Isolde (Iseult) de Mortimer1,2,3
F, b. circa 1265, d. after 1336
Isolde (Iseult) de Mortimer married Walter de Balun , of Much Marcle & Eastington.2,3 Isolde (Iseult) de Mortimer was born circa 1265 at Wigmore, Herefordshire, England.4 She was the daughter of Hugh de Mortimer , of Chelmarsh and Agatha de Ferrers. Isolde (Iseult) de Mortimer was born before 1266 at Chelmarsh, Bridgnorth, Shropshire, England.5 She married Hugh 1st Baron de Audley , of Stratton, Sir, son of James de Audley , of Heleigh, Sheriff of Salop and Ela de Longespee, circa 1288 at of, Wigmore, Herefordshire, England.6 Isolde (Iseult) de Mortimer married an unknown person after 1303.6 She died after 1336 at Upper Arley, Kidderminster, Worcestershire, England.1
She Douglas Richardson in the following post to SGM, 25 Jan 2002, makes anargument that Isolde/Iseult was a daughter of Hugh de Mortimer & Agathade Ferrers, instead of Edmund de Mortimer by his 1st wife (as CP & manyother sources have it). Although her parents are still uncertain (nodirect evidence), the case of her not being a daughter of Edmund (or atleast a legitimate daughter) is strengthened by the fact that, accordingto a post by Paul Reed (see notes under Edmund), Edmund was a cleric inthe church until Nov 1282, and is not likely to be father of Isolde (who was certainly born before then).
As pointed out by J.W. Flank, Douglas Richardson has since changed hisopinion, thinking that Iseult is a sister of Edmund, but I don't thinkthat Iseult was born as early as Douglas is now thinking that she was born. The relationship between Edmund & Iseult is based on the fact that Edmund gave rights to Upper Arley to Iseult for the remainder of herlife, but Edmund was renting Much Marcle from Iseult's 1st husband WalterBalun, and, when Walter died, Iseult claimed an interest in Much Marcle(probably dowry rights), so the transference of Upper Marcle to Iseultcould have been a 'business deal' between Edmund & Iseult to replace herdowry rights. I am keeping the ancestry as proposed below until moreinformation surfaces:
From: Douglas Richardson (royalancestry AT msn.com)
Subject: Solution to the identity of Iseult. wife of Hugh de Audley
Newsgroups: soc.genealogy.medieval
Date: 2002-01-25 01:32:48 PST
Dear Newsgroup ~
Last week I expressed my doubts that Iseult, wife of Hugh de Audley, of Stratton (in Stratton Audley), co. Oxford, was the daughter of Edmund deMortimer, Baron of Wigmore, co. Hereford. I made that assessment based on a careful review of the evidence, which, in my opinion, simply did not support such a filiation.
Upon further review of the evidence offline with Chris Phillips, we established that the sole source for Iseult's parentage appears to be one of the unpublished 'Additional Manuscripts' kept by the British Library. Chris has since examined the manuscript in question and determined that either the manuscript or folio number cited by modern sources is in error. As such, it doesn't seem possible any time soon for us to learn the nature of the information supposedly recorded in the Additional Manuscripts material. Regardless, while that avenue has reached a deadend, it appears another door has opened which appears to provide the correct solution to the problem.
Tonight while I was going through the biography of Sir James de Audley in George Frederick Beltz' interesting book, Memorials of the Most Noble Order of the Garter (1841), I discovered a statement pertaining to Sir James de Audley's family, which almost certainly relates to relatives of his grandmother, Iseult de Audley. Beltz states that Sir James de Audley was severely wounded in the Battle of Poitiers in 1356. According to Beltz, Froissart (a contemporary historian) relates that 'upon his return to his lodging, our knight [Sir James de Audley] sent for his brother sir Peter de Audeley, sir Bartholomew Burghershe, sir Stephen Cosington, the lord Willoughby, and sir Ralph de Ferrers, who, he says, were of his blood and lineage.'
This list of Audley kinsmen is similar to the list of people Nat Taylorposted last week in the Bohun-Basset consanguinity case, in that thepeople named were probably distantly related to one another, making itsomewhat difficult to pinpoint the exact link tying the people together.Not surprisingly, in a footnote, Beltz adds: '... Sir James' relationshipto the four last-named knights does not appear,' showing that Beltz wasstymied in his attempt to determine the common link between the fiveindividuals.
Reviewing the list of the men called kinsmen by Sir James de Audley, a good deal is known of the ancestry of three of these individuals, namely Sir Bartholomew Burghersh, 4th Lord Burghersh; John de Willoughby, 2ndLord Willoughby of Eresby; and Sir Ralph de Ferrers. Reviewing the ancestry of Sir Bartholomew Burghersh, for example, it is apparent at once that he was great-grandson of Edmund de Mortimer, lst Lord Mortimer,who is the alleged father of Sir James de Audley's grandmother, Iseult. This would surely be strong confirmation that Iseult de Audley definitely had a Mortimer connection.
Reviewing the ancestry of the other two individuals, John de Willoughby and Ralph de Ferrers, however, it shows they possess no such link to the Mortimer family. Rather, they both descend from William de Ferrers, 5thEarl of Derby (died 1254). Ralph de Ferrers was grandson of the 5th Earl, while John de Willoughby was great-grandson of the 5th Earl.
Given the common link between John de Willoughby and Ralph de Ferrers, it is difficult to explain their intended tie to Sir James de Audley, if in fact Sir James' grandmother, Iseult, was the daughter of Edmund deMortimer, lst Lord Mortimer, as alleged in print. Iseult as Edmund's daughter would seemingly have no connection to William de Ferrers, 5thEarl of Derby. However, checking the accounts of the various families, a neat solution has appeared on the horizon. My Mortimer family notes show that Edmund de Mortimer had an uncle, Hugh de Mortimer (died 1273) ofChelmarsh, who married Agatha de Ferrers (died 1306), daughter of William de Ferrers, 5th Earl of Derby. If Iseult de Audley was the child of Hugh and Agatha, it would give her grandson, Sir James de Audley, the needed links to both the Mortimer and Ferrers families. Also, it would solve the obvious chronology problem of Iseult being Edmund de Mortimer'sdaughter.
When anyone has a moment, I'd appreciate comments on this placement ofIseult as a member of the Mortimer family. By placing Iseult as Hugh deMortimer's daughter, she becomes granddaughter rather thangreat-granddaughter of the ever popular lady on the newsgroup, Gladys Dhu. For convenience sake, I've posted below the lengthy list ofcolonial immigrants who descend from Iseult, wife of Hugh de Audley.
In closing, I wish to express my thanks to Chris Phillips for hiscontinued efforts in helping to solve these difficult and longstandingmedieval problems. Friendship and collegiality are the two of the keysto solving the many genealogical mysteries which have long eluded us.
Best always, Douglas Richardson, Salt Lake City, Utah
E-mail: royalancestry AT msn.com.
She Douglas Richardson in the following post to SGM, 25 Jan 2002, makes anargument that Isolde/Iseult was a daughter of Hugh de Mortimer & Agathade Ferrers, instead of Edmund de Mortimer by his 1st wife (as CP & manyother sources have it). Although her parents are still uncertain (nodirect evidence), the case of her not being a daughter of Edmund (or atleast a legitimate daughter) is strengthened by the fact that, accordingto a post by Paul Reed (see notes under Edmund), Edmund was a cleric inthe church until Nov 1282, and is not likely to be father of Isolde (who was certainly born before then).
As pointed out by J.W. Flank, Douglas Richardson has since changed hisopinion, thinking that Iseult is a sister of Edmund, but I don't thinkthat Iseult was born as early as Douglas is now thinking that she was born. The relationship between Edmund & Iseult is based on the fact that Edmund gave rights to Upper Arley to Iseult for the remainder of herlife, but Edmund was renting Much Marcle from Iseult's 1st husband WalterBalun, and, when Walter died, Iseult claimed an interest in Much Marcle(probably dowry rights), so the transference of Upper Marcle to Iseultcould have been a 'business deal' between Edmund & Iseult to replace herdowry rights. I am keeping the ancestry as proposed below until moreinformation surfaces:
From: Douglas Richardson (royalancestry AT msn.com)
Subject: Solution to the identity of Iseult. wife of Hugh de Audley
Newsgroups: soc.genealogy.medieval
Date: 2002-01-25 01:32:48 PST
Dear Newsgroup ~
Last week I expressed my doubts that Iseult, wife of Hugh de Audley, of Stratton (in Stratton Audley), co. Oxford, was the daughter of Edmund deMortimer, Baron of Wigmore, co. Hereford. I made that assessment based on a careful review of the evidence, which, in my opinion, simply did not support such a filiation.
Upon further review of the evidence offline with Chris Phillips, we established that the sole source for Iseult's parentage appears to be one of the unpublished 'Additional Manuscripts' kept by the British Library. Chris has since examined the manuscript in question and determined that either the manuscript or folio number cited by modern sources is in error. As such, it doesn't seem possible any time soon for us to learn the nature of the information supposedly recorded in the Additional Manuscripts material. Regardless, while that avenue has reached a deadend, it appears another door has opened which appears to provide the correct solution to the problem.
Tonight while I was going through the biography of Sir James de Audley in George Frederick Beltz' interesting book, Memorials of the Most Noble Order of the Garter (1841), I discovered a statement pertaining to Sir James de Audley's family, which almost certainly relates to relatives of his grandmother, Iseult de Audley. Beltz states that Sir James de Audley was severely wounded in the Battle of Poitiers in 1356. According to Beltz, Froissart (a contemporary historian) relates that 'upon his return to his lodging, our knight [Sir James de Audley] sent for his brother sir Peter de Audeley, sir Bartholomew Burghershe, sir Stephen Cosington, the lord Willoughby, and sir Ralph de Ferrers, who, he says, were of his blood and lineage.'
This list of Audley kinsmen is similar to the list of people Nat Taylorposted last week in the Bohun-Basset consanguinity case, in that thepeople named were probably distantly related to one another, making itsomewhat difficult to pinpoint the exact link tying the people together.Not surprisingly, in a footnote, Beltz adds: '... Sir James' relationshipto the four last-named knights does not appear,' showing that Beltz wasstymied in his attempt to determine the common link between the fiveindividuals.
Reviewing the list of the men called kinsmen by Sir James de Audley, a good deal is known of the ancestry of three of these individuals, namely Sir Bartholomew Burghersh, 4th Lord Burghersh; John de Willoughby, 2ndLord Willoughby of Eresby; and Sir Ralph de Ferrers. Reviewing the ancestry of Sir Bartholomew Burghersh, for example, it is apparent at once that he was great-grandson of Edmund de Mortimer, lst Lord Mortimer,who is the alleged father of Sir James de Audley's grandmother, Iseult. This would surely be strong confirmation that Iseult de Audley definitely had a Mortimer connection.
