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Groom of the Chamber
Position in the monarch's household
Position in the monarch's household
Groom of the Chamber was a position in the Household of the monarch in early modern England. Other Ancien Régime royal establishments in Europe had comparable officers, often with similar titles. In France, the Duchy of Burgundy, and in England while French was still the language of the court, the title was varlet or valet de chambre. In German, Danish and Russian the term was "Kammerjunker" and in Swedish the similar "Kammarjunkare".
In England after the Restoration, appointments in the King's Household included Groom of the Great Chamber, Groom of the Privy Chamber and Groom of the Bedchamber. The first two positions were appointed by Lord Chamberlain's warrant; the third, of greater importance, was a Crown appointment.
Medieval and early-modern England
Traditionally, the English Court was organized into three branches or departments:
- the Household, primarily concerned with fiscal more than domestic matters, the "royal purse";
- the Chamber, concerned with the Presence Chamber, the Privy chamber, and other more public rooms of the royal palaces, as the Bedchamber was concerned with the innermost;
- the Bedchamber, focused on the most direct and intimate aspects of the lives of the royal family, with its own offices, like the Groom of the Body and the Squire of the Body.
The Chamber organization was controlled by the Lord Chamberlain; if he was the general of a small army of servitors, the Grooms of the Chamber were his junior officers, with ushers and footmen the footsoldiers. The Grooms wore the royal livery (in earlier periods), served as general attendants, and fulfilled a wide range of specific functions. (One Groom of the Chamber had the job of handing the "King's Stuff" to a Squire of the Body, who would then dress the King.) Grooms ranked below Gentlemen of the Chamber, usually important noblemen, but above Yeomen of the Chamber. They were mostly well-born, on a first rung of a courtier's career. The office of Groom of the Chamber could also be bestowed in a more honorific manner, upon people who served the royal household in some less direct way; the early Tudor poet Stephen Hawes became a Groom of the Chamber in 1502, under Henry VII.
Under James I, the Bedchamber was established as a semi-autonomous department (overseen by the Groom of the Stole) with its own hierarchy of Gentlemen, Grooms and Yeomen, which usurped those of the Privy Chamber in terms of their influence with and closeness to the King. (The old Bedchamber office of Esquire to the Body was finally abolished in 1702).
;;;Grooms Extraordinary In the reigns of the early monarchs of the House of Stuart, James I and Charles I, the actors of the King's Men, the playing company under royal patronage, were officially "Grooms extraordinary of the Chamber". They did not usually fulfill the normal functions of the office; rather, they served the King by performing plays for him. Although on busy occasions, the King's Men appear to have acted as more ordinary servants: in August 1604 they were "waiting and attending" upon the Spanish ambassador at Somerset House, "on his Majesty's service" — but no plays were performed.) They were also turned out to bulk up the Household for grand ceremonial occasions. A similar arrangement held for some of Queen Anne's Men, including their playwright Thomas Heywood; they became Grooms of the Queen's Chamber, under the Queen's Chamberlain. On some occasions, Shakespeare, Heywood, and their compatriots wore the royal livery, marched in processions, and played other roles in the ceremonial life of the monarchy. (Grooms could not be arrested for debt without the permission of the Lord Chamberlain — a big advantage for sometimes-struggling actors.) In at least two cases, those of George Bryan (Lord Chamberlain's Men) and John Singer (Queen Elizabeth's Men; Admiral's Men), professional actors became "normal" Grooms of the Chamber, with the normal duties, after retiring from the stage.
List of Grooms of the Chamber
- Stephen Hawes, 1502–?
- William Sharington, 1542–1544
- Thomas Streete, c.1547(-1553?)
