John Aston was the son and heir of John de Aston (fl. 1475) of Parkhall and Heywood by his wife Elizabeth Delves, a daughter of Sir John Delves, of Dodrington, Cheshire.[2]
Aston was made a Knight of the Bath, at the marriage of Prince Arthur, eldest son of Henry VII, with Catherine of Aragon, Infanta of Spain, (afterwards the wife of his younger brother Henry VIII) which was celebrated in the year 1502.[3]
Maitland in his History of London records a charitable association, of which Sir John Aston was one of the members and founders:
There was a very noble Guild, or fraternity, founded in the church of St. Catherine's Hospital, in honor of St. Barbara. It was governed by a master and three wardens. It had two royal founders, King Henry VIII. and Queen Katharine his first wife; and many very high and honourable persons associated themselves as members and founders of the said confraternity ...[7]
Death and burial
Sir John died on 14 March 1523,[4] and he was succeeded by his eldest son Sir Edward Aston of Tixall.[2] Sir John was buried by the side of his wife, in All Saints Church, Church Leigh, the parish church of Leigh, Staffordshire, where a handsome marble monument richly gilded, was erected to her memory. The manor of Leigh (and the manor house known as Park Hall in Church Leigh) was acquired by the Aston family on the marriage of Sir Thomas Aston to Elizabeth de Legh, a sister and co-heiress of Reginald de Legh, of Leigh.[8]
On the top of the monument are the figures of Sir John habited as a knight in complete armour, and his lady lying by him, their hands joined, and elevated in a praying posture, with appropriate emblems of valour and virtue, at the head and feet. The monument stands lengthways against the wall, and on the opposite side are six niches, with two human figures in each. At the head are also three niches, with two figures in each, and at the foot of the monument there are three, each filled with an angel, supporting a coat of arms. Round the verge is this inscription:[9]
Hic jacent corpora Domini Johannis Aston Militis, et Domimæ Johannæ Aston, uxoris ejus, qui quidem Dominus Johannes obiit decimo octavo die Mensis Maii, Anno Domini 1523. Et prædicta Domina Johanna obiit, —— die Mensis —— Anno Dom. 15——.
Marriage and issue
Sir John Aston married Joan Littleton, the daughter and heiress of Sir William Littleton (1450–1507) of Tixhall Hall, Staffordshire, eldest son and heir of Sir Thomas Littleton,[2][11] by his first wife, Ellen Walsh, a daughter of William Walsh/Welsh/Walsshe/Waleys of Wanlip in Leicestershire.[12][13][14] Joan Littleton inherited the manor of Wanlip from her mother, Ellen Walsh. Through this marriage the manor of Tixall also came to the Aston family, having been purchased by Sir Thomas Littleton from the heiress Rosede Wasteneys.[3] Sir John Aston had issue by his wife Joan Littleton including:[15]
Elyn Aston, wife of John Morgan (d.1535) of Mapperton Hall, Dorset. Her arms, with six quarters, impaled by Morgan, survive in a stained glass window in All Saints' Church, Mapperton.[16]
Notes
^"Ashton of Stafford", per Papworth, John Woody, Alphabetical Dictionary of Coats of Arms Belonging to Families in Great Britain and Ireland, Vol.II, London, 1874, p.716; "Ashton of Staffordshire" Burke, Sir Bernard, The General Armory, London, 1884, p.29
^Before Sir John left on the French campaign he made his will dated 24 April 1513, which began "intending to depart over see with our most dreadde soverayne in his royall armee..." (Boddie 1975, p. 272).
^Argent, a fess and in chief three lozenges in fess sable (Aston of Tixhall Hall, Staffordshire; "Ashton of Stafford", per Papworth, John Woody, Alphabetical Dictionary of Coats of Arms Belonging to Families in Great Britain and Ireland, Vol.II, London, 1874, p.716; "Ashton of Staffordshire" Burke, Sir Bernard, The General Armory, London, 1884, p.29; 'Mapperton', in An Inventory of the Historical Monuments in Dorset, Volume 1, West (London, 1952), pp. 153-156. [1]
Richardson, Douglas (2011), Everingham, KimballG. (ed.), Magna Carta Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, vol. III (2nd ed.), SaltLakeCity, ISBN978-1449966393{{citation}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
Boddie, John Bennett (1975) [1954], Virginia Historical Genealogies (illustrated, reprint ed.), Baltimore: Genealogical Pub. Co., pp. 272–273, ISBN9780806300429
This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain: Constable, Sir Thomas Hugh; Clifford, Arthur (1817), A topographical and historical description of the parish of Tixall in the County of Stafford, Paris, p. 243