William de Beauchamp , Lord of Elmley1,2,3
M, b. circa 1210, d. AFT 7 JAN 1268/69
William de Beauchamp , Lord of Elmley died AFT 7 JAN 1268/69 at Elmley Castle, Worcestershire, England.1,2 He married Isabel Mauduit at Hanslope, Buckinghamshire, England. William de Beauchamp , Lord of Elmley was born circa 1210 at Elmley Castle, Worcestershire, England.
He William de Beauchamp, of Elmley, Worcs; Hereditary Sheriff of Worcs andPantler (officer responsible for the bread) at the King's Coronation(died between 7 Jan and 21 April 1268). [Burke's Peerage]
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This nobleman, William de Beauchamp, feudal Lord of Elmley, attended KingHenry III, in the 37th year of his reign [1253], into Gascoigne, and intwo years afterwards marched under the banner of Robert de Clare, Earl ofGloucester, against the Scots. In the 41st of the same reign, he hadsummons (with other illustrious persons) to meet the king at Chester onthe feast day of St Peter de Vincula, well fitted with horse and arms tooppose the incursions of Llewellyn, Prince of Wales. Lord Beauchamp m.Isabel, dau. of William Mauduit, of Hanslape, co. Bucks, heritablechamberlain of the exchequer, and sister and heiress of William Mauduit,Earl of Warwick (who inherited that dignity from his cousin, Margery deNewburgh, Countess of Warwick, in the year 1263). His lordship made hiswill in 1268, the year in which he died. Besides the daus. mentionedabove [there are no daughters named in this article], Lord Beauchamp leftfour sons, viz., William; John, of Holt, co. Worcester; Walter, of Powykeand Alcester; Thomas, d. s. p. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant and ExtinctPeerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 30, Beauchamp, Earls ofWarwick]
He William de Beauchamp, of Elmley, Worcs; Hereditary Sheriff of Worcs andPantler (officer responsible for the bread) at the King's Coronation(died between 7 Jan and 21 April 1268). [Burke's Peerage]
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This nobleman, William de Beauchamp, feudal Lord of Elmley, attended KingHenry III, in the 37th year of his reign [1253], into Gascoigne, and intwo years afterwards marched under the banner of Robert de Clare, Earl ofGloucester, against the Scots. In the 41st of the same reign, he hadsummons (with other illustrious persons) to meet the king at Chester onthe feast day of St Peter de Vincula, well fitted with horse and arms tooppose the incursions of Llewellyn, Prince of Wales. Lord Beauchamp m.Isabel, dau. of William Mauduit, of Hanslape, co. Bucks, heritablechamberlain of the exchequer, and sister and heiress of William Mauduit,Earl of Warwick (who inherited that dignity from his cousin, Margery deNewburgh, Countess of Warwick, in the year 1263). His lordship made hiswill in 1268, the year in which he died. Besides the daus. mentionedabove [there are no daughters named in this article], Lord Beauchamp leftfour sons, viz., William; John, of Holt, co. Worcester; Walter, of Powykeand Alcester; Thomas, d. s. p. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant and ExtinctPeerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 30, Beauchamp, Earls ofWarwick]
Child of William de Beauchamp , Lord of Elmley and Isabel Mauduit
- William de Beauchamp , 9th Earl of Warwick+ b. 1237, d. BET 5 AND 9 JUN 1298
Citations
- [S233] Charles Mosley Editor-in-Chief, Burke's Peerage & Baronetage, 106th Edition.
- [S234] Frederick Lewis Weis additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition.
- [S269] G. E Cokayne, Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, II:44.
Isabel Mauduit1,2,3
F, b. circa 1217, d. before 1268
Isabel Mauduit married William de Beauchamp , Lord of Elmley at Hanslope, Buckinghamshire, England. Isabel Mauduit was buried at Nunnery of Cokehill. She was born circa 1217 at Hanslope, Buckinghamshire, England. She died before 1268 at Elmley Castle, Worcestershire, England.1
She Isabel Mauduit; married William de Beauchamp, of Elmley, Worcs;Hereditary Sheriff of Worcs and Pantler (officer responsible for thebread) at the King's Coronation (died between 7 Jan and 21 April 1268),and died by 1268. [Burke's Peerage]
Note Isabel's brother William Mauduit became 8th Earl of Warwick, dsp 8Jan 1267/8.
She Isabel Mauduit; married William de Beauchamp, of Elmley, Worcs;Hereditary Sheriff of Worcs and Pantler (officer responsible for thebread) at the King's Coronation (died between 7 Jan and 21 April 1268),and died by 1268. [Burke's Peerage]
Note Isabel's brother William Mauduit became 8th Earl of Warwick, dsp 8Jan 1267/8.
Child of Isabel Mauduit and William de Beauchamp , Lord of Elmley
- William de Beauchamp , 9th Earl of Warwick+ b. 1237, d. BET 5 AND 9 JUN 1298
Citations
- [S233] Charles Mosley Editor-in-Chief, Burke's Peerage & Baronetage, 106th Edition.
- [S234] Frederick Lewis Weis additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition.
- [S269] G. E Cokayne, Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, II:44.
Hugh de Mortimer , of Chelmarsh1
M, b. circa 1234, d. before 23 June 1273
Hugh de Mortimer , of Chelmarsh was born circa 1234 at Wigmore, Ludlow (Shrops), Herefordshire, England. He was the son of Ralph de Mortimer , Lord of Wigmore and Gwladys 'Ddu' verch Llewelyn , Princess of Wales. Hugh de Mortimer , of Chelmarsh married Agatha de Ferrers, daughter of William de Ferrers , 5th Earl of Derby and Sibyl Marshal, after 24 July 1255.1 Hugh de Mortimer , of Chelmarsh died before 23 June 1273 at Chelmarsh, Bridgnorth, Shropshire, England.1
He The following post by Douglas Richardson to SGM, 25 Jan 2002, gives infoon Hugh & Agatha:
From: Douglas Richardson (royalancestry AT msn.com)
Subject: Re: Solution to the identity of Iseult. wife of Hugh de Audley
Newsgroups: soc.genealogy.medieval
Date: 2002-01-25 07:57:25 PST
Dear Newsgroup ~
Gerald Paget's Baronage (388:1) gives the following information regardingHugh de Mortimer, of Chelmarsh:
HUGH DE MORTIMER, youngest son of Ralph de Mortimer of Wigmore, by Gladyshis wife, daughter of Llewellyn Prince of Wales.(Pat. 39 Hen. 3. p.2.m6). He adhered to Henry III against the Barons, and having lost threegood horses at the siege of Kenilworth Castle, had a grant of 40 marks torecompense him.(Rot.Fin.50 Hen. 3.m 1). Sheriff of Salop and Staffs1272-3.(Rot. Pip.1 Edw.1).
He married shortly after 24th July 1255, Agatha de Ferrers, 6th daughterof William Earl of Derby, and one of the seven coheirs of her motherSybil, sister and coheir of Walter Marshall Earl of Pembroke.(Pat.39 Hen.3 p 2.m 6; Mon. Ang. I:727a a 20). By her he had issue,
I. HENRY, son and heir, born about 1266 (being 40 years of age athis mother's death).
II. HUGH, living 14th April 1300, when he was commissioned by hismother to sue for her purparty of the Marshal lands in Ireland.(Cl.28Edw.I.m 101).
Hugh de Mortimer (husband of Agatha) died shortly before 23rd June 1273,when his kinsman Ralph son of Roger de Mortimer of Wigmore was appointedSheriff of Salop and Staffs in his place (Rot.Fin.1 Edw.1.m 25). Hiswidow who inherited a seventh of of fourth part of the large estates ofthe Marshals, including a sixth of Luton, Beds., a seventh ofSturminster-Marshal, Dorset, and lands in Wexford, Kildare and Kilkenny,died shortly before 12th June 1306.(Esch.34 Edw.I. no 38).
As we can see, the chronology here is fine for Hugh de Mortimer and hiswife, Agatha de Ferrers, to be the parents of Iseult de Audley, who Ijudge was born say 1260/5. It doesn't work at all for Iseult to be thedaughter of Hugh de Mortimer's nephew, Edmund de Mortimer, who was bornabout 1252. I might add that Agatha de Ferrers was evidently born in themid to late 1230's.
Best always, Douglas Richardson, Salt Lake City, Utah
E-mail: royalancestry AT msn.com.
He The following post by Douglas Richardson to SGM, 25 Jan 2002, gives infoon Hugh & Agatha:
From: Douglas Richardson (royalancestry AT msn.com)
Subject: Re: Solution to the identity of Iseult. wife of Hugh de Audley
Newsgroups: soc.genealogy.medieval
Date: 2002-01-25 07:57:25 PST
Dear Newsgroup ~
Gerald Paget's Baronage (388:1) gives the following information regardingHugh de Mortimer, of Chelmarsh:
HUGH DE MORTIMER, youngest son of Ralph de Mortimer of Wigmore, by Gladyshis wife, daughter of Llewellyn Prince of Wales.(Pat. 39 Hen. 3. p.2.m6). He adhered to Henry III against the Barons, and having lost threegood horses at the siege of Kenilworth Castle, had a grant of 40 marks torecompense him.(Rot.Fin.50 Hen. 3.m 1). Sheriff of Salop and Staffs1272-3.(Rot. Pip.1 Edw.1).
He married shortly after 24th July 1255, Agatha de Ferrers, 6th daughterof William Earl of Derby, and one of the seven coheirs of her motherSybil, sister and coheir of Walter Marshall Earl of Pembroke.(Pat.39 Hen.3 p 2.m 6; Mon. Ang. I:727a a 20). By her he had issue,
I. HENRY, son and heir, born about 1266 (being 40 years of age athis mother's death).
II. HUGH, living 14th April 1300, when he was commissioned by hismother to sue for her purparty of the Marshal lands in Ireland.(Cl.28Edw.I.m 101).
Hugh de Mortimer (husband of Agatha) died shortly before 23rd June 1273,when his kinsman Ralph son of Roger de Mortimer of Wigmore was appointedSheriff of Salop and Staffs in his place (Rot.Fin.1 Edw.1.m 25). Hiswidow who inherited a seventh of of fourth part of the large estates ofthe Marshals, including a sixth of Luton, Beds., a seventh ofSturminster-Marshal, Dorset, and lands in Wexford, Kildare and Kilkenny,died shortly before 12th June 1306.(Esch.34 Edw.I. no 38).
As we can see, the chronology here is fine for Hugh de Mortimer and hiswife, Agatha de Ferrers, to be the parents of Iseult de Audley, who Ijudge was born say 1260/5. It doesn't work at all for Iseult to be thedaughter of Hugh de Mortimer's nephew, Edmund de Mortimer, who was bornabout 1252. I might add that Agatha de Ferrers was evidently born in themid to late 1230's.
Best always, Douglas Richardson, Salt Lake City, Utah
E-mail: royalancestry AT msn.com.
Child of Hugh de Mortimer , of Chelmarsh and Agatha de Ferrers
- Isolde (Iseult) de Mortimer+ b. c 1265, d. a 1336
Citations
- [S235] Newsgroup: soc.genealogy.medieval, at groups - google.com, online google.com, Douglas Richardson, 25 Jan 2002.
Isabella Princess of Aragon1,2,3
F, b. 1243, d. between 28 January 1270 and 1271
Isabella Princess of Aragon was buried at St. Denis, Ile-de-France, France. She was born in 1243 at Barcelona, Spain.2 She was born in 1247 at Aragon, Spain.4 She married Philippe III ['the Bold'] le Hardi on 28 May 1262 at Clermont, Auvergne, France.1 Isabella Princess of Aragon died between 28 January 1270 and 1271 at Casenza- Cosenza/Clermont, Auvergne, France.4
She She died on the return from the crusade where LouisIX had perished. Her children, then motherless, saw little of their father, who, stricken by the
death of his wife, threw himself into campaigning and administrative affairs. Also, she was the sister of the King of Aragonat that time, whichl ikely
meant that she was a daughter of a former King of Aragon, unfounded to this date. She was Queen consort/PhilipIII.
She She died on the return from the crusade where LouisIX had perished. Her children, then motherless, saw little of their father, who, stricken by the
death of his wife, threw himself into campaigning and administrative affairs. Also, she was the sister of the King of Aragonat that time, whichl ikely
meant that she was a daughter of a former King of Aragon, unfounded to this date. She was Queen consort/PhilipIII.
Children of Isabella Princess of Aragon and Philippe III ['the Bold'] le Hardi
- Philippe IV. le Bel 'the Fair' Capet+ b. 1268, d. 29 Nov 1314
- Charles I. de Valois b. bt 12 Mar 1269 - 1270, d. 16 Dec 1325
Citations
- [S234] Frederick Lewis Weis additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition.
- [S236] Unknown author, Leo's Genealogics Website (Leo van de Pas), www.genealogics.org, Isabella of Aragon.
- [S270] William Henry Turton, The Plantagenet Ancestry, 4, 5.
- [S237] LAYNEJAYNE <, LAYNEJAYNE@@aol.com>, solidgold4 <, solidgold4@@aol.com>, jercty31 < and jercty31@@aol.com>, New England Families to Royalty GEDCOM inported 7 NOV 1999 by LindaJoyce Neely.