- John Fowler, 1548
- William Goring, 1553
- George Brediman or Bridgeman, c.1553-1580
;;;Elizabeth I (1558–1603)
- Thomas Astley, 1558-1595
- John Baptist Castilion, 1558-1597
- Thomas Commander, 1558-1559
- Henry Seckford, 1558-1610
- Thomas Lichfield, 1559-1586
- John Tamworth, 1559–1569
- Edward Cary, 1562-1618
- Henry Middlemore, 1566-1593
- Thomas Knyvett, 1570-1622
- Thomas Gorges, 1571-1610
- William Killigrew, 1578-1622
- Edward Darcy, 1579-1612
- Edward Denny, 1582-1600
- Michael Stanhope, c.1583–1603
- Ferdinando Richardson (alias Heyborne), 1586-1618
;;;James I (1603–1625)
- Sir John Holles, 1603–1610
- Sir Henry Bromley, 1603–1609
- Humphrey May, 1604–1611
- Sir Thomas Gerard, 1st Baronet, 1603–1621
- William Woodhouse, 1603–1625
- Henry Goodyer, 1603–1626
- Sir Oliver Cromwell, 1603–1636
- Sir Robert Mansell, by 1604–1615
- Sir Walter Cope, by 1607–1614
- Sir John Kay, by 1608–1615
- Sir William Uvedale, by 1612–1618
- Sir John Eyre, by 1612–1632
- George Chaworth, 1st Viscount Chaworth, 1621–?
- John Maynard, by 1621–1641 Queen Anne of Denmark
- Samuel Daniel
- John Florio, by 1604 - 1619
- Matthew Hairstanes Charles I (1625–1649)
- John Trevor, 1625–? (died 1630)
- Sir William Walter, 1633–1646
List of Grooms of the Bedchamber
James I (1603–1625)
- John Murray, (1603-1622)
Charles I (1625–1649)
- George Kirke, 1625–1646
- William Murray, 1625-1643
- William Legge, 1645–1647
Commonwealth (1649–1660)
No Grooms of the Bedchamber appointed
Post-Restoration England and Great Britain
Fourteen Grooms of the Great Chamber were appointed under Charles II (later reduced to ten); they served as internal court messengers and were in attendance in the guard room.
The Grooms of the Privy Chamber were six in number (reduced to two under James I); initially responsible for manning the doors to the Privy Chamber, by 1720 the office largely lost its function, but attendance was still required for Coronations and other 'extraordinary Occasions'.
There were usually a dozen or so Grooms of the Bedchamber appointed (though under different monarchs the number varied from as many as fifteen or as few as eight), two of whom were on duty at any one time. They served for a week at a time in rotation and were responsible for attending the King in the Chamber when he dressed, and at Dinner when he dined privately (taking food and wine from the servants to give it to the Lords, who would serve The King). They would also deputise for the Lords of the Bedchamber if required to do so. Grooms of the Bedchamber were close to the King and were occasionally sent overseas as special envoys to negotiate royal marriages and such. During the exile of James II a court was maintained by that king in France and certain of his grooms joined him there. Similarly, during the last years of the reign of King George III, when he withdrew from public life in consequence of his poor mental health, several of his grooms followed him to Windsor Castle, whilst others remained in London to serve the Prince Regent, later to become King George IV. When the Monarch was a Queen, the positions of Groom of the Bedchamber were not filled (though Prince Albert, consort to Queen Victoria, did appoint his own Grooms of the Bedchamber).
List of Grooms of the Privy Chamber
Charles II (1660–1685)
| Date |
|---|
