LancashirePast: a recommended website

The gruesome death of Ferdinando Stanley, 5th Earl of Derby

For several years now, Adrian Bowden has been publishing carefully researched and well written articles, chiefly on historic Lancashire properties. His last was on Haighton Manor featured in a recent post here, but put ‘Preston’ in the search box of his LancashirePast website and you’ll discover many more of local interest.

His latest post is something of a departure, dealing as it does with persons rather than properties. The title is Lord Strange’s Men, Knowsley, Lathom and London. Lord Strange was Ferdinando Stanley, the future Earl of Derby. The Stanley family had a long association with Preston, as can be seen today in the many Stanley and Derby placenames around the city.

Here’s the introduction:

‘Lord Strange’s Men was the acting troupe of Ferdinando Stanley, heir to the Earl of Derby, the most powerful noble in Tudor Lancashire. During his patronage, the Men would become embroiled in blasphemy allegations, the fallout from a treasonous plot against the queen, and face losing their livelihoods after his suspected poisoning. History remembers them for having performed William Shakespeare’s first plays, and for the bard joining them in their next incarnation, as both actor and playwright.’

Page from LancashirePast website

The post includes the following gruesome account of the young earl’s final days when it was suspected he had been poisoned. He would have been little relieved by the sore trials inflicted on patients by doctors and ‘local cunning women’ in Elizabethan England:

‘Ferdinando had been hunting for four days at Knowsley, but subsequently on 5th April [1594] he became ill, vomiting three times. The next day, he moved to Lathom, but continued to be sick, and sent for doctors. Thinking he may have been poisoned, he took a number of remedies: a bezoar stone (a mass formed in an animal’s intestines from hairs and undigested fibre) and a ‘unicorn’s horn’ (probably powdered bone or fossil). He also administered an enema, and ate chicken broth that contained a laxative made from rhubarb and the manna ash tree.

‘The doctors did not arrive until the next day, travelling from Chester. In their absence, a local cunning woman had been creating herbal remedies for Ferdinando. The two physicians and two surgeons were professionally suspicious of her, and when they saw her praying (or perhaps mouthing a ‘spell’) over one of her concoctions, they knocked it over and flung her from the room.

‘Ferdinando continued to vomit and had a yellow jaundiced appearance. The doctors suspected a swollen spleen, possibly due to alcoholism. He began to suffer from severe abdominal pain. The doctors’ remedies were both ghastly and useless, and Ferdinando had the sense to refuse some of them. He would not let the doctors bleed him (a common ‘remedy’ that cured nothing) and also declined their suggestion of swallowing some of his own vomit.

‘They administered substances to purge him, and applied “oils and plaisters” to his stomach. They also gave him an opiate of diascordium in syrup of lemon, to enable him to sleep. Despite all of this, the frequent vomiting continued. On the seventh day of his illness, he could not pass urine and the insertion of a catheter did nothing to remedy this. In the end, Ferdinando begged the doctors to stop treating him, and allow him to die. They granted his wish, and after twelve days since the beginning of his illness he passed away, at the age of 35.’

If you’re interested in Shakespeare, Catholic Lancashire and tales of treachery and double dealing, the post is well worth a read: https://lancashirepast.com/2025/04/19/lord-stranges-men-knowsley-lathom-and-london/


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