Roger de Lyons , of Warkworth

M, b. circa 1217
     Roger de Lyons , of Warkworth was born circa 1217 at Warkworth, Banbury, Northamptonshire, England.

Child of Roger de Lyons , of Warkworth and Joane de Napton

Joane de Napton

F, b. circa 1222
     Joane de Napton was born circa 1222 at Napton on the Hill, Rugby, Warwickshire, England.

Child of Joane de Napton and Roger de Lyons , of Warkworth

John de Wydeville , of Grafton Regis, Esq1

M, b. 1288, d. 1329
     John de Wydeville , of Grafton Regis, Esq was born in 1288 at Grafton Regis, Northamptonshire, England. He was the son of John de Wydeville , of Grafton Regis, Esq and Alice de Passenham. John de Wydeville , of Grafton Regis, Esq died in 1329.

Child of John de Wydeville , of Grafton Regis, Esq and Margery Oakley

Citations

  1. [S235] Newsgroup: soc.genealogy.medieval, at groups - google.com, online google.com, Benjamin Hertzel, 30 Jul 1999.

John de Wydeville , of Grafton Regis, Esq1

M, b. 1241, d. 1327
     John de Wydeville , of Grafton Regis, Esq was born in 1241 at Grafton Regis, Northamptonshire, England. He was the son of Walter de Wydeville , of Grafton Regis, Esq. John de Wydeville , of Grafton Regis, Esq died in 1327.

Child of John de Wydeville , of Grafton Regis, Esq and Alice de Passenham

Citations

  1. [S235] Newsgroup: soc.genealogy.medieval, at groups - google.com, online google.com, Benjamin Hertzel, 30 Jul 1999.

Alice de Passenham1

F, b. 1265, d. 1349
     Alice de Passenham was born in 1265 at Passenham, Potterspury, Northamptonshire, England. She was the daughter of Henry de Passenham. Alice de Passenham died in 1349.

Citations

  1. [S235] Newsgroup: soc.genealogy.medieval, at groups - google.com, online google.com, Benjamin Hertzel, 30 Jul 1999.

Henry de Passenham1

M, b. 1238, d. 1278
     Henry de Passenham was born in 1238 at Passenham, Potterspury, Northamptonshire, England. He was the son of William de Passenham. Henry de Passenham died in 1278.

Child of Henry de Passenham

Citations

  1. [S235] Newsgroup: soc.genealogy.medieval, at groups - google.com, online google.com, Benjamin Hertzel, 30 Jul 1999.

William de Passenham

M, b. 1209, d. 1287
     William de Passenham was born in 1209 at Passenham, Potterspury, Northamptonshire, England. He died in 1287.

Child of William de Passenham

Walter de Wydeville , of Grafton Regis, Esq1

M, b. circa 1210, d. circa 1240
     Walter de Wydeville , of Grafton Regis, Esq was born circa 1210 at Grafton Regis, Northamptonshire, England. He was the son of Mr. de Wydeville , of Grafton Regis. Walter de Wydeville , of Grafton Regis, Esq died circa 1240.
     He Domesday records show that Hugh de Widville, Walter's direct ancestor,held lands in Northamptonshire & Leicestershire.

Child of Walter de Wydeville , of Grafton Regis, Esq

Citations

  1. [S235] Newsgroup: soc.genealogy.medieval, at groups - google.com, online google.com, Benjamin Hertzel, 30 Jul 1999.

John I Duke de Brittany , Earl of Richmond1,2

M, b. 1216, d. 8 October 1285
     John I Duke de Brittany , Earl of Richmond was buried at Abbey of Notre Dame de Prieres, France. He was born in 1216 at Nantes, Loire-Atlantique, Pays-de-la-Loire, France.2 He married Blanche Princess of Navarre between 16 January 1235 and 1236 at Chateau-Thierry, Picardy, France.3 John I Duke de Brittany , Earl of Richmond died on 8 October 1285 at Richmond Castle, North Riding Yorkshire, England.2
     He Richmond, previous creations: Henry III granted the Richmond lands in1240 to Piers, a younger son of the Count of Savoy, who accordinglybecame known as Earl of Richmond, though never formally invested assuch. On his death the Earldom of Richmond, inasmuch as it had ever beenhis at all, reverted to the Crown. In 1268 Henry granted the Earldom ofRichmond to Piers de Braine's son John, who forthwith made it over to hisown son, another John. (These Johns, who were both known by the surnameBretagne rather than de Braine, may be regarded respectively as 2nd and3rd Earls of Richmond of the January 1218/9 creation.) John the younger(ie. the 3rd Earl), who was temporarily deprived of his estates inEngland in 1296 for siding with the French, married a daughter of HenryIII. He was killed by a wall falling on him in Lyons for the coronationof Pope Clement V in 1305. On his death Edward I asserted a right to theEarldom of Richmond, together with its castles and territories, but ayear later conferred the title on the late Earl's second son John, whothus became 4th Earl of Richmond. Like his predecessors he too sufferedtemporary confiscation of his estates by the Crown, this time in 1326,though they were given back to him later that year, on 25 Decemberapproximately. [Burke's Peerage, p. 2402]

--------------------------

EARLDOM OF RICHMOND (VI, 2)

JOHN DE BRETAGNE, DUKE OF BRITTANY, styled 'Le Roux,' 1st son and heir ofPiers, DUKE OF BRITTANY and sometime EARL OF RICHMOND, by his 1st wife,Alice of Brittany, was born in 1216. He was styled John de Bretagne untilhe became Duke of Brittany on his father's resignation, when he didhomage to the King of France in Paris, on or shortly before 16 November1237. He received the ducal insignia, viz. the sword and banner, atRennes a few days later. He was knighted by Louis IX on 8 September 1241at Melun. On 10 April 1240 he ordered the expulsion of the Jews fromBrittany. In 1242 and 1259 he petitioned Henry III for the restitution ofthe Earldom of Richmond. In 1254 he surrendered his right to thesuccession to the Kingdom of Navarre, which had been secured to him byhis marriage contract, for an annuity of 3,000 livres. In 1268 Henry IIIrestored the Earldom of Richmond to John, who immediately surrendered itto his son. In July 1270 he went on Crusade, and took part in the siegeof Tunisby Louis IX. Like his father, he was involved in constantquarrels with the Breton bishops, and was excommunicated.

He married, 16 January 1235/6, at Château-Thierry, Blanche, daughter ofTheobald, KING OF NAVARRE, COUNT OF CHAMPAGNE AND BRIE, by his 2nd wife,Agnes DE BEAUJEU. She died 12, and was buried 14 August 1283, in theabbey of Nôtre Dame de la Joie, near Hennebont. John died probably 8October 1285, and was buried in the abbey of Nôtre Dame de Prières.[Complete Peerage X:809-11, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)] John I Duke de Brittany , Earl of Richmond was also known as Jean de Dreux.

