Rowland Lockey (c. 1565–1616) was an English painter and goldsmith, and was the son of Leonard Lockey,[1] a crossbow maker of the parish of St Bride's, Fleet Street, London. Lockey was apprenticed to Queen Elizabeth's miniaturist and goldsmith Nicholas Hilliard[2] for eight years beginning Michaelmas 1581[1] and was made a freeman or master of the Worshipful Company of Goldsmiths by 1600.[3]
He worked mainly as a copyist of earlier portraits to make up sets of oil paintings for the fashionable long galleries of great houses,[3] but signed or documented portrait miniatures on vellum and a signed title page engraving for the 1602 Bishops' Bible also survive.[4]