Lord of the manor of Iron Acton in Gloucestershire
Poyntz Chapel in the Gaunt's Chapel, Bristol, built by Sir Robert Poyntz (died 1520); left: view towards east end formerly occupied by an altar, with Spanish floor-tiles; right: the fan-vaulted ceiling with Poyntz arms impaling Woodville in centre
He was the eldest son and heir of John Poyntz (died 1465/72[4]), of Iron Acton, by his wife Alicia Cocks of Bristol,[5] who survived him and remarried to Sir Edward Berkeley of Beverstone Castle[6] in Gloucestershire. Sir Robert's younger brother was Thomas Poyntz (died 1501), an Esquire of the Body of King Henry VII at the baptism of his first-born son Prince Arthur, who married a certain Jane, the second wife and widow of Walter Devereux, 8th Baron Ferrers of Chartley(c.1432–1485), Knight of the Garter.[7]
Early origins
The Poyntz family of Iron Acton were descended from John Poyntz (d.1376), a younger son of Nicholas Poyntz (d.1311), feudal baron of Curry Mallet in Somerset, by his second wife Matilda (or Maud) de Acton, aunt and heiress in her issue of John de Acton (died 1362) of Iron Acton.[8]
"A testimony of this match apereth by indenture of covenant of the mariag yett extant under the hand and seale of the said Erle, by letters written by the hand of the reverend ffather Morton, Cardinall, also by the armes of the Erle impaled w(i)th Poyntz on the top of a Chappell near Bristowe where they lye buried".
By his wife he had five sons and four daughters including:
Sir Anthony Poyntz (c. 1480 – 1533) of Iron Acton, eldest son and heir;
Sir Francis Poyntz (d. 1528), a diplomatist, third son,[12] of Madeley Castle, Staffordshire. In 1526 he was granted custody of the manor of Holborn, "in the suburbs of London", during the minority of Edward Stanley, 3rd Earl of Derby, and in the same year he received some of the forfeited lands of Edward Stafford, 3rd Duke of Buckingham, of which Madeley was part. He married Jane or Joan, a daughter of Sir Matthew Browne of Betchworth, Surrey, but left no issue. At the request of his eldest brother Anthony, Sir Francis wrote The Table of Cebes the Philosopher, Translated out of Latine into Englishe by Sir Francis Poyngs, which was published in by Berthelet probably about 1530; a copy is in the British Museum Library. He died of the plague in London on 25 June 1528.[12]
Lady Anne Walsh (nee Poyntz) (c. 1492 – 1528), the wife of Lord John Walsh,[13] who was a close associate of King Henry VIII and the Sheriff of Gloucester. The Walshes employed future Protestant martyr and bible translator William Tyndale as a tutor for their sons.[14]
In about 1520,[16] at the end of his life, he built a fine chantry chapel as an addition to the Gaunt's Chapel in Bristol (today known as St Mark's Church, Bristol), to the east end of the south aisle, beyond the tower, known as the "Chapel of Jesus" or "Poyntz Chapel". It should be distinguished from the Poyntz manorial chapel in Iron Acton Church, the family's chapel as lords of the manor and patrons of the advowson. It is fan-vaulted, and has two niches of unknown use on the North wall.[17] The floor is covered with coloured Spanish tiles, probably from Seville and contemporaneous with the building.[18] The center boss of the vaulted ceiling comprises a shield displaying the arms of Poyntz impaling Woodville, representing his marriage. At the entrance to the chapel is sculpted in stone the canting crest of Poyntz, A hand clenched,[19] from the French poigne, "fist".[20]
Death and burial
He died in 1520 and was buried in the Gaunt's Chapel in Bristol (today known as St Mark's Church, Bristol), in which he had built the Poyntz Chapel, his chantry chapel. Two remnants of his chest-tomb survive in the Gaunt's Chapel, being wooden panels decorated with Gothic canopy-work, each showing an heraldic shield. One shows the arms of Poyntz of four quarters ( 1:Poyntz; 2:de Acton; 3:Clanvowe; 4:FitzNichol[21]); the other shows the same first four quarters with an additional six quarters of the Woodville family, thus being the shield of the couple's son.[22] The 5th quarter is Woodville with baton sinister for bastardy.
^Maclean, Sir John & Heane, W.C., (Eds.), The Visitation of the County of Gloucester Taken in the Year 1623 by Henry Chitty and John Phillipot as Deputies to William Camden Clarenceux King of Arms, etc, London, 1885, pp.129,133 (pedigree of Poyntz)
^Maclean, 1885, pp.129,133, regnal dates 12 Edward IV & 5 Edward IV
^Barkly, H. (1885). "The Berkeleys of Dursley during the 13th and 14th Centuries". Transactions of the Bristol & Gloucestershire Archaeological Society. 9: 276.
^Date of building usually given as "1523", which however is three years after the date of his death given as 1520 in the Heraldic Visitations
^M Q Smith, The Medieval Churches of Bristol, University of Bristol (Bristol Branch of the Historical Association), 1970, p. 23