Child of John I Duke de Brittany , Earl of Richmond and Blanche Princess of Navarre

Citations

  1. [S233] Charles Mosley Editor-in-Chief, Burke's Peerage & Baronetage, 106th Edition.
  2. [S269] G. E Cokayne, Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, X:809-11.
  3. [S269] G. E Cokayne, Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, X:810-1.

Agnes de Resson

F, b. circa 1226, d. after 1261
     Agnes de Resson was born circa 1226 at Resson, Ardennes, Champagne-Ardenne, France. She was the daughter of Garnier IV de Trainel , Sire de Marigny and Helissende de Rethel , Dame de Perthes. Agnes de Resson died after 1261.
     Agnes de Resson was also known as Agnes de Trainel.

Vilain I d' Aulnay , Baron d'Arkadia

M, b. circa 1220, d. 18 September 1253
     Vilain I d' Aulnay , Baron d'Arkadia was born circa 1220 at Arcadia, Greece. He was the son of Oudard d' Aulnay , Baron d'Arkadia and Galiene (?) Vilain I d' Aulnay , Baron d'Arkadia died on 18 September 1253.
     Vilain I d' Aulnay , Baron d'Arkadia was also known as Vilain d' Arkadia.

Child of Vilain I d' Aulnay , Baron d'Arkadia and Agnes de Resson

Helissende de Rethel , Dame de Perthes1

F, b. circa 1201, d. 1234
     Helissende de Rethel , Dame de Perthes married Thomas Comte du Perche.1 Helissende de Rethel , Dame de Perthes was born circa 1201 at Perthes, Ardennes, Champagne-Ardenne, France. She married Garnier IV de Trainel , Sire de Marigny in June 1225.1 Helissende de Rethel , Dame de Perthes died after 1227.1 She died in 1234.

Child of Helissende de Rethel , Dame de Perthes and Garnier IV de Trainel , Sire de Marigny

Citations

  1. [S236] Unknown author, Leo's Genealogics Website (Leo van de Pas), www.genealogics.org, Helissende de Rethel, Dame de Perthes.

Lionel Plantagenet , KG, Duke of Clarence1,2,3

M, b. 29 November 1338, d. 17 October 1368
     Lionel Plantagenet , KG, Duke of Clarence was buried at Augustine Friars, Clare, Suffolk, England. He was born on 29 November 1338 at Antwerp, Belgium.4,3 He was the son of Edward III Plantagenet King of England and Philippa d' Avesnes , of Hainault. Lionel Plantagenet , KG, Duke of Clarence married Lady Elizabeth de Burgh Countess of Ulster, daughter of William de Burgh the brown Earl, 3rd Earl of Ulster and Maud Plantagenet, on 9 September 1342 at Tower of London.5 Lionel Plantagenet , KG, Duke of Clarence married an unknown person on 28 May 1368 at Milan.5 He died on 17 October 1368 at Alba, Cuneo, Piedmont, Italy, at age 29.4,2,3
     He EARLDOM of ULSTER (V) 1342 (in right of wife)

DUKEDOM of CLARENCE (I) 1362 to 1368

Lionel, styled 'of Antwerp', 3rd, but 2nd surviving son of Edward III, byPhilippe, daughter of William, Count of Holland and Hainault, was b. 29Nov 1338, at Antwerp, and having (in his 4th year) m., 15 Aug 1342, atthe Tower of London, Elizabeth, only daughter and heir of William deBurgh, 3rd Earl of Ulster, by Maud, daughter of Henry, Earl of Lancaster,consummated the said marriage, when aged 14 in 1352. By this match, hebecame, in her right, EARL OF ULSTER, being recognized as such previousto 26 Jan 1347, and acquired not only the right to vast estates inIreland of the de Burgh family, but the possession of a large part(including the honour of Clare) of the estates of the great family of deClare (Earls of Gloucester and Hertford) in right of his said wife'spaternal grandmother, Elizabeth, 'Lady of Clare', wife of John de Burgh,3rd and youngest sister and coheir of Gilbert de Clare, Earl ofGloucester &c., abovenamed. He was, accordingly, on 13 Nov 1362, createdin full Parliament, DUKE OF CLARENCE ('de Clarentia'). He had, when amere child, been made Guardian of England, 1 Jul 1345 and 25 Jun 1346,and had (as Earl of Ulster), probably shortly before Apr 1361, beennominated KG; Chief Governor of Ireland, 1 Jul 1361064, again 1364-5, andagain for some part of 1367.

His wife [Elizabeth de Burgh], who was six years his senior, was b. 6 Jul1332, and d. 1363. He m. 2ndly, (contract at Westminster, 15 May 1367),with great state, 28 May 1368 at Milan, Violanta, daughter of GaleazzoVisconti, Signore de Milano, by Blanca Maria, daughter of Aimo, Count ofSavoy. Soon after this he dspm., 17 Oct 1368, aged nearly 30, at Alba(Longeuvil) in Piedmont, and was buried at Pavia, but subsequentlyremoved to England and buried at Clare Priory, aforesaid. Will dated 3Oct 1368 at Alba, probated 8 Jun 1369 at Lambeth. By his death theDukedom of Clarence became extinct, the Irish Earldom of Ulster, as alsothe Honour of Clare, devolving on his daughter and sole heir. His widowm. 2 Aug 1377, at Pavia, Ottone Paleologo, Marquis of Monferrato, who wasmurdered at Langhirano, near Parma, Dec 1378. She m. 3rdly, her 1stcousin, Lodovico Visconti, Signor di Lodi, who was b. Sep 1358, and d. 18Apr 1381. She d. 1382. [Complete Peerage III:257-8]

---------------------------------------

Lionel Plantagenet, b. 29 November, 1338 (of Antwerp), 3rd son of KingHenry III, who became jure uxoris, Earl of Ulster, and was created 15September, 1362, Duke of Clarence.* The prince was likewise a knight ofthe Garter, he had an only child by the heiress of Ulster, PhilippaPlantagenet, who m. Edmond Mortimer, 3rd Earl of March. About four yearsafter the death of the Duchess Elizabeth (25 April, 1368), King Edwardconcluded the terms of a new marriage for his son, the Duke of Clarence,with Violanta, or Jolantis, the dau. of Galeas, prince of Milan, andsister to John Galeas, who subsequently became 1st Duke of Milan. Thebargain, for such it was in the strictest meaning of the word, was struckat Windsor, upon which occasion the wealthy and munificent Prince Galeaspaid down for his daughter's dowry, the sum of 100,000 florins. This,however, was but a prelude to the unbounded munificence with which hereceived his son-in-law and his small but chosen retinue of Englishnobles, who in number amounted to about 200. When the duke married hisaffianced bride on 15 June, 1368, the luxury of the various feasts thatfollowed upon the nuptial and the richness of the gifts presented byGaleas to the bridegroom and his followers were such as fairly toconfound the imagination. The whole scene, as described by Paulus Jovius,is only to be paralleled by the wild dreamings of some eastern story. Atone banquet, when the celebrated Petrarch was present, thirty coursessucceeded each other, all composed of the choicest viands that the earthor sea could supply, and between each course, as many rare gifts werebrought in by Galeas himself and presented by him to Clarence.

