Mary Darnall
F, #11761
Last Edited | 10 Aug 2008 |
Mary Darnall died at Maryland, USA. She married Charles Calvert 3rd Lord Baltimore, son of Cecil Calvert 2nd Lord Baltimore and Hon. Anne Arundell, circa 1660
; his 1st wife.1,2
.1
; his 1st wife.1,2
.1
Family | Charles Calvert 3rd Lord Baltimore b. 27 Aug 1637, d. 21 Feb 1714/15 |
Citations
- [S673] David Faris, Plantagenet Ancestry of Seventeenth-Century Colonists: The Descent from the Later Plantagenet Kings of England, Henry III, Edward I, and Edward III, of Emigrants from England and Wales to the North American Colonies before 1701, English Ancestry Series, Volume 1, Second Edition (Boston, MA: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1999), p. 67. Hereinafter cited as Faris [1999] - Plantagenet Ancestry.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website (oiginated by Leo van de Pas, continued by Ian Fettes), online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Charles Calvert: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00186720&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
Jane Lowe Lady Baltimore1,2,3
F, #11762, b. 14 October 1633, d. 19 January 1700/1
Father | Vincent Lowe Esq., of Denby, co. Derby1,2,4,5 b. 1594, d. a 1640 |
Mother | Anne Cavendish1,2,6 |
Last Edited | 26 Jan 2014 |
Jane Lowe Lady Baltimore was born on 14 October 1633 at Denby, Derbyshire, England.1 She married Col. Henry Sewall, son of Richard Sewall of Nuneaton, Warwickshire and Mary Dugdale, before 1650 at England
; her 1st husband.1,2,3,7 Jane Lowe Lady Baltimore married Charles Calvert 3rd Lord Baltimore, son of Cecil Calvert 2nd Lord Baltimore and Hon. Anne Arundell, circa 1667
; her 2nd husband; his 2nd wife.8,9,1,2,10,3
Jane Lowe Lady Baltimore died on 19 January 1700/1 at co. Middlesex, England, at age 67.8,1,2,3
Jane Lowe Lady Baltimore was buried after 19 January 1700/1 at St. Giles-in-the-Field Church, co. Middlesex, England.1,3
; Jane Lowe*
Birth: 14 Oct 1633, Denby, co. Derby[4]
Death: 19 Jan 1700, Middlesex, England[10]
Burial: St. Giles-in-the-Field church, Middlesex
Occ: Lady Baltimore
she m. 1stly Henry Sewall,
2ndly (as 2nd wife) Charles Calvert, Lord
Baltimore[10];[4];[11].
Raised grandson Notley Rozer after death of his father in 1681[12](son
Nicholas Sewall was guardian of Notley Rozer per indenture of
1682[13])
d. intestate, 19 Jan 1700/01 [Barnes, p.2[14] ]
Spouse: Henry Sewall
Birth: aft 1622[4]
Death: bef 17 Apr 1665[4]
Father: Richard Sewall (-<1638)
Mother: Mary Dugdale (1597-ca1648)
Marr: bef 1650, England[15]
Children: Anne (ca1651-1693)
Elizabeth (<1651-<1710)
Nicholas (ca1655-1737)
Mary (1658-1693)
Jane
Other Spouses Charles Calvert, 3rd Lord Baltimore
Ravilious cites:
4. Robert W. Barnes, "British Roots of Maryland Families," Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc., 1999.
10. David Faris, "Plantagenet Ancestry of Seventeenth-Century Colonists" Boston: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1999, (2nd edition, 1999).
11. "Charles Calvert; article in American National Biography," David W. Jordan (J. Garraty, M. Carnes, gen editors), Oxford Univ. Press, 1999, Vol. 4, pp. 242-244.
14. "Robert Barnes," "JANE LOWE SEWALL CALVERT: GOVERNOR'S LADY AND LAND BARONESS ", The Archivist's Bulldog, vol. 13, No. 12 (June 28, 1999) p. 2, The Archivist's Bulldog - Newsletter of the Maryland State Archives.1
; Subject: Descent from Richard III of Normandy to Jane Lowe (Grey of Sandiacre)
From: Therav3@aol.com
Date: Fri, 22 Oct 2004 09:48:10 EDT
To: GEN-MEDIEVAL-L@rootsweb.com
Friday, 22 October, 2004
Dear Douglas, Leo, et al.,
First Doug, thanks for your post of yesterday, Grey of Sandiacre/Hillary/Marmion>, which provides additional links
for the ancestry of Sir Edward Hillary (d. 1362).
And to Leo, for the details provided at www.genealogics.org
as to the ancestry of the Leekes of Hasland, co. Derbys. which
includes Sir Edward Hillary and his wife Alice de Grey.
Following is a pedigree from Richard III, Duke of Normandy
(d. 1027) to the emigrant Jane Lowe (wife of Henry Sewall, 2ndly of
Charles Calvert, Lord Baltimore), which provides the link through
the family of Grey of Sandiacre.
~ This will be of interest to those Cavendish descendants who
are members of the list (Peter, Adrian & c.) and others besides.
Cheers,
John *
1 Richard III of Normandy [5062]
----------------------------------------
Birth: ca 0997[1]
Death: 6 Aug 1027[2]
Occ: Duke of Normandy 1026-1027
Father: Richard II of Normandy (0978-1026)
Mother: Judith of Rennes (-1017)
re: Richard III, Robert of Torigny wrote
"Successit ei filius ejus Ricardus tercius. Hic genuit Nicolaum,
postea abbatem Sancti Audoeni, et duas filias, Papiam videlicet
uxorum Walterii de Sancto Walerico, et Aeliz, uxorem Ranulfi
vicecomitis de Baiocis."
(Roughly:) He was succeeded by his son Richard III. To him was
born Nicholas, who became abbot of St. Ouen, and two daughters,
Papia that married Walter de St. Valery and Alice, married to
Ranulf, Vicount of Bayeux. '[1]
Papia, wife of Walter (or Guilbert) de St. Valery is identified
as daughter of Richard III in error.[1],[3]
Spouse: NN [not married]
Children: Nicholas, abbot of St. Ouen
Adeliz
1.1 Adeliz of Normandy[1] [10542]
----------------------------------------
illegitimate daughter[4]
'At the beginning of Duke William's reign the vicomte of
the Bessin was Rannulf, who was the son of a vicomte
named Anschitil. He married a daughter of Duke
Richard III and was among the defeated rebels at
Val-es-Dunes.....'[2]
Spouse: Ranulf of the Bessin [10541]
Father: Anschitil the Vicomte
Children: Ranulf II (->1089)
1.1.1 Ranulf II of the Bessin [10537]
----------------------------------------
Death: aft Mar 1089[4]
Occ: viscount of the Bessin
'Ranulph, vicomte de Bayeux ' [CP III:166[5]]
Spouse: Maud of the Avranchin [10538]
Father: Richard of the Avranchin (->1074)
Mother: Emma de Conteville
Children: Ranulf III (-ca1129)
NN
Agnes
William le Meschin
1.1.1.1 Ranulf III of the Bessin [4631]
----------------------------------------
Death: ca 1129[5]
Burial: St. Werburg's, Chester[5]
Occ: viscount of the Bessin and the Avranchin; Earl of Chester
Earl of Chester. Also styled "Ranulf le Meschin"
commander of the first wing (army of Henry I) at
battle of Tinchebrai, 28 Sept 1106[6]
held 'extensive lands in Cumberland' , which he
surrendered to Henry I upon his receiving the
earldom of Chester, 1121 [C. W. Hollister[6];
cf. also CP III:166[5]]
* note: evidently still had lands in Cumberland (Carlisle and possibly
elsewhere) at date of grant by David I of Scots to Robert de Brus
in Annandale [Donaldson, p. 19[7]]
Earl of Chester and vicomte of the Avranchin 1121-1129 (successor to
cousin Richard of Avranches, d. 1120 in the White Ship)[5]
Spouse: Lucia of Alkborough [4635]
Birth: ca 1070[8]
Death: 1141[8],[9]
Father: Turold of Bucknall (-<1079)
Mother: NN Malet (-<1083)
Children: Ranulf (-1153)
Adeliza
William (-<1136)
Maud
1.1.1.1.1a Adeliza of Chester* [4633]
----------------------------------------
brought lands in Northampton and Lincoln as her marriage portion
captured at Abergavenny by the Welsh when her husband was slain,
15 Apr 1136; rescued by Miles of Gloucester[5]
she made gifts to the monks of St. Peters, Gloucester for the soul
of her husband:
' ... confirmation by Henry II ("Henricus rex Angliae et dux
Normanniae et Aquitanniae et comes Andegaviae...") of the
prior charter, having to do with the gift of the mill at Olney
and that at 'Taddeswell'. This confirmation reads in part,
" Praecipio quod sine dilatione et juste faciatis habere abbati
et monachis de Gloucestria' quos comes Ranulfus eis dedit
in molendinis de Olneyo et de Taddeswelle, sicut carta
testatur. " '[10]
Rosie Bevan wrote:
' There are three additional confirmation charters containing
references to Alice, sister of Ranulph, earl of Chester, and wife of
Richard fitz Gilbert in St Peter's cartulary, which confirm what you
are both saying. It's interesting to see three different versions of
her name.
Vol. I p.104
"...Ranulphus comes Cestriae dedit deo et monachis Sancti Petri
Gloucestriae quadraginta solidos annuos in molendino de Oleneye, jure
haereditario. Confirmat etiam molendinum de Taddewell quad dedit
Alicia soror ejus pro anima Ricardi filii Gilberti viri sui, tempore
Hamelini abbatis..."
vol I p.351
"...quadraginta solidos in molendino Olneye de dono Ranulfi comitis
Cestriae; et molendinum de Tadwalla quod dedit eidem ecclesiae Adeliza
soror ejusdem comitis pro anima viri Ricardi filii Gilberti..."
vol II p. 127 Henry II's confirmation
"...quadraginta solidos in molendino Olneye de dono Rannulphi comitis
Cestriae; et molendinum de Tadwella quod dedit eidem ecclesiae Attelysa
soror ejusdem comitis pro anima viri Ricardi filii Gilberti..."
Olneye is Olney, Bucks, and Tadwell is Tathwell, Lincs.
Cheers, Rosie '[11]
she m. lstly Richard de Clare,
2ndly Robert de Condet/Cundy
Spouse: Richard de Clare [1st husband]
Death: 15 Apr 1136, near Abergavenny (slain)[5]
Father: Gilbert de Clare (-ca1117)
Mother: Adeliza de Clermont
Children: Alice (->1147)
Gilbert de Clare(-1152)
Roger fitz Richard de Clare(-1173)
Rohese (->1156)
Lucy
1.1.1.1.1b Adeliza of Chester* (See above) [4633]
----------------------------------------
Spouse: Robert de Condet [12459]
Death: ca 1141[12]
Father: Osbert de Condet
Mother: Adelaide de Chesney
Marr: aft 15 Apr 1136
Children: Isabel (>1136->1165)
1.1.1.1.1b.1 Isabel de Condet[5] [10564]
----------------------------------------
Birth: aft 1136
Death: aft 1165[12]
had manor of South Carlton, co. Lincoln as her maritagium [Grimston, co. Notts either her inheritance or also part of her maritagium][13]
identified as daughter of Robert de Condet and Adeliza 'le Meschin'[12], and
as granddaughter of Ranulf, Earl of Chester[12]
[supported by indication of the lands of her maritagium]
Spouse: Hugh Bardolf
Death: ca 1176[12]
Father: NN Bardolf
Children: Beatrice (-<1225)
Hugh (->1197)
Robert (-<1225)
NN
NN (-<1225)
Juliana (-<1218)
Matilda (->1225)
1.1.1.1.1b.1.1 NN Bardolf
----------------------------------------
unnamed daughter
died before 1 July 1225, on which date her daughter Iseude was recorded
as having done homage for his inheritance of her uncle, Robert
Bardolf[14],[15]
Spouse: NN
Children: Iseude (-<1246)
1.1.1.1.1b.1.1.1 Iseude[5] [23382]
----------------------------------------
Death: bef 18 Jun 1246[5]
identified as daughter of Hugh Bardolf in CP (Grey)[5]
her maritagium included the manor of Codnor
'Isolde de Gray',
correctly identified as niece of Robert Bardolf, fine of 1 July 1225:
performed homage and had livery of her purparty of the lands of uncle
Robert Bardolf, 1 Jul 1225[5]: a fine of that date records,
' D’ homag capto. Dns Rex cep homag JORD’ FOLIOT ISOLD’ DE
GRAY ’t RAD’ PAYNEL de portoibs suis
q eos coting de tris q fuut ROB’TI BARDULF’ avuncli sui q’s de dno R.
tenuit i cap ’t mand est Vic Kanc qd accepta ab eis sec’itate de
relevio suo dno R. reddendo q’tu p jud curie dni R. inde redde
debuint: plena eis saisina hre fac de portoibs suis ipos heditar
ctingetibs de tris pdcis i balla sua, accepta & ead sec’itate a
ROB’TO LUPO loco MATILD’ BARDULF’ mris sue q est una hedu
pdci Robti de relevio suo dno R. reddendo q’tu ad ipam ptin t
p pte sua silr eid Rob pl saisina hre fac loco mat’s sue de portoe
ipam heditar cting de tris pdcis. Portoem vo ctingente fil ’t hede
HUG’ POINZ qui similr e unus hedu ipius Robti ’t inf’ etate est
’t i custodia dni R. salvo custodiat don dns R. aliud inde pcepit.
T. R. ap Westm j. die Jul. ' Excerpta e Rotulis Finium, I:129[14]
Spouse: Sir Henry de Grey of Thurrock [23399]
Death: 1219[5]
Children: Sir Richard de Grey of Codnor(-<1271)
Sir John de Grey of Shirland, co. Derbys.(-<1265)
Sir William (-<1268)
1.1.1.1.1b.1.1.1.1 Sir William de Grey [51498]
----------------------------------------
Death: bef 10 Feb 1268[5]
knt., of Sandiacre, co. Derbys.
cf. CP VI:165[5]
Children: Sir Richard (-<1298)
1.1.1.1.1b.1.1.1.1.1 Sir Richard de Grey
----------------------------------------
Death: bef 26 May 1298[5]
knt., of Sandiacre, co. Derbys.
summoned to attend the King at Shrewsbury by writ dated 28 June 1283,
directed 'Ricardo de Grey' [CP VI:166]
' In 1294 Richard de Grey and Lucy his wife settled the manor of
Erliston [Arleston] which was of her right on Lucy, da. of the said
Richard de Grey, and the heirs of her body; and the manor of
Sutton-in-Dale (also of the right of Lucy, the wife) on Henry de
Sutton for life (Feet of Fines, Derby, Mich. 22 Edw. I). '
[CP VI:166, note (d)[5]]
cf. CP VI:165-6[5]
Spouse: Lucy
Children: Lucy
William (-<1298)
1.1.1.1.1b.1.1.1.1.1.1 William de Grey
----------------------------------------
Death: bef 26 May 1298, d.v.p.[5]
heir of his father [CP VI:166[5] ]
Spouse: Joan
Children: Richard (ca1288-<1310)
1.1.1.1.1b.1.1.1.1.1.1.1 Richard de Grey
----------------------------------------
Birth: ca 25 Mar 1288[5]
Death: bef 24 Dec 1310[5]
of Sandiacre, co. Derbys.
cf. CP VI:166[5]
Spouse: Felicia
Children: Sir William (ca1307-1369)
1.1.1.1.1b.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1 Sir William de Grey
----------------------------------------
Birth: ca 1307[5]
Death: 1369[5]
of Sandiacre, co. Derbys.
cf. CP VI:167[5]
Children: Alice
1.1.1.1.1b.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1 Alice de Grey
----------------------------------------
heir of her father
cf. CP VI:167 and note (g)[5]
Spouse: Sir Edward Hillary
Death: 1362[5]
Father: Henry Hillary
Children: John (<1355-1403)
1.1.1.1.1b.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1 John Grey
----------------------------------------
Birth: bef 1355[5]
Death: 6 Sep 1403[5]
of Sandiacre, co. Derbys.
Sheriff of Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire, 1395[5]
birth name John Hillary:
' after his father's death in the custody of his grandfather, Sir
William de Grey. On or before 13 May 1390 he assumed the name of
Grey. ' [5]
cf. CP VI:168[5]
Genealogics I00272015[16], cites The Lineage and Ancestry of
H.R.H. Prince Charles, Prince of Wales Edinburgh, 1977.,
Gerald Paget, Reference: Q 116505
Spouse: Emma
Children: Isabel (ca1377-)
Alice (ca1382-)
1.1.1.1.1b.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1 Alice Grey
----------------------------------------
Birth: ca 1382[5]
coheir of her father
cf. CP VI:168[5]
Genealogics I00272014[16], cites The Lineage and Ancestry of
H.R.H. Prince Charles, Prince of Wales Edinburgh, 1977.,
Gerald Paget, Reference: Q 116505
Spouse: John Leek, Esq.
Children: William
1.1.1.1.1b.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1 William Leek [59106]
----------------------------------------
of Lakeford
cf. Genealogics #I00105387[16] [cites The Lineage and Ancestry of H.R.H. Prince Charles, Prince of Wales Edinburgh, 1977., Gerald Paget, Reference: P 58253]
Spouse: Catherine Chaworth
Father: Sir Thomas Chaworth
Mother: Isabel Aylesbury
Children: Thomas
1.1.1.1.1b.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1 Thomas Leeke [63271]
----------------------------------------
of Hasland, co. Derby[17]
as part of the marriage arrangement for his daughter Muriel,
entered into a contract dated 20 Dec 1510 (also 12 Feb 1510/1):
' Gift: Robert Lynacre of Bramton to Thomas Leeke of Hasland
Robert Barlow esq., Oliver Flynnt clerk, and Henry Eyre
gent.:-- manor of and all his property in Hasland. All his
property in Hakynthorpe and elsewhere in co. Derby--: To the
use of R.L. for life, then to his son George Lynacre and Muriel
Leeke, daughter of T.L. and the heirs of their bodies. Power of
attorney to Robert Cawse yeoman to deliver seisin. Endorsed
with memorandum of livery of seisin. Witn. Roger Fletcher,
Richard Alwod, Robert Wydoson and Thomas Shaw.' - PRO,
Nottinghamshire Archives: Portland of Welbeck: Cavendish
Deeds [DD/P/CD/119][18]
cf. Genealogics #I00105383 [16] [cites The Lineage and Ancestry of H.R.H. Prince Charles, Prince of Wales Edinburgh, 1977., Gerald Paget, Reference: O 29127]
Spouse: Margaret Fox
Father: William Fox
Children: Elizabeth
Muriel
1.1.1.1.1b.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1 Elizabeth Leeke [63273]
----------------------------------------
m. 2ndly Ralph Leche of Chatsworth[17]
Spouse: John Hardwick
Birth: ca 1495[17],[19]
Death: 24 Jan 1527[17]
Father: John Hardwick (ca1470-1506)
Mother: Elizabeth Pinchbeck
Marr: 1512[17]
Children: James
Mary
Dorothy
Alice
Elizabeth (ca1521-1607)
Jane
1.1.1.1.1b.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1 Elizabeth Hardwick [20086]
----------------------------------------
Birth: ca 1521[17]
Death: 13 Feb 1607, Hardwick Hall, co. Derby[17]
Burial: Allhallows, co. Derby[17]
Occ: Countess of Shrewsbury
the famed "Bess of Hardwick"
fourth daughter and coheiress;
married 1stly Robert Barlow;
2ndly Sir William Cavendish,
3rdly William St. Lo, captain of the Guard to Queen
Elizabeth [she was then Lady of the Bedchamber and confidante to Queen Elizabeth]
4thly George Talbot, 9th Earl of Shrewsbury
[Countess of Shrewsbury by this marriage][17]
disinherited her eldest son Henry Cavendish by a resettlement of her
estate, largely on her younger sons:
' 25 Oct. 1594 [1613]
' Reciting settlement of manor of Blackwall and Merston, and premises
there and in Asheford, Topcliffe, Kingsternedale, Cowdall, Stenden
alias Staden, Fayrefeilde, Bradwall, Buxton, Chappell en le Frithe,
Shalcrosse, Haselbache, Monyashe, Hollington, Gryndlowe and
Yolgrave (Db.) to use of her for life as inheritance of late husband
Sir Wm. Cavendish, then to Hen. Cavendish; now revokes this re.
Topcliffe and others to and including Monyashe, which are to her for
life, then to Sir Chas. Cavendish, with entail; in default in turn to
Wm. and Hen. Cavendish with entails, then jointly to Arabella Steward
(d. of Earl of Lennox and wife Eliz. Cavendish, Mary (Cavendish), wife
of Gilbert, Earl of Shrewsbury, and Frances (Cavendish), wife of Hen.
Pierrepont; in default to right heirs of Sir Chas. Cavendish.' - PRO,
Nottinghamshire Archives: Portland of Welbeck (4th Deposit):
Estate Papers [DD/4P/46/2][18]
Spouse: William Cavendish [20087]
Birth: ca 1505
Death: 25 Oct 1557[17]
Father: Thomas Cavendish (-1524)
Mother: Alice Smith (-1515)
Marr: 20 Aug 1547[17]
Children: Henry (1550-1616)
William (ca1552-1625)
Elizabeth
Sir Charles (-1617)
Mary
Frances
1.1.1.1.1b.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1 Henry Cavendish [55471]
----------------------------------------
Birth: 17 Dec 1550[20]
Death: 12 Oct 1616, d.s.p.l.[17]
Esq., of Tutbury, co. Stafford
M.P. for Derbyshire[21]
friend of Mary, Queen of Scots during her imprisonment at Hardwicke
Hall and at Tutbury[17]
succeeded his father at Tutbury:
'.. Henry, who was several times M.P. for Derbyshire. In 1583 Henry
also secured the rectory: the Crown had granted it in 1578 to a pair
of speculators, and they sold it to another pair, who in turn sold it
to Henry. He conveyed the estate to his younger brother William,
Baron Cavendish (later earl of Devonshire), in 1608, although he
himself was still living at Tutbury in 1614. Henry still held the
rectory in 1612, but on his death in 1616 it presumably passed to
William, whose grandson William, earl of Devonshire held it in 1653.
Tutbury '... consisted of 234 a. in Tutbury and 27 a. of meadow
nearby in Derbyshire..'[22]
Entered into an agreement with his brothers, 10 Dec 1579:
' Bargain and sale, William and Charles Cavendish of Chatsworthe
(Db) re-sell the Manors of Cromforde, Bonsall, Matlocke,
Willersley and Churchebroughton (Db) including lands in above
and also in Hardewicke, Kirkebie in Ashfelde, Kirkebie
Woodehouse, Sutton in Ashfelde, to Henry Cavendish their
brother.' -PRO, Nottinghamshire Archives: Portland of Welbeck
(6th Deposit): Deeds and Estate Papers [DD/P/6/1/1/45 ][18]
disinherited by his mother, evidently for failure to produce issue
(outside of his illegitimate offspring); as noted by Adrian Channing,
he was given the epithet 'The Common Bull to all Derbyshire'[23]
Spouse: NN [not married] [probably several mothers of his various children]
Children: Anne
Henry Cavendish, of Doveridge
Augustus
Charles (->1617)
Thomas
1.1.1.1.1b.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1 Anne Cavendish [67390]
----------------------------------------
illegitimate daughter[17];[24]
Spouse: Vincent Lowe [67389]
Birth: 1594[17]
Death: aft 1640[17]
Father: Patrick Lowe (ca1561->1617)
Mother: Jane Harpur
Children: Grace (1614-)
John (1616-1659)
Anne (1618-)
Beth (1626-)
Catherine (1627-)
Henry (1628-)
Dorothy (1630-)
Vincent (1632-)
Jane (1633-1700)
Nicholas (1639-)
1.1.1.1.1b.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1a Jane Lowe* [11763]
----------------------------------------
Birth: 14 Oct 1633, Denby, co. Derby[24]
Death: 19 Jan 1700, Middlesex, England[17]
Burial: St. Giles-in-the-Field church, Middlesex
Occ: Lady Baltimore
she m. 1stly Henry Sewall,
2ndly (as 2nd wife) Charles Calvert, Lord
Baltimore[17];[24];[25].
