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Vice-Admiral Sir Richard Leveson : ウィキペディア英語版
Richard Leveson (admiral)

Sir Richard Leveson (c.1570 – 2 August 1605)〔.〕 was an important Elizabethan seaman, politician and landowner. His origins were in the landed gentry of Shropshire and Staffordshire. A client and son-in-law of Charles Howard, 1st Earl of Nottingham, he became Vice-Admiral under him. He served twice as MP for Shropshire in the English parliament. He was ruined by the burden of debt built up by his father.
==Family background==
Richard Leveson's parents were
:
*Sir Walter Leveson (1551-1602) of Lilleshall, Shropshire,〔 son of Sir Richard Leveson (d.1560) and Mary Fitton (1529–1591). The family name is pronounced , and could be rendered in many ways in the 16th century, including Lewson, Luson and Lucen. In the late Middle Ages, the Levesons were important wool merchants and minor landowners based in the Wolverhampton area. They became major landowners in Shropshire and Staffordshire mainly through the acquisition of former church lands by Walter's grandfather, James Leveson, after the Dissolution of the Lesser Monasteries. The most important estates were at Lilleshall, where James Leveson had bought first the Abbey〔(Victoria County History: Shropshire, Volume 2, Chapter 14: The Abbey of Lilleshall. )〕 and then the entire manor, and at Trentham, where James bought the lands of the dissolved priory.〔(Victoria County History: Staffordshire, Volume 3, Chapter 16: The Priory of Trentham. )〕 Walter was initially an enclosing and improving landlord, raising the family's profile still further, and serving as MP for Shropshire three times.〔(History of Parliament Online: Members 1558-1603 - LEVESON, Walter (1551-1602) - Author: J.J.C. )〕
:
*Anne Corbet, the daughter of Sir Andrew Corbet of Moreton Corbet, who was vice-president of the powerful Council of Wales and the Marches. The Corbets were very important landowners in Shropshire, supplying knights of the shire through much of the reign of Queen Elizabeth:〔(History of Parliament Online: Constituencies 1558-1603 - Shropshire - Author: P. W. Hasler. )〕 in concert with the Levesons, they could dictate the representation of Shropshire in the English parliament.
The Leveson and Corbet families were the most powerful of the landed gentry families in Shropshire, a county without a resident aristocracy.〔Coulton, Barbara (2010): ''Regime and Religion: Shrewsbury 1400-1700'', Logaston Press ISBN 978 1 906663 47 6, p.40〕 Both underwent a crisis in the late Elizabethan and Jacobean periods as a result of overspending and succession problems, coupled with unwise exposure to the vagaries of the State. In Richard Leveson's case, the problems stemmed almost entirely from his father's impulsive and irrational behaviour, stemming apparently from a serious mental illness.

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