'But not five months after, the Duke of Clarence (having lived with thisnew wife after the manner of his own country, forgetting, or notregarding the change of air, and addicting himself to immoderatefeasting), spent and consumed with a lingering disease, departed thisworld at Alba Pompeia, called also Longuevil, in the Marquisate ofMontserrat, in Piedmont, on the vigil of St. Luke the Evangelist, viz.,the 17th day of October, anno 1368.'

The duke was first buried in the city of Pavia, but was afterwardsbrought over to England by Thomas Narbonne and others of the retinue, whohad accompanied him in his nuptial expedition. The body was then conveyedto the church of the Augustine Friars, at Clare, in Suffolk, and finallydeposited near the remains of his 1st wife, Elizabeth de Burgh. Violantaherself was afterwards m. to Otho, Marquis of Montserrat, but as thechronicler quaintly observes, her 2nd marriage was not more fortunatethan her first; -- Otho soon perished ignobly in the mountains, beingslain by a country stable-keeper.

At the death of Lionel, the Dukedom of Clarence became extinct.

* The title of Clarence was derived from the honour of Clare. [SirBernard Burke, Dormant and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd.,London, 1883, p. 434, Plantagenet, Duke of Clarence]

----------

Lionel of Antwerp, duke of Clarence, also called (1346-62) EARL OF ULSTER(b. Nov. 29, 1338, Antwerp--d. Oct. 17, 1368, Alba, Italy), secondsurviving son of King Edward III of England and ancestor of Edward IV.

Before he was four years of age Lionel was betrothed to Elizabeth (d.1363), daughter and heiress of William de Burgh, earl of Ulster (d.1333), and he entered nominally into possession of her great Irishinheritance. Having been named as his father's representative in Englandin 1345 and again in 1346, Lionel was created earl of Ulster and joined(in 1355) an expedition into France, but his chief energies were reservedfor the affairs of Ireland. Appointed governor of that country, he landedat Dublin in September 1361. In November 1362 he was created duke ofClarence and in the following year his father made an abortive attempt tosecure for him the succession to the crown of Scotland.

His efforts to secure an effective authority over his Irish lands wereonly moderately successful, and after holding a parliament at Kilkenny,which passed the celebrated Statute of Kilkenny in 1366, he threw up histask in disgust and returned to England. At Milan, on May 28, 1368, hemarried Violante, only daughter of Galeazzo Visconti, lord of Pavia, whobrought him a rich dowry. Several months were then spent in festivities,during which Lionel was taken ill and died at Alba.

His only child, Philippa (1355-81), a daughter by his first wife, marriedin 1368 Edmund Mortimer (1352-81), 3rd earl of March, and through thisunion Clarence became an ancestor of Edward IV. [Encyclopædia BritannicaCD '97]

Child of Lionel Plantagenet , KG, Duke of Clarence and Lady Elizabeth de Burgh Countess of Ulster

Citations

  1. [S239] Unknown author, Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999, 36-9, 161-17.
  2. [S269] G. E Cokayne, Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, XII/2:180.
  3. [S269] G. E Cokayne, Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, III:257-8.
  4. [S239] Unknown author, Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999, 161-17.
  5. [S242] Alice Beard, GEDCOM 'Royals of Europe' imported 7 NOV 1999 by Linda Joyce Neely.

William de Burgh , 3rd Earl of Ulster1,2

M, b. 13 September 1312, d. 6 June 1333
     William de Burgh , 3rd Earl of Ulster was born on 13 September 1312 at Ulster, Ireland.1,2 He was the son of John de Burgh , of Ulster and Elizabeth de Clare. William de Burgh , 3rd Earl of Ulster married Maud Plantagenet, daughter of Henry Plantagenet 3rd Earl of Lancaster, MP and Maud de Chaworth, before 1 May 1327; date of Papal dispensation.1,3 William de Burgh , 3rd Earl of Ulster died on 6 June 1333 at Murdered at Le Ford, Belfast, Antrim, Ulster, Ireland, at age 20.1,2
     William de Burgh , 3rd Earl of Ulster was also known as 4th3rd Earl of Ulster , William de Burgh. He EARLDOM OF ULSTER (IV, 3) 1326

WILLIAM (DE BURGH),EARL OF ULSTER, grandson and heir, being son and heirof John DE BURGH and Elizabeth his wife, was born 17 September 1312 andcrossed to England with his grandfather, Earl Richard, in 1322 and 1323.Although still a minor, he received Earl Richard's English lands, 3February, and his Irish lands, 5 February 1326/7, and was summoned toParliament [ENG] from 10 December 1327 to 15 June 1328, by writs directedWillelmo de Burgh, whereby he is held to have become LORD BURGH. He wasknighted in London, 22 May 1328, and was among those who were to go toBerwick for the marriage ceremonies, 12 July following, confirming theTreaty of Northampton. Returning to Ireland in that year with Robert,King of Scots, he was granted the keeping of Carrickfergus Castle, 15November 1328, and of Athlone Castle, 24 February 1330/1. He attendedParliaments [IRL] at Dublin, 1328 and 1329, and at Kilkenny, 1330. In1329-30 he was in conflict with Brian Ban O'Brien in Munster and alsowith the Earl of Desmond. Both Earls were ordered, 19 June 1330, by theKing to keep the peace and both were committed by the Justiciar [IRL] tothe custody of the Marshal in Limerick later in that year. Earl Richardwas ordered to aid and advise the Justiciar, 27 February, and wasappointed the King's Deputy in Ireland, 3 March 1330. He was called toEngland, November 1331, to advise the King as to his intended visit toIreland; and was among those ordered to postpone trials there till afterthe King's arrival, 4 August 1332.

He married (Papal dispensation 1 May 1327) Maud, daughter of Henry, EARLOF LANCASTER AND LEICESTER (grandson of HENRY III) by his 1st wife, Maud,daughter and heir of Sir Patrick DE CHAWORTH, of Kidwelly, co.Carmarthen, and Kempsford, co. Gloucester. He was murdered, 6 June 1333,aged 20, at Le Ford (now Belfast), on his way to Carrickfergus, by Johnde Logan and some of the Mandevilles. His widow fled immediately with herdaughter Elizabeth to England, where she married, before 8 August 1343,Sir Ralph DE UFFORD, Justiciar of Ireland (1344-46), who d. 9 April 1346at Kilmainham (Ireland) and was buried at Campsey Priory, Suffolk. Maud,who became an Augustinian canoness at Campsey in 1347, had licence fromthe Pope to transfer to the Order of St. Clare, 11 April 1364, and wasliving at Bruisyard Abbey in the same co., 21 February 1368/9. She died 5May 1377 and was buried with her 2nd husband at Campsey. [CompletePeerage XII/2:178-9, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)]

Citations

  1. [S234] Frederick Lewis Weis additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition.
  2. [S269] G. E Cokayne, Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, XII/2:178-9.
  3. [S269] G. E Cokayne, Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, XII/2:179.

