'' by
John Everett Millais, 1871 Little is known about Sir Walter Raleigh's birth but he is believed to have been born on 22 January 1552 (or possibly 1554). He grew up in the house of Hayes
Barton (in the parish of
East Budleigh), in East
Devon. He was the youngest of the five sons of Walter Raleigh (1510–1581) (or Rawleigh) of
Fardel Manor (in the parish of
Cornwood), in South Devon. His mother, Katherine (Catherine) Champernon (Champernowne), was born before 1518 and died on 19 April 1594. Her mother's maiden name was Carew. Raleigh's family is generally assumed to have been a junior branch of the Raleigh family, 11th-century lords of the
manor of Raleigh, Pilton in North Devon, although the two branches are known to have borne entirely dissimilar coats of arms, adopted at the start of the age of
heraldry (–1215). Church His mother was Katherine Champernowne, the third wife of Walter Raleigh senior. She was the fourth daughter of Sir Philip Champernowne (1479–1545),
lord of the manor of
Modbury, Devon, by his wife Catherine Carew, a daughter of Sir Edmund Carew (d. 1513) of
Mohuns Ottery (in the parish of
Luppitt), Devon,. Katherine was the widow of Otes Gilbert (1513–1546/7) of
Greenway (in the parish of
Brixham) and of
Compton Castle (in the parish of
Marldon), both in Devon. (The coat of arms of Otes Gilbert and Katherine Champernowne survives in a stained glass window in
Churston Ferrers Church, near Greenway.) Katherine Champernowne's paternal aunt was
Kat Ashley, governess of Queen Elizabeth I, who introduced Raleigh and his brothers to the court. Raleigh's maternal uncle was Sir
Arthur Champernowne (–1578), a
Member of Parliament,
Sheriff of Devon and
Admiral of the West. Walter Raleigh junior's immediate family included his full brother
Carew Raleigh, and half-brothers John Gilbert,
Humphrey Gilbert and Adrian Gilbert. As a consequence of their kinship with the Champernowne family, all of the Raleigh and Gilbert brothers became prominent during the reigns of
Elizabeth I and
James I. Raleigh's family was highly
Protestant in religious orientation and had a number of near escapes during the reign of
Roman Catholic Queen
Mary I of England. In the most notable of these, his father had to hide in a tower to avoid execution. As a result, Raleigh developed a
hatred of Roman Catholicism during his childhood, and proved himself quick to express it after Protestant Queen Elizabeth I came to the throne in 1558. In matters of religion, Elizabeth was more moderate than her half-sister Mary. In 1569, Raleigh went to France to serve with the
Huguenots in the French religious civil wars. In 1572, Raleigh was registered as an undergraduate at
Oriel College, Oxford, but he left in 1574 without a degree. Much of his life is uncertain between 1569 and 1575, but in his
History of the World, he claimed to have been an eyewitness at the
Battle of Moncontour (3 October 1569) in France. In 1575 or 1576, Raleigh returned to England. In 1577 and again in 1579 Raleigh made voyages with his half-brother
Sir Humphrey Gilbert in attempts to find a
Northwest Passage. They failed to find a passage, but succeeded in raiding Spanish ships. ==Ireland==