Edmund Grey 9th Lord Grey of Wilton
M, #11851, b. circa 1469, d. 5 May 1511
Father | John Grey Knt., 8th Lord Grey of Wilton1 d. 3 Apr 1499 |
Mother | Anne Grey1 |
Last Edited | 23 Nov 2008 |
Edmund Grey 9th Lord Grey of Wilton was born circa 1469.2,3 He married Florence Hastings, daughter of Sir Ralph Hastings Knt. and Anne/Amy Tattershall, before 1495
; Burke's Peerage says marriage "by May 1505."4,3
Edmund Grey 9th Lord Grey of Wilton died on 5 May 1511.2,5,3
Edmund Grey 9th Lord Grey of Wilton lived at Wilton, Herefordshire, England.2
Edmund Grey 9th Lord Grey of Wilton lived at Eton, Buckinghamshire, England.2 He was 9th Lord (Baron) Grey of Wilton.1
; EDMUND GREY, 9th LORD (Baron) GREY (of Wilton); b c 1469; m by May 1505 Florence, est dau of Sir Ralph Hastinges, himself yr bro of 1st Lord (Baron) Hastings of the Feb 1461/2 cr (see HUNTINGDON, E), and d 5 May 1511.1
; Faris (1999, p. 376): "EDMUND GREY, of Eton, co. Buckingham, and London, 9th Lord Grey, of Wilton, son and heir, by first marriage, was born about 1469 (aged thirty and more at his father's death). He was summoned to Parliament on 17 Oct. 1509. He was married before 1495 to FLORENCE HASTINGS, daughter and co-heiress of Ralph Hastings, Knt., of Harrowden, co. Northampton, and Kirby, co. Leicester (descendant of King Edward III), by Amy, daughter and co-heiress of John Tattershall, of Woolwich, Kent, and Wanstead, Essex [see HASTINGS 9 for her ancestry]. They had four sons. "Edmund lord Grey de Wilton, of Wilton on Wye, Hereford" died testate (P.C.C., 38 Bennett) on 5 May 1511 survived by his wife.
Stemmata Chicheleana (1765), p. 31 ("Florence = Edm. Grey of Wilton [with children] William, Lord Grey ob. 1562 [&] Elizabeth ob. 1559 = John Brydges, Lord Chandos") (Agnes Chichele, mother of Anne Tattershall, was "Founder's Kin"). C.P. 6:181-186 (1926). NEHGR 108:177-178 (July 1954) (asserts Tacy was daughter of Arthur Grey, of Wilton, a grandson of Edmund Grey). NEHGR 110:232 (July 1956). Paget (1957) 260:6 (marriage date) (no named daughters).
Child of Edmund Grey, by Florence Hastings:
i. TACY GREY, married JOHN GYSE [see HAVILAND 4].1." He was M.P. from 17 October 1509 to.2
; Burke's Peerage says marriage "by May 1505."4,3
Edmund Grey 9th Lord Grey of Wilton died on 5 May 1511.2,5,3
Edmund Grey 9th Lord Grey of Wilton lived at Wilton, Herefordshire, England.2
Edmund Grey 9th Lord Grey of Wilton lived at Eton, Buckinghamshire, England.2 He was 9th Lord (Baron) Grey of Wilton.1
; EDMUND GREY, 9th LORD (Baron) GREY (of Wilton); b c 1469; m by May 1505 Florence, est dau of Sir Ralph Hastinges, himself yr bro of 1st Lord (Baron) Hastings of the Feb 1461/2 cr (see HUNTINGDON, E), and d 5 May 1511.1
; Faris (1999, p. 376): "EDMUND GREY, of Eton, co. Buckingham, and London, 9th Lord Grey, of Wilton, son and heir, by first marriage, was born about 1469 (aged thirty and more at his father's death). He was summoned to Parliament on 17 Oct. 1509. He was married before 1495 to FLORENCE HASTINGS, daughter and co-heiress of Ralph Hastings, Knt., of Harrowden, co. Northampton, and Kirby, co. Leicester (descendant of King Edward III), by Amy, daughter and co-heiress of John Tattershall, of Woolwich, Kent, and Wanstead, Essex [see HASTINGS 9 for her ancestry]. They had four sons. "Edmund lord Grey de Wilton, of Wilton on Wye, Hereford" died testate (P.C.C., 38 Bennett) on 5 May 1511 survived by his wife.
Stemmata Chicheleana (1765), p. 31 ("Florence = Edm. Grey of Wilton [with children] William, Lord Grey ob. 1562 [&] Elizabeth ob. 1559 = John Brydges, Lord Chandos") (Agnes Chichele, mother of Anne Tattershall, was "Founder's Kin"). C.P. 6:181-186 (1926). NEHGR 108:177-178 (July 1954) (asserts Tacy was daughter of Arthur Grey, of Wilton, a grandson of Edmund Grey). NEHGR 110:232 (July 1956). Paget (1957) 260:6 (marriage date) (no named daughters).
Child of Edmund Grey, by Florence Hastings:
i. TACY GREY, married JOHN GYSE [see HAVILAND 4].1." He was M.P. from 17 October 1509 to.2
Family | Florence Hastings d. a 5 May 1511 |
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.
- [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. 375. 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, Grey, Baron Family Page.
- [S673] David Faris, Faris [1999] - Plantagenet Ancestry, pp. 177, 375.
- [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 4511, p. 65. Hereinafter cited as Weis MCS-5. - [S752] Marcellus Donald Alexander R. von Redlich, compiler, Pedigrees of Some of the Emperor Charlemagne's Descendants, Vol. I (Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc., 1941 (1988 reprint)), p. 200. Hereinafter cited as von Redlich [1941] Charlemagne Desc. vol I.
- [S2261] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 1st edition (n.p.: Genealogical Publishing Company, Inc., 2004), Haviland 16: p. 389. Hereinafter cited as Richardson PA.
Sir John de Camoys Baron Camoys of Berkerton1,2
M, #11852, b. circa 1320, d. after 1383
Father | Sir Ralph de Camoys 1st Lord Camoys2 b. 1272, d. b Jun 1336 |
Mother | Elizabeth de Rogate2,3 |
Reference | GAV21 |
Last Edited | 30 Aug 2019 |
Sir John de Camoys Baron Camoys of Berkerton married Elizabeth Latimer, daughter of Sir William le Latimer Knt., 2nd/3rd Lord Latimer of Corby and Elizabeth Botetourte.4,5
Sir John de Camoys Baron Camoys of Berkerton was born circa 1320 at Trotton, co. Sussex, England; per Johns: "second son, aged 40 at IPM taken 30 Sep 1360."2
Sir John de Camoys Baron Camoys of Berkerton died after 1383.
GAV-21.
.6
Sir John de Camoys Baron Camoys of Berkerton was born circa 1320 at Trotton, co. Sussex, England; per Johns: "second son, aged 40 at IPM taken 30 Sep 1360."2
Sir John de Camoys Baron Camoys of Berkerton died after 1383.
GAV-21.
.6
Family 1 | |
Child |
Family 2 | Elizabeth Latimer |
Child |
|
Citations
- [S2069] Douglas Richardson, "Richardson email 29 Dec 2006: "C.P. Correction: Elizabeth le Despenser, wife of Sir Ralph de Camoys, Lord Camoys"," e-mail message from e-mail address (unknown address) to e-mail address, 29 Dec 2006. Hereinafter cited as "Richardson email 29 Dec 2006."
- [S2118] Will Johnson, "Johnson email 2 Jan 2007: "Re: Sir Ralph de Camoys, Lord Camoys, and his Despenser connection"," e-mail message from e-mail address (unknown address) to e-mail address, 2 Jan 2007. Hereinafter cited as "Johnson email 2 Jan 2007."
- [S1490] Genealogics Website (oiginated by Leo van de Pas, continued by Ian Fettes), online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Elizabeth de Rogate: https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00177833&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Elizabeth Latimer: https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00319491&tree=LEO
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Sir John de Camoys: https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00177831&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. 177. Hereinafter cited as Faris [1999] - Plantagenet Ancestry.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Maud|Mathilde Camoys: https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00028646&tree=LEO
- [S1396] Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site, online http://www.burkes-peerage.net/sites/peerageandgentry/sitepages/home.asp, Camoys Family Page. Hereinafter cited as Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Sir Thomas de Camoys, 1st Baron Camoys: https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00026610&tree=LEO
Elizabeth de Rogate1
F, #11853
Reference | GAV22 |
Last Edited | 13 Nov 2019 |
Elizabeth de Rogate married Sir Ralph de Camoys 1st Lord Camoys, son of Sir John de Camoys and Margaret de Gatesden, before 1319
; his 2nd wife.2,3,4,5
; probably dau or sis of William de Rogate.2
Reference: Genealogics cites: The Complete Peerage, 1936 , Doubleday, H.A. & Lord Howard de Walden. II 507.4,6
; Sir John de Camoys' wife, ?Elizabeth, was almost certainly of baronial descent as her son, Thomas, was called "cousin" by Sir William le Latimer, K.G., 4th Lord Latimer.3
.6 GAV22. Elizabeth de Rogate was living in 1370;
Per Genealogics: "Mentioned."1
; his 2nd wife.2,3,4,5
; probably dau or sis of William de Rogate.2
Reference: Genealogics cites: The Complete Peerage, 1936 , Doubleday, H.A. & Lord Howard de Walden. II 507.4,6
; Sir John de Camoys' wife, ?Elizabeth, was almost certainly of baronial descent as her son, Thomas, was called "cousin" by Sir William le Latimer, K.G., 4th Lord Latimer.3
.6 GAV22. Elizabeth de Rogate was living in 1370;
Per Genealogics: "Mentioned."1
Family | Sir Ralph de Camoys 1st Lord Camoys b. 1272, d. b Jun 1336 |
Child |
|
Citations
- [S4718] The History of Parliament, online <http://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/>, Elizabeth de Rogate: https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00177833&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as History of Parliament Website.
- [S1396] Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site, online http://www.burkes-peerage.net/sites/peerageandgentry/sitepages/home.asp, Camoys Family Page. Hereinafter cited as Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site.
- [S2069] Douglas Richardson, "Richardson email 29 Dec 2006: "C.P. Correction: Elizabeth le Despenser, wife of Sir Ralph de Camoys, Lord Camoys"," e-mail message from e-mail address (unknown address) to e-mail address, 29 Dec 2006. Hereinafter cited as "Richardson email 29 Dec 2006."
- [S1490] Genealogics Website (oiginated by Leo van de Pas, continued by Ian Fettes), online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Elizabeth de Rogate: https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00177833&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Sir Ralph de Camoys: https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00177832&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. 177. Hereinafter cited as Faris [1999] - Plantagenet Ancestry.
- [S2118] Will Johnson, "Johnson email 2 Jan 2007: "Re: Sir Ralph de Camoys, Lord Camoys, and his Despenser connection"," e-mail message from e-mail address (unknown address) to e-mail address, 2 Jan 2007. Hereinafter cited as "Johnson email 2 Jan 2007."
Elizabeth de Louches
F, #11854
Father | William de Louches of Milton, Oxfordshire1,2 |
Reference | GAV20 |
Last Edited | 30 Aug 2019 |
Elizabeth de Louches married Sir Thomas de Camoys Knt., KG, 1st Lord Camoys, son of Sir John de Camoys Baron Camoys of Berkerton and Elizabeth Latimer,
; his 1st wife.3,1,4,5,6
GAV-20.
Reference: Genealogics cites: The Complete Peerage, 1936 , Doubleday, H.A. & Lord Howard de Walden. II 507.5
.3 Elizabeth de Louches was also known as Elizabeth Louches.5
; his 1st wife.3,1,4,5,6
GAV-20.
Reference: Genealogics cites: The Complete Peerage, 1936 , Doubleday, H.A. & Lord Howard de Walden. II 507.5
.3 Elizabeth de Louches was also known as Elizabeth Louches.5
Family | Sir Thomas de Camoys Knt., KG, 1st Lord Camoys b. c 1351, d. 28 Mar 1421 |
Children |
|
Citations
- [S1396] Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site, online http://www.burkes-peerage.net/sites/peerageandgentry/sitepages/home.asp, Camoys Family Page. Hereinafter cited as Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site.
- [S4718] The History of Parliament, online <http://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/>, William Louches, of Milton, co. Oxford: https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00112436&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as History of Parliament 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), p. 177. Hereinafter cited as Faris [1999] - Plantagenet Ancestry.
- [S2069] Douglas Richardson, "Richardson email 29 Dec 2006: "C.P. Correction: Elizabeth le Despenser, wife of Sir Ralph de Camoys, Lord Camoys"," e-mail message from e-mail address (unknown address) to e-mail address, 29 Dec 2006. Hereinafter cited as "Richardson email 29 Dec 2006."
- [S4718] History of Parliament Website, online http://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/, Elizabeth Louches: https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00112437&tree=LEO
- [S1490] Genealogics Website (oiginated by Leo van de Pas, continued by Ian Fettes), online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Sir Thomas de Camoys, 1st Baron Camoys: https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00026610&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
- [S2118] Will Johnson, "Johnson email 2 Jan 2007: "Re: Sir Ralph de Camoys, Lord Camoys, and his Despenser connection"," e-mail message from e-mail address (unknown address) to e-mail address, 2 Jan 2007. Hereinafter cited as "Johnson email 2 Jan 2007."