Ralph de Ufford , Justiciar of Ireland, Sir1,2

M, b. circa 1302, d. 9 April 1346
     Ralph de Ufford , Justiciar of Ireland, Sir was buried at Campsey Priory, Suffolk, England. He was born circa 1302 at Thurston, Stow, Suffolk, England. He was the son of Robert II 1st Baron de Ufford , Sir and Cecily de Valoines. Ralph de Ufford , Justiciar of Ireland, Sir married Maud Plantagenet, daughter of Henry Plantagenet 3rd Earl of Lancaster, MP and Maud de Chaworth, before 8 August 1343.1,2 Ralph de Ufford , Justiciar of Ireland, Sir died on 9 April 1346 at Kilmainham, Dublin, Ireland.1,2

Citations

  1. [S234] Frederick Lewis Weis additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition.
  2. [S269] G. E Cokayne, Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, XII/2:179.

John 'Fairborn' Beaufort , Marquess Somerset, KG1,2

M, b. circa 1370, d. between 16 March 1409 and 1410
     John 'Fairborn' Beaufort , Marquess Somerset, KG was born circa 1370 at Chateau de Beaufort, Maine-et-Loire, France.1 He was the son of John of Gaunt PLANTAGENET and Catherine de Roet. John 'Fairborn' Beaufort , Marquess Somerset, KG married Margaret de Holand, daughter of Thomas de Holand 2nd Earl of Kent, KG, Sir and Alice FitzAlan, before 28 September 1397.1 John 'Fairborn' Beaufort , Marquess Somerset, KG died between 16 March 1409 and 1410 at St Catherine by the Tower Hospital, London, Middlesex, England.1
     He Sir John Beaufort (Beaufort being the name of a castle in Champagnebelonging to his father), KG (c1397); created 10 Feb 1396/7 Earl ofSomerset and 29 Sep 1397 Marquess of Dorset and Marquess of Somerset (hewas degraded from both marquessates 1399 following accession of HenryIV), Constable of England 1404. [Burke's Peerage]

---------------------------

John Beaufort, Earl of Somerset, Marquis of Dorset, KG, b. c 1372, d. 16Mar 1410. He was legitimated with the 3 other children of Katharine byAct of Parliament 20 Richard II (1397) for all purposes except the royalsuccession. He married as her 1st husband, c 1399, Margaret, d. c 30 Dec1439, 3rd daughter and eventual coheir of Thomas Holand, 2nd Earl ofKent, KG. She m. (2) 1411 Thomas, Duke of Clarence, KG, 2nd son of HenryIV. [Magna Charta Sureties]

---------------------------

John Beaufort, KG, Earl and Marquis of Somerset, b. c 1370, d. 16 Mar1409/10, son of John of Gaunt, Duke of Lancaster. [Magna ChartaSureties, line 90-9]

---------------------------

On the Dukedom of Somerset [Burke's Peerage, p. 1661]

Two and a half ceturies later Richard II created the eldest of John ofGaunt's bastards by Catherine Swynford, John Beaufort, Earl of Somerset.He was later promoted Marquess of Somerset, though degraded from the rankin the early part of Henry IV's reign. Both before and after thedeposition of Richard he was a prominent military figure, chiefly inFrance during the Hundred Years War. The latter conflict continured toprovide the Beafort Earls of Somerset with opportunities; the 3rd Earl[John Beaufort], one of John's younger sons, was promoted Duke ofSomerset in 1443 following various military operations in Normandy,Anjou, and Maine, though these were competently executed rather thanconspicuously triumphant. Probably his close kinship with Henry VI wasthe chief cause of his leap in the peerage, for his mother Margaret wasdaughter of Thomas Earl of Kent, a descendant of Edward I. It is thisDuke of Somerset's daughter who was mother of Henry VII.

The Dukedom of Somerset created in 1443 expired with the death of thegrantee [John Beaufort] in 1444.

Child of John 'Fairborn' Beaufort , Marquess Somerset, KG and Margaret de Holand

Citations

  1. [S239] Unknown author, Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999, 90-9.
  2. [S233] Charles Mosley Editor-in-Chief, Burke's Peerage & Baronetage, 106th Edition.

Margaret de Holand1,2

F, b. circa 1385, d. 30 December 1439
     Margaret de Holand was born circa 1385 at Upholland, Lancashire, England. She was the daughter of Thomas de Holand 2nd Earl of Kent, KG, Sir and Alice FitzAlan. Margaret de Holand married John 'Fairborn' Beaufort , Marquess Somerset, KG, son of John of Gaunt PLANTAGENET and Catherine de Roet, before 28 September 1397.3 Margaret de Holand married Thomas Plantagenet , KG, KB, Duke of Clarence on 10 November 1411.4,5,2 Margaret de Holand died on 30 December 1429 at St Saviours Monastery, Bermondsey, Surrey, England.3 She died on 30 December 1439 at St Saviours Monastery, Bermondsey, Surrey, England.4,2
     She Margaret, d. c 30 Dec 1439, 3rd daughter and eventual coheir of ThomasHoland, 2nd Earl of Kent, KG. She m. (2) 1411 Thomas, Duke of Clarence,KG, 2nd son of Henry IV. [Magna Charta Sureties, line 161-18]

----------------

Margaret de Holand, d. 30 Dec 1429; m. (1) bef. 28 Sep 1397 JohnBeaufort, KG, Earl and Marquis of Somerset, b. c 1370, d. 16 Mar 1409/10,son of John of Gaunt, Duke of Lancaster. [Magna Charta Sureties, line90-9]

-----------------

He [Thomas of Lancaster] m. 1411 (Papal Disp. to m. 10 Nov 1411),Margaret, widow of John Beaufort, Marquess of Somerset (and of Dorset),daughter of Thomas de Holand, 2nd Earl of Kent, by Alice, daughter ofRichard FitzAlan, Earl of Arundel. He dsp. legit, aged 31, being slain,while in command, by Sir John de la Croise, at the battle of Bauge, inAnjou, 22 Mar 1420/1, when all his honours became extinct. Will dated 10Jul 1417, probated 23 Nov 1423 at Lambeth. His body was conveyed toEngland, and buried (near his father) in Canterbury Cathedral. Hiswidow, who in 1428 desiring 'to lead a celibate life and putting asideworldly pomps', was living hard by the Augustinian Monastery of St.Saviour's, London, d. 30 Dec 1439, and was there buried under amagnificent monument to herself and her two husbands. [Complete PeerageIII:258-60]

Child of Margaret de Holand and John 'Fairborn' Beaufort , Marquess Somerset, KG

Citations

  1. [S239] Unknown author, Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999, 90-9, 161-18.
  2. [S269] G. E Cokayne, Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, III:258-60.
  3. [S239] Unknown author, Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999, 90-9.
  4. [S234] Frederick Lewis Weis additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition.
  5. [S239] Unknown author, Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999, 161-18.

