William II Canynges (c. 1399–1474) was an
English merchant and shipper from
Bristol, one of the wealthiest private citizens of his day and an occasional royal financier. He served as
Mayor of Bristol five times and as
MP for
Bristol thrice. He was a generous patron of the arts in Bristol, particularly concerning the church of
St Mary Redcliffe
St Mary Redcliffe is an Anglican parish church located in the Redcliffe district of Bristol, England. The church is a short walk from Bristol Temple Meads station. The church building was constructed from the 12th to the 15th centuries, and it ...
in Bristol, "The crown of Bristol architecture". Following the death of his wife Joan in 1467, he renounced civic and commercial life and was ordained a priest in 1468, in which capacity he remained until his death six years later. His tomb effigy in St Mary's later inspired the boy poet
Thomas Chatterton to write the romantic poem "
The Storie of William Canynge".
Background
Canynges was born at
Bristol in 1399 or 1400, a member of a wealthy family of merchants and cloth manufacturers in that city. He was one of the younger of seven children of John Canynges, who died as a young man in 1405, by his wife Joan Wotton. William's eldest brother
Thomas Canynges
Thomas Canynges (fl. 1450) was an English politician who served as Lord Mayor of London from 1456 to 1457.
Background
He was probably born in Bristol before 1399, in a wealthy family of merchants and cloth manufacturers in that city. He was ...
was
Lord Mayor of London in 1456–7, having been elected
Alderman for
Aldgate ward in 1445, and was a
Grocer. William's grandfather William I Canynges (d. 1396) was also a great Bristol merchant and was also five times
Mayor of Bristol and three times MP for
Bristol, in 1383, 1384 and 1386. His second son John Canynges, the father of William II, was also prominent in Bristol civic life, serving twice as mayor and as MP for Bristol in 1383. His wife Joan Wotton survived him and married secondly in about 1408 Thomas Young, twice mayor of Bristol, by whom she had two successful sons, John Young,
Alderman of London,
Grocer and
Lord Mayor of London in 1466, and
Thomas Young (d. 1476) a lawyer of the
Middle Temple,
Recorder of Bristol from 1441 and MP for
Bristol almost continuously, with one break in 1453, between 1435 and 1455. Thomas Young served as the other of Bristol's two MPs during his half-brother William II Canynges's terms as MP in 1450 and 1455, and before 1450 entered into the household of
Richard, Duke of York (d. 1460), the Yorkist contender for heirship to the Throne then occupied by
Henry VI (1422–1461).
Marriage
At some time before 1429 William married Joan Burton, from a prominent Bristol family. Her sister Isabel became the wife of William's half-brother Thomas Young, with whom he served jointly for two terms as MP for Bristol. William and Joan had two sons, who were encouraged by their father to become members of the Gloucestershire
gentry, yet both predeceased him, and thus ended the Canynges dynasty in Bristol. Joan died in September 1467, following which traumatic event William renounced his former life and entered the priesthood.
Mercantile career
Although Canynges benefitted from the wide trade connections of his forebears and a large inheritance, he does not seem to have followed them in the cloth manufacturing industry as his name was never recorded in the
aulnage returns, but rather specialised in the shipping of cloth to south-west Europe. In 1436 he served as Constable of the
Merchants of the Staple, a key post in the wool export trade, and became a
Grocer in 1441, like his half-brother John Young.
Invests in John Sturmey's expedition
He was an investor in the disastrous 1457 Mediterranean venture of fellow Bristol mayor and merchant Robert Sturmey. This was an expedition to the
Aegean Sea seeking to break the Italian
monopoly in trade with the Orient and to set up an English trading post in the Levant. His investors, including Canynges, financed the fitting out of three ships carrying cargoes of cloth, tin and lead. The fleet traded successfully in the Levant but was attacked by
Genoese
Genoese may refer to:
* a person from Genoa
* Genoese dialect, a dialect of the Ligurian language
* Republic of Genoa (–1805), a former state in Liguria
See also
* Genovese, a surname
* Genovesi, a surname
*
*
*
*
* Genova (disambiguati ...
pirates near
Malta which resulted in the loss of two ships, ''Katherine'' and ''Marie''. Sturmey himself lost his life during the incident but his main partner John Heydon managed to return to Bristol. The king fined the Genoese traders in England £6,000 in damages, and imprisoned them and seized their assets until the fine should be paid. This put a stop to further English adventures in the Mediterranean for many years, but prompted a new look to westward lands, which bore fruit under
John Cabot
John Cabot ( it, Giovanni Caboto ; 1450 – 1500) was an Italian navigator and explorer. His 1497 voyage to the coast of North America under the commission of Henry VII of England is the earliest-known European exploration of coastal North ...
in 1497.