Sir Roger Camoys1
M, #11855, b. circa 1406
Father | Sir Thomas de Camoys Knt., KG, 1st Lord Camoys2 b. c 1351, d. 28 Mar 1421 |
Mother | Lady Elizabeth Mortimer b. 12 Feb 1370/71, d. 20 Apr 1417 |
Last Edited | 30 Aug 2019 |
Sir Roger Camoys married Isabel (?)1
Sir Roger Camoys was born circa 1406.1 He married Isabel de Beaunoy circa 1448
; papal licence 1448.1
; Sir Roger CAMOYS; b c 1406; in 1428 in possession of his f's estates in various counties including Hunts, described April 1429 as 'Roger lord de Camoys' but never summoned to Parl, although this description and similar others in numerous documents suggest he was recognized as a lord (of Parl?); Seneschal Guienne, France, July 1453; m 1st Isabel - (d by 26 Nov 1444; m 2nd (papal licence 1448) Isabel de Beaunoy.1
.3
Sir Roger Camoys was born circa 1406.1 He married Isabel de Beaunoy circa 1448
; papal licence 1448.1
; Sir Roger CAMOYS; b c 1406; in 1428 in possession of his f's estates in various counties including Hunts, described April 1429 as 'Roger lord de Camoys' but never summoned to Parl, although this description and similar others in numerous documents suggest he was recognized as a lord (of Parl?); Seneschal Guienne, France, July 1453; m 1st Isabel - (d by 26 Nov 1444; m 2nd (papal licence 1448) Isabel de Beaunoy.1
.3
Family 1 | Isabel (?) d. b 26 Nov 1444 |
Family 2 | Isabel de Beaunoy |
Citations
- [S1396] Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site, online http://www.burkes-peerage.net/sites/peerageandgentry/sitepages/home.asp, Camoys 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 Thomas de Camoys, 1st Baron Camoys: https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00026610&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), p. 177. Hereinafter cited as Faris [1999] - Plantagenet Ancestry.
Margaret Fiennes1,2,3
F, #11856
Father | Sir Roger Fiennes Knt., of Herstmonceaux, Sussex1,2,3 b. b 14 Sep 1384, d. Nov 1449 |
Mother | Elizabeth Holand4,1,2,3 d. a Apr 1441 |
Last Edited | 22 Dec 2012 |
Margaret Fiennes married Nicholas Carew Esq., of Beddington, et al, Surrey, son of Nicholas Carew of Beddington and Isabel de la Mare.5,1,6,2,3
Margaret Fiennes was buried after 20 April 1458 at Chapel of St. Nichols in St. Mary's, Beddington, co. Surrey, England.1
; van de Pas cites: The Lineage and Ancestry of H.R.H. Prince Charles, Prince of Wales, Edinburgh, 1977, Paget, Gerald, Reference: Q 115018.5,2 Margaret Fiennes was also known as Margaret Fienes.2
Margaret Fiennes was buried after 20 April 1458 at Chapel of St. Nichols in St. Mary's, Beddington, co. Surrey, England.1
; van de Pas cites: The Lineage and Ancestry of H.R.H. Prince Charles, Prince of Wales, Edinburgh, 1977, Paget, Gerald, Reference: Q 115018.5,2 Margaret Fiennes was also known as Margaret Fienes.2
Family | Nicholas Carew Esq., of Beddington, et al, Surrey b. c 1402, d. 20 Apr 1458 |
Child |
|
Citations
- [S2261] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 1st edition (n.p.: Genealogical Publishing Company, Inc., 2004), Beddington 13: p. 87. 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 Fienes: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00038372&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
- [S2261] Douglas Richardson, Richardson PA, Say 12.ii: p. 642.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Elizabeth Holand: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00038368&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. 18. Hereinafter cited as Faris [1999] - Plantagenet Ancestry.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Sir Nicholas Carew, of Beddington: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00109594&tree=LEO
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, James Carew, of Beddington: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00109525&tree=LEO
Nicholas Carew Esq., of Beddington, et al, Surrey1,2
M, #11857, b. circa 1402, d. 20 April 1458
Father | Nicholas Carew of Beddington1,2,3 b. 1356, d. 4 Sep 1432 |
Mother | Isabel de la Mare1,2,4 |
Last Edited | 29 Aug 2019 |
Nicholas Carew Esq., of Beddington, et al, Surrey was buried at Chapel of St. Nichols, St. Mary's, Beddington, co. Surrey, England.5 He married Margaret Fiennes, daughter of Sir Roger Fiennes Knt., of Herstmonceaux, Sussex and Elizabeth Holand.6,1,2,7,8
Nicholas Carew Esq., of Beddington, et al, Surrey was born circa 1402.6,2,1
Nicholas Carew Esq., of Beddington, et al, Surrey died on 20 April 1458.2
Nicholas Carew Esq., of Beddington, et al, Surrey was buried after 20 April 1458 at Chapel of St. Nichols in St. Mary's, Beddington, co. Surrey, England.1
His estate was probated on 10 May 1458
; P.C.C. 12 Stokton.1,2
; Genealogics cites:
1. The Lineage and Ancestry of H.R.H. Prince Charles, Prince of Wales, Edinburgh, 1977, Paget, Gerald. Q 115017
2. The Carews of Beddington , Michell, Ronald. 1pp. III.2
; Faris (1999, p. 18): "MARGARET FIENNES, was married to NICHOLAS CAREW, Knt., of Beddington, Surrey, Sheriff of Surrey, son of Nicholas de Carew (descendant of Charlemagne), by Isabel, daughter of Stephen Delamare. He was born about 1402. They had two sons and three daughters. The will of NICHOLAS DE CAREW was dated 14 Nov. 1457 and proved 10 May 1458 (P.C.C., 12 Stokton). They were buried in the Chapel of St. Nichols in St. Mary's, Beddington.
Berry's Sussex Pedigrees. Cal.Close Rolls, 1435-41, p. 45; 1447-54, p. 100. VCH Surrey 4:170. Beville (1976), p. 328. Roskell (1992) 3:73 (1992)."
Nicholas Carew Esq., of Beddington, et al, Surrey left a will on 14 November 1457.1
Nicholas Carew Esq., of Beddington, et al, Surrey was born circa 1402.6,2,1
Nicholas Carew Esq., of Beddington, et al, Surrey died on 20 April 1458.2
Nicholas Carew Esq., of Beddington, et al, Surrey was buried after 20 April 1458 at Chapel of St. Nichols in St. Mary's, Beddington, co. Surrey, England.1
His estate was probated on 10 May 1458
; P.C.C. 12 Stokton.1,2
; Genealogics cites:
1. The Lineage and Ancestry of H.R.H. Prince Charles, Prince of Wales, Edinburgh, 1977, Paget, Gerald. Q 115017
2. The Carews of Beddington , Michell, Ronald. 1pp. III.2
; Faris (1999, p. 18): "MARGARET FIENNES, was married to NICHOLAS CAREW, Knt., of Beddington, Surrey, Sheriff of Surrey, son of Nicholas de Carew (descendant of Charlemagne), by Isabel, daughter of Stephen Delamare. He was born about 1402. They had two sons and three daughters. The will of NICHOLAS DE CAREW was dated 14 Nov. 1457 and proved 10 May 1458 (P.C.C., 12 Stokton). They were buried in the Chapel of St. Nichols in St. Mary's, Beddington.
Berry's Sussex Pedigrees. Cal.Close Rolls, 1435-41, p. 45; 1447-54, p. 100. VCH Surrey 4:170. Beville (1976), p. 328. Roskell (1992) 3:73 (1992)."
Nicholas Carew Esq., of Beddington, et al, Surrey left a will on 14 November 1457.1
Family | Margaret Fiennes |
Child |
|
Citations
- [S2261] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 1st edition (n.p.: Genealogical Publishing Company, Inc., 2004), Beddington 13: p. 87. 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 Nicholas Carew, of Beddington: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00109594&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Nicholas Carew, of Beddington: https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00109592&tree=LEO
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Isabel de la Mare: https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00109593&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), BEDDINGTON 7, p. 18. Hereinafter cited as Faris [1999] - Plantagenet Ancestry.
- [S673] David Faris, Faris [1999] - Plantagenet Ancestry, p. 18.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Margaret Fienes: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00038372&tree=LEO
- [S2261] Douglas Richardson, Richardson PA, Say 12.ii: p. 642.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, James Carew, of Beddington: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00109525&tree=LEO
Nicholas Carew of Beddington1
M, #11858, b. 1356, d. 4 September 1432
Father | Sir Nicholas Carew Knt., of Beddington2,1 d. 17 Aug 1390 |
Mother | Lucy Willoughby1,3 |
Last Edited | 29 Aug 2019 |
Nicholas Carew of Beddington married Isabel de la Mare, daughter of Stephen Delamare of Delamers and Alice (?),
;
His 1st wife.4,1 Nicholas Carew of Beddington was born in 1356.1 He married Mercy|Mary|Marcia Hayme circa July 1398
;
His 2nd wife; her 1st husband.5,1
Nicholas Carew of Beddington died on 4 September 1432.1
Nicholas Carew of Beddington was buried after 4 September 1432 at Beddington, co. Surrey, England.1
;
Per History of Parliament:
CAREW, Nicholas (c.1356-1432), of Beddington, Surr.
Published in The History of Parliament: the House of Commons 1386-1421, ed. J.S. Roskell, L. Clark, C. Rawcliffe., 1993
Constituency Dates
SURREY 1394
SURREY 1395
SURREY Jan. 1397
SURREY Sept. 1397
SURREY 1417
Family and Education
"b.c.1356, s. and h. of Nicholas Carew† (d.1390) of Beddington, keeper of the privy seal, by his w. Lucy, da. and h. of Sir Richard Willoughby of Beddington, wid. of Sir Thomas Huscarle† (d. by 1352) of Purley Magna, Berks. m. (1) prob. by May 1374, Isabel, da. of Alice de la Mare of Delamers, Herts., at least 1s. Nicholas†; (2) prob. by July 1398, Mercy (d.1453), da. of Stephen Hayme† of Winchester by his w. Christine, at least 8s. 8da.1
Offices Held: Sheriff, Surr. and Suss. 21 Oct. 1391-18 Oct. 1392, 24 Nov. 1400-8 Nov. 1401.
"Commr. of array, Surr. Mar. 1392, Dec. 1399, Jan. 1400, July 1402, Aug., Sept. 1403, July 1419; inquiry, Surr., Suss. Mar. 1392 (concealments), Surr. Mar. 1395, Apr. 1400 (escaped prisoner), June 1406 (concealments), Dec. 1406 (wastes), Suss. Aug. 1408 (ownership of the manor of Heyshott) Surr. Feb. 1415 (concealments),2 Surr., Suss. Feb. 1419 (escapes and concealments); oyer and terminer Apr. 1392 (treasure trove), Surr. Oct. 1398 (thefts from Battle abbey estates), Suss. Feb. 1420 (treasons and felonies); to survey highways, Surr. Dec. 1392, Mar. 1394 (Egham area); of gaol delivery, Guildford Apr. 1394; to seize the estates of the Lords Appellant of 1387-8, Surr., Suss. Oct. 1397; of kiddles, Mdx., Surr. June 1398, Surr. bef. July 1401, Surr., Kent Nov. 1403 London Bridge to Greenwich Nov. 1405; to prevent the spread of treasonous rumours May 1402; seize the lands of Sir Thomas West, Suss. July 1405; raise a royal loan, Surr., Hants Sept. 1405, June 1406, Surr. Nov. 1419, Jan. 1420; restore the goods of Thomas, earl of Arundel Feb. 1411; assess a tax, Surr. Jan. 1412.
"J.p. Surr. 18 June 1394-Mar. 1413, 28 Oct. 1417-Dec. 1431, Suss. 27 July-Nov. 1397, 3 Feb. 1400-3.
"Escheator, Surr. and Suss. 12 Nov. 1403-24 Nov. 1404, 9 Nov. 1406-2 Nov. 1407.
"Tax collector, Surr. Sept. 1405.
"Keeper of the estates of Bermondsey abbey 11 May 1400-aft. 12 July 1410.