William de Percy , Lord of Topcliffe, Sir1,2
M, b. circa 1193, d. 28 July 1245
William de Percy , Lord of Topcliffe, Sir was born circa 1193 at Topcliffe, Thirsk, North Riding Yorkshire, England.1 He married Joan de Briwere circa 1215.3 William de Percy , Lord of Topcliffe, Sir married Eleanor (Ellen, Elena) de Baliol (Balliol) in 1226 at Dalton Percy, Durham, England.3 William de Percy , Lord of Topcliffe, Sir married Ellen de Baliol , Heiress of Dalton circa 1233.1 William de Percy , Lord of Topcliffe, Sir was buried in 1245 at Sallay Abby, Yorkshire, England.4,3 He died on 28 July 1245 at Dalton Piercy, Hartlepool, Durham, England.1
He William de Percy; attained his majority some time between mid-1212 andmid-1214; was with Henry III at the taking of William de Forz, titularCount of Aumale's castle of Biham in Lincs 1221 (Aumale being another ofthe 25 magnates charged with ensuring that the Magna Carta was observedbut who was now seen as in rebellion against royal authority rather thanin understandable opposition to despotism, as had been the case when Johnwas still on the throne five years earlier); married 1st Joan (died by 12June 1233), daughter of Sir William Briwere or Brewer, his guardian whena minor; married 2nd Ellen (who brought him as dowry Dalton, Co Durham,in consequence called Dalton Percy (it is now in Cleveland), and died ashort while before 22 Nov 1281), daughter of Ingram de Balliol by adaughter and heir of Walter de Berkeley, Chamberlain of Scotland, anddied just before 28 July 1245. [Burke's Peerage]
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William de Percy, Lord of Topcliffe, co. York. [Ancestral Roots]
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William de Percy came into full possession of all those rights andproperties which had been usurped at the decease of his mother but didnot live long to enjoy them, for he d. in 1245, and was s. by his son (byhis 2nd wife, Elena, dau. of Ingelram de Baliol, by whom he obtained indower Dalton, afterwards Dalton Percy, in the bishopric of Durham), Henryde Percy. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and ExtinctPeerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 423, Percy, BaronsPercy, Earls of Northumberland, &c.]
He William de Percy; attained his majority some time between mid-1212 andmid-1214; was with Henry III at the taking of William de Forz, titularCount of Aumale's castle of Biham in Lincs 1221 (Aumale being another ofthe 25 magnates charged with ensuring that the Magna Carta was observedbut who was now seen as in rebellion against royal authority rather thanin understandable opposition to despotism, as had been the case when Johnwas still on the throne five years earlier); married 1st Joan (died by 12June 1233), daughter of Sir William Briwere or Brewer, his guardian whena minor; married 2nd Ellen (who brought him as dowry Dalton, Co Durham,in consequence called Dalton Percy (it is now in Cleveland), and died ashort while before 22 Nov 1281), daughter of Ingram de Balliol by adaughter and heir of Walter de Berkeley, Chamberlain of Scotland, anddied just before 28 July 1245. [Burke's Peerage]
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William de Percy, Lord of Topcliffe, co. York. [Ancestral Roots]
--------------------------------------
William de Percy came into full possession of all those rights andproperties which had been usurped at the decease of his mother but didnot live long to enjoy them, for he d. in 1245, and was s. by his son (byhis 2nd wife, Elena, dau. of Ingelram de Baliol, by whom he obtained indower Dalton, afterwards Dalton Percy, in the bishopric of Durham), Henryde Percy. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and ExtinctPeerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 423, Percy, BaronsPercy, Earls of Northumberland, &c.]
Child of William de Percy , Lord of Topcliffe, Sir and Joan de Briwere
- Anastasia de Percy+ b. c 1216, d. b 28 Apr 1272
Child of William de Percy , Lord of Topcliffe, Sir and Ellen de Baliol , Heiress of Dalton
- Henry de Percy , Lord of Topcliffe, Sir+ b. c 1235, d. 29 Aug 1272
Citations
- [S234] Frederick Lewis Weis additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition.
- [S269] G. E Cokayne, Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, XII/1:650-651.
- [S232] Unknown author, 6 zip files containing Monarchs.ged downloaded end 1999 by Linda Neely.
- [S238] Unknown author, aol-kings.zip.
Henry III Plantagenet King of England1,2
M, b. 1 October 1207, d. 16 November 1272
Henry III Plantagenet King of England was born on 1 October 1207 at Winchester Castle, Winchester, Hampshire, England.3,2 He married Eleanor Berenger Countess of Provence, Queen of England between 14 January 1236 and 1237 at Cathedral, Canterbury, Kent, England.3,4 Henry III Plantagenet King of England died on 16 November 1272 at Westminster Palace, London, Middlesex, England, at age 65.3,2 He was buried on 20 November 1272 at Westminster Abby, Westminster, Middlesex, England.5
He was King of England 1216-1272. He Name Suffix: King of England
Henry III (of England) (1207-72), king of England (1216-72), Duke ofAquitaine, son and successor of King John (Lackland),and a member ofthe house of Anjou, or Plantagenet. Henry ascended the throne at theage of nine, on the death of his
father. During his minority the kingdom was ruled by William Marshal,earl of Pembroke, as regent, but after his death in 1219 the justiciarHubert de Burgh was the chief power in the government. During theregency the French, who occupied much
of eastern England, were expelled,and rebellious barons were subdued.Henry was declared of age in 1227. In 1232 he dismissed Hubert deBurgh from his court and commenced ruling without the aidofministers. Henry displeased the barons by
filling government and church offices with foreign favorites, many ofthem relatives of his wife, Eleanor of Provence, whom he married in1236, and by squandering money on Continental wars, especially inFrance. In order to secure the throne of
Sicily for one of his sons,Henry agreed to pay the pope a large sum.When the king requested money from the barons to pay his debt, theyrefused and in 1258 forced him to agree to the Provisions of Oxford,whereby he agreed to share his power
with a council of barons. Henry soon repudiated his oath, however,with papal approval. After a brief period of war, the matter wasreferred to the arbitration of Louis IX, king of France, who decidedin Henry's favor in a judgment called the
Mise of Amiens (1264). Simon de Montfort, earl of Leicester,accordingly led the barons into war, defeated Henry at Lewes, and tookhim prisoner. In 1265, however, Henry's son and heir, Edward, laterKing Edward I, led the royal troops to
victory over the barons at Evesham, about 40.2 km (about 25 mi) southof Birmingham. Simon de Montfort was killed in the battle, and thebarons agreed to a compromise with Edwardand his party in 1267. Fromthat time on Edward ruled England,
and when Henry died, he succeeded him as king.
--Other Fields
Ref Number: 45375760@@NI0312@@NI3039@@
Reigned 1216-1272. A minor when he took the throne he did not takethe reigns of Government himself until 1234. Baronian discontentsimmered, boiling over in 1258 when Henry facing financial disasterattempted to raise large sums from his magnates. Reforms were agreedupon but then renouced by Henry. Simon de Montford lead a rebellionagainst the King (the Barons Wars) which was defeated after initialsuccess, thereafter Hnery ceeded much of his power to his son. Burkesays he was born 10 Oct 1206 and married 14 Jan, crowned 1216.
sources: LDS Ancestry files & Hull Univ. database
Reigned 1216-1272. A minor whenhe took the throne he did not takethe reigns of Government himself until 1234.Baronian discontentsimmered, boiling over in 1258 when Henry facing financial disasterattempted to raise large sums from his magnates. Reforms were agreedupon but then renouced by Henry. Simon de Montford lead a rebellionagainst the King (the Barons Wars) which was defeated after initialsuccess, thereafter Hnery ceeded much of his power to his son. Burkesays he was born 10 Oct 1206 and married 14 Jan, crowned 1216.
sources: LDS Ancestry files & Hull Univ. database
Reigned 1216-1272. A minor when he took the throne he did not takethe reigns ofGovernment himself until 1234. Baronian discontentsimmered, boiling over in 1258 when Henry facing financial disasterattempted to raise large sums from his magnates. Reforms were agreedupon but then renouced by Henry. Simon de Montford lead a rebellionagainst the King (the Barons Wars) which was defeated after initialsuccess, thereafter Hnery ceeded much of his power to his son. Burkesays hewas born 10 Oct 1206 and married 14 Jan, crowned 1216.
sources: LDS Ancestry files & Hull Univ. databaseGEDCOM provided byCarolyn Proffitt Winch
Reigned 1216-1272. A minor when he took the throne he did not takethe reigns of Government himself until 1234. Baronian. He Henry III was born in 1207 and succeeded his father John on the throne ofEngland in 1216. It was a ravaged inheritance, the scene of civil war andanarchy, and much of the east and south eastern England was under thecontrol of the French Dauphin Louis. But Henry had two greatprotectors---his liege lord the Pope, and the aged William Marshal.
The Marshal, by a combination of military skill and diplomatic ability,saw off the Dauphin by September, 1217, but less than two years later hewas dead, and a triumvirate ruled in his place: the papal legal Pandulf;the Poitevin Bishop of Winchester Peter des Roches; and the JusticiarHubert de Burgh. The legate departed in 1221; two years later Henrybecame of age and, rejecting Peter, chose Hubert to be his chiefcounsellor.
Trouble soon came, as Hubert attempted to re-asert royal authority.Barons, who had kept their castles undistrubed and exercised their powerswithout supervison, were now called to account to the haughty justiciar,and the party of Peter des Roches did not fail to underline theannoyances involved. The years 1223-4 were taken up with quellingrebellions.
Meanwhile the situation abroad was even more disturbing: the French kingPhilip Augustus was eating up English lands in Gascony, and Henry'smother Isabella made a bad situation worse by her marriage with CountHugh of Lusignan. It was only in 1230 that a badly prepared English forceset out for France and, after much squabbling, all it was able to do wasmake a demonstration march through Gascony.
Hubert had already had one dismal failure in Wales in 1228, and hisarrogant attempts to build up a personal base in the Marches provoked aWelsh raid in 1231 which did more harm to his good name. Hubert wasthrust out of power, to be replaced by Peter des Roches' Poitevins. Butby 1234 they had upset the baronage of England, who had never takenkindly to foreigners other than the Normans, and Richard Marshal combinedwith Edmund of Abington, Archbishop of Canterbury, to force the King toreplace them.
Henry now began his period of personal rule, and the world was to seewhat sort of king he would make. He was a simple, direct man, trustful onfirst impression, but bearing a life-long grudge when people let himdown. At times lavish and life-loving, he could show another side of hisnature, that wicked Angevin temper and streak of vindictive cruelty. Hehad a very refined taste, and enjoyed building and restoration work morethan anything else. Surrounded by barons who had been proved in thehardest schools of war, the King had the spirit of an interior decorator;the nation could have born the expense of his artistic tastes, could haveforgiven the eccentricity of it all, but Henry showed time and again thathe was timorous as well as artistic. He feared thunderstorms, and battlewas beyond him.
The Crown had some 60 castles in England, and these were in a bad stateafter the troubles of John's reign and the minority. Henry travelledabout tirelessly rebuilding them and making them more comfortable,spending at least ten per cent of his income on building works. Hepersonally instructed his architects in great detail, and could not waitfor them to finish---it must be ready for his return 'even if a thousandworkmen are required every day' and the job must be 'properly done,beautiful and fine.' In addition he built or restored twenty royalhouses, decorating them sumptiously. The painted chamber at Westminsterwas 80 ft. long, 26 ft. wide, and 31 ft. high. The walls were allwainscotted (at Winchester even the pantry and cellar were wainscotted)and painted with pictures and proverbs. The subjects of the picturesvaried according to the royal moods---in May 1250 the Queen borrowed abook about the crusades, and a year later the walls at Clarendon showedRichard the Lionheart duelling with Saladin. Wherever there were nopictures, there was the King's favourite decor---green curtains spangledwith gold stars. The floors were tiled, the windows glazed (and barredafter 1238 when an attempted assassination scared Henry out of hiswits---he even had the vent of the royal privy into the Thames barredover) and fireplaces provided the ultimate in luxury. Special roomssprouted everywhere, including the room where the royal head was washed.
If his private comfort bulked large in Henry's mind, his public displayof piety came a close second: these were neatly combined in the royalbedroom where a window was fitted to look into the chapel. His greatestproject was the rebuilding of Westminster Abbey, on which he spent nearly£50,000---the equivalent of £4,000,000 today. He had been so thrilledwith St. Louis' Sainte Chapelle that he had wanted to put it on a cartand roll it back to England. That was impossible, so he had to build hisown. He finished it in 1269, and proudly put up the inscription 'As therose is the flower of all flowers, so this is the house of houses.'
For a while Henry had reason for pride: he married Eleanor, daughter ofthe Count of Savoy, and sister of the Queen of France, the finest matchin Europe; his sister Isabella was married to the Emperor Frederick II,and his son Edward to Eleanor of Castille. He persuaded the Germans toelect his brother, Richard of Cornwall, King of the Romans.