Raised grandson Notley Rozer after death of his father in 1681[26]
(son Nicholas Sewall was guardian of Notley Rozer per indenture of
1682[27])
d. intestate, 19 Jan 1700/01 [Barnes, p.2[28] ]
Spouse: Henry Sewall
Birth: aft 1622[24]
Death: bef 17 Apr 1665[24]
Father: Richard Sewall (-<1638)
Mother: Mary Dugdale (1597-ca1648)
Marr: bef 1650, England[29]
Children: Anne (ca1651-1693)
Elizabeth (<1651-<1710)
Nicholas (ca1655-1737)
Mary (1658-1693)
Jane
1.1.1.1.1b.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1b Jane Lowe* (See above) [11763]
----------------------------------------
Spouse: Charles Calvert, Lord Baltimore [2nd husband]
Birth: 27 Aug 1637[30]
Death: 21 Feb 1714[30]
Father: Cecil Calvert (-1675)
Mother: Anne Arundel
Marr: ca 1666[17]
Children: Clare (1670-)
Anne (1673-1731)
Benedict Leonard Calvert, Lord Baltimore(1678-1715)
1. Todd A. Farmerie, "Re: Reginald de St. Valery and His Descendants,"
October 1, 2001, paper copy: library of John Ravilious.
2. David C. Douglas, "William the Conqueror," Univ of California
Press, 1964 (1st of English Monarchs series).
3. Stewart Baldwin, "Re: Reginald de St. Valery and His Descendants,"
September 30, 2001, paper copy: library of John Ravilious, cites
Ordericus Vitalis, Historica Ecclesiastica, Latin from Migne vol.
188 col. 463, English from Forester (1853-6, vol. 2, p. 266).
5. G. E. Cokayne, "The Complete Peerage," 1910 -
The Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and
the United Kingdom.
6. C. Warren Hollister, "Henry I," New Haven: Yale University Press,
2001, [English Monarchs Series].
7. Gordon Donaldson, "Scottish Historical Documents," Edinburgh:
Scottish Academic Press, 1970.
8. Rosie Bevan, "Re: Tallboys," August 28, 2002, paper copy: library
of John P. Ravilious, citations from Rosie Bevan :
rbevan@paradise.net.nz, cites K. Keats-Rohan, 'Antecessor Noster',
in Prosopon 2, and Sanders, English Baronies.
9. I. J. Sanders, "English Baronies: A Study of Their Origin and
Descent, 1086-1327," Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1960.
10. William H. Hart, ed., "Historia et Cartularium Monasterii Sancti
Petri Gloucestriae," Rerum Britannicarum Medii Aevi Scriptores
(London: Longman, Green), 1863, (Title: Rerum ...., or Chronicles
and Memorials of Great Britain and Ireland during The Middle Ages),
available via Gallica: http://gallica.bnf.fr/.
11. Rosie Bevan, "Re: Ancestry of Agnes de Condet/Cundy, wife of Walter
de Clifford," 7 February 2004, cites charters, Cartulary of St.
Peters Gloucester, email rbevan@paradise.net.nz.
12. Frederick L. Weis (add/corr, Walter L Sheppard Jr.), "Ancestral
Roots of Certain American Colonists," Baltimore: Genealogical Pub.
Co., connection of Isabel de Condet and Hugh Bardolf, as cited by
E. Mann, Line 132D-27,-28 in AR7, also, Descendants of Henry I of
Germany (10/30/98), Line 157 (Gerberga of Burgundy to Emperor
Henry III).
13. "Rootsweb Webpages," rootsweb.com/~legends/poyntz.html
14. Charles Roberts, ed., "Excerpta ex Rotulis Finium," The
Commissioners of the Public Records of the Kingdom, Vol I
(1216-1246), 1835, full title: Excerpta e Rotulis Finium in Turri
Londinensi asservatis, Henrico Tertio Rege, A.D. 1216-1272.
15. John P. Ravilious, "Re: DD Correction: the Bardolfs of Ilketshall,
Suffolk, Waddington, Lincs. & c.," January 19, 2003, email,
therav3@aol.com (paper copy: library of John Ravilious, cites
Excerpta e Rotulis Finium, I:129, also Complete Peerage (Grey;
Poyntz; Bardolf);, contributions by Paul Reed, FASG (re: Farrer,
Honors and Knights Fees, ii:17 and others), Todd Farmerie, Cris
Nash and Roz Griston.
16. "Genealogics," website by Leo van de Pas, www.genealogics.com
17. David Faris, "Plantagenet Ancestry of Seventeenth-Century
Colonists," Boston: New England Historic Genealogical Society,
1999, (2nd edition, 1999).
18. "Public Record Office Archives," provided by "Access to Archives",
http://www.a2a.pro.gov.uk/
19. Philip Riden, Consultant Editor, "Victoria County History of
Derbyshire," *draft version, Ault Hucknall,
http://www.englandpast.net/der_draft/index.html
20. Douglas Richardson, "Plantagenet," Jan 20, 2003, email
royalancestry@msn.com.
21. "Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages," Burke's
Peerage, from Genealogy.com Family History: Notable British
Families, p. 460 (Ros).
22. Philip Riden, Consultant Editor, "Victoria County History of
Staffordshire," *draft version, Tutbury,
http://www.englandpast.net/staffs_draft/index.html
23. Adrian Channing, "Anne Cavendish, One of My Gateway Ancestresses,"
Feb 8, 1999, GEN-MEDIEVAL-L@rootsweb.com, followup on Feb 13,
1999 - cites Francis Bickley, 'The Cavendish Family' [1911].
24. Robert W. Barnes, "British Roots of Maryland Families," Baltimore:
Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc., 1999.
25. "Charles Calvert; article in American National Biography," David W.
Jordan (J. Garraty, M. Carnes, gen editors), Oxford Univ. Press,
1999, Vol. 4, pp. 242-244.
26. Nettie Leitch Major, "Rozer - Young - Carroll - Brent: Colonial
Marylanders "Lost" by the Formation of the District of Columbia,"
Maryland Genealogical Society Bulletin, Vol. 19, No. 4, Fall, 1978
[as corrected, Winter 1979 -Vol. 20, No. 1, p. 93], pp. 293 et seq.
27. Effie Gwynn Bowie, "Across the Years in Prince George's County,"
Richmond: Garrett and Massie, Inc., 1916.
28. "Robert Barnes," "JANE LOWE SEWALL CALVERT: GOVERNOR'S LADY AND
LAND BARONESS ", The Archivist's Bulldog, vol. 13, No. 12 (June
28, 1999) p. 2, The Archivist's Bulldog - Newsletter of the
Maryland State Archives,
http://www.mdarchives.state.md.us/msa/refserv/bulldog/bull99/bull13-12/html/bull13-12.html#sewall
29. Debbie Shields, "Shields Genealogy,"
www.debbieshields.com/genealogy/tree12.html
Sept 16, 2000.
30. David Faris, "Plantagenet Ancestry of 17th Century Colonists,"
Baltimore: the Genealogical Pub. Company, 1st ed.
* John P. Ravilious.11
; her 1st husband.1,2,3,7 Jane Lowe Lady Baltimore married Charles Calvert 3rd Lord Baltimore, son of Cecil Calvert 2nd Lord Baltimore and Hon. Anne Arundell, circa 1667
; her 2nd husband; his 2nd wife.8,9,1,2,10,3
Jane Lowe Lady Baltimore died on 19 January 1700/1 at co. Middlesex, England, at age 67.8,1,2,3
Jane Lowe Lady Baltimore was buried after 19 January 1700/1 at St. Giles-in-the-Field Church, co. Middlesex, England.1,3
; Jane Lowe*
Birth: 14 Oct 1633, Denby, co. Derby[4]
Death: 19 Jan 1700, Middlesex, England[10]
Burial: St. Giles-in-the-Field church, Middlesex
Occ: Lady Baltimore
she m. 1stly Henry Sewall,
2ndly (as 2nd wife) Charles Calvert, Lord
Baltimore[10];[4];[11].
Raised grandson Notley Rozer after death of his father in 1681[12](son
Nicholas Sewall was guardian of Notley Rozer per indenture of
1682[13])
d. intestate, 19 Jan 1700/01 [Barnes, p.2[14] ]
Spouse: Henry Sewall
Birth: aft 1622[4]
Death: bef 17 Apr 1665[4]
Father: Richard Sewall (-<1638)
Mother: Mary Dugdale (1597-ca1648)
Marr: bef 1650, England[15]
Children: Anne (ca1651-1693)
Elizabeth (<1651-<1710)
Nicholas (ca1655-1737)
Mary (1658-1693)
Jane
Other Spouses Charles Calvert, 3rd Lord Baltimore
Ravilious cites:
4. Robert W. Barnes, "British Roots of Maryland Families," Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc., 1999.
10. David Faris, "Plantagenet Ancestry of Seventeenth-Century Colonists" Boston: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1999, (2nd edition, 1999).
11. "Charles Calvert; article in American National Biography," David W. Jordan (J. Garraty, M. Carnes, gen editors), Oxford Univ. Press, 1999, Vol. 4, pp. 242-244.
14. "Robert Barnes," "JANE LOWE SEWALL CALVERT: GOVERNOR'S LADY AND LAND BARONESS ", The Archivist's Bulldog, vol. 13, No. 12 (June 28, 1999) p. 2, The Archivist's Bulldog - Newsletter of the Maryland State Archives.1
; Subject: Descent from Richard III of Normandy to Jane Lowe (Grey of Sandiacre)
From: Therav3@aol.com
Date: Fri, 22 Oct 2004 09:48:10 EDT
To: GEN-MEDIEVAL-L@rootsweb.com
Friday, 22 October, 2004
Dear Douglas, Leo, et al.,
First Doug, thanks for your post of yesterday,
for the ancestry of Sir Edward Hillary (d. 1362).
And to Leo, for the details provided at www.genealogics.org
as to the ancestry of the Leekes of Hasland, co. Derbys. which
includes Sir Edward Hillary and his wife Alice de Grey.
Following is a pedigree from Richard III, Duke of Normandy
(d. 1027) to the emigrant Jane Lowe (wife of Henry Sewall, 2ndly of
Charles Calvert, Lord Baltimore), which provides the link through
the family of Grey of Sandiacre.
~ This will be of interest to those Cavendish descendants who
are members of the list (Peter, Adrian & c.) and others besides.
Cheers,
John *
1 Richard III of Normandy [5062]
----------------------------------------
Birth: ca 0997[1]
Death: 6 Aug 1027[2]
Occ: Duke of Normandy 1026-1027
Father: Richard II of Normandy (0978-1026)
Mother: Judith of Rennes (-1017)
re: Richard III, Robert of Torigny wrote
"Successit ei filius ejus Ricardus tercius. Hic genuit Nicolaum,
postea abbatem Sancti Audoeni, et duas filias, Papiam videlicet
uxorum Walterii de Sancto Walerico, et Aeliz, uxorem Ranulfi
vicecomitis de Baiocis."
(Roughly:) He was succeeded by his son Richard III. To him was
born Nicholas, who became abbot of St. Ouen, and two daughters,
Papia that married Walter de St. Valery and Alice, married to
Ranulf, Vicount of Bayeux. '[1]
Papia, wife of Walter (or Guilbert) de St. Valery is identified
as daughter of Richard III in error.[1],[3]
Spouse: NN [not married]
Children: Nicholas, abbot of St. Ouen
Adeliz
1.1 Adeliz of Normandy[1] [10542]
----------------------------------------
illegitimate daughter[4]
'At the beginning of Duke William's reign the vicomte of
the Bessin was Rannulf, who was the son of a vicomte
named Anschitil. He married a daughter of Duke
Richard III and was among the defeated rebels at
Val-es-Dunes.....'[2]
Spouse: Ranulf of the Bessin [10541]
Father: Anschitil the Vicomte
Children: Ranulf II (->1089)
1.1.1 Ranulf II of the Bessin [10537]
----------------------------------------
Death: aft Mar 1089[4]
Occ: viscount of the Bessin
'Ranulph, vicomte de Bayeux ' [CP III:166[5]]
Spouse: Maud of the Avranchin [10538]
Father: Richard of the Avranchin (->1074)
Mother: Emma de Conteville
Children: Ranulf III (-ca1129)
NN
Agnes
William le Meschin
1.1.1.1 Ranulf III of the Bessin [4631]
----------------------------------------
Death: ca 1129[5]
Burial: St. Werburg's, Chester[5]
Occ: viscount of the Bessin and the Avranchin; Earl of Chester
Earl of Chester. Also styled "Ranulf le Meschin"
commander of the first wing (army of Henry I) at
battle of Tinchebrai, 28 Sept 1106[6]
held 'extensive lands in Cumberland' , which he
surrendered to Henry I upon his receiving the
earldom of Chester, 1121 [C. W. Hollister[6];
cf. also CP III:166[5]]
* note: evidently still had lands in Cumberland (Carlisle and possibly
elsewhere) at date of grant by David I of Scots to Robert de Brus
in Annandale [Donaldson, p. 19[7]]
Earl of Chester and vicomte of the Avranchin 1121-1129 (successor to
cousin Richard of Avranches, d. 1120 in the White Ship)[5]
Spouse: Lucia of Alkborough [4635]
Birth: ca 1070[8]
Death: 1141[8],[9]
Father: Turold of Bucknall (-<1079)
Mother: NN Malet (-<1083)
Children: Ranulf (-1153)
Adeliza
William (-<1136)
Maud
1.1.1.1.1a Adeliza of Chester* [4633]
----------------------------------------
brought lands in Northampton and Lincoln as her marriage portion
captured at Abergavenny by the Welsh when her husband was slain,
15 Apr 1136; rescued by Miles of Gloucester[5]
she made gifts to the monks of St. Peters, Gloucester for the soul
of her husband:
' ... confirmation by Henry II ("Henricus rex Angliae et dux
Normanniae et Aquitanniae et comes Andegaviae...") of the
prior charter, having to do with the gift of the mill at Olney
and that at 'Taddeswell'. This confirmation reads in part,
" Praecipio quod sine dilatione et juste faciatis habere abbati
et monachis de Gloucestria' quos comes Ranulfus eis dedit
in molendinis de Olneyo et de Taddeswelle, sicut carta
testatur. " '[10]
Rosie Bevan wrote:
' There are three additional confirmation charters containing
references to Alice, sister of Ranulph, earl of Chester, and wife of
Richard fitz Gilbert in St Peter's cartulary, which confirm what you
are both saying. It's interesting to see three different versions of
her name.
Vol. I p.104
"...Ranulphus comes Cestriae dedit deo et monachis Sancti Petri
Gloucestriae quadraginta solidos annuos in molendino de Oleneye, jure
haereditario. Confirmat etiam molendinum de Taddewell quad dedit
Alicia soror ejus pro anima Ricardi filii Gilberti viri sui, tempore
Hamelini abbatis..."
vol I p.351
"...quadraginta solidos in molendino Olneye de dono Ranulfi comitis
Cestriae; et molendinum de Tadwalla quod dedit eidem ecclesiae Adeliza
soror ejusdem comitis pro anima viri Ricardi filii Gilberti..."
vol II p. 127 Henry II's confirmation
"...quadraginta solidos in molendino Olneye de dono Rannulphi comitis
Cestriae; et molendinum de Tadwella quod dedit eidem ecclesiae Attelysa
soror ejusdem comitis pro anima viri Ricardi filii Gilberti..."
Olneye is Olney, Bucks, and Tadwell is Tathwell, Lincs.
Cheers, Rosie '[11]
she m. lstly Richard de Clare,
2ndly Robert de Condet/Cundy
Spouse: Richard de Clare [1st husband]
Death: 15 Apr 1136, near Abergavenny (slain)[5]
Father: Gilbert de Clare (-ca1117)
Mother: Adeliza de Clermont
Children: Alice (->1147)
Gilbert de Clare(-1152)
Roger fitz Richard de Clare(-1173)
Rohese (->1156)
Lucy
1.1.1.1.1b Adeliza of Chester* (See above) [4633]
----------------------------------------
Spouse: Robert de Condet [12459]
Death: ca 1141[12]
Father: Osbert de Condet
Mother: Adelaide de Chesney
Marr: aft 15 Apr 1136
Children: Isabel (>1136->1165)
1.1.1.1.1b.1 Isabel de Condet[5] [10564]
----------------------------------------
Birth: aft 1136
Death: aft 1165[12]
had manor of South Carlton, co. Lincoln as her maritagium [Grimston, co. Notts either her inheritance or also part of her maritagium][13]
identified as daughter of Robert de Condet and Adeliza 'le Meschin'[12], and
as granddaughter of Ranulf, Earl of Chester[12]
[supported by indication of the lands of her maritagium]
Spouse: Hugh Bardolf
Death: ca 1176[12]
Father: NN Bardolf
Children: Beatrice (-<1225)
Hugh (->1197)
Robert (-<1225)
NN
NN (-<1225)
Juliana (-<1218)
Matilda (->1225)
1.1.1.1.1b.1.1 NN Bardolf
----------------------------------------
unnamed daughter
died before 1 July 1225, on which date her daughter Iseude was recorded
as having done homage for his inheritance of her uncle, Robert
Bardolf[14],[15]
Spouse: NN
Children: Iseude (-<1246)
1.1.1.1.1b.1.1.1 Iseude[5] [23382]
----------------------------------------
Death: bef 18 Jun 1246[5]
identified as daughter of Hugh Bardolf in CP (Grey)[5]
her maritagium included the manor of Codnor
'Isolde de Gray',
correctly identified as niece of Robert Bardolf, fine of 1 July 1225:
performed homage and had livery of her purparty of the lands of uncle
Robert Bardolf, 1 Jul 1225[5]: a fine of that date records,
' D’ homag capto. Dns Rex cep homag JORD’ FOLIOT ISOLD’ DE
GRAY ’t RAD’ PAYNEL de portoibs suis
q eos coting de tris q fuut ROB’TI BARDULF’ avuncli sui q’s de dno R.
tenuit i cap ’t mand est Vic Kanc qd accepta ab eis sec’itate de
relevio suo dno R. reddendo q’tu p jud curie dni R. inde redde
debuint: plena eis saisina hre fac de portoibs suis ipos heditar
ctingetibs de tris pdcis i balla sua, accepta & ead sec’itate a
ROB’TO LUPO loco MATILD’ BARDULF’ mris sue q est una hedu
pdci Robti de relevio suo dno R. reddendo q’tu ad ipam ptin t
p pte sua silr eid Rob pl saisina hre fac loco mat’s sue de portoe
ipam heditar cting de tris pdcis. Portoem vo ctingente fil ’t hede
HUG’ POINZ qui similr e unus hedu ipius Robti ’t inf’ etate est
’t i custodia dni R. salvo custodiat don dns R. aliud inde pcepit.
T. R. ap Westm j. die Jul. ' Excerpta e Rotulis Finium, I:129[14]
Spouse: Sir Henry de Grey of Thurrock [23399]
Death: 1219[5]
Children: Sir Richard de Grey of Codnor(-<1271)
Sir John de Grey of Shirland, co. Derbys.(-<1265)
Sir William (-<1268)
1.1.1.1.1b.1.1.1.1 Sir William de Grey [51498]
----------------------------------------
Death: bef 10 Feb 1268[5]
knt., of Sandiacre, co. Derbys.
cf. CP VI:165[5]
Children: Sir Richard (-<1298)
1.1.1.1.1b.1.1.1.1.1 Sir Richard de Grey
----------------------------------------
Death: bef 26 May 1298[5]
knt., of Sandiacre, co. Derbys.
summoned to attend the King at Shrewsbury by writ dated 28 June 1283,
directed 'Ricardo de Grey' [CP VI:166]
' In 1294 Richard de Grey and Lucy his wife settled the manor of
Erliston [Arleston] which was of her right on Lucy, da. of the said
Richard de Grey, and the heirs of her body; and the manor of
Sutton-in-Dale (also of the right of Lucy, the wife) on Henry de
Sutton for life (Feet of Fines, Derby, Mich. 22 Edw. I). '
[CP VI:166, note (d)[5]]
cf. CP VI:165-6[5]
Spouse: Lucy
Children: Lucy
William (-<1298)
1.1.1.1.1b.1.1.1.1.1.1 William de Grey
----------------------------------------
Death: bef 26 May 1298, d.v.p.[5]
heir of his father [CP VI:166[5] ]
Spouse: Joan
Children: Richard (ca1288-<1310)
1.1.1.1.1b.1.1.1.1.1.1.1 Richard de Grey
----------------------------------------
Birth: ca 25 Mar 1288[5]
Death: bef 24 Dec 1310[5]
of Sandiacre, co. Derbys.
cf. CP VI:166[5]
Spouse: Felicia
Children: Sir William (ca1307-1369)
1.1.1.1.1b.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1 Sir William de Grey
----------------------------------------
Birth: ca 1307[5]
Death: 1369[5]
of Sandiacre, co. Derbys.
cf. CP VI:167[5]
Children: Alice
1.1.1.1.1b.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1 Alice de Grey
----------------------------------------
heir of her father
cf. CP VI:167 and note (g)[5]
Spouse: Sir Edward Hillary
Death: 1362[5]
Father: Henry Hillary
Children: John (<1355-1403)
1.1.1.1.1b.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1 John Grey
----------------------------------------
Birth: bef 1355[5]
Death: 6 Sep 1403[5]
of Sandiacre, co. Derbys.
Sheriff of Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire, 1395[5]
birth name John Hillary:
' after his father's death in the custody of his grandfather, Sir
William de Grey. On or before 13 May 1390 he assumed the name of
Grey. ' [5]
cf. CP VI:168[5]
Genealogics I00272015[16], cites The Lineage and Ancestry of
H.R.H. Prince Charles, Prince of Wales Edinburgh, 1977.,
Gerald Paget, Reference: Q 116505
Spouse: Emma
Children: Isabel (ca1377-)
Alice (ca1382-)
1.1.1.1.1b.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1 Alice Grey
----------------------------------------
Birth: ca 1382[5]
coheir of her father
cf. CP VI:168[5]
Genealogics I00272014[16], cites The Lineage and Ancestry of
H.R.H. Prince Charles, Prince of Wales Edinburgh, 1977.,
Gerald Paget, Reference: Q 116505
Spouse: John Leek, Esq.
Children: William
1.1.1.1.1b.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1 William Leek [59106]
----------------------------------------
of Lakeford
cf. Genealogics #I00105387[16] [cites The Lineage and Ancestry of H.R.H. Prince Charles, Prince of Wales Edinburgh, 1977., Gerald Paget, Reference: P 58253]
Spouse: Catherine Chaworth
Father: Sir Thomas Chaworth
Mother: Isabel Aylesbury
Children: Thomas
1.1.1.1.1b.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1 Thomas Leeke [63271]
----------------------------------------
of Hasland, co. Derby[17]
as part of the marriage arrangement for his daughter Muriel,
entered into a contract dated 20 Dec 1510 (also 12 Feb 1510/1):
' Gift: Robert Lynacre of Bramton to Thomas Leeke of Hasland
Robert Barlow esq., Oliver Flynnt clerk, and Henry Eyre
gent.:-- manor of and all his property in Hasland. All his
property in Hakynthorpe and elsewhere in co. Derby--: To the
use of R.L. for life, then to his son George Lynacre and Muriel
Leeke, daughter of T.L. and the heirs of their bodies. Power of
attorney to Robert Cawse yeoman to deliver seisin. Endorsed
with memorandum of livery of seisin. Witn. Roger Fletcher,
Richard Alwod, Robert Wydoson and Thomas Shaw.' - PRO,
Nottinghamshire Archives: Portland of Welbeck: Cavendish
Deeds [DD/P/CD/119][18]
cf. Genealogics #I00105383 [16] [cites The Lineage and Ancestry of H.R.H. Prince Charles, Prince of Wales Edinburgh, 1977., Gerald Paget, Reference: O 29127]
Spouse: Margaret Fox
Father: William Fox
Children: Elizabeth
Muriel
1.1.1.1.1b.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1 Elizabeth Leeke [63273]
----------------------------------------
m. 2ndly Ralph Leche of Chatsworth[17]
Spouse: John Hardwick
Birth: ca 1495[17],[19]
Death: 24 Jan 1527[17]
Father: John Hardwick (ca1470-1506)
Mother: Elizabeth Pinchbeck
Marr: 1512[17]
Children: James
Mary
Dorothy
Alice
Elizabeth (ca1521-1607)
Jane
1.1.1.1.1b.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1 Elizabeth Hardwick [20086]
----------------------------------------
Birth: ca 1521[17]
Death: 13 Feb 1607, Hardwick Hall, co. Derby[17]
Burial: Allhallows, co. Derby[17]
Occ: Countess of Shrewsbury
the famed "Bess of Hardwick"
fourth daughter and coheiress;
married 1stly Robert Barlow;
2ndly Sir William Cavendish,
3rdly William St. Lo, captain of the Guard to Queen
Elizabeth [she was then Lady of the Bedchamber and confidante to Queen Elizabeth]
4thly George Talbot, 9th Earl of Shrewsbury
[Countess of Shrewsbury by this marriage][17]
disinherited her eldest son Henry Cavendish by a resettlement of her
estate, largely on her younger sons:
' 25 Oct. 1594 [1613]
' Reciting settlement of manor of Blackwall and Merston, and premises
there and in Asheford, Topcliffe, Kingsternedale, Cowdall, Stenden
alias Staden, Fayrefeilde, Bradwall, Buxton, Chappell en le Frithe,
Shalcrosse, Haselbache, Monyashe, Hollington, Gryndlowe and
Yolgrave (Db.) to use of her for life as inheritance of late husband
Sir Wm. Cavendish, then to Hen. Cavendish; now revokes this re.