Reviewing the ancestry of the other two individuals, John de Willoughby and Ralph de Ferrers, however, it shows they possess no such link to the Mortimer family. Rather, they both descend from William de Ferrers, 5thEarl of Derby (died 1254). Ralph de Ferrers was grandson of the 5th Earl, while John de Willoughby was great-grandson of the 5th Earl.
Given the common link between John de Willoughby and Ralph de Ferrers, it is difficult to explain their intended tie to Sir James de Audley, if in fact Sir James' grandmother, Iseult, was the daughter of Edmund deMortimer, lst Lord Mortimer, as alleged in print. Iseult as Edmund's daughter would seemingly have no connection to William de Ferrers, 5thEarl of Derby. However, checking the accounts of the various families, a neat solution has appeared on the horizon. My Mortimer family notes show that Edmund de Mortimer had an uncle, Hugh de Mortimer (died 1273) ofChelmarsh, who married Agatha de Ferrers (died 1306), daughter of William de Ferrers, 5th Earl of Derby. If Iseult de Audley was the child of Hugh and Agatha, it would give her grandson, Sir James de Audley, the needed links to both the Mortimer and Ferrers families. Also, it would solve the obvious chronology problem of Iseult being Edmund de Mortimer'sdaughter.
When anyone has a moment, I'd appreciate comments on this placement ofIseult as a member of the Mortimer family. By placing Iseult as Hugh deMortimer's daughter, she becomes granddaughter rather thangreat-granddaughter of the ever popular lady on the newsgroup, Gladys Dhu. For convenience sake, I've posted below the lengthy list ofcolonial immigrants who descend from Iseult, wife of Hugh de Audley.
In closing, I wish to express my thanks to Chris Phillips for hiscontinued efforts in helping to solve these difficult and longstandingmedieval problems. Friendship and collegiality are the two of the keysto solving the many genealogical mysteries which have long eluded us.
Best always, Douglas Richardson, Salt Lake City, Utah
E-mail: royalancestry AT msn.com.
Children of Isolde (Iseult) de Mortimer and Hugh 1st Baron de Audley , of Stratton, Sir
- Hugh Baron de Audley , 1st Earl of Gloucester+ b. c 1290, d. 10 Nov 1347
- Baroness Alice de Audley+ b. c 1300, d. bt 11 Jan 1372 - 1373
Citations
- [S239] Unknown author, Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999, 150-5.
- [S269] G. E Cokayne, Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, VI:190.
- [S269] G. E Cokayne, Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, IX:283 note (m), XIV:488.
- [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.
- [S235] Newsgroup: soc.genealogy.medieval, at groups - google.com, online google.com, Douglas Richardson, 22 Oct 2002.
- [S232] Unknown author, 6 zip files containing Monarchs.ged downloaded end 1999 by Linda Neely.
Eleanor FitzAlan1,2
F, b. circa 1275, d. between July 1328 and August 1328
Eleanor FitzAlan was buried at Beverley, East Riding Yorkshire, England. She was born circa 1275 at Arundel, Sussex, England.3 She was the daughter of John III FitzAlan and Isabella de Mortimer. Eleanor FitzAlan was born circa 1285 at Arundel, Sussex, England. She married an unknown person before June 1294.2 She died between July 1328 and August 1328.1,2
She Name Suffix: [Baroness Percy]
Please send Addition of data or corrections to<jackeo1@@hotmail.com>SOURCE: Edmundson's Baronetage 3:270
TITLE: Baroness Percy
This information is assumed correct, but may contain erroneous links.Please don't assume it to be the absolute truth. I've tried to doublecheck most of the work to assure myself of its accuracy...but you cannever be 100% sure. Thank you, and
REFN: 9HS5-46@@S469@@@@S759@@@@S759@@@@S759@@. She Eleanor (died July or Aug 1328), sister of Richard de Arundel. [Burke'sPeerage]
She Name Suffix:
Please send Addition of data or corrections to<jackeo1@@hotmail.com>SOURCE: Edmundson's Baronetage 3:270
TITLE: Baroness Percy
This information is assumed correct, but may contain erroneous links.Please don't assume it to be the absolute truth. I've tried to doublecheck most of the work to assure myself of its accuracy...but you cannever be 100% sure. Thank you, and
REFN: 9HS5-46@@S469@@@@S759@@@@S759@@@@S759@@. She Eleanor (died July or Aug 1328), sister of Richard de Arundel. [Burke'sPeerage]
Child of Eleanor FitzAlan and Henry 1st Baron de Percy , of Alnwick, Sir
- Henry 2nd Baron de Percy KG, MP,+ b. 6 FEB 1299/00, d. bt 26 Feb 1351 - 1352
Citations
- [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.
- [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.
Maud de Clare1,2,3
F, b. circa 1285, d. between 1 February 1324 and 1325
Maud de Clare was born circa 1285 at Bunratty Castle, Thomond, Clare, Ireland. She was the daughter of Thomas de Clare , Lord of Thomond, Gov London and Juliane FitzMaurice. Maud de Clare married Robert I 1st Baron de Clifford , Sir, son of Roger III de Clifford , Justice of Forests and Isabel de Vipont, on 13 November 1295 at Clifford Castle, Hay, Herefordshire, England.1 Maud de Clare married Robert 2nd Baron de Welles , Sir before 16 December 1315.3 Maud de Clare was buried in 1324. She died between 1 February 1324 and 1325.4
She Maud (married 2nd by 16 Dec 1315 2nd Lord (Baron) Welles of the 1299creation and died between 4 March 1326/7 and 24 March 1327), daughter ofThomas de Clare, Lord of Thomond in Connaught, 2nd son of 5th Earl ofHertford and 2nd Earl of Gloucester. [Burke's Peerage]
------------------------------
11 Nov 1315 Abducted & Forcibly Remarried by Robert de Welles.
She Maud (married 2nd by 16 Dec 1315 2nd Lord (Baron) Welles of the 1299creation and died between 4 March 1326/7 and 24 March 1327), daughter ofThomas de Clare, Lord of Thomond in Connaught, 2nd son of 5th Earl ofHertford and 2nd Earl of Gloucester. [Burke's Peerage]
------------------------------
11 Nov 1315 Abducted & Forcibly Remarried by Robert de Welles.
Child of Maud de Clare and Robert I 1st Baron de Clifford , Sir
- Idoine de Clifford , Lady Alnwick+ b. 1303, d. 24 Aug 1365
Citations
- [S239] Unknown author, Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999, 8-6, 144-5.
- [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.
- [S239] Unknown author, Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999, 8-6.
Eupheme* FitzRoger
F, b. circa 1267, d. 1329
Eupheme* FitzRoger was buried at Staindrop, Durham, England.1 She was born circa 1267 at Clavering, Saffron Walden, Essex, England. She was the daughter of Robert FitzRoger , 1st Baron Clavering, Sir and Margery (Mary) la ZOUCHE. Eupheme* FitzRoger married Randolf* De Neville, son of Robert de Neville , Sir and Mary FitzRandolph , Heiress of Middleham, circa 1282 at of, Warkworth, Northumberland, England.2 Eupheme* FitzRoger died in 1329 at Raby Castle, Durham, England.
She Euphemia de Clavering; m. as his 1st wife, Randolph de Neville, b. 18 Oct1262, d. shortly after 18 Apr 1331, 1st Lord Neville of Raby. [MagnaCharta Sureties] Eupheme* FitzRoger was also known as Eupheme* Neville. She Name Suffix: [Baroness Nevill
Line 1648 from GEDCOM File not recognizable or too long:
TITL [BARONESS NEVILLE]/
Please send Addition of data or corrections to<jackeo1@@hotmail.com>!TITLE: Baroness Neville
REFN: N2F7-2G@@S469@@@@S759@@@@S759@@@@S759@@. Eupheme* FitzRoger was also known as Euphemia de Clavering.3,4
She Euphemia de Clavering; m. as his 1st wife, Randolph de Neville, b. 18 Oct1262, d. shortly after 18 Apr 1331, 1st Lord Neville of Raby. [MagnaCharta Sureties] Eupheme* FitzRoger was also known as Eupheme* Neville. She Name Suffix:
Line 1648 from GEDCOM File not recognizable or too long:
TITL [BARONESS NEVILLE]/
Please send Addition of data or corrections to<jackeo1@@hotmail.com>!TITLE: Baroness Neville
REFN: N2F7-2G@@S469@@@@S759@@@@S759@@@@S759@@. Eupheme* FitzRoger was also known as Euphemia de Clavering.3,4
Child of Eupheme* FitzRoger and Randolf* De Neville
- Ralph Neville 2nd Baron Neville Of Raby+ b. c 1291, d. 5 Aug 1367
Citations
- [S238] Unknown author, aol-kings.zip.
- [S232] Unknown author, 6 zip files containing Monarchs.ged downloaded end 1999 by Linda Neely.
- [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.
Roger de Clifford
M, b. 1243, d. 6 November 1282
Roger de Clifford was buried at Shap Abbey, Shap, Westmorland, England.1 He was born in 1243 at Clifford Castle, Hertfordshire, England.2 He married Isabel de Vipont, daughter of Robert de Vipont , Lord of Appleby and Isabel FitzJohn, in 1269 at Clifford Castle, Hereford, England.1 Roger de Clifford died on 6 November 1282 at Menai Straits, Wales.2
He Name Suffix: [Baron Clifford]
Please send Addition of data or corrections to<jackeo1@@hotmail.com>Custom Field:<_FA#> Judge & Soldier
Custom Field:<_FA#> Poisoned by WifeTITLE: Baron of CliffordThe Houseof Clifford, chapter 11
This information is assumed correct, but may contain erroneous links.Please don't assume it to be the absolute truth. I've tried to doublecheck most of the work to assure myself of its accuracy...but you cannever be 100% sure. Thank you, and
REFN: 91SH-L1@@S469@@@@S759@@@@S759@@@@S759@@.
He Name Suffix:
Please send Addition of data or corrections to<jackeo1@@hotmail.com>Custom Field:<_FA#> Judge & Soldier
Custom Field:<_FA#> Poisoned by WifeTITLE: Baron of CliffordThe Houseof Clifford, chapter 11
This information is assumed correct, but may contain erroneous links.Please don't assume it to be the absolute truth. I've tried to doublecheck most of the work to assure myself of its accuracy...but you cannever be 100% sure. Thank you, and
REFN: 91SH-L1@@S469@@@@S759@@@@S759@@@@S759@@.