On the other hand, his foreign policy was leading him into dangers. In1242 he foolishly allowed himself to be led into supporting his mother'sambitions in Poitou, and the enmity with France was to continueneedlessly until the settlement of 1259. Louis IX had no desire to be hisenemy---in 1254 all England was amazed at the French King's generous giftof an elephant, which the historian Matthew Paris went to draw in theTower of London.
In 1246 Henry's mother died (to almost universal relief) and hegenerously invited his four Lusignan half-brothers to live out theirorphanage under his roof. He gave them large incomes, but they took more,milking the land as hard as they could in the last moments beforebankruptcy. The English hated them for their avarice, price, andforeign-ness.
In ecclesiastical affairs Henry's hands were hopelessly tied---the Popehad always been his chief prop, and the King could not afford to lose hisaid. There was a strong movement for reform, but the papacy's desparateneed for money to prosecute its war against the Hohenstauffen made reforma secondary consideration, and indeed frequently blocked it. But Henrymay justly be criticised for his foolishness in accepting the papal offerof the crown of Sicily for his son Edmund in 1250. The payment was tomeet the astonomical debts of the Pope, and Richard of Cornwall hadalready wisely turned down this bad bargain, commenting that he had beenoffered the moon, if he could reach it.
Henry's need for money dominated most of his domestic policy. During theperiod of his personal government he obtained what he needed by gettinglegalists and professional civil servants to manipulate the complex chaosof the feudal government he had inherited. Government became a secret andcentralised affair, excluding the barons, great and small. There are manycomparisons here with the tyranny of Chales I.
In 1258 came the explosion: Parliament refused a grant unless Henryshould exile his grasping half-brothers, and allow a commission ofenquiry. A committee was set up to control the appointment of Crownofficials, examine and reform local government, and supervise the affairsof the realm in general.
This was a revolt, but it had many obscure roots. One cannot assess howdeeply felt were the demands for just and equal government voiced bySimon de Montfort, but certainly there were other elements in thebaronial party which were reactionary rather than revolutionary, wantingto return to baronial government for its own sake. On this issue thereformers spilt, Gloucester leading the conservatives, and de Montfortthe radicals. Henry saw his chance, and deftly using the ever valuablesupport of the Pope, shook off the Committee's control.
Now came war, and the stunning defeat of the royal party at Lewes in1264. From this point onwards Henry was very much a broken man, thoughprone to bouts of vicious anger. The initiative was passed to his son,the Lord Edward, who defeated de Montfort at Evesham, where Henry wasrescued, scratched and shouting 'Do not hurt me.'
Henry longed for revenge, and disinherited the rebels, who fled tohideouts in the fens to continue the war. The papal legate Ottobonopersuaded the King to go so far, in the Dictum of Kenilworth of 1266, asto allow the rebels to buy back their estates. Still not satisfied, thedisinherited, under Gloucester's leadership, took London, and Richard ofCornwall negotiated an easier peace. In 1267 the Statute of Marlboroughembodied much of what de Montfort had fought for, and the long years oftrouble were over.
Henry had at least survived, and his last years were happy in that hefininshed building his patron saint's Abbey of Westminster. The wheel offortune that decorated so many of his palaces' walls had come round, andall the rage and terror were done with. Henry died in 1272. [Source:Who's Who in the Middle Ages, John Fines, Barnes & Noble Books, New York,1995]
He was King of England 1216-1272. He Name Suffix:
Henry III (of England) (1207-72), king of England (1216-72), Duke ofAquitaine, son and successor of King John (Lackland),and a member ofthe house of Anjou, or Plantagenet. Henry ascended the throne at theage of nine, on the death of his
father. During his minority the kingdom was ruled by William Marshal,earl of Pembroke, as regent, but after his death in 1219 the justiciarHubert de Burgh was the chief power in the government. During theregency the French, who occupied much
of eastern England, were expelled,and rebellious barons were subdued.Henry was declared of age in 1227. In 1232 he dismissed Hubert deBurgh from his court and commenced ruling without the aidofministers. Henry displeased the barons by
filling government and church offices with foreign favorites, many ofthem relatives of his wife, Eleanor of Provence, whom he married in1236, and by squandering money on Continental wars, especially inFrance. In order to secure the throne of
Sicily for one of his sons,Henry agreed to pay the pope a large sum.When the king requested money from the barons to pay his debt, theyrefused and in 1258 forced him to agree to the Provisions of Oxford,whereby he agreed to share his power
with a council of barons. Henry soon repudiated his oath, however,with papal approval. After a brief period of war, the matter wasreferred to the arbitration of Louis IX, king of France, who decidedin Henry's favor in a judgment called the
Mise of Amiens (1264). Simon de Montfort, earl of Leicester,accordingly led the barons into war, defeated Henry at Lewes, and tookhim prisoner. In 1265, however, Henry's son and heir, Edward, laterKing Edward I, led the royal troops to
victory over the barons at Evesham, about 40.2 km (about 25 mi) southof Birmingham. Simon de Montfort was killed in the battle, and thebarons agreed to a compromise with Edwardand his party in 1267. Fromthat time on Edward ruled England,
and when Henry died, he succeeded him as king.
--Other Fields
Ref Number: 45375760@@NI0312@@NI3039@@
Reigned 1216-1272. A minor when he took the throne he did not takethe reigns of Government himself until 1234. Baronian discontentsimmered, boiling over in 1258 when Henry facing financial disasterattempted to raise large sums from his magnates. Reforms were agreedupon but then renouced by Henry. Simon de Montford lead a rebellionagainst the King (the Barons Wars) which was defeated after initialsuccess, thereafter Hnery ceeded much of his power to his son. Burkesays he was born 10 Oct 1206 and married 14 Jan, crowned 1216.
sources: LDS Ancestry files & Hull Univ. database
Reigned 1216-1272. A minor whenhe took the throne he did not takethe reigns of Government himself until 1234.Baronian discontentsimmered, boiling over in 1258 when Henry facing financial disasterattempted to raise large sums from his magnates. Reforms were agreedupon but then renouced by Henry. Simon de Montford lead a rebellionagainst the King (the Barons Wars) which was defeated after initialsuccess, thereafter Hnery ceeded much of his power to his son. Burkesays he was born 10 Oct 1206 and married 14 Jan, crowned 1216.
sources: LDS Ancestry files & Hull Univ. database
Reigned 1216-1272. A minor when he took the throne he did not takethe reigns ofGovernment himself until 1234. Baronian discontentsimmered, boiling over in 1258 when Henry facing financial disasterattempted to raise large sums from his magnates. Reforms were agreedupon but then renouced by Henry. Simon de Montford lead a rebellionagainst the King (the Barons Wars) which was defeated after initialsuccess, thereafter Hnery ceeded much of his power to his son. Burkesays hewas born 10 Oct 1206 and married 14 Jan, crowned 1216.
sources: LDS Ancestry files & Hull Univ. databaseGEDCOM provided byCarolyn Proffitt Winch
Reigned 1216-1272. A minor when he took the throne he did not takethe reigns of Government himself until 1234. Baronian. He Henry III was born in 1207 and succeeded his father John on the throne ofEngland in 1216. It was a ravaged inheritance, the scene of civil war andanarchy, and much of the east and south eastern England was under thecontrol of the French Dauphin Louis. But Henry had two greatprotectors---his liege lord the Pope, and the aged William Marshal.
The Marshal, by a combination of military skill and diplomatic ability,saw off the Dauphin by September, 1217, but less than two years later hewas dead, and a triumvirate ruled in his place: the papal legal Pandulf;the Poitevin Bishop of Winchester Peter des Roches; and the JusticiarHubert de Burgh. The legate departed in 1221; two years later Henrybecame of age and, rejecting Peter, chose Hubert to be his chiefcounsellor.
Trouble soon came, as Hubert attempted to re-asert royal authority.Barons, who had kept their castles undistrubed and exercised their powerswithout supervison, were now called to account to the haughty justiciar,and the party of Peter des Roches did not fail to underline theannoyances involved. The years 1223-4 were taken up with quellingrebellions.
Meanwhile the situation abroad was even more disturbing: the French kingPhilip Augustus was eating up English lands in Gascony, and Henry'smother Isabella made a bad situation worse by her marriage with CountHugh of Lusignan. It was only in 1230 that a badly prepared English forceset out for France and, after much squabbling, all it was able to do wasmake a demonstration march through Gascony.
Hubert had already had one dismal failure in Wales in 1228, and hisarrogant attempts to build up a personal base in the Marches provoked aWelsh raid in 1231 which did more harm to his good name. Hubert wasthrust out of power, to be replaced by Peter des Roches' Poitevins. Butby 1234 they had upset the baronage of England, who had never takenkindly to foreigners other than the Normans, and Richard Marshal combinedwith Edmund of Abington, Archbishop of Canterbury, to force the King toreplace them.
Henry now began his period of personal rule, and the world was to seewhat sort of king he would make. He was a simple, direct man, trustful onfirst impression, but bearing a life-long grudge when people let himdown. At times lavish and life-loving, he could show another side of hisnature, that wicked Angevin temper and streak of vindictive cruelty. Hehad a very refined taste, and enjoyed building and restoration work morethan anything else. Surrounded by barons who had been proved in thehardest schools of war, the King had the spirit of an interior decorator;the nation could have born the expense of his artistic tastes, could haveforgiven the eccentricity of it all, but Henry showed time and again thathe was timorous as well as artistic. He feared thunderstorms, and battlewas beyond him.
The Crown had some 60 castles in England, and these were in a bad stateafter the troubles of John's reign and the minority. Henry travelledabout tirelessly rebuilding them and making them more comfortable,spending at least ten per cent of his income on building works. Hepersonally instructed his architects in great detail, and could not waitfor them to finish---it must be ready for his return 'even if a thousandworkmen are required every day' and the job must be 'properly done,beautiful and fine.' In addition he built or restored twenty royalhouses, decorating them sumptiously. The painted chamber at Westminsterwas 80 ft. long, 26 ft. wide, and 31 ft. high. The walls were allwainscotted (at Winchester even the pantry and cellar were wainscotted)and painted with pictures and proverbs. The subjects of the picturesvaried according to the royal moods---in May 1250 the Queen borrowed abook about the crusades, and a year later the walls at Clarendon showedRichard the Lionheart duelling with Saladin. Wherever there were nopictures, there was the King's favourite decor---green curtains spangledwith gold stars. The floors were tiled, the windows glazed (and barredafter 1238 when an attempted assassination scared Henry out of hiswits---he even had the vent of the royal privy into the Thames barredover) and fireplaces provided the ultimate in luxury. Special roomssprouted everywhere, including the room where the royal head was washed.
If his private comfort bulked large in Henry's mind, his public displayof piety came a close second: these were neatly combined in the royalbedroom where a window was fitted to look into the chapel. His greatestproject was the rebuilding of Westminster Abbey, on which he spent nearly£50,000---the equivalent of £4,000,000 today. He had been so thrilledwith St. Louis' Sainte Chapelle that he had wanted to put it on a cartand roll it back to England. That was impossible, so he had to build hisown. He finished it in 1269, and proudly put up the inscription 'As therose is the flower of all flowers, so this is the house of houses.'
For a while Henry had reason for pride: he married Eleanor, daughter ofthe Count of Savoy, and sister of the Queen of France, the finest matchin Europe; his sister Isabella was married to the Emperor Frederick II,and his son Edward to Eleanor of Castille. He persuaded the Germans toelect his brother, Richard of Cornwall, King of the Romans.
On the other hand, his foreign policy was leading him into dangers. In1242 he foolishly allowed himself to be led into supporting his mother'sambitions in Poitou, and the enmity with France was to continueneedlessly until the settlement of 1259. Louis IX had no desire to be hisenemy---in 1254 all England was amazed at the French King's generous giftof an elephant, which the historian Matthew Paris went to draw in theTower of London.
In 1246 Henry's mother died (to almost universal relief) and hegenerously invited his four Lusignan half-brothers to live out theirorphanage under his roof. He gave them large incomes, but they took more,milking the land as hard as they could in the last moments beforebankruptcy. The English hated them for their avarice, price, andforeign-ness.
In ecclesiastical affairs Henry's hands were hopelessly tied---the Popehad always been his chief prop, and the King could not afford to lose hisaid. There was a strong movement for reform, but the papacy's desparateneed for money to prosecute its war against the Hohenstauffen made reforma secondary consideration, and indeed frequently blocked it. But Henrymay justly be criticised for his foolishness in accepting the papal offerof the crown of Sicily for his son Edmund in 1250. The payment was tomeet the astonomical debts of the Pope, and Richard of Cornwall hadalready wisely turned down this bad bargain, commenting that he had beenoffered the moon, if he could reach it.
Henry's need for money dominated most of his domestic policy. During theperiod of his personal government he obtained what he needed by gettinglegalists and professional civil servants to manipulate the complex chaosof the feudal government he had inherited. Government became a secret andcentralised affair, excluding the barons, great and small. There are manycomparisons here with the tyranny of Chales I.
In 1258 came the explosion: Parliament refused a grant unless Henryshould exile his grasping half-brothers, and allow a commission ofenquiry. A committee was set up to control the appointment of Crownofficials, examine and reform local government, and supervise the affairsof the realm in general.