Topcliffe and others to and including Monyashe, which are to her for
life, then to Sir Chas. Cavendish, with entail; in default in turn to
Wm. and Hen. Cavendish with entails, then jointly to Arabella Steward
(d. of Earl of Lennox and wife Eliz. Cavendish, Mary (Cavendish), wife
of Gilbert, Earl of Shrewsbury, and Frances (Cavendish), wife of Hen.
Pierrepont; in default to right heirs of Sir Chas. Cavendish.' - PRO,
Nottinghamshire Archives: Portland of Welbeck (4th Deposit):
Estate Papers [DD/4P/46/2][18]
Spouse: William Cavendish [20087]
Birth: ca 1505
Death: 25 Oct 1557[17]
Father: Thomas Cavendish (-1524)
Mother: Alice Smith (-1515)
Marr: 20 Aug 1547[17]
Children: Henry (1550-1616)
William (ca1552-1625)
Elizabeth
Sir Charles (-1617)
Mary
Frances
1.1.1.1.1b.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1 Henry Cavendish [55471]
----------------------------------------
Birth: 17 Dec 1550[20]
Death: 12 Oct 1616, d.s.p.l.[17]
Esq., of Tutbury, co. Stafford
M.P. for Derbyshire[21]
friend of Mary, Queen of Scots during her imprisonment at Hardwicke
Hall and at Tutbury[17]
succeeded his father at Tutbury:
'.. Henry, who was several times M.P. for Derbyshire. In 1583 Henry
also secured the rectory: the Crown had granted it in 1578 to a pair
of speculators, and they sold it to another pair, who in turn sold it
to Henry. He conveyed the estate to his younger brother William,
Baron Cavendish (later earl of Devonshire), in 1608, although he
himself was still living at Tutbury in 1614. Henry still held the
rectory in 1612, but on his death in 1616 it presumably passed to
William, whose grandson William, earl of Devonshire held it in 1653.
Tutbury '... consisted of 234 a. in Tutbury and 27 a. of meadow
nearby in Derbyshire..'[22]
Entered into an agreement with his brothers, 10 Dec 1579:
' Bargain and sale, William and Charles Cavendish of Chatsworthe
(Db) re-sell the Manors of Cromforde, Bonsall, Matlocke,
Willersley and Churchebroughton (Db) including lands in above
and also in Hardewicke, Kirkebie in Ashfelde, Kirkebie
Woodehouse, Sutton in Ashfelde, to Henry Cavendish their
brother.' -PRO, Nottinghamshire Archives: Portland of Welbeck
(6th Deposit): Deeds and Estate Papers [DD/P/6/1/1/45 ][18]
disinherited by his mother, evidently for failure to produce issue
(outside of his illegitimate offspring); as noted by Adrian Channing,
he was given the epithet 'The Common Bull to all Derbyshire'[23]
Spouse: NN [not married] [probably several mothers of his various children]
Children: Anne
Henry Cavendish, of Doveridge
Augustus
Charles (->1617)
Thomas
1.1.1.1.1b.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1 Anne Cavendish [67390]
----------------------------------------
illegitimate daughter[17];[24]
Spouse: Vincent Lowe [67389]
Birth: 1594[17]
Death: aft 1640[17]
Father: Patrick Lowe (ca1561->1617)
Mother: Jane Harpur
Children: Grace (1614-)
John (1616-1659)
Anne (1618-)
Beth (1626-)
Catherine (1627-)
Henry (1628-)
Dorothy (1630-)
Vincent (1632-)
Jane (1633-1700)
Nicholas (1639-)
1.1.1.1.1b.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1a Jane Lowe* [11763]
----------------------------------------
Birth: 14 Oct 1633, Denby, co. Derby[24]
Death: 19 Jan 1700, Middlesex, England[17]
Burial: St. Giles-in-the-Field church, Middlesex
Occ: Lady Baltimore
she m. 1stly Henry Sewall,
2ndly (as 2nd wife) Charles Calvert, Lord
Baltimore[17];[24];[25].
Raised grandson Notley Rozer after death of his father in 1681[26]
(son Nicholas Sewall was guardian of Notley Rozer per indenture of
1682[27])
d. intestate, 19 Jan 1700/01 [Barnes, p.2[28] ]
Spouse: Henry Sewall
Birth: aft 1622[24]
Death: bef 17 Apr 1665[24]
Father: Richard Sewall (-<1638)
Mother: Mary Dugdale (1597-ca1648)
Marr: bef 1650, England[29]
Children: Anne (ca1651-1693)
Elizabeth (<1651-<1710)
Nicholas (ca1655-1737)
Mary (1658-1693)
Jane
1.1.1.1.1b.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1b Jane Lowe* (See above) [11763]
----------------------------------------
Spouse: Charles Calvert, Lord Baltimore [2nd husband]
Birth: 27 Aug 1637[30]
Death: 21 Feb 1714[30]
Father: Cecil Calvert (-1675)
Mother: Anne Arundel
Marr: ca 1666[17]
Children: Clare (1670-)
Anne (1673-1731)
Benedict Leonard Calvert, Lord Baltimore(1678-1715)
1. Todd A. Farmerie, "Re: Reginald de St. Valery and His Descendants,"
October 1, 2001, paper copy: library of John Ravilious.
2. David C. Douglas, "William the Conqueror," Univ of California
Press, 1964 (1st of English Monarchs series).
3. Stewart Baldwin, "Re: Reginald de St. Valery and His Descendants,"
September 30, 2001, paper copy: library of John Ravilious, cites
Ordericus Vitalis, Historica Ecclesiastica, Latin from Migne vol.
188 col. 463, English from Forester (1853-6, vol. 2, p. 266).
5. G. E. Cokayne, "The Complete Peerage," 1910 -
The Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and
the United Kingdom.
6. C. Warren Hollister, "Henry I," New Haven: Yale University Press,
2001, [English Monarchs Series].
7. Gordon Donaldson, "Scottish Historical Documents," Edinburgh:
Scottish Academic Press, 1970.
8. Rosie Bevan, "Re: Tallboys," August 28, 2002, paper copy: library
of John P. Ravilious, citations from Rosie Bevan :
rbevan@paradise.net.nz, cites K. Keats-Rohan, 'Antecessor Noster',
in Prosopon 2, and Sanders, English Baronies.
9. I. J. Sanders, "English Baronies: A Study of Their Origin and
Descent, 1086-1327," Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1960.
10. William H. Hart, ed., "Historia et Cartularium Monasterii Sancti
Petri Gloucestriae," Rerum Britannicarum Medii Aevi Scriptores
(London: Longman, Green), 1863, (Title: Rerum ...., or Chronicles
and Memorials of Great Britain and Ireland during The Middle Ages),
available via Gallica: http://gallica.bnf.fr/.
11. Rosie Bevan, "Re: Ancestry of Agnes de Condet/Cundy, wife of Walter
de Clifford," 7 February 2004, cites charters, Cartulary of St.
Peters Gloucester, email rbevan@paradise.net.nz.
12. Frederick L. Weis (add/corr, Walter L Sheppard Jr.), "Ancestral
Roots of Certain American Colonists," Baltimore: Genealogical Pub.
Co., connection of Isabel de Condet and Hugh Bardolf, as cited by
E. Mann, Line 132D-27,-28 in AR7, also, Descendants of Henry I of
Germany (10/30/98), Line 157 (Gerberga of Burgundy to Emperor
Henry III).
13. "Rootsweb Webpages," rootsweb.com/~legends/poyntz.html
14. Charles Roberts, ed., "Excerpta ex Rotulis Finium," The
Commissioners of the Public Records of the Kingdom, Vol I
(1216-1246), 1835, full title: Excerpta e Rotulis Finium in Turri
Londinensi asservatis, Henrico Tertio Rege, A.D. 1216-1272.
15. John P. Ravilious, "Re: DD Correction: the Bardolfs of Ilketshall,
Suffolk, Waddington, Lincs. & c.," January 19, 2003, email,
therav3@aol.com (paper copy: library of John Ravilious, cites
Excerpta e Rotulis Finium, I:129, also Complete Peerage (Grey;
Poyntz; Bardolf);, contributions by Paul Reed, FASG (re: Farrer,
Honors and Knights Fees, ii:17 and others), Todd Farmerie, Cris
Nash and Roz Griston.
16. "Genealogics," website by Leo van de Pas, www.genealogics.com
17. David Faris, "Plantagenet Ancestry of Seventeenth-Century
Colonists," Boston: New England Historic Genealogical Society,
1999, (2nd edition, 1999).
18. "Public Record Office Archives," provided by "Access to Archives",
http://www.a2a.pro.gov.uk/
19. Philip Riden, Consultant Editor, "Victoria County History of
Derbyshire," *draft version, Ault Hucknall,
http://www.englandpast.net/der_draft/index.html
20. Douglas Richardson, "Plantagenet," Jan 20, 2003, email
royalancestry@msn.com.
21. "Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages," Burke's
Peerage, from Genealogy.com Family History: Notable British
Families, p. 460 (Ros).
22. Philip Riden, Consultant Editor, "Victoria County History of
Staffordshire," *draft version, Tutbury,
http://www.englandpast.net/staffs_draft/index.html
23. Adrian Channing, "Anne Cavendish, One of My Gateway Ancestresses,"
Feb 8, 1999, GEN-MEDIEVAL-L@rootsweb.com, followup on Feb 13,
1999 - cites Francis Bickley, 'The Cavendish Family' [1911].
24. Robert W. Barnes, "British Roots of Maryland Families," Baltimore:
Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc., 1999.
25. "Charles Calvert; article in American National Biography," David W.
Jordan (J. Garraty, M. Carnes, gen editors), Oxford Univ. Press,
1999, Vol. 4, pp. 242-244.
26. Nettie Leitch Major, "Rozer - Young - Carroll - Brent: Colonial
Marylanders "Lost" by the Formation of the District of Columbia,"
Maryland Genealogical Society Bulletin, Vol. 19, No. 4, Fall, 1978
[as corrected, Winter 1979 -Vol. 20, No. 1, p. 93], pp. 293 et seq.
27. Effie Gwynn Bowie, "Across the Years in Prince George's County,"
Richmond: Garrett and Massie, Inc., 1916.
28. "Robert Barnes," "JANE LOWE SEWALL CALVERT: GOVERNOR'S LADY AND
LAND BARONESS ", The Archivist's Bulldog, vol. 13, No. 12 (June
28, 1999) p. 2, The Archivist's Bulldog - Newsletter of the
Maryland State Archives,
http://www.mdarchives.state.md.us/msa/refserv/bulldog/bull99/bull13-12/html/bull13-12.html#sewall
29. Debbie Shields, "Shields Genealogy,"
www.debbieshields.com/genealogy/tree12.html
Sept 16, 2000.
30. David Faris, "Plantagenet Ancestry of 17th Century Colonists,"
Baltimore: the Genealogical Pub. Company, 1st ed.
* John P. Ravilious.11
Family 1 | Col. Henry Sewall b. a 1622, d. b 17 Apr 1665 |
Children |
|
Family 2 | Charles Calvert 3rd Lord Baltimore b. 27 Aug 1637, d. 21 Feb 1714/15 |
Child |
|
Citations
- [S1754] John P. Ravilious, "Ravilious email 4 Jan 2005 "C.P. Addition: Identity of Lleucu, wife of Geoffrey de Camville"," e-mail message from e-mail address (unknown address) to e-mail address, 4 Jan 2005. Hereinafter cited as "Ravilious email 4 Jan 2005."
- [S2261] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 1st edition (n.p.: Genealogical Publishing Company, Inc., 2004), Calvert 18.i: p. 183. Hereinafter cited as Richardson PA.
- [S2261] Douglas Richardson, Richardson PA, Lowe 18.ii: p. 469.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website (oiginated by Leo van de Pas, continued by Ian Fettes), online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Vincent Lowe: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00241046&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
- [S2261] Douglas Richardson, Richardson PA, Lowe 18: p. 469.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Anne Cavendish: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00241047&tree=LEO
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Henry Sewall: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00241048&tree=LEO
- [S673] David Faris, Plantagenet Ancestry of Seventeenth-Century Colonists: The Descent from the Later Plantagenet Kings of England, Henry III, Edward I, and Edward III, of Emigrants from England and Wales to the North American Colonies before 1701, English Ancestry Series, Volume 1, Second Edition (Boston, MA: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1999), p. 67. Hereinafter cited as Faris [1999] - Plantagenet Ancestry.
- [S633] With additions and corrections by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr. and William R. Beall Frederick Lewis Weis, The Magna Charta Sureties, 1215: The Barons Named in the Magna
Charta, 1215 and Some of Their Descendants Who Settled in America
During the Early Colonial Years, 5th Edition (Baltimore, MD, USA: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc., unknown publish date), line 63-16, p. 83. Hereinafter cited as Weis MCS-5. - [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Charles Calvert: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00186720&tree=LEO
- [S1792] John P. Ravilious, "Ravilious email 22 Oct 2004 "Descent from Richard III of Normandy to Jane Lowe (Grey of Sandiacre)"," e-mail message from e-mail address (unknown address) to e-mail address, 22 Oct 2004. Hereinafter cited as "Ravilious email 22 Oct 2004."
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Elizabeth Sewall: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00387262&tree=LEO
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Major Nicholas Sewall: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00387288&tree=LEO
Mary Baakes
F, #11763, d. 13 March 1710/11
Last Edited | 10 Aug 2008 |
Mary Baakes married Charles Calvert 3rd Lord Baltimore, son of Cecil Calvert 2nd Lord Baltimore and Hon. Anne Arundell, on 6 December 1701
; his 3rd wife.1,2,3
Mary Baakes died on 13 March 1710/11.1,2
Mary Baakes was also known as Mary Banks.4,2
; his 3rd wife.1,2,3
Mary Baakes died on 13 March 1710/11.1,2
Mary Baakes was also known as Mary Banks.4,2
Family | Charles Calvert 3rd Lord Baltimore b. 27 Aug 1637, d. 21 Feb 1714/15 |
Citations
- [S673] David Faris, Plantagenet Ancestry of Seventeenth-Century Colonists: The Descent from the Later Plantagenet Kings of England, Henry III, Edward I, and Edward III, of Emigrants from England and Wales to the North American Colonies before 1701, English Ancestry Series, Volume 1, Second Edition (Boston, MA: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1999), p. 67. Hereinafter cited as Faris [1999] - Plantagenet Ancestry.
- [S2261] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 1st edition (n.p.: Genealogical Publishing Company, Inc., 2004), Calvert 18.i: p. 183. Hereinafter cited as Richardson PA.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website (oiginated by Leo van de Pas, continued by Ian Fettes), online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Charles Calvert: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00186720&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Mary Banks: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00186723&tree=LEO
Margaret Charleton1
F, #11764, d. 20 July 1731
Father | Thomas Charleton of Hexham, Northumberland1 |
Last Edited | 10 Aug 2008 |
Margaret Charleton married Charles Calvert 3rd Lord Baltimore, son of Cecil Calvert 2nd Lord Baltimore and Hon. Anne Arundell, in 1712
; his 4th wife.2,1,3 Margaret Charleton married Lawrence Eliot on 9 November 1718
; her 2nd husband.1
Margaret Charleton died on 20 July 1731.2,1
; his 4th wife.2,1,3 Margaret Charleton married Lawrence Eliot on 9 November 1718
; her 2nd husband.1
Margaret Charleton died on 20 July 1731.2,1
Family 1 | Charles Calvert 3rd Lord Baltimore b. 27 Aug 1637, d. 21 Feb 1714/15 |
Family 2 | Lawrence Eliot |
Citations
- [S2261] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 1st edition (n.p.: Genealogical Publishing Company, Inc., 2004), Calvert 18.i: p. 183. Hereinafter cited as Richardson PA.
- [S673] David Faris, Plantagenet Ancestry of Seventeenth-Century Colonists: The Descent from the Later Plantagenet Kings of England, Henry III, Edward I, and Edward III, of Emigrants from England and Wales to the North American Colonies before 1701, English Ancestry Series, Volume 1, Second Edition (Boston, MA: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1999), p. 67. Hereinafter cited as Faris [1999] - Plantagenet Ancestry.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website (oiginated by Leo van de Pas, continued by Ian Fettes), online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Charles Calvert: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00186720&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
William Hastings Knt, KG, 1st Lord Hastings1,2,3
M, #11765, b. circa 1431, d. 13 June 1483
Father | Sir Leonard Hastings Knt., of Kirkby Muxloe, Leicestershire2,3 b. c 1397, d. 20 Oct 1455 |
Mother | Alice Camoys2,3 d. a 20 Oct 1455 |
Last Edited | 14 Nov 2019 |
William Hastings Knt, KG, 1st Lord Hastings was buried at St. George's Chapel, Windsor Castle, Windsor, Windsor and Maidenhead Royal Borough, Berkshire, England.4 He was born circa 1431; Richardson says "aged 24 in 1455"; van de Pas says b. 1430.4,5,2,3 He married Lady Katherine Neville, daughter of Richard Neville KG, 1st/5th Earl of Salisbury and Lady Alice Montagu Countess of Salisbury, Baroness Montagu, before 6 February 1462
; her 2nd husband.6,4,5,7,8,2,3
William Hastings Knt, KG, 1st Lord Hastings died on 13 June 1483 at Tower of London, London, City of London, Greater London, England; beheaded on a charge of high treason; died testate P.C.C. 10 Logge.5,7,2,3
William Hastings Knt, KG, 1st Lord Hastings was buried after 13 June 1483 at St. George's Chapel, Windsor Castle, Berkshire, England.2
William Hastings Knt, KG, 1st Lord Hastings lived at Allerston, Gissing & Burton Hastings, Warwickshire, England.4
William Hastings Knt, KG, 1st Lord Hastings lived at Kirby Muxloe, Leicestershire, England.4
; per van de Pas: "In 1461 William was created a peer by Edward IV, and from 1461 till 1483 he was Lord Chamberlain. Before 6 November 1462 he married Lady Catherine Nevill and they had six children. A devoted Yorkist in 1470 he helped Edward IV escape to Holland and was prominent among the forces fighting the Lancastrian armies at Tewkesbury and Barnet in 1471. He commanded the English force in France during Edward's brief campaign there in 1475.
After Edward's death in 1483, Hastings took the King's mistress Jane Shore for himself. On 13 June 1483 the Duke of Gloucester, the future Richard III, had Hastings arrested on a false charge of treason and beheaded without trial the same day in the Tower of London. In this way he removed one of the young Edward V's most powerful protectors and cleared his own way to the throne of England."3
Reference: Genealogics cites:
; Sir WILLIAM HASTINGES, 1st LORD (Baron) HASTINGS (E), so cr 26 July 1461, though whether by writ of summons, investiture or patent is unclear; also granted by EDWARD IV 17 Feb 1461/2 the Lordship, Barony and Honour of Hastings (which probably was a late example of a feudal tenure rather than a peerage creation, though connected with the peerage creation of the previous July rather in the same way that Earls had traditionally been created or invested with grants of lands attached for the upkeep of the dignity; see NORTHUMBERLAND, D, and RUTLAND, D, for a discussion of this point), KG (March 1461/2); b c 1431; Sheriff Warwicks and Leics 1455-56,Yorkist Wars of Roses, fought Battle of Towton 1461 (Yorkist Victory), where ktd, Receiver-Gen Duchy Cornwall 1461, Master and Worker King's Mints 1461, Chamberlain N Wales 1461, Steward Honour of Leicester and Lordships and Manors of Castle Donington, Leics, and Higham Ferrers and Daventry, Northants, also Keeper Leicester Castle and Constable Higham Ferrers and Donington Castles (where Donington Hall, the seat of the Earls of Huntingdon, was erected in 1595, remodelled in the neo-Gothic style by William Wilkins 1795, used as a POW camp WW I, as a children's charity home later in the 20th century and as a setting for the BBC TV film of Alice in Wonderland 1966 and acquired as a corporate HQ by Br Midland Airways 1982; LORD HASTINGS also in 1474 converted 3,000 acres to parkland at Ashby-de-la-Zouche, Leics, and constructed a castle there, which was afterwards one of the places of imprisonment of MARY QUEEN OF SCOTS and a royalist stronghold in the Civil War of the 17th century till demolished spring 1645 after a nine-months' siege); Jt Constable with his bro Ralph of Rockingham and Northampton Castles 1462; Ch Justice and Chamberlain Merioneths and Constable Harlech Castle 1464; granted 1464 the Castle and Honour of Huntingdon, recently the property of his remote cousin John Hastynges Earl of Pembroke (see HASTINGS, B); envoy to negotiate alliances abroad with Burgundy and Brittany 1466; fought Battle of Barnet 1471 (overthrow of Warwick the Kingmaker by EDWARD IV (see ABERGAVENNY, M)); Chamberlain Receipt Exchequer 1471; Lt-Gen Calais 1471; m by 6 Feb 1461/2 Katherine, widow of William Bonville, 6th Lord (Baron) Harington or Haverington, and dau of Richard Nevill(e), Earl of Salisbury (see ABERGAVENNY, M), and was beheaded at the Tower of London 13 June 1483 on a charge of treason (though not attainted), having displeased RICHARD III, when his estates were confiscated (but later restored to his son, part by RICHARD and the remainder by HENRY VII), having had, with three sons (including Richard and William) and a dau (Anne, m by 27 June 1481, as his 1st w, 4th Earl of Shrewsbury and Waterford, qv).5 He was Master of the London Mint.4 He was Chamberlain of the Household.4 He was Sheriff of Warwickshire and Leicestershire.4
; Faris (1999, p. 177-178): [quote] WILLIAM HASTINGS, Knt., K.G., of Kirby Muxloe, co. Leicester, Allerston, Gissing, and Burton Hastings, co. Warwick, Sheriff of Warwickshire and Leicestershire, chamberlain of the household, steward of Rockingham Castle, master of the London mint, was born about 1431 (aged twenty-four and more at his father's death), and, as a staunch Yorkist, was a retainer of Edward Plantagenet, 4th Duke of York, later King Edward IV. He was knighted at Towton on 29 Mar. 1461 by King Edward IV. He was married before 6 Feb. 1461/2 to KATHERINE NEVILLE, widow of WILLIAM BONVILLE, 6th Lord Harington (slain aged twenty on 31 Dec. 1460) [see BONVILLE 7 for descendants of this marriage], and fifth daughter of Richard Neville, Earl of Salisbury (descendant of King Edward III), by Alice, daughter of Thomas Montagu, Earl of Salisbury (descendant of King Edward I) [see MONTAGU 8 for her ancestry]. William and Katherine had four sons and one daughter. On account of his great services against King Henry VI, the Earls of Pembroke and Wiltshire, and other rebels and traitors, in 1 Edw. IV, he was raised to the rank of a Baron, and on 17 Feb. 1461/2 the King granted him the lordship, barony, and honour of Hastings. He was summoned to Parliament from 26 July 1461 by writs directed Wullelmo Haslynges militi domino Hastynges. On the death of King Edward, William Hastings lost power and influence and excited the enmity of Richard Plantagenet, Duke of Gloucester, later King Richard III. "William Hastyngs Knyght, lord Hastyngs" was arrested, by the order of Richard, Duke of Gloucester, at a council in the Tower of London, charged with high treason, and beheaded without trial testate (P.C.C., 10 Logge) on 13 June 1483. He was buried at St. George's Chapel, Windsor. The will of "Kateryn lady Hastinges" was dated 22 Nov. 1503, and was proved 25 Mar. 1504/5, requesting burial at Ashby-de-la-Zouch, Co. Leicester (P.C.C., 7 Holgrave).