Citations
- [S232] Unknown author, 6 zip files containing Monarchs.ged downloaded end 1999 by Linda Neely.
- [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.
Anastasia de Percy1,2
F, b. circa 1216, d. before 28 April 1272
Anastasia de Percy was born circa 1216 at Alnwick Castle, Alnwick, Northumberland, England.3 She was the daughter of William de Percy , Lord of Topcliffe, Sir and Joan de Briwere. Anastasia de Percy was born in 1220 at Topcliffe, Thirsk, North Riding Yorkshire, England. She married Ralph FitzRandolph , Lord of Middleham circa 1243.4 Anastasia de Percy died before 28 April 1272.5
She Anastasia, daughter of William DE PERCY. [Complete Peerage]
She Anastasia, daughter of William DE PERCY. [Complete Peerage]
Child of Anastasia de Percy and Ralph FitzRandolph , Lord of Middleham
- 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.
- [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.
- [S232] Unknown author, 6 zip files containing Monarchs.ged downloaded end 1999 by Linda Neely.
- [S243] Unknown author, Magna Carta Ancestry, by Douglas Richardson, 2005, Genealogical Publishing Co., 616.
Eleanor (Ellen, Elena) de Baliol (Balliol)
F, b. circa 1200, d. November 1281
Eleanor (Ellen, Elena) de Baliol (Balliol) was born circa 1200 at Alnwick, Northumberland, England.1 She married William de Percy , Lord of Topcliffe, Sir in 1226 at Dalton Percy, Durham, England.1 Eleanor (Ellen, Elena) de Baliol (Balliol) died in November 1281.1
She NAME Eleanor (Ellen, Elena) De /BALIOL (BALLIOL)/
REFN: 924X-98@@S759@@@@S759@@@@S759@@. Eleanor (Ellen, Elena) de Baliol (Balliol) was also known as Eleanor (Ellen, Elena) de De Percy.
She NAME Eleanor (Ellen, Elena) De /BALIOL (BALLIOL)/
REFN: 924X-98@@S759@@@@S759@@@@S759@@. Eleanor (Ellen, Elena) de Baliol (Balliol) was also known as Eleanor (Ellen, Elena) de De Percy.
Citations
- [S232] Unknown author, 6 zip files containing Monarchs.ged downloaded end 1999 by Linda Neely.
John II FitzAlan
M, b. 1223, d. 1267
John II FitzAlan was born in 1223.1 He married Maud (Matilda) de Botiller (Verdon circa 1247.2 John II FitzAlan died in 1267.1 He was buried before 10 November 1267.2
He was Lord Of Oswestry Clun And Arundel.1 He Name Suffix: [Earl Of Arundel 5]
Line 3367 from GEDCOM File not recognizable or too long:
TITL [EARL OF ARUNDEL]/
Please send Addition of dataor corrections to<jackeo1@@hotmail.com>Custom Field:<_FA#> 5th EARL deARUNDELTITLE: Earl of Arundel [Marvel.FTW]
5th Earl of Arundel
REFN: 8JDT-WP@@S759@@@@S759@@@@S759@@
Custom Field:<_FA#> which mom29 May 2003OPEN.
He was Lord Of Oswestry Clun And Arundel.1 He Name Suffix:
Line 3367 from GEDCOM File not recognizable or too long:
TITL [EARL OF ARUNDEL]/
Please send Addition of dataor corrections to<jackeo1@@hotmail.com>Custom Field:<_FA#> 5th EARL deARUNDELTITLE: Earl of Arundel [Marvel.FTW]
5th Earl of Arundel
REFN: 8JDT-WP@@S759@@@@S759@@@@S759@@
Custom Field:<_FA#> which mom29 May 2003OPEN.
Child of John II FitzAlan and Maud (Matilda) de Botiller (Verdon
- John III FitzAlan+ b. 14 Sep 1246, d. bt 18 Mar 1271 - 1272
Maud (Matilda) de Botiller (Verdon
F, b. circa 1227, d. 27 November 1283
Maud (Matilda) de Botiller (Verdon was born circa 1227 at Lincoln, Lincolnshire, England.1 She married John II FitzAlan circa 1247.1 Maud (Matilda) de Botiller (Verdon married an unknown person circa 1269 at of, Wicklow, Ireland. She was buried in 1283. She died on 27 November 1283.2,3
She Name Suffix: [Countess Of Aru
Line 3382 from GEDCOM File not recognizable or too long:
NAME Maud (Matilda) De /BOTILLER (VERDON)/
Line 3383 fromGEDCOM File not recognizable or too long:
TITL [COUNTESS OF ARUNDEL]/
Please send Addition of data or corrections to<jackeo1@@hotmail.com>@@NI2310TITLE: Countess of Arundel
REFN: 91SK-7D@@S759@@@@S759@@@@S759@@.
She Name Suffix:
Line 3382 from GEDCOM File not recognizable or too long:
NAME Maud (Matilda) De /BOTILLER (VERDON)/
Line 3383 fromGEDCOM File not recognizable or too long:
TITL [COUNTESS OF ARUNDEL]/
Please send Addition of data or corrections to<jackeo1@@hotmail.com>@@NI2310TITLE: Countess of Arundel
REFN: 91SK-7D@@S759@@@@S759@@@@S759@@.
Child of Maud (Matilda) de Botiller (Verdon and John II FitzAlan
- John III FitzAlan+ b. 14 Sep 1246, d. bt 18 Mar 1271 - 1272
Citations
- [S232] Unknown author, 6 zip files containing Monarchs.ged downloaded end 1999 by Linda Neely.
- [S249] Carolyn & Randy Winch, Home Page of Roger, Carolyn & Randy Winchhtt://edge.net/~gumby/index.htmlfoundend of 1997 by Linda Joyce Neely.
- [S263] Jr < Paul E Whittier and Pj4241@@aol.com>, GEDCOM '9000 Names-New England & Europe' downloaded end OCT 1999 byLinda Joyce Neely.
Joan de Briwere1
F, b. 1190, d. before 12 June 1233
Joan de Briwere was born in 1190 at Stoke, Devonshire, England. She married William de Percy , Lord of Topcliffe, Sir circa 1215.2 Joan de Briwere died before 12 June 1233 at Hospital, Sandown, Surrey, England.
She Joan (died by 12 June 1233), daughter of Sir William Briwere or Brewer,his [William de Percy's] guardian when a minor. [Burke's Peerage]
She Joan (died by 12 June 1233), daughter of Sir William Briwere or Brewer,his [William de Percy's] guardian when a minor. [Burke's Peerage]
Child of Joan de Briwere and William de Percy , Lord of Topcliffe, Sir
- Anastasia de Percy+ b. c 1216, d. b 28 Apr 1272
John de Burgh Earl Of Ulster
M, b. circa 1288, d. 18 June 1313
John de Burgh Earl Of Ulster was born circa 1288 at Ulster, Ireland. He married an unknown person on 30 September 1308 at Waltham Abbey, Essex, England. He married Elizabeth de Clare, daughter of Gilbert de Clare , Earl Gloucester & Hertford and Joan 'of Acre' Plantagenet , Princess of England, on 30 September 1308 at Waltham Abbey, Essex, England. John de Burgh Earl Of Ulster was buried in 1313. He died on 18 June 1313 at Galway. He married an unknown person circa 1354 at of, Ruthin, Denbigh, England.
Child of John de Burgh Earl Of Ulster and Elizabeth de Clare
- William de Burgh the brown Earl, 3rd Earl of Ulster+ b. 17 Sep 1312, d. 6 Jun 1333
Elizabeth de Clare
F, b. 16 September 1294, d. 1360
Elizabeth de Clare was buried at St Mary Aldgate, London, Middlesex, England. She was born on 16 September 1294. She was the daughter of Gilbert de Clare , Earl Gloucester & Hertford and Joan 'of Acre' Plantagenet , Princess of England. Elizabeth de Clare married John de Burgh Earl Of Ulster on 30 September 1308 at Waltham Abbey, Essex, England. Elizabeth de Clare died in 1360.
Child of Elizabeth de Clare and John de Burgh Earl Of Ulster
- William de Burgh the brown Earl, 3rd Earl of Ulster+ b. 17 Sep 1312, d. 6 Jun 1333
Philippe de Montacute
F, b. circa 1332, d. 5 January 1382
Philippe de Montacute married Roger de Mortimer, son of Edmund de Mortimer and Elizabeth de Badlesmere, at England.1 Philippe de Montacute was born circa 1332 at Salisbury, Wiltshire, England.1 She was the daughter of William de Montagu 1st Earl of Salisbury and Katherine De Grandison. Philippe de Montacute was buried in 1382 at Bisham, Berkshire, England.1 She died on 5 January 1382 at England.1
Child of Philippe de Montacute and Roger de Mortimer
- Edmund de Mortimer+ b. bt 1 Feb 1351 - 1352, d. 26 Dec 1381
Citations
- [S253] CarolynCC, GEDCOM imported 6 NOV 1999 by Linda Joyce Neely.
Katherine De Grandison
F, b. circa 1304, d. 23 November 1349
Katherine De Grandison was buried at Bisham, Berkshire, England.1 She was born circa 1304 at Ashford, Hertfordshire, England.1 She was the daughter of William de Grandison and Sybil Tregoz. Katherine De Grandison married William de Montagu 1st Earl of Salisbury, son of William I de Montagu and Elizabeth de Montfort, in 1324 at of Cassington, Oxfordshire, England.1 Katherine De Grandison died on 23 November 1349 at Bisham, Berkshire, England.1
Child of Katherine De Grandison and William de Montagu 1st Earl of Salisbury
- Philippe de Montacute+ b. c 1332, d. 5 Jan 1382
Citations
- [S232] Unknown author, 6 zip files containing Monarchs.ged downloaded end 1999 by Linda Neely.
Joan De Geneville
F, b. between 2 February 1284 and 1285, d. 19 October 1356
Joan De Geneville was born between 2 February 1284 and 1285 at Shropshire, Ludlow, England.1 She married Roger De Mortimer, son of Edmund de Mortimer and Margaret de Fiennes, before 6 October 1306 at England.2 Joan De Geneville was buried in 1356 at England.2 She died on 19 October 1356 at England.1,2
Child of Joan De Geneville and Roger De Mortimer
- Edmund de Mortimer+ b. c 1306, d. 16 Dec 1331
Sybil Tregoz
F, b. 1271, d. 12 October 1334
Sybil Tregoz was born in 1271 at Ewyas, Herefordshire, England.1 She married William de Grandison circa 1285 at of, Donyatt, Somerset, England.1 Sybil Tregoz died on 12 October 1334.1
She GEDCOM provided by Carolyn Proffitt Winch
REFN: 91QH-WC@@S759@@S759@@@@S759@@@@S759@@@@S759@@@@S759@@
REFN: 12106.