Acquires large fleet
He appears to have started to specialise in shipping the goods of others rather than trading on his own account. He owned a fleet of at least ten ships, as is stated in William Worcester's "Itineraries", one of the largest known in England at that time, and is said to have employed 800 sailors. Three of his ships exceeded 200 tons, then considered large: The ''Mary Canynges'' (400 tons), ''Mary Redcliffe'' (500 tons) and the ''Mary and John'' (900 tons). The last was considered by Worcester "a monster" and had cost £2666 13s. 4d. to build. His combined tonnage was almost 3,000 tons.
Trade with Scandinavia
Canynges also traded towards Scandinavia, exporting cloth and filling his homeward bound ships with fish. By special licence from the king of
Denmark he enjoyed for some time a
monopoly of the fish trade between
Iceland,
Finland and England, and he also competed successfully with the Flemish merchants in the
Baltic Sea, obtaining a large share of their business.
Political career
Canynges's civic career started in 1432 with his appointment as
bailiff
A bailiff (from Middle English baillif, Old French ''baillis'', ''bail'' "custody") is a manager, overseer or custodian – a legal officer to whom some degree of authority or jurisdiction is given. Bailiffs are of various kinds and their offi ...
of Bristol and in 1438 as
Sheriff
A sheriff is a government official, with varying duties, existing in some countries with historical ties to England where the office originated. There is an analogous, although independently developed, office in Iceland that is commonly transla ...
. He was five times
mayor of Bristol, first in September 1441 when still aged under 40. He served as Mayor also in 1449, 1456, 1461 and 1466. He was elected three times as MP for
Bristol, in 1439, 1450–1 and 1455.
Interaction with royalty
At Bristol in 1456 he entertained Queen
Margaret of Anjou
Margaret of Anjou (french: link=no, Marguerite; 23 March 1430 – 25 August 1482) was Queen of England and nominally Queen of France by marriage to King Henry VI from 1445 to 1461 and again from 1470 to 1471. Born in the Duchy of Lorrain ...
, consort of the
Lancastrian King
Henry VI (1422–1461). William's half-brother Thomas Young, whilst serving with him as the Bristol MPs in 1450, had proposed a motion in Parliament for the recognition of his Yorkist royal patron
Richard, Duke of York (d. 1460) as heir to Henry's throne, for which action he was imprisoned. Canynges appears to have shared his half-brother's support for the Yorkist cause as in 1450 during his third term as mayor he prevented the sale in Bristol of gunpowder intended for use against the Duke. He also occupied Bristol Castle on the Duke's instructions, holding it against his rival
Edmund Beaufort, 2nd Duke of Somerset (d. 1455). Whilst mayor in September 1461, following Henry's deposition in that year, Canynges received in Bristol the Duke's son, the new
Yorkist King
Edward IV
Edward IV (28 April 1442 – 9 April 1483) was King of England from 4 March 1461 to 3 October 1470, then again from 11 April 1471 until his death in 1483. He was a central figure in the Wars of the Roses, a series of civil wars in England ...
(1461–1483), to whom he loaned 500 marks.
Patron of arts
Canynges undertook at his own expense the great work of rebuilding the great Bristol church of
St Mary Redcliffe
St Mary Redcliffe is an Anglican parish church located in the Redcliffe district of Bristol, England. The church is a short walk from Bristol Temple Meads station. The church building was constructed from the 12th to the 15th centuries, and it ...
