At the creation of the diocese of Peterborough in 1541 most of the possessions of the former monastery were divided between the new bishop and the dean and chapter. The lordship of the liberty or soke of Peterborough went to the bishop, while the urban community, now a city, passed into the hands of the dean and chapter. Not long afterwards, in 1576, Bishop Scambler surrendered his lordship over the liberty and it was granted the following year to Lord Burghley. The dean and chapter, however, having inherited the rights and liberties formerly enjoyed by the abbots in the city, had them confirmed by Queen Elizabeth in 1560 and continued to exercise close control over its affairs. This was particularly significant because Peterborough, overshadowed for centuries by the abbey, had experienced nothing in the way of corporate growth. The dean, appointed by the Crown, was a quasi-mayor and soon began to be called ‘right worshipful’ rather than ‘very reverend’.
The new city, though lacking a corporation, acquired the right to send Members to Parliament. A city or high bailiff, appointed by the dean and chapter, received the election precepts on their behalf and conducted the elections in the moot hall. There is some evidence to suggest that the franchise was restricted originally to householders living within the cathedral precincts, but was very soon extended to include all those paying ‘scot and lot’.
Though lords of the city, the Elizabethan deans of Peterborough do not seem to have been active parliamentary patrons. Elections were dominated by the two principal families in the soke, the Cecils and the Fitzwilliams of Milton. Lord Burghley found seats there for several of his relatives. His brother-in-law, Robert Wingfield 1, of Upton, Northamptonshire, was elected three times—evidence survives of Burghley’s intervention on his behalf in 1563
Sir William Fitzwilliam II, head of the Milton family, spent most of Elizabeth’s reign in Ireland, but he seems to have been able to command one of the seats at Peterborough on numerous occasions. He occupied it himself in 1559, and almost certainly replaced Robert Wingfield I for the last session of the 1572 Parliament. His brother John was elected in 1563, and his son William in! 1584 and 1586. Hugh Fitzwilliam (1572) was a distant cousin who lived in Yorkshire. Humphrey Mildmay, who filled the vacancy in 1576 caused by Hugh’s death, was the son of Sir Walter Mildmay, the Northamptonshire county Member, and the brother-in-law of the younger William Fitzwilliam.
Only one Peterborough family, that of Hake, is to be found among the list of MPs for the reign. Thomas Hake (1586) and his son William (1593) were both included among the original group of feoffees in the city. The final Member, Goddard Pemberton, belonged to a Northamptonshire family, but he probably owed his election to his connexions with (Sir)John Stanhope, high steward of the cathedral.
