Sir William Butts married Margaret Bacon of Cambridgeshire. They had three children, • (Sir)
William Butts of
Thornage, Norfolk (c1506 - 1583) (m. Joan Bures). Butts was a patron of literature. After his death a collection of poems,
A Book of Epitaphes (1583) was published in his memory by
Robert Dallington. He is also the subject of a notable portrait by Holbein. His tomb at Thornage has (above) a heraldic quartering for Butts with Bacon, shown also on the tomb-chest, dexter: for his wife, sinister, is a quartering for Bures, "Per chevron indented sable and ermine, in chief two lions rampant or". The central blazon on the tomb chest is the impalement of Butts with Bures. •
Thomas Butts of
Great Ryburgh, Norfolk (m. Bridget Bures), of
Corpus Christi College, Cambridge, who participated in the 1536 voyage of
Richard Hore to
Newfoundland, and survived to tell the story to
Richard Hakluyt. He died in 1592 and was commemorated in funeral verses. His copious heraldic cycle at Great Ryburgh survives in glass, church plate and stone, and was studied by the antiquary
Thomas Martin of Palgrave. •
Edmund Butts of
Barrow, Suffolk (m. Anne Bures). They had been seven years married when he died in 1548: he was buried at Barrow, and Anne survived him as a widow for 61 years, dying in December 1609. She is buried with a fine monumental brass effigy with verses and a fillet inscription set in black marble in the church at
Redgrave, Suffolk. Their daughter Anne Butts married
Sir Nicholas Bacon, 1st Baronet, of Redgrave (c. 1540–1624). The three wives were sisters, the daughters of Sir Henry Bures (died 1528) of
Acton, Suffolk, and his wife Anne, daughter of George Waldegrave and Anne Drury. Their mother remarried c. 1528 to (Sir)
Clement Heigham (died 1571), whose stepdaughters they became. ==References==