She GEDCOM provided by Carolyn Proffitt Winch
REFN: 91QH-WC@@S759@@S759@@@@S759@@@@S759@@@@S759@@@@S759@@
REFN: 12106.
Child of Sybil Tregoz and William de Grandison
- Katherine De Grandison+ b. c 1304, d. 23 Nov 1349
Citations
- [S232] Unknown author, 6 zip files containing Monarchs.ged downloaded end 1999 by Linda Neely.
Sancho IV. El Bravo Alfonsez
M, b. 1258, d. 1295
Sancho IV. El Bravo Alfonsez was buried at Santa Iglesia De, Toledo, Spain.1 He was born in 1258.2 He was the son of Alfonso X , 'El Sabio' the Wise (?) Sancho IV. El Bravo Alfonsez married Maria (Majorra) Alfonsa de Molina & Mesa in July 1281 at Toledo, Spain.3 Sancho IV. El Bravo Alfonsez died in 1295.2,4,5
He was King of Castile and Leon. He Name Suffix: Rey de Castilla
'der Weise'
Eine Garantie für die Richtigkeit und Vollständigkeit der Angaben wirdnicht übernommen. Berichtigungen, Anregungen und Hinweise sindjederzeit willkommen.REIGNED: Spanish king of Castile & Leon (1282-95)
SOURCE: Colombia Encyclopedia (c) 1944The second son of Alfonso X, heusurped the throne from nephew Alfonso de La
Cerda, repelled a Marinid invasion of Andalusia in 1290, and marriedhis
daughter to James II of Aragon to secure support in 1291.
Information provided by Randy Winch <gumby@@cafes.net>
Information provided by Randy Winch <gumby@@cafes.net>FromAncestral File (TM), data as of 5 JAN 1998.From Ancestral File (TM),data as of 5JAN 1998.
Ancestral File Number: 9B5V-64@@S809@@@@S809@@@@S1298@@
REFN: 9B5V-64@@S759@@@@S759@@@@S759@@.
He was King of Castile and Leon. He Name Suffix:
'der Weise'
Eine Garantie für die Richtigkeit und Vollständigkeit der Angaben wirdnicht übernommen. Berichtigungen, Anregungen und Hinweise sindjederzeit willkommen.REIGNED: Spanish king of Castile & Leon (1282-95)
SOURCE: Colombia Encyclopedia (c) 1944The second son of Alfonso X, heusurped the throne from nephew Alfonso de La
Cerda, repelled a Marinid invasion of Andalusia in 1290, and marriedhis
daughter to James II of Aragon to secure support in 1291.
Information provided by Randy Winch <gumby@@cafes.net>
Information provided by Randy Winch <gumby@@cafes.net>FromAncestral File (TM), data as of 5 JAN 1998.From Ancestral File (TM),data as of 5JAN 1998.
Ancestral File Number:
REFN: 9B5V-64@@S759@@@@S759@@@@S759@@.
Children of Sancho IV. El Bravo Alfonsez and Maria (Majorra) Alfonsa de Molina & Mesa
- Fernando IV 'Citatus' Sanchez+ b. 6 Dec 1286, d. 7 Sep 1312
- Beatrix Sancha+ b. 1293, d. 25 Oct 1359
Citations
- [S248] Unknown author, gedcom imported SEP 2002.
- [S247] Dan Anzelmo (Malone) < and SongmanDan@@aol.com>, GEDCOM downloaded end OCT 1999 by Linda Joyce Neely.
- [S282] Dick Larkin, GEDCOM File : LARKIN.ged - research of Dick Larkin of Alexandria, VA.
- [S232] Unknown author, 6 zip files containing Monarchs.ged downloaded end 1999 by Linda Neely.
- [S251] Sheila Stewart < and stewart1@@gosympatico.ca>, gedcom downloaded MAY 2002 by Linda Joyce Neely.
Maud Plantagenet1,2
F, b. circa 1312, d. 5 May 1377
Maud Plantagenet was born in 1298. She was born circa 1312 at Lancaster, Lancashire, England. She was the daughter of Henry Plantagenet 3rd Earl of Lancaster, MP and Maud de Chaworth. Maud Plantagenet married William de Burgh , 3rd Earl of Ulster, son of John de Burgh , of Ulster and Elizabeth de Clare, before 1 May 1327; date of Papal dispensation.1,2 Maud Plantagenet married Ralph de Ufford , Justiciar of Ireland, Sir, son of Robert II 1st Baron de Ufford , Sir and Cecily de Valoines, before 8 August 1343.1,2 Maud Plantagenet died on 5 May 1377 at Campsey Priory, Suffolk, England; (as a nun.)1,2
Maud Plantagenet was also known as Maud de Lancaster. She He [William de Burgh] married (Papal dispensation 1 May 1327) Maud,daughter of Henry, EARL OF LANCASTER AND LEICESTER (grandson of HENRYIII) by his 1st wife, Maud, daughter and heir of Sir Patrick DE CHAWORTH,of Kidwelly, co. Carmarthen, and Kempsford, co. Gloucester. He wasmurdered, 6 June 1333, aged 20, at Le Ford (now Belfast), on his way toCarrickfergus, by John de Logan and some of the Mandevilles. His widowfled immediately with her daughter Elizabeth to England, where shemarried, before 8 August 1343, Sir Ralph DE UFFORD, Justiciar of Ireland(1344-46), who d. 9 April 1346 at Kilmainham (Ireland) and was buried atCampsey Priory, Suffolk. Maud, who became an Augustinian canoness atCampsey in 1347, had licence from the Pope to transfer to the Order ofSt. Clare, 11 April 1364, and was living at Bruisyard Abbey in the sameco., 21 February 1368/9. She died 5 May 1377 and was buried with her 2ndhusband at Campsey. [Complete Peerage XII/2:178-9, (transcribed by DaveUtzinger)]
Maud Plantagenet was also known as Maud de Lancaster. She He [William de Burgh] married (Papal dispensation 1 May 1327) Maud,daughter of Henry, EARL OF LANCASTER AND LEICESTER (grandson of HENRYIII) by his 1st wife, Maud, daughter and heir of Sir Patrick DE CHAWORTH,of Kidwelly, co. Carmarthen, and Kempsford, co. Gloucester. He wasmurdered, 6 June 1333, aged 20, at Le Ford (now Belfast), on his way toCarrickfergus, by John de Logan and some of the Mandevilles. His widowfled immediately with her daughter Elizabeth to England, where shemarried, before 8 August 1343, Sir Ralph DE UFFORD, Justiciar of Ireland(1344-46), who d. 9 April 1346 at Kilmainham (Ireland) and was buried atCampsey Priory, Suffolk. Maud, who became an Augustinian canoness atCampsey in 1347, had licence from the Pope to transfer to the Order ofSt. Clare, 11 April 1364, and was living at Bruisyard Abbey in the sameco., 21 February 1368/9. She died 5 May 1377 and was buried with her 2ndhusband at Campsey. [Complete Peerage XII/2:178-9, (transcribed by DaveUtzinger)]
Child of Maud Plantagenet and William de Burgh the brown Earl, 3rd Earl of Ulster
- Lady Elizabeth de Burgh Countess of Ulster+ b. 6 Jul 1332, d. Dec 1363
Maria (Majorra) Alfonsa de Molina & Mesa
F, b. 1246, d. 1 June 1322
Maria (Majorra) Alfonsa de Molina & Mesa was buried at Convento De Las, Valladolid, Valladolid, Spain.1 She was born in 1246 at Of, Molina, Molina, Spain.2,3,4 She married Sancho IV. El Bravo Alfonsez, son of Alfonso X , 'El Sabio' the Wise (?), in July 1281 at Toledo, Spain.5 Maria (Majorra) Alfonsa de Molina & Mesa died on 1 June 1322.2,3,4
She was Queen consort. She From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 5 JAN 1998.
Eine Garantie für die Richtigkeit und Vollständigkeit der Angaben wirdnicht übernommen. Berichtigungen, Anregungen und Hinweise sindjederzeit willkommen.GEDCOM provided by Carolyn Proffitt Winch
Information provided by Randy Winch <gumby@@cafes.net>
Information provided by Randy Winch <gumby@@cafes.net>FromAncestral File (TM), data as of 5 JAN 1998.
Ancestral File Number: 9BBL-CD@@S809@@@@S1298@@
REFN: 9BBL-CD@@S759@@@@S759@@@@S759@@.
She was Queen consort. She From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 5 JAN 1998.
Eine Garantie für die Richtigkeit und Vollständigkeit der Angaben wirdnicht übernommen. Berichtigungen, Anregungen und Hinweise sindjederzeit willkommen.GEDCOM provided by Carolyn Proffitt Winch
Information provided by Randy Winch <gumby@@cafes.net>
Information provided by Randy Winch <gumby@@cafes.net>FromAncestral File (TM), data as of 5 JAN 1998.
Ancestral File Number:
REFN: 9BBL-CD@@S759@@@@S759@@@@S759@@.
Children of Maria (Majorra) Alfonsa de Molina & Mesa and Sancho IV. El Bravo Alfonsez
- Fernando IV 'Citatus' Sanchez+ b. 6 Dec 1286, d. 7 Sep 1312
- Beatrix Sancha+ b. 1293, d. 25 Oct 1359
Citations
Margaret de Fiennes
F, b. between 1262 and 1270, d. 7 February 1334
Margaret de Fiennes was born between 1262 and 1270 at Wigmore, Herefordshire, England.1,2 She was the daughter of William Fiennes and Blanche De Brienne. Margaret de Fiennes married Edmund de Mortimer, son of Roger de Mortimer and Maud de Braose, circa 1285 at England.3 Margaret de Fiennes was buried in 1334 at England.3 She died on 7 February 1334 at England.3
Child of Margaret de Fiennes and Edmund de Mortimer
- Roger De Mortimer+ b. 25 Apr 1287, d. 29 Nov 1330
Citations
- [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.
- [S246] Unknown author, Source #11.
- [S253] CarolynCC, GEDCOM imported 6 NOV 1999 by Linda Joyce Neely.
William Fiennes
M, b. circa 1245, d. 11 July 1302
William Fiennes was born circa 1245 at Wendover, Buckinghamshire, England.1,2 He married Blanche De Brienne in 1259.2 William Fiennes died on 11 July 1302 at Courtal, Fzandre, Occ. BEL.3
Child of William Fiennes and Blanche De Brienne
- Margaret de Fiennes+ b. bt 1262 - 1270, d. 7 Feb 1334
Citations
- [S238] Unknown author, aol-kings.zip.