Isabel le Despenser , Baroness Burghersh1,2,3,4

F, b. 26 July 1400, d. 27 December 1439
     Isabel le Despenser , Baroness Burghersh was born on 26 July 1400 at Cardiff, Glamorganshire, Wales.2,3,4 She married an unknown person on 27 July 1411 at Tewkesbury, Gloucestershire, England.1,3 She married Richard de Beauchamp , KG, 13th Earl of Warwick, son of Thomas de Beauchamp , KG, 12th Earl of Warwick and Margaret Ferrers, on 26 November 1423.2,3,4 Isabel le Despenser , Baroness Burghersh was buried between 13 January 1439 and 1440 at Tewkesbury Abbey, Gloucestershire, England. She died on 27 December 1439 at Friars Minoresses, London, Middlesex, England, at age 39.2,3,4
     She Isabel, Baroness Burghersh in her own right, widow of his cousin Richardde Beuachamp, Earl of Worcester, and sister and heir of Richard leDespenser, de jure Lord (Baron) Burghersh. [Burke's Peerage]

Note: Isabel was mother of Henry de Beauchamp, 14th Earl of Warwick & 1stDuke of Warwick, dspm 11 June 1464; also Anne de Beauchamp, who becameCountess of Warwick after Henry's daughter Anne died 3 Jan 1448/9.

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Isabel le Despenser, m. 27 July 1411 [Richard de Beauchamp], (daughter ofThomas le Despenser and Constance, daughter of Edmund, Duke of York).[Magna Charta Sureties]

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He [Richard Beauchamp, Earl of Worcester] m. 27 Jul 1411, at Tewkesbury,Isabel, sister and eventually (1414) sole heir of Richard le Despenser,apparently de jure Lord Burghersh, being daughter of Thomas, theattainted Earl of Gloucester (Lord le Despenser), by Constance, daughterof Edmund, Duke of York. He dspm. (being mortally wounded at the siegeof Meaux in France, 18 Mar 1421/2), and was buried 25 Apr 1422 inTewkesbury Abbey. At his death, his vast estates and the representationof his Barony devolved on his only daughter and heir (Elizabeth), but theEarldom of Worcester apparently reverted to the Crown. His widow, (whowas b. (posthumous) 26 Jul 1400 at Cardiff, and who was apparently suojure Baroness Burghersh) m. (by papl dispensation) 26 Nov 1423, at HanleyCastle, co. Worcester, as 2nd wife, her husband's cousin, RichardBeauchamp, 13th Earl of Warwick, who d. 30 Apr, and was buried 4 Oct1439, at Warwick. M.I. Will dated 8 Aug 1435. She d. 27 Dec 1439, atthe Friars Minoresses, London, and was buried 13 Jan 1439/40, inTewkesbury Abbey. M.I. WIll dated 1 Dec 1439, probated 4 Feb 1439/40.Inq.p.m. at Abingdon, June 1441. [Complete Peerage I:26-27, XIV:6]

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He [Richard de Beauchamp, Earl of Warwick] married, 2ndly, 26 November1423, at Hanley Castle, co. Worcester, Isabel, de jure suo jure(according to modern doctrine) BARONESS BURGHERSH, widow of his cousinRichard (DE BEAUCHAMP), EARL OF WORCESTER (who died s.p.m. March 1422),sister and heir of Richard (LE DESPENSER), de jure LORD BURGHERSH (whodied s.p. 7 October 1414), posthumous daughter and eventually sole heirof Thomas (LE DESPENSER), EARL OF GLOUCESTER and LORD LE DESPENSER (whowas beheaded, January 1399/1400, and afterwards attainted] by Constance,daughter of Edmund, 'of Langley,' DUKE OF YORK, 5th son of EDWARD III. Hedied 30 April 1439 at Rouen, aged 57, and was buried 4 October in St.Mary's, Warwick, being afterwards removed to the Lady Chapel (built byhis executors), where is a superb monument to him. His widow, who wasborn 26 July 1400 at Cardiff, died 27 December 1439 at the FriarsMinoresses, London, and was buried 13 January 1439/40 in TewkesburyAbbey, aged 39. M.I. [Complete Peerage XII/2:378-82, (transcribed byDave Utzinger)]

Child of Isabel le Despenser , Baroness Burghersh and Richard de Beauchamp , KG, 13th Earl of Warwick

Citations

  1. [S239] Unknown author, Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999, 47-8.
  2. [S233] Charles Mosley Editor-in-Chief, Burke's Peerage & Baronetage, 106th Edition.
  3. [S269] G. E Cokayne, Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, I:26-27.
  4. [S269] G. E Cokayne, Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, XII/2:378-82.

Unknown First wife1

F, b. circa 1220, d. before 1273
     Unknown First wife was born circa 1220. She died before 1273.

Child of Unknown First wife and Robert Neville

Citations

  1. [S233] Charles Mosley Editor-in-Chief, Burke's Peerage & Baronetage, 106th Edition.

Sarah de Vescy

F, b. circa 1236, d. before 1273
     Sarah de Vescy married Robert I Peyton de Ufford , Justiciar Ireland. Sarah de Vescy was born circa 1236 at Alnwick Castle, Northumberland, England. She died before 1273.
     She Curt Hofemann, curt_hofemann AT yahoo.com, wrote in a post-em (but Ithink based on unreliable information):

FWIW, the flwg is from:


& says his wife was Sara de VESEY dau & h of Wm. de VESEY, Earl ofSuffolk (in right of his wife) Maud de GLANVILLE dau of Ralph DeGlanville s of Gilbert de GLANVILLE, 3rd Earl of Suffolk (who wasstripped of his estates & title by Henry III).

Ralph de Glanville, the eldest son (of Gilbert de Glanville, 3rd Earl ofSuffolk), was a benefactor to Leiston Abbey, founded by hisgreat-grandfather, the Lord Chief Justice. 'Ufortunately I have not comeacross anything further connected with him but that he left an onlydaughter, Maud de Glanville, his sole heiress, who married Sir William deVesey, [fn 46] of Ireland, who, as most people do say, was created Earlof Suffolk, in right of his wife, in 1326. Sir William de Vesey had issueby her, Sara de Vesey, sole heiress, who married Robert de Ufford, [fn47] and whose issue were now made Earls of Suffolk. The original name ofUfford was Peyton of Peyton, in Suffolk. The above-named Robert deUfford, or more properly Peyton, was a younger son of John de Peyton, andhe assumed his surname from his lordship of Ufford.

