Peter Wyche (ambassador)

English ambassador and merchant From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Sir Peter Wyche PC (c. 1593 – 7 October 1643) was a London merchant and English Ambassador to the Ottoman Empire from 1627 to 1641.

Preceded bySir Thomas Jermyn
Preceded bySir Thomas Roe
Succeeded bySir Sackville Crowe
Quick facts The Right HonourableSir Peter Wyche, Comptroller of the King's Household ...
Sir Peter Wyche
Comptroller of the King's Household
In office
1641–1643
Preceded bySir Thomas Jermyn
Succeeded byChristopher Hatton, 1st Baron Hatton
British Ambassador to the Ottoman Empire
In office
1627–1641
Preceded bySir Thomas Roe
Succeeded bySir Sackville Crowe
Personal details
Bornc. 1593
Died7 October 1643(1643-10-07) (aged 49–50)
Spouse
Jane Meredith
(m. 1627)
RelationsRichard Saltonstall (grandfather)
Nathaniel Wyche (brother)
Parent(s)Richard Wyche
Elizabeth Saltonstall
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Early life

Wyche was the sixth son of Richard Wyche (1554–1621), a merchant, and his wife Elizabeth (née Saltonstall) Wyche (1556–1626), daughter of Richard Saltonstall, Lord Mayor of London. His brother, Nathaniel Wyche, was a merchant and president of the East India Company.[1][2]

His paternal grandparents were Margaret (née Haughton) Wyche and Richard Wyche, a descendant of the fifteenth-century Lord Mayor of London, Henry Wyche.[3]

Career

Arms of Wyche: Azure, a pile ermine

He was knighted by King Charles I on 16 December 1626, having received instructions from the king on 18 November, after his personal nomination. As ambassador, Wyche arrived at Constantinople on 10 April 1628, and remained at that post until he returned to England in May 1639. He secured a reduction of duty on English cloth. While in Constantinople he gave lodgings to the scholars and travellers John Greaves and Edward Pococke. From December 1637 to August 1640, Pococke resided at the British embassy, where he acted as temporary chaplain to Wyche.[4]

His wife astonished the Sultana by making a visit to the Sultan's harem.[5] It was said that the Sultana was amazed by the farthingales worn by the English ladies, and wondered if all English women had such an unusual shape.[6]

In 1641 he became Privy Counsellor and Comptroller of the King's Household. He was a signer of the King's Declaration of Abhorrence at the idea of making war upon his Parliament. His descendant, Cyril Wyche, reported that Wyche lent Charles I £30,000.

He did not live to see the outcome of the English Civil War, dying at Oxford in late 1643.[7]

Personal life

On 17 April 1627, Sir Peter married Jane Meredith (d. 1660) daughter of Sir William Meredith, in Hanworth Church, Middlesex, England. Together, they were the parents of the following children:[8]

Wyche died at Oxford on 7 October 1643 where he was buried on 7 December 1643, in Christ Church Cathedral in the south aisle, where a monument was erected to his memory.[7] His son Tuscarene died in Aleppo, Syria and Peter's widow was granted administration of his estate in November 1656.

Descendants

Through his son Peter, he was a great-grandfather of Sir Cyril Wyche, 1st Baronet, also the Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary to Russia who was created a baronet in 1729.[10]

Through his daughter Jane, Countess of Bath, he was a grandfather of Charles Granville, 2nd Earl of Bath; Lady Jane Granville (wife of Sir William Leveson-Gower, 4th Baronet);[11] Lady Catherine Granville (wife of Craven Peyton, MP for Boroughbridge);[12] Lady Grace Granville, suo jure 1st Countess Granville (wife of George Carteret, 1st Baron Carteret);[13] and John Granville, 1st Baron Granville of Potheridge.[14]

See also

References

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