Elizabeth Brydges
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Elizabeth Brydges (c. 1575–1617) was a courtier and aristocrat, Maid of Honour to Elizabeth I, and victim of bigamy. She was a daughter of Giles Brydges, 3rd Baron Chandos, and Frances Clinton, who lived at Sudeley Castle.
An entertainment for Queen Elizabeth at Sudeley in 1592 presented Elizabeth Brydges as Daphne, articulate, loyal, and chaste. In the pageant "Daphne" escaped from the laurel tree and ran to the queen.[2] Soon after she joined the royal household as a Maiden of Honour.[3]
In December 1593 it was said the "young Earl of Bedford was paying his addresses to Mrs Bridges, the lord Chandos' heir."[4] At court in the 1590s, she obtained money from Charles Lister of New Windsor (d. 1613) and promised to marry him, and he complained in 1598 that he had loaned her more than £3000 and bankrupted himself. Brydges invested £150 of Lister's money in the Earl of Essex's assault on Cadiz.[5] Around this time Brydges may have had some kind of affair with Essex, possibly to be identified as the woman noted by Rowland Whyte as "his fairest B."[6]
One day in 1597 the "fair Mistress Brydges" and "Mrs Russell" (Elizabeth Russell, daughter of Elizabeth Cooke, Lady Russell) took physic, perhaps pretending to be ill to avoid their work, and went together through the privy galleries of the palace to watch men "playing at balloon". Queen Elizabeth was very angry and used "words and blows" against Brydges, and both women were suspended from their duties for three days and had to lodge outside the palace. Rowland Whyte hinted that the queen's storms of anger had arisen from another cause, perhaps Essex's interest in Brydges.[7][8]
In January 1600, as a New Year's Day gift, Brydges gave Queen Elizabeth a doublet of network lawn, cut and tufted up with white knit-work, flourished with silver.[9] During the entertainment at Harefield in August 1602, she was assigned a dozen points (clothing toggles) in the lottery with these verses; "You are in every point a lover true, And therefore fortune gives the points to you."[10]
Elizabeth Brydges bought some of her clothes, and possibly her New Year's Day gifts, from an embroiderer James Sympson. Later, he claimed his bills from 1593, 1596, and 1597 remained unpaid. Sympson charged her £1 for stiffening (starching) and smoothing two skirts of a petticoat, £2 for altering a gown of white silver chamlet, £10 for supplying a new gown of dove colour satin, cut and razed with tinsel, £1 for cobweb lace upon a pair of sleeves of needlework, and 13 shillings four pence for a pair of sleeves of cloth of silver wrought about with strawberry leaves.[11] A "suffkyn" or snoskyn, a kind of muff, of cloth of gold of dove colour cost £5, and could have been a suitable New Year's Day gift.[12]
She was a co-heir of her father Baron Chandos, who died in 1594 with no sons. In June 1602 her cousin, Grey Brydges, who became Baron Chandos, disputed her claims on the family estate, and he attacked and injured her representative Ambrose Willoughby during a legal meeting.[13] Grey's father, William Brydges, 4th Baron Chandos died in November 1602, and the estate was settled and a plan for Elizabeth and Grey to marry was abandoned.[14]
After the death of Queen Elizabeth, Brydges, Lady Finch, and other women went to see King James at Theobalds where, according to Anne Clifford as a sign of the changing times, they were "all lousy" by waiting in Sir Thomas Erskine's chamber.[15] In June 1603 "Mistress Bridges" went to meet the new queen, Anne of Denmark, riding from London with the Countess of Warwick and Anne Vavasour, the Countess of Cumberland and Anne Clifford joined them at Dingley Hall.[16]
