Roger Manners (c. 1536 – 11 December 1607) was an English courtier and politician.
In a later letter Roger Manners mentioned Mary Radcliffe, a gentlewoman at Elizabeth's court, as a relation.
[2] After St John's College and Corpus Christi Cambridge, Manners served in the navy and was aboard the New Bark at Portsmouth in May 1554.
[5] Manners was a "squire of the body" at the court of Mary I of England and Elizabeth I.
He helped place his great-niece Lady Bridget Manners at court, and smooth things over when her marriage to Robert Tyrwhitt angered the queen.