- [S232] Unknown author, 6 zip files containing Monarchs.ged downloaded end 1999 by Linda Neely.
- [S261] Fred L. Curry < and flcurry@@mindspring.com>, GEDCOM downloaded JUN 2000 by Linda Joyce Neely, TYPE: Web SiteRaven Genealogy and Family HistoryDATE: 3/8/99SOUR: f.
Blanche De Brienne
F, b. circa 1245, d. 1302
Blanche De Brienne was born circa 1245 at Courtrain, Mynn, France.1,2 She married William Fiennes in 1259.2 Blanche De Brienne was buried in 1302.1,2,3 She died in 1302 at Wendover, Buckinghamshire, England.
Child of Blanche De Brienne and William Fiennes
- Margaret de Fiennes+ b. bt 1262 - 1270, d. 7 Feb 1334
Henry 1st Baron de Percy , of Alnwick, Sir1,2
M, b. 25 March 1273, d. 2 October 1314
Henry 1st Baron de Percy , of Alnwick, Sir was buried at Fountains Abbey, Yorkshire, England. He was born on 25 March 1273 at Alnwick, Northumberland, England.3 He was the son of Henry de Percy , Lord of Topcliffe, Sir and Alianore [Eleanor] de Warenne. Henry 1st Baron de Percy , of Alnwick, Sir married an unknown person circa 1297.3 He was buried in October 1314 at Fountains Abby, Yorkshire, England.4,5 He died on 2 October 1314 at Alnwick Castle, Northumberland, England, at age 41.1
He Name Suffix: Baron of Alnwick
TITLE: 2nd Lord (Earl) of Percy
SOURCE: Edmundson's Baronetage 3:270; Britsh Heritage 17:2 1996p.22-27
Please send Addition of data or corrections to<jackeo1@@hotmail.com>
This information is assumed correct, but may contain erroneous links.Please don't assume it to be the absolute truth. I've tried to doublecheck most of the work to assure myself of its accuracy...but you cannever be 100% sure. Thank you, and
REFN: 9HSD-CC@@S451@@@@S759@@@@S759@@@@S759@@. He Henry de Percy, 1st Lord (Baron) Percy, so created by writ of summons toParliament 6 Feb 1298/9; born posthumously c25 March 1273; served inEdward I's Welsh campaign 1294, knighter 1296, fought at Battle of Dunbar27 April 1296, in which his maternal grandfather the 7th Earl of Surreybeat off an attack by the Scots, Warden of Galloway and Ayrshire Sep1296, Justiciar of Dumfries 1297, Jt Justiciar of Cumberland, Lancs andWestmorland 1297, Member of Council of Regency, during Edward I's absenceoverseas 1297-98, fought at English victory of Falkirk over the Scots1298, at Siege of Carlaverock 1300; accompanied Edward I at Siege ofStirling 1304, King's Lt and Captain over all men-at-arms of the WestBorders 1306, Constable of Scarborough Castle March 1307/8; bought 19 Nov1309 from Anthony Beck or Bek, Bishop of Durham, the Barony (here aterritorial entity carrying certain feudal rights, rather than a title ofhonour in the modern sense) of Alnwick, Co Northumberland, thus foundingthe Percy ascendancy there (for the bulk of the lands previouslybelonging to the family had been further south in Yorkshire, Sussex, orHants); one of the magnates opposed to Edward II, took part in theappointment of the Lords Ordainers, an executive committee entrusted withgiving specific expression to that opposition; Keeper of the Bishopric ofDurham pro tem March 1311, Justice of the Forest beyond Trent and Keeperof Bamburgh Castle Dec 1311, Jt Keeper of the Marches c1311; married? byJune 1294 Eleanor (died July or Aug 1328), sister of Richard de Arundel,and died between 2 and 10 Oct 1314. [Burke's Peerage]
----------------------------------
Henry de Percy, 9th feudal lord, was summoned to parliament from 6February, 1299 (27th Edward I) to 29 July, 1315 (8th Edward II). Thisnobleman obtained, 19 November, 1309, from Anthony Beck, bishop ofDurham, by purchase, a grant of the Barony of Alnwick, co.Northumberland. His lordship was one of the great barons who subscribed,in 1301, the celebrated letter to Pope Boniface VIII, upon the attempt ofhis holiness to interpose in the affairs of the kingdom, intimating,'That their king was not to answer in judgment, for any rights of thecrown of England, before any tribunal under heaven, &c., and that, by thehelp of God, they would resolutely, and with all their force, maintainagainst all men.' He m. Eleanor, dau. of John FitzAlan, Earl of Arundel,d. in 1315, and was s. by his eldest son, Henry de Percy, 2nd Lord Percy.[Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages,Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 423, Percy, Barons Percy, Earlsof Northumberland, &c.]
------------------------------------
Sir Henry Percy, Knight, 9th Baron Percy, Baron of Alnwick, co.Northumberland 1309. [Ancestral Roots]
He Name Suffix:
TITLE: 2nd Lord (Earl) of Percy
SOURCE: Edmundson's Baronetage 3:270; Britsh Heritage 17:2 1996p.22-27
Please send Addition of data or corrections to<jackeo1@@hotmail.com>
This information is assumed correct, but may contain erroneous links.Please don't assume it to be the absolute truth. I've tried to doublecheck most of the work to assure myself of its accuracy...but you cannever be 100% sure. Thank you, and
REFN: 9HSD-CC@@S451@@@@S759@@@@S759@@@@S759@@. He Henry de Percy, 1st Lord (Baron) Percy, so created by writ of summons toParliament 6 Feb 1298/9; born posthumously c25 March 1273; served inEdward I's Welsh campaign 1294, knighter 1296, fought at Battle of Dunbar27 April 1296, in which his maternal grandfather the 7th Earl of Surreybeat off an attack by the Scots, Warden of Galloway and Ayrshire Sep1296, Justiciar of Dumfries 1297, Jt Justiciar of Cumberland, Lancs andWestmorland 1297, Member of Council of Regency, during Edward I's absenceoverseas 1297-98, fought at English victory of Falkirk over the Scots1298, at Siege of Carlaverock 1300; accompanied Edward I at Siege ofStirling 1304, King's Lt and Captain over all men-at-arms of the WestBorders 1306, Constable of Scarborough Castle March 1307/8; bought 19 Nov1309 from Anthony Beck or Bek, Bishop of Durham, the Barony (here aterritorial entity carrying certain feudal rights, rather than a title ofhonour in the modern sense) of Alnwick, Co Northumberland, thus foundingthe Percy ascendancy there (for the bulk of the lands previouslybelonging to the family had been further south in Yorkshire, Sussex, orHants); one of the magnates opposed to Edward II, took part in theappointment of the Lords Ordainers, an executive committee entrusted withgiving specific expression to that opposition; Keeper of the Bishopric ofDurham pro tem March 1311, Justice of the Forest beyond Trent and Keeperof Bamburgh Castle Dec 1311, Jt Keeper of the Marches c1311; married? byJune 1294 Eleanor (died July or Aug 1328), sister of Richard de Arundel,and died between 2 and 10 Oct 1314. [Burke's Peerage]
----------------------------------
Henry de Percy, 9th feudal lord, was summoned to parliament from 6February, 1299 (27th Edward I) to 29 July, 1315 (8th Edward II). Thisnobleman obtained, 19 November, 1309, from Anthony Beck, bishop ofDurham, by purchase, a grant of the Barony of Alnwick, co.Northumberland. His lordship was one of the great barons who subscribed,in 1301, the celebrated letter to Pope Boniface VIII, upon the attempt ofhis holiness to interpose in the affairs of the kingdom, intimating,'That their king was not to answer in judgment, for any rights of thecrown of England, before any tribunal under heaven, &c., and that, by thehelp of God, they would resolutely, and with all their force, maintainagainst all men.' He m. Eleanor, dau. of John FitzAlan, Earl of Arundel,d. in 1315, and was s. by his eldest son, Henry de Percy, 2nd Lord Percy.[Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages,Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 423, Percy, Barons Percy, Earlsof Northumberland, &c.]
------------------------------------
Sir Henry Percy, Knight, 9th Baron Percy, Baron of Alnwick, co.Northumberland 1309. [Ancestral Roots]
Child of Henry 1st Baron de Percy , of Alnwick, Sir and Eleanor FitzAlan
- Henry 2nd Baron de Percy KG, MP,+ b. 6 FEB 1299/00, d. bt 26 Feb 1351 - 1352
Citations
- [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.
- [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.
- [S238] Unknown author, aol-kings.zip.
- [S232] Unknown author, 6 zip files containing Monarchs.ged downloaded end 1999 by Linda Neely.
Ralph Neville 2nd Baron Neville Of Raby1,2,3
M, b. circa 1291, d. 5 August 1367
Ralph Neville 2nd Baron Neville Of Raby was buried at Cathedral Church, Durham, England.4,5 He was born circa 1291 at Raby Castle, Durham, England.1,6 He was the son of Randolf* De Neville and Eupheme* FitzRoger. Ralph Neville 2nd Baron Neville Of Raby married Baroness Alice de Audley, daughter of Hugh 1st Baron de Audley , of Stratton, Sir and Isolde (Iseult) de Mortimer, between 14 January 1326 and 1327; License date.1,6 Ralph Neville 2nd Baron Neville Of Raby died on 5 August 1367 at Durham, Durham, England.7
He Ralph, educated at Oxford, captured with his elder brother Robert, andhis 2 younger brothers Alexander and John at the Scots victory at theBattle of Bannockburn 24 June 1314, was ransomed at crippling cost to hisfather. Witnessed his elder brother 'The Peacock of the North' Robert'sdeath in June 1319 at the hands of Sir James Douglas (known as 'TheGood' by the Scots, but also, especially by the English, as the 'BlackDouglas' from his dark complexion) outside the walls of Berwick Castle insingle combat, a contest arranged in revenge for the killing by Nevilleand his brothers the previous Dec of Richard FitzMarmaduke. [Burke'sPeerage]
------------------
Ralph de Neville, Lord Neville of Raby, age 40+ at father's death, b. c1291, d. 5 Aug 1367; m. license 14 Jan 1326/7 Alice de Audley, d. 12 Jan1373/4. [Magna Charta Sureties]
-------------------------------------------------------------------------- ---
Fourth Baron of Raby, second Baron Neville. Ralph was captured in abattle with the Scots in 1318. He was ransomed and lived to command adivision of English that soundly defeated the Scots at the Battle ofNeville's Cross on October 17, 1346, when the Scots were defeated andKing David captured. The battle was fought one-half mile west of Durhamon the Brancepeth road near the old cross. After the battle, lord Nevillereplaced it with a much grander monument. It stood for 240 years in goodcondition until 1589 when it was vandalized. These remains still stand.