Biography
"Carew belonged to an old and distinguished family of Norman descent with strong Irish as well as English connexions. He was a kinsman of the influential Devonshire Carews, although his immediate ancestors lived in Berkshire and it was only during his father’s lifetime that the extensive Surrey estates which made up over half his inheritance were acquired. Nicholas Carew the elder played a prominent part in county society, representing Surrey twice in Parliament and serving on many local commissions. His main interests lay, however, at Court. He rose to become keeper of the privy seal in 1371; and his last years were largely given over to his duties as a feoffee and executor of Edward III.3 The subject of this biography was born in about 1356, and may well have married some 18 years later, when the Berkshire landowner, Sir Thomas de la Mare†, settled his manor of Aldermaston upon various members of the Carew family for life. Nicholas’s wife, Isabel, the daughter of Alice de la Mare of Delamers in Hertfordshire, was quite probably related to Sir Thomas; and it was certainly through her that Carew established a connexion with John Ludwick* who became her stepfather during the 1380s. Meanwhile, from 1377 onwards, the young Nicholas Carew was a party to the numerous enfeoffments of property made by and for his father, so that on the latter’s death, in 1390, he gained undisputed possession of a substantial inheritance, most of which came to him through his mother, Lucy Willoughby, whose first husband, Sir Thomas Huscarle, left her his Berkshire and Surrey estates. Thus, by the date of his first return to Parliament, our Member enjoyed a landed income of at least £91 a year (and probably far more), derived from the manors of Beddington, Huscarle, Norbury, Carshalton, Woodmansterne, Carews in Warlingham and Nutfield, together with land in Hoe, Chesham, Sanderstead, Horne, Burstow, Mitcham, Coulsdon and Bensham, Surrey; from property in Gravesend and the manors of Stoke in Hoo and Maytham, Kent (although revenues from Stoke had been set aside for the upkeep of a chantry); and from Great Purley, Fulscot and Charlton in Wantage, as well as tenements in Tullwick and other parts of Berkshire.4 Carew appears to have consolidated his holdings in Surrey over the next few years, so that by 1412 this part of his estates alone was said to be worth £80 a year. His marriage to Mercy, the daughter of Stephen Hayme, which took place in, or before, July 1398, brought him the manors of Hyde and Sulham in Berkshire. On her death, over 50 years later, Mercy Carew held the manor of ‘Pery’ in Harmondsworth, Middlesex, together with property in the London parish of Holy Trinity Aldgate, although these estates do not appear to have come into Carew’s hands until the end of his life, if then. It was, however, through his second wife that he acquired land and rents in the Hampshire villages of Forton and Otterbourne, since the Haymes had strong connexions with this part of the country, and Mercy’s father had represented Winchester in Parliament. The tax returns of 1412 show our MP to have been in receipt of £158 6s.8d. a year from his various properties, over and above the estimated £80 p.a. which was made over to him as a trustee of the Tregoz estates in Sussex.5 Carew became a feoffee-to-uses of John Tregoz in 1400, and administered his inheritance from 1404 until about 1428, fighting at least two protracted lawsuits to retain control of the three manors involved.6 He showed great concern, meanwhile, for the future of his own estates, and made a series of settlements upon feoffees, the first of which, begun on his second marriage, was to safeguard the title of his son and heir Nicholas. Over the years 1420 and 1421, and again in 1430, he conveyed most of his possessions to trustees, including John Gaynesford†, thus creating an impressive jointure for his widow. Her interests were indeed considerable, for by 1428 the Carews had obtained seisin of the manor of Studham in Berkshire as well as further holdings near their home at Beddington. They are also known to have become landowners in Hertfordshire at some point before 1420, possibly acquiring the property in and around King’s Langley and King’s Walden which Nicholas Carew the younger held some 15 years later.7
"Unlike his father, Carew never played a prominent part in national affairs, although he was active as a crown servant in the south east for almost 30 years of his life. He was occasionally called upon to perform the duties of a mainpernor and feoffee-to-uses while his father was alive, but it was not until the latter’s death that he became really involved in the local community. His administrative career began with his appointment as sheriff of Surrey and Sussex, and from then onwards he served regularly on royal commissions as well as sitting on the bench. In January 1393 he was rewarded with a grant of the farm of the manor of Croham in Croydon, for which he paid 40s. a year. We do not know why Carew and John Bonet* bound themselves to pay 200 marks to Thomas Ickham* and others in the following November, but the transaction may well have concerned Carew’s extensive dealings in the property market.8 During the next two decades he was constantly preoccupied with litigation, for in addition to the cases fought by him as a trustee, he both brought and defended a number of personal actions at the local assizes. These concerned the ownership of property in Surrey, and one, over land in Mersham, resulted in his being awarded damages totalling 92 marks. He also appeared fairly regularly at Westminster as the plaintiff in suits for debt and trespass, although none of these seem to have reached a verdict. When, in November 1413, he quarrelled with the London mercer, John Lane, he agreed to accept the arbitration of four distinguished aldermen, offering securities of 1,000 marks as a guarantee of his readiness to abide by their decision.9
"Notwithstanding the fact that he sat in the two Parliaments of 1397 and was a commissioner for the confiscation of the lands of the Lords Appellant of 1388, Carew’s sympathies were sufficiently Lancastrian for him to find favour with the recently crowned Henry IV. He began a second term as sheriff in November 1400 - having already been re-appointed to the Sussex bench - and went on to become escheator of Surrey and Sussex. In October 1402 he was approached for a ‘benevolence’; and soon afterwards the Crown requested a personal contribution of 200 marks towards the cost of coastal defence. His support for the new regime also found practical expression in a loan of £100 which he advanced in July 1406, and recovered in the following year. No more money was borrowed from him by the government until June 1417, when he lent £40 towards Henry V’s second invasion of France. Carew was, meanwhile, chosen to represent Surrey at the great councils of 1401 and 1403, and it is clear that he was then regarded as one of the leading gentry of the shire. No doubt because of his social position, he was able to establish many influential connexions. He often acted as a mainpernor in Chancery and at the Exchequer, most notably for his fellow MPs, John Gravesend, the above-mentioned John Ludwick and the latter’s friend, John Durham* (in 1399), and Henry Beaufort, bishop of Winchester (in 1420).10 As we have already seen, many people wished to make Carew their feoffee-to-uses. He performed this service for Thomas, earl of Arundel (d. 1415) and thus became involved in a dispute with John Wintershall* over the title to certain property in Surrey. Another quarrel with the widowed countess of Arundel dragged on for a while, but in February 1419 she surrendered bonds worth £1,000 to Carew and his co-feoffees in pledge of her acceptance of the dower settlement made upon her. One of the earl’s other associates was Ralph Cuddington*, who gave evidence on Carew’s behalf at this time and made him his executor shortly before he died in 1421.11 It was evidently through their mutual attachment to Arundel that Carew struck up a friendship with Sir Thomas Sackville II* and Richard Wayville*. He and Sackville acted as each other’s trustees; and both men were named, along with Robert, Lord Poynings, as supervisors of Wayville’s last will, in which Carew received a bequest of a rosary. The latter was also on very close terms with Sir Thomas Lewknor†, his reputed son-in-law, whom he chose as a feoffee and as the supervisor of his own executors.12
"Although he remained on the Surrey bench until a few months before his death, Carew may otherwise be said to have retired from public life in about 1420. He and John Clipsham* helped settle a local property dispute at the beginning of the year, but apart from his attendance at the elections held in Guildford for the Parliament of May 1421, he had little else to do with government at any level. In April 1423 he was given custody of part of the manor of Burton Stacey in Hampshire, perhaps as a final reward for years of loyal service to the Crown.13 Carew died on 4 Sept. 1432, ‘senex et plenus dierum’, and was buried at Beddington, next to his first wife, Isabel. In his will he made provision for bequests in excess of £183, several of which were to the churches and other religious bodies on his land. Only three of the 17 or more children of his two marriages appear to have survived him, the bulk of his estates having been settled previously upon Nicholas, his eldest son. The latter faced immediate problems over the administration of his father’s will, and also seems to have quarrelled with his stepmother, the widowed Mercy Carew, over the allocation of her dower.14 She died in the spring of 1453, having taken Arthur Ormesby of London as her second husband. Carew’s descendants became involved in a bitter and protracted dispute with his feoffees over the custody of his property, which was eventually divided between his grand daughters.15
Ref Volumes: 1386-1421, Author: C.R.
Notes
Variants: Carreu(e), Carrew(e), Carrou, Carru, Carue.
1. C136/66/10; PCC 16 Luffenham; VCH Berks. iii. 418-19, 429; Herts. ii. 298; Surr. iv. 170; Surr. Arch. Colls. xxv. 55-57, 59-63; xliii. 53-55; CCR, 1369-74, pp. 341-2; CPR, 1370-4, p. 436; Lambeth Pal. Lib. Reg. Courtenay, f. 147.
2.CIMisc. vii. 369.
3.VCH Surr. iv. 73, 170; Bucks. iii. 505-6; T.F. Tout, Chapters, iii. 267, 330; v. 44-45; R. Wills ed. Nichols, 63; CPR, 1381-5, p. 306.
4. C136/66/10; VCH Bucks. iii. 418-19, 502; iv. 324; Herts. ii. 298; Surr. iii. 223; iv. 239, 335; CCR, 1369-74, pp. 341-2; 1377-81, pp. 102, 344, 466, 471; 1389-92, p. 293; 1392-6, p. 251; CPR, 1370-4, p. 436; 1388-92, p. 5; CAD, v. A10681; CChR, v. 229; CIMisc. iv. 49; CFR, x. 329, 359; Add. Chs. 22707, 23141, 23148, 23155, 23157, 23332, 23398, 23401, 23627-9, 23631, 23784, 23446.
5. CP25(1)/231/64/56, 58; VCH Berks. iii. 429; Add. Chs. 23157, 23785; CCR, 1402-5, p. 285; Feudal Aids, vi. 404, 453, 470, 516, 523; Lambeth Pal. Lib. Reg. Kempe, f. 298v.
6.Suss. Arch. Colls. xciii. 53-56; Suss. Rec. Soc. xxiii. 211-12; CCR, 1399-1402, pp. 298, 303-5.
7. C1/18/36, 19/258; CP25(1)/292/67; Feudal Aids, i. 43; CCR, 1419-22, pp. 139, 219, 221-6; 1429-35, p. 189; 1435-41, pp. 44-45; Add. Chs. 23176, 23178, 23632-3; CPR, 1422-9, p. 251.
8.CCR, 1377-81, pp. 246, 340; 1385-9, p. 620; 1392-6, p. 233; CFR, xi. 68; xii. 20.
9. JUST 1/1503 rot. 77, 78, 83v, 1521 rot. 47v, 1523 rot. 7-7v, 1528 rot. 26-26v; CCR, 1396-9, p. 234; 1399-1402, p. 483; CPR, 1405-8, p. 405; 1422-9, pp. 251, 313; Cal. P. and M. London, 1413-37, pp. 11-12.
10. E401/619, 677; E403/571, 645; PPC, i. 161, 202; ii.73, 75, 87; CFR, xii. 10, 21; CCR, 1399-1402, p. 107; CPR, 1408-13, pp. 203-4; 1416-22, p. 310.
11. Reg. Chichele, ii. 71, 229; Sel. Cases in Chancery (Selden Soc. x), 122; CCR, 1413-19, p. 520; 1419-22, p. 34; 1422-9, p. 105; CPR, 1416-22, pp. 62-63; 238-9; 1422-9, pp. 115-16, 282.
12.CCR, 1413-19, p. 360; Surr. N. and Q. xii. 77-79; W. Berry, Surr. Gen. 3; PCC 16 Luffenham.
13. C219/12/5; CFR, xv. 33; Add. Ch. 27759.
14. PCC 16 Luffenham; C1/9/469; C139/57/1; Surr. Arch. Colls. xxv. 55-57, 59-65; Add. Chs. 23408, 23730.
15. C1/12/126, 18/36, 19/258-9; CCR, 1435-41, pp. 126, 128-9, 260, 262-5, 269-70; CAD, iv. A9778; Surr. Arch. Colls. xliii. 53-55.6
; descendant of Charlemagne.7 Nicholas Carew of Beddington was also known as Nicholas de Carew.
Reference: Genealogics cites:
1. The Lineage and Ancestry of H.R.H. Prince Charles, Prince of Wales, Edinburgh, 1977, Paget, Gerald. Q 115017
2. The Ancestry of Dorothea Poyntz, wife of Reverend John Owsley, 3rd Edition, 1999, Bodine, Ronnie O. & Thomas W Spalding Jr. page 41 nr 548
3. History of Parliament , Roskell. 1386 2:482
4. Posting to Gen-Medieval Newsgroup . 6 Dec 1999.8,1
;
His 1st wife.4,1 Nicholas Carew of Beddington was born in 1356.1 He married Mercy|Mary|Marcia Hayme circa July 1398
;
His 2nd wife; her 1st husband.5,1
Nicholas Carew of Beddington died on 4 September 1432.1
Nicholas Carew of Beddington was buried after 4 September 1432 at Beddington, co. Surrey, England.1
;
Per History of Parliament:
CAREW, Nicholas (c.1356-1432), of Beddington, Surr.
Published in The History of Parliament: the House of Commons 1386-1421, ed. J.S. Roskell, L. Clark, C. Rawcliffe., 1993
Constituency Dates
SURREY 1394
SURREY 1395
SURREY Jan. 1397
SURREY Sept. 1397
SURREY 1417
Family and Education
"b.c.1356, s. and h. of Nicholas Carew† (d.1390) of Beddington, keeper of the privy seal, by his w. Lucy, da. and h. of Sir Richard Willoughby of Beddington, wid. of Sir Thomas Huscarle† (d. by 1352) of Purley Magna, Berks. m. (1) prob. by May 1374, Isabel, da. of Alice de la Mare of Delamers, Herts., at least 1s. Nicholas†; (2) prob. by July 1398, Mercy (d.1453), da. of Stephen Hayme† of Winchester by his w. Christine, at least 8s. 8da.1
Offices Held: Sheriff, Surr. and Suss. 21 Oct. 1391-18 Oct. 1392, 24 Nov. 1400-8 Nov. 1401.
"Commr. of array, Surr. Mar. 1392, Dec. 1399, Jan. 1400, July 1402, Aug., Sept. 1403, July 1419; inquiry, Surr., Suss. Mar. 1392 (concealments), Surr. Mar. 1395, Apr. 1400 (escaped prisoner), June 1406 (concealments), Dec. 1406 (wastes), Suss. Aug. 1408 (ownership of the manor of Heyshott) Surr. Feb. 1415 (concealments),2 Surr., Suss. Feb. 1419 (escapes and concealments); oyer and terminer Apr. 1392 (treasure trove), Surr. Oct. 1398 (thefts from Battle abbey estates), Suss. Feb. 1420 (treasons and felonies); to survey highways, Surr. Dec. 1392, Mar. 1394 (Egham area); of gaol delivery, Guildford Apr. 1394; to seize the estates of the Lords Appellant of 1387-8, Surr., Suss. Oct. 1397; of kiddles, Mdx., Surr. June 1398, Surr. bef. July 1401, Surr., Kent Nov. 1403 London Bridge to Greenwich Nov. 1405; to prevent the spread of treasonous rumours May 1402; seize the lands of Sir Thomas West, Suss. July 1405; raise a royal loan, Surr., Hants Sept. 1405, June 1406, Surr. Nov. 1419, Jan. 1420; restore the goods of Thomas, earl of Arundel Feb. 1411; assess a tax, Surr. Jan. 1412.