Robert de Ufford, who married Sara de Vesey, inherited through herconsiderable estates which had formerly belonged to the Glanvilles. Theirson, Robert de Ufford, was summoned to Parliament as a Baron 13 Jan.1308, and continued to sit as such until the year 1311. He considerablyaugmented his estates by his marriage with Cicely, daughter and coheir ofRobert, Lord Valoins, and also heiress of another branch of the Glanvillefamily.

An account of the descent of the Glanville inheritance to the Uffords isgiven under the Lordships of Bawdsey, Glosthorpe, Orford, Aldringham, andCombs.

This Robert de Ufford was succeeded by his son, Robert de Ufford, Knightof the Garter, who served in the wars of Saxony in the reign of EdwardII., and in the beginning of Edward III. he obtained a grant for life ofthe town and castle of Oreford, formerly the Glanville property, thecastle having been built by Glanville, Earl of Suffolk, [fn 48] and ofwhich Bartholomew de Glanville was governor in the days of the secondHenry.

Regards,
Curt

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Sarah Vesey's marriage Robert de Peyton is based on a book written byWilliam Urmston S. Glanville-Richards, Esq. in 'Records of the AngloNorman House of Glanville from AD 1050 to 1880', who describes three'Earls of Suffolk', which titles are totally false, and is described as'a classic example [e.g.] of 19th century antiquarian mayhem - built froma mass of unquestionably invaluable Glanville source material, assembledinto a dismally ill-considered narrative/pedigree. (The most blatant and- because it is so patently berserk - ultimately least crucial examplebeing his persistently calling Ran(d)ulph, William and Gilbert deGlanville the 1st, 2nd, and 3rd 'Earls of Suffolk' when no such earldomexisted).' [Christopher Nash, 1 Sep 1998 posting tosoc.genealogy.medieval newsgroup]

After such a glowing review of the veracity of the Glanville-Richardsinformation, there is doubt whether Sarah existed or was married toRobert. She certainly is not indicated by any reliable source (CP, MCS,etc.]. However, the 'reliable sources' do not have Robert marrying forthe first time until he was about 40, which is unlikely. Plus I have asource for Alice as being a daughter of Robert, when her indicated agewould be by a first wife earlier than the 'Mary, widow of William de Say'who is the 1st wife, according to the 'reliable sources'.

I see in Jack Comas' files on World Connect db=:990696, rootsweb.com,that Sarah is daughter of William de Vescy by his first (according to'reliable sources') wife Isabel Longespee. This looks reasonable to me. Sarah de Vescy was also known as Sarah de Vesey.

William de Montagu , KG, 2nd Earl of Salisbury1,2

M, b. 20 June 1328, d. 3 June 1397
     William de Montagu , KG, 2nd Earl of Salisbury married Joan Plantagenet , 'The Fair Maid of Kent', daughter of Edmund of Woodstock Plantagenet 1st Earl of Kent and Margaret of Liddell Wake Baroness Wake, BEF 10 FEB 1340/41; dissolved by Pope 17 Nov 1349.3 William de Montagu , KG, 2nd Earl of Salisbury was buried at Bisham Priory, Maidenhead, Berkshire, England. He was born on 20 June 1328 at Donyatt, Chard, Somerset, England.2 He married an unknown person after 1349.2 He died on 3 June 1397 at Salisbury, Wiltshire, England, at age 68.2
     He The 2nd Earl of this creation fought at Crecy and Poitiers and was afounder of the Knight of the Garter, outliving all his fellowfirst-generation KG's. He also went through a form of marriage andsubsequently cohabited as husband with Joan 'The Fair Maid of Kent'.[Burke's Peerage]

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BARONY OF MONTAGU (IV)

EARLDOM OF SALISBURY (VII, 2)

WILLIAM (DE MONTAGU), EARL OF SALISBURY and LORD MONTAGU, son and heir,was born 20 June 1328, at Donyatt, Somerset. He served with a retinue inthe Crécy campaign, being kniehted at the landing at La Hogue, 13 July1346. Having done homage, he had order for livery of his inheritance,July 1349. Knight Founder of the Garter, and the last surviving Founder.He took part in the fight with the Spaniards off Winchelsey, 1350. Heserved in the Prince's campaigns in France, 1355 and 1356, being in jointcommand of the rearguard at Poitiers, 19 September 1356, and seems tohave been abroad on service till 1360. Commissioner of the peace, Hantsand Somerset, 1361; in Dorset, 1368, and in Wilts, 1380. In 1363hereditary steward of Chester; in 1364 commissioner to treat of themarriage of the King's son, Edmund of Langley, with Margaret of Burgundy.P.C. 1365; in 1367, commissioner of array in Somerset. He took part inJohn of Gaunt's expedition into France, 1369, and executed indentures toserve, February 1371/2. In February 1372/3 he indented to serve in thefleet, and was appointed Captain of the whole armada of ships and barges.In 1375, and again in 1377, a commissioner to treat for peace withFrance; in July 1376 appointed Admiral from mouth of Thames westward; inMarch 1376/7 ordered to repair to his lands in the Isle of Wight, todefend them against the French. At the Coronation of Richard II he boreone of the ceremonial vestments; in July 1377 he was appointed to providefor the defence of the coasts of Hants, Somerset and Dorset; in Januaryfollowing he indented to serve under the King of Castile; and later, withthe Earl of Arundel, made a successful expedition to Cherbourg. AppointedCaptain of Calais, 2 February 1378/9, and in September following chiefcommissioner to treat again with France. In the Parliament of November1381 he was appointed on committees to inquire into the conduct of theKing's household, and the guarding of the seas against the enemy; and inDecember he escorted Anne of Bohemia from Calais to Dover. In 1382appointed Keeper of the Isle of Wight and Carisbrooke Castle, of which,in 1385 he had a grant in fee. He was summoned for service in Scotland,June 1385; in 1389 and 1392 was a commissioner to treat of peace withFrance.