Constable of Warkworth Castle, keeper of peace in Yorkshire and Raby,assisted in truce with Robert Bruce, named warded on marches inNorthumberland, Cumberland and Westmorland, named superior warden,steward of Kings household.
1350-with English fleet in battle with Spaniards off Calais.
1355-in France with battle of Poitiers
He was buried in the church of Durham, on the south side thereof, beingthe first layman that had sepulture there.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------- ----
Ralph de Nevill, 2nd baron, was summoned to parliament from 20 November,1331, to 20 January, 1336. This nobleman, in the time of his father, wasretained by indenture to serve the Lord Henry de Percy for life, in peaceand war, against all men except the king, with twenty men-at-arms,whereof five to be knights receiving £100 sterling per annum. The disputewith the prior of Durham, regarding the presentation of the stag wasrevived and finally set to rest in the abandonment of his claim by thisLord Nevill. The matter is thus detailed by Dugdale: 'In this yearlikewise, doing his fealty to William, prior of Durham, upon Lammas Day,for the manor of Raby, he told him, 'that he would offer the stag as hisancestors had done; saving that, whereas his father required that theprior's servants should be set aside at that time and his own serve intheir stead, he would be content that his should attend together withthose of the prior's; and, whereas his father insisted that his servantsshould only be admitted at dinner, he stood upon it that his should bethere entertained the whole day and likewise the morrow at breakfast.'Whereupon the prior made answer, 'that none of his ancestors were ever soadmitted and that he would rather quit the stag than suffer any newcustom to the prejudice of their church.' But, to this Ralph replied,'that he would perform the whole service or none and put the trial of hisright upon the country.' The prior, therefore, knowing him to be sopowerful and that the country could not displease him, declined theoffer; howbeit, at length, to gain his favour, in regard he had no smallinterest at court and might do him a kindness or a displeasure, wascontent for that one time he should perform it as he pleased so that itmight not be drawn into example afterwards; and, to the purpose proposed,that indentures should be made betwixt them. Whereupon the Lord Nevillbrought but few with him and those more for the honour of the prior thana burthen; and so, shortly after dinner, took his leave, but left one ofhis servants to lodge there all night and to take his breakfast there onthe next day; 'protesting that, being both a son and tenant to thechurch, he would not be burthensome to it, in respect it would be noadvantage to himself but might much damnifie him if he should bring withhim as great a train as he would, saying, 'what doth a breakfast signifyto me? nothing. And likewise, that if the prior would shew that he had noright to what he so claimed, he would freely recede therefrom; and if hehad a right, he would accept a composition for it rather than beburthensome to the convent; but if they should put him to get his rightby law, then he would not abate anything thereof.' Whereupon inquirybeing made amongst the eldest monks of the house, they affirmed that,being of eight years standing when his father was before repulsed, theyhad often seen the stag offered, and that he never staid dinner but whenthe prior invited him, and some ancient men of the country testified asmuch; also, that so soon as the stag was brought, they carried him to thekitchen, and those who brought him were taken into the hall to breakfast,as they that bring their rents used to be.
'Moreover, when it happened any of the Lords Nevill to be desired to staydinner with the prior, his cook was admitted into the kitchen to preparea dish for him; so, likewise, another servant in the cellar to choose hisdrink; and in like manner, some other at the gate who knew his servantsand followers, merely to let them in and keep out others who, underpretence of being servants, might then intrude. But this was only done bythe prior, as out of courtesy and respect, and not at all out of right.'
In the 7th Edward III [1314], Lord Nevill was one of the commissionerssent into Scotland, there to see that the covenants between Edward deBaliol, King of Scots, and his royal master were ratified by theparliament of that kingdom; and the next year he was joined with Henry dePercy in the wardenship of the marches of Northumberland, Cumberland, andWestmoreland. He had, subsequently, other high and confidentialemployments and was constantly engaged in the wars of Scotland andFrance. His lordship m. Alice, dau. of of Sir Hugh de Audley, and by her(who m 2ndly, Ralph, Lord Greystock, and d. 1374) had issue, John,Thomas, Robert, Alexander, Ralph, Euphemia, Catherine, Margaret, Isabel,and Eleanor.
He d. in 1367 and was buried in the church of Durham, on the south sidethereof, being the first layman that had sepulture there, which favour heobtained from the prior and convent for a vestment of red velvet, richlyembroidered with gold silk, great pearls, and images of the saintsstanding in tabernacles by him given to St Cuthbert. His body beingbrought in a chariot drawn by seven horses to the boundary of thechurchyard and thence conveyed upon the shoulders of knights into themiddle of the church where the abbot of St. Mary's in York (by reason ofthe bishop's absence and impotency of the dean), performed the office ofthe dead, and celebrated the morrow mass, at which were offered eighthorses, viz., four for the war, with four men armed, and all theirharness and habiliments; and four others for peace; as also three clothsof gold, of blue colour, interwoven with flowers. Four of those horseswere redeemed after the funeral by Sir John, his son and heir, for 100marks. His lordship was s. by his eldest son, Sir John de Nevill. [SirBernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages, Burke'sPeerage, Ltd., London, England, 1883, p. 393, Nevill, Barons Nevill, ofRaby, Earls of Westmoreland]
He Ralph, educated at Oxford, captured with his elder brother Robert, andhis 2 younger brothers Alexander and John at the Scots victory at theBattle of Bannockburn 24 June 1314, was ransomed at crippling cost to hisfather. Witnessed his elder brother 'The Peacock of the North' Robert'sdeath in June 1319 at the hands of Sir James Douglas (known as 'TheGood' by the Scots, but also, especially by the English, as the 'BlackDouglas' from his dark complexion) outside the walls of Berwick Castle insingle combat, a contest arranged in revenge for the killing by Nevilleand his brothers the previous Dec of Richard FitzMarmaduke. [Burke'sPeerage]
------------------
Ralph de Neville, Lord Neville of Raby, age 40+ at father's death, b. c1291, d. 5 Aug 1367; m. license 14 Jan 1326/7 Alice de Audley, d. 12 Jan1373/4. [Magna Charta Sureties]
-------------------------------------------------------------------------- ---
Fourth Baron of Raby, second Baron Neville. Ralph was captured in abattle with the Scots in 1318. He was ransomed and lived to command adivision of English that soundly defeated the Scots at the Battle ofNeville's Cross on October 17, 1346, when the Scots were defeated andKing David captured. The battle was fought one-half mile west of Durhamon the Brancepeth road near the old cross. After the battle, lord Nevillereplaced it with a much grander monument. It stood for 240 years in goodcondition until 1589 when it was vandalized. These remains still stand.
Constable of Warkworth Castle, keeper of peace in Yorkshire and Raby,assisted in truce with Robert Bruce, named warded on marches inNorthumberland, Cumberland and Westmorland, named superior warden,steward of Kings household.
1350-with English fleet in battle with Spaniards off Calais.
1355-in France with battle of Poitiers
He was buried in the church of Durham, on the south side thereof, beingthe first layman that had sepulture there.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------- ----
Ralph de Nevill, 2nd baron, was summoned to parliament from 20 November,1331, to 20 January, 1336. This nobleman, in the time of his father, wasretained by indenture to serve the Lord Henry de Percy for life, in peaceand war, against all men except the king, with twenty men-at-arms,whereof five to be knights receiving £100 sterling per annum. The disputewith the prior of Durham, regarding the presentation of the stag wasrevived and finally set to rest in the abandonment of his claim by thisLord Nevill. The matter is thus detailed by Dugdale: 'In this yearlikewise, doing his fealty to William, prior of Durham, upon Lammas Day,for the manor of Raby, he told him, 'that he would offer the stag as hisancestors had done; saving that, whereas his father required that theprior's servants should be set aside at that time and his own serve intheir stead, he would be content that his should attend together withthose of the prior's; and, whereas his father insisted that his servantsshould only be admitted at dinner, he stood upon it that his should bethere entertained the whole day and likewise the morrow at breakfast.'Whereupon the prior made answer, 'that none of his ancestors were ever soadmitted and that he would rather quit the stag than suffer any newcustom to the prejudice of their church.' But, to this Ralph replied,'that he would perform the whole service or none and put the trial of hisright upon the country.' The prior, therefore, knowing him to be sopowerful and that the country could not displease him, declined theoffer; howbeit, at length, to gain his favour, in regard he had no smallinterest at court and might do him a kindness or a displeasure, wascontent for that one time he should perform it as he pleased so that itmight not be drawn into example afterwards; and, to the purpose proposed,that indentures should be made betwixt them. Whereupon the Lord Nevillbrought but few with him and those more for the honour of the prior thana burthen; and so, shortly after dinner, took his leave, but left one ofhis servants to lodge there all night and to take his breakfast there onthe next day; 'protesting that, being both a son and tenant to thechurch, he would not be burthensome to it, in respect it would be noadvantage to himself but might much damnifie him if he should bring withhim as great a train as he would, saying, 'what doth a breakfast signifyto me? nothing. And likewise, that if the prior would shew that he had noright to what he so claimed, he would freely recede therefrom; and if hehad a right, he would accept a composition for it rather than beburthensome to the convent; but if they should put him to get his rightby law, then he would not abate anything thereof.' Whereupon inquirybeing made amongst the eldest monks of the house, they affirmed that,being of eight years standing when his father was before repulsed, theyhad often seen the stag offered, and that he never staid dinner but whenthe prior invited him, and some ancient men of the country testified asmuch; also, that so soon as the stag was brought, they carried him to thekitchen, and those who brought him were taken into the hall to breakfast,as they that bring their rents used to be.
'Moreover, when it happened any of the Lords Nevill to be desired to staydinner with the prior, his cook was admitted into the kitchen to preparea dish for him; so, likewise, another servant in the cellar to choose hisdrink; and in like manner, some other at the gate who knew his servantsand followers, merely to let them in and keep out others who, underpretence of being servants, might then intrude. But this was only done bythe prior, as out of courtesy and respect, and not at all out of right.'
In the 7th Edward III [1314], Lord Nevill was one of the commissionerssent into Scotland, there to see that the covenants between Edward deBaliol, King of Scots, and his royal master were ratified by theparliament of that kingdom; and the next year he was joined with Henry dePercy in the wardenship of the marches of Northumberland, Cumberland, andWestmoreland. He had, subsequently, other high and confidentialemployments and was constantly engaged in the wars of Scotland andFrance. His lordship m. Alice, dau. of of Sir Hugh de Audley, and by her(who m 2ndly, Ralph, Lord Greystock, and d. 1374) had issue, John,Thomas, Robert, Alexander, Ralph, Euphemia, Catherine, Margaret, Isabel,and Eleanor.