Test. Vetusta, p. 450. Clay (1913), p. 101. C.P. 6:370-374, 622 footnote (1926) f. Paget (1957) 278:5-6. Acheson (1922), pp. 234-235. [end quote] He was Steward of Rockingham Castle at Rockingham Castle, near Corby, Northamptonshire, England.4 He was 1st Lord (Baron) Hastings of the Feb 1461/2 cr between 1461 and 1462.9,5 He was M.P. on 26 July 1461.4 He was 188 Knight of the Garter in 1462.3
; her 2nd husband.6,4,5,7,8,2,3
William Hastings Knt, KG, 1st Lord Hastings died on 13 June 1483 at Tower of London, London, City of London, Greater London, England; beheaded on a charge of high treason; died testate P.C.C. 10 Logge.5,7,2,3
William Hastings Knt, KG, 1st Lord Hastings was buried after 13 June 1483 at St. George's Chapel, Windsor Castle, Berkshire, England.2
William Hastings Knt, KG, 1st Lord Hastings lived at Allerston, Gissing & Burton Hastings, Warwickshire, England.4
William Hastings Knt, KG, 1st Lord Hastings lived at Kirby Muxloe, Leicestershire, England.4
; per van de Pas: "In 1461 William was created a peer by Edward IV, and from 1461 till 1483 he was Lord Chamberlain. Before 6 November 1462 he married Lady Catherine Nevill and they had six children. A devoted Yorkist in 1470 he helped Edward IV escape to Holland and was prominent among the forces fighting the Lancastrian armies at Tewkesbury and Barnet in 1471. He commanded the English force in France during Edward's brief campaign there in 1475.
After Edward's death in 1483, Hastings took the King's mistress Jane Shore for himself. On 13 June 1483 the Duke of Gloucester, the future Richard III, had Hastings arrested on a false charge of treason and beheaded without trial the same day in the Tower of London. In this way he removed one of the young Edward V's most powerful protectors and cleared his own way to the throne of England."3
Reference: Genealogics cites:
1. The Plantagenet Encyclopedia, London, 1990 , Hallam, Elizabeth; General Editor, Reference: 90 bio.
2. The Lineage and Ancestry of H.R.H. Prince Charles, Prince of Wales, Edinburgh, 1977, Paget, Gerald, Reference: Q 115385.
3. Burke's Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Peerage, Baronetage and Knightage, London, 1938, Reference: Page 1357.
4. Cahiers de Saint Louis , Dupont, Jacques and Saillot, Jacques, Reference: 936.
5. The Complete Peerage, 1936 , Doubleday, H.A. & Lord Howard de Walden, Reference: VI 370.3
2. The Lineage and Ancestry of H.R.H. Prince Charles, Prince of Wales, Edinburgh, 1977, Paget, Gerald, Reference: Q 115385.
3. Burke's Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Peerage, Baronetage and Knightage, London, 1938, Reference: Page 1357.
4. Cahiers de Saint Louis , Dupont, Jacques and Saillot, Jacques, Reference: 936.
5. The Complete Peerage, 1936 , Doubleday, H.A. & Lord Howard de Walden, Reference: VI 370.3
; Sir WILLIAM HASTINGES, 1st LORD (Baron) HASTINGS (E), so cr 26 July 1461, though whether by writ of summons, investiture or patent is unclear; also granted by EDWARD IV 17 Feb 1461/2 the Lordship, Barony and Honour of Hastings (which probably was a late example of a feudal tenure rather than a peerage creation, though connected with the peerage creation of the previous July rather in the same way that Earls had traditionally been created or invested with grants of lands attached for the upkeep of the dignity; see NORTHUMBERLAND, D, and RUTLAND, D, for a discussion of this point), KG (March 1461/2); b c 1431; Sheriff Warwicks and Leics 1455-56,Yorkist Wars of Roses, fought Battle of Towton 1461 (Yorkist Victory), where ktd, Receiver-Gen Duchy Cornwall 1461, Master and Worker King's Mints 1461, Chamberlain N Wales 1461, Steward Honour of Leicester and Lordships and Manors of Castle Donington, Leics, and Higham Ferrers and Daventry, Northants, also Keeper Leicester Castle and Constable Higham Ferrers and Donington Castles (where Donington Hall, the seat of the Earls of Huntingdon, was erected in 1595, remodelled in the neo-Gothic style by William Wilkins 1795, used as a POW camp WW I, as a children's charity home later in the 20th century and as a setting for the BBC TV film of Alice in Wonderland 1966 and acquired as a corporate HQ by Br Midland Airways 1982; LORD HASTINGS also in 1474 converted 3,000 acres to parkland at Ashby-de-la-Zouche, Leics, and constructed a castle there, which was afterwards one of the places of imprisonment of MARY QUEEN OF SCOTS and a royalist stronghold in the Civil War of the 17th century till demolished spring 1645 after a nine-months' siege); Jt Constable with his bro Ralph of Rockingham and Northampton Castles 1462; Ch Justice and Chamberlain Merioneths and Constable Harlech Castle 1464; granted 1464 the Castle and Honour of Huntingdon, recently the property of his remote cousin John Hastynges Earl of Pembroke (see HASTINGS, B); envoy to negotiate alliances abroad with Burgundy and Brittany 1466; fought Battle of Barnet 1471 (overthrow of Warwick the Kingmaker by EDWARD IV (see ABERGAVENNY, M)); Chamberlain Receipt Exchequer 1471; Lt-Gen Calais 1471; m by 6 Feb 1461/2 Katherine, widow of William Bonville, 6th Lord (Baron) Harington or Haverington, and dau of Richard Nevill(e), Earl of Salisbury (see ABERGAVENNY, M), and was beheaded at the Tower of London 13 June 1483 on a charge of treason (though not attainted), having displeased RICHARD III, when his estates were confiscated (but later restored to his son, part by RICHARD and the remainder by HENRY VII), having had, with three sons (including Richard and William) and a dau (Anne, m by 27 June 1481, as his 1st w, 4th Earl of Shrewsbury and Waterford, qv).5 He was Master of the London Mint.4 He was Chamberlain of the Household.4 He was Sheriff of Warwickshire and Leicestershire.4
; Faris (1999, p. 177-178): [quote] WILLIAM HASTINGS, Knt., K.G., of Kirby Muxloe, co. Leicester, Allerston, Gissing, and Burton Hastings, co. Warwick, Sheriff of Warwickshire and Leicestershire, chamberlain of the household, steward of Rockingham Castle, master of the London mint, was born about 1431 (aged twenty-four and more at his father's death), and, as a staunch Yorkist, was a retainer of Edward Plantagenet, 4th Duke of York, later King Edward IV. He was knighted at Towton on 29 Mar. 1461 by King Edward IV. He was married before 6 Feb. 1461/2 to KATHERINE NEVILLE, widow of WILLIAM BONVILLE, 6th Lord Harington (slain aged twenty on 31 Dec. 1460) [see BONVILLE 7 for descendants of this marriage], and fifth daughter of Richard Neville, Earl of Salisbury (descendant of King Edward III), by Alice, daughter of Thomas Montagu, Earl of Salisbury (descendant of King Edward I) [see MONTAGU 8 for her ancestry]. William and Katherine had four sons and one daughter. On account of his great services against King Henry VI, the Earls of Pembroke and Wiltshire, and other rebels and traitors, in 1 Edw. IV, he was raised to the rank of a Baron, and on 17 Feb. 1461/2 the King granted him the lordship, barony, and honour of Hastings. He was summoned to Parliament from 26 July 1461 by writs directed Wullelmo Haslynges militi domino Hastynges. On the death of King Edward, William Hastings lost power and influence and excited the enmity of Richard Plantagenet, Duke of Gloucester, later King Richard III. "William Hastyngs Knyght, lord Hastyngs" was arrested, by the order of Richard, Duke of Gloucester, at a council in the Tower of London, charged with high treason, and beheaded without trial testate (P.C.C., 10 Logge) on 13 June 1483. He was buried at St. George's Chapel, Windsor. The will of "Kateryn lady Hastinges" was dated 22 Nov. 1503, and was proved 25 Mar. 1504/5, requesting burial at Ashby-de-la-Zouch, Co. Leicester (P.C.C., 7 Holgrave).
Test. Vetusta, p. 450. Clay (1913), p. 101. C.P. 6:370-374, 622 footnote (1926) f. Paget (1957) 278:5-6. Acheson (1922), pp. 234-235. [end quote] He was Steward of Rockingham Castle at Rockingham Castle, near Corby, Northamptonshire, England.4 He was 1st Lord (Baron) Hastings of the Feb 1461/2 cr between 1461 and 1462.9,5 He was M.P. on 26 July 1461.4 He was 188 Knight of the Garter in 1462.3
Family | Lady Katherine Neville b. 1435, d. a 22 Nov 1503 |
Children |
|
Citations
- [S1396] Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site, online http://www.burkes-peerage.net/sites/peerageandgentry/sitepages/home.asp, Grey, Baron Family Page - illegitimate daughter. Hereinafter cited as Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site.
- [S2261] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 1st edition (n.p.: Genealogical Publishing Company, Inc., 2004), Hastings 12: pp. 385-386. Hereinafter cited as Richardson PA.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website (oiginated by Leo van de Pas, continued by Ian Fettes), online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, William Hastings: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00107596&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
- [S673] David Faris, Plantagenet Ancestry of Seventeenth-Century Colonists: The Descent from the Later Plantagenet Kings of England, Henry III, Edward I, and Edward III, of Emigrants from England and Wales to the North American Colonies before 1701, English Ancestry Series, Volume 1, Second Edition (Boston, MA: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1999), pp. 177-178. Hereinafter cited as Faris [1999] - Plantagenet Ancestry.
- [S1396] Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site, online http://www.burkes-peerage.net/sites/peerageandgentry/sitepages/home.asp, Huntingdon Family Page.
- [S673] David Faris, Faris [1999] - Plantagenet Ancestry, p. 38.
- [S2261] Douglas Richardson, Richardson PA, Bonville 13: p. 127.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Lady Catherine Nevill: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00107597&tree=LEO
- [S1396] Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site, online http://www.burkes-peerage.net/sites/peerageandgentry/sitepages/home.asp, Grey, Baron Family Page.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Edward Hastings: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00107578&tree=LEO
- [S2261] Douglas Richardson, Richardson PA, Hastings 13: pp. 386-387.
William Bonville Esq.1,2,3
M, #11766, d. 30 December 1460
Father | Sir William Bonville Knt., KG, 1st Lord Bonville of Chewton1,3,2 b. 31 Aug 1393, d. 18 Feb 1460/61 |
Mother | Margaret Grey4,5,2,3 d. 1426/27 |
Last Edited | 19 Jul 2008 |
William Bonville Esq. married Elizabeth (?), daughter of William (?) 5th Lord Harington and Margaret Hylle (Hulle), before 1442.6,7,1,3,2,8
William Bonville Esq. died on 30 December 1460 at Battle of Wakefield, near Pontefract Castle, Wakefield, Yorkshire, England.6,7,3
; "William, who d. before the baron [his father], having m. Elizabeth de Harrington, dau. and heir of William, Lord Harrington, and leaving an only child, William, commonly called Lord Harrington..."1
; van de Pas cites: 1. The Lineage and Ancestry of H.R.H. Prince Charles, Prince of Wales, Edinburgh, 1977, Paget, Gerald, Reference: Q 115099
2. The Complete Peerage, 1936 , Doubleday, H.A. & Lord Howard de Walden, Reference: VI 320
3. A Genealogical History of the dormant, abeyant, forfeited and extinct peerages of the British Empire, London, 1866, Burke, Sir Bernard, Reference: 59.3
; Faris (1999, p. 38): "WILLIAM BONVILLE, son and heir apparent, was married in or before 1442 to ELIZABETH HARINGTON, daughter and heiress of William Harington, 5th Lord Harington (of Magna Carta Surety descent and descendant of Charlemagne), by Margaret, daughter of John Hylle (or Hulle), Knt., of Hill's Court, near Exeter, and Kyton in Holcombe Regis, Devon. She died before 1458 v.p. WILLIAM BONVILLE died v.p., being slain with his son at Wakefield on 30 Dec. 1460.
Gen.n.s. 9:78 (1892). C.P. 6:320 (1926). Paget (1957) 273:2."
William Bonville Esq. died on 30 December 1460 at Battle of Wakefield, near Pontefract Castle, Wakefield, Yorkshire, England.6,7,3
; "William, who d. before the baron [his father], having m. Elizabeth de Harrington, dau. and heir of William, Lord Harrington, and leaving an only child, William, commonly called Lord Harrington..."1
; van de Pas cites: 1. The Lineage and Ancestry of H.R.H. Prince Charles, Prince of Wales, Edinburgh, 1977, Paget, Gerald, Reference: Q 115099
2. The Complete Peerage, 1936 , Doubleday, H.A. & Lord Howard de Walden, Reference: VI 320
3. A Genealogical History of the dormant, abeyant, forfeited and extinct peerages of the British Empire, London, 1866, Burke, Sir Bernard, Reference: 59.3
; Faris (1999, p. 38): "WILLIAM BONVILLE, son and heir apparent, was married in or before 1442 to ELIZABETH HARINGTON, daughter and heiress of William Harington, 5th Lord Harington (of Magna Carta Surety descent and descendant of Charlemagne), by Margaret, daughter of John Hylle (or Hulle), Knt., of Hill's Court, near Exeter, and Kyton in Holcombe Regis, Devon. She died before 1458 v.p. WILLIAM BONVILLE died v.p., being slain with his son at Wakefield on 30 Dec. 1460.
Gen.n.s. 9:78 (1892). C.P. 6:320 (1926). Paget (1957) 273:2."
Family | Elizabeth (?) d. b 1458 |
Child |
|
Citations
- [S1429] Unknown compiler, Notable British Families 1600s-1900s from Burke's Peerage., CD-ROM (n.p.: Broderbund Software Company, 1999), Notable British Families, Burke's Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages, p. 59. Hereinafter cited as Notable British Families CD # 367.
- [S2261] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 1st edition (n.p.: Genealogical Publishing Company, Inc., 2004), Bonville 12: p. 127. Hereinafter cited as Richardson PA.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website (oiginated by Leo van de Pas, continued by Ian Fettes), online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, William Bonville: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00125453&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
- [S2261] Douglas Richardson, Richardson PA, Bonville 11: p. 127.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Margaret Grey: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00294112&tree=LEO
- [S673] David Faris, Plantagenet Ancestry of Seventeenth-Century Colonists: The Descent from the Later Plantagenet Kings of England, Henry III, Edward I, and Edward III, of Emigrants from England and Wales to the North American Colonies before 1701, English Ancestry Series, Volume 1, Second Edition (Boston, MA: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1999), p. 38. Hereinafter cited as Faris [1999] - Plantagenet Ancestry.
- [S1396] Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site, online http://www.burkes-peerage.net/sites/peerageandgentry/sitepages/home.asp, Harington Family Page. Hereinafter cited as Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Elizabeth Harington: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00125454&tree=LEO
- [S2261] Douglas Richardson, Richardson PA, Bonville 13: p. 127.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, William Bonville: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00125455&tree=LEO
Elizabeth (?)1,2,3,4
F, #11767, d. before 1458
Father | William (?) 5th Lord Harington1,2,3,4,5 b. c 1390, d. bt 3 Oct 1458 - 10 Mar 1458 |
Mother | Margaret Hylle (Hulle)1,3,4 |
Last Edited | 1 Sep 2008 |
Elizabeth (?) married William Bonville Esq., son of Sir William Bonville Knt., KG, 1st Lord Bonville of Chewton and Margaret Grey, before 1442.6,1,2,7,3,4
Elizabeth (?) died before 1458; dvp.6,3,4
; Elizabeth; m by 1442 William BONVILLE (dvp 31 Dec 1460, ka Battle of Wakefield), s and heir of 1st Lord (Baron) Bonville, of Chewton (see above), and dvp.1
; van de Pas cites: 1. The Lineage and Ancestry of H.R.H. Prince Charles, Prince of Wales, Edinburgh, 1977, Paget, Gerald, Reference: Q 115099
2. The Complete Peerage, 1936 , Doubleday, H.A. & Lord Howard de Walden, Reference: VI 320.4
Elizabeth (?) died before 1458; dvp.6,3,4
; Elizabeth; m by 1442 William BONVILLE (dvp 31 Dec 1460, ka Battle of Wakefield), s and heir of 1st Lord (Baron) Bonville, of Chewton (see above), and dvp.1
; van de Pas cites: 1. The Lineage and Ancestry of H.R.H. Prince Charles, Prince of Wales, Edinburgh, 1977, Paget, Gerald, Reference: Q 115099
2. The Complete Peerage, 1936 , Doubleday, H.A. & Lord Howard de Walden, Reference: VI 320.4
Family | William Bonville Esq. d. 30 Dec 1460 |
Child |
|
Citations
- [S1396] Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site, online http://www.burkes-peerage.net/sites/peerageandgentry/sitepages/home.asp, Harington Family Page. Hereinafter cited as Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site.
- [S1429] Unknown compiler, Notable British Families 1600s-1900s from Burke's Peerage., CD-ROM (n.p.: Broderbund Software Company, 1999), Notable British Families, Burke's Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages, p. 59. Hereinafter cited as Notable British Families CD # 367.
- [S2261] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 1st edition (n.p.: Genealogical Publishing Company, Inc., 2004), Bonville 12: p. 127. Hereinafter cited as Richardson PA.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website (oiginated by Leo van de Pas, continued by Ian Fettes), online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Elizabeth Harington: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00125454&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, William Harington: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00377587&tree=LEO
- [S673] David Faris, Plantagenet Ancestry of Seventeenth-Century Colonists: The Descent from the Later Plantagenet Kings of England, Henry III, Edward I, and Edward III, of Emigrants from England and Wales to the North American Colonies before 1701, English Ancestry Series, Volume 1, Second Edition (Boston, MA: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1999), p. 38. Hereinafter cited as Faris [1999] - Plantagenet Ancestry.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, William Bonville: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00125453&tree=LEO
- [S2261] Douglas Richardson, Richardson PA, Bonville 13: p. 127.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, William Bonville: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00125455&tree=LEO
William (?) 5th Lord Harington1,2
M, #11768, b. circa 1390, d. between 3 October 1458 and 10 March 1458
Father | Sir Robert de Harington KB, 3rd Lord Harington1,3,2 b. 28 Mar 1356, d. 21 May 1406 |
Mother | Isabel Loring1,4,2 d. 21 Aug 1400 |
Last Edited | 1 Sep 2008 |
William (?) 5th Lord Harington was born circa 1390.1,2 He married Margaret Hylle (Hulle), daughter of Sir John Hylle (Hulle) Knt., before 1423.5,1,2
William (?) 5th Lord Harington died between 3 October 1458 and 10 March 1458; dspm.1,2
; Sir WILLIAM HARINGTON, 5th LORD (Baron) HARINGTON; b c 1390; m by 1423 Margaret, dau of Sir John Hill, Judge King's Bench, and dspm 3/10 March 1457/8.1
; van de Pas cites: 1. The Lineage and Ancestry of H.R.H. Prince Charles, Prince of Wales, Edinburgh, 1977, Paget, Gerald, Reference: Q 115099
2. The Complete Peerage, 1936 , Doubleday, H.A. & Lord Howard de Walden, Reference: VI 318,319.2
.6
William (?) 5th Lord Harington died between 3 October 1458 and 10 March 1458; dspm.1,2
; Sir WILLIAM HARINGTON, 5th LORD (Baron) HARINGTON; b c 1390; m by 1423 Margaret, dau of Sir John Hill, Judge King's Bench, and dspm 3/10 March 1457/8.1
; van de Pas cites: 1. The Lineage and Ancestry of H.R.H. Prince Charles, Prince of Wales, Edinburgh, 1977, Paget, Gerald, Reference: Q 115099
2. The Complete Peerage, 1936 , Doubleday, H.A. & Lord Howard de Walden, Reference: VI 318,319.2
.6
Family | Margaret Hylle (Hulle) |
Child |
Citations
- [S1396] Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site, online http://www.burkes-peerage.net/sites/peerageandgentry/sitepages/home.asp, Harington Family Page. Hereinafter cited as Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website (oiginated by Leo van de Pas, continued by Ian Fettes), online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, William Harington: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00377587&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Robert de Haverington: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00220794&tree=LEO
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Isabel Loring: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00220795&tree=LEO
- [S673] David Faris, Plantagenet Ancestry of Seventeenth-Century Colonists: The Descent from the Later Plantagenet Kings of England, Henry III, Edward I, and Edward III, of Emigrants from England and Wales to the North American Colonies before 1701, English Ancestry Series, Volume 1, Second Edition (Boston, MA: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1999), p. 38. Hereinafter cited as Faris [1999] - Plantagenet Ancestry.
- [S673] David Faris, Faris [1999] - Plantagenet Ancestry, p. 38: "of Magna Carta Surety descent and descendant of Charlemagne."
- [S1429] Unknown compiler, Notable British Families 1600s-1900s from Burke's Peerage., CD-ROM (n.p.: Broderbund Software Company, 1999), Notable British Families, Burke's Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages, p. 59. Hereinafter cited as Notable British Families CD # 367.
- [S2261] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 1st edition (n.p.: Genealogical Publishing Company, Inc., 2004), Bonville 12: p. 127. Hereinafter cited as Richardson PA.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Elizabeth Harington: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00125454&tree=LEO
Margaret Hylle (Hulle)
F, #11769
Father | Sir John Hylle (Hulle) Knt.1,2 |
Last Edited | 1 Sep 2008 |
Margaret Hylle (Hulle) married William (?) 5th Lord Harington, son of Sir Robert de Harington KB, 3rd Lord Harington and Isabel Loring, before 1423.3,4,5
; van de Pas cites: The Complete Peerage, 1936 , Doubleday, H.A. & Lord Howard de Walden, Reference: VI 319.3,1 Margaret Hylle (Hulle) was also known as Margaret Hill.4,1
; van de Pas cites: The Complete Peerage, 1936 , Doubleday, H.A. & Lord Howard de Walden, Reference: VI 319.3,1 Margaret Hylle (Hulle) was also known as Margaret Hill.4,1
Family | William (?) 5th Lord Harington b. c 1390, d. bt 3 Oct 1458 - 10 Mar 1458 |
Child |
|
Citations
- [S1490] Genealogics Website (oiginated by Leo van de Pas, continued by Ian Fettes), online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Margaret Hill: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00377588&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Sir John Hill, of Hill's Court: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00377589&tree=LEO
- [S673] David Faris, Plantagenet Ancestry of Seventeenth-Century Colonists: The Descent from the Later Plantagenet Kings of England, Henry III, Edward I, and Edward III, of Emigrants from England and Wales to the North American Colonies before 1701, English Ancestry Series, Volume 1, Second Edition (Boston, MA: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1999), p. 38. Hereinafter cited as Faris [1999] - Plantagenet Ancestry.
- [S1396] Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site, online http://www.burkes-peerage.net/sites/peerageandgentry/sitepages/home.asp, Harington Family Page. Hereinafter cited as Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, William Harington: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00377587&tree=LEO
- [S2261] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 1st edition (n.p.: Genealogical Publishing Company, Inc., 2004), Bonville 12: p. 127. Hereinafter cited as Richardson PA.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Elizabeth Harington: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00125454&tree=LEO
Sir John Hylle (Hulle) Knt.1
M, #11770
Last Edited | 1 Sep 2008 |
Sir John Hylle (Hulle) Knt. lived at Kyton, Holcombe Regis, Devonshire, England.2
; van de Pas cites: The Complete Peerage, 1936 , Doubleday, H.A. & Lord Howard de Walden, Reference: VI 319.3 Sir John Hylle (Hulle) Knt. was also known as Sir John Hill of Hill's Court.1,3
Sir John Hylle (Hulle) Knt. lived at Hill's Court, near Exeter, England.2 He was Judge of the King's Bench between 1389 and 1407.1,3
; van de Pas cites: The Complete Peerage, 1936 , Doubleday, H.A. & Lord Howard de Walden, Reference: VI 319.3 Sir John Hylle (Hulle) Knt. was also known as Sir John Hill of Hill's Court.1,3
Sir John Hylle (Hulle) Knt. lived at Hill's Court, near Exeter, England.2 He was Judge of the King's Bench between 1389 and 1407.1,3
Family | |
Child |
Citations
- [S1396] Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site, online http://www.burkes-peerage.net/sites/peerageandgentry/sitepages/home.asp, Harington Family Page. Hereinafter cited as Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site.