"J.p. Surr. 18 June 1394-Mar. 1413, 28 Oct. 1417-Dec. 1431, Suss. 27 July-Nov. 1397, 3 Feb. 1400-3.
"Escheator, Surr. and Suss. 12 Nov. 1403-24 Nov. 1404, 9 Nov. 1406-2 Nov. 1407.
"Tax collector, Surr. Sept. 1405.
"Keeper of the estates of Bermondsey abbey 11 May 1400-aft. 12 July 1410.
Biography
"Carew belonged to an old and distinguished family of Norman descent with strong Irish as well as English connexions. He was a kinsman of the influential Devonshire Carews, although his immediate ancestors lived in Berkshire and it was only during his father’s lifetime that the extensive Surrey estates which made up over half his inheritance were acquired. Nicholas Carew the elder played a prominent part in county society, representing Surrey twice in Parliament and serving on many local commissions. His main interests lay, however, at Court. He rose to become keeper of the privy seal in 1371; and his last years were largely given over to his duties as a feoffee and executor of Edward III.3 The subject of this biography was born in about 1356, and may well have married some 18 years later, when the Berkshire landowner, Sir Thomas de la Mare†, settled his manor of Aldermaston upon various members of the Carew family for life. Nicholas’s wife, Isabel, the daughter of Alice de la Mare of Delamers in Hertfordshire, was quite probably related to Sir Thomas; and it was certainly through her that Carew established a connexion with John Ludwick* who became her stepfather during the 1380s. Meanwhile, from 1377 onwards, the young Nicholas Carew was a party to the numerous enfeoffments of property made by and for his father, so that on the latter’s death, in 1390, he gained undisputed possession of a substantial inheritance, most of which came to him through his mother, Lucy Willoughby, whose first husband, Sir Thomas Huscarle, left her his Berkshire and Surrey estates. Thus, by the date of his first return to Parliament, our Member enjoyed a landed income of at least £91 a year (and probably far more), derived from the manors of Beddington, Huscarle, Norbury, Carshalton, Woodmansterne, Carews in Warlingham and Nutfield, together with land in Hoe, Chesham, Sanderstead, Horne, Burstow, Mitcham, Coulsdon and Bensham, Surrey; from property in Gravesend and the manors of Stoke in Hoo and Maytham, Kent (although revenues from Stoke had been set aside for the upkeep of a chantry); and from Great Purley, Fulscot and Charlton in Wantage, as well as tenements in Tullwick and other parts of Berkshire.4 Carew appears to have consolidated his holdings in Surrey over the next few years, so that by 1412 this part of his estates alone was said to be worth £80 a year. His marriage to Mercy, the daughter of Stephen Hayme, which took place in, or before, July 1398, brought him the manors of Hyde and Sulham in Berkshire. On her death, over 50 years later, Mercy Carew held the manor of ‘Pery’ in Harmondsworth, Middlesex, together with property in the London parish of Holy Trinity Aldgate, although these estates do not appear to have come into Carew’s hands until the end of his life, if then. It was, however, through his second wife that he acquired land and rents in the Hampshire villages of Forton and Otterbourne, since the Haymes had strong connexions with this part of the country, and Mercy’s father had represented Winchester in Parliament. The tax returns of 1412 show our MP to have been in receipt of £158 6s.8d. a year from his various properties, over and above the estimated £80 p.a. which was made over to him as a trustee of the Tregoz estates in Sussex.5 Carew became a feoffee-to-uses of John Tregoz in 1400, and administered his inheritance from 1404 until about 1428, fighting at least two protracted lawsuits to retain control of the three manors involved.6 He showed great concern, meanwhile, for the future of his own estates, and made a series of settlements upon feoffees, the first of which, begun on his second marriage, was to safeguard the title of his son and heir Nicholas. Over the years 1420 and 1421, and again in 1430, he conveyed most of his possessions to trustees, including John Gaynesford†, thus creating an impressive jointure for his widow. Her interests were indeed considerable, for by 1428 the Carews had obtained seisin of the manor of Studham in Berkshire as well as further holdings near their home at Beddington. They are also known to have become landowners in Hertfordshire at some point before 1420, possibly acquiring the property in and around King’s Langley and King’s Walden which Nicholas Carew the younger held some 15 years later.7
"Unlike his father, Carew never played a prominent part in national affairs, although he was active as a crown servant in the south east for almost 30 years of his life. He was occasionally called upon to perform the duties of a mainpernor and feoffee-to-uses while his father was alive, but it was not until the latter’s death that he became really involved in the local community. His administrative career began with his appointment as sheriff of Surrey and Sussex, and from then onwards he served regularly on royal commissions as well as sitting on the bench. In January 1393 he was rewarded with a grant of the farm of the manor of Croham in Croydon, for which he paid 40s. a year. We do not know why Carew and John Bonet* bound themselves to pay 200 marks to Thomas Ickham* and others in the following November, but the transaction may well have concerned Carew’s extensive dealings in the property market.8 During the next two decades he was constantly preoccupied with litigation, for in addition to the cases fought by him as a trustee, he both brought and defended a number of personal actions at the local assizes. These concerned the ownership of property in Surrey, and one, over land in Mersham, resulted in his being awarded damages totalling 92 marks. He also appeared fairly regularly at Westminster as the plaintiff in suits for debt and trespass, although none of these seem to have reached a verdict. When, in November 1413, he quarrelled with the London mercer, John Lane, he agreed to accept the arbitration of four distinguished aldermen, offering securities of 1,000 marks as a guarantee of his readiness to abide by their decision.9
"Notwithstanding the fact that he sat in the two Parliaments of 1397 and was a commissioner for the confiscation of the lands of the Lords Appellant of 1388, Carew’s sympathies were sufficiently Lancastrian for him to find favour with the recently crowned Henry IV. He began a second term as sheriff in November 1400 - having already been re-appointed to the Sussex bench - and went on to become escheator of Surrey and Sussex. In October 1402 he was approached for a ‘benevolence’; and soon afterwards the Crown requested a personal contribution of 200 marks towards the cost of coastal defence. His support for the new regime also found practical expression in a loan of £100 which he advanced in July 1406, and recovered in the following year. No more money was borrowed from him by the government until June 1417, when he lent £40 towards Henry V’s second invasion of France. Carew was, meanwhile, chosen to represent Surrey at the great councils of 1401 and 1403, and it is clear that he was then regarded as one of the leading gentry of the shire. No doubt because of his social position, he was able to establish many influential connexions. He often acted as a mainpernor in Chancery and at the Exchequer, most notably for his fellow MPs, John Gravesend, the above-mentioned John Ludwick and the latter’s friend, John Durham* (in 1399), and Henry Beaufort, bishop of Winchester (in 1420).10 As we have already seen, many people wished to make Carew their feoffee-to-uses. He performed this service for Thomas, earl of Arundel (d. 1415) and thus became involved in a dispute with John Wintershall* over the title to certain property in Surrey. Another quarrel with the widowed countess of Arundel dragged on for a while, but in February 1419 she surrendered bonds worth £1,000 to Carew and his co-feoffees in pledge of her acceptance of the dower settlement made upon her. One of the earl’s other associates was Ralph Cuddington*, who gave evidence on Carew’s behalf at this time and made him his executor shortly before he died in 1421.11 It was evidently through their mutual attachment to Arundel that Carew struck up a friendship with Sir Thomas Sackville II* and Richard Wayville*. He and Sackville acted as each other’s trustees; and both men were named, along with Robert, Lord Poynings, as supervisors of Wayville’s last will, in which Carew received a bequest of a rosary. The latter was also on very close terms with Sir Thomas Lewknor†, his reputed son-in-law, whom he chose as a feoffee and as the supervisor of his own executors.12
"Although he remained on the Surrey bench until a few months before his death, Carew may otherwise be said to have retired from public life in about 1420. He and John Clipsham* helped settle a local property dispute at the beginning of the year, but apart from his attendance at the elections held in Guildford for the Parliament of May 1421, he had little else to do with government at any level. In April 1423 he was given custody of part of the manor of Burton Stacey in Hampshire, perhaps as a final reward for years of loyal service to the Crown.13 Carew died on 4 Sept. 1432, ‘senex et plenus dierum’, and was buried at Beddington, next to his first wife, Isabel. In his will he made provision for bequests in excess of £183, several of which were to the churches and other religious bodies on his land. Only three of the 17 or more children of his two marriages appear to have survived him, the bulk of his estates having been settled previously upon Nicholas, his eldest son. The latter faced immediate problems over the administration of his father’s will, and also seems to have quarrelled with his stepmother, the widowed Mercy Carew, over the allocation of her dower.14 She died in the spring of 1453, having taken Arthur Ormesby of London as her second husband. Carew’s descendants became involved in a bitter and protracted dispute with his feoffees over the custody of his property, which was eventually divided between his grand daughters.15
Ref Volumes: 1386-1421, Author: C.R.
Notes
Variants: Carreu(e), Carrew(e), Carrou, Carru, Carue.
1. C136/66/10; PCC 16 Luffenham; VCH Berks. iii. 418-19, 429; Herts. ii. 298; Surr. iv. 170; Surr. Arch. Colls. xxv. 55-57, 59-63; xliii. 53-55; CCR, 1369-74, pp. 341-2; CPR, 1370-4, p. 436; Lambeth Pal. Lib. Reg. Courtenay, f. 147.
2.CIMisc. vii. 369.
3.VCH Surr. iv. 73, 170; Bucks. iii. 505-6; T.F. Tout, Chapters, iii. 267, 330; v. 44-45; R. Wills ed. Nichols, 63; CPR, 1381-5, p. 306.
4. C136/66/10; VCH Bucks. iii. 418-19, 502; iv. 324; Herts. ii. 298; Surr. iii. 223; iv. 239, 335; CCR, 1369-74, pp. 341-2; 1377-81, pp. 102, 344, 466, 471; 1389-92, p. 293; 1392-6, p. 251; CPR, 1370-4, p. 436; 1388-92, p. 5; CAD, v. A10681; CChR, v. 229; CIMisc. iv. 49; CFR, x. 329, 359; Add. Chs. 22707, 23141, 23148, 23155, 23157, 23332, 23398, 23401, 23627-9, 23631, 23784, 23446.
5. CP25(1)/231/64/56, 58; VCH Berks. iii. 429; Add. Chs. 23157, 23785; CCR, 1402-5, p. 285; Feudal Aids, vi. 404, 453, 470, 516, 523; Lambeth Pal. Lib. Reg. Kempe, f. 298v.
6.Suss. Arch. Colls. xciii. 53-56; Suss. Rec. Soc. xxiii. 211-12; CCR, 1399-1402, pp. 298, 303-5.
7. C1/18/36, 19/258; CP25(1)/292/67; Feudal Aids, i. 43; CCR, 1419-22, pp. 139, 219, 221-6; 1429-35, p. 189; 1435-41, pp. 44-45; Add. Chs. 23176, 23178, 23632-3; CPR, 1422-9, p. 251.
8.CCR, 1377-81, pp. 246, 340; 1385-9, p. 620; 1392-6, p. 233; CFR, xi. 68; xii. 20.
9. JUST 1/1503 rot. 77, 78, 83v, 1521 rot. 47v, 1523 rot. 7-7v, 1528 rot. 26-26v; CCR, 1396-9, p. 234; 1399-1402, p. 483; CPR, 1405-8, p. 405; 1422-9, pp. 251, 313; Cal. P. and M. London, 1413-37, pp. 11-12.
10. E401/619, 677; E403/571, 645; PPC, i. 161, 202; ii.73, 75, 87; CFR, xii. 10, 21; CCR, 1399-1402, p. 107; CPR, 1408-13, pp. 203-4; 1416-22, p. 310.
11. Reg. Chichele, ii. 71, 229; Sel. Cases in Chancery (Selden Soc. x), 122; CCR, 1413-19, p. 520; 1419-22, p. 34; 1422-9, p. 105; CPR, 1416-22, pp. 62-63; 238-9; 1422-9, pp. 115-16, 282.
12.CCR, 1413-19, p. 360; Surr. N. and Q. xii. 77-79; W. Berry, Surr. Gen. 3; PCC 16 Luffenham.
13. C219/12/5; CFR, xv. 33; Add. Ch. 27759.
14. PCC 16 Luffenham; C1/9/469; C139/57/1; Surr. Arch. Colls. xxv. 55-57, 59-65; Add. Chs. 23408, 23730.
15. C1/12/126, 18/36, 19/258-9; CCR, 1435-41, pp. 126, 128-9, 260, 262-5, 269-70; CAD, iv. A9778; Surr. Arch. Colls. xliii. 53-55.6
; descendant of Charlemagne.7 Nicholas Carew of Beddington was also known as Nicholas de Carew.