, and for a long time had a hundred workmen in his regular service for this purpose. He added to its jewels and equipment, and founded two
chantries in 1466 and 1467 to which were attached two priests. He created an endowment of £340 to re-establish the two "St Mary priests" and three clerics. His house in Bristol with a fine
Perpendicular Gothic
Perpendicular Gothic (also Perpendicular, Rectilinear, or Third Pointed) architecture was the third and final style of English Gothic architecture developed in the Kingdom of England during the Late Middle Ages, typified by large windows, four-c ...
oak roof was still standing in 1884.
[''Encyc. Brit.'' op. cit. 1884] His contemporary John Shipward (d. 1473), a fellow Bristol merchant was a similarly generous patron of Bristol arts, having financed the building of the tower of
St Stephen's Church. Both followed in the footsteps of Walter Frampton (d. 1357), thrice Mayor of Bristol, who funded the building of the
Church of St John the Baptist, Bristol.
Takes Holy Orders
The death of his wife Joan in September 1467 was a turning point in Canynges's life, for he gave up his commercial and political life for the cloister. Before the
Dissolution of the Monasteries Bristol was within the
Diocese of Worcester, and it was under the care of
Bishop John Carpenter of Worcester(d.1476) that his transformation to the clergy occurred. He first obtained the post of
rector
Rector (Latin for the member of a vessel's crew who steers) may refer to:
Style or title
*Rector (ecclesiastical), a cleric who functions as an administrative leader in some Christian denominations
*Rector (academia), a senior official in an edu ...
of St Alban's, Worcester, and was admitted by the bishop on 19 September 1467 to the order of
acolyte, and ordained priest by him on 16 April 1468. He was appointed a
canon of the Collegiate Church of
Westbury-on-Trym and
prebendary of Goodringhill. He said mass for the first time in St Mary Redcliffe, the church to which he had been a generous patron, the following
Whitsuntide. He moved his residence from Redcliffe to Westbury where he became
dean in June 1469, and where he remained until his death five years later in 1474.
Death and burial
Canynges died on 17 or 19 November 1474
and was buried in
St Mary Redcliffe
St Mary Redcliffe is an Anglican parish church located in the Redcliffe district of Bristol, England. The church is a short walk from Bristol Temple Meads station. The church building was constructed from the 12th to the 15th centuries, and it ...
Church, Bristol, where a canopied stone tomb was erected in the south aisle in his memory containing his effigy in red velvet mayoral robes, next to that of his wife Joan. A funeral service was held at
Westbury-on-Trym, where a very high quality sculpted
alabaster effigy of him was placed, dressed in clerical attire. Following the
Dissolution of Westbury, the effigy was moved to St Mary Redcliffe Church, where it is now situated adjacent to the original monument, against the south wall of the south aisle. The tombstone of Canynges's cook is set into the pavement nearby, decorated with incised cooking utensils of knife and sieve.
Descendants
The statesman
George Canning
George Canning (11 April 17708 August 1827) was a British Tory statesman. He held various senior cabinet positions under numerous prime ministers, including two important terms as Foreign Secretary, finally becoming Prime Minister of the Unit ...
, and
Stratford Canning, 1st Viscount Stratford de Redcliffe, were descendants of his family.
References
Sources
Pryce, George. Memorials of the Canynges Family and their Times, Bristol, 1854*''Oxford Dictionary of National Biography'', 2004, Vol. 9, pp. 970–971
*
Further reading
*Williams, E. E., The Chantries of William Canynges in St Mary Redcliffe, Bristol, with a Survey of Chantries in General and some Events in the Lives of the Canynges Family, 1950
*Sherborne, J., William Canynges 1402–1474, 1985
*Carus-Wilson, E. M., The Overseas Trade of Bristol in the Later Middle Ages, 2nd Ed., 1967
*Carus-Wilson, E. M., Medieval Merchant Venturers, 1954
*Harvey, J. H., (Ed.), Itineraries of William Worcestre, 1969
Dellaway, Rev James. Antiquities of Bristow in the Middle Centuries Including the ''Topography'' by William Wyrcestre and the Life of William Canynges, Bristol, 1834 pp. 166–212
{{DEFAULTSORT:Canynges, William
1399 births
1474 deaths
15th-century English businesspeople
High Sheriffs of Bristol
Mayors of Bristol
Merchants of the Staple
Businesspeople from Bristol