- [S673] David Faris, Plantagenet Ancestry of Seventeenth-Century Colonists: The Descent from the Later Plantagenet Kings of England, Henry III, Edward I, and Edward III, of Emigrants from England and Wales to the North American Colonies before 1701, English Ancestry Series, Volume 1, Second Edition (Boston, MA: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1999), p. 38. Hereinafter cited as Faris [1999] - Plantagenet Ancestry.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website (oiginated by Leo van de Pas, continued by Ian Fettes), online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Sir John Hill, of Hill's Court: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00377589&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Margaret Hill: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00377588&tree=LEO
Sir William Bonville Knt., KG, 1st Lord Bonville of Chewton1,2,3,4
M, #11771, b. 31 August 1393, d. 18 February 1460/61
Father | Sir John Bonville of Chute2,5,6,3,4 b. c 1371, d. 12 Nov 1396 |
Mother | Elizabeth Fitz Roger Lady of Chewton2,7,5,3,4 b. 15 Aug 1370, d. 15 Apr 1414 |
Last Edited | 18 Dec 2012 |
Sir William Bonville Knt., KG, 1st Lord Bonville of Chewton was born on 31 August 1393 at Shute, near Colyton, Devonshire, England.8,3,4 He married Margaret Grey, daughter of Sir Reynold de Grey 3rd Lord Grey of Ruthin and Margaret de Ros, circa 12 December 1414
; his 1st wife; date of contract.8,3,4,9,10 Sir William Bonville Knt., KG, 1st Lord Bonville of Chewton married Lady Elizabeth Courtenay, daughter of Sir Edward "the Blind Earl" de Courtenay Knt., 3rd Earl of Devon, 2nd Lord Courtenay and Maud Camoys, circa 9 October 1427
; her 2nd husband.1,3,11,4
Sir William Bonville Knt., KG, 1st Lord Bonville of Chewton died on 18 February 1460/61 at St. Albans, England, at age 67; beheaded after the 1st battle of St. Albans by order of Queen Margaret.8,12,1,3,4
He was Seneschal of Aquitaine.13 He was Sheriff of Devonshire.13
; van de Pas cites: 1. A Genealogical History of the dormant, abeyant, forfeited and extinct peerages of the British Empire, London, 1866, Burke, Sir Bernard, Reference: 59
2. The Lineage and Ancestry of H.R.H. Prince Charles, Prince of Wales, Edinburgh, 1977, Paget, Gerald, Reference: Q 117927
3. The Complete Peerage, 1936 , Doubleday, H.A. & Lord Howard de Walden, Reference: II 218.3
; "Sir William Bonvile (son of John de Bonvile, by Elizabeth his wife, Lady of Chuton, dau. of Henry FitzRoger). This Sir William, in the 5th of Henry V., in the expedition then made into France, was of the retinue of Thomas, Duke of Clarence, the king's brother. In the 1st of Henry VI. Sir William was appointed sheriff of Devonshire, and being afterwards engaged in the French wars, wherein he deported himself with great valour, he was constituted seneschal of the duchy of Aquitaine, and had summons to parliament as a Baron, from 23 September, 1449, to 30 July, 1460, under the title of Lord Bonvile, of Chuton. His lordship subsequently espousing the interests of the house of York, was one of those to whom the custody of King Henry VI was committed after the battle of Northampton, but the tide of fortune turning, his lordship lost his head, with the Duke of Exeter and the Earl of Devon, after the second battle of St. Alban's. Lord Bonvile m. Margaret Meriet, and had (with a dau. Mary, m. to Sir William Courtenay), an only son, William....Lord Bonvile was s. at his decease by his great-grand-dau, Cecily Bonvile..."2
; Faris (1999, pp. 37-38): [quote] MARGARET GREY, was married, with marriage contract dated 12 Dec. 1414, to WILLIAM BONVILLE, Knt., K.G., of Chewton Mendip, Somerset, Sheriff of Devonshire, M.P. for Somerset and Devonshire, son and heir of John Bonville, Knt., of Shute, Devon (descendant of Charlemagne), by Elizabeth, daughter and heiress of John fitz Roger, lord of Chewton, Somerset (of Magna Carta Surety descent and descendant of Charlemagne), by his wife Alice. He was born at Shute, near Colyton, Devon, on 31 Aug. 1393. They had one son and three daughters. She was living in 1426. He was married for the second time about 9 Oct. 1427 to Elizabeth Courtenay, widow of John Harington, Lord Harington, of Aldingham in Furness and Porlock, Somerset (died 11 Feb. 1417/8), and daughter of Edward Courtenay, Earl of Devon, by Maud, daughter of Thomas Camoys, 3rd Lord Camoys. He was summoned to Parliament from 10 Mar. 1448/9 by writs directed (mostly) Willelmo Bonville domino Bonville et de Chuton. Despite previous appearance of loyalty to King Henry VI, he appeared on the Yorkist side at the Battle of Northampton in July 1460, and witnessed the deaths of his only son William and his grandson William at the Battle of Wakefield on 30 Dec. 1460. WILLIAM BONVILLE, Lord Bonville of Chewton, was, after the Lancastrian victory at St. Albans, beheaded the next day, aged sixty-seven, on 18 Feb. 1460/1. His widow died on 28 Oct. 1471 s.p.
C.P. 2:218-219 (1912) (no identification of parents of first wife Margaret). Paget (1957) 273:2. Roskell (1992) 2:284.288 ("one of the most active of the country gentlemen of the south-west, often charged to investigate reports of lawless enterprises on land and sea"). C.P. 14:98 (1998).
Children of William Bonville, by Margaret Grey:
i. WILLIAM BONVILLE [see next].
ii. ELIZABETH BONVILLE, married WILLIAM TAILBOYS [see TAILBOYS 6].12
[end quote].14 He was 1st Lord Bonville of the 1449 cr between 10 March 1448 and 1449.14,15 He was 1st Lord Bonville of Chewton on 23 September 1449.1,2
; his 1st wife; date of contract.8,3,4,9,10 Sir William Bonville Knt., KG, 1st Lord Bonville of Chewton married Lady Elizabeth Courtenay, daughter of Sir Edward "the Blind Earl" de Courtenay Knt., 3rd Earl of Devon, 2nd Lord Courtenay and Maud Camoys, circa 9 October 1427
; her 2nd husband.1,3,11,4
Sir William Bonville Knt., KG, 1st Lord Bonville of Chewton died on 18 February 1460/61 at St. Albans, England, at age 67; beheaded after the 1st battle of St. Albans by order of Queen Margaret.8,12,1,3,4
He was Seneschal of Aquitaine.13 He was Sheriff of Devonshire.13
; van de Pas cites: 1. A Genealogical History of the dormant, abeyant, forfeited and extinct peerages of the British Empire, London, 1866, Burke, Sir Bernard, Reference: 59
2. The Lineage and Ancestry of H.R.H. Prince Charles, Prince of Wales, Edinburgh, 1977, Paget, Gerald, Reference: Q 117927
3. The Complete Peerage, 1936 , Doubleday, H.A. & Lord Howard de Walden, Reference: II 218.3
; "Sir William Bonvile (son of John de Bonvile, by Elizabeth his wife, Lady of Chuton, dau. of Henry FitzRoger). This Sir William, in the 5th of Henry V., in the expedition then made into France, was of the retinue of Thomas, Duke of Clarence, the king's brother. In the 1st of Henry VI. Sir William was appointed sheriff of Devonshire, and being afterwards engaged in the French wars, wherein he deported himself with great valour, he was constituted seneschal of the duchy of Aquitaine, and had summons to parliament as a Baron, from 23 September, 1449, to 30 July, 1460, under the title of Lord Bonvile, of Chuton. His lordship subsequently espousing the interests of the house of York, was one of those to whom the custody of King Henry VI was committed after the battle of Northampton, but the tide of fortune turning, his lordship lost his head, with the Duke of Exeter and the Earl of Devon, after the second battle of St. Alban's. Lord Bonvile m. Margaret Meriet, and had (with a dau. Mary, m. to Sir William Courtenay), an only son, William....Lord Bonvile was s. at his decease by his great-grand-dau, Cecily Bonvile..."2
; Faris (1999, pp. 37-38): [quote] MARGARET GREY, was married, with marriage contract dated 12 Dec. 1414, to WILLIAM BONVILLE, Knt., K.G., of Chewton Mendip, Somerset, Sheriff of Devonshire, M.P. for Somerset and Devonshire, son and heir of John Bonville, Knt., of Shute, Devon (descendant of Charlemagne), by Elizabeth, daughter and heiress of John fitz Roger, lord of Chewton, Somerset (of Magna Carta Surety descent and descendant of Charlemagne), by his wife Alice. He was born at Shute, near Colyton, Devon, on 31 Aug. 1393. They had one son and three daughters. She was living in 1426. He was married for the second time about 9 Oct. 1427 to Elizabeth Courtenay, widow of John Harington, Lord Harington, of Aldingham in Furness and Porlock, Somerset (died 11 Feb. 1417/8), and daughter of Edward Courtenay, Earl of Devon, by Maud, daughter of Thomas Camoys, 3rd Lord Camoys. He was summoned to Parliament from 10 Mar. 1448/9 by writs directed (mostly) Willelmo Bonville domino Bonville et de Chuton. Despite previous appearance of loyalty to King Henry VI, he appeared on the Yorkist side at the Battle of Northampton in July 1460, and witnessed the deaths of his only son William and his grandson William at the Battle of Wakefield on 30 Dec. 1460. WILLIAM BONVILLE, Lord Bonville of Chewton, was, after the Lancastrian victory at St. Albans, beheaded the next day, aged sixty-seven, on 18 Feb. 1460/1. His widow died on 28 Oct. 1471 s.p.
C.P. 2:218-219 (1912) (no identification of parents of first wife Margaret). Paget (1957) 273:2. Roskell (1992) 2:284.288 ("one of the most active of the country gentlemen of the south-west, often charged to investigate reports of lawless enterprises on land and sea"). C.P. 14:98 (1998).
Children of William Bonville, by Margaret Grey:
i. WILLIAM BONVILLE [see next].
ii. ELIZABETH BONVILLE, married WILLIAM TAILBOYS [see TAILBOYS 6].12
[end quote].14 He was 1st Lord Bonville of the 1449 cr between 10 March 1448 and 1449.14,15 He was 1st Lord Bonville of Chewton on 23 September 1449.1,2
Family 1 | Margaret Grey d. 1426/27 |
Children |
|
Family 2 | Lady Elizabeth Courtenay d. 18 Oct 1471 |
Citations
- [S1396] Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site, online http://www.burkes-peerage.net/sites/peerageandgentry/sitepages/home.asp, Harington Family Page. Hereinafter cited as Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site.
- [S1429] Unknown compiler, Notable British Families 1600s-1900s from Burke's Peerage., CD-ROM (n.p.: Broderbund Software Company, 1999), Notable British Families, Burke's Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages, p. 59. Hereinafter cited as Notable British Families CD # 367.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website (oiginated by Leo van de Pas, continued by Ian Fettes), online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, William Bonville: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00028649&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
- [S2261] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 1st edition (n.p.: Genealogical Publishing Company, Inc., 2004), Bonville 11: p. 127. Hereinafter cited as Richardson PA.
- [S2261] Douglas Richardson, Richardson PA, Bonville 10: p. 126.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Sir John Bonville, of Chute: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00146976&tree=LEO
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Elizabeth FitzRoger: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00146977&tree=LEO
- [S673] David Faris, Plantagenet Ancestry of Seventeenth-Century Colonists: The Descent from the Later Plantagenet Kings of England, Henry III, Edward I, and Edward III, of Emigrants from England and Wales to the North American Colonies before 1701, English Ancestry Series, Volume 1, Second Edition (Boston, MA: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1999), pp. 37-38. Hereinafter cited as Faris [1999] - Plantagenet Ancestry.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Margaret Grey: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00294112&tree=LEO
- [S2261] Douglas Richardson, Richardson PA, Ruthin 10: pp. 620-1.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Lady Elizabeth Courtenay: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00028648&tree=LEO
- [S632] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America before 1700: The Lineage of Alfred the Great, Charlemagne, Malcolm of Scotland, Robert the Strong, and Some of Their Descendants, 7th edition (n.p.: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc.
Baltimore, 1992, unknown publish date), line 93A-33, p. 91: "beheaded". Hereinafter cited as Weis AR-7. - [S632] Frederick Lewis Weis, Weis AR-7, line 93A-33, p. 91.
- [S633] With additions and corrections by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr. and William R. Beall Frederick Lewis Weis, The Magna Charta Sureties, 1215: The Barons Named in the Magna
Charta, 1215 and Some of Their Descendants Who Settled in America
During the Early Colonial Years, 5th Edition (Baltimore, MD, USA: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc., unknown publish date), line 108-10, p. 141. Hereinafter cited as Weis MCS-5. - [S1396] Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site, online http://www.burkes-peerage.net/sites/peerageandgentry/sitepages/home.asp, de Courtenay Family Page.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, William Bonville: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00125453&tree=LEO
- [S2261] Douglas Richardson, Richardson PA, Bonville 12: p. 127.
Margaret Grey1,2,3
F, #11772, d. 1426/27
Father | Sir Reynold de Grey 3rd Lord Grey of Ruthin1,2,4,3 b. c 1362, d. 18 Oct 1440 |
Mother | Margaret de Ros1,2,3 |
Last Edited | 20 Aug 2019 |
Margaret Grey married Sir William Bonville Knt., KG, 1st Lord Bonville of Chewton, son of Sir John Bonville of Chute and Elizabeth Fitz Roger Lady of Chewton, circa 12 December 1414
; his 1st wife; date of contract.5,6,1,2,3
Margaret Grey died in 1426/27.5
Margaret Grey was also known as Margaret de Grey. She was living in 1426.1
; his 1st wife; date of contract.5,6,1,2,3
Margaret Grey died in 1426/27.5
Margaret Grey was also known as Margaret de Grey. She was living in 1426.1
Family | Sir William Bonville Knt., KG, 1st Lord Bonville of Chewton b. 31 Aug 1393, d. 18 Feb 1460/61 |
Children |
|
Citations
- [S2261] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 1st edition (n.p.: Genealogical Publishing Company, Inc., 2004), Bonville 11: p. 127. Hereinafter cited as Richardson PA.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website (oiginated by Leo van de Pas, continued by Ian Fettes), online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Margaret Grey: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00294112&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
- [S2261] Douglas Richardson, Richardson PA, Ruthin 10: pp. 620-1.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Reginald Grey: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00026857&tree=LEO
- [S673] David Faris, Plantagenet Ancestry of Seventeenth-Century Colonists: The Descent from the Later Plantagenet Kings of England, Henry III, Edward I, and Edward III, of Emigrants from England and Wales to the North American Colonies before 1701, English Ancestry Series, Volume 1, Second Edition (Boston, MA: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1999), pp. 37-38. Hereinafter cited as Faris [1999] - Plantagenet Ancestry.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, William Bonville: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00028649&tree=LEO
- [S2261] Douglas Richardson, Richardson PA, Bonville 12: p. 127.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, William Bonville: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00125453&tree=LEO
Sir John Bonville of Chute1,2,3,4
M, #11773, b. circa 1371, d. 12 November 1396
Father | Sir William de Bonville Knt., of Shute, co. Devon2,4,3 d. 14 Feb 1407/8 |
Mother | Margaret de Albermarle4,3,5 |
Last Edited | 19 Jul 2008 |
Sir John Bonville of Chute was born circa 1371; Richardson says "aged 11 in 1382."6,1,4 He married Elizabeth Fitz Roger Lady of Chewton, daughter of John Fitz Roger Lord of Chewton and Alice (?), before 18 October 1377
; her 1st husband.7,8,2,4,9
Sir John Bonville of Chute died on 12 November 1396.8
.10
; her 1st husband.7,8,2,4,9
Sir John Bonville of Chute died on 12 November 1396.8
.10
Family | Elizabeth Fitz Roger Lady of Chewton b. 15 Aug 1370, d. 15 Apr 1414 |
Children |
|
Citations
- [S632] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America before 1700: The Lineage of Alfred the Great, Charlemagne, Malcolm of Scotland, Robert the Strong, and Some of Their Descendants, 7th edition (n.p.: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc.
Baltimore, 1992, unknown publish date), line 124A-36, p. 114. Hereinafter cited as Weis AR-7. - [S1429] Unknown compiler, Notable British Families 1600s-1900s from Burke's Peerage., CD-ROM (n.p.: Broderbund Software Company, 1999), Notable British Families, Burke's Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages, p. 59. Hereinafter cited as Notable British Families CD # 367.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website (oiginated by Leo van de Pas, continued by Ian Fettes), online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Sir John Bonville, of Chute: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00146976&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
- [S2261] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 1st edition (n.p.: Genealogical Publishing Company, Inc., 2004), Bonville 10: p. 126. Hereinafter cited as Richardson PA.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Margaret d'Aumale: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00456237&tree=LEO
- [S632] Frederick Lewis Weis, Weis AR-7, line 261-37, p. 236.
- [S673] David Faris, Plantagenet Ancestry of Seventeenth-Century Colonists: The Descent from the Later Plantagenet Kings of England, Henry III, Edward I, and Edward III, of Emigrants from England and Wales to the North American Colonies before 1701, English Ancestry Series, Volume 1, Second Edition (Boston, MA: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1999), pp. 37-38. Hereinafter cited as Faris [1999] - Plantagenet Ancestry.
- [S633] With additions and corrections by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr. and William R. Beall Frederick Lewis Weis, The Magna Charta Sureties, 1215: The Barons Named in the Magna
Charta, 1215 and Some of Their Descendants Who Settled in America
During the Early Colonial Years, 5th Edition (Baltimore, MD, USA: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc., unknown publish date), line 90A-9, p. 113. Hereinafter cited as Weis MCS-5. - [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Elizabeth FitzRoger: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00146977&tree=LEO
- [S673] David Faris, Faris [1999] - Plantagenet Ancestry, pp. 37-38: "descendant of Charlemagne."
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, William Bonville: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00028649&tree=LEO
- [S2261] Douglas Richardson, Richardson PA, Bonville 11: p. 127.
Elizabeth Fitz Roger Lady of Chewton1,2,3
F, #11774, b. 15 August 1370, d. 15 April 1414
Father | John Fitz Roger Lord of Chewton1,4,3,2 b. bt 1344 - 1352, d. bt 1370 - 1372 |
Mother | Alice (?)5,2,3,4 d. 27 Mar 1426 |
Last Edited | 19 Jul 2008 |
Elizabeth Fitz Roger Lady of Chewton was born on 15 August 1370; Richardson and Weis say b. 15 Aug 1370; van de Pas says b. 25 Aug 1370.6,3,2 She married Sir John Bonville of Chute, son of Sir William de Bonville Knt., of Shute, co. Devon and Margaret de Albermarle, before 18 October 1377
; her 1st husband.7,6,1,2,3 Elizabeth Fitz Roger Lady of Chewton married Richard Stuckley Gent., King's Esquire, son of Geoffrey de Stuecle and Christine (?), before 2 December 1398
; her 2nd husband.8,9,2,3,10
Elizabeth Fitz Roger Lady of Chewton died on 15 April 1414 at age 43.6,2
; van de Pas cites: 1. The Complete Peerage, 1936 , Doubleday, H.A. & Lord Howard de Walden, Reference: II 218
2. The Royal Descents of 500 Immigrants to the American Colonies or the USA, Baltimore, 1993, Roberts, Gary Boyd, Reference: 345
3. A Genealogical History of the dormant, abeyant, forfeited and extinct peerages of the British Empire, London, 1866, Burke, Sir Bernard, Reference: 59.7,3
; her 1st husband.7,6,1,2,3 Elizabeth Fitz Roger Lady of Chewton married Richard Stuckley Gent., King's Esquire, son of Geoffrey de Stuecle and Christine (?), before 2 December 1398
; her 2nd husband.8,9,2,3,10
Elizabeth Fitz Roger Lady of Chewton died on 15 April 1414 at age 43.6,2
; van de Pas cites: 1. The Complete Peerage, 1936 , Doubleday, H.A. & Lord Howard de Walden, Reference: II 218
2. The Royal Descents of 500 Immigrants to the American Colonies or the USA, Baltimore, 1993, Roberts, Gary Boyd, Reference: 345
3. A Genealogical History of the dormant, abeyant, forfeited and extinct peerages of the British Empire, London, 1866, Burke, Sir Bernard, Reference: 59.7,3
Family 1 | Sir John Bonville of Chute b. c 1371, d. 12 Nov 1396 |
Children |
|
Family 2 | Richard Stuckley Gent., King's Esquire d. b 28 Nov 1441 |
Child |
|
Citations
- [S1429] Unknown compiler, Notable British Families 1600s-1900s from Burke's Peerage., CD-ROM (n.p.: Broderbund Software Company, 1999), Notable British Families, Burke's Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages, p. 59. Hereinafter cited as Notable British Families CD # 367.
- [S2261] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 1st edition (n.p.: Genealogical Publishing Company, Inc., 2004), Bonville 10: p. 126. Hereinafter cited as Richardson PA.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website (oiginated by Leo van de Pas, continued by Ian Fettes), online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Elizabeth FitzRoger: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00146977&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
- [S2261] Douglas Richardson, Richardson PA, Bonville 9: p. 126.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Alice: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00146975&tree=LEO
- [S633] With additions and corrections by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr. and William R. Beall Frederick Lewis Weis, The Magna Charta Sureties, 1215: The Barons Named in the Magna
Charta, 1215 and Some of Their Descendants Who Settled in America
During the Early Colonial Years, 5th Edition (Baltimore, MD, USA: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc., unknown publish date), line 90A-9, p. 113. Hereinafter cited as Weis MCS-5. - [S673] David Faris, Plantagenet Ancestry of Seventeenth-Century Colonists: The Descent from the Later Plantagenet Kings of England, Henry III, Edward I, and Edward III, of Emigrants from England and Wales to the North American Colonies before 1701, English Ancestry Series, Volume 1, Second Edition (Boston, MA: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1999), pp. 37-38. Hereinafter cited as Faris [1999] - Plantagenet Ancestry.
- [S633] With additions and corrections by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr. and William R. Beall Frederick Lewis Weis, Weis MCS-5, line 22-9, p. 29.
- [S632] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America before 1700: The Lineage of Alfred the Great, Charlemagne, Malcolm of Scotland, Robert the Strong, and Some of Their Descendants, 7th edition (n.p.: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc.
Baltimore, 1992, unknown publish date), line 261-37, p. 236. Hereinafter cited as Weis AR-7. - [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Richard Stukeley: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00371308&tree=LEO
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, William Bonville: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00028649&tree=LEO
- [S2261] Douglas Richardson, Richardson PA, Bonville 11: p. 127.
John Fitz Roger Lord of Chewton1
M, #11775, b. between 1344 and 1352, d. between 1370 and 1372
Father | Sir Henry Fitz Roger Ktn., Lord of Chewton, Somerset2,3,1 b. 30 Nov 1318, d. 29 Jan 1352 |
Mother | Elizabeth de Holand2,4,1 d. 13 Jul 1387 |
Last Edited | 19 Jul 2008 |
John Fitz Roger Lord of Chewton was born between 1344 and 1352.5,1 He married Alice (?) before 26 April 1369
; her 1st husband.6,5,1,7
John Fitz Roger Lord of Chewton died between 1370 and 1372.8,1
John Fitz Roger Lord of Chewton lived at Westkyngton, Wiltshire, England.5 He was Lord of Chewton at Chewton, co. Somerset, England.5
.9
John Fitz Roger Lord of Chewton lived at Chewton, co. Somerset, England.6
; her 1st husband.6,5,1,7
John Fitz Roger Lord of Chewton died between 1370 and 1372.8,1
John Fitz Roger Lord of Chewton lived at Westkyngton, Wiltshire, England.5 He was Lord of Chewton at Chewton, co. Somerset, England.5
.9
John Fitz Roger Lord of Chewton lived at Chewton, co. Somerset, England.6
Family | Alice (?) d. 27 Mar 1426 |
Child |
|
Citations
- [S2261] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 1st edition (n.p.: Genealogical Publishing Company, Inc., 2004), Bonville 9: p. 126. Hereinafter cited as Richardson PA.
