English: Monumental brass in Sandford Church, Devon, of Mary Carew (1550-1604), wife of Walter II Dowrish, of Dowrish in the parish of Sandford and daughter of Dr. George Carew, Dean of Windsor, 3rd son of Sir Edmund Carew, Baron Carew, of Mohuns Ottery in the parish of Luppitt, Devon. This is the original brass, originally lying on the floor of the church which caused it to become worn, especially on the right side. It was restored in the 19th century by descendants of the Dowrish family and framed in a new brass frame decorated with heraldry of the Dowrich family (not shown here). The upper part of this brass is in three sections, comprising an arcade of three arches; under the central arch is a recumbent effigy of the deceased lying on an altar-tomb, with above her an escutcheon showing Dowrish (
Argent, a bend cotised sable a bordure engrailed of the last) impaling Carew (
Or, three lions passant sable); under the two flanking arches are kneeling effigies of one son and three daughters: under the left arch is shown her only son and heir Thomas VIII Dowrish (1568-1628), with above him the arms of Dowrish impaling Stucley (
Azure, three pears pendant or), and kneeling behind him his eldest surviving sister Dorothy Dowrish, the wife of Thomas II Peyton, Customer of Plymouth, the second son of Thomas I Peyton of St Edmundsbury in Suffolk (a junior member of the ancient Peyton family of Peyton Hall, Boxford, Suffolk, descended from Thomas de Peyton (1418-1484), twice Sheriff of Cambridgeshire and Huntingdonshire (1443 & 1453)who rebuilt the church of St Andrew's in Isleham,[31] in the chancel of which survives his monumental brass[32])[33] by his wife Lady Cecilia Bourchier, a daughter of John Bourchier, 2nd Earl of Bath (1499-1560/61) of Tawstock in Devon. Thomas II Peyton's elder brother was Sir Henry Peyton who married Lady Mary Seymour, a daughter of Edward Seymour, 1st Duke of Somerset, KG, (c.1500–1552) Lord Protector of England from 1547 until 1549 during the minority of his nephew, King Edward VI (1547-1553) and the eldest brother of Queen Jane Seymour (d.1537), the third wife of King Henry VIII.[34] Shown above the kneeling figure of Dorothy Dowrish is an escutcheon showing Peyton (
Sable, a cross engrailed or a mullet in the first quarter argent, with a crescent for difference) impaling Dowrish. On the right of Mary Carew are shown her two younger daughters, both kneeling, with above each an impaled escutcheon, representing the marriage of each, as follows: closest to Mary Carew is shown her 3rd daughter Elizabeth Dowrich (d.post 1631), wife of George Trobridge (1564-1631) of Trobridge,(Vivian, pp.290,738) near Crediton (Pole, pp.227-8), with an escutcheon above showing
Or, over water proper a bridge triple-towered gules(Vivian, p.738) (
Argent, a bridge gules arched with a flag on the top (
Pole, Sir William (d.1635), Collections Towards a Description of the County of Devon,
Sir John-William de la Pole (ed.), London, 1791, p.505)) (Trobridge) impaling Dowrich; kneeling behind Elizabeth is Margaret Dowrich, 4th daughter, the wife of William Linesey of Ifield in Kent, later of Calby in Norfolk,(Vivian, p.290) with an escutcheon above showing
An eagle displayed (Linesey(?)) impaling Dowrich.
. Below is the following inscription:
- "Here lyeth ye body of Mary Dowrich wife & widdowe of Walter Dowrich of Dowrich Esqr onely sister to George Lord Carew, Earle of Totnes. Shee had issue one so(n)ne & three daughters viz: Thomas who married Katherine daughter to John Stukely of Afton, Esqr; Dorothy married to Thomas Peyton of Islam in Camb. Esqr; Elizabeth married to George Trobrydge of Trobridge Esqr and Mary married to William Limsey of Colbye in Norff. Esq.r She departed this life in the true fayth of Jesus Christ the tenth of September An. DNI 1604"