Reference: Genealogics cites:
1. The Lineage and Ancestry of H.R.H. Prince Charles, Prince of Wales, Edinburgh, 1977, Paget, Gerald. Q 115017
2. The Ancestry of Dorothea Poyntz, wife of Reverend John Owsley, 3rd Edition, 1999, Bodine, Ronnie O. & Thomas W Spalding Jr. page 41 nr 548
3. History of Parliament , Roskell. 1386 2:482
4. Posting to Gen-Medieval Newsgroup . 6 Dec 1999.8,1
Family 1 | Mercy|Mary|Marcia Hayme b. c 1380, d. 1453 |
Family 2 | Isabel de la Mare |
Child |
|
Citations
- [S1490] Genealogics Website (oiginated by Leo van de Pas, continued by Ian Fettes), online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Nicholas Carew, of Beddington: https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00109592&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Nicholas Carew, of Beddington: https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00672992&tree=LEO
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Lucy Willoughby: https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00672993&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. 18. Hereinafter cited as Faris [1999] - Plantagenet Ancestry.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Mercy|Mary|Marcia Hayme: https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00672989&tree=LEO
- [S4718] The History of Parliament, online <http://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/>, http://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/volume/1386-1421/member/carew-nicholas-1356-1432. Hereinafter cited as History of Parliament Website.
- [S673] David Faris, Faris [1999] - Plantagenet Ancestry, BEDDINGTON 7, p. 18.
- [S673] David Faris, Faris [1999] - Plantagenet Ancestry, p. 18: "descendant of Charlemagne."
- [S2261] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 1st edition (n.p.: Genealogical Publishing Company, Inc., 2004), Beddington 13: p. 87. Hereinafter cited as Richardson PA.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Sir Nicholas Carew, of Beddington: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00109594&tree=LEO
Isabel de la Mare1
F, #11859
Father | Stephen Delamare of Delamers2 |
Mother | Alice (?)3 |
Last Edited | 29 Aug 2019 |
Isabel de la Mare married Nicholas Carew of Beddington, son of Sir Nicholas Carew Knt., of Beddington and Lucy Willoughby,
;
His 1st wife.4,5
Reference: Genealogics cites:
1. The Lineage and Ancestry of H.R.H. Prince Charles, Prince of Wales, Edinburgh, 1977, Paget, Gerald. Q 115017
2. The Ancestry of Dorothea Poyntz, wife of Reverend John Owsley, 3rd Edition, 1999, Bodine, Ronnie O. & Thomas W Spalding Jr. page 41 see 549.1
.4
;
His 1st wife.4,5
Reference: Genealogics cites:
1. The Lineage and Ancestry of H.R.H. Prince Charles, Prince of Wales, Edinburgh, 1977, Paget, Gerald. Q 115017
2. The Ancestry of Dorothea Poyntz, wife of Reverend John Owsley, 3rd Edition, 1999, Bodine, Ronnie O. & Thomas W Spalding Jr. page 41 see 549.1
.4
Family | Nicholas Carew of Beddington b. 1356, d. 4 Sep 1432 |
Child |
|
Citations
- [S1490] Genealogics Website (oiginated by Leo van de Pas, continued by Ian Fettes), online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Isabel de la Mare: https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00109593&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Stephen Delamare, of Delamers: https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00700406&tree=LEO
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Alice: https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00700407&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. 18. Hereinafter cited as Faris [1999] - Plantagenet Ancestry.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Nicholas Carew, of Beddington: https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00109592&tree=LEO
- [S2261] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 1st edition (n.p.: Genealogical Publishing Company, Inc., 2004), Beddington 13: p. 87. Hereinafter cited as Richardson PA.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Sir Nicholas Carew, of Beddington: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00109594&tree=LEO
Stephen Delamare of Delamers
M, #11860
Last Edited | 29 Aug 2019 |
Family | Alice (?) |
Child |
Citations
- [S1490] Genealogics Website (oiginated by Leo van de Pas, continued by Ian Fettes), online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Alice: https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00700407&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Stephen Delamare, of Delamers: https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00700406&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. 18. Hereinafter cited as Faris [1999] - Plantagenet Ancestry.
Sir Richard Carew Knt., KB, of Beddington1
M, #11861, b. circa 1470, d. 23 May 1520
Father | James Carew Esq., of Beddington, et al2,3,1 d. 22 Dec 1492 |
Mother | Eleanor Hoo2,4,1 b. c 1449 |
Last Edited | 27 Dec 2008 |
Sir Richard Carew Knt., KB, of Beddington was buried at St. Mary's, Beddington, co. Surrey, England.5 He married Malyn Oxenbridge, daughter of Sir Robert Oxenbridge Knt., of Brede, Sussex and Anne Lyvelode.5,1,6,7
Sir Richard Carew Knt., KB, of Beddington was born circa 1470; Richardson says "aged 23 at his father's inquisition post mortem"; can de Pas says b. 1469.5,1
Sir Richard Carew Knt., KB, of Beddington died on 23 May 1520; died testate (P.C.C. 3 Bodfelde.)5,1,7
Sir Richard Carew Knt., KB, of Beddington was buried after 23 May 1520 at St. Mary's, Beddington, co. Surrey, England.1
Sir Richard Carew Knt., KB, of Beddington lived at Beddington, co. Surrey, England.5 He was Lieutenant of the Castle of Calais.5,1
; van de Pas cites: The Lineage and Ancestry of H.R.H. Prince Charles, Prince of Wales, Edinburgh, 1977, Paget, Gerald, Reference: O 28755.7
; Faris (1999, p. 19): "RICHARD CAREW, Knt., of Beddington, Surrey, etc., Sheriff of Surrey, Lieutenant of the Castle of Calais, son and heir, was born about 1470 (aged twenty-three at father's inquisition). He was made a Knight Banneret by King Henry VII after the Battle of Blackheath in 1497 defeating the Cornishmen. He was married to MALYN OXENBRIDGE, daughter of Robert Oxenbridge, Knt., of Brede Place, Sussex, by his wife Anne Lyvelode. They had one son and four daughters. "Richard Carewe of Bedyngton in the Dicese of Wynchester in the Countie of Surrey knyght" died testate on 23 May 1520 (P.C.C., 3 Bodfelde). They were buried at St. Mary's, Beddington, Surrey, Lady Malyn on 3 Oct. 1544 (M.I. and brasses).
Manning-Bray 2:chart facing p. 523 (1807). Sussex Arch. CoIl. 8:230 (1956) ("Margaret [daughter of Robert Oxenbridge, of Brede] m Cheney, and 2d Sir Rich. Carew, who ob. 23d May 1520 leaving her surviving (Collins, iv, p. 161"). H.S.P. 43:17,214 (1899). VCH Hertford 2:298 (1908). Beville (1976), pp. 332-340, 399. Paget (1977), p. 178." He was Sheriff of Surrey.5,1
Sir Richard Carew Knt., KB, of Beddington was born circa 1470; Richardson says "aged 23 at his father's inquisition post mortem"; can de Pas says b. 1469.5,1
Sir Richard Carew Knt., KB, of Beddington died on 23 May 1520; died testate (P.C.C. 3 Bodfelde.)5,1,7
Sir Richard Carew Knt., KB, of Beddington was buried after 23 May 1520 at St. Mary's, Beddington, co. Surrey, England.1
Sir Richard Carew Knt., KB, of Beddington lived at Beddington, co. Surrey, England.5 He was Lieutenant of the Castle of Calais.5,1
; van de Pas cites: The Lineage and Ancestry of H.R.H. Prince Charles, Prince of Wales, Edinburgh, 1977, Paget, Gerald, Reference: O 28755.7
; Faris (1999, p. 19): "RICHARD CAREW, Knt., of Beddington, Surrey, etc., Sheriff of Surrey, Lieutenant of the Castle of Calais, son and heir, was born about 1470 (aged twenty-three at father's inquisition). He was made a Knight Banneret by King Henry VII after the Battle of Blackheath in 1497 defeating the Cornishmen. He was married to MALYN OXENBRIDGE, daughter of Robert Oxenbridge, Knt., of Brede Place, Sussex, by his wife Anne Lyvelode. They had one son and four daughters. "Richard Carewe of Bedyngton in the Dicese of Wynchester in the Countie of Surrey knyght" died testate on 23 May 1520 (P.C.C., 3 Bodfelde). They were buried at St. Mary's, Beddington, Surrey, Lady Malyn on 3 Oct. 1544 (M.I. and brasses).
Manning-Bray 2:chart facing p. 523 (1807). Sussex Arch. CoIl. 8:230 (1956) ("Margaret [daughter of Robert Oxenbridge, of Brede] m Cheney, and 2d Sir Rich. Carew, who ob. 23d May 1520 leaving her surviving (Collins, iv, p. 161"). H.S.P. 43:17,214 (1899). VCH Hertford 2:298 (1908). Beville (1976), pp. 332-340, 399. Paget (1977), p. 178." He was Sheriff of Surrey.5,1
Family | Malyn Oxenbridge d. 3 Oct 1544 |
Child |
|
Citations
- [S2261] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 1st edition (n.p.: Genealogical Publishing Company, Inc., 2004), Beddington 15: p. 88. Hereinafter cited as Richardson PA.
- [S2261] Douglas Richardson, Richardson PA, Beddington 14: p. 88.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website (oiginated by Leo van de Pas, continued by Ian Fettes), online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, James Carew, of Beddington: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00109525&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Eleanor Hoo: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00109526&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. 19. Hereinafter cited as Faris [1999] - Plantagenet Ancestry.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Malwyn Oxenbridge: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00108440&tree=LEO
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Sir Richard Carew, of Beddington: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00108439&tree=LEO
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Sir Nicholas Carew: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00139857&tree=LEO
Malyn Oxenbridge1,2
F, #11862, d. 3 October 1544
Father | Sir Robert Oxenbridge Knt., of Brede, Sussex1 d. 1487 |
Mother | Anne Lyvelode1 |
Last Edited | 27 Dec 2008 |
Malyn Oxenbridge married Sir Richard Carew Knt., KB, of Beddington, son of James Carew Esq., of Beddington, et al and Eleanor Hoo.3,1,2,4
Malyn Oxenbridge died on 3 October 1544.1
; van de Pas cites: 1. The Lineage and Ancestry of H.R.H. Prince Charles, Prince of Wales, Edinburgh, 1977, Paget, Gerald, Reference: O 28756
2. The Carews of Beddington , Michell, Ronald.3,2
Malyn Oxenbridge died on 3 October 1544.1
; van de Pas cites: 1. The Lineage and Ancestry of H.R.H. Prince Charles, Prince of Wales, Edinburgh, 1977, Paget, Gerald, Reference: O 28756
2. The Carews of Beddington , Michell, Ronald.3,2
Family | Sir Richard Carew Knt., KB, of Beddington b. c 1470, d. 23 May 1520 |
Child |
|
Citations
- [S2261] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 1st edition (n.p.: Genealogical Publishing Company, Inc., 2004), Beddington 15: p. 88. 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, Malwyn Oxenbridge: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00108440&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), p. 19. Hereinafter cited as Faris [1999] - Plantagenet Ancestry.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Sir Richard Carew, of Beddington: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00108439&tree=LEO
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Sir Nicholas Carew: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00139857&tree=LEO
Sir Robert Oxenbridge Knt., of Brede, Sussex1,2,3
M, #11863, d. 1487
Last Edited | 27 Dec 2008 |
Sir Robert Oxenbridge Knt., of Brede, Sussex married Anne Lyvelode.1,2,4,3
Sir Robert Oxenbridge Knt., of Brede, Sussex died in 1487.3
; Descendants of Robert Oxenbridge
1 Robert Oxenbridge - 1487
. +Anne Lyvelode 1493 -
........ 2 Goddard Oxenbridge - 1530/31
............ +Elizabeth Echyngham 1460 -
................... 3 Thomas Oxenbridge 1501 -
....................... +Elizabeth Putenham
.............................. 4 Elizabeth Oxenbridge - 1589
.................................. +Robert Tyrwhit 1510 - 1581
........ *2nd Wife of Goddard Oxenbridge:
............ +Anne Fiennes 1474 - 1531
................... 3 Margaret Oxenbridge
................... 3 Mary Catherine Oxenbridge
................... 3 Elizabeth Oxenbridge
................... 3 William Oxenbridge
................... 3 Robert Oxenbridge
........ 2 Thomas Oxenbridge - 1497
........ 2 Adam Oxenbridge
........ 2 Robert Oxenbridge
........ 2 Agnes Oxenbridge
........ 2 Margaret Oxenbridge - 1514
............ +John Cheyney
........ *2nd Husband of Margaret Oxenbridge:
............ +William Fincham
Charlotsmith@prodigy.net.5
Sir Robert Oxenbridge Knt., of Brede, Sussex lived at Brede Place, co. Sussex, England.2
Sir Robert Oxenbridge Knt., of Brede, Sussex died in 1487.3
; Descendants of Robert Oxenbridge
1 Robert Oxenbridge - 1487
. +Anne Lyvelode 1493 -
........ 2 Goddard Oxenbridge - 1530/31
............ +Elizabeth Echyngham 1460 -
................... 3 Thomas Oxenbridge 1501 -
....................... +Elizabeth Putenham
.............................. 4 Elizabeth Oxenbridge - 1589
.................................. +Robert Tyrwhit 1510 - 1581
........ *2nd Wife of Goddard Oxenbridge:
............ +Anne Fiennes 1474 - 1531
................... 3 Margaret Oxenbridge
................... 3 Mary Catherine Oxenbridge
................... 3 Elizabeth Oxenbridge
................... 3 William Oxenbridge
................... 3 Robert Oxenbridge
........ 2 Thomas Oxenbridge - 1497
........ 2 Adam Oxenbridge
........ 2 Robert Oxenbridge
........ 2 Agnes Oxenbridge
........ 2 Margaret Oxenbridge - 1514
............ +John Cheyney
........ *2nd Husband of Margaret Oxenbridge:
............ +William Fincham
Charlotsmith@prodigy.net.5
Sir Robert Oxenbridge Knt., of Brede, Sussex lived at Brede Place, co. Sussex, England.2
Family | Anne Lyvelode |
Children |
|
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), ECHINGHAM-6, p. 128. Hereinafter cited as Faris [1999] - Plantagenet Ancestry.