This was a revolt, but it had many obscure roots. One cannot assess howdeeply felt were the demands for just and equal government voiced bySimon de Montfort, but certainly there were other elements in thebaronial party which were reactionary rather than revolutionary, wantingto return to baronial government for its own sake. On this issue thereformers spilt, Gloucester leading the conservatives, and de Montfortthe radicals. Henry saw his chance, and deftly using the ever valuablesupport of the Pope, shook off the Committee's control.
Now came war, and the stunning defeat of the royal party at Lewes in1264. From this point onwards Henry was very much a broken man, thoughprone to bouts of vicious anger. The initiative was passed to his son,the Lord Edward, who defeated de Montfort at Evesham, where Henry wasrescued, scratched and shouting 'Do not hurt me.'
Henry longed for revenge, and disinherited the rebels, who fled tohideouts in the fens to continue the war. The papal legate Ottobonopersuaded the King to go so far, in the Dictum of Kenilworth of 1266, asto allow the rebels to buy back their estates. Still not satisfied, thedisinherited, under Gloucester's leadership, took London, and Richard ofCornwall negotiated an easier peace. In 1267 the Statute of Marlboroughembodied much of what de Montfort had fought for, and the long years oftrouble were over.
Henry had at least survived, and his last years were happy in that hefininshed building his patron saint's Abbey of Westminster. The wheel offortune that decorated so many of his palaces' walls had come round, andall the rage and terror were done with. Henry died in 1272. [Source:Who's Who in the Middle Ages, John Fines, Barnes & Noble Books, New York,1995]
Children of Henry III Plantagenet King of England and Eleanor Berenger Countess of Provence, Queen of England
- Edward I 'Longshanks' Hammer of the Scots Plantagenet+ b. 17 Jun 1239, d. 7 Jul 1307
- Beatrice Plantagenet , Princess of England+ b. 25 Jun 1242, d. bt 24 Mar 1274 - 1275
- Edmund 'Crouchback' PLANTAGENET+ b. bt 16 Jan 1244 - 1245, d. 5 Jun 1296
Citations
- [S239] Unknown author, Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999, 4-6, 161-13.
- [S240] Unknown author, Encyclopedia Britannica, Treatise on, Henry III.
- [S239] Unknown author, Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999, 161-13.
- [S234] Frederick Lewis Weis additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition.
- [S241] Bill Lewis, 'Lewis Royal History'GEDCOM imported end OCT 1999 by Linda Joyce Neely.
Eleanor Berenger Countess of Provence, Queen of England
F, b. 1217, d. 25 June 1291
Eleanor Berenger Countess of Provence, Queen of England was buried at Convent Church, Amesbury, Wiltshire, England.1 She was born in 1217 at Aix-en-Provence, Bouches-du-Rhone, France.2 She was born circa 1233 at of Aix-en, Provence, Bouches-du-Rhone, France.3 She married Henry III Plantagenet King of England between 14 January 1236 and 1237 at Cathedral, Canterbury, Kent, England.4,2 Eleanor Berenger Countess of Provence, Queen of England died on 25 June 1291 at Amesbury, Wiltshire, England.2
She was Queen consort/Henry III.
She was Queen consort/Henry III.
Children of Eleanor Berenger Countess of Provence, Queen of England and Henry III Plantagenet King of England
- Edward I 'Longshanks' Hammer of the Scots Plantagenet+ b. 17 Jun 1239, d. 7 Jul 1307
- Beatrice Plantagenet , Princess of England+ b. 25 Jun 1242, d. bt 24 Mar 1274 - 1275
- Edmund 'Crouchback' PLANTAGENET+ b. bt 16 Jan 1244 - 1245, d. 5 Jun 1296
Citations
- [S242] Alice Beard, GEDCOM 'Royals of Europe' imported 7 NOV 1999 by Linda Joyce Neely.
- [S234] Frederick Lewis Weis additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition.
- [S241] Bill Lewis, 'Lewis Royal History'GEDCOM imported end OCT 1999 by Linda Joyce Neely.
- [S239] Unknown author, Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999, 161-13.
Alinore (?)
F, b. circa 1217
Child of Alinore (?) and Geoffrey de Langley
- Alianore de Langley+ b. c 1250, d. b 1287
Piers de Gaveston , 1st Earl of Cornwall1,2,3
M, b. circa 1284, d. 19 June 1312
Piers de Gaveston , 1st Earl of Cornwall was born circa 1284 at Blacklow Hill, Warwickshire, England.3 He married Margaret de Clare , Countess of Gloucester, daughter of Gilbert de Clare , Earl Gloucester & Hertford and Joan 'of Acre' Plantagenet , Princess of England, on 1 November 1307.3 Piers de Gaveston , 1st Earl of Cornwall died on 19 June 1312; (murdered.)4
He Piers Gaveston was a favorite (and possible lover) of King Edward II. Hewas given title of Earl of Cornwall in 1307. 5 years later he wasmurdered by a lynch mob of nobles jealous of his influence over KingEdward II. Piers de Gaveston , 1st Earl of Cornwall was also known as 04th1st Earl of Cornwall , Piers de Gavaston.
He Piers Gaveston was a favorite (and possible lover) of King Edward II. Hewas given title of Earl of Cornwall in 1307. 5 years later he wasmurdered by a lynch mob of nobles jealous of his influence over KingEdward II. Piers de Gaveston , 1st Earl of Cornwall was also known as 04th1st Earl of Cornwall , Piers de Gavaston.
Citations
- [S233] Charles Mosley Editor-in-Chief, Burke's Peerage & Baronetage, 106th Edition.
- [S240] Unknown author, Encyclopedia Britannica, Treatise on, Edward II of England.
- [S234] Frederick Lewis Weis additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition.
- [S240] Unknown author, Encyclopedia Britannica, Treatise on, Eward II of England.
Margaret de Clare , Countess of Gloucester1,2
F, b. October 1292, d. 9 April 1342
Margaret de Clare , Countess of Gloucester was born in October 1292 at Caerphilly Castle, Cardiff, Glamorganshire, England.1 She was the daughter of Gilbert de Clare , Earl Gloucester & Hertford and Joan 'of Acre' Plantagenet , Princess of England. Margaret de Clare , Countess of Gloucester married Piers de Gaveston , 1st Earl of Cornwall on 1 November 1307.2 Margaret de Clare , Countess of Gloucester married Hugh Baron de Audley , 1st Earl of Gloucester, son of Hugh 1st Baron de Audley , of Stratton, Sir and Isolde (Iseult) de Mortimer, on 28 April 1317.3 Margaret de Clare , Countess of Gloucester died on 9 April 1342 at France at age 49.1
She Margaret de Clare, b. c 1292, d. 9 Apr 1342; m. (2) Windsor, 28 Apr 1317,Hugh de Audley, d. 10 Nov 1347, Earl of Gloucester. [Magna ChartaSureties]
--------------------
Margaret de Clare, b. c 1292, d. Apr 1342; m. (1) 1 Nov 1307, Piers deGaveston, b. c 1284 (probably son of Sir Ernaud de Gaveston by Clarmundade Marsau et de Louvigny), created Earl of Cornwall, executed 19 June1312. She m. (2) 28 Apr 1317, Hugh de Audley. [Ancestral Roots]
She Margaret de Clare, b. c 1292, d. 9 Apr 1342; m. (2) Windsor, 28 Apr 1317,Hugh de Audley, d. 10 Nov 1347, Earl of Gloucester. [Magna ChartaSureties]
--------------------
Margaret de Clare, b. c 1292, d. Apr 1342; m. (1) 1 Nov 1307, Piers deGaveston, b. c 1284 (probably son of Sir Ernaud de Gaveston by Clarmundade Marsau et de Louvigny), created Earl of Cornwall, executed 19 June1312. She m. (2) 28 Apr 1317, Hugh de Audley. [Ancestral Roots]
Child of Margaret de Clare , Countess of Gloucester and Hugh Baron de Audley , 1st Earl of Gloucester
- Margaret Baroness de Audley+ b. b 1325, d. 7 Sep 1349
Citations
- [S239] Unknown author, Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999, 28-5.
- [S234] Frederick Lewis Weis additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition.
- [S239] Unknown author, Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999, 28-5, 150-6.
Hugh Baron de Audley , 1st Earl of Gloucester1,2,3
M, b. circa 1290, d. 10 November 1347
Hugh Baron de Audley , 1st Earl of Gloucester was born circa 1290 at Stratton Audley, Oxfordshire, England. He was the son of Hugh 1st Baron de Audley , of Stratton, Sir and Isolde (Iseult) de Mortimer. Hugh Baron de Audley , 1st Earl of Gloucester married Margaret de Clare , Countess of Gloucester, daughter of Gilbert de Clare , Earl Gloucester & Hertford and Joan 'of Acre' Plantagenet , Princess of England, on 28 April 1317.1 Hugh Baron de Audley , 1st Earl of Gloucester died on 10 November 1347 at Tunbridge Priory, Kent, England.1
He Hugh de Audley, who had been summoned to parliament in the lifetime ofhis father as 'Hugh de Audley, Junior,' from 20 November, 1317, to 15May, 1321, and after that nobleman's decease, as 'Hugh de Audlie,' from 3December, 1326, 20th Edward II, to 10th Edward III [1337]. His lordshipm. Margaret, sister and co-heiress of Gilbert de Clare, Earl ofGloucester, and widow of Piers Gavestone, by whom he left an only dau.and heiress, Margaret, who m. Ralph, Lord Stafford. Hugh, Lord Audley,was created Earl of Gloucester, 23 April, 1337. [Sir Bernard Burke,Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd.,London, England, 1883, p. 17, Audley, or de Alditheley, Barons Audley,and Subsequently Earl of Gloucester]
He Hugh de Audley, who had been summoned to parliament in the lifetime ofhis father as 'Hugh de Audley, Junior,' from 20 November, 1317, to 15May, 1321, and after that nobleman's decease, as 'Hugh de Audlie,' from 3December, 1326, 20th Edward II, to 10th Edward III [1337]. His lordshipm. Margaret, sister and co-heiress of Gilbert de Clare, Earl ofGloucester, and widow of Piers Gavestone, by whom he left an only dau.and heiress, Margaret, who m. Ralph, Lord Stafford. Hugh, Lord Audley,was created Earl of Gloucester, 23 April, 1337. [Sir Bernard Burke,Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd.,London, England, 1883, p. 17, Audley, or de Alditheley, Barons Audley,and Subsequently Earl of Gloucester]
Child of Hugh Baron de Audley , 1st Earl of Gloucester and Margaret de Clare , Countess of Gloucester
- Margaret Baroness de Audley+ b. b 1325, d. 7 Sep 1349
Citations
- [S239] Unknown author, Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999, 28-5, 150-6.
- [S233] Charles Mosley Editor-in-Chief, Burke's Peerage & Baronetage, 106th Edition.
- [S234] Frederick Lewis Weis additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition.
Ralph FitzRandolph , Lord of Middleham1,2,3
M, b. circa 1218, d. 31 March 1270
Ralph FitzRandolph , Lord of Middleham was buried at Coverham Abbey, North Riding Yorkshire, England. He was born circa 1206 at Middleham, Yorkshire, England.4 He was born circa 1218 at Middleham, North Riding Yorkshire, England.5 He married Anastasia de Percy, daughter of William de Percy , Lord of Topcliffe, Sir and Joan de Briwere, circa 1243.6 Ralph FitzRandolph , Lord of Middleham died on 31 March 1270 at Barton, Darlington, North Riding Yorkshire, England.7,5
He Ralph FITZRANULF (or FITZRANDOLF), of Middleham, Yorks, by Anastasia,daughter of William DE PERCY. [Complete Peerage] He Name Suffix: [Lord Of Middleham]
Line 2872 from GEDCOM File not recognizable or too long:
TITL [LORD OF MIDDLEHAM]
Please send Addition of data or corrections to<jackeo1@@hotmail.com>TITLE: Lord Middleham
REFN: 924R-JR@@S759@@@@S759@@@@S759@@.
He Ralph FITZRANULF (or FITZRANDOLF), of Middleham, Yorks, by Anastasia,daughter of William DE PERCY. [Complete Peerage] He Name Suffix:
Line 2872 from GEDCOM File not recognizable or too long:
TITL [LORD OF MIDDLEHAM]
Please send Addition of data or corrections to<jackeo1@@hotmail.com>TITLE: Lord Middleham
REFN: 924R-JR@@S759@@@@S759@@@@S759@@.
Child of Ralph FitzRandolph , Lord of Middleham and Anastasia de Percy
- Mary FitzRandolph , Heiress of Middleham+ b. c 1244, d. b 11 Apr 1320
Citations
- [S239] Unknown author, Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999, 132-4.
- [S233] Charles Mosley Editor-in-Chief, Burke's Peerage & Baronetage, 106th Edition.
- [S269] G. E Cokayne, Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, XII/1:650-651.
- [S237] LAYNEJAYNE <, LAYNEJAYNE@@aol.com>, solidgold4 <, solidgold4@@aol.com>, jercty31 < and jercty31@@aol.com>, New England Families to Royalty GEDCOM inported 7 NOV 1999 by LindaJoyce Neely.
