Sir William Dugdale (September 12, 1605 –
February 10, 1686) was an English antiquary.
He was born at Shustoke, near Coleshill,
Warwickshire, of an old Lancashire family, and he was educated at King Henry VIII School, Coventry. To please his elderly father,
he married at seventeen, and lived with his wife's family until his father's death in 1624, when he went to live at
Fillongley, near Shustoke, an estate formerly purchased for
him by his father. In 1625 he purchased the manor of Blythe, near Shustoke, and moved there. He had already shown an inclination for antiquarian studies, and in 1635, meeting
Sir Symon Archer (1581-1662), himself a learned antiquary, who was then employed in collecting
materials for a history of Warwickshire, he accompanied him to London. There he made the
acquaintance of Sir Christopher Hatton, Baron Hatton of Kirby,
Comptroller of the Household, and Thomas Howard, 21st Earl of Arundel, then Earl
Marshal of England.
In 1638 Dugdale was created a pursuivant of arms
extraordinary by the name of Blanch Lyon, and in 1639 he was promoted to
the office of Rouge Croix Pursuivant of Arms in Ordinary. He now had a lodging in
the College of Arms, and spent much of his time in London examining the records in the
Tower and the Cottonian and other collections of manuscripts. In 1641 Sir Christopher
Hatton, foreseeing the war and dreading the ruin and spoliation of the Church, commissioned him to make exact drafts of all the
monuments in Westminster Abbey and the principal churches in England, including
Peterborough Cathedral, Ely Cathedral,
Norwich Cathedral, Lincoln Cathedral.
Newark, Beverley Minster, Southwell Minster, Kingston-upon-Hull, York Minster, Selby Abbey, Chester
Cathedral, Lichfield Cathedral, Tamworth
and Warwick Cathedral.
In June 1642 he was summoned to attend the king at York. When war
broke out Charles deputed him to summon to surrender the castles of Banbury and Warwick,
and other strongholds which were being rapidly filled with ammunition and rebels. He went with Charles to Oxford, remaining there till its surrender during the
final siege of Oxford in 1646. He witnessed the battle of Edgehill, where he made afterwards an exact survey of the field, noting how the armies were
drawn up, and where and in what direction the various movements took place, and marking the graves of the slain. In November 1642
he was admitted MA of the university, and in 1644 the king created
him Chester Herald of Arms in Ordinary.
During his leisure at Oxford he collected material at the Bodleian Library and
college libraries for his books. In 1646 Dugdale returned to London
and compounded for his estates, which had been sequestrated, by a payment of £268. After a visit to France in 1648 he continued his antiquarian researches in London, collaborating
with Roger Dodsworth in his Monasticon Anglicanum, which was published
successively in single volumes in 1655, 1664 and 1673. At the Restoration Dugdale
obtained the office of Norroy King of Arms. In 1677 he was knighted and promoted to the office of Garter Principal
King of Arms, which he held until his death. He died "in his chair" at Blythe Hall in
1686.
Dugdale's most important works are Antiquities of Warwickshire (1656); Monasticon Anglicanum (1655-1673);
History of St Paul's Cathedral (1658); and Baronage of England (1675-1676). His Life, written by himself up
to 1678, with his diary and correspondence, and an index to his manuscript collections, was edited by William Hamper, and
published in 1827.
Succession
References
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