Hello,
You posted this quite a while ago, but I have an interest in pre-1600 historical research and this seemed like an interesting one, so I had a look for you.
As you state in your post, Elizabeth Bevill's family is very well-documented, but there is little in the way of information on her husband, Henry Meggs, Esq. All that I can find in the various pedigrees is his name and that he was indeed Elizabeth's spouse.
I see where you found the "of Cambridgeshire" link, but I cannot find reference to this in any reliable documentation. This seems to come from a few family trees uploaded by hobbyists, which isn't to say it isn't true, but I take this sort of thing with a grain of salt.
I don't know where you got the 1541 birth year or the 1568 marriage year; perhaps you could add your source?
Also, I can't find any children born to this couple. Are you a descendant? If so, could you please add from what child you are descended; naming patterns can often point towards parentage.
I went with the possibility that Henry was indeed connected to Cambridgeshire and took a cursory look at the National Archives. I found a record of a court case between a Henry Meggs and Robert Fyncham concerning the manor of Barton Wisbech and Downham, Cambridgeshire. Downham is in the Isle of Ely. The court case took place in the mid-to-late 1500s.
I then followed the trail into that area of Cambridgeshire and found an interesting possibility...
There was a wealthy landed family of Meggs in the Isle of Ely in the 1500s. The patriarch of the family was a man called Thomas Meggs, Esq. Thomas was the Chief Bailiff of the Isle of Ely, indicating he was a man of stature. His inquisition post-mortem (an early modern record of the death, estate and heir of one of the king's tenants-in-chief) took place in the year 1543-1544.
It is known he had at least 2 sons:
- Nicholas Meggs, heir to his estate
- Henry Meggs
I could be totally wrong, but could this be the Henry who married Elizabeth?
Interestingly, there is a book called
Court & country: studies in Tudor social history ,which mentions a "[Henry] Meggs, born in the Isle of Ely, but married in Cornwall." Unfortunately, it doesn't really say anything else about him, just that he didn't "prosper in Cornwall." It doesn't give an exact year, but seems to cover the 16th century.
Again, this is just a theory, but an interesting one nonetheless!
Queenie