- [S243] Unknown author, Magna Carta Ancestry, by Douglas Richardson, 2005, Genealogical Publishing Co., 616.
- [S232] Unknown author, 6 zip files containing Monarchs.ged downloaded end 1999 by Linda Neely.
- [S269] G. E Cokayne, Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, XII/1:651 (f).
Alice de Lusignan1,2
F, b. circa 1243, d. 1290
Alice de Lusignan was born circa 1243 at Lusignan, Vienne, Poitou, France. She married Gilbert de Clare , Earl Gloucester & Hertford, son of Richard de Clare , Earl Gloucester & Hertford, in 1253.1,2 Alice de Lusignan died in 1290.
She The Earl m. 1stly, in the spring of 1253, Alice (cont. dated 2 Feb1252/3), daughter of Hugh de Lusignan (le Brun), Count of la Marche andAngouleme (uterine brother of Henry III), by Yolande, daughter of PierreMauclerk, Duke of Brittany. She, who is said to have becomehypochondriacal, procured a divorce from her husband, judgement beinggiven at Norwich 18 Jul 1271. [Complete Peerage V:702-8]
She The Earl m. 1stly, in the spring of 1253, Alice (cont. dated 2 Feb1252/3), daughter of Hugh de Lusignan (le Brun), Count of la Marche andAngouleme (uterine brother of Henry III), by Yolande, daughter of PierreMauclerk, Duke of Brittany. She, who is said to have becomehypochondriacal, procured a divorce from her husband, judgement beinggiven at Norwich 18 Jul 1271. [Complete Peerage V:702-8]
Child of Alice de Lusignan and Gilbert de Clare , Earl Gloucester & Hertford
- Isabel de Clare b. bt 10 Mar 1262 - 1263, d. 1333
Roberto Orsini , Conte di Nola1,2
M, b. circa 1310, d. 1350
Roberto Orsini , Conte di Nola was born circa 1310 at Naples, Italy. He was the son of Romano de Orsini , Count of Nola, Senator and Anastasia de Montfort , Countess of Nola. Roberto Orsini , Conte di Nola married Sueva de Baux, daughter of Hugh (Hugues) de Baux , Conte di Soleto and Jaqueline (Jacopa) della Marra, in 1330.1 Roberto Orsini , Conte di Nola died in 1350 at Nola, Naples, Italy.1,2
Roberto Orsini , Conte di Nola was also known as Robert des Ursins , Conte di Nola.
Roberto Orsini , Conte di Nola was also known as Robert des Ursins , Conte di Nola.
Child of Roberto Orsini , Conte di Nola and Sueva de Baux
- Niccolo Orsini , Conte di Nola+ b. 27 Aug 1331, d. bt 14 Feb 1398 - 1399
Sueva de Baux1,2
F, b. circa 1310
Sueva de Baux was born circa 1310 at Soleto, Apulia, Italy. She was the daughter of Hugh (Hugues) de Baux , Conte di Soleto and Jaqueline (Jacopa) della Marra. Sueva de Baux married Roberto Orsini , Conte di Nola, son of Romano de Orsini , Count of Nola, Senator and Anastasia de Montfort , Countess of Nola, in 1330.1
Sueva de Baux was also known as Sveva del Balzo.
Sueva de Baux was also known as Sveva del Balzo.
Child of Sueva de Baux and Roberto Orsini , Conte di Nola
- Niccolo Orsini , Conte di Nola+ b. 27 Aug 1331, d. bt 14 Feb 1398 - 1399
Geoffrey 1st Baron de Geneville , of Trim1
M, b. after 1226, d. 21 October 1314
Geoffrey 1st Baron de Geneville , of Trim was born after 1226 at Ludlow Castle, Shropshire, England.1 He married Maud (Matilda) de Lacy, daughter of Gilbert II de Lacy , Master of Meath and Isabella Bigod, before 8 August 1252.2 Geoffrey 1st Baron de Geneville , of Trim died on 21 October 1314 at Trim Castle, Meath, Ireland.1
He Sir Geoffrey de Geneville, Lord Geneville, b. in or aft. 1226, d. Trim,21 Oct 1314, son of Simon de Joinville, Senschal of Champagne, Seigneurde Vaucouleurs in France. [Magna Charta Sureties]
Geoffrey de Joinville, 1st Lord Genevil, Sire de Vaucouleurs, Lord ofLudlow (Salop) and of Trim (in Ireland), born c1226, died at Trim 21 Oct1314, son of Simon, Sire de Joinville, and Beatrix de Bourgogne. [MagnaCharta Sureties] Geoffrey 1st Baron de Geneville , of Trim was also known as Geoffrey de Joinville , 1st Lord Genevil.
He Sir Geoffrey de Geneville, Lord Geneville, b. in or aft. 1226, d. Trim,21 Oct 1314, son of Simon de Joinville, Senschal of Champagne, Seigneurde Vaucouleurs in France. [Magna Charta Sureties]
Geoffrey de Joinville, 1st Lord Genevil, Sire de Vaucouleurs, Lord ofLudlow (Salop) and of Trim (in Ireland), born c1226, died at Trim 21 Oct1314, son of Simon, Sire de Joinville, and Beatrix de Bourgogne. [MagnaCharta Sureties] Geoffrey 1st Baron de Geneville , of Trim was also known as Geoffrey de Joinville , 1st Lord Genevil.
Child of Geoffrey 1st Baron de Geneville , of Trim and Maud (Matilda) de Lacy
- Piers de Geneville , of Trim & Ludlow, Sir+ b. 1256, d. b 8 Jun 1292
Gilbert II de Lacy , Master of Meath1,2,3
M, b. circa 1200, d. between 12 August 1230 and 25 December 1230
Gilbert II de Lacy , Master of Meath married Isabella Bigod. Gilbert II de Lacy , Master of Meath was born circa 1200 at Ewyas Harold, Herefordshire, England. He died between 12 August 1230 and 25 December 1230 at Trim Castle, Meath, Ireland.4,2 He died in 1234.3
He Gilbert de Lacy, d. 1230, of Ewyas Lacy, Trim, and of Weobley, co.Hereford, son and heir apparent of Walter de Lacy d. 1241, Lord ofMeath. [Magna Charta Sureties]
Gilbert de Lacy, dvp between 12 Aug and 25 Dec 1230, son and heir(apparent) of Walter de Lacy, Lord of Meath, etc. by his wife Margaret deBraose. [Magna Charta Sureties]
He Gilbert de Lacy, d. 1230, of Ewyas Lacy, Trim, and of Weobley, co.Hereford, son and heir apparent of Walter de Lacy d. 1241, Lord ofMeath. [Magna Charta Sureties]
Gilbert de Lacy, dvp between 12 Aug and 25 Dec 1230, son and heir(apparent) of Walter de Lacy, Lord of Meath, etc. by his wife Margaret deBraose. [Magna Charta Sureties]
Children of Gilbert II de Lacy , Master of Meath and Isabella Bigod
- Margaret de Lacy+ b. c 1229, d. a 10 Jun 1256
- Maud (Matilda) de Lacy+ b. c 1230, d. 11 Apr 1304
Citations
- [S239] Unknown author, Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999, 4-3, 12-3, 13-3, 17c-3.
- [S269] G. E Cokayne, Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, XII/2:248.
- [S270] William Henry Turton, The Plantagenet Ancestry, 74.
- [S239] Unknown author, Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999, 4-3, 17C-3.
Gerard de Furnival , Lord of Hallamshire, Sir1,2
M, b. circa 1225, d. before 18 October 1261
Gerard de Furnival , Lord of Hallamshire, Sir married Maud FitzJohn, daughter of John FitzGeoffrey , Justiciar of Ireland, Sir and Isabella Bigod.1,2 Gerard de Furnival , Lord of Hallamshire, Sir was born circa 1225 at Hallamshire, Sheffield, Yorkshire, England. He died before 18 October 1261; (dsp.)1
He Gerard de Furnivalle, of Sheffield, co. York, dsp bef. 18 Oct 1261.[Magna Charta Sureties]
----------------
Gerard de Furnivall(e) [elder son]; feudal Lord of Hallamshire; m. Maud(married 2nd c 1270 9th Earl of Warwick) of the 1088 created and diedApril 1301), eldest daughter of Sir John fitz Geoffrey and sister andeventual coheir of Sir Richard fitz John, of Shere and Fambridge, and dspby 18 Oct 1261. [Burke's Peerage]
----------------
Note: Despite MCS & Burke's, I have a daughter for Gerard. Gerard de Furnival , Lord of Hallamshire, Sir was also known as Gerard de Furnivalle.
He Gerard de Furnivalle, of Sheffield, co. York, dsp bef. 18 Oct 1261.[Magna Charta Sureties]
----------------
Gerard de Furnivall(e) [elder son]; feudal Lord of Hallamshire; m. Maud(married 2nd c 1270 9th Earl of Warwick) of the 1088 created and diedApril 1301), eldest daughter of Sir John fitz Geoffrey and sister andeventual coheir of Sir Richard fitz John, of Shere and Fambridge, and dspby 18 Oct 1261. [Burke's Peerage]
----------------
Note: Despite MCS & Burke's, I have a daughter for Gerard. Gerard de Furnival , Lord of Hallamshire, Sir was also known as Gerard de Furnivalle.
Maud (Matilda) de Lacy1,2
F, b. circa 1230, d. 11 April 1304
Maud (Matilda) de Lacy was born circa 1230 at Trim Castle, Meath, Ireland. She was the daughter of Gilbert II de Lacy , Master of Meath and Isabella Bigod. Maud (Matilda) de Lacy married Pierre de Geneva before 15 May 1244.3 Maud (Matilda) de Lacy married Geoffrey 1st Baron de Geneville , of Trim before 8 August 1252.4 Maud (Matilda) de Lacy died on 11 April 1304.1,2
She Matilda de Lacy (by first husband), coheir of her grandfather, Walter deLacy, died 11 April 1304; married (1) before 15 May 1244 Pierre deGeneva, dsp 1249 before 29 June, son of Humbert, Comte de Geneva, andAgnes di Savoie; married (2) before 8 Aug 1252, Geoffrey de Joinville,1st Lord Genevil, Sire de Vaucouleurs, Lord of Ludlow (Salop) and of Trim(in Ireland), born c1226, died at Trim 21 Oct 1314, son of Simon, Sire deJoinville, and Beatrix de Bourgogne. [Magna Charta Sureties]
----------------------
Trim Castle:
When Walter died in 1241 the estates passed to his granddaughter, Maudwho married Geoffrey de Geneville in 1254--the beginning of a period ofprosperity for Trim. The Great Hall was constructed on the site of thenorth curtain wall and the North tower developed as the Solar or privateapartments. In 1306, de Geneville's granddaughter Joanna married RogerMortimer--1st Earl of March. Their descendants held Trim until Edmund,the 5th Earl, died in 1425. [Trim Castle Visitors Guide, Duchas--TheHeritage Service of Ireland]
She Matilda de Lacy (by first husband), coheir of her grandfather, Walter deLacy, died 11 April 1304; married (1) before 15 May 1244 Pierre deGeneva, dsp 1249 before 29 June, son of Humbert, Comte de Geneva, andAgnes di Savoie; married (2) before 8 Aug 1252, Geoffrey de Joinville,1st Lord Genevil, Sire de Vaucouleurs, Lord of Ludlow (Salop) and of Trim(in Ireland), born c1226, died at Trim 21 Oct 1314, son of Simon, Sire deJoinville, and Beatrix de Bourgogne. [Magna Charta Sureties]
----------------------
Trim Castle:
When Walter died in 1241 the estates passed to his granddaughter, Maudwho married Geoffrey de Geneville in 1254--the beginning of a period ofprosperity for Trim. The Great Hall was constructed on the site of thenorth curtain wall and the North tower developed as the Solar or privateapartments. In 1306, de Geneville's granddaughter Joanna married RogerMortimer--1st Earl of March. Their descendants held Trim until Edmund,the 5th Earl, died in 1425. [Trim Castle Visitors Guide, Duchas--TheHeritage Service of Ireland]
Child of Maud (Matilda) de Lacy and Geoffrey 1st Baron de Geneville , of Trim
- Piers de Geneville , of Trim & Ludlow, Sir+ b. 1256, d. b 8 Jun 1292
Citations
- [S239] Unknown author, Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999, 12-4, 17c-4.
- [S270] William Henry Turton, The Plantagenet Ancestry, 74.
- [S239] Unknown author, Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999, 17C-4, 12-4.
- [S239] Unknown author, Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999, 17C-4, 12-4.
Pierre de Geneva1
M, b. circa 1225, d. before 29 June 1249
Pierre de Geneva was born circa 1225 at Geneva, Switzerland. He married Maud (Matilda) de Lacy, daughter of Gilbert II de Lacy , Master of Meath and Isabella Bigod, before 15 May 1244.2 Pierre de Geneva died before 29 June 1249; (dsp.)3
Pierre de Geneva was also known as Piers de Genevre.
Pierre de Geneva was also known as Piers de Genevre.
Citations
- [S239] Unknown author, Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999, 12-4, 17C-4.
- [S239] Unknown author, Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999, 17C-4, 12-4.
- [S239] Unknown author, Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999, 12-4.