He d. in 1367 and was buried in the church of Durham, on the south sidethereof, being the first layman that had sepulture there, which favour heobtained from the prior and convent for a vestment of red velvet, richlyembroidered with gold silk, great pearls, and images of the saintsstanding in tabernacles by him given to St Cuthbert. His body beingbrought in a chariot drawn by seven horses to the boundary of thechurchyard and thence conveyed upon the shoulders of knights into themiddle of the church where the abbot of St. Mary's in York (by reason ofthe bishop's absence and impotency of the dean), performed the office ofthe dead, and celebrated the morrow mass, at which were offered eighthorses, viz., four for the war, with four men armed, and all theirharness and habiliments; and four others for peace; as also three clothsof gold, of blue colour, interwoven with flowers. Four of those horseswere redeemed after the funeral by Sir John, his son and heir, for 100marks. His lordship was s. by his eldest son, Sir John de Nevill. [SirBernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages, Burke'sPeerage, Ltd., London, England, 1883, p. 393, Nevill, Barons Nevill, ofRaby, Earls of Westmoreland]
Child of Ralph Neville 2nd Baron Neville Of Raby and Baroness Alice de Audley
- John 3rd Baron de Neville , of Raby, KG, Sir+ b. c 1331, d. 17 Oct 1388
Citations
- [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.
- [S239] Unknown author, Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999, 44-5, 45-5.
- [S238] Unknown author, aol-kings.zip.
- [S232] Unknown author, 6 zip files containing Monarchs.ged downloaded end 1999 by Linda Neely.
- [S239] Unknown author, Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999, 44-5.
- [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.
Randolf* De Neville
M, b. 18 October 1262, d. after 18 April 1331
Randolf* De Neville was buried at Cloverham, Durham, England.1,2 He was born on 18 October 1262 at Middleham, North Riding Yorkshire, England.3 He was the son of Robert de Neville , Sir and Mary FitzRandolph , Heiress of Middleham. Randolf* De Neville married Eupheme* FitzRoger, daughter of Robert FitzRoger , 1st Baron Clavering, Sir and Margery (Mary) la ZOUCHE, circa 1282 at of, Warkworth, Northumberland, England.2 Randolf* De Neville died after 18 April 1331 at Raby Castle, Durham, England.3
He Randolph or Ranulf de Neville, 1st Lord (Baron) Neville (of Raby), socreated (according to later doctrine) by writ of summons to Parliament 24June 1295; b 18 Oct 1262; found guilty 1313 of incest with his daughter,Anastasia, Lady de Faucomberge. [Burke's Peerage]
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Randolph de Neville, b. 18 Oct 1262, d. shortly after 18 Apr 1331, 1stLord Neville of Raby. [Magna Charta Sureties]
-------------
First Baron Neville of Raby
Became heir to mothers lands
Ranulph held eight adjoining lordships in the Prior of Durham. He hadnumerous disputes with the Bishop of Durhan concerning hisresponsibilities. He was convicted of incest with a daughter and made todo public penance for the crime. He was summoned to Parliament in 1295 asLord Neville of Raby and served until his death (1331)
Some say he is incorrectly called Ralph. He was one of the signers of aletter to Pope Boniface VIII (1292-1303) drawn up in a parliamentconvened in Lincoln by Edward I on January 23, 1301. This letter setforth the rights of the Crown to Scotland and strongly disapproved of thePope's other actions in regard to England. Ranulphus was a champion ofcivil liberties, a soldier in Gascony and Scotland, yet has been muchmaligned. His mother was heiress to her father's estate but she does notappear to have held Ranulphus in much esteem as she settled them on hergrandson, Robert.
Buried at Coverham Abby.
some show marriage in 1282, some show death as October 29, 1331.
was in wars with France and Scotland
-------------
Ranulf, or Ralph, de Nevill, being in minority at the time of hisgrandfather's decease [in 1282], obtained liberty of the king that hisfriends might plough and manage his lands and, in the 13th Edward I[1285], had livery of certain manors, part of his inheritance. Soon afterthis, he had a warm contest with the prior of Durham about thepresentation of a stag upon St. Cuthbert's Day, in September, 'which, intruth,' says Dugdale, 'was rather a rent than an obligation, in regard heheld Raby with the eight adjoining townships by the yearly rent of £4 anda stag. For, contrary to the custom of his ancestors, he not onlyrequired that the prior of Durham, at the offering of that stag, ought tofeast him and all the company he should bring, but that the prior's ownmenial servants should, for that time, be set aside, and his peculiarservants and officers be put in their stead. Whereupon, amongst other ofhis guests, he invited John de Baliol, of Barnard Castle, who refused togo with him, alleging that he never knew the Nevills to have such aprivilege there; Sir William de Bromtpon, the bishop's chief justice,likewise acknowledging that he himself was the first that began theextravagant practice for being a young man and delighting in hunting, hecame with the Lord Nevill at the offering of the stag and said to hiscompanions, 'Come, let us go to the abbey and wind our horns,' and sothey did. The prior father adding, that before the time of this Ranulph,none of his predecessors ever made any such claim, but when they broughtthe stag into the hall, they had only a breakfast, nor did the lord everstay dinner, except he were invited.'
This Ranulph was summoned to parliament as a Baron, 8 June, 1294, andfrom that period to 18 February, 1331. His lordship was in the wars ofFrance, temp. Edward I, and in those of Scotland in the next reign. It issaid, however, that he little minded secular business but devoted theprincipal part of his time to conversation with the canons of Merton andCoverham, upon whom he bestowed some considerable grants. He m. 1st,Euphemia, dau. of Robert and sister of John de Clavering, and had twosons, Robert and Ralph, and two daus., Margaret and Anastasia. Hislordship m. 2ndly, Margery, dau. of John, son of Marmaduke de Thweng, buthad no issue. He d. in 1331, was buried on the south side of the altar atCoverham, and was s. by his only surviving son, Ralph de Nevill. [SirBernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages, Burke'sPeerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 392-3, Nevill, Barons Nevill, of Raby,Earls of Westmoreland] Randolf* De Neville was also known as Randolph 1st Baron de Neville , of Raby, Sir.4,5
He Randolph or Ranulf de Neville, 1st Lord (Baron) Neville (of Raby), socreated (according to later doctrine) by writ of summons to Parliament 24June 1295; b 18 Oct 1262; found guilty 1313 of incest with his daughter,Anastasia, Lady de Faucomberge. [Burke's Peerage]
-------------
Randolph de Neville, b. 18 Oct 1262, d. shortly after 18 Apr 1331, 1stLord Neville of Raby. [Magna Charta Sureties]
-------------
First Baron Neville of Raby
Became heir to mothers lands
Ranulph held eight adjoining lordships in the Prior of Durham. He hadnumerous disputes with the Bishop of Durhan concerning hisresponsibilities. He was convicted of incest with a daughter and made todo public penance for the crime. He was summoned to Parliament in 1295 asLord Neville of Raby and served until his death (1331)
Some say he is incorrectly called Ralph. He was one of the signers of aletter to Pope Boniface VIII (1292-1303) drawn up in a parliamentconvened in Lincoln by Edward I on January 23, 1301. This letter setforth the rights of the Crown to Scotland and strongly disapproved of thePope's other actions in regard to England. Ranulphus was a champion ofcivil liberties, a soldier in Gascony and Scotland, yet has been muchmaligned. His mother was heiress to her father's estate but she does notappear to have held Ranulphus in much esteem as she settled them on hergrandson, Robert.
Buried at Coverham Abby.
some show marriage in 1282, some show death as October 29, 1331.
was in wars with France and Scotland
-------------
Ranulf, or Ralph, de Nevill, being in minority at the time of hisgrandfather's decease [in 1282], obtained liberty of the king that hisfriends might plough and manage his lands and, in the 13th Edward I[1285], had livery of certain manors, part of his inheritance. Soon afterthis, he had a warm contest with the prior of Durham about thepresentation of a stag upon St. Cuthbert's Day, in September, 'which, intruth,' says Dugdale, 'was rather a rent than an obligation, in regard heheld Raby with the eight adjoining townships by the yearly rent of £4 anda stag. For, contrary to the custom of his ancestors, he not onlyrequired that the prior of Durham, at the offering of that stag, ought tofeast him and all the company he should bring, but that the prior's ownmenial servants should, for that time, be set aside, and his peculiarservants and officers be put in their stead. Whereupon, amongst other ofhis guests, he invited John de Baliol, of Barnard Castle, who refused togo with him, alleging that he never knew the Nevills to have such aprivilege there; Sir William de Bromtpon, the bishop's chief justice,likewise acknowledging that he himself was the first that began theextravagant practice for being a young man and delighting in hunting, hecame with the Lord Nevill at the offering of the stag and said to hiscompanions, 'Come, let us go to the abbey and wind our horns,' and sothey did. The prior father adding, that before the time of this Ranulph,none of his predecessors ever made any such claim, but when they broughtthe stag into the hall, they had only a breakfast, nor did the lord everstay dinner, except he were invited.'
This Ranulph was summoned to parliament as a Baron, 8 June, 1294, andfrom that period to 18 February, 1331. His lordship was in the wars ofFrance, temp. Edward I, and in those of Scotland in the next reign. It issaid, however, that he little minded secular business but devoted theprincipal part of his time to conversation with the canons of Merton andCoverham, upon whom he bestowed some considerable grants. He m. 1st,Euphemia, dau. of Robert and sister of John de Clavering, and had twosons, Robert and Ralph, and two daus., Margaret and Anastasia. Hislordship m. 2ndly, Margery, dau. of John, son of Marmaduke de Thweng, buthad no issue. He d. in 1331, was buried on the south side of the altar atCoverham, and was s. by his only surviving son, Ralph de Nevill. [SirBernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages, Burke'sPeerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 392-3, Nevill, Barons Nevill, of Raby,Earls of Westmoreland] Randolf* De Neville was also known as Randolph 1st Baron de Neville , of Raby, Sir.4,5
Child of Randolf* De Neville and Eupheme* FitzRoger
- Ralph Neville 2nd Baron Neville Of Raby+ b. c 1291, d. 5 Aug 1367
Citations
- [S238] Unknown author, aol-kings.zip.
- [S232] Unknown author, 6 zip files containing Monarchs.ged downloaded end 1999 by Linda Neely.