- [S673] David Faris, Faris [1999] - Plantagenet Ancestry, p. 19.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website (oiginated by Leo van de Pas, continued by Ian Fettes), online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Robert Oxenbridge: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00465084&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Anne Lyvelode: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00465084&tree=LEO
- [S1817] Charlotte Smith, "Smith, C email 4 Aug 2005 "Oxenbridge family"," e-mail message from e-mail address (unknown address) to e-mail address, 4 Aug 2005. Hereinafter cited as "Smith, C email 4 Aug 2005."
- [S2261] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 1st edition (n.p.: Genealogical Publishing Company, Inc., 2004), Beddington 15: p. 88. Hereinafter cited as Richardson PA.
- [S2261] Douglas Richardson, Richardson PA, Echingham 14: p. 282.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Sir Goddard Oxenbridge: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00465085&tree=LEO
Anne Lyvelode1,2,3
F, #11864
Last Edited | 27 Dec 2008 |
Family | Sir Robert Oxenbridge Knt., of Brede, Sussex d. 1487 |
Children |
|
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. 19. Hereinafter cited as Faris [1999] - Plantagenet Ancestry.
- [S673] David Faris, Faris [1999] - Plantagenet Ancestry, ECHINGHAM-6, p. 128.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website (oiginated by Leo van de Pas, continued by Ian Fettes), online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Anne Lyvelode: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00465084&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Robert Oxenbridge: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00465084&tree=LEO
- [S2261] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 1st edition (n.p.: Genealogical Publishing Company, Inc., 2004), Beddington 15: p. 88. Hereinafter cited as Richardson PA.
- [S2261] Douglas Richardson, Richardson PA, Echingham 14: p. 282.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Sir Goddard Oxenbridge: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00465085&tree=LEO
Sir Nicholas Carew Knt., KG, of Beddington, Surrey1,2,3
M, #11865, b. before 1496, d. 3 March 1539/40
Father | Sir Richard Carew Knt., KB, of Beddington4,3 b. c 1470, d. 23 May 1520 |
Mother | Malyn Oxenbridge4,5,3 d. 3 Oct 1544 |
Last Edited | 21 Aug 2019 |
Sir Nicholas Carew Knt., KG, of Beddington, Surrey was buried at St. Botolph's, Aldersgate, London, City of London, Greater London, England.6 He was born before 1496.6,2 He married Elizabeth Bryan, daughter of Sir Thomas Bryan Knt., of Ashridge, Buckhinhamshire and Margaret Bourgchier, in 1514.6,2,3
Sir Nicholas Carew Knt., KG, of Beddington, Surrey was buried after 3 March 1540 at St. Botolph's, Aldersgate, London, City of London, Greater London, England.2
Sir Nicholas Carew Knt., KG, of Beddington, Surrey died on 3 March 1539/40 at Tower of London, London, City of London, Greater London, England; attainted and beheaded in testate.6,2,3
Sir Nicholas Carew Knt., KG, of Beddington, Surrey lived at Beddington, co. Surrey, England.6
; van de Pas cites: The Lineage and Ancestry of H.R.H. Prince Charles, Prince of Wales, Edinburgh, 1977, Paget, Gerald, Reference: O 24667 : addit death Tim Powys-Lybbe.3 He was Knight of the Shire for Surrey at co. Surrey, England.6,2
; Faris (1999, p. 19): [quote] NICHOLAS CAREW, Knt., of Beddington, co. Surrey, K.G., Knight of the Shire for Surrey, son and heir, was born before 1496, and was knighted before July 1520. He was married (the marriage attended by King Henry VIII) in 1514 to ELIZABETH BRYAN, daughter and heiress of Thomas Bryan, Knt., of Ashridge in Chesham, co. Buckingham, by Margaret, daughter of Humphrey Bourgchier, Knt. (descendant of King Edward Ill) [see BOURCHIER 5 for her ancestry]. They had one son and four daughters. He was in attendance to the Court of King Henry VIII, being first mentioned as a knight at a banquet at Greenwich on 7 July 1517. He was made Sheriff of Surrey and Sussex in 1518/19. He was present at the Field of the Cloth of Gold in 1520. He was appointed Master of the Horse to King Henry VIII on 18 July 1522, and entertained the King with hunting on the grounds at Beddington. He was engaged in diplomatic missions to the court of France, and was installed Knight of the Order of the Garter on 21 May 1536. He fell into disfavour and was accused of treason. SIR NICHOLAS CAREW was attainted and beheaded intestate on Tower Hill on 3 Mar. 1539/40. ... They were buried at St. Botolph's, Aldersgate, London.
H.S.P. 43:17,214 (1899). Beville (1976), pp. 340-399. Paget (1977), p. 167. Bindoff (1982) 1:575-578 ("Carew frequently took part in revels, mummeries and jousting tournaments; a portrait by Holbein shows him in tilting armour with a broken stave in one hand and a sword in the other".)
Children of Nicholas Carew, by Elizabeth Bryan:
i. MARY CAREW, married ARTHUR DARCY [see LAUNCE 3].1
ii. ISABEL CAREW, married NICHOLAS SAUNDERS [see BEVILLE 3].2 [end quote].
; 298 Knight of the Garter.3
Sir Nicholas Carew Knt., KG, of Beddington, Surrey was buried after 3 March 1540 at St. Botolph's, Aldersgate, London, City of London, Greater London, England.2
Sir Nicholas Carew Knt., KG, of Beddington, Surrey died on 3 March 1539/40 at Tower of London, London, City of London, Greater London, England; attainted and beheaded in testate.6,2,3
Sir Nicholas Carew Knt., KG, of Beddington, Surrey lived at Beddington, co. Surrey, England.6
; van de Pas cites: The Lineage and Ancestry of H.R.H. Prince Charles, Prince of Wales, Edinburgh, 1977, Paget, Gerald, Reference: O 24667 : addit death Tim Powys-Lybbe.3 He was Knight of the Shire for Surrey at co. Surrey, England.6,2
; Faris (1999, p. 19): [quote] NICHOLAS CAREW, Knt., of Beddington, co. Surrey, K.G., Knight of the Shire for Surrey, son and heir, was born before 1496, and was knighted before July 1520. He was married (the marriage attended by King Henry VIII) in 1514 to ELIZABETH BRYAN, daughter and heiress of Thomas Bryan, Knt., of Ashridge in Chesham, co. Buckingham, by Margaret, daughter of Humphrey Bourgchier, Knt. (descendant of King Edward Ill) [see BOURCHIER 5 for her ancestry]. They had one son and four daughters. He was in attendance to the Court of King Henry VIII, being first mentioned as a knight at a banquet at Greenwich on 7 July 1517. He was made Sheriff of Surrey and Sussex in 1518/19. He was present at the Field of the Cloth of Gold in 1520. He was appointed Master of the Horse to King Henry VIII on 18 July 1522, and entertained the King with hunting on the grounds at Beddington. He was engaged in diplomatic missions to the court of France, and was installed Knight of the Order of the Garter on 21 May 1536. He fell into disfavour and was accused of treason. SIR NICHOLAS CAREW was attainted and beheaded intestate on Tower Hill on 3 Mar. 1539/40. ... They were buried at St. Botolph's, Aldersgate, London.
H.S.P. 43:17,214 (1899). Beville (1976), pp. 340-399. Paget (1977), p. 167. Bindoff (1982) 1:575-578 ("Carew frequently took part in revels, mummeries and jousting tournaments; a portrait by Holbein shows him in tilting armour with a broken stave in one hand and a sword in the other".)
Children of Nicholas Carew, by Elizabeth Bryan:
i. MARY CAREW, married ARTHUR DARCY [see LAUNCE 3].1
ii. ISABEL CAREW, married NICHOLAS SAUNDERS [see BEVILLE 3].2 [end quote].
; 298 Knight of the Garter.3
Family | Elizabeth Bryan d. bt 21 May 1546 - 17 Jul 1546 |
Children |
Citations
- [S1396] Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site, online http://www.burkes-peerage.net/sites/peerageandgentry/sitepages/home.asp, Darcy de Knayth Family Page. 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), Beddington 16: p. 88. 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 Nicholas Carew: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00139857&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
- [S2261] Douglas Richardson, Richardson PA, Beddington 15: p. 88.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Malwyn Oxenbridge: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00108440&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. 19. Hereinafter cited as Faris [1999] - Plantagenet Ancestry.
- [S2261] Douglas Richardson, Richardson PA, Launce 16: p. 442.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Mary Carew: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00113961&tree=LEO
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Anne Carew, of Beddington: https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00037917&tree=LEO
Elizabeth Bryan1,2
F, #11866, d. between 21 May 1546 and 17 July 1546
Father | Sir Thomas Bryan Knt., of Ashridge, Buckhinhamshire1,2 d. prob. 1516 |
Mother | Margaret Bourgchier2 d. 1551/52 |
Last Edited | 21 Aug 2019 |
Elizabeth Bryan married Sir Nicholas Carew Knt., KG, of Beddington, Surrey, son of Sir Richard Carew Knt., KB, of Beddington and Malyn Oxenbridge, in 1514.3,2,4
Elizabeth Bryan was buried in 1546 at St. Botolph's, Aldersgate, London, City of London, Greater London, England.2
Elizabeth Bryan died between 21 May 1546 and 17 July 1546.3
Her estate was probated on 17 July 1546
; P.C.C. 13 Alen.2
; Faris (1999, p. 19): "The will of "Ladye Dame Elsabeth Carewe", dated 21 May and proved 17 July 1546 (P.C.C., 13 Alen), mentioned "my ladye Darcie the wyfe of Sir Arthure Darcye knyghte my doughter", as well as her other daughters, Isabel and Anne, and brother Sir Francis Bryan. They were buried at St. Botolph's, Aldersgate, London."
Elizabeth Bryan left a will on 21 May 1546.2
Elizabeth Bryan was buried in 1546 at St. Botolph's, Aldersgate, London, City of London, Greater London, England.2
Elizabeth Bryan died between 21 May 1546 and 17 July 1546.3
Her estate was probated on 17 July 1546
; P.C.C. 13 Alen.2
; Faris (1999, p. 19): "The will of "Ladye Dame Elsabeth Carewe", dated 21 May and proved 17 July 1546 (P.C.C., 13 Alen), mentioned "my ladye Darcie the wyfe of Sir Arthure Darcye knyghte my doughter", as well as her other daughters, Isabel and Anne, and brother Sir Francis Bryan. They were buried at St. Botolph's, Aldersgate, London."
Elizabeth Bryan left a will on 21 May 1546.2
Family | Sir Nicholas Carew Knt., KG, of Beddington, Surrey b. b 1496, d. 3 Mar 1539/40 |
Children |
Citations
- [S2261] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 1st edition (n.p.: Genealogical Publishing Company, Inc., 2004), Launce 16: p. 442. Hereinafter cited as Richardson PA.
- [S2261] Douglas Richardson, Richardson PA, Beddington 16: p. 88.
- [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. 19. 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 Nicholas Carew: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00139857&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Mary Carew: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00113961&tree=LEO
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Anne Carew, of Beddington: https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00037917&tree=LEO
Sir Thomas Bryan Knt., of Ashridge, Buckhinhamshire1
M, #11867, d. prob. 1516
Last Edited | 27 Dec 2008 |
Sir Thomas Bryan Knt., of Ashridge, Buckhinhamshire died prob. 1516.2 He married Margaret Bourgchier, daughter of Sir Humphrey Bourchier Knt. and Elizabeth Tylney.3,1
Sir Thomas Bryan Knt., of Ashridge, Buckhinhamshire lived at Ashridge, Chesham, Buckinghamshire, England.3
; Faris (1999, p. 44) "THOMAS BRYAN, Knt., of Ashridge in Chesham, co. Buckingham, Knight of the Body to Kings Henry VII and Henry VIII, son of Thomas Bryan, Knt., of Ashridge in Chesham, Chief Justice of the Common Pleas. He was knighted by King Henry VII in 1497, and was Vice Chamberlain to Queen Katherine of Aragon."3
Sir Thomas Bryan Knt., of Ashridge, Buckhinhamshire lived at Ashridge, Chesham, Buckinghamshire, England.3
; Faris (1999, p. 44) "THOMAS BRYAN, Knt., of Ashridge in Chesham, co. Buckingham, Knight of the Body to Kings Henry VII and Henry VIII, son of Thomas Bryan, Knt., of Ashridge in Chesham, Chief Justice of the Common Pleas. He was knighted by King Henry VII in 1497, and was Vice Chamberlain to Queen Katherine of Aragon."3
Family | Margaret Bourgchier d. 1551/52 |
Children |
|
Citations
- [S2261] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 1st edition (n.p.: Genealogical Publishing Company, Inc., 2004), Beddington 16: p. 88. 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. 43. Hereinafter cited as Faris [1999] - Plantagenet Ancestry.