| 6 June 1660 |
| 7 June 1660 |
| 10 June 1660 |
| 12 June 1660 |
| 17 May 1661 |
| 27 January 1669 |
| 30 April 1670 |
| 15 May 1671 |
| 15 May 1672 |
| 17 May 1673 |
| 25 June 1673 |
| 8 July 1676 |
| 18 December 1676 |
| 11 October 1677 |
| 20 May 1678 |
| 23 October 1680 |
| 20 August 1683 |
James II 1685–1688
| Date |
|---|
| February 1685 |
William III 1689–1702
| Date |
|---|
| February 1689 |
| 28 March 1689 |
| 12 January 1694 |
| 29 July 1695 |
| 30 November 1695 |
| 22 December 1699 |
| 19 May 1700 |
| 25 October 1701 |
1702–1901
| Date |
|---|
| 9 July 1702 |
| 26 March 1711 |
| 28 May 1715 |
| 3 February 1719 |
| 12 August 1719 |
| 25 November 1720 |
| 10 December 1728 |
| 11 May 1729 |
| 2 June 1740 |
| 7 June 1745 |
| 24 February 1750 |
| 3 June 1762 |
| 8 October 1762 |
| 5 July 1774 |
| 6 July 1774 |
| 24 October 1778 |
| 24 February 1781 |
| 18 November 1781 |
| 7 March 1785 |
| March 1788 |
| 5 February 1794 |
| 19 October 1797 |
| 29 July 1798 |
| 1799 |
| 23 May 1800 |
| 18 May 1802 |
| 19 August 1808 |
| 3 June 1812 |
| 6 July 1814 |
| 12 August 1818 |
| 12 December 1823 |
| 21 April 1832 |
| 23 April 1833 |
| 6 May 1836 |
| 1 November 1839 |
| 24 February 1840 |
| 1 March 1852 |
| 13 July 1852 |
| 16 February 1859 |
| 31 March 1860 |
| 2 October 1862 |
| 3 July 1867 |
| 14 January 1871 |
| 8 January 1874 |
| 16 February 1874 |
| 24 October 1884 |
| 25 July 1890 |
| 1 October 1893 |
| 14 November 1899 |
List of Grooms of the Bedchamber
Charles II (1660–1685)
| Date of appointment |
|---|
| 1 Feb 1661 |
| 2 Feb 1661 |
| 3 Feb 1661 |
| 6 Feb 1661 |
| 1 Jan 1662 |
| 28 Oct 1664 |
| 1 Oct 1670 |
| 16 Jun 1671 |
| 21 Jun 1672 |
| 7 Jun 1673 |
| 8 Jul 1675 |
| Aug 1677 |
| 18 Jul 1678 |
| Apr 1679 |
| 16 May 1679 |
| 26 Nov 1679 |
| Mar 1683 |
| 15 May 1683 |
| 19 Dec 1683 |
James II (1685–1688)
| Date of appointment |
|---|
| 2 May 1685 |
| 1686 |
| 9 Mar 1687 |
William III (1689–1702)
| Date of appointment |
|---|
| 6 Jun 1689 |
| Mar 1690 |
| 29 Apr 1691 |
| Jan 1692 |
| 6 May 1695 |
Anne (1702–1714) No Grooms of the Bedchamber appointed
George I (1714–1727)
| Date of appointment |
|---|
| 20 Sep 1714 |
| 16 Oct 1714 |
| 21 Oct 1714 |
| 15 Jun 1715 |
| 13 May 1719 |
| 11 Jun 1720 |
| 10 Aug 1721 |
| 24 Jun 1722 |
| 25 May 1723 |
George II (1727–1760)
| Date of appointment |
|---|
| 21 Aug 1727 |
| 14 Sep 1727 |
| 7 May 1731 |
| 7 May 1733 |
| 22 Apr 1740 |
| 14 Jul 1742 |
| 20 Jan 1746 |
| 22 Jan 1747 |
| 5 Apr 1757 |
| 4 Jun 1757 |
| 16 Jan 1760 |
| 19 Jan 1760 |
George III (1760–1820)
| Date of appointment |
|---|
| 27 Nov 1760 |
| 10 Dec 1760 |
| 11 Dec 1760 |
| 17 Feb 1761 |
| 10 Oct 1762 |
| 21 Dec 1762 |
| 19 Jan 1763 |
| 16 Feb 1763 |
| 5 May 1763 |
| 5 Nov 1763 |
| April 1764 |
| 24 Aug 1765 |
| 3 Dec 1766 |
| 23 Apr 1770 |
| 16 May 1770 |
| 10 May 1771 |
| 17 May 1771 |
| 3 Dec 1771 |
| 8 Feb 1773 |
| 28 Mar 1775 |
| 18 Jun 1777 |
| 22 Feb 1779 |
| 17 Jan 1783 |
| 19 Aug 1784 |
| 20 Jan 1788 |
| 3 Jun 1791 |
| 26 Jan 1793 |
| 29 Mar 1800 |
| 30 May 1801 |
| 27 Apr 1802 |
| 24 May 1804 |
| 15 Apr 1807 |
| 31 Oct 1808 |
| 1 Nov 1808 |
| 4 Mar 1809 |
| 2 June 1809 |
| 18 Feb 1812 |
| 10 Mar 1812 |
| 10 Apr 1812 |
| 28 Jul 1812 |
| 6 Jun 1816 |
| 6 Sep 1816 |
| 5 Jan 1817 |
| 21 Nov 1818 |
| 19 Oct 1819 |
George IV (1820–1830)
| Date of appointment |
