Nevill Catlin

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Sir Nevill Catlin (1634–1702) (aliter Catlyn, Catelyn, etc.) of Kirby Cane in Norfolk and of Wingfield Castle in Suffolk, England, was a landowner and member of Parliament from a Norfolk family long active in local and national affairs.

Baptised on 3 March 1634, he was the eldest surviving son of Richard Catlin IV (1583–1662) of Kirby Cane, MP, by his second wife Dorothy Neville (1605–1672), a daughter of landowner and politician Sir Henry Nevill (d.1615) of Billingbear, by his wife Anne Killigrew, a daughter of Henry Killigrew.[1] Sir Nevill Catlin's grandfather Thomas Catlin (c.1550-1636; a younger son of Richard Catlin II (1520–1556), MP for Norwich in Norfolk[2]) had purchased the manor of Kirby Cane in 1604.[3] The first cousin of Sir Nevill Catlin's father was Irish judge Sir Nathaniel Catelyn.

Early life

His father had supported the King in the Civil War and had been disabled from sitting in Parliament in 1644 and suffered sequestration of his estate, but was discharged without fine in 1647.[4] His elder half-brother Thomas Catlin died fighting for the royalist side in the Second Battle of Newbury in 1644. His elder half-sister Mary Catlin married Sir Edward Ward, 1st Baronet, of Bixley.[1] In 1650 he entered King's College, Cambridge.

Marriages and issue

Career

References

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