- [S673] David Faris, Faris [1999] - Plantagenet Ancestry, p. 19.
- [S2261] Douglas Richardson, Richardson PA, Launce 16: p. 442.
Margaret Bourgchier1
F, #11868, d. 1551/52
Father | Sir Humphrey Bourchier Knt.1 d. 14 Apr 1471 |
Mother | Elizabeth Tylney2 b. 1446, d. 4 Apr 1497 |
Last Edited | 27 Dec 2008 |
Margaret Bourgchier married Sir Thomas Bryan Knt., of Ashridge, Buckhinhamshire.3,1
Margaret Bourgchier married John Sandys, son of Sir William Sandys of the Vyne, Hants and Margaret|Elizabeth|Edith Cheyney.4
Margaret Bourgchier died in 1551/52.5
; Faris (1999, p. 44): "MARGARET BOURGCHIER, died 1551/2; married, first, JOHN SANDYS, son and heir of William Sandys, Knt., of Hampshire; married, second, THOMAS BRYAN, Knt....She was governess to Princess Mary Tudor, later to Princess Elizabeth Tudor. In the period 1486-93, Thomas Bryan, Esq., and Margaret his wife, previously the wife of John Sandes, Esq., sued William Sandes, Knt., father of the said John, in Chancery regarding "jointure of the said Margaret, who is daughter of Elizabeth wife of Thomas, earl of Surrey". "Sir Thomas Bryan, knt., of Assheruge, Bucks" died testate (P.C.C., 4 Ayloffe) between 1 Oct. 1508 and 30 Jan. 1517, probably in 1516. Collins (1734), pp. 331-344 (see 6.i above for identification as daughter of Elizabeth Tilney). Glover-Foster (1875), pp. 62-63 (identification of Margaret's parents and husbands). H.S.P. 13:2 (1878) (1552 Via. Essex) (identifies "Marget wyff to Sr Thomas Bryan" as sister rather than daughter of Humphrey). D.N.B. 3:150 (1908). Early Chancery Proceedings 3:36. Copinger 5:206 (1910). Bindoff (1982) 1:527 (Margaret was "something of a bluestocking").
a. ELIZABETH BRYAN, married NICHOLAS CAREW [see BEDDINGTON 4].l."3
Margaret Bourgchier married John Sandys, son of Sir William Sandys of the Vyne, Hants and Margaret|Elizabeth|Edith Cheyney.4
Margaret Bourgchier died in 1551/52.5
; Faris (1999, p. 44): "MARGARET BOURGCHIER, died 1551/2; married, first, JOHN SANDYS, son and heir of William Sandys, Knt., of Hampshire; married, second, THOMAS BRYAN, Knt....She was governess to Princess Mary Tudor, later to Princess Elizabeth Tudor. In the period 1486-93, Thomas Bryan, Esq., and Margaret his wife, previously the wife of John Sandes, Esq., sued William Sandes, Knt., father of the said John, in Chancery regarding "jointure of the said Margaret, who is daughter of Elizabeth wife of Thomas, earl of Surrey". "Sir Thomas Bryan, knt., of Assheruge, Bucks" died testate (P.C.C., 4 Ayloffe) between 1 Oct. 1508 and 30 Jan. 1517, probably in 1516. Collins (1734), pp. 331-344 (see 6.i above for identification as daughter of Elizabeth Tilney). Glover-Foster (1875), pp. 62-63 (identification of Margaret's parents and husbands). H.S.P. 13:2 (1878) (1552 Via. Essex) (identifies "Marget wyff to Sr Thomas Bryan" as sister rather than daughter of Humphrey). D.N.B. 3:150 (1908). Early Chancery Proceedings 3:36. Copinger 5:206 (1910). Bindoff (1982) 1:527 (Margaret was "something of a bluestocking").
a. ELIZABETH BRYAN, married NICHOLAS CAREW [see BEDDINGTON 4].l."3
Family 1 | John Sandys |
Family 2 | Sir Thomas Bryan Knt., of Ashridge, Buckhinhamshire d. prob. 1516 |
Children |
|
Citations
- [S2261] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 1st edition (n.p.: Genealogical Publishing Company, Inc., 2004), Beddington 16: p. 88. 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 Tilney: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00007903&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), p. 19. Hereinafter cited as Faris [1999] - Plantagenet Ancestry.
- [S673] David Faris, Faris [1999] - Plantagenet Ancestry, p. 43.
- [S673] David Faris, Faris [1999] - Plantagenet Ancestry, p. 44.
Sir Francis Bryan
M, #11869
Father | Sir Thomas Bryan Knt., of Ashridge, Buckhinhamshire d. prob. 1516 |
Mother | Margaret Bourgchier d. 1551/52 |
Last Edited | 29 May 2001 |
.1
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. 19. Hereinafter cited as Faris [1999] - Plantagenet Ancestry.
Mary Carew1,2,3
F, #11870
Father | Sir Nicholas Carew Knt., KG, of Beddington, Surrey1,2,3,4,5 b. b 1496, d. 3 Mar 1539/40 |
Mother | Elizabeth Bryan2,3 d. bt 21 May 1546 - 17 Jul 1546 |
Last Edited | 27 Dec 2008 |
Mary Carew married Sir Arthur Darcy Knt., of Brimham, Yorks, son of Sir Thomas Darcy Knt., KG, PC, 1st Lord Darcy and Dowsabel Tempest.6,1,7,8,2,3
; van de Pas cites: Living descendants of Blood Royal in America , Angerville, Count d', Reference: 120.3
.6
; van de Pas cites: Living descendants of Blood Royal in America , Angerville, Count d', Reference: 120.3
.6
Family | Sir Arthur Darcy Knt., of Brimham, Yorks b. c 1505, d. 3 Apr 1561 |
Children |
|
Citations
- [S1396] Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site, online http://www.burkes-peerage.net/sites/peerageandgentry/sitepages/home.asp, Darcy de Knayth Family Page. 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), Launce 16: p. 442. 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, Mary Carew: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00113961&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
- [S2261] Douglas Richardson, Richardson PA, Beddington 16: p. 88.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Sir Nicholas Carew: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00139857&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. 19, 210. Hereinafter cited as Faris [1999] - Plantagenet Ancestry.
- [S2170] Brad Verity, "Verity email 28 Aug 2007: "Descents From Edward III For John Beverley of Jervaulx Abbey (1656-aft.1694)"," e-mail message from unknown author e-mail (e-mail address) to e-mail address, 28 Aug 2007. Hereinafter cited as "Verity email 28 Aug 2007."
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Sir Arthur Darcy: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00113960&tree=LEO
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Sir Edward Darcy, of Dartford: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00284793&tree=LEO
Isabel Carew1
F, #11871
Father | Sir Nicholas Carew Knt., KG, of Beddington, Surrey1,2 b. b 1496, d. 3 Mar 1539/40 |
Mother | Elizabeth Bryan d. bt 21 May 1546 - 17 Jul 1546 |
Last Edited | 27 Dec 2008 |
.3
Citations
- [S2261] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 1st edition (n.p.: Genealogical Publishing Company, Inc., 2004), Beddington 16: p. 88. 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 Nicholas Carew: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00139857&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. 19, 28. Hereinafter cited as Faris [1999] - Plantagenet Ancestry.
Anne Carew of Beddington1
F, #11872
Father | Sir Nicholas Carew Knt., KG, of Beddington, Surrey2,3,1 b. b 1496, d. 3 Mar 1539/40 |
Mother | Elizabeth Bryan1 d. bt 21 May 1546 - 17 Jul 1546 |
Last Edited | 27 Aug 2019 |
Anne Carew of Beddington married Sir Nicholas Throckmorton Knt., of Paulerspury, son of Sir George Throckmorton Knt., of Coughton Warwickshire and Katherine Vaux, in 1545 at Beddington, co. Surrey, England.4,1
Reference: Genealogics cites:
1. The Lineage and Ancestry of H.R.H. Prince Charles, Prince of Wales, Edinburgh, 1977, Paget, Gerald. N 12334
2. The Carews of Beddington , Michell, Ronald. app. III.5,1
Reference: Genealogics cites:
1. The Lineage and Ancestry of H.R.H. Prince Charles, Prince of Wales, Edinburgh, 1977, Paget, Gerald. N 12334
2. The Carews of Beddington , Michell, Ronald. app. III.5,1
Family | Sir Nicholas Throckmorton Knt., of Paulerspury b. 1519, d. 12 Feb 1571 |
Child |
|
Citations
- [S1490] Genealogics Website (oiginated by Leo van de Pas, continued by Ian Fettes), online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Anne Carew, of Beddington: https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00037917&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), Beddington 16: p. 88. Hereinafter cited as Richardson PA.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Sir Nicholas Carew: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00139857&tree=LEO
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Sir Nicholas Throckmorton, of Paulerspury: https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00037916&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. 19. Hereinafter cited as Faris [1999] - Plantagenet Ancestry.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Elizabeth Throckmorton: https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00350288&tree=LEO
Sir Arthur Darcy Knt., of Brimham, Yorks1,2,3,4
M, #11873, b. circa 1505, d. 3 April 1561
Father | Sir Thomas Darcy Knt., KG, PC, 1st Lord Darcy1,5,2,6,4 b. c 1467, d. 30 Jun 1537 |
Mother | Dowsabel Tempest1,2,6,4 d. a 1503 |
Last Edited | 27 Dec 2008 |
Sir Arthur Darcy Knt., of Brimham, Yorks was buried at St. Botolph's, Aldgate, London, City of London, Greater London, England.7 He married Mary Carew, daughter of Sir Nicholas Carew Knt., KG, of Beddington, Surrey and Elizabeth Bryan.8,1,2,4,3,9
Sir Arthur Darcy Knt., of Brimham, Yorks was born circa 1505.7,2,4,3
Sir Arthur Darcy Knt., of Brimham, Yorks died on 3 April 1561; died testate; P.C.C. 17 Loftes.7,1,2,4,3
Sir Arthur Darcy Knt., of Brimham, Yorks was buried after 3 April 1561 at St. Botolph's, Aldgate, London, City of London, Greater London, England.3
He was Lieutenant of the Tower of London at Tower of London, London, City of London, Greater London, England.10
; van de Pas cites: 1. Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists who came to America bef. 1700, Baltimore, 1995, Weis, Frederick Lewis; Sheppard, Walter, Reference: 17
2. The Darcy Ancestry of Mrs. Joan Sherman The American Genealogist, 169-177 1943
3. Living descendants of Blood Royal in America , Angerville, Count d', Reference: 120.4
; Arthur (Sir); Lt Tower of London; m Mary, dau of Sir Nicholas Carew, KG, of Beddington, Surrey, and d 1561, having had issue, with three sons (dvp) and five daus (of whom Elizabeth m 3rd Lord (Baron) Mordaunt; see MORDAUNT, Bt.)1
; Faris (1999, p. 210): "ARTHUR DARCY, Knt., of Brimham, co. York, Lieutenant of the Tower of London, second son, was born about 1505. He was married to MARY CAREW, second daughter and co-heiress of Nicholas Carew, Knt., of Beddington, Surrey (descendant of King Edward I), by Elizabeth (descendant of King Edward III), daughter and heiress of Thomas Bryan, Knt., of Ashridge in Chesham, co. Buckingham [see BEDDINGTON 4 for her ancestry]. They had ten sons and five daughters. "Sir Arthur Darcie, knight, York" died testate on 3 Apr. 1561 (P.C.C., 17 Loftes), and was buried at St. Botolph's, Aldgate (M.I.)
Glover-Foster (1875), p. 47 (1564 Vis. Yorks). H.S.P. 16:93 (1881) (1564 Vis. Yorks). H.S.P. 43:17,214 (1899) (1623 Vis. Surrey). Clay (1913), pp. 44-45. C.P. 4:71 (1916). TAG 21:174 (Jan. 1945) (no indication of wife's descent from King Edward III). Beville (1976), p. 386."
Sir Arthur Darcy Knt., of Brimham, Yorks lived at Brimham, Yorkshire, England.7
Sir Arthur Darcy Knt., of Brimham, Yorks was born circa 1505.7,2,4,3
Sir Arthur Darcy Knt., of Brimham, Yorks died on 3 April 1561; died testate; P.C.C. 17 Loftes.7,1,2,4,3
Sir Arthur Darcy Knt., of Brimham, Yorks was buried after 3 April 1561 at St. Botolph's, Aldgate, London, City of London, Greater London, England.3
He was Lieutenant of the Tower of London at Tower of London, London, City of London, Greater London, England.10
; van de Pas cites: 1. Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists who came to America bef. 1700, Baltimore, 1995, Weis, Frederick Lewis; Sheppard, Walter, Reference: 17
2. The Darcy Ancestry of Mrs. Joan Sherman The American Genealogist, 169-177 1943
3. Living descendants of Blood Royal in America , Angerville, Count d', Reference: 120.4
; Arthur (Sir); Lt Tower of London; m Mary, dau of Sir Nicholas Carew, KG, of Beddington, Surrey, and d 1561, having had issue, with three sons (dvp) and five daus (of whom Elizabeth m 3rd Lord (Baron) Mordaunt; see MORDAUNT, Bt.)1
; Faris (1999, p. 210): "ARTHUR DARCY, Knt., of Brimham, co. York, Lieutenant of the Tower of London, second son, was born about 1505. He was married to MARY CAREW, second daughter and co-heiress of Nicholas Carew, Knt., of Beddington, Surrey (descendant of King Edward I), by Elizabeth (descendant of King Edward III), daughter and heiress of Thomas Bryan, Knt., of Ashridge in Chesham, co. Buckingham [see BEDDINGTON 4 for her ancestry]. They had ten sons and five daughters. "Sir Arthur Darcie, knight, York" died testate on 3 Apr. 1561 (P.C.C., 17 Loftes), and was buried at St. Botolph's, Aldgate (M.I.)