- [S2261] Douglas Richardson, Richardson PA, Bonville 8: p. 126.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website (oiginated by Leo van de Pas, continued by Ian Fettes), online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Sir Henry FitzRoger: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00371305&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Elizabeth Holand: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00371306&tree=LEO
- [S633] With additions and corrections by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr. and William R. Beall Frederick Lewis Weis, The Magna Charta Sureties, 1215: The Barons Named in the Magna
Charta, 1215 and Some of Their Descendants Who Settled in America
During the Early Colonial Years, 5th Edition (Baltimore, MD, USA: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc., unknown publish date), line 90A-8, p. 113. Hereinafter cited as Weis MCS-5. - [S673] David Faris, Plantagenet Ancestry of Seventeenth-Century Colonists: The Descent from the Later Plantagenet Kings of England, Henry III, Edward I, and Edward III, of Emigrants from England and Wales to the North American Colonies before 1701, English Ancestry Series, Volume 1, Second Edition (Boston, MA: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1999), pp. 37-38. Hereinafter cited as Faris [1999] - Plantagenet Ancestry.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Alice: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00146975&tree=LEO
- [S632] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America before 1700: The Lineage of Alfred the Great, Charlemagne, Malcolm of Scotland, Robert the Strong, and Some of Their Descendants, 7th edition (n.p.: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc.
Baltimore, 1992, unknown publish date), line 261-36, p. 236. Hereinafter cited as Weis AR-7. - [S673] David Faris, Faris [1999] - Plantagenet Ancestry, pp. 37-38: "of Magna Carta Surety descent and descendant of Charlemagne."
- [S1429] Unknown compiler, Notable British Families 1600s-1900s from Burke's Peerage., CD-ROM (n.p.: Broderbund Software Company, 1999), Notable British Families, Burke's Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages, p. 59. Hereinafter cited as Notable British Families CD # 367.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Elizabeth FitzRoger: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00146977&tree=LEO
- [S2261] Douglas Richardson, Richardson PA, Bonville 10: p. 126.
Sir Ralph Carminowe of Carminowe1,2
M, #11776, d. between 9 October 1386 and 1 January 1387
Last Edited | 19 Jul 2008 |
Sir Ralph Carminowe of Carminowe married Alice (?) before 18 November 1383
; her 3rd husband, his 2nd wife.1,3,2
Sir Ralph Carminowe of Carminowe died between 9 October 1386 and 1 January 1387.1,2
; her 3rd husband, his 2nd wife.1,3,2
Sir Ralph Carminowe of Carminowe died between 9 October 1386 and 1 January 1387.1,2
Family | Alice (?) d. 27 Mar 1426 |
Citations
- [S2261] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 1st edition (n.p.: Genealogical Publishing Company, Inc., 2004), Bonville 9: p. 126. Hereinafter cited as Richardson PA.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website (oiginated by Leo van de Pas, continued by Ian Fettes), online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Sir Ralph Carminowe, of Carminowe: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00146975&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Alice: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00146975&tree=LEO
Margaret de Ros1,2
F, #11777
Father | Sir Thomas de Ros Knt., 4th Lord de Ros of Helmesley3,4,1,2 b. 13 Jan 1336/37, d. 8 Jun 1384 |
Mother | Beatrice de Stafford4,1,2 b. c 1340, d. 14 Apr 1415 |
Last Edited | 30 Aug 2019 |
Margaret de Ros married Sir Reynold de Grey 3rd Lord Grey of Ruthin, son of Reynold de Grey 2nd Lord Grey of Ruthin and Eleanor/Alianore le Strange, after 25 November 1378.5,6,7,8,1,2
.5 Margaret de Ros was also known as Margaret Roos.9,2
.5 Margaret de Ros was also known as Margaret Roos.9,2
Family | Sir Reynold de Grey 3rd Lord Grey of Ruthin b. c 1362, d. 18 Oct 1440 |
Children |
|
Citations
- [S2261] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 1st edition (n.p.: Genealogical Publishing Company, Inc., 2004), Roos 10.iii: p. 613. Hereinafter cited as Richardson PA.
- [S2261] Douglas Richardson, Richardson PA, Ruthin 10: pp. 620-1.
- [S2261] Douglas Richardson, Richardson PA, Bonville 11: p. 127.
- [S2261] Douglas Richardson, Richardson PA, Roos 10: pp. 612-3.
- [S673] David Faris, Plantagenet Ancestry of Seventeenth-Century Colonists: The Descent from the Later Plantagenet Kings of England, Henry III, Edward I, and Edward III, of Emigrants from England and Wales to the North American Colonies before 1701, English Ancestry Series, Volume 1, Second Edition (Boston, MA: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1999), pp. 37-38, 314. Hereinafter cited as Faris [1999] - Plantagenet Ancestry.
- [S632] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America before 1700: The Lineage of Alfred the Great, Charlemagne, Malcolm of Scotland, Robert the Strong, and Some of Their Descendants, 7th edition (n.p.: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc.
Baltimore, 1992, unknown publish date), line 93A-32, pp. 91-92. Hereinafter cited as Weis AR-7. - [S1396] Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site, online http://www.burkes-peerage.net/sites/peerageandgentry/sitepages/home.asp, Grey, Baron Family Page - see CULLEN OF ASHBOURNE, B. Hereinafter cited as Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website (oiginated by Leo van de Pas, continued by Ian Fettes), online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Reginald Grey: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00026857&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
- [S2261] Douglas Richardson, Richardson PA, Poynings p. 594.
- [S2261] Douglas Richardson, Richardson PA, Cornwall 10: p. 235.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Margaret Grey: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00294112&tree=LEO
- [S2261] Douglas Richardson, Richardson PA, Poynings 11: p. 594.
Thomas Beaufort Earl of Perche1,2
M, #11778, b. 1405, d. October 1431
Father | Sir John Beaufort KG, 1st Earl of Somerset, Marquess of Dorset1,2 b. c 1371, d. bt 16 Mar 1409 - 5 Apr 1410 |
Mother | Margaret de Holand1,2 b. c 1380, d. 30 Dec 1439 |
Last Edited | 29 Sep 2019 |
Thomas Beaufort Earl of Perche was born in 1405 at England.3,1,2,4
Thomas Beaufort Earl of Perche was buried in October 1431 at Chapel of St. Michael, Canterbury Cathedral, Canterbury, co. Kent, England.2
Thomas Beaufort Earl of Perche died in October 1431 at at the siege of Louviers, France; died unmarried.3,1,2,4
Thomas Beaufort Earl of Perche was buried after October 1431 at St. Michael's Chapel, Canterbury Cathedral, Canterbury, City of Canterbury, co. Kent, England; From Find A Grave:
BIRTH 1405, England
DEATH Oct 1431 (aged 25–26), France
Earl of Perche, English commander during the Hundred Years' War. Third son of John Beaufort, 1st Earl of Somerset and his wife, Margaret Holland. Grandson of John of Gaunt, 1st Duke of Lancaster and Katherine Swynford, Thomas Holland, 2nd Earl of Kent and Alice FitzAlan. Nephew of Cardinal Beaufort.
Thomas joined in King Henry V's 1419 campaigns in France along with his older brother, Henry Beaufort, Earl of Somerset. In 1421, he accompanied the king's younger brother, Thomas of Lancaster, to the fighting in Anjou where Lancaster was killed at the Battle of Baugé and Somerset and Thomas were captured. Thomas was eventually released in a prisoner exchange negotiated by his uncle, Henry Beaufort, Bishop of Winchester and Cardinal Beaufort, the son of John of Gaunt.
Thomas received his title of Count of Perche in December 1427, a title in honor only, for the corresponding lands captured by the English were still held by the French Duke John II of Alençon. Thomas was granted a retinue of 128 soldiers and 460 archers in 1431 by Henry VI. He commanded soldiers at a battle at La Charité-sur-Loire in late 1430 and died 3 October 1431 at the siege of Louviers, three weeks before the city's fall.
Perche died unmarried and childless, buried in the chapel of St Michael in Canterbury Cathedral. Upon his death, his title was extinct.
Family Members
Parents
John de Beaufort 1371–1410
Margaret de Holland de Beaufort 1380–1439
Siblings
Margaret Beaufort Courtenay unknown–1449
John Beaufort 1404–1444
Joan Beaufort 1404–1445
Edmund Beaufort 1406–1455
BURIAL Canterbury Cathedral, Canterbury, City of Canterbury, Kent, England
Created by: Anne Shurtleff Stevens
Added: 7 Mar 2013
Find A Grave Memorial 106355535.4
Thomas Beaufort Earl of Perche was buried in October 1431 at Chapel of St. Michael, Canterbury Cathedral, Canterbury, co. Kent, England.2
Thomas Beaufort Earl of Perche died in October 1431 at at the siege of Louviers, France; died unmarried.3,1,2,4
Thomas Beaufort Earl of Perche was buried after October 1431 at St. Michael's Chapel, Canterbury Cathedral, Canterbury, City of Canterbury, co. Kent, England; From Find A Grave:
BIRTH 1405, England
DEATH Oct 1431 (aged 25–26), France
Earl of Perche, English commander during the Hundred Years' War. Third son of John Beaufort, 1st Earl of Somerset and his wife, Margaret Holland. Grandson of John of Gaunt, 1st Duke of Lancaster and Katherine Swynford, Thomas Holland, 2nd Earl of Kent and Alice FitzAlan. Nephew of Cardinal Beaufort.
Thomas joined in King Henry V's 1419 campaigns in France along with his older brother, Henry Beaufort, Earl of Somerset. In 1421, he accompanied the king's younger brother, Thomas of Lancaster, to the fighting in Anjou where Lancaster was killed at the Battle of Baugé and Somerset and Thomas were captured. Thomas was eventually released in a prisoner exchange negotiated by his uncle, Henry Beaufort, Bishop of Winchester and Cardinal Beaufort, the son of John of Gaunt.
Thomas received his title of Count of Perche in December 1427, a title in honor only, for the corresponding lands captured by the English were still held by the French Duke John II of Alençon. Thomas was granted a retinue of 128 soldiers and 460 archers in 1431 by Henry VI. He commanded soldiers at a battle at La Charité-sur-Loire in late 1430 and died 3 October 1431 at the siege of Louviers, three weeks before the city's fall.
Perche died unmarried and childless, buried in the chapel of St Michael in Canterbury Cathedral. Upon his death, his title was extinct.
Family Members
Parents
John de Beaufort 1371–1410
Margaret de Holland de Beaufort 1380–1439
Siblings
Margaret Beaufort Courtenay unknown–1449
John Beaufort 1404–1444
Joan Beaufort 1404–1445
Edmund Beaufort 1406–1455
BURIAL Canterbury Cathedral, Canterbury, City of Canterbury, Kent, England
Created by: Anne Shurtleff Stevens
Added: 7 Mar 2013
Find A Grave Memorial 106355535.4
Citations
- [S1438] Miroslav Marek, online http://genealogy.euweb.cz/index.html, unknown author (e-mail address), downloaded updated 15 May 2003, Anjou 6 page (The House of Anjou): http://genealogy.euweb.cz/anjou/anjou6.html
- [S2371] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 2nd edition (3 Volumes) (Salt Lake City, UT: Self Published, 2011), Vol III: Somerset 9.iii: p. 224. Hereinafter cited as Richardson [2011] Plantagenet Ancestry 2nd ed (3 vols).
- [S673] David Faris, Plantagenet Ancestry of Seventeenth-Century Colonists: The Descent from the Later Plantagenet Kings of England, Henry III, Edward I, and Edward III, of Emigrants from England and Wales to the North American Colonies before 1701, English Ancestry Series, Volume 1, Second Edition (Boston, MA: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1999), pp. 332-333. Hereinafter cited as Faris [1999] - Plantagenet Ancestry.
- [S2374] Find a Grave, online http://www.findagrave.com/, Find A Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com : accessed 29 September 2019), memorial page for Thomas Beaufort (1405–Oct 1431), Find A Grave Memorial no. 106355535, citing Canterbury Cathedral, Canterbury, City of Canterbury, Kent, England ; Maintained by Anne Shurtleff Stevens (contributor 46947920), at: https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/106355535/thomas-beaufort. Hereinafter cited as Find a Grave.
Joan Beaufort Queen Dowager of Scotland1,2
F, #11779, b. 1404, d. 15 July 1445
Father | Sir John Beaufort KG, 1st Earl of Somerset, Marquess of Dorset1,3,4,5,2 b. c 1371, d. bt 16 Mar 1409 - 5 Apr 1410 |
Mother | Margaret de Holand3,5,2 b. c 1380, d. 30 Dec 1439 |
Last Edited | 3 Nov 2020 |
Joan Beaufort Queen Dowager of Scotland was born in 1404 at City of Westminster, Greater London, England.6 She married James I Stewart King of Scotland, son of Robert III (John) Stewart King of Scots and Annabella Drummond Queen of Scotland, between 13 February 1422 and 1423 at St. Mary Overy's, Southwark, co. Surrey, England,
; her 1st husband; Burke's Peerage says "He m 2 Feb 1423-34."7,1,2 Joan Beaufort Queen Dowager of Scotland married Sir James "the Black Knight of Lorne" Stewart Knt., son of Sir John Stewart Lord of Innermeath and Lorn, 1st of Grandtully and Isobel/Isabella de Ergadia, before 21 September 1439
; her 2nd husband; Papal dispensation for both consanguinity and affinity, 21 Sept 1439.7,8,1,9,2
Joan Beaufort Queen Dowager of Scotland was buried after 15 June 1445 at Perth, Perth and Kinross, Scotland; From Find A Grave:
BIRTH 1404, Westminster, City of Westminster, Greater London, England
DEATH 15 Jun 1445 (aged 40–41), Dunbar, East Lothian, Scotland
Scottish Monarch. Queen consort of James I. The daughter of John Beaufort, Marquess of Somerset and Margaret Holland, she caught the eye of James I during his imprisonment in England. She so inspired him that he wrote a long love poem to her, The King's Quhair. They were married in Southwark on February 2, 1424. Together they had eight children, including the future James II. Two years after her husband's murder, she married James Stewart, the Black Knight of Lorn, in 1439. She had one son by Stewart, John, Earl of Atholl. Joan died at Dunbar Castle. Bio by: Kristen Conrad
Family Members
Parents
John de Beaufort 1371–1410
Margaret de Holland de Beaufort 1380–1439
Spouses
James King of Scots 1394–1437
James Stewart 1383–1454
Siblings
Margaret Beaufort Courtenay unknown–1449
John Beaufort 1404–1444
Thomas Beaufort 1405–1431
Edmund Beaufort 1406–1455
Children
Margaret Stewart 1424–1445
Isabeau d'Écosse 1426–1498
Joan Stewart Douglas 1428–1498
James King of Scots II 1430–1460
Eleanor of Scotland 1431–1480
John Stewart 1440–1512
Andrew Stewart 1444–1501
BURIAL Perth Abbey, Perth, Perth and Kinross, Scotland
Maintained by: Find A Grave
Originally Created by: Kristen Conrad
Added: 2 Sep 2004
Find A Grave Memorial 9401207.6
Joan Beaufort Queen Dowager of Scotland died on 15 July 1445 at Dunbar, East Lothian, Scotland.7,1,9,3,4,6
She was Queen Dowager of Scotland.
; her 1st husband; Burke's Peerage says "He m 2 Feb 1423-34."7,1,2 Joan Beaufort Queen Dowager of Scotland married Sir James "the Black Knight of Lorne" Stewart Knt., son of Sir John Stewart Lord of Innermeath and Lorn, 1st of Grandtully and Isobel/Isabella de Ergadia, before 21 September 1439
; her 2nd husband; Papal dispensation for both consanguinity and affinity, 21 Sept 1439.7,8,1,9,2
Joan Beaufort Queen Dowager of Scotland was buried after 15 June 1445 at Perth, Perth and Kinross, Scotland; From Find A Grave:
BIRTH 1404, Westminster, City of Westminster, Greater London, England
DEATH 15 Jun 1445 (aged 40–41), Dunbar, East Lothian, Scotland
Scottish Monarch. Queen consort of James I. The daughter of John Beaufort, Marquess of Somerset and Margaret Holland, she caught the eye of James I during his imprisonment in England. She so inspired him that he wrote a long love poem to her, The King's Quhair. They were married in Southwark on February 2, 1424. Together they had eight children, including the future James II. Two years after her husband's murder, she married James Stewart, the Black Knight of Lorn, in 1439. She had one son by Stewart, John, Earl of Atholl. Joan died at Dunbar Castle. Bio by: Kristen Conrad
Family Members
Parents
John de Beaufort 1371–1410
Margaret de Holland de Beaufort 1380–1439
Spouses
James King of Scots 1394–1437
James Stewart 1383–1454
Siblings
Margaret Beaufort Courtenay unknown–1449
John Beaufort 1404–1444
Thomas Beaufort 1405–1431
Edmund Beaufort 1406–1455
Children
Margaret Stewart 1424–1445
Isabeau d'Écosse 1426–1498
Joan Stewart Douglas 1428–1498
James King of Scots II 1430–1460
Eleanor of Scotland 1431–1480
John Stewart 1440–1512
Andrew Stewart 1444–1501
BURIAL Perth Abbey, Perth, Perth and Kinross, Scotland
Maintained by: Find A Grave
Originally Created by: Kristen Conrad
Added: 2 Sep 2004
Find A Grave Memorial 9401207.6
Joan Beaufort Queen Dowager of Scotland died on 15 July 1445 at Dunbar, East Lothian, Scotland.7,1,9,3,4,6
She was Queen Dowager of Scotland.
Family 1 | James I Stewart King of Scotland b. 25 Jul 1394, d. 21 Feb 1437 |
Children |
|
Family 2 | Sir James "the Black Knight of Lorne" Stewart Knt. |
Children |
|
Citations
- [S1396] Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site, online http://www.burkes-peerage.net/sites/peerageandgentry/sitepages/home.asp, Stuart Earls of Moray Family Page. Hereinafter cited as Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site.
- [S2371] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 2nd edition (3 Volumes) (Salt Lake City, UT: Self Published, 2011), Vol III: Somerset 9.v: p. 224. Hereinafter cited as Richardson [2011] Plantagenet Ancestry 2nd ed (3 vols).
- [S1426] Jiri Louda (Tables) and Michael Maclagan (text), Lines of Succession: Heraldry of the Royal Families of Europe (New York, NY: Barnes & Noble Books, 2002), Table 4: England - Last Plantagenets. Hereinafter cited as Louda & Maclagan [2002] Lines of Succession.
- [S1426] Jiri Louda (Tables) and Michael Maclagan (text), Louda & Maclagan [2002] Lines of Succession, Table 13: Scotland: Houses of Bruce and Stuart.
- [S1429] Unknown compiler, Notable British Families 1600s-1900s from Burke's Peerage., CD-ROM (n.p.: Broderbund Software Company, 1999), Notable British Families, Burke's Dromant, ABeyant, Forgeited, and Extinct Peerages, p. 35. Hereinafter cited as Notable British Families CD # 367.
- [S2374] Find a Grave, online http://www.findagrave.com/, Find A Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com : accessed 29 September 2019), memorial page for Joan Beaufort (1404–15 Jun 1445), Find A Grave Memorial no. 9401207, citing Perth Abbey, Perth, Perth and Kinross, Scotland ; Maintained by Find A Grave, at: https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/9401207/joan-beaufort. Hereinafter cited as Find a Grave.
- [S673] David Faris, Plantagenet Ancestry of Seventeenth-Century Colonists: The Descent from the Later Plantagenet Kings of England, Henry III, Edward I, and Edward III, of Emigrants from England and Wales to the North American Colonies before 1701, English Ancestry Series, Volume 1, Second Edition (Boston, MA: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1999), pp. 332-333. Hereinafter cited as Faris [1999] - Plantagenet Ancestry.
- [S633] With additions and corrections by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr. and William R. Beall Frederick Lewis Weis, The Magna Charta Sureties, 1215: The Barons Named in the Magna
Charta, 1215 and Some of Their Descendants Who Settled in America
During the Early Colonial Years, 5th Edition (Baltimore, MD, USA: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc., unknown publish date), line 91-10, p. 117. Hereinafter cited as Weis MCS-5. - [S1396] Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site, online http://www.burkes-peerage.net/sites/peerageandgentry/sitepages/home.asp, Stewart of Appin Family Page.
- [S761] John Cannon and Ralph Griffiths, The Oxford Illustrated History of the British Monarchy (Great Clarendon Street, Oxford OX2 6DP, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press, 1988), Appendix IV: The Scottish Royal Dynasties. Hereinafter cited as Cannon & Griffiths [1988] Hist of Brit Monarchy.
- [S2203] Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG): MEDIEVAL LANDS - A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/SCOTLAND.htm#JamesIIdied1460B. Hereinafter cited as FMG Medieval Lands Website.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website (oiginated by Leo van de Pas, continued by Ian Fettes), online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, James II: https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00000501&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
- [S1396] Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site, online http://www.burkes-peerage.net/sites/peerageandgentry/sitepages/home.asp, Stuart Earls of Moray Family Page (see ERROLL).
- [S1396] Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site, online http://www.burkes-peerage.net/sites/peerageandgentry/sitepages/home.asp, Erskine Earls of Buchan Family Page.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Sir John Stewart: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00001647&tree=LEO
Margaret Beaufort1,2
F, #11780, d. November 1449
Father | Sir John Beaufort KG, 1st Earl of Somerset, Marquess of Dorset3,1,2 b. c 1371, d. bt 16 Mar 1409 - 5 Apr 1410 |
Mother | Margaret de Holand3,2 b. c 1380, d. 30 Dec 1439 |
Last Edited | 29 Sep 2019 |
Margaret Beaufort married Sir Thomas Courtenay Knt., 13th Earl of Devon; 6th Lord Courtenay, son of Hugh de Courtenay 4th Earl of Devon and Anne Talbot, after 1421.4,1,2,5
Margaret Beaufort was buried in November 1449 at St. Andrew's Churchyard, Colyton, East Devon District, Devonshire, England; From Find A Grave:
BIRTH unknown, England
DEATH Nov 1449, England
Margaret de Beaufort de Courtenay, Countess of Devon - Second daughter of Sir John Beaufort and Margaret Holand. Granddaughter of John of Gaunt and Katherine de Roet, Sir Thomas de Holand and Alice Rundel. Wife of Sir Thomas Courtenay Earl of Devon, Lord Courtenay. They were married after 1421 and had three sons and two daughters:
* Sir Thomas, 6th Earl of Devon, beheaded at York 1461
* Henry, 7th Earl of Devon, beheaded at Salisbury
* John, slain at the Battle of Tewkesbury
* Joan, wife of Sir Roger Clifford & Sir Wm Knyvet
* Elizabeth, wife of Sir Hugh Conway
* Anne
* Eleanor
* Maud
Sir Thomas died at Abington Abbey 03 Feb 1458.
Family Members
Parents
John de Beaufort 1371–1410
Margaret de Holland de Beaufort 1380–1439
Spouse
Thomas de Courtenay 1414–1458
Siblings
John Beaufort 1404–1444
Joan Beaufort 1404–1445
Thomas Beaufort 1405–1431
Edmund Beaufort 1406–1455
BURIAL St Andrew's Churchyard, Colyton, East Devon District, Devon, England
Maintained by: Grady Leroy Puryear
Originally Created by: Anne Shurtleff Stevens
Added: 3 Jul 2013
Find A Grave Memorial 113262589.6
Margaret Beaufort died in November 1449.2,6
.4
Margaret Beaufort was buried in November 1449 at St. Andrew's Churchyard, Colyton, East Devon District, Devonshire, England; From Find A Grave:
BIRTH unknown, England
DEATH Nov 1449, England
Margaret de Beaufort de Courtenay, Countess of Devon - Second daughter of Sir John Beaufort and Margaret Holand. Granddaughter of John of Gaunt and Katherine de Roet, Sir Thomas de Holand and Alice Rundel. Wife of Sir Thomas Courtenay Earl of Devon, Lord Courtenay. They were married after 1421 and had three sons and two daughters:
* Sir Thomas, 6th Earl of Devon, beheaded at York 1461
* Henry, 7th Earl of Devon, beheaded at Salisbury
* John, slain at the Battle of Tewkesbury
* Joan, wife of Sir Roger Clifford & Sir Wm Knyvet
* Elizabeth, wife of Sir Hugh Conway
* Anne
* Eleanor
* Maud
Sir Thomas died at Abington Abbey 03 Feb 1458.
Family Members
Parents
John de Beaufort 1371–1410
Margaret de Holland de Beaufort 1380–1439
Spouse
Thomas de Courtenay 1414–1458
Siblings
John Beaufort 1404–1444
Joan Beaufort 1404–1445
Thomas Beaufort 1405–1431
Edmund Beaufort 1406–1455
BURIAL St Andrew's Churchyard, Colyton, East Devon District, Devon, England
Maintained by: Grady Leroy Puryear
Originally Created by: Anne Shurtleff Stevens
Added: 3 Jul 2013
Find A Grave Memorial 113262589.6
Margaret Beaufort died in November 1449.2,6
.4
Family | Sir Thomas Courtenay Knt., 13th Earl of Devon; 6th Lord Courtenay b. 1414, d. 3 Feb 1458 |
Children |
|
Citations
- [S2261] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 1st edition (n.p.: Genealogical Publishing Company, Inc., 2004), Gurdon 12: p. 367. Hereinafter cited as Richardson PA.