He married, 1stly, Joan, suo jure COUNTESS OF KENT, BARONESS WOODSTOCKand BARONESS WAKE, sister and heir of John, EARL of KENT, and daughter ofEdmund, EARL OF KENT, younger son of EDWARD I by his 2nd wife Margaret,daughter of PHILIP III, KING OF FRANCE (a). He married, 2ndly, Elizabethborn 1343), 1st daughter, and in 1375 coheir, of John (MOHUN), LORDMOHUN of Dunster, by Joan, daughter of Bartholomew (BURGHERSH), LORDBURGHERSH. He died 3 June 1397 and was buried at Bisham. His widow, whoreceived issues of robes of the Garter, had orders [for dower, December1397, and later. In 1402 she escorted Princess Blanche, elder daughter ofHenry IV, to Cologne for her marriage. She died 14-16 January 1414/5.[Complete Peerage XI:388-90, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)]

(a) The marriage presumably took place before 10 Feb 1340/1, when theEarl of Salisbury [William's father] had lic. to settle Mold uponWilliam, son of William de Montagu, and Joan his wife; certainly beforethe date in 1343, when the Bishop of Exeter (Grandison) wrote that hisnephew, son and heir of the Earl of Salisbury, had m. the niece of ThomasWake (Lord Wake of Liddell). Sir Thomas Holand (later Earl of Kent)afterwards proved that he had m. Joan (about 1339, when she would havebeen 11), and alleged that, in his absence in Prussia, she was m. toWilliam de Montagu. William and Joan were still living as husband andwife, 15 Oct 1348. They were divorced in or before Oct 1349. The popeordered the re-establishment of the 1st marriage, 17 Nov 1349. The papalcommission to the archbishop, concerning the marriage of the Prince ofWales and the Countess Joan, 7 Sep 1361, confirmed by another Bull, 11Dec following, records that the Earl of Salisbury acquiesced in thedefinitive sentence (pronounced in 1349) and m. another lady, whom hethenceforth possessed, and still possesses, as his lawful wife.

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The following information was contained in a post-em by Curt Hofemann,curt_hofemann AT yahoo.com:

Earl of Salisbury [Ref: Weis AR7 47 & 236]
2nd Earl of Salisbury [Ref: Paget p20]
Jul 13 1346: knighted at the landing of La Hogue [Ref: CP XI:388]
founding Knight of Garter, and last surviving founder [Ref: CP XI:388]

William Montacute, Earl of Salisbury (1328-1397) Born: 20th June 1328at Donyatt, Somerset, Baron Montagu, Earl of Salisbury, Died: 3rd June1397 at Bisham, Berkshire.

This Earl, the eldest son and heir of William, Lord Montacute, thefirst Earl of Salisbury of that family, by Katherine daughter of William,Lord Grandisson, was born on the 20th June 1328. His father, one of themost eminent warriors of his time, died on the 30th January 1344, inconsequence of bruises received at the Windsor jousts; and the youngEarl, then in his sixteenth year, having doubtless also participated, andwith distinction, in those chivalrous exercises, was chosen to be one ofthe Founders of the Order of the Garter in the April following.

He was in the expedition into France in 1346 and received knighthood,if not the degree of banneret, upon landing at La Hogue. We find himmentioned as assisting at the Siege of Caen and it may be presumed thathe was also at Crécy. In the two following years, he was again on servicein France and, about this period, he contracted a marriage with the LadyJoan Plantagenet, 'the Fair Maid of Kent'. However, Sir Thomas Hollandpetitioned Pope Clement VI, alleging that she had previously been hiswife, in virtue of a marriage lawfully solemnised, and that, during hisabsence in distant parts, the Earl had married and then unjustly detainedher from him. The case was referred, by the Holy See, to theinvestigation of Cardinal Ademar, who, having examined witnesses on bothsides, reported that the marriage between Holland and Joan had beenlegally celebrated. The Pope thereupon, by his bull dated at Avignon,13th November 1349, decreed the contract with Montacute to be null andvoid, and ordered restitution of the lady to Holland, her lawful husband.

In the same year, William made proof of his age and had livery of hislands, and, before the end of the year, succeeded, upon the death of hismother, to the lands which she had held in dower. In 1350, he was in thenaval engagement with the Spaniards off Winchelsea and, on 24th October1353, did homage to the King at Westminster, in the presence of PrinceEdward, for his Barony of Denbigh. Being, along with his younger brother,Sir John Montacute, of that Prince's retinue, he embarked at Plymouth forGascony, on 1st January 1356 in order to play his part in the HundredYears War against France. He had, with him, letters to the Seneschal forhis special protection against any demand upon him during two years, onaccount of the debts of his ancestors. William was involved in the foray,with the Earls of Warwick, Suffolk and Oxford, in Languedoc, on whichoccasion they burnt the suburbs of Narbonne, destroyed Carcassonne andreturned, over the district of Armagnac, to Bordeaux.

In 1356, the Earl commanded the rear of the English army at the Battleof Poitiers and continued in France during the year following. In 1359,he appears to have been in attendance on the King in his Frenchexpedition; and was there also in 1360. He was present, in 1368, at theconclusion of the truce and, in 1369, was sent, with the Earl of Warwickand others, under the command of the Duke of Lancaster, to Calais. In1370, he was, at Westminster, one of the witnesses to the celebratedletter for the redress of grievances in Aquitaine. In 1372, he embarkedwith the King at Southampton and sailed towards Rochelle with a view torelieve Thouars; but the fleet was compelled, by contrary winds, toreturn to England. In 1376, he was constituted Admiral of the Fleet and,in the same year, was found by inquisition to be one of the co-heirs ofhis cousin, Thomas, Lord Grandisson.

On the accession of Richard II, William was appointed to secure thesea?coasts in the counties of Hampshire, Dorset & Somerset and, in thefollowing year, was Governor of Calais. In 1384, he was ordered to marchagainst the Scots. In 1385, the Isle of Wight and the Castle ofCarisbrooke were granted to him for life. He continued in publicemployment until his death, which happened on 3rd June 1397, at the ageof sixty?nine. He made his will on 20th April 1387, under the titles ofEarl of Salisbury and Lord of the Isles of Man and Wight, and directedhis interment in the conventual church of the Priory of Bisham inBerkshire, which had been founded by his father. The will was proved on27th June following.

The Earl had, soon after the decision of the Pope in 1349, marriedElizabeth, the eldest daughter and co-heiress of John, Lord Mohun ofDunster (Somerset), by whom he had an only child, Sir William Montacute,who married, in 1378, Elizabeth FitzAlan, daughter of Richard, Earl ofArundel, but died without issue, having been unhappily slain in a tiltingmatch at Windsor (Berks) by the Earl, his father, on the 6th August 1382.Elizabeth, Countess of Salisbury, took the veil some years after thedeath of her husband; and was received into the sisterhood of the conventof St. Albans on 10th October 1408. She made her will on the eve of St.Katherine, 1414, and died on 14th January 1415, leaving Philippa, Duchessof York, her younger sister, and Richard, Lord Strange of Knockyn, son ofMaud her other sister, her next heirs.

Edited from George Frederick Beltz's 'Memorials of the Most Noble Orderof the Garter' (1861). [Ref: Britannia.com athttp://www.britannia.com/bios/lords/]

Jim, check out above website for lots of great bios on others in yourdatabase.

Regards,
Curt

And Curt added the birth place in a later post-em, correcting my original:

Birth: 19 JUN 1328 in Cassington, Oxfordshire, England

CP XI:388 confirms date but lists place: Donyatt, Somerset, England

Regards,
Curt.

Citations

  1. [S233] Charles Mosley Editor-in-Chief, Burke's Peerage & Baronetage, 106th Edition.
  2. [S269] G. E Cokayne, Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, XI:388-90.
  3. [S269] G. E Cokayne, Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, XI:388-90 & note (a).