- [S239] Unknown author, Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999, 44-4.
- [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.
Roger De Mortimer
M, b. 25 April 1287, d. 29 November 1330
Roger De Mortimer was born on 25 April 1287 at Netherwood, Thornbury, Hartfordshire, England.1,2 He was the son of Edmund de Mortimer and Margaret de Fiennes. Roger De Mortimer married Joan De Geneville before 6 October 1306 at England.3 Roger De Mortimer was buried in 1330 at England.3 He died on 29 November 1330 at age 43.1,2
He was Lord lieutenant of Ireland; 1st Earl of March.4
He was Lord lieutenant of Ireland; 1st Earl of March.4
Child of Roger De Mortimer and Joan De Geneville
- Edmund de Mortimer+ b. c 1306, d. 16 Dec 1331
Citations
- [S268] Unknown author, Bolton, MA VR to 1850.
- [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.
- [S253] CarolynCC, GEDCOM imported 6 NOV 1999 by Linda Joyce Neely.
- [S261] Fred L. Curry < and flcurry@@mindspring.com>, GEDCOM downloaded JUN 2000 by Linda Joyce Neely, TYPE: Web SiteThe Paternal Ancestry of Homer Beers James.
Robert FitzRoger , 1st Baron Clavering, Sir1,2,3
M, b. circa 1241, d. 1310
Robert FitzRoger , 1st Baron Clavering, Sir was born circa 1241.4 He was the son of Roger FitzJohn , Lord of Warkworth & Clavering and Isabel de Merlay. Robert FitzRoger , 1st Baron Clavering, Sir was born in 1247 at Warkworth Castle, Alnwick, Northumberland, England.5 He married Margery (Mary) la ZOUCHE, daughter of Alan la Zouche Lord of Ashby and Ellen (Helen) (Elena) de Quincy, in 1265.1 Robert FitzRoger , 1st Baron Clavering, Sir died in 1310 at Clavering, Saffron Walden, Essex, England.5,3
He Robert Fitz Roger, b. 1247, d. 1310, Lord Fitz Roger of Clavering, MP1295-1309; m. 1265 Margery de la Zouche. [Magna Charta Sureties]
-------------------
BARONY OF CLAVERING OR FITZROGER (I) 1295
ROBERT FITZROGER, son and heir of Roger FITZJOHN, of Clavering, Essex, ofWarkworth, Northumberland, of Horsford Norfolk, &c. (d. about Whitsuntide1249), was very young at his father's death. He was summoned to attendthe King at Shrewsbury, 28 June 1283 by writ directed Roberto filioRogeri. He was excused 14 June 1294 from attendance on the King inGascony, anddistinguished himself in the war with Scotland, 1294-98,being with his son) at the siege of Carlaverock. He was summoned toParliament from 2 November 1295 to 26 October 1309, by writs directedRoberto filio Rogeri, whereby he is held to have become LORD FITZROGER.He was one of the barons who, in February 1300/1, took p[art in thecelebrated letter to Pope Boniface VIII, being therein described asRobertus filius Rogeri dominus de Claveryng.
He married Margaret, daughter of Sir Alan DE LA ZOUCHE of Asby, co.Leicester. He died 1310. [Complete Peerage III:274-5, XIV:186,(transcribed by Dave Utzinger)]
-------------------
Roger Fitz-John d. in 1249, and was s. by his son, Robert Fitz-Roger,then in infancy, whose tuition was committed to William de Valence, theking's half-brother, although Ada de Baliol, the grandmother of thischild, offered 2,200 marks for the wardship. This feudal lord becameeventually so eminent in the Scottish wars of King Edward I, particularlyin the battle of Falkirk, and other memorable conflicts, that he wassummoned as 'Robert Fitz-Roger' to parliament as a Baron, from 2November, 1295, to 16 June (4th Edward II), 1311, and subsequentlyassisted with his son, John, who assumed, by the king's appointment, thesurname of Clavering, at the celebrated siege of Caerlaverock. Hislordship m. Margaret de la Zouche, and had issue, seven son, viz., John,his successor; Edmund, Alexander, Robert, Henry, Roger, all d. s. p;Alan (Sir), m. Isabella, eldest dau. and co-heir of William Riddell, andfrom this union descended the Claverings of Callaly, in Northumberland,the Baronets Clavering of Axwell, co. Durham, the Claverings ofLearchild, the Claverings of Tilmouth, co. Durham, &c. He d. about theyear 1311, and was s. by his eldest son, John de Clavering. [Sir BernardBurke, Dormant and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883,p. 121, Clavering, Barons Clavering]
He Robert Fitz Roger, b. 1247, d. 1310, Lord Fitz Roger of Clavering, MP1295-1309; m. 1265 Margery de la Zouche. [Magna Charta Sureties]
-------------------
BARONY OF CLAVERING OR FITZROGER (I) 1295
ROBERT FITZROGER, son and heir of Roger FITZJOHN, of Clavering, Essex, ofWarkworth, Northumberland, of Horsford Norfolk, &c. (d. about Whitsuntide1249), was very young at his father's death. He was summoned to attendthe King at Shrewsbury, 28 June 1283 by writ directed Roberto filioRogeri. He was excused 14 June 1294 from attendance on the King inGascony, anddistinguished himself in the war with Scotland, 1294-98,being with his son) at the siege of Carlaverock. He was summoned toParliament from 2 November 1295 to 26 October 1309, by writs directedRoberto filio Rogeri, whereby he is held to have become LORD FITZROGER.He was one of the barons who, in February 1300/1, took p[art in thecelebrated letter to Pope Boniface VIII, being therein described asRobertus filius Rogeri dominus de Claveryng.
He married Margaret, daughter of Sir Alan DE LA ZOUCHE of Asby, co.Leicester. He died 1310. [Complete Peerage III:274-5, XIV:186,(transcribed by Dave Utzinger)]
-------------------
Roger Fitz-John d. in 1249, and was s. by his son, Robert Fitz-Roger,then in infancy, whose tuition was committed to William de Valence, theking's half-brother, although Ada de Baliol, the grandmother of thischild, offered 2,200 marks for the wardship. This feudal lord becameeventually so eminent in the Scottish wars of King Edward I, particularlyin the battle of Falkirk, and other memorable conflicts, that he wassummoned as 'Robert Fitz-Roger' to parliament as a Baron, from 2November, 1295, to 16 June (4th Edward II), 1311, and subsequentlyassisted with his son, John, who assumed, by the king's appointment, thesurname of Clavering, at the celebrated siege of Caerlaverock. Hislordship m. Margaret de la Zouche, and had issue, seven son, viz., John,his successor; Edmund, Alexander, Robert, Henry, Roger, all d. s. p;Alan (Sir), m. Isabella, eldest dau. and co-heir of William Riddell, andfrom this union descended the Claverings of Callaly, in Northumberland,the Baronets Clavering of Axwell, co. Durham, the Claverings ofLearchild, the Claverings of Tilmouth, co. Durham, &c. He d. about theyear 1311, and was s. by his eldest son, John de Clavering. [Sir BernardBurke, Dormant and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883,p. 121, Clavering, Barons Clavering]
Child of Robert FitzRoger , 1st Baron Clavering, Sir and Margery (Mary) la ZOUCHE
- Eupheme* FitzRoger+ b. c 1267, d. 1329
Citations
- [S239] Unknown author, Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999, 44-3, 49-3.
- [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, III:274-5.
- [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.
- [S239] Unknown author, Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999, 44-3.
Roger FitzJohn , Lord of Warkworth & Clavering1
M, b. circa 1210, d. 1249
Roger FitzJohn , Lord of Warkworth & Clavering was born circa 1210 at Warkworth, Northumberland, England. He was born circa 1220 at Warkworth Castle, Alnwick, Northumberland, England. He died in 1249 at Normandy, France. He died in 1249 at Horsford, St. Faith's, Norfolk, England.1
He Roger Fitz John, d. Normandy, about Whitsun 1249, lord of Warkworth andof Clavering; m. Isabel. [Magna Charta Sureties]
He Roger Fitz John, d. Normandy, about Whitsun 1249, lord of Warkworth andof Clavering; m. Isabel. [Magna Charta Sureties]
Child of Roger FitzJohn , Lord of Warkworth & Clavering and Isabel de Merlay
- Robert FitzRoger , 1st Baron Clavering, Sir+ b. c 1241, d. 1310
Citations
- [S239] Unknown author, Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999, 44-2.
Alianore Holand
F, b. circa 1384
Alianore Holand was born circa 1384 at Upholland, Lancashire, England. She was the daughter of Thomas de Holand 2nd Earl of Kent, KG, Sir and Alice FitzAlan. Alianore Holand married Thomas of Salisbury de Montacute, son of John de Montagu and Maud Fraunceys, on 23 May 1399.
Child of Alianore Holand and Thomas of Salisbury de Montacute
- Alice Montagu+ b. 1406, d. 1463
Malcolm II MacKenneth King of Scotland1,2,3,4
M, b. 954, d. 25 November 1034
Malcolm II MacKenneth King of Scotland married an unknown person. He married Blanaid nic Brian , of Munster after 948. Malcolm II MacKenneth King of Scotland was born in 954 at Scotland.4 He died on 25 November 1034 at Glamis, Angus, Scotland; (murdered.)1,4
He Malcolm took advantage of the fact that the English were preoccupied withDanish raids and marched south, winning the Battle of Carham against theAngles in 1018 and thereby regaining Lothian. Thirteen years later KingCanute invaded Scotland and forced Malcolm to submit to him. However,Canute seems to have recognized Malcolm's possession of Lothian.
After Malcolm II's reign, Scottish succession was based on the principleof direct descent. Previously, succession was determined by tanistry -during a king's lifetime an heir was chosen and known as 'tanaiste rig'(second to the king). He was Type: Ruled between 1005 and 1034.
He Malcolm took advantage of the fact that the English were preoccupied withDanish raids and marched south, winning the Battle of Carham against theAngles in 1018 and thereby regaining Lothian. Thirteen years later KingCanute invaded Scotland and forced Malcolm to submit to him. However,Canute seems to have recognized Malcolm's possession of Lothian.
After Malcolm II's reign, Scottish succession was based on the principleof direct descent. Previously, succession was determined by tanistry -during a king's lifetime an heir was chosen and known as 'tanaiste rig'(second to the king). He was Type: Ruled between 1005 and 1034.
Child of Malcolm II MacKenneth King of Scotland and Blanaid nic Brian , of Munster
- Doda Princess of Scotland+ b. c 985
Citations
- [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, X:A:9.
- [S270] William Henry Turton, The Plantagenet Ancestry, 21.