Background Information
Constituency business
County
Date Candidate Votes
1558/59 DRU DRURY 1E371/402(1).
ROBERT COLSHILL 2Ibid.
Dec. 1562 ROBERT HOPTON
THOMAS WILSON
1571 EDWARD STAFFORD II
FRANCIS ALFORD
27 Apr. 1572 CHARLES LYSTER
THOMAS WEST I
13 Jan. 1578 EDWARD LANE vice Lyster, deceased3C219/283/1.
9 Nov. 1584 EDWARD BARKER 4Add. 38823, ff. 17-21.
JAMES ERISIE 5Ibid.
1586 THOMAS COSWORTH
HENRY SOMASTER
20 Nov. 1588 JAMES CLARKE I
EDWARD COSWORTH
1593 SIR WALTER RALEGH
RICHARD REYNELL II
20 Sept. 1597 RICHARD CAREW
JOHN ARUNDELL
29 Sept. 1601 WILLIAM CHOMELEY
GEORGE CHUDLEIGH
Main Article

Mitchell, alias Michael, alias Medishole, was owned by the Arundell family of Lanherne, the lords of the manor with which the borough was co-extensive. The borough government was rudimentary. The parliamentary returns for 1584, 1589 and 1597 state that election was made by the bailiff and burgesses, but the return for 1563 mentions the constable, burgesses and free inhabitants. In 1572 Sir John Arundell of Lanherne is named as one of the burgesses. In that year, and again in 1601, the portreeve is specified but not a constable or bailiff. From 1589 the borough adopted the practice, found elsewhere in Cornwall, of making a separate return for each Member.6Henderson, Essays in Cornish Hist. 55; Rowse, Tudor Cornw. 52; C219/28/15.

The Arundells of Lanherne were probably responsible for the return of the two 1559 Members, but, being Catholics, the family were thenceforward somewhat in eclipse, Sir John Arundell spending some time under house arrest in London. This left the borough open to court patronage, and all four MPs in 1563 and 1571 reflect this. Neither 1572 MP has been certainly identified, but court influence is likely to be the explanation for their return, and also for that of Edward Lane, who replaced Lyster for the third session of that Parliament. Edward Barker (1584) probably owed his return to Walsingham. With the exception of William Chomeley (1601), who may have been Robert Cecil’s nominee, all the remaining MPs, including (Sir) Walter Ralegh, no less, were brought in by the Arundells of Trerice or their kinsmen by marriage, the Carews of Antony. The Arundells of Trerice were distant, and protestant, relatives of the Lanherne branch of the family, with whom they nevertheless remained on good terms. During the minority of John Arundell (b.1576) the patronage was exercised by Richard Carew, bailiff of the borough, who in 1597 took one of the seats with Arundell, then just short of 21, taking the other.7Cam. Misc. ix(3), p. 69; Challoner, Mems. of Missionary Priests, 6, 198; Patten, English Catholics, 162; Cath. Rec. Soc. ii. 239; xxi. 112; xxii. 76; Carew’s Surv. Cornw. ed. Halliday, 19, 221; PRO Index 10217(1).

Author
Notes
  • 1. E371/402(1).
  • 2. Ibid.
  • 3. C219/283/1.
  • 4. Add. 38823, ff. 17-21.
  • 5. Ibid.
  • 6. Henderson, Essays in Cornish Hist. 55; Rowse, Tudor Cornw. 52; C219/28/15.
  • 7. Cam. Misc. ix(3), p. 69; Challoner, Mems. of Missionary Priests, 6, 198; Patten, English Catholics, 162; Cath. Rec. Soc. ii. 239; xxi. 112; xxii. 76; Carew’s Surv. Cornw. ed. Halliday, 19, 221; PRO Index 10217(1).