above, and St John the Baptist,
St George (armour) and St
Mary Magdalene (to anoint) with the
Agnus Dei below. Left and right, St Stephen and St Margaret. Jenyns Lectionary, fol. 34.
Wills and exequies Jenyns made his will on 29 January 1521/2, appointing John Nechylls and John Kirton his executors and John Baker overseer. He was to be buried in the conventual church of the
London Greyfriars. He desired them to arrange that 24 poor men's children 'such as can say our lady matens or the
psalme of Deprofundis' should bear torches at his funeral, and that the five orders of Friars, the priests of the Fraternities and of
St Augustine Papey, and the 60 priests and company of the Fraternity of Parish Clerks of London should accompany his funeral procession. He provided for many masses of
requiem and
dirige, for his soul and for the souls of his wives, to be sung by the priors and convents of Elsing Spital (St. Mary within Cripplegate), of
St Mary Spital without Bishopsgate and of the
London Charterhouse, the Abbots of
Faversham,
Boxley and Stratford, the
Franciscan friars at
Greenwich and
Richmond, and the two
Lazar houses; and there were plenty of charitable bequests to be made. This will was proved on 28 May 1523. In June 1522 he made a separate will to John Bennett, granting three parcels of land or property in London, and provision for the payment for his obits, to the Merchant Taylors. Bennett fulfilled his intention in 1527: this was a means of assuring the Guild's future title to the property. Obits were still being kept for him by the Merchant Taylors at
St. Martin Outwich during the 1540s, but the moneys reserved for that purpose at the Greyfriars were surrendered to be stripped of their
superstitious uses (and given over to
profane ones).
Tomb and heraldry Jenyns had a tomb prepared for himself in the
Apostles Chapel on the south side of the choir of the church. His monument is illustrated in
polychrome in the
Book of Funerals of Sir
Thomas Wriothesley, Garter King of Arms (died 1534). In this Herald's image the long sides of the rectangular tomb-chest are shown each divided into three equal panels framed by slender squared
pilaster strips with gothic detailing. Each panel encloses a
quatrefoil containing a large heraldic shield, and there is a single panel of the same kind at either end. The central panel of the sides and foot show the Jenyns
emblazonment: Argent a chevron gules between three plummets sable. The four outer shields on the long sides repeat a Jenyns impalement with another coat, and at the head end of the chest is a shield (Barry nebuly of six argent and sable on a chief gules a lion passant guardant or), for the Merchants of the Staple. On the slab above, the tinctured figure of Sir Stephen Jenyns is presented in full-length effigy (possibly in alabaster). He is shown in military armour under a long red robe with furred lining, with his gold chain over, and his hands in prayer: his armoured feet rest on a recumbent greyhound and his head (clean-shaven, with long black hair) on his crested helm. The crest is: A griffin's head couped between two wings inverted proper in the beak a plummet pendant sable. This tomb was one of the great number listed by John Stow as having been destroyed or utterly defaced by Sir
Martin Bowes.
Family and kin Jenyns's granddaughters Joan Nechylls and Elizabeth Stalworth were both living at his death. The children of John Kirton and Christopher Rawson were also remembered in the will. After Katherine Nechylls (Jenyns's daughter) died, John Nechylls married Margaret Offley (Thomas Offley's sister) who had lived in his household as a servant, and secured her fortunes. John Offley took up residence in Nychills's house at
Hackney, Middlesex. Nechylls died in December 1530, having promised his daughter and heir Joan to Thomas Offley, who married her. Stephen Kirton, who as Jenyns's apprentice received a legacy of £20 from him, married Margaret, Offley's sister and now Nechylls's widow: he was admitted to
Gray's Inn in 1534. Another Offley sister, Margery, became the second wife of James Leveson. Thomas Offley and Stephen Kirton became highly successful wool merchants shipping through
Calais during the following decades. Two of John Kirton's children, William and Margaret, married two of the Leek children, their step-siblings, and the later Leek family of Wyer Hall at Edmonton were Margaret Kirton's descendants.
Foundations Jenyns bequeathed £40 towards the recovery to Civic patronage of the
Bethlehem without Bishopsgate Hospital, if it could be achieved within three years of his death. The School at Wolverhampton remained fully under the control of the Worshipful Company of Merchant Taylors until the later 18th century. After an interval the company's interest was reinstated under different terms, and continues fruitfully to the present time. Thomas Offley, whose father had witnessed the original endowment, acquired the manor of
Madeley, Staffordshire, in 1547 and was involved in the administration of the Rushock estate. The volume of Chaucer's
Boethius, its endpapers much scribbled upon, remained with the Kirtons and Offleys (apparently in London, and then in Thorpe Mandeville) down to the 1560s. The church of St Andrew Undershaft became the family vault of Jenyns's descendants and dependants, as the burial-place of John Nechylls, Nicholas Leveson, Stephen Kirton, Sir Thomas Offley and his half-brother Alderman Hugh Offley, and also of David Woodroffe (Sheriff, and Merchant of the Staple of Calais), whose son
Nicholas Woodroffe married a daughter of Stephen Kirton and Margaret Offley. == References ==