|---|
| Jan 1820 |
| 4 Apr 1820 |
| 24 Jan 1821 |
| 11 Oct 1821 |
| 7 Sep 1825 |
| 27 May 1828 |
| 24 Sep 1828 |
| 14 Feb 1830 |
| 15 Mar 1830 |
William IV (1830–1837)
| Date of appointment |
|---|
| June 1830 |
| 17 Jul 1830 |
| 24 Jul 1830 |
| 30 Nov 1830 |
| 23 Dec 1830 |
| 31 Jan 1831 |
| 24 Feb 1831 |
| 12 Nov 1832 |
| 15 Dec 1832 |
| 20 Jun 1837 |
Victoria (1837–1901) No Grooms of the Bedchamber appointed
Edward VII (1901–1910) The term "Groom-in-Waiting" was employed
George V (1910–1936)
| Date appointed |
|---|
| 10 Jun 1910 |
The above-mentioned were gazetted as "Grooms of the Bedchamber in Waiting"; subsequently, the term "Groom in Waiting in Ordinary" was used.
Edward VIII (1936) The term "Groom-in-Waiting" was employed.
George VI (1936–1952) The term "Groom-in-Waiting" was employed.
Elizabeth II (1952–2022) No Grooms of the Bedchamber appointed.
Charles III (2022–) No Grooms of the Bedchamber appointed.
In France
The French portrait painter Jean Clouet (c. 1485–1540) was appointed a valet de chambre groom of the chamber of the French monarchy in 1523 by Francis I of France, as was his son François Clouet later. The office could serve as a sinecure to provide a minimum income and social place for someone who enjoyed royal favor.
Many noble households in Europe had their own grooms of the chamber, known by various titles. See Valet de chambre for a fuller account.
Notes
References
- Bucholz, R. O. The Database of Court Officers 1660-1837. Loyola University of Chicago.
- Brown, Cedric C., ed. Patronage, Politics, and Literary Traditions in England, 1558-1658. Detroit, Wayne State University Press, 1993.
- Halliday, F. E. A Shakespeare Companion 1564–1964. Baltimore, Penguin, 1964.
- Walter, James. Shakespeare's True Life. London, Longmans, Green & Co., 1890; reprinted Kessinger Publishing, 2003.
References
- "Office-Holders in Modern Britain: Volume 11 (Revised), Court Officers, 1660-1837". Institute of Historical Research.
- {{DNB Cite
- "Office-Holders in Modern Britain: Introduction: Administrative structure and work". Institute of Historical Research.
- Halliday, p. 460; spellings modernized.
- At that time, [[Robert Sidney, 1st Earl of Leicester]] (1563–1626), younger brother of Sir [[Philip Sidney]].
- C. E. Challis, 'Sharington, Sir William (c. 1495–1553), administrator and embezzler', in ''[[Oxford Dictionary of National Biography]]'', Oxford University Press, September 2004
- (1899). "The visitations of the county of Surrey : made and taken in the years 1530 by Thomas Benolte, Clarenceux king of arms; 1572 by Robert Cooke, Clarenceux king of arms; and 1623 by Samuel Thompson, Windsor herald, and Augustin Vincent, Rouge croix pursuivant, marshals and deputies to William Camden, Clarenceux king of arms". Ye Wardour Press.
- (2014). "Titled Elizabethans: A Directory of Elizabethan Court, State, and Church Officers, 1558–1603". Palgrave Macmillan.
- "TAMWORTH, John (c.1524-69), of Sandon, Essex; Sutton, Lincs. and St. Botolph, Bishopsgate. | History of Parliament Online".
- "KILLIGREW, William (d.1622), of Hanworth, Mdx. and Lothbury, London. | History of Parliament Online".
- "STANHOPE, Sir Michael (c.1545-1621), of the Barbican, London and Sudbourne, nr. Orford, Suff.; later of St. John's, Clerkenwell, Mdx.". History of Parliament Trust.
