Paul Bayning, 1st Viscount Bayning
Paul Bayning, 1st Viscount Bayning of Sudbury in Suffolk (1588 – 29 July 1629), previously known as Sir Paul Bayning and as Baron Bayning, was an English landed gentleman, created a peer in 1628.
Life
Bayning was the son of another Paul Bayning, a merchant of
As a young man Bayning inherited large estates in Essex and Suffolk. He made his principal seat at Honingham Hall in Norfolk.[2] He financed and organised James Lancaster's expedition to Recife in April 1595.[3]
On an unknown date before 1613 Bayning married Anne, a daughter of Sir Henry Glemham and Lady Anne Sackville, and their surviving children were Paul (born 1616), Anne, Elizabeth, Mary (born 1623), and Cecilia.[1]
On 24 September 1611
Posterity
After Bayning's death, his daughters made advantageous marriages: his eldest daughter, Anne Bayning, married Henry Murray, a
On the death of the second Viscount Bayning in 1638, the Bayning titles became extinct, while the estates were inherited by Anne Baber. In 1674 she was created
Notes
- ^ a b c d e George Edward Cokayne, Vicary Gibbs, The Complete Peerage of England, Scotland, Ireland, Great Britain and the United Kingdom (Bass to Canning, 1912), p. 37
- ^ a b George Crabb, Universal Historical Dictionary (vol. 1, 1833), p. 32
- ^ França, Jean; Hue, Sheila. Piratas no Brasil. Globo Livro. p. 84.
- Oxford Dictionary of National Biography(Oxford University Press, 2007)