Ralph 1st Baron de Monthermer , Earl Gloucester1,2,3
M, b. 1262, d. 5 April 1325
Ralph 1st Baron de Monthermer , Earl Gloucester was born in 1262 at Acre, Hazafon, Palestine.2 He married Joan 'of Acre' Plantagenet , Princess of England, daughter of Edward I 'Longshanks' Hammer of the Scots Plantagenet, in 1297.1,4 Ralph 1st Baron de Monthermer , Earl Gloucester married an unknown person before 20 November 1318.3 He died on 5 April 1325 at Grey Friars, Salisbury, Wiltshire, England.1
He Sir Ralph de Monthermer, styled Earl of Gloucester and Hertford duringthe life of his wife (Joan), created Lord Monthermer 1308, died 5 April1325. [Magna Charta Sureties]
Note: Although styled 'Earl of Gloucester and Hertford', according to CP,he did not receive full comital rank, for he didn't appear to have hadthe third penny of the county pleas, which the Earls of Gloucester hadreceived for more than 160 years. Moreover the title was in right of hiswife, so he lost the title of Earl at his wife's death.
-------------------------
EARLDOM of ATHOLL (X, 1) 1306
RALPH (DE MONTHERMER), Earl of Gloucester, on whom his father-in-law,Edward I, conferred 12 Oct 1306, the whole of Annandale, with the titleof EARL OF ATHOLL [Scotland]. He, however, for 5,000 marks, resignedsuch title in favour of the son of the late Earl, 24 June 1307.[Complete Peerage, I:306]
-------------------------
Ralph de Monthermer, 'a plain Esquire,' having m. the Lady JoanePlantagenet (commonly called Joane of Acre), dau. of King Edward I andwidow of Gilbert, Earl of Clare, Gloucester, and Hertford, in her right,and was summoned to parliament as 'Comiti Gloucester' et Hertf.' from 6February, 1299 to 3 November, 1306. In the 26th Edward I [1298], hislordship was in the expedition then made into Scotland, and behaved sovaliantly that the king rendered to him and his wife, the said Joane, thecastle and honour of Tonebruge with other lands in Kent, Surrey, andSussex, as also the Isle of Portland and divers other estates belongingto the said Joane, which had been seized by the crown in consequence ofher marriage without license with the said Ralph, and the king becameeventually much attached to his son-in-law, to whom he had beenreconciled through the intercession of Anthony Bek, the celebrated bishopof Durham. In the 31st, 32nd, and 34th of his father-in-law [1203, 1304,and 1306], the earl was again in Scotland and in the contest with Bruce.King Edward conferred upon him the whole of Anandale with the title ofEarl of Atholl, the Scottish nobleman who held that dignity havingespoused the fortunes of Bruce, but it was not long after that that Joaneof Acre departed this life (viz., 1st Edward II), and he never,subsequently, obtained the title of Earl of Gloucester and Hertfordalthough he lived for several years; in a grant of considerable landedproperty made to him and his sons in two years afterwards, he is styledRalph de Monthermer only. Nor is he otherwise denominated in the 5thEdward II [1312], at which time, for recompense of his service inScotland, the king gave him 300 marks, part of the 600 marks which he wasto have paid for the wardship of John ap Adam, a great man of that age.Nor in two years afterwards, when again in the wars of Scotland, he wasmade prisoner at Bannockburn, but he then found favour from his formerfamiliarity with the King of Scotland, at the court of England, andobtained his freedom without paying ransom. He was, however, summoned toparliament as a Baron from 4 March, 1309, to 30 October, 1321. Hislordship m. 2ndly, Isabel, widow of John de Hastings, and sister andco-heir of Aymer de Valence, Earl of Pembroke, by whom he had no issue.By his first wife, the Princess Joane, he had two sons, viz., Thomas, hisheir; Edward, who was summoned to parliament as a Baron, 23 April, 1337,11th Edward III, but never afterwards, and nothing further is known ofhim or his descendants. Ralph, Lord Monthermer, d. 19th Edward II [1326],and was s. by his son, Thomas, Lord Monthermer. [Sir Bernard Burke,Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage Ltd,London, England, 1883, pp. 378-9, Monthermer, Baron Monthermer, Earl ofGloucester and Hertford] Ralph 1st Baron de Monthermer , Earl Gloucester was also known as 10th1st Earl of Atholl , Ralph de Monthermer.
He Sir Ralph de Monthermer, styled Earl of Gloucester and Hertford duringthe life of his wife (Joan), created Lord Monthermer 1308, died 5 April1325. [Magna Charta Sureties]
Note: Although styled 'Earl of Gloucester and Hertford', according to CP,he did not receive full comital rank, for he didn't appear to have hadthe third penny of the county pleas, which the Earls of Gloucester hadreceived for more than 160 years. Moreover the title was in right of hiswife, so he lost the title of Earl at his wife's death.
-------------------------
EARLDOM of ATHOLL (X, 1) 1306
RALPH (DE MONTHERMER), Earl of Gloucester, on whom his father-in-law,Edward I, conferred 12 Oct 1306, the whole of Annandale, with the titleof EARL OF ATHOLL [Scotland]. He, however, for 5,000 marks, resignedsuch title in favour of the son of the late Earl, 24 June 1307.[Complete Peerage, I:306]
-------------------------
Ralph de Monthermer, 'a plain Esquire,' having m. the Lady JoanePlantagenet (commonly called Joane of Acre), dau. of King Edward I andwidow of Gilbert, Earl of Clare, Gloucester, and Hertford, in her right,and was summoned to parliament as 'Comiti Gloucester' et Hertf.' from 6February, 1299 to 3 November, 1306. In the 26th Edward I [1298], hislordship was in the expedition then made into Scotland, and behaved sovaliantly that the king rendered to him and his wife, the said Joane, thecastle and honour of Tonebruge with other lands in Kent, Surrey, andSussex, as also the Isle of Portland and divers other estates belongingto the said Joane, which had been seized by the crown in consequence ofher marriage without license with the said Ralph, and the king becameeventually much attached to his son-in-law, to whom he had beenreconciled through the intercession of Anthony Bek, the celebrated bishopof Durham. In the 31st, 32nd, and 34th of his father-in-law [1203, 1304,and 1306], the earl was again in Scotland and in the contest with Bruce.King Edward conferred upon him the whole of Anandale with the title ofEarl of Atholl, the Scottish nobleman who held that dignity havingespoused the fortunes of Bruce, but it was not long after that that Joaneof Acre departed this life (viz., 1st Edward II), and he never,subsequently, obtained the title of Earl of Gloucester and Hertfordalthough he lived for several years; in a grant of considerable landedproperty made to him and his sons in two years afterwards, he is styledRalph de Monthermer only. Nor is he otherwise denominated in the 5thEdward II [1312], at which time, for recompense of his service inScotland, the king gave him 300 marks, part of the 600 marks which he wasto have paid for the wardship of John ap Adam, a great man of that age.Nor in two years afterwards, when again in the wars of Scotland, he wasmade prisoner at Bannockburn, but he then found favour from his formerfamiliarity with the King of Scotland, at the court of England, andobtained his freedom without paying ransom. He was, however, summoned toparliament as a Baron from 4 March, 1309, to 30 October, 1321. Hislordship m. 2ndly, Isabel, widow of John de Hastings, and sister andco-heir of Aymer de Valence, Earl of Pembroke, by whom he had no issue.By his first wife, the Princess Joane, he had two sons, viz., Thomas, hisheir; Edward, who was summoned to parliament as a Baron, 23 April, 1337,11th Edward III, but never afterwards, and nothing further is known ofhim or his descendants. Ralph, Lord Monthermer, d. 19th Edward II [1326],and was s. by his son, Thomas, Lord Monthermer. [Sir Bernard Burke,Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage Ltd,London, England, 1883, pp. 378-9, Monthermer, Baron Monthermer, Earl ofGloucester and Hertford] Ralph 1st Baron de Monthermer , Earl Gloucester was also known as 10th1st Earl of Atholl , Ralph de Monthermer.
Citations
- [S239] Unknown author, Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999, 17B-15.
- [S234] Frederick Lewis Weis additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition.
- [S269] G. E Cokayne, Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, VI:348.
- [S269] G. E Cokayne, Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, V:708-10.
Margaret Countess of Hainault & Flanders1,2
F, b. 2 June 1202, d. between 10 February 1279 and 1280
Margaret Countess of Hainault & Flanders was buried at Flines-Les-Morta, Nord, France. She was born on 2 June 1202 at Constantinople, Turkey.3 She married Bouchard d' Avesnes Archdeacon of Laon between March 1211 and 1212.1,2,3 Margaret Countess of Hainault & Flanders married William II Seigneur de Dampierre before 15 November 1223. Margaret Countess of Hainault & Flanders died between 10 February 1279 and 1280 at Valenciennes, Nord, Nord-Pas-de-Calais France.1,3,2
She Ancestral Roots states that Margaret's marriage to Bouchard is her 2nd. Ihave no idea who her 1st husband was, but she must have married/divorcedhim extremely young. AR could have been mistaken; it could have been her1st to Bouchard. Margaret Countess of Hainault & Flanders was also known as Margaret Countess of Hainault & Avesnes.
She Ancestral Roots states that Margaret's marriage to Bouchard is her 2nd. Ihave no idea who her 1st husband was, but she must have married/divorcedhim extremely young. AR could have been mistaken; it could have been her1st to Bouchard. Margaret Countess of Hainault & Flanders was also known as Margaret Countess of Hainault & Avesnes.
Child of Margaret Countess of Hainault & Flanders and Bouchard d' Avesnes Archdeacon of Laon
- John I d' Avesnes Count of Holland+ b. 1 May 1218, d. 24 Dec 1257
Child of Margaret Countess of Hainault & Flanders and William II Seigneur de Dampierre
- Guy III de Dampierre Count of Flanders+ b. c 1225, d. bt 7 Mar 1304 - 1305
Citations
- [S234] Frederick Lewis Weis additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition.
- [S270] William Henry Turton, The Plantagenet Ancestry, 5.
- [S235] Newsgroup: soc.genealogy.medieval, at groups - google.com, online google.com, John Ravilious (Therav3), 8 Oct 2002.
Bouchard d' Avesnes Archdeacon of Laon1,2,3,4
M, b. after 1180, d. 7 September 1244
Bouchard d' Avesnes Archdeacon of Laon was buried at Clairefontaine, Autelbas, Walloon Region, Belgium. He was born after 1180 at Oizy, Namur, Belgium.3 He married Margaret Countess of Hainault & Flanders between March 1211 and 1212.1,4,2 Bouchard d' Avesnes Archdeacon of Laon died on 7 September 1244 at Estroeungt, Belgium.1,2,3,4
Bouchard d' Avesnes Archdeacon of Laon was also known as Bouchard d' Avenes.
Bouchard d' Avesnes Archdeacon of Laon was also known as Bouchard d' Avenes.
Child of Bouchard d' Avesnes Archdeacon of Laon and Margaret Countess of Hainault & Flanders
- John I d' Avesnes Count of Holland+ b. 1 May 1218, d. 24 Dec 1257
Citations
- [S234] Frederick Lewis Weis additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition.
- [S235] Newsgroup: soc.genealogy.medieval, at groups - google.com, online google.com, John Ravilious (Therav3), 8 Oct 2002.
- [S236] Unknown author, Leo's Genealogics Website (Leo van de Pas), www.genealogics.org, Bouchard d'Avesnes.
- [S270] William Henry Turton, The Plantagenet Ancestry, 5.
Alice de Orreby1,2
F, b. 1260, d. before 20 October 1317
Alice de Orreby was born in 1260 at Hatherton, Nantwich, Cheshire, England. She married an unknown person in 1295. She married Humphrey de Beauchamp , of Ryme, Sir, son of Robert V de Beauchamp , Lord of Hache and Alice de Mohun, after 10 August 1300.1 Alice de Orreby died after May 1315.2 She died before 20 October 1317.1
Maurice II 'Magnanimous' 2nd Baron de Berkeley1,2,3,4
M, b. April 1271, d. 31 May 1326
Maurice II 'Magnanimous' 2nd Baron de Berkeley was buried at St Augustine's Priory, Bristol, Gloucestershire, England. He was born in April 1271 at Berkeley Castle, Thornbury, Gloucestershire, England.2,5 He was the son of Thomas II 'The Wise' 1st Baron de Berkeley and Joan de Ferrers. Maurice II 'Magnanimous' 2nd Baron de Berkeley was born in April 1281 at Berkeley Castle, Thornbury, Gloucestershire, England.6,4 He married Eva la Zouche, daughter of Eudo (Eon) la Zouche , of Haryngworth and Milicent de Cantelou, in 1289.1,7 Maurice II 'Magnanimous' 2nd Baron de Berkeley married Isabel de Clare, daughter of Gilbert de Clare , Earl Gloucester & Hertford and Alice de Lusignan, in 1316.2,8 Maurice II 'Magnanimous' 2nd Baron de Berkeley died on 31 May 1326 at Wallingford Castle, Berkshire, England, at age 55; (as a prisoner.)6,4
He Sir Maurice de Berkeley, b. Apr 1281, d. 31 May 1326, Lord Berkeley ofBerkeley Castle; m. (1) 1289, neither being over eight years of age, Evala Zouche. [Magna Charta Sureties]
Note: They must have been married in early 1289, because Eva had to havebeen born bef. 25 Mar 1280 (nine months after her father's latestpossible death date).
