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Richard Martin (Lord Mayor of London)

English goldsmith


Summary

English goldsmith

FieldValue
honorific-prefixSir
nameRichard Martin
officeWarden of the Mint
term_start1560
term_end1595
predecessorJohn Browne
successorThomas Knyvet
office2Master of the Mint
term_start21582
term_end21617
predecessor2John Lonyson
successor2Edward Villiers
office3Lord Mayor of the City of London
term_start31589
term_end31589
predecessor3Martin Calthrop
successor3John Harte
office4Lord Mayor of the City of London
term_start41593
term_end41594
predecessor4Cuthbert Buckell
successor4John Spencer
death_dateJuly 1617
death_placeLondon, England
resting_placeTottenham Church, London, England
spouseDorcas Egleston
childrenJohn Martin

| honorific-prefix = Sir

Sir Richard Martin (died July 1617 in London) was an English goldsmith and Master of the Mint who served as Sheriff and twice as Lord Mayor of the City of London during the reign of Elizabeth I.

Early career

Richard Martyn's birth is estimated at c. 1534 on the basis of his age given as 28 in a portrait medallion by Steven van Herwijk dated 1562. He was elected a liveryman of the Worshipful Company of Goldsmiths, one of the Livery Companies or craft guilds of the City of London, in 1558. He was elected alderman for the wards of Farringdon Within 1578–1598 and Bread Street 1598–1602. He was Sheriff of London in 1581–1582.

Martin was knighted in 1588–1589 and served a partial year as Lord Mayor in 1589, succeeding Sir Martin Calthrop who had died in office. He was Prime Warden or head of the Goldsmiths' Company 1592–1593, chairing the Court of Wardens or governing body of the company, and served a second term as Lord Mayor in 1593–1594, succeeding Sir Cuthbert Buckell. His other municipal offices included President of Christ's Hospital and Comptroller-General of Hospitals 1594–1602.

Martin was an investor in Sir Francis Drake's 1577–1580 voyage of circumnavigation and also in Drake's 1585–1586 expedition to harass the Spanish ports in the New World.

Martin and the Royal Mint

Martin was Warden of the Royal Mint by 1572, and was responsible for overseeing the workings of the mint and the quality of the coinage. He supplied metal of specified fineness for gold coins to John Lovyson (Lawinson or Lonison), Master of the Tower Mint in 1577. John Stow in his Survey of London recorded Martin's charges against John Lovyson, a matter that was finally weighed by a commission of Privy Council members including Nicholas Bacon, the Lord Keeper, William Cecil, Lord Burghley, the Lord Treasurer, and others, which recommended that

Martin himself succeeded Lovyson as Master of the Mint in 1582, serving in that capacity until his death in 1617.

Making and selling silver plate

Martin supplied silver plate to the queen's privy kitchen in 1583, including a great standing cup gilt, with a cover, the body garnished with "sundry vermin as snakes ewetes (newts) frogs and others", and laid with colours, the cover garnished with sundry men and beasts hunting with a stag at the top. This cup, probably made in Germany, was admired in the Tower of London by Lupold von Wedel in November 1584. It was a gift at the baptism of Prince Henry in August 1594.

He provided silver plate for the use of Mary, Queen of Scots, including a silver gilt bowl and cover in 1585, decorated with an engraved pattern of fish.

In 1589 Martin supplied silver plate, silks, and other goods to the value of £2,000 which Elizabeth gave to James VI of Scotland for the reception of Anne of Denmark. James VI took some of this silver plate to Oslo and presented it to the Danish councillors Steen Brahe and Axel Gyldenstierne. In 1591 Martin and Hugh Kayle supplied Queen Elizabeth with silver plate worth £2,213, some plate was for New Year's Day gifts and some for christening gifts.

In 1597 a thief stole a silver inkstand and silver bowls belonging to Elizabeth I from Theobalds. Martin helped track down the dealers and goldsmiths who bought the stolen silver. John Williams, a successful Welsh-born goldsmith, was his apprentice in 1584.

Marriage and family

Richard Martin married Dorcas Ecclestone (1537-1599) sometime before 1562. Martin had a silver medal with their portraits made to commemorate their marriage. The medal was designed by Steven Corneliszoon van Herwijck who was working in London in 1562.

They had five sons and one daughter.

Both Martins were active in radical religious causes including the Admonition Controversy, part of an effort to encourage the queen to further reform Protestantism in England.

The country house at Highgate later known as Lauderdale House was built for him in 1582.

The Martins' son Captain John Martin commanded the Benjamin under Drake in the 1585–1586 expedition. On his return, John Martin married Mary Brandon (born 1566), daughter of Robert Brandon, Chamberlain of London, on 23 May 1586 at St Vedast, Foster Lane. John Martin became a Councilman of the Jamestown Colony of Virginia in 1607 and was the proprietor of Martin's Brandon Plantation on the south bank of the James River, apparently named after his wife's family.

Another son, Richard (died 1616), served with his father as a master-worker at the mint from 1599 to 1607.

Their daughter Dorcas married Sir Julius Caesar, later Chancellor of the Exchequer and Master of the Rolls under James I.