- [S2371] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 2nd edition (3 Volumes) (Salt Lake City, UT: Self Published, 2011), Vol III: Somerset 9.vi: pp. 224-5. Hereinafter cited as Richardson [2011] Plantagenet Ancestry 2nd ed (3 vols).
- [S1429] Unknown compiler, Notable British Families 1600s-1900s from Burke's Peerage., CD-ROM (n.p.: Broderbund Software Company, 1999), Notable British Families, Burke's Dromant, ABeyant, Forgeited, and Extinct Peerages, p. 35. Hereinafter cited as Notable British Families CD # 367.
- [S673] David Faris, Plantagenet Ancestry of Seventeenth-Century Colonists: The Descent from the Later Plantagenet Kings of England, Henry III, Edward I, and Edward III, of Emigrants from England and Wales to the North American Colonies before 1701, English Ancestry Series, Volume 1, Second Edition (Boston, MA: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1999), pp. 332-333. Hereinafter cited as Faris [1999] - Plantagenet Ancestry.
- [S2374] Find a Grave, online http://www.findagrave.com/, Find A Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com : accessed 29 September 2019), memorial page for Sir Thomas de Courtenay (1414–3 Feb 1458), Find A Grave Memorial no. 113266268, citing Exeter Cathedral, Exeter, City of Exeter, Devon, England ; Maintained by Anne Shurtleff Stevens (contributor 46947920), at: https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/113266268/thomas-de-courtenay. Hereinafter cited as Find a Grave.
- [S2374] Find a Grave, online http://www.findagrave.com/, Find A Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com : accessed 29 September 2019), memorial page for Margaret Beaufort Courtenay (unknown–Nov 1449), Find A Grave Memorial no. 113262589, citing St Andrew's Churchyard, Colyton, East Devon District, Devon, England ; Maintained by Grady Leroy Puryear (contributor 47316716), at: https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/113262589/margaret-courtenay
- [S1396] Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site, online http://www.burkes-peerage.net/sites/peerageandgentry/sitepages/home.asp, de Courtenay Family Page. Hereinafter cited as Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site.
- [S2371] Douglas Richardson, Richardson [2011] Plantagenet Ancestry 2nd ed (3 vols), Vol III: Somerset 9.vi.c: pp. 225-6.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website (oiginated by Leo van de Pas, continued by Ian Fettes), online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Joane Courtenay: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00028664&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
- [S2371] Douglas Richardson, Richardson [2011] Plantagenet Ancestry 2nd ed (3 vols), Vol III: Somerset 9.vi.e: pp. 226-7.
James I Stewart King of Scotland
M, #11781, b. 25 July 1394, d. 21 February 1437
Father | Robert III (John) Stewart King of Scots1,2 b. 1337, d. 4 Apr 1406 |
Mother | Annabella Drummond Queen of Scotland1,2 b. c 1350, d. 1401 |
Last Edited | 27 Jan 2020 |
James I Stewart King of Scotland was buried at Carthusian Church, Perth, Perth and Kinross, Scotland.3 He was born on 25 July 1394 at Dunfermline Palace, Dunfermline, Fife, Scotland; Burke's Peerage says "b Dec 1394."4,1 He married Joan Beaufort Queen Dowager of Scotland, daughter of Sir John Beaufort KG, 1st Earl of Somerset, Marquess of Dorset and Margaret de Holand, between 13 February 1422 and 1423 at St. Mary Overy's, Southwark, co. Surrey, England,
; her 1st husband; Burke's Peerage says "He m 2 Feb 1423-34."3,1,5
James I Stewart King of Scotland was buried in 1437 at Perth, Perth and Kinross, Scotland.4
James I Stewart King of Scotland died on 21 February 1437 at Perthshire, Scotland, at age 42; assassinated.3,4
He was Earl of Carrick.4 He was Duke of Rothesay.4 James I Stewart King of Scotland was also known as James I King of Scotland.
; JAMES I, KING OF SCOTS; b Dec 1394, was captured at sea by the English on his way to France, 1406, and held as prisoner until 1424, was crowned at Scone, 1424, suppressed the Albany branch of his family, 1425, and was assassinated by Sir Robert Graham (whose family he had wronged) 21 Feb 1436-37. He m 2 Feb 1423-34, Joan Beaufort (who m 2nd 1439, Sir James Stewart, "the Black Knight of Lorn'' (see above), and d 15 July 1445), dau of John, Marquess of Dorset and Earl of Somerset, KG, Great Chamberlain and Ld High Admiral of England (s of John of Gaunt, s of Edward III, King of England) and by her had issue.1 He was King of the Scots: JAMES I. After imprisonment (since 1405) in England, James began a vigorous reform, reduction of violence, restoration of the judicial process, and new legislation that ended anarchy and disciplined the Church. The country lairds were given representation in parliament as a support to the crown (1428). James was assassinated, 1437. St. Andrew's University founded. between 4 April 1406 and 21 February 1437.6,7 He Crowned.3 He Crowned.4
; her 1st husband; Burke's Peerage says "He m 2 Feb 1423-34."3,1,5
James I Stewart King of Scotland was buried in 1437 at Perth, Perth and Kinross, Scotland.4
James I Stewart King of Scotland died on 21 February 1437 at Perthshire, Scotland, at age 42; assassinated.3,4
He was Earl of Carrick.4 He was Duke of Rothesay.4 James I Stewart King of Scotland was also known as James I King of Scotland.
; JAMES I, KING OF SCOTS; b Dec 1394, was captured at sea by the English on his way to France, 1406, and held as prisoner until 1424, was crowned at Scone, 1424, suppressed the Albany branch of his family, 1425, and was assassinated by Sir Robert Graham (whose family he had wronged) 21 Feb 1436-37. He m 2 Feb 1423-34, Joan Beaufort (who m 2nd 1439, Sir James Stewart, "the Black Knight of Lorn'' (see above), and d 15 July 1445), dau of John, Marquess of Dorset and Earl of Somerset, KG, Great Chamberlain and Ld High Admiral of England (s of John of Gaunt, s of Edward III, King of England) and by her had issue.1 He was King of the Scots: JAMES I. After imprisonment (since 1405) in England, James began a vigorous reform, reduction of violence, restoration of the judicial process, and new legislation that ended anarchy and disciplined the Church. The country lairds were given representation in parliament as a support to the crown (1428). James was assassinated, 1437. St. Andrew's University founded. between 4 April 1406 and 21 February 1437.6,7 He Crowned.3 He Crowned.4
Family | Joan Beaufort Queen Dowager of Scotland b. 1404, d. 15 Jul 1445 |
Children |
|
Citations
- [S1396] Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site, online http://www.burkes-peerage.net/sites/peerageandgentry/sitepages/home.asp, Stuart Earls of Moray Family Page. Hereinafter cited as Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site.
- [S1426] Jiri Louda (Tables) and Michael Maclagan (text), Lines of Succession: Heraldry of the Royal Families of Europe (New York, NY: Barnes & Noble Books, 2002), Table 13: Scotland: Houses of Bruce and Stuart. Hereinafter cited as Louda & Maclagan [2002] Lines of Succession.
- [S673] David Faris, Plantagenet Ancestry of Seventeenth-Century Colonists: The Descent from the Later Plantagenet Kings of England, Henry III, Edward I, and Edward III, of Emigrants from England and Wales to the North American Colonies before 1701, English Ancestry Series, Volume 1, Second Edition (Boston, MA: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1999), pp. 332-333. Hereinafter cited as Faris [1999] - Plantagenet Ancestry.
- [S1361] Mike Ashley, The Mammoth Book of British Kings & Queens (New York, NY: Carroll & Graf Publishers, Inc., 1998), pp. 548 (Chart 41), 555-559. Hereinafter cited as Ashley (1998) - British Kings.
- [S2371] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 2nd edition (3 Volumes) (Salt Lake City, UT: Self Published, 2011), Vol III: Somerset 9.v: p. 224. Hereinafter cited as Richardson [2011] Plantagenet Ancestry 2nd ed (3 vols).
- [S632] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America before 1700: The Lineage of Alfred the Great, Charlemagne, Malcolm of Scotland, Robert the Strong, and Some of Their Descendants, 7th edition (n.p.: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc.
Baltimore, 1992, unknown publish date), line 252-34, p. 225. Hereinafter cited as Weis AR-7. - [S1224] General Editor Peter N. Stearns, The Encyclopedia of World History, Sixth Edition (Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company, 2001), p. 243. Hereinafter cited as The Encyclopedia of World History, 6th Ed.
- [S761] John Cannon and Ralph Griffiths, The Oxford Illustrated History of the British Monarchy (Great Clarendon Street, Oxford OX2 6DP, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press, 1988), Appendix IV: The Scottish Royal Dynasties. Hereinafter cited as Cannon & Griffiths [1988] Hist of Brit Monarchy.
- [S1396] Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site, online http://www.burkes-peerage.net/sites/peerageandgentry/sitepages/home.asp, Huntly Family Page.
- [S1438] Miroslav Marek, online http://genealogy.euweb.cz/index.html, unknown author (e-mail address), downloaded updated 15 May 2003, Stuart 1 page: http://genealogy.euweb.cz/stuart/stuart1.html
- [S2203] Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG): MEDIEVAL LANDS - A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/SCOTLAND.htm#JamesIIdied1460B. Hereinafter cited as FMG Medieval Lands Website.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website (oiginated by Leo van de Pas, continued by Ian Fettes), online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, James II: https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00000501&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
Sir James "the Black Knight of Lorne" Stewart Knt.
M, #11782
Father | Sir John Stewart Lord of Innermeath and Lorn, 1st of Grandtully1,2 d. 26 Apr 1421 |
Mother | Isobel/Isabella de Ergadia1,3 d. 21 Dec 1439 |
Last Edited | 20 Aug 2019 |
Sir James "the Black Knight of Lorne" Stewart Knt. married Joan Beaufort Queen Dowager of Scotland, daughter of Sir John Beaufort KG, 1st Earl of Somerset, Marquess of Dorset and Margaret de Holand, before 21 September 1439
; her 2nd husband; Papal dispensation for both consanguinity and affinity, 21 Sept 1439.4,5,1,6,7
; Sir James, called "the Black Knight of Lorn'', husband of the Queen Dowager and a close ally of the Black Douglas, plotted the overthrow of the boy-king's guardian, the powerful Sir Alexander Livingston of Callendar, who imprisoned the Queen Dowager in Stirling Castle and threw the Black Knight of Lorn into the castle pit-dungeon 1439, but he was later freed, had safe-conducts to visit England, 1445, 1447 and 1451; was captured at sea by a Flemish ship, with 8 score Englishmen, and put to death. He m (Papal dispensation for both consanguinity and affinity, 21 Sept 1439) Joan Beaufort Queen Dowager of Scotland (who d 15 July 1445), widow of KING JAMES I, and dau of John, Marquess of Dorset and Earl of Somerset, KG, Great Chamberlain and Ld High Admiral of England (s of John of Gaunt, titular King of Castile and Leon, 1st Duke of Lancaster, KG, s of KING EDWARD III), and by her had issue, three sons.1
; James (Sir), the "Black Knight of Lorn"; m 1439, Lady Joan Beaufort (d 15 July, 1445), widow of JAMES I of Scotland (see BURKE's PEERAGE & BARONETAGE 1956 edn, ROYAL LINEAGE, KINGS OF SCOTLAND), and dau of 1st Earl of Somerset, KG (see BURKE's Dormant and Extinct Peerages), and had issue (see BUCHAN, E).6
.4
; her 2nd husband; Papal dispensation for both consanguinity and affinity, 21 Sept 1439.4,5,1,6,7
; Sir James, called "the Black Knight of Lorn'', husband of the Queen Dowager and a close ally of the Black Douglas, plotted the overthrow of the boy-king's guardian, the powerful Sir Alexander Livingston of Callendar, who imprisoned the Queen Dowager in Stirling Castle and threw the Black Knight of Lorn into the castle pit-dungeon 1439, but he was later freed, had safe-conducts to visit England, 1445, 1447 and 1451; was captured at sea by a Flemish ship, with 8 score Englishmen, and put to death. He m (Papal dispensation for both consanguinity and affinity, 21 Sept 1439) Joan Beaufort Queen Dowager of Scotland (who d 15 July 1445), widow of KING JAMES I, and dau of John, Marquess of Dorset and Earl of Somerset, KG, Great Chamberlain and Ld High Admiral of England (s of John of Gaunt, titular King of Castile and Leon, 1st Duke of Lancaster, KG, s of KING EDWARD III), and by her had issue, three sons.1
; James (Sir), the "Black Knight of Lorn"; m 1439, Lady Joan Beaufort (d 15 July, 1445), widow of JAMES I of Scotland (see BURKE's PEERAGE & BARONETAGE 1956 edn, ROYAL LINEAGE, KINGS OF SCOTLAND), and dau of 1st Earl of Somerset, KG (see BURKE's Dormant and Extinct Peerages), and had issue (see BUCHAN, E).6
.4
Family | Joan Beaufort Queen Dowager of Scotland b. 1404, d. 15 Jul 1445 |
Children |
|
Citations
- [S1396] Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site, online http://www.burkes-peerage.net/sites/peerageandgentry/sitepages/home.asp, Stuart Earls of Moray Family Page. Hereinafter cited as Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website (oiginated by Leo van de Pas, continued by Ian Fettes), online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Sir John Stewart, Lord of Lorne and Innermeath, 1st of Grandtully: https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00046285&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Isabel de Ergadia (MacDougall): https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00046286&tree=LEO
- [S673] David Faris, Plantagenet Ancestry of Seventeenth-Century Colonists: The Descent from the Later Plantagenet Kings of England, Henry III, Edward I, and Edward III, of Emigrants from England and Wales to the North American Colonies before 1701, English Ancestry Series, Volume 1, Second Edition (Boston, MA: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1999), pp. 332-333. Hereinafter cited as Faris [1999] - Plantagenet Ancestry.
- [S633] With additions and corrections by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr. and William R. Beall Frederick Lewis Weis, The Magna Charta Sureties, 1215: The Barons Named in the Magna
Charta, 1215 and Some of Their Descendants Who Settled in America
During the Early Colonial Years, 5th Edition (Baltimore, MD, USA: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc., unknown publish date), line 91-10, p. 117. Hereinafter cited as Weis MCS-5. - [S1396] Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site, online http://www.burkes-peerage.net/sites/peerageandgentry/sitepages/home.asp, Stewart of Appin Family Page.
- [S2371] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 2nd edition (3 Volumes) (Salt Lake City, UT: Self Published, 2011), Vol III: Somerset 9.v: p. 224. Hereinafter cited as Richardson [2011] Plantagenet Ancestry 2nd ed (3 vols).
- [S1396] Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site, online http://www.burkes-peerage.net/sites/peerageandgentry/sitepages/home.asp, Stuart Earls of Moray Family Page (see ERROLL).
- [S1396] Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site, online http://www.burkes-peerage.net/sites/peerageandgentry/sitepages/home.asp, Erskine Earls of Buchan Family Page.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Sir John Stewart: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00001647&tree=LEO
Sir Thomas Courtenay Knt., 13th Earl of Devon; 6th Lord Courtenay1
M, #11783, b. 1414, d. 3 February 1458
Father | Hugh de Courtenay 4th Earl of Devon2,3,4 b. c 1389, d. 16 Jun 1422 |
Mother | Anne Talbot2,3,4 d. bt 16 Jan 1440 - 1441 |
Last Edited | 29 Sep 2019 |
Sir Thomas Courtenay Knt., 13th Earl of Devon; 6th Lord Courtenay was born in 1414 at England.2,3,4 He married Margaret Beaufort, daughter of Sir John Beaufort KG, 1st Earl of Somerset, Marquess of Dorset and Margaret de Holand, after 1421.5,1,3,4
Sir Thomas Courtenay Knt., 13th Earl of Devon; 6th Lord Courtenay died on 3 February 1458 at Abingdon Abbey, Abingdon, Vale of White Horse District, Oxfordshire, England.2,3,4
Sir Thomas Courtenay Knt., 13th Earl of Devon; 6th Lord Courtenay was buried after 3 February 1458 at Exeter Cathedral, Exeter, Devonshire, England; From Find A Grave:
BIRTH 1414, England
DEATH 3 Feb 1458 (aged 43–44), Abingdon, Vale of White Horse District, Oxfordshire, England
13th Earl of Devon, 6th Lord Courtenay, Knight of Colcombe Castle neart Colyton, Devon, and Tiverton Castle, Devon, his family's historic home. Privy Councillorm Lord High Steward. Thomas was the only surviving son of Hugh de Courtenay, the 12th Earl of Devon and Anne Talbot. Grandson of Sir Edward de Courtenay and Maud Camoys, Richard Talbot and Ankaret le Strange.
Thomas was the husband of Margaret de Beaufort, the second daughter of Sir John Beaufort and Margaret Holand. They were married after 1421 and had three sons and two daughters:
* Sir Thomas, 6th Earl of Devon, beheaded at York 1461
* Henry, 7th Earl of Devon, beheaded at Salisbury
* John, slain at the Battle of Tewkesbury
* Joan, wife of Sir Roger Clifford & Sir Wm Knyvet
* Elizabeth, wife of Sir Hugh Conway
* Anne
* Eleanor
* Maud
He inherited this father's kingdom in 1422 at the age of eight when his father died in June, but placed in the wardship of John Talbot, the 1st Earl of Shrewsbury, Thomas's uncle. Thomas spent most of his life involved in the War of the Roses and serious political upheaval. After he changed his loyalties to the Yorkists, he was charged with treason, imprisoned at Wallingford Castle, tried before the House of Lords, where upon he lost his royal commissions. Thomas was eventually restored, his sons absolved of the murder of Nicholas Radford.
On his journey to London after a summons from King Henry VI, Thomas stopped at Abington Abbey where he died within a day or so, allegedly poisoned by the Prior on orders from Queen Margaret, yet Thomas had an alliance with the Queen. His will, requesting burial at Exeter, was proved at Lambeth 21 Feb 1458, and a post mortem inquisition was held 1467.
His son, Thomas, became the 14th Earl, beheaded in 1461 after the Battle to Towton and the earldom was forfeited.
Family Members
Spouse
Margaret Beaufort Courtenay unknown–1449
BURIAL Exeter Cathedral, Exeter, City of Exeter, Devon, England
Created by: Anne Shurtleff Stevens
Added: 3 Jul 2013
Find A Grave Memorial 113266268.4
His estate was probated on 21 February 1458 at Lambeth, co. Surrey, England,
;
Per Find A Grave: "His will, requesting burial at Exeter, was proved at Lambeth 21 Feb 1458, and a post mortem inquisition was held 1467."4
He was 5th/13th Earl of Devon.3
; THOMAS de COURTENAY, 5th EARL OF DEVON, PC; b 1414; ktd 1426, Ld High Steward at coronation of HENRY VI's w MARGARET OF ANJOU 1445, campaigned in France towards end of Hundred Years War; m Margaret Beaufort, 2nd and yst dau of 1st Earl of Somerset of the 1397 cr (see BEAUFORT, D), and d 3 Feb 1458, leaving ... issue.2 Sir Thomas Courtenay Knt., 13th Earl of Devon; 6th Lord Courtenay was also known as Sir Thomas de Courtenay.4
.5
Sir Thomas Courtenay Knt., 13th Earl of Devon; 6th Lord Courtenay died on 3 February 1458 at Abingdon Abbey, Abingdon, Vale of White Horse District, Oxfordshire, England.2,3,4
Sir Thomas Courtenay Knt., 13th Earl of Devon; 6th Lord Courtenay was buried after 3 February 1458 at Exeter Cathedral, Exeter, Devonshire, England; From Find A Grave:
BIRTH 1414, England
DEATH 3 Feb 1458 (aged 43–44), Abingdon, Vale of White Horse District, Oxfordshire, England
13th Earl of Devon, 6th Lord Courtenay, Knight of Colcombe Castle neart Colyton, Devon, and Tiverton Castle, Devon, his family's historic home. Privy Councillorm Lord High Steward. Thomas was the only surviving son of Hugh de Courtenay, the 12th Earl of Devon and Anne Talbot. Grandson of Sir Edward de Courtenay and Maud Camoys, Richard Talbot and Ankaret le Strange.
Thomas was the husband of Margaret de Beaufort, the second daughter of Sir John Beaufort and Margaret Holand. They were married after 1421 and had three sons and two daughters:
* Sir Thomas, 6th Earl of Devon, beheaded at York 1461
* Henry, 7th Earl of Devon, beheaded at Salisbury
* John, slain at the Battle of Tewkesbury
* Joan, wife of Sir Roger Clifford & Sir Wm Knyvet
* Elizabeth, wife of Sir Hugh Conway
* Anne
* Eleanor
* Maud
He inherited this father's kingdom in 1422 at the age of eight when his father died in June, but placed in the wardship of John Talbot, the 1st Earl of Shrewsbury, Thomas's uncle. Thomas spent most of his life involved in the War of the Roses and serious political upheaval. After he changed his loyalties to the Yorkists, he was charged with treason, imprisoned at Wallingford Castle, tried before the House of Lords, where upon he lost his royal commissions. Thomas was eventually restored, his sons absolved of the murder of Nicholas Radford.
On his journey to London after a summons from King Henry VI, Thomas stopped at Abington Abbey where he died within a day or so, allegedly poisoned by the Prior on orders from Queen Margaret, yet Thomas had an alliance with the Queen. His will, requesting burial at Exeter, was proved at Lambeth 21 Feb 1458, and a post mortem inquisition was held 1467.
His son, Thomas, became the 14th Earl, beheaded in 1461 after the Battle to Towton and the earldom was forfeited.
Family Members
Spouse
Margaret Beaufort Courtenay unknown–1449
BURIAL Exeter Cathedral, Exeter, City of Exeter, Devon, England
Created by: Anne Shurtleff Stevens
Added: 3 Jul 2013
Find A Grave Memorial 113266268.4
His estate was probated on 21 February 1458 at Lambeth, co. Surrey, England,
;
Per Find A Grave: "His will, requesting burial at Exeter, was proved at Lambeth 21 Feb 1458, and a post mortem inquisition was held 1467."4
He was 5th/13th Earl of Devon.3
; THOMAS de COURTENAY, 5th EARL OF DEVON, PC; b 1414; ktd 1426, Ld High Steward at coronation of HENRY VI's w MARGARET OF ANJOU 1445, campaigned in France towards end of Hundred Years War; m Margaret Beaufort, 2nd and yst dau of 1st Earl of Somerset of the 1397 cr (see BEAUFORT, D), and d 3 Feb 1458, leaving ... issue.2 Sir Thomas Courtenay Knt., 13th Earl of Devon; 6th Lord Courtenay was also known as Sir Thomas de Courtenay.4
.5
Family | Margaret Beaufort d. Nov 1449 |
Children |
|
Citations
- [S2261] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 1st edition (n.p.: Genealogical Publishing Company, Inc., 2004), Gurdon 12: p. 367. Hereinafter cited as Richardson PA.
- [S1396] Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site, online http://www.burkes-peerage.net/sites/peerageandgentry/sitepages/home.asp, de Courtenay Family Page. Hereinafter cited as Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site.
- [S2371] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 2nd edition (3 Volumes) (Salt Lake City, UT: Self Published, 2011), Vol III: Somerset 9.vi: pp. 224-5. Hereinafter cited as Richardson [2011] Plantagenet Ancestry 2nd ed (3 vols).
- [S2374] Find a Grave, online http://www.findagrave.com/, Find A Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com : accessed 29 September 2019), memorial page for Sir Thomas de Courtenay (1414–3 Feb 1458), Find A Grave Memorial no. 113266268, citing Exeter Cathedral, Exeter, City of Exeter, Devon, England ; Maintained by Anne Shurtleff Stevens (contributor 46947920), at: https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/113266268/thomas-de-courtenay. Hereinafter cited as Find a Grave.
- [S673] David Faris, Plantagenet Ancestry of Seventeenth-Century Colonists: The Descent from the Later Plantagenet Kings of England, Henry III, Edward I, and Edward III, of Emigrants from England and Wales to the North American Colonies before 1701, English Ancestry Series, Volume 1, Second Edition (Boston, MA: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1999), pp. 332-333. Hereinafter cited as Faris [1999] - Plantagenet Ancestry.