- "HOLLES, Sir John (c.1567-1637), of Haughton, Notts. and Lincoln's Inn Fields, Mdx.; later of Westminster and Thurland Place, Nottingham, Notts. | History of Parliament Online".
- "BROMLEY, Sir Henry (c.1560-1615), of Holt Castle, Worcs., Shrawardine Castle, Salop and St. Lawrence Pountney, London; later of Westminster. | History of Parliament Online".
- "MAY, Humphrey (1574-1630), of Whitehall Palace, Carrow Priory, Norf. and Coldrey, Hants. | History of Parliament Online".
- "GERRARD, Sir Thomas, 1st Bt. (c.1560-1621), of Bryn, Lancs. | History of Parliament Online".
- "WOODHOUSE, Sir William (c.1570-1639), of Waxham, Norf. and Whitehall | History of Parliament Online".
- "GOODYER, Sir Henry (?1571-1627), of Polesworth, Warws. | History of Parliament Online".
- "CROMWELL, Sir Oliver (1562/6-1655), of Hinchingbrooke House and Ramsey Abbey, Hunts. | History of Parliament Online".
- "MANSELL (MANSFIELD, MANSFELT), Sir Robert (1570/1-1652), of Pentney, Norf.; Marquess House, Broad Street, London; and Church Street, Croom's Hill, East Greenwich, Kent. | History of Parliament Online".
- "COPE, Sir Walter (c.1553-1614), of The Strand, Westminster and Kensington, Mdx. | History of Parliament Online".
- "KAY (KEYES), Sir John (1568-1624), of Hackney, Mdx. and the Tower of London | History of Parliament Online".
- "UVEDALE, Sir William (1581-1652), of Wickham, Hants and Whitehall | History of Parliament Online".
- "EYRE, Sir John (1580-1639), of Great Chalfield, Wilts.; later of St. Giles-in-the-Fields, Mdx. | History of Parliament Online".
- "CHAWORTH, Sir George (c.1569-1639), of Annesley, Notts. and Westminster | History of Parliament Online".
- "MAYNARD, John (c.1592-1658), of Tooting Graveney, Surr.; later of Gt. Isleham, Cambs. | History of Parliament Online".
- Florio, Resolute John. (2019-09-19). "JOHN FLORIO AT COURT: GROOM OF THE PRIVY CHAMBER".
- Public Record Office, S.P. 14.107, f.93 (Cal. S.P. Dom.1619-23, p.31)
- "TREVOR, John (1563-1630) of Oatlands, Surrey". History of Parliament.
- "WALTER, William (c.1604-1675), of Sarsden, Oxon. and the Inner Temple, London | History of Parliament Online".
- "LEGGE, William I (c.1608-70), of The Minories, London.". History of Parliament Trust.
- "Office-Holders in Modern Britain: Guard Chamber: Grooms of the Great Chamber 1660-1837". Institute of Historical Research.
- "Office-Holders in Modern Britain: Privy Chamber: Grooms of the Privy Chamber 1660-1837". Institute of Historical Research.
- "Office-Holders in Modern Britain: The bedchamber: Grooms of the Bedchamber 1660-1837". Institute of Historical Research.
- Court Circular
- {{London Gazette. (8 November 1839)
- {{London Gazette. (24 February 1840)
- {{London Gazette. (2 March 1852)
- {{London Gazette. (20 July 1852)
- {{London Gazette. (18 February 1859)
- {{London Gazette. (30 March 1860)
- {{London Gazette. (3 October 1862)
- {{London Gazette. (26 July 1867)
- {{London Gazette. (17 January 1871)
- {{London Gazette. (16 January 1874)
- {{London Gazette. (20 February 1874)
- {{London Gazette. (28 October 1884)
- {{London Gazette. (25 July 1890)
- {{London Gazette. (10 October 1893)
- "Page 834 | Issue 11324, 26 July 1901 | Edinburgh Gazette | The Gazette".
- "Page 621 | Issue 12258, 14 June 1910 | Edinburgh Gazette | The Gazette".
- "Page 624 | Issue 15301, 21 July 1936 | Edinburgh Gazette | The Gazette".
- "Page 1406 | Issue 34376, 2 March 1937 | London Gazette | The Gazette".
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