His 13X great-grandson is British horror actor Nathan Head.

The house in Cripplegate

In March 1595 Martin raided the house of Edmund Williamson in Philip Lane, Cripplegate, after his brother Nicholas Williamson was arrested for treason. Martin discovered that Edmund Williamson ran a kind of pawnbroking business from his house, obtaining luxury goods from young men for small sums, less than their worth. Nicholas Skeres, an associate of Christopher Marlowe involved in the credit racket, was taken by Martin and held for a few days.

Late life

Martin had remained both Warden and Master of the Mint for almost two decades, but following charges in 1597 that he was profiteering by delaying repayments he sold his office of Warden to Sir Thomas Knyvet. The two soon fell out, with Knyvet accusing Martin of owing the crown substantial funds and Martin insisting he was owed. Martin was briefly imprisoned for debt, which led to his removal from his Aldermanry on 31 August 1602 on account of his "unfitting demeanour and carriage". Suits and countersuits continued, with the Exchequer finding against Martin in 1607 and a further enquiry finding in his favour in 1615.

In 1608 Martin asked to be involved in the assay of silver ore sent to the Tower Mint from Hilderston in Scotland. He sent a report of the assay and chemical opinions offered by his workmen to the Earl of Salisbury in October.

Richard Martin died in July 1617, and was buried in Tottenham Church, 30 July 1617. At his death he "was held near a hundred years old". His wife Dorcas had been buried in the same church on 2 September 1599, and his son Richard on 28 May 1616.

Notes

References

References

  1. Beavan
  2. The British Museum, Collection online, [https://www.britishmuseum.org/research/collection_online/collection_object_details.aspx?objectId=952902&partId=1 ref. M.6869] (British Museum).
  3. C.E. Challis, 'Martin, Sir Richard (1533/4-1617), ''Oxford Dictionary of National Biography'' (2004).
  4. Martin 1892 p.21
  5. Martin 1892 p.22
  6. Brown, p. 944
  7. J. Collingwood & J. Trier, ''Calendar of Patent Rolls, 1575-1578'' (London: HMSO, 1982), pp. 226 no. 1515, 341 no. 2339, 436-8 no. 2885.
  8. Martin 1892, p. 24
  9. Strype, John. (1720). "TOWER of London. The Mint.". John Stowe's Survey of London.
  10. Challis 1992, p. 259
  11. A. Jefferies Collins, ''[[Inventory of Elizabeth I of England. Jewels and Plate of Queen Elizabeth I]]'' (London, 1955), p. 578 no. 1541.
  12. Arthur Collins, ''Jewels and Plate of Queen Elizabeth'' (London, 1955), p. 582.
  13. ''Calendar State Papers Scotland'', vol. 10 (Edinburgh, 1936), pp. 160-162: [[Annie Cameron. Annie I. Cameron]], ''Calendar State Papers Scotland: 1593-1595'', vol. 11 (Edinburgh, 1936), p. 130.
  14. David Stevenson, ''Scotland's Last Wedding'' (Edinburgh, 1997), pp. 39, 95: David Masson, ''Register of the Privy Seal of Scotland: 1585-1592'', vol. 4 (Edinburgh, 1881), pp. 444-5.
  15. ''HMC 6th Report: Wykeham Martin'' (London, 1877), p. 468.
  16. A. Jefferies Collins, ''Jewels and Plate of Queen Elizabeth I'' (London, 1955), pp. 157-8.
  17. "WILLIAMS, JOHN (fl.1584-1627?), goldsmith | Dictionary of Welsh Biography".
  18. (2005). "Framing the Family: Narrative and Representation in the Medieval and Early Modern Periods". Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies.
  19. "Use this image 1612948380 | British Museum".
  20. Tarnya Cooper & Jane Eade, ''Elizabeth I and her people'' (London, 2013), p. 77.
  21. Dorcas Martin's epitaph reads "Here lyeth Interred the body of Dame DORCAS Martin The late Wife of Sr Richard Martin, Knight twise Lord Mayor of the Cittie of London The Davghter of Iohn Ecclestone of ye Covntie of Lancastar gent who had Issve by the said Sr Rich Martin V sones, & one davght: and deceased Ovt of this mortall life ye first day of Septemb : 1599." See Cansick 1875, p. 52
  22. McQuade et al. 2008, p. xxiv
  23. Currer-Briggs, p. 162
  24. Challis 1992, p. 262
  25. "Martin Family tree".
  26. ''HMC Salisbury Hatfield'', vol. 5 (London, 1894), pp. 141-2.
  27. Constance Brown Kuriyama, ''Christopher Marlowe: A Renaissance Life'' (Cornell University Press, 2002), p. 103: [[Charles Nicholl (author). Charles Nicholl]], ''The Reckoning: The Murder of Christopher Marlowe'' (London, 2002), pp. 34-5.
  28. Challis 1992, pp. 259–62.
  29. Robert William Cochran-Patrick, ''Early Records Relating to Mining in Scotland'' (Edinburgh, 1878), p. 127.
  30. Robert William Cochran-Patrick, ''Early Records Relating to Mining in Scotland'' (Edinburgh, 1878), pp. 135-6.
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