- [S2371] Douglas Richardson, Richardson [2011] Plantagenet Ancestry 2nd ed (3 vols), Vol III: Somerset 9.vi.c: pp. 225-6.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website (oiginated by Leo van de Pas, continued by Ian Fettes), online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Joane Courtenay: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00028664&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
- [S2371] Douglas Richardson, Richardson [2011] Plantagenet Ancestry 2nd ed (3 vols), Vol III: Somerset 9.vi.e: pp. 226-7.
Walter Rokesley Esq.
M, #11784
Last Edited | 29 Dec 2012 |
Walter Rokesley Esq. was buried at Crowland, Lincolnshire, England.1 He married Lady Eleanor (Alianor) Beauchamp, daughter of Sir Richard de Beauchamp KB, KG, 13th Earl of Warwick and Elizabeth de Berkeley Baroness Berkeley, Lisle and Teyes, after 1455
; date opf her 2nd husband's death.2,1
.3
; date opf her 2nd husband's death.2,1
.3
Family | Lady Eleanor (Alianor) Beauchamp b. Sep 1408, d. 4 Mar 1467 |
Citations
- [S2371] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 2nd edition (3 Volumes) (Salt Lake City, UT: Self Published, 2011), Vol III: Somerset 10: pp. 227-8. Hereinafter cited as Richardson [2011] Plantagenet Ancestry 2nd ed (3 vols).
- [S673] David Faris, Plantagenet Ancestry of Seventeenth-Century Colonists: The Descent from the Later Plantagenet Kings of England, Henry III, Edward I, and Edward III, of Emigrants from England and Wales to the North American Colonies before 1701, English Ancestry Series, Volume 1, Second Edition (Boston, MA: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1999), SOMERSET-9, pp. 333-334. Hereinafter cited as Faris [1999] - Plantagenet Ancestry.
- [S673] David Faris, Faris [1999] - Plantagenet Ancestry, pp. 333-334.
Henry Beaufort KG, 3rd Duke of Somerset, Marquess of Dorset, Earl of Somerset, Earl of Dorset1,2,3
M, #11785, b. April 1436, d. 15 May 1464
Father | Sir Edmund Beaufort KG, Earl of Dorset, 4th Earl of Somerset; Count of Mortain4,1,2,5 b. 15 Mar 1406, d. 22 May 1455 |
Mother | Lady Eleanor (Alianor) Beauchamp4,1,2,5 b. Sep 1408, d. 4 Mar 1467 |
Reference | GKJ14 |
Last Edited | 29 Dec 2012 |
Henry Beaufort KG, 3rd Duke of Somerset, Marquess of Dorset, Earl of Somerset, Earl of Dorset was born in April 1436.6,7,4,2
Henry Beaufort KG, 3rd Duke of Somerset, Marquess of Dorset, Earl of Somerset, Earl of Dorset died on 15 May 1464 at Hexham, England, at age 28; beheaded following his defeat by the Yorkists and attainted; commanded the Lancastrian army.6,8,9,4,2,3
Henry Beaufort KG, 3rd Duke of Somerset, Marquess of Dorset, Earl of Somerset, Earl of Dorset was buried after 15 May 1464 at Hexham Priory, Heyford, Northumberland, England.10,3
; HENRY BEAUFORT, 2nd DUKE OF SOMERSET; b c April 1436; as a Lancastrian was attainted 1461 during EDWARD IV's ascendancy and all his titles forfeited (later pardoned and had them restored March 1462/3, the pardon and restoration being in their turn revoked Jan 1464/5; this revocation too was declared null after his death by HENRY VII 1485); beheaded following his defeat by the Yorkists at Hexham 1464, leaving illegitimate issue by Joan Hill.9 He was Constable of Dover Castle.7 GKJ-14.
; The 2nd Duke of Somerset of the 1448 creation, initially a Lancastrian like his father the 1st Duke, was attainted in 1461, restored by EDWARD IV in blood and honours in 1463, deserted EDWARD IV later the same year and was executed (and the act of restoration annulled) after the Lancastrian defeat of Hexham 1464, only to be posthumously pardoned once HENRY VII had ascended the throne in 1485. This Duke's younger brother Edmund Beaufort was regarded by Lancastrians as rightful Duke of Somerset after 1464 and indeed so styled himself, but he died in 1471, having in any case been attainted six years earlier. The Beaufort Earls and Dukes of Somerset thus came to an end.11 He was 2nd Duke of Somerset.7
; Faris (1999, p. 334): [quote] HENRY BEAUFORT, 2nd Duke of Somerset, son and heir, was born on 26 Jan.
1436. He was with his father at the 1st Battle of St. Albans, at which he was severely wounded, on 22 May 1455. He commanded the victorious Lancastrian army at the Battle of Wakefield on 30 Dec. 1469, and defeated the Yorkists at the 2nd Battle of St. Albans 17 Feb. 1460/1. After defeat at the Battle of Towton on 29 Mar. 1461, he fled to Scotland; attainted, 1461, and all honours forfeited; pardoned 10 Mar. 1462/3; but at end of 1463 deserted King Edward IV, and fled to Alnwick; defeated and captured at the Battle of Hexham. HENRY BEAUFORT was beheaded by the Yorkists at Hexham on the same day 15 May 1464, unmarried, and was buried Hexham Abbey.
C.P. 4:417 (1916). C.P. 12(1):54-57 (1953). [end quote] He was Warden of the Cinque Ports in 1459.7
Henry Beaufort KG, 3rd Duke of Somerset, Marquess of Dorset, Earl of Somerset, Earl of Dorset died on 15 May 1464 at Hexham, England, at age 28; beheaded following his defeat by the Yorkists and attainted; commanded the Lancastrian army.6,8,9,4,2,3
Henry Beaufort KG, 3rd Duke of Somerset, Marquess of Dorset, Earl of Somerset, Earl of Dorset was buried after 15 May 1464 at Hexham Priory, Heyford, Northumberland, England.10,3
; HENRY BEAUFORT, 2nd DUKE OF SOMERSET; b c April 1436; as a Lancastrian was attainted 1461 during EDWARD IV's ascendancy and all his titles forfeited (later pardoned and had them restored March 1462/3, the pardon and restoration being in their turn revoked Jan 1464/5; this revocation too was declared null after his death by HENRY VII 1485); beheaded following his defeat by the Yorkists at Hexham 1464, leaving illegitimate issue by Joan Hill.9 He was Constable of Dover Castle.7 GKJ-14.
; The 2nd Duke of Somerset of the 1448 creation, initially a Lancastrian like his father the 1st Duke, was attainted in 1461, restored by EDWARD IV in blood and honours in 1463, deserted EDWARD IV later the same year and was executed (and the act of restoration annulled) after the Lancastrian defeat of Hexham 1464, only to be posthumously pardoned once HENRY VII had ascended the throne in 1485. This Duke's younger brother Edmund Beaufort was regarded by Lancastrians as rightful Duke of Somerset after 1464 and indeed so styled himself, but he died in 1471, having in any case been attainted six years earlier. The Beaufort Earls and Dukes of Somerset thus came to an end.11 He was 2nd Duke of Somerset.7
; Faris (1999, p. 334): [quote] HENRY BEAUFORT, 2nd Duke of Somerset, son and heir, was born on 26 Jan.
1436. He was with his father at the 1st Battle of St. Albans, at which he was severely wounded, on 22 May 1455. He commanded the victorious Lancastrian army at the Battle of Wakefield on 30 Dec. 1469, and defeated the Yorkists at the 2nd Battle of St. Albans 17 Feb. 1460/1. After defeat at the Battle of Towton on 29 Mar. 1461, he fled to Scotland; attainted, 1461, and all honours forfeited; pardoned 10 Mar. 1462/3; but at end of 1463 deserted King Edward IV, and fled to Alnwick; defeated and captured at the Battle of Hexham. HENRY BEAUFORT was beheaded by the Yorkists at Hexham on the same day 15 May 1464, unmarried, and was buried Hexham Abbey.
C.P. 4:417 (1916). C.P. 12(1):54-57 (1953). [end quote] He was Warden of the Cinque Ports in 1459.7
Family | Jane Hill |
Child |
|
Citations
- [S1429] Unknown compiler, Notable British Families 1600s-1900s from Burke's Peerage., CD-ROM (n.p.: Broderbund Software Company, 1999), Notable British Families, Burke's Dromant, ABeyant, Forgeited, and Extinct Peerages, p. 36. Hereinafter cited as Notable British Families CD # 367.
- [S1438] Miroslav Marek, online http://genealogy.euweb.cz/index.html, unknown author (e-mail address), downloaded updated 15 May 2003, Anjou 6 page (The House of Anjou): http://genealogy.euweb.cz/anjou/anjou6.html
- [S2371] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 2nd edition (3 Volumes) (Salt Lake City, UT: Self Published, 2011), Vol III: Somerset 11: pp. 233-4. Hereinafter cited as Richardson [2011] Plantagenet Ancestry 2nd ed (3 vols).
- [S1426] Jiri Louda (Tables) and Michael Maclagan (text), Lines of Succession: Heraldry of the Royal Families of Europe (New York, NY: Barnes & Noble Books, 2002), Table 4: England - Last Plantagenets. Hereinafter cited as Louda & Maclagan [2002] Lines of Succession.
- [S2371] Douglas Richardson, Richardson [2011] Plantagenet Ancestry 2nd ed (3 vols), Vol III: Somerset 10: pp. 227-8.
- [S673] David Faris, Plantagenet Ancestry of Seventeenth-Century Colonists: The Descent from the Later Plantagenet Kings of England, Henry III, Edward I, and Edward III, of Emigrants from England and Wales to the North American Colonies before 1701, English Ancestry Series, Volume 1, Second Edition (Boston, MA: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1999), pp. 333-334. Hereinafter cited as Faris [1999] - Plantagenet Ancestry.
- [S633] With additions and corrections by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr. and William R. Beall Frederick Lewis Weis, The Magna Charta Sureties, 1215: The Barons Named in the Magna
Charta, 1215 and Some of Their Descendants Who Settled in America
During the Early Colonial Years, 5th Edition (Baltimore, MD, USA: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc., unknown publish date), line 90-11, p. 112. Hereinafter cited as Weis MCS-5. - [S633] With additions and corrections by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr. and William R. Beall Frederick Lewis Weis, Weis MCS-5, line 90-11, p. 112: "beheaded."
- [S1396] Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site, online http://www.burkes-peerage.net/sites/peerageandgentry/sitepages/home.asp, Beaufort Family Page. Hereinafter cited as Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site.
- [S673] David Faris, Faris [1999] - Plantagenet Ancestry, p. 334.
- [S1396] Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site, online http://www.burkes-peerage.net/sites/peerageandgentry/sitepages/home.asp, Somerset Family Page.
- [S1438] Miroslav Marek, updated 15 May 2003, Anjou 4 page (The House of Anjou): http://genealogy.euweb.cz/anjou/anjou4.html
- [S1490] Genealogics Website (oiginated by Leo van de Pas, continued by Ian Fettes), online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Charles Somerset: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00028573&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
Edmund Beaufort 3rd Duke of Somerset1,2
M, #11786, b. circa 1439, d. 6 May 1471
Father | Sir Edmund Beaufort KG, Earl of Dorset, 4th Earl of Somerset; Count of Mortain1,3,4,2 b. 15 Mar 1406, d. 22 May 1455 |
Mother | Lady Eleanor (Alianor) Beauchamp1,3,4,2 b. Sep 1408, d. 4 Mar 1467 |
Last Edited | 29 Dec 2012 |
Edmund Beaufort 3rd Duke of Somerset was born circa 1439.5,1,2
Edmund Beaufort 3rd Duke of Somerset died on 6 May 1471 at Battle of Tewkesbury, Tewkesbury, Gloucestershire, England; beheaded by the Yorkists; died without issue.5,1,3,2
He was 3rd Duke of Somerset.1
; Faris (1999, p. 334): "EDMUND BEAUFORT, 3rd Duke of Somerset, born about 1439, fled after the Battle of Tewkesbury on 4 May 1471 to take refuge in Tewkesbury Abbey, beheaded by the Yorkists in the town of Tewkesbury on 6 May 1471, buried in the Abbey Church. With him the house of Beaufort became extinct."
Edmund Beaufort 3rd Duke of Somerset died on 6 May 1471 at Battle of Tewkesbury, Tewkesbury, Gloucestershire, England; beheaded by the Yorkists; died without issue.5,1,3,2
He was 3rd Duke of Somerset.1
; Faris (1999, p. 334): "EDMUND BEAUFORT, 3rd Duke of Somerset, born about 1439, fled after the Battle of Tewkesbury on 4 May 1471 to take refuge in Tewkesbury Abbey, beheaded by the Yorkists in the town of Tewkesbury on 6 May 1471, buried in the Abbey Church. With him the house of Beaufort became extinct."
Citations
- [S1426] Jiri Louda (Tables) and Michael Maclagan (text), Lines of Succession: Heraldry of the Royal Families of Europe (New York, NY: Barnes & Noble Books, 2002), Table 4: England - Last Plantagenets. Hereinafter cited as Louda & Maclagan [2002] Lines of Succession.
- [S2371] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 2nd edition (3 Volumes) (Salt Lake City, UT: Self Published, 2011), Vol III: Somerset 10.ii: pp. 229-230. Hereinafter cited as Richardson [2011] Plantagenet Ancestry 2nd ed (3 vols).
- [S1429] Unknown compiler, Notable British Families 1600s-1900s from Burke's Peerage., CD-ROM (n.p.: Broderbund Software Company, 1999), Notable British Families, Burke's Dromant, ABeyant, Forgeited, and Extinct Peerages, p. 36. Hereinafter cited as Notable British Families CD # 367.
- [S2371] Douglas Richardson, Richardson [2011] Plantagenet Ancestry 2nd ed (3 vols), Vol III: Somerset 10: pp. 227-8.
- [S673] David Faris, Plantagenet Ancestry of Seventeenth-Century Colonists: The Descent from the Later Plantagenet Kings of England, Henry III, Edward I, and Edward III, of Emigrants from England and Wales to the North American Colonies before 1701, English Ancestry Series, Volume 1, Second Edition (Boston, MA: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1999), p. 334. Hereinafter cited as Faris [1999] - Plantagenet Ancestry.
John Beaufort Marquess of Dorset1
M, #11787, d. 4 May 1471
Father | Sir Edmund Beaufort KG, Earl of Dorset, 4th Earl of Somerset; Count of Mortain2,3,4 b. 15 Mar 1406, d. 22 May 1455 |
Mother | Lady Eleanor (Alianor) Beauchamp2,3,4 b. Sep 1408, d. 4 Mar 1467 |
Last Edited | 29 Dec 2012 |
John Beaufort Marquess of Dorset died on 4 May 1471 at Battle of Tewkesbury, Tewkesbury, Gloucestershire, England.5,2,1
Citations
- [S2371] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 2nd edition (3 Volumes) (Salt Lake City, UT: Self Published, 2011), Vol III: Somerset 10.iii: p. 230. Hereinafter cited as Richardson [2011] Plantagenet Ancestry 2nd ed (3 vols).
- [S1426] Jiri Louda (Tables) and Michael Maclagan (text), Lines of Succession: Heraldry of the Royal Families of Europe (New York, NY: Barnes & Noble Books, 2002), Table 4: England - Last Plantagenets. Hereinafter cited as Louda & Maclagan [2002] Lines of Succession.
- [S1429] Unknown compiler, Notable British Families 1600s-1900s from Burke's Peerage., CD-ROM (n.p.: Broderbund Software Company, 1999), Notable British Families, Burke's Dromant, ABeyant, Forgeited, and Extinct Peerages, p. 36. Hereinafter cited as Notable British Families CD # 367.
- [S2371] Douglas Richardson, Richardson [2011] Plantagenet Ancestry 2nd ed (3 vols), Vol III: Somerset 10: pp. 227-8.
- [S673] David Faris, Plantagenet Ancestry of Seventeenth-Century Colonists: The Descent from the Later Plantagenet Kings of England, Henry III, Edward I, and Edward III, of Emigrants from England and Wales to the North American Colonies before 1701, English Ancestry Series, Volume 1, Second Edition (Boston, MA: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1999), p. 334. Hereinafter cited as Faris [1999] - Plantagenet Ancestry.
Thomas Beaufort1
M, #11788, d. before 1463
Father | Sir Edmund Beaufort KG, Earl of Dorset, 4th Earl of Somerset; Count of Mortain2 b. 15 Mar 1406, d. 22 May 1455 |
Mother | Lady Eleanor (Alianor) Beauchamp2 b. Sep 1408, d. 4 Mar 1467 |
Last Edited | 29 Dec 2012 |
Citations
- [S2371] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 2nd edition (3 Volumes) (Salt Lake City, UT: Self Published, 2011), Vol III: Somerset 10.vi: p. 230. Hereinafter cited as Richardson [2011] Plantagenet Ancestry 2nd ed (3 vols).
- [S2371] Douglas Richardson, Richardson [2011] Plantagenet Ancestry 2nd ed (3 vols), Vol III: Somerset 10: pp. 227-8.
- [S673] David Faris, Plantagenet Ancestry of Seventeenth-Century Colonists: The Descent from the Later Plantagenet Kings of England, Henry III, Edward I, and Edward III, of Emigrants from England and Wales to the North American Colonies before 1701, English Ancestry Series, Volume 1, Second Edition (Boston, MA: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1999), p. 334: "....died young". Hereinafter cited as Faris [1999] - Plantagenet Ancestry.
Margaret Beaufort1
F, #11789, b. circa 1437, d. 1474
Father | Sir Edmund Beaufort KG, Earl of Dorset, 4th Earl of Somerset; Count of Mortain2,3,4 b. 15 Mar 1406, d. 22 May 1455 |
Mother | Lady Eleanor (Alianor) Beauchamp2,3,4 b. Sep 1408, d. 4 Mar 1467 |
Reference | EDV16 |
Last Edited | 30 Dec 2012 |
Margaret Beaufort married Sir Humphrey Stafford Knt., Earl of Stafford, son of Sir Humphrey Stafford Knt, KG, 1st Duke of Buckingham, 6th Earl of Stafford and Lady Anne Neville of Raby,
; her 1st husband.5,6,2,1,7 Margaret Beaufort was born circa 1437.8 She married Sir Richard Darrell Knt., of Ower or Paltons, Hampshire, son of William Darrell Esq., of Littlecote and Axford, Wiltshire and Elizabeth Calstone, before 1 August 1463
; her 2nd husband; his 1st wife.9,2,1,7
Margaret Beaufort died in 1474.5,8
EDV-16.
.10
; Staley cites: CP II: 388-9, XII/1: 182, XIV: 589.8
; her 1st husband.5,6,2,1,7 Margaret Beaufort was born circa 1437.8 She married Sir Richard Darrell Knt., of Ower or Paltons, Hampshire, son of William Darrell Esq., of Littlecote and Axford, Wiltshire and Elizabeth Calstone, before 1 August 1463
; her 2nd husband; his 1st wife.9,2,1,7
Margaret Beaufort died in 1474.5,8
EDV-16.
.10
; Staley cites: CP II: 388-9, XII/1: 182, XIV: 589.8
Family 1 | Sir Humphrey Stafford Knt., Earl of Stafford b. c 1424, d. 22 May 1455 |
Children |
|
Family 2 | Sir Richard Darrell Knt., of Ower or Paltons, Hampshire d. 1489 |
Child |
Citations
- [S2371] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 2nd edition (3 Volumes) (Salt Lake City, UT: Self Published, 2011), Vol III: Somerset 10.v: p. 230. Hereinafter cited as Richardson [2011] Plantagenet Ancestry 2nd ed (3 vols).
- [S1429] Unknown compiler, Notable British Families 1600s-1900s from Burke's Peerage., CD-ROM (n.p.: Broderbund Software Company, 1999), Notable British Families, Burke's Dromant, ABeyant, Forgeited, and Extinct Peerages, p. 36. Hereinafter cited as Notable British Families CD # 367.
- [S1807] Louise Staley, "Staley email #5 3 Aug 2005 "EDWARD III to Roger CORBET of Albright Hussey 11 Ways (1)"," e-mail message from e-mail address (unknown address) to e-mail address, 3 Aug 2005. Hereinafter cited as "Staley email #5 3 Aug 2005."
- [S2371] Douglas Richardson, Richardson [2011] Plantagenet Ancestry 2nd ed (3 vols), Vol III: Somerset 10: pp. 227-8.
- [S673] David Faris, Plantagenet Ancestry of Seventeenth-Century Colonists: The Descent from the Later Plantagenet Kings of England, Henry III, Edward I, and Edward III, of Emigrants from England and Wales to the North American Colonies before 1701, English Ancestry Series, Volume 1, Second Edition (Boston, MA: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1999), p. 340. Hereinafter cited as Faris [1999] - Plantagenet Ancestry.
- [S1396] Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site, online http://www.burkes-peerage.net/sites/peerageandgentry/sitepages/home.asp, Stafford Family Page. Hereinafter cited as Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site.
- [S2371] Douglas Richardson, Richardson [2011] Plantagenet Ancestry 2nd ed (3 vols), Vol III: Stafford 12: pp. 256-7.
- [S1806] Louise Staley, "Staley email #4 3 Aug 2005 "EDWARD III to Roger CORBET of Albright Hussey 11 Ways (1)"," e-mail message from e-mail address (unknown address) to e-mail address, 3 Aug 2005. Hereinafter cited as "Staley email #4 3 Aug 2005."
- [S1396] Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site, online http://www.burkes-peerage.net/sites/peerageandgentry/sitepages/home.asp, Beaufort Family Page.
- [S673] David Faris, Faris [1999] - Plantagenet Ancestry, pp. 334, 340.
- [S2371] Douglas Richardson, Richardson [2011] Plantagenet Ancestry 2nd ed (3 vols), Vol III: Stafford 12.i: p. 257.
- [S2371] Douglas Richardson, Richardson [2011] Plantagenet Ancestry 2nd ed (3 vols), Vol III: Stafford 13: pp. 257-261.
Anne Beaufort1,2
F, #11790
Father | Sir Edmund Beaufort KG, Earl of Dorset, 4th Earl of Somerset; Count of Mortain3,1,4 b. 15 Mar 1406, d. 22 May 1455 |
Mother | Lady Eleanor (Alianor) Beauchamp3,1,4 b. Sep 1408, d. 4 Mar 1467 |
Last Edited | 29 Dec 2012 |
Anne Beaufort married Sir William Paston Esq., of Norwich, etc. Norfolk and Lond, son of William Paston Esq. and Agnes Berry, on 24 March 1443 at Baynard's Castle, London, City of London, Greater London, England.5,3,1,2
.6
.6
Family | Sir William Paston Esq., of Norwich, etc. Norfolk and Lond d. b 7 Sep 1496 |
Children |
|
Citations
- [S2261] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 1st edition (n.p.: Genealogical Publishing Company, Inc., 2004), Rudyard 11: p. 615. Hereinafter cited as Richardson PA.
- [S2371] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 2nd edition (3 Volumes) (Salt Lake City, UT: Self Published, 2011), Vol III: Somerset 10.vii: p. 230. Hereinafter cited as Richardson [2011] Plantagenet Ancestry 2nd ed (3 vols).
- [S1429] Unknown compiler, Notable British Families 1600s-1900s from Burke's Peerage., CD-ROM (n.p.: Broderbund Software Company, 1999), Notable British Families, Burke's Dromant, ABeyant, Forgeited, and Extinct Peerages, p. 36. Hereinafter cited as Notable British Families CD # 367.
- [S2371] Douglas Richardson, Richardson [2011] Plantagenet Ancestry 2nd ed (3 vols), Vol III: Somerset 10: pp. 227-8.
- [S673] David Faris, Plantagenet Ancestry of Seventeenth-Century Colonists: The Descent from the Later Plantagenet Kings of England, Henry III, Edward I, and Edward III, of Emigrants from England and Wales to the North American Colonies before 1701, English Ancestry Series, Volume 1, Second Edition (Boston, MA: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1999), pp. 333-334. Hereinafter cited as Faris [1999] - Plantagenet Ancestry.
- [S673] David Faris, Faris [1999] - Plantagenet Ancestry, p. 334.
- [S2261] Douglas Richardson, Richardson PA, Rudyard 12: p. 615.
- [S1396] Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site, online http://www.burkes-peerage.net/sites/peerageandgentry/sitepages/home.asp, ABERGAVENNY Family Page. Hereinafter cited as Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site.