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Maurice de Berkeley, 1st/2nd Baron Berkeley; b. April 1271; took part inScottish Wars 1295-1318; at Siege of Carlaverock July 1300, called toParliament 1308 in his father's lifetime by a series of writs worded tohim as 'Maurice de Berkeley', which by a later interpretation would havemeant that he was made Lord (Baron) Berkeley in a separate creation tothat of his father, but in fact there is no record of his having takenhis seat, Warden Gloucester 1312, Capt Berwick 1315, Commissioner toScotland 1316, Chief Justiciar of South Wales 1316, Seneschal ofAquitaine 1320, joined the Earl of Lancaster's insurrection againstEdward II and his favourites the Despensers 1321 but was captured andimprisoned in Wallingford Castle. [Burke's Peerage]
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BARONY of BERKELEY (II)
MAURICE (DE BERKELEY), LORD DE BERKELEY, son and heir, who 'may beecalled Maurice the Magnanimous,' born April 1281 (b). He distinguishedhimself in the Scottish wars, 1295-1318, and was at the siege ofCarlaverock in July 1300. He was summoned to Parliament v.p., from 16August 1308 to 15 May 1321 by writs directed Mauricio de Berkeleye,whereby he may be held to have become LORD BERKELEY, though there is noactual record of his having sat in Parliament. He held several importantposts, v.p., being Warden Of Gloucester, 1312; Capt. of Berwick, 1315;one of the Commissioners to Scotland, 1316; Chief Justiciar of SouthWales 1316, and Seneschal of Aquitaine, 1320. Shortly afterwards hejoined the Earl of Lancaster in the rebellion against Edward II and theDespenser family, and within 6 months of his father's death was sentprisoner to Wallingford Castle, 20 Jan 1321/2, where he d. about a yearafterwards.
He m. 1stly 1289 (neither party being aged over 8), Eve, sister ofWilliam la Zouche (Lord Zouche of Haryngworth), and daughter of Eon laZouche, by Millicent, sister and coheir of George de Cauntelo, Lord ofAbergavenny, daughter of William de Cauntelo, of Calne, co. Wilts andAston Cantlow, co. Warwick. She d. 6 Dec 1314, and was buried inPortbury Church, Somerset. He m. 2ndly, about 1316, Isabel, daughter ofGilbert de Clare, Earl of Gloucester and Hertford, by his 1st wife Alice,daughter of Hugh XI, called le Brun, Sire de Lusignan, Count of la Marcheand Angouleme (uterine brother of Henry III). He d. as aforesaid, 31 May1326 , and was buried at Wallingford, but removed to St. Augustine's,Bristol (c). Inq.p.m. Feb 1326/7. His widow, who was b. 10 Mar 1262/3,dsp 1333. [Complete Peerage II:128-9, XIV:87]
(b) This makes him a father at the age of 14, for which Smyth quotes theBiblical precedents of Solomon and Ahaz, each a father at 11 and of KingJosiah at 14, and adds that his own 'small reading could parallel morethan a dozen other parents which have been Fathers and Mothers at 14years'. The date of birth appears to rest on his being found to be 40years old in 1321 in two inquisitions on his father's death, 'and' saysSmyth 'he best knew his own age that sett it down.' It is however nowrecognised that the age of men in middle life being a matter of littlepractical importance, is seldom given with any degree of accuracy in theinquisitions. His birth (as the elder son of his parents) would moreprobably be in 1271 than in 1281, ie. after some 4, rather than some 14,years of their marriage.
(c) From his 2nd son, Maurice, descend the Berkeleys of Stoke Gifford,co. Gloucester (Lords Botetourt), the Berkeleys of Stratton, Cornwall(Lords Berkeley of Stratton) and the Berkeleys of Pyll, of which familiesthe last is now (1911) represented in the male line by Viscount Portman.
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Maurice de Berkeley, 2nd baron, b. 1281, d. 1326, m. Eve, dau. of Eudo leZouch. He received summons to parliament from 1308 to 1321, during hisfather's lifetime. He had issue, Thomas, 3rd baron; Sir Maurice; John,constable of Bristol Castle; Eudo; Peter; Isabel. [Sir Bernard Burke,Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd.,London, 1883, p. 44, Berkeley, Viscount Berkeley, Earl of Nottingham, andMarquess of Berkeley]
He Sir Maurice de Berkeley, b. Apr 1281, d. 31 May 1326, Lord Berkeley ofBerkeley Castle; m. (1) 1289, neither being over eight years of age, Evala Zouche. [Magna Charta Sureties]
Note: They must have been married in early 1289, because Eva had to havebeen born bef. 25 Mar 1280 (nine months after her father's latestpossible death date).
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Maurice de Berkeley, 1st/2nd Baron Berkeley; b. April 1271; took part inScottish Wars 1295-1318; at Siege of Carlaverock July 1300, called toParliament 1308 in his father's lifetime by a series of writs worded tohim as 'Maurice de Berkeley', which by a later interpretation would havemeant that he was made Lord (Baron) Berkeley in a separate creation tothat of his father, but in fact there is no record of his having takenhis seat, Warden Gloucester 1312, Capt Berwick 1315, Commissioner toScotland 1316, Chief Justiciar of South Wales 1316, Seneschal ofAquitaine 1320, joined the Earl of Lancaster's insurrection againstEdward II and his favourites the Despensers 1321 but was captured andimprisoned in Wallingford Castle. [Burke's Peerage]
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BARONY of BERKELEY (II)
MAURICE (DE BERKELEY), LORD DE BERKELEY, son and heir, who 'may beecalled Maurice the Magnanimous,' born April 1281 (b). He distinguishedhimself in the Scottish wars, 1295-1318, and was at the siege ofCarlaverock in July 1300. He was summoned to Parliament v.p., from 16August 1308 to 15 May 1321 by writs directed Mauricio de Berkeleye,whereby he may be held to have become LORD BERKELEY, though there is noactual record of his having sat in Parliament. He held several importantposts, v.p., being Warden Of Gloucester, 1312; Capt. of Berwick, 1315;one of the Commissioners to Scotland, 1316; Chief Justiciar of SouthWales 1316, and Seneschal of Aquitaine, 1320. Shortly afterwards hejoined the Earl of Lancaster in the rebellion against Edward II and theDespenser family, and within 6 months of his father's death was sentprisoner to Wallingford Castle, 20 Jan 1321/2, where he d. about a yearafterwards.
He m. 1stly 1289 (neither party being aged over 8), Eve, sister ofWilliam la Zouche (Lord Zouche of Haryngworth), and daughter of Eon laZouche, by Millicent, sister and coheir of George de Cauntelo, Lord ofAbergavenny, daughter of William de Cauntelo, of Calne, co. Wilts andAston Cantlow, co. Warwick. She d. 6 Dec 1314, and was buried inPortbury Church, Somerset. He m. 2ndly, about 1316, Isabel, daughter ofGilbert de Clare, Earl of Gloucester and Hertford, by his 1st wife Alice,daughter of Hugh XI, called le Brun, Sire de Lusignan, Count of la Marcheand Angouleme (uterine brother of Henry III). He d. as aforesaid, 31 May1326 , and was buried at Wallingford, but removed to St. Augustine's,Bristol (c). Inq.p.m. Feb 1326/7. His widow, who was b. 10 Mar 1262/3,dsp 1333. [Complete Peerage II:128-9, XIV:87]
(b) This makes him a father at the age of 14, for which Smyth quotes theBiblical precedents of Solomon and Ahaz, each a father at 11 and of KingJosiah at 14, and adds that his own 'small reading could parallel morethan a dozen other parents which have been Fathers and Mothers at 14years'. The date of birth appears to rest on his being found to be 40years old in 1321 in two inquisitions on his father's death, 'and' saysSmyth 'he best knew his own age that sett it down.' It is however nowrecognised that the age of men in middle life being a matter of littlepractical importance, is seldom given with any degree of accuracy in theinquisitions. His birth (as the elder son of his parents) would moreprobably be in 1271 than in 1281, ie. after some 4, rather than some 14,years of their marriage.
(c) From his 2nd son, Maurice, descend the Berkeleys of Stoke Gifford,co. Gloucester (Lords Botetourt), the Berkeleys of Stratton, Cornwall(Lords Berkeley of Stratton) and the Berkeleys of Pyll, of which familiesthe last is now (1911) represented in the male line by Viscount Portman.
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Maurice de Berkeley, 2nd baron, b. 1281, d. 1326, m. Eve, dau. of Eudo leZouch. He received summons to parliament from 1308 to 1321, during hisfather's lifetime. He had issue, Thomas, 3rd baron; Sir Maurice; John,constable of Bristol Castle; Eudo; Peter; Isabel. [Sir Bernard Burke,Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd.,London, 1883, p. 44, Berkeley, Viscount Berkeley, Earl of Nottingham, andMarquess of Berkeley]
Child of Maurice II 'Magnanimous' 2nd Baron de Berkeley and Eva la Zouche
- Thomas IV 'The Rich' 3rd Baron de Berkeley+ b. b 1296, d. 27 Oct 1361
Citations
- [S239] Unknown author, Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999, 80-5, 82-5, 88-5.
- [S233] Charles Mosley Editor-in-Chief, Burke's Peerage & Baronetage, 106th Edition.
- [S234] Frederick Lewis Weis additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition.
- [S269] G. E Cokayne, Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, II:128-9.
- [S269] G. E Cokayne, Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, II:128 (b).
- [S239] Unknown author, Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999, 80-5, 88-5.
- [S269] G. E Cokayne, Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, II:129.
- [S269] G. E Cokayne, Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, II:219.
Eva la Zouche1,2
F, b. before 25 March 1280, d. 6 December 1314
Eva la Zouche was born before 25 March 1280 at Harringworth, Northumberland, England.3 She was the daughter of Eudo (Eon) la Zouche , of Haryngworth and Milicent de Cantelou. Eva la Zouche married Maurice II 'Magnanimous' 2nd Baron de Berkeley, son of Thomas II 'The Wise' 1st Baron de Berkeley and Joan de Ferrers, in 1289.1,2 Eva la Zouche died on 6 December 1314 at Church of Portbury, Somerset, England.4,5
She Eva la Zouche, d. 5 Dec 1314; m. 1289, Sir Maurice de Berkeley, b. Apr1281, d. 31 May 1326, Lord Berkeley of Berkeley Castle. [Magna ChartaSureties]
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He [Maurice de Berkeley] m. 1stly 1289 (neither party being aged over 8),Eve, sister of William la Zouche (Lord Zouche of Haryngworth), anddaughter of Eon la Zouche, by Millicent, sister and coheir of George deCauntelo, Lord of Abergavenny, daughter of William de Cauntelo, of Calne,co. Wilts and Aston Cantlow, co. Warwick. She d. 6 Dec 1314, and wasburied in Portbury Church, Somerset. [Complete Peerage II:128-9, XIV:87]
She Eva la Zouche, d. 5 Dec 1314; m. 1289, Sir Maurice de Berkeley, b. Apr1281, d. 31 May 1326, Lord Berkeley of Berkeley Castle. [Magna ChartaSureties]
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He [Maurice de Berkeley] m. 1stly 1289 (neither party being aged over 8),Eve, sister of William la Zouche (Lord Zouche of Haryngworth), anddaughter of Eon la Zouche, by Millicent, sister and coheir of George deCauntelo, Lord of Abergavenny, daughter of William de Cauntelo, of Calne,co. Wilts and Aston Cantlow, co. Warwick. She d. 6 Dec 1314, and wasburied in Portbury Church, Somerset. [Complete Peerage II:128-9, XIV:87]
Child of Eva la Zouche and Maurice II 'Magnanimous' 2nd Baron de Berkeley
- Thomas IV 'The Rich' 3rd Baron de Berkeley+ b. b 1296, d. 27 Oct 1361
Citations
- [S239] Unknown author, Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999, 80-5, 82-5, 88-5.
- [S269] G. E Cokayne, Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, II:129.
- [S239] Unknown author, Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999, 74-4.
- [S239] Unknown author, Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999, 80-5.
- [S269] G. E Cokayne, Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, II:129, XIV:87.