Glover-Foster (1875), p. 47 (1564 Vis. Yorks). H.S.P. 16:93 (1881) (1564 Vis. Yorks). H.S.P. 43:17,214 (1899) (1623 Vis. Surrey). Clay (1913), pp. 44-45. C.P. 4:71 (1916). TAG 21:174 (Jan. 1945) (no indication of wife's descent from King Edward III). Beville (1976), p. 386."
Sir Arthur Darcy Knt., of Brimham, Yorks lived at Brimham, Yorkshire, England.7
Citations
- [S1396] Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site, online http://www.burkes-peerage.net/sites/peerageandgentry/sitepages/home.asp, Darcy de Knayth Family Page. Hereinafter cited as Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site.
- [S2170] Brad Verity, "Verity email 28 Aug 2007: "Descents From Edward III For John Beverley of Jervaulx Abbey (1656-aft.1694)"," e-mail message from unknown author e-mail (e-mail address) to e-mail address, 28 Aug 2007. Hereinafter cited as "Verity email 28 Aug 2007."
- [S2261] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 1st edition (n.p.: Genealogical Publishing Company, Inc., 2004), Launce 16: p. 442. 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 Arthur Darcy: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00113960&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Thomas Darcy: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00113956&tree=LEO
- [S2261] Douglas Richardson, Richardson PA, Launce 15: pp. 441-442.
- [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. 210. Hereinafter cited as Faris [1999] - Plantagenet Ancestry.
- [S673] David Faris, Faris [1999] - Plantagenet Ancestry, pp. 19, 210.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Mary Carew: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00113961&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 33-16, p. 44. Hereinafter cited as Weis MCS-5. - [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Sir Edward Darcy, of Dartford: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00284793&tree=LEO
John Blackiston1,2
M, #11874, b. before 6 January 1630, d. before 14 April 1632
Father | John Blackiston M.P.2 b. c 21 Aug 1603, d. Jun 1649 |
Mother | Susannah Charles2 b. c 1603, d. a 31 May 1661 |
Last Edited | 13 Jul 2008 |
John Blackiston was born before 6 January 1630.3 He was baptized on 6 January 1630.3
John Blackiston was buried on 13 April 1632 .3
John Blackiston died before 14 April 1632.3
John Blackiston was buried on 13 April 1632 .3
John Blackiston died before 14 April 1632.3
Citations
- [S1490] Genealogics Website (oiginated by Leo van de Pas, continued by Ian Fettes), online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, John Blakiston: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00472940&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), Blakiston 18.i: p. 113. 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. 32. Hereinafter cited as Faris [1999] - Plantagenet Ancestry.
John Blackiston Esq., of Newcastle-upon tyne, Northants1,2
M, #11875, b. before 18 April 1633
Father | John Blackiston M.P.3,1,4 b. c 21 Aug 1603, d. Jun 1649 |
Mother | Susannah Charles5,1,4 b. c 1603, d. a 31 May 1661 |
Last Edited | 13 Jul 2008 |
John Blackiston Esq., of Newcastle-upon tyne, Northants married Phoebe Johnstone.6,1,2
John Blackiston Esq., of Newcastle-upon tyne, Northants was born before 18 April 1633.6 He was christened on 18 April 1633.2
John Blackiston Esq., of Newcastle-upon tyne, Northants was buried between 12 March 1701 and 1702 .2
He was a witness to (an unknown value) with John Blackiston Esq., of Blakiston, Durham.7
; Leo van de Pas cites: The Royal Descents of 600 Immigrants to the American Colonies of the United, States; Baltimore, 2004, Roberts, Gary Boyd, Reference: 167.1
; Faris (1999, p. 32): "JOHN BLAKISTON, Esq., of Newcastle-on-Tyne, baptiaed 18 Apr. 1633; admitted to Gray's Inn 20 Mar. 1649; Barrister-at-law; buried testate 12 Mar. 1701/2; married PHOEBE JOHNSTONE. Three sons (including Nathaniel Blakiston, Governor of Maryland before returning to England) and three daughters (including Margaret, wife of Maj. EDWARD NOTT, of Kingston in Surrey, Deputy Governor of Virginia, see Va.Mag. xiv:302)."6
John Blackiston Esq., of Newcastle-upon tyne, Northants was born before 18 April 1633.6 He was christened on 18 April 1633.2
John Blackiston Esq., of Newcastle-upon tyne, Northants was buried between 12 March 1701 and 1702 .2
He was a witness to (an unknown value) with John Blackiston Esq., of Blakiston, Durham.7
; Leo van de Pas cites: The Royal Descents of 600 Immigrants to the American Colonies of the United, States; Baltimore, 2004, Roberts, Gary Boyd, Reference: 167.1
; Faris (1999, p. 32): "JOHN BLAKISTON, Esq., of Newcastle-on-Tyne, baptiaed 18 Apr. 1633; admitted to Gray's Inn 20 Mar. 1649; Barrister-at-law; buried testate 12 Mar. 1701/2; married PHOEBE JOHNSTONE. Three sons (including Nathaniel Blakiston, Governor of Maryland before returning to England) and three daughters (including Margaret, wife of Maj. EDWARD NOTT, of Kingston in Surrey, Deputy Governor of Virginia, see Va.Mag. xiv:302)."6
Family | Phoebe Johnstone |
Children |
Citations
- [S1490] Genealogics Website (oiginated by Leo van de Pas, continued by Ian Fettes), online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, John Blakiston: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00472940&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), Blakiston 18.i.a: p. 114. Hereinafter cited as Richardson PA.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, John Blakiston: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00472934&tree=LEO
- [S2261] Douglas Richardson, Richardson PA, Blakiston 18.i: p. 113.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Susan Chambers: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00472935&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. 32. Hereinafter cited as Faris [1999] - Plantagenet Ancestry.
- [S4282] Robert W. Barnes, British Roots of Maryland Families (Baltimore, MD: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc., 1999), pp. 58-59
Seen on Ancestry.com on 22 Aug 2018 at: https://www.ancestry.com/interactive/49095/FLHG_BritishRoots-0071?backurl=https%3a%2f%2fsearch.ancestry.com%2fsearch%2fdb.aspx%3fdbid%3d49095%26path%3d&ssrc=&backlabel=ReturnBrowsing#?imageId=FLHG_BritishRoots-0098. Hereinafter cited as Barnes [1999] British Roots of Maryland Families.
Joseph Blackiston1
M, #11876, b. before 22 October 1635, d. before 28 August 1637
Father | John Blackiston M.P.1 b. c 21 Aug 1603, d. Jun 1649 |
Mother | Susannah Charles1 b. c 1603, d. a 31 May 1661 |
Last Edited | 13 Jul 2008 |
Joseph Blackiston was born before 22 October 1635.2 He was baptized on 22 October 1635.2
Joseph Blackiston died before 28 August 1637.2
Joseph Blackiston was buried on 28 August 1637 .2
Joseph Blackiston died before 28 August 1637.2
Joseph Blackiston was buried on 28 August 1637 .2
Citations
- [S2261] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 1st edition (n.p.: Genealogical Publishing Company, Inc., 2004), Blakiston 18.i: p. 113. 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. 32. Hereinafter cited as Faris [1999] - Plantagenet Ancestry.
Nehemiah Blackiston Gent.1,2
M, #11877, d. December 1693
Father | John Blackiston M.P.3,1 b. c 21 Aug 1603, d. Jun 1649 |
Mother | Susannah Charles4,1 b. c 1603, d. a 31 May 1661 |
Last Edited | 20 Jan 2022 |
Nehemiah Blackiston Gent. married Elizabeth Gerrard, daughter of Thomas Gerard Gent., of St. Clement's St. Mary's Co., MD and Susanna Snow, on 6 May 1669
; her 1st husband.5,2
Nehemiah Blackiston Gent. died in December 1693.2
He was a mentioned with John Blackiston Esq., of Blakiston, Durham.6
Nehemiah Blackiston Gent. lived at St. Mary's Co., Maryland, USA.5
Nehemiah Blackiston Gent. immigrated in 1668; per Richardson: "probably immigrated with uncle, George Blakiston, in 1668, settling St. Mary's County, Maryland."2
; her 1st husband.5,2
Nehemiah Blackiston Gent. died in December 1693.2
He was a mentioned with John Blackiston Esq., of Blakiston, Durham.6
Nehemiah Blackiston Gent. lived at St. Mary's Co., Maryland, USA.5
Nehemiah Blackiston Gent. immigrated in 1668; per Richardson: "probably immigrated with uncle, George Blakiston, in 1668, settling St. Mary's County, Maryland."2
Family | Elizabeth Gerrard d. 1716 |
Child |
Citations
- [S2261] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 1st edition (n.p.: Genealogical Publishing Company, Inc., 2004), Blakiston 18.i: p. 113. Hereinafter cited as Richardson PA.
- [S2261] Douglas Richardson, Richardson PA, Blakiston 18.i.b: p. 114.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website (oiginated by Leo van de Pas, continued by Ian Fettes), online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, John Blakiston: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00472934&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Susan Chambers: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00472935&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. 32. Hereinafter cited as Faris [1999] - Plantagenet Ancestry.
- [S4282] Robert W. Barnes, British Roots of Maryland Families (Baltimore, MD: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc., 1999), pp. 58-59
Seen on Ancestry.com on 22 Aug 2018 at: https://www.ancestry.com/interactive/49095/FLHG_BritishRoots-0071?backurl=https%3a%2f%2fsearch.ancestry.com%2fsearch%2fdb.aspx%3fdbid%3d49095%26path%3d&ssrc=&backlabel=ReturnBrowsing#?imageId=FLHG_BritishRoots-0098. Hereinafter cited as Barnes [1999] British Roots of Maryland Families. - [S3755] LLB and Nelson Osgood Rhoades George Norbury Mackenzie, compiler, Colonial Families of the United States of America: in Which is Given the History, Genealogy and Armorial Bearings of Colonial Families Who Settled in the American Colonies From the Time of the Settlement of Jamestown, 13th May, 1607, to the Battle of Lexington, 19th April, 177 (7 volumes) (Baltimore, MD: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc., Original 1912, Reprint 1966, 1995), p. 883. Hereinafter cited as MacKenzie [1912] Colonial Families of the USA.
Elizabeth Gerrard1
F, #11878, d. 1716
Father | Thomas Gerard Gent., of St. Clement's St. Mary's Co., MD2,3,4 b. 10 Dec 1608, d. 1673 |
Mother | Susanna Snow2 |
Last Edited | 20 Jan 2022 |
Elizabeth Gerrard married Nehemiah Blackiston Gent., son of John Blackiston M.P. and Susannah Charles, on 6 May 1669
; her 1st husband.5,2 Elizabeth Gerrard married Ralph Rymer circa 1696
; her 2nd husband.2 Elizabeth Gerrard married Joshua Guibert
; her 3rd husband.2
Elizabeth Gerrard died in 1716 at St. Mary's Co., Maryland, USA.2
Elizabeth Gerrard was also known as Elizabeth Gerard.4
; her 1st husband.5,2 Elizabeth Gerrard married Ralph Rymer circa 1696
; her 2nd husband.2 Elizabeth Gerrard married Joshua Guibert
; her 3rd husband.2
Elizabeth Gerrard died in 1716 at St. Mary's Co., Maryland, USA.2
Elizabeth Gerrard was also known as Elizabeth Gerard.4
Family | Nehemiah Blackiston Gent. d. Dec 1693 |
Child |
Citations
- [S4450] Virginia Lee Hutcheson Davis, Tidewater Virginia Families (Baltimore, MD: Genealogical Publishing Co., 1989), p. 383. Hereinafter cited as Davis [1989] Tidewater Virginia Families.
- [S2261] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 1st edition (n.p.: Genealogical Publishing Company, Inc., 2004), Blakiston 18.i.b: p. 114. Hereinafter cited as Richardson PA.
- [S2261] Douglas Richardson, Richardson PA, Gerard 17.i: p. 351.
- [S3755] LLB and Nelson Osgood Rhoades George Norbury Mackenzie, compiler, Colonial Families of the United States of America: in Which is Given the History, Genealogy and Armorial Bearings of Colonial Families Who Settled in the American Colonies From the Time of the Settlement of Jamestown, 13th May, 1607, to the Battle of Lexington, 19th April, 177 (7 volumes) (Baltimore, MD: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc., Original 1912, Reprint 1966, 1995), p. 883. Hereinafter cited as MacKenzie [1912] Colonial Families of the USA.
- [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. 32. Hereinafter cited as Faris [1999] - Plantagenet Ancestry.
Col. Nathaniel Blackiston1
M, #11880
Father | John Blackiston Esq., of Newcastle-upon tyne, Northants2 b. b 18 Apr 1633 |
Mother | Phoebe Johnstone |
Last Edited | 20 Jan 2022 |
Citations
- [S2261] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 1st edition (n.p.: Genealogical Publishing Company, Inc., 2004), Blakiston 18.i.a: p. 114. 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, John Blakiston: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00472940&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), p. 32. Hereinafter cited as Faris [1999] - Plantagenet Ancestry.