Eudo (Eon) la Zouche , of Haryngworth1,2,3
M, b. 1232, d. before 25 June 1279
Eudo (Eon) la Zouche , of Haryngworth was born in 1232 at Ashby de la Zouche, Leicestershire, England. He married Milicent de Cantelou before 13 December 1273 at Abergavenny, Monmouthshire, Wales.3,2 Eudo (Eon) la Zouche , of Haryngworth died before 25 June 1279 at Ashton Cantelou, Warwickshire, England.4,2
He Eudo la Zouche [son of Roger, brother of Alan], of Haryngworth, d. bet.28 Apr and 25 June 1279; m. Milicent de Cantelou. [Magna Charta Sureties]
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Eon la Zouche (not necessarily a 'younger' brother of William, thoughprobably so of Alan); m. by 13 Dec 1273 Millicent (d. by 7 Jan 1298/9),daughter of William de Cauntelo and widow of John de Mohaut, and d. 28April-25 June 1279. [Burke's Peerage, p. 3102]
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Eudo, from whom the Zouches, Barons Zouche, of Haryngworth derive. [SirBernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages, Burke'sPeerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 598, Zouche, Baron Zouche, of Ashby, co.Leicester]
He Eudo la Zouche [son of Roger, brother of Alan], of Haryngworth, d. bet.28 Apr and 25 June 1279; m. Milicent de Cantelou. [Magna Charta Sureties]
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Eon la Zouche (not necessarily a 'younger' brother of William, thoughprobably so of Alan); m. by 13 Dec 1273 Millicent (d. by 7 Jan 1298/9),daughter of William de Cauntelo and widow of John de Mohaut, and d. 28April-25 June 1279. [Burke's Peerage, p. 3102]
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Eudo, from whom the Zouches, Barons Zouche, of Haryngworth derive. [SirBernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages, Burke'sPeerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 598, Zouche, Baron Zouche, of Ashby, co.Leicester]
Child of Eudo (Eon) la Zouche , of Haryngworth and Milicent de Cantelou
- Eva la Zouche+ b. b 25 Mar 1280, d. 6 Dec 1314
Citations
- [S239] Unknown author, Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999, 74-4, 146-4, 60-5, 80-4.
- [S233] Charles Mosley Editor-in-Chief, Burke's Peerage & Baronetage, 106th Edition.
- [S234] Frederick Lewis Weis additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition.
- [S239] Unknown author, Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999, 74-4.
Milicent de Cantelou1,2,3
F, b. 1250, d. BEF 7 JAN 1298/99
Milicent de Cantelou died BEF 7 JAN 1298/99 at Harringworth, Northamptonshire, England.4,2 She married John de Mohaut , of Bingley.5,2 Milicent de Cantelou was born in 1250 at Calne, Wiltshire, England. She married Eudo (Eon) la Zouche , of Haryngworth before 13 December 1273 at Abergavenny, Monmouthshire, Wales.5,2
Milicent de Cantelou Millicent (d. by 7 Jan 1298/9), daughter of William de Cauntelo and widowof John de Mohaut; m. Eon la Zouche. [Burke's Peerage, p. 3102]
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The following from VCH-Wiltshire:
Before the Conquest the land of QUEMERFORD was almost certainly part ofthe king's estate called Calne, and as part of the rump of that estate,later called Calne manor, most of it was probably granted to Fulk deCauntelo c. 1199. The rest evidently lay in holdings which were grantedaway piecemeal from the king's estate or from Calne manor.
Presumably as part of what was probably granted to Fulk de Cauntelo c.1199 the lord of Calne manor held 4 yardlands in Quemerford which in 1274was described as bureland, perhaps suggesting that it was demesne landconverted to customary tenure; it was later called BOWERS manor. Much ofQuemerford's land, including Bowers manor, descended with Calne andCalstone manors and from 1763 with Bowood House. From the 13th century orearlier land in Quemerford was part of Calstone Wylye manor. When, in1585, the lord of Calne manor bought Calstone Wylye manor it waspresumably added to his other land in Quemerford. In 1728 Calne andCalstone manor included c. 450 a. and pasture rights in Quemerford; theland lay mainly in six farms, of which the largest were Sands, LowerSands, Quemerford, and Quemerford Common. In 1776 William, earl ofShelburne, the owner of Bowood House, bought a farm of 58 a. from HenryVince, and in 1790, then marquess of Lansdowne, he bought a farm probablyof 64 a. from Daniel Bull; the farmstead of the farm bought in 1790 wasin 1728 that on the site of Wagon and Horses Cottages. In 1919 Henry,marquess of Lansdowne, sold Sands farm, 267 a. including Calne (formerlyCalstone) Low and land in Abberd mead, and Lower Sands farm, 78 a., to W.A. Higgs. Apparently in the same year Sands farm was bought by H. K.Henly, who in 1942 sold 37 a. to the state for R.A.F. Compton Bassett andin 1947 bought Lower Sands farm. In the early 1950s Henly sold bothfarms, except a small part of Lower Sands farm, to E. H. Bradley & SonsLtd., and in 2001 the land belonged to Aggregate Industries Ltd. In 1919Lord Lansdowne sold Quemerford farm, 117 a., to W. A. Higgs, who sold itin 1923 to Thomas Davis (d. 1962). In 1979 Davis's sons and trustees H.W. and N. G. Davis sold the farm, then 107 a., to Mr. Anthony Whinney,the owner in 1996. In 1919 Lord Lansdowne sold Quemerford Common farm,131 a., to M. L. Bodman. It passed to J. F. Bodman (d. 1969) and, 58 a.,was offered for sale in that year.
In 1198 and until 1226 or later Maurice of Calne held a small estate atQuemerford by serjeanty. In 1231, then assessed at ½ yardland, it wassettled by John son of Ellis on John son of Robert for the grantee'slife; in 1255 it was held by John son of Ellis, in 1275 it was held forservice as bailiff of Calne hundred by that John's son Thomas of Swindon,and in 1294 it passed on Thomas's death to his brother John Ellis. By1289 Millicent de Montalt, the lord of Calne and Calstone manors and ofCalne hundred, had successfully claimed that the land was held of her. Ithas not been traced further than 1294.
[From: 'Calne: Manors and other estates', A History of the County ofWiltshire: Volume 17: Calne (2002), pp. 64-79. URL:http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.asp?compid=18038&strquery=galiena. Date accessed: 26 August 2005] Milicent de Cantelou was also known as Millicent de Cauntelo.
Milicent de Cantelou Millicent (d. by 7 Jan 1298/9), daughter of William de Cauntelo and widowof John de Mohaut; m. Eon la Zouche. [Burke's Peerage, p. 3102]
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The following from VCH-Wiltshire:
Before the Conquest the land of QUEMERFORD was almost certainly part ofthe king's estate called Calne, and as part of the rump of that estate,later called Calne manor, most of it was probably granted to Fulk deCauntelo c. 1199. The rest evidently lay in holdings which were grantedaway piecemeal from the king's estate or from Calne manor.
Presumably as part of what was probably granted to Fulk de Cauntelo c.1199 the lord of Calne manor held 4 yardlands in Quemerford which in 1274was described as bureland, perhaps suggesting that it was demesne landconverted to customary tenure; it was later called BOWERS manor. Much ofQuemerford's land, including Bowers manor, descended with Calne andCalstone manors and from 1763 with Bowood House. From the 13th century orearlier land in Quemerford was part of Calstone Wylye manor. When, in1585, the lord of Calne manor bought Calstone Wylye manor it waspresumably added to his other land in Quemerford. In 1728 Calne andCalstone manor included c. 450 a. and pasture rights in Quemerford; theland lay mainly in six farms, of which the largest were Sands, LowerSands, Quemerford, and Quemerford Common. In 1776 William, earl ofShelburne, the owner of Bowood House, bought a farm of 58 a. from HenryVince, and in 1790, then marquess of Lansdowne, he bought a farm probablyof 64 a. from Daniel Bull; the farmstead of the farm bought in 1790 wasin 1728 that on the site of Wagon and Horses Cottages. In 1919 Henry,marquess of Lansdowne, sold Sands farm, 267 a. including Calne (formerlyCalstone) Low and land in Abberd mead, and Lower Sands farm, 78 a., to W.A. Higgs. Apparently in the same year Sands farm was bought by H. K.Henly, who in 1942 sold 37 a. to the state for R.A.F. Compton Bassett andin 1947 bought Lower Sands farm. In the early 1950s Henly sold bothfarms, except a small part of Lower Sands farm, to E. H. Bradley & SonsLtd., and in 2001 the land belonged to Aggregate Industries Ltd. In 1919Lord Lansdowne sold Quemerford farm, 117 a., to W. A. Higgs, who sold itin 1923 to Thomas Davis (d. 1962). In 1979 Davis's sons and trustees H.W. and N. G. Davis sold the farm, then 107 a., to Mr. Anthony Whinney,the owner in 1996. In 1919 Lord Lansdowne sold Quemerford Common farm,131 a., to M. L. Bodman. It passed to J. F. Bodman (d. 1969) and, 58 a.,was offered for sale in that year.
In 1198 and until 1226 or later Maurice of Calne held a small estate atQuemerford by serjeanty. In 1231, then assessed at ½ yardland, it wassettled by John son of Ellis on John son of Robert for the grantee'slife; in 1255 it was held by John son of Ellis, in 1275 it was held forservice as bailiff of Calne hundred by that John's son Thomas of Swindon,and in 1294 it passed on Thomas's death to his brother John Ellis. By1289 Millicent de Montalt, the lord of Calne and Calstone manors and ofCalne hundred, had successfully claimed that the land was held of her. Ithas not been traced further than 1294.
[From: 'Calne: Manors and other estates', A History of the County ofWiltshire: Volume 17: Calne (2002), pp. 64-79. URL:http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.asp?compid=18038&strquery=galiena. Date accessed: 26 August 2005] Milicent de Cantelou was also known as Millicent de Cauntelo.
Child of Milicent de Cantelou and Eudo (Eon) la Zouche , of Haryngworth
- Eva la Zouche+ b. b 25 Mar 1280, d. 6 Dec 1314
Citations
- [S239] Unknown author, Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999, 74-4, 146-4, 60-5, 80-4.
- [S233] Charles Mosley Editor-in-Chief, Burke's Peerage & Baronetage, 106th Edition.
- [S244] Unknown author, Victoria County History of Wiltshire, Volume 17, 2002, online at www.british-history.ac.uk, Calne Manors - Quemerford.
- [S239] Unknown author, Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999, 146-4.
- [S234] Frederick Lewis Weis additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition.
Ellen (Helen) (Elena) de Quincy1,2,3,4
F, b. circa 1225, d. before 20 August 1296
Ellen (Helen) (Elena) de Quincy was born circa 1225 at Winchester, Hampshire, England. She married an unknown person before 1242 at Winchester, Hampshire, England.5 She died before 20 August 1296.5
She Elena de Quincy, d. shortly bef. 20 Aug 1296; m. bef. 1242 Sir Alan laZouche (son of Roger), d. 12 Aug 1270, Lord Zouche of Ashby la Zouche,co. Leicester, Constable of the Tower of London, and a descendant of theCounts of Porhoet in Brittany. [Magna Charta Sureties]
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Ellen/Helen (d. by 20 Aug 1296), 3rd daughter of 2nd Earl of Winchesterof the Feb 1206/7 creation. [Burke's Peerage]
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Helen, or Ellen, 3rd daughter and coheir of Roger (DE QUENCY), 2nd EARLOF WINCHESTER, CONSTABLE OF SCOTLAND, by his 1st wife, Helen, 2nd but 1stsurviving daughter and coheir of Alan, LORD OF GALLOWAY, CONSTABLE OFSCOTLAND. In the course of a lawsuit with John (de Warenne), Earl ofSurrey, he and his son Roger were violently assaulted by the Earl beforethe Justices in Westminster Hall on the Octave of St. John (1 July) 1270,whereby he received wounds of which he died, 10 August following. Hiswidow, who received Brackley in her pourparty and was patron of theHospital there, was summoned to send her service to Wales in 1277 and1282. She died shortly before 20 August 1296.
She Elena de Quincy, d. shortly bef. 20 Aug 1296; m. bef. 1242 Sir Alan laZouche (son of Roger), d. 12 Aug 1270, Lord Zouche of Ashby la Zouche,co. Leicester, Constable of the Tower of London, and a descendant of theCounts of Porhoet in Brittany. [Magna Charta Sureties]
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Ellen/Helen (d. by 20 Aug 1296), 3rd daughter of 2nd Earl of Winchesterof the Feb 1206/7 creation. [Burke's Peerage]
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Helen, or Ellen, 3rd daughter and coheir of Roger (DE QUENCY), 2nd EARLOF WINCHESTER, CONSTABLE OF SCOTLAND, by his 1st wife, Helen, 2nd but 1stsurviving daughter and coheir of Alan, LORD OF GALLOWAY, CONSTABLE OFSCOTLAND. In the course of a lawsuit with John (de Warenne), Earl ofSurrey, he and his son Roger were violently assaulted by the Earl beforethe Justices in Westminster Hall on the Octave of St. John (1 July) 1270,whereby he received wounds of which he died, 10 August following. Hiswidow, who received Brackley in her pourparty and was patron of theHospital there, was summoned to send her service to Wales in 1277 and1282. She died shortly before 20 August 1296.
Children of Ellen (Helen) (Elena) de Quincy and Alan la Zouche Lord of Ashby
- Roger la Zouche Lord of Ashby+ b. bt 1240 - 1242, d. 15 Oct 1285
- Margery (Mary) la ZOUCHE+ b. c 1248
Citations
- [S239] Unknown author, Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999, 74-3, 90-3.
- [S234] Frederick Lewis Weis additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition.
- [S233] Charles Mosley Editor-in-Chief, Burke's Peerage & Baronetage, 106th Edition.
- [S269] G. E Cokayne, Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, XII/2:934.
- [S239] Unknown author, Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999, 74-3.