John de Mohaut , of Bingley1,2

M, b. circa 1236, d. before 13 December 1273
     John de Mohaut , of Bingley married Milicent de Cantelou.1,2 John de Mohaut , of Bingley was born circa 1236 at Castle Rising, Norfolk, England. He died before 13 December 1273 at Bingley with Micklethwaite, Keighley, West Riding Yorkshire, England.1
     He Click here for Photoof Castle Rising (use browser back arrow to return.) John de Mohaut , of Bingley was also known as John de Montalt , of Bingley.

Citations

  1. [S234] Frederick Lewis Weis additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition.
  2. [S233] Charles Mosley Editor-in-Chief, Burke's Peerage & Baronetage, 106th Edition.

Paul Peyver or Piper , King's Steward1

M, b. circa 1215, d. 5 June 1251
     Paul Peyver or Piper , King's Steward married Joan Esquire.1 Paul Peyver or Piper , King's Steward was born circa 1215 at England. He died on 5 June 1251 at London, Middlesex, England.

Citations

  1. [S233] Charles Mosley Editor-in-Chief, Burke's Peerage & Baronetage, 106th Edition.

Maud de Prendergast1

F, b. circa 1243
     Maud de Prendergast married Maurice 'Mael' FitzMaurice , Lord of Offaly.1 Maud de Prendergast was born circa 1243 at Beauvoir, Cork, Ireland.
     She Widow of Maurice de Rocheford.

Child of Maud de Prendergast and Maurice 'Mael' FitzMaurice , Lord of Offaly

Citations

  1. [S233] Charles Mosley Editor-in-Chief, Burke's Peerage & Baronetage, 106th Edition.

Edmund Beaufort , KG, 1st Duke of Somerset1,2,3

M, b. circa 1406, d. 22 May 1455
     Edmund Beaufort , KG, 1st Duke of Somerset was born circa 1406 at Westminster, Middlesex, England.4 He was the son of John 'Fairborn' Beaufort , Marquess Somerset, KG and Margaret de Holand. Edmund Beaufort , KG, 1st Duke of Somerset married Eleanor Beauchamp, daughter of Richard de Beauchamp , KG, 13th Earl of Warwick and Elizabeth Baroness de Berkeley , & Lisle & Teye, circa 1436.5,2 Edmund Beaufort , KG, 1st Duke of Somerset died on 22 May 1455 at Battle of St Albans, Hertfordshire, England.4
     He Edmund Beaufort, Marquis of Dorset, Duke of Somerset, Lieut. General ofFrance, Normandy and Guienne. [Ancestral Roots]

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Sir Edmund Beaufort, 4th Earl of Somerset and 1st Duke of Somerset, aswhich created 31 March 1448, as also earlier 28 Aug 1442 Earl of Dorsetand 24 June 1443 Marquess of Dorset, KG (1436); born c1406; Constable ofEngland 1450; married by 1436 Lady Eleanor Beauchamp, daughter ofRichard, Earl of Warwick and widow of 8th Lord (Baron) de Ros ofHelmsley, and was killed fighting on the Lancastrian side at the YorkistVictory of St Albans 22 May 1455. [Burke's Peerage, p. 220]

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On the Dukedom of Somerset [Burke's Peerage, p. 1661]

The Dukedom of Somerset created in 1443 expired with the death of thegrantee [John Beaufort] in 1444. His brother [Edmund Beaufort] inheritedas 4th Earl of Somerset, however, and in 1448 was promoted Duke ofSomerset, despite a military career of relative failure during the lastphase of the Hundred Years War. He died fighting on the Lancastrian sideat the 1st Battle of St Albans in 1455.

Child of Edmund Beaufort , KG, 1st Duke of Somerset and Eleanor Beauchamp

Citations

  1. [S239] Unknown author, Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999, 90-10, 80-10.
  2. [S234] Frederick Lewis Weis additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition.
  3. [S233] Charles Mosley Editor-in-Chief, Burke's Peerage & Baronetage, 106th Edition.
  4. [S239] Unknown author, Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999, 90-10.
  5. [S239] Unknown author, Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999, 80-10, 90-10.

Eleanor Beauchamp1,2

F, b. 1407, d. between 6 March 1466 and 1467
     Eleanor Beauchamp married Thomas 8th Baron de Ros , of Helmsley, Sir.3 Eleanor Beauchamp was born in 1407 at Eddgenoch, Warwickshire, England.3 She was the daughter of Richard de Beauchamp , KG, 13th Earl of Warwick and Elizabeth Baroness de Berkeley , & Lisle & Teye. Eleanor Beauchamp married Edmund Beaufort , KG, 1st Duke of Somerset, son of John 'Fairborn' Beaufort , Marquess Somerset, KG and Margaret de Holand, circa 1436.1,2 Eleanor Beauchamp married Walter Rokesley , of Walthamstow, Esq after 1455.3 Eleanor Beauchamp died between 6 March 1466 and 1467 at Baynard's Castle, London, Middlesex, England.3
     She Eleanor; married 1st 8th Lord (Baron) Ros of Helmsley and had issue;married 2nd by 7 March 1437/8 1st Duke of Somerset of the 1448 creation.[Burke's Peerage]

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Eleanor Beauchamp, b. Eddgenoch, co Warwick, 1407; d. 6 March 1467, widowof Thomas, Lord Ros, and daughter of Richard Beauchamp, Earl of Warwick,she married (3) Walter Rokesley, Esq. [Ancestral Roots]

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Eleanor Beauchamp, b. 1407, d. 6 Mar 1467; m. (1) Thomas, Lord Ros; m.(2) by 1436, Edmund Beaufort, Duke of Somerset; m. (3) Walter Rokesley,Esq. [Magna Charta Sureties]

Child of Eleanor Beauchamp and Edmund Beaufort , KG, 1st Duke of Somerset

Citations

  1. [S239] Unknown author, Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999, 80-10, 90-10.
  2. [S234] Frederick Lewis Weis additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition.
  3. [S239] Unknown author, Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999, 80-10.

Thomas Plantagenet , KG, KB, Duke of Clarence1,2,3

M, b. 29 September 1388, d. between 22 March 1420 and 1421
     Thomas Plantagenet , KG, KB, Duke of Clarence was buried at Canterbury Cathedral, Kent, England. He was born on 29 September 1388 at Kenilworth, Warwickshire, England.3 He married Margaret de Holand, daughter of Thomas de Holand 2nd Earl of Kent, KG, Sir and Alice FitzAlan, on 10 November 1411.1,2,3 Thomas Plantagenet , KG, KB, Duke of Clarence died between 22 March 1420 and 1421 at Battle of Bauge, Anjou, France.3
     He Thomas, Duke of Clarence, KG, 2nd son of Henry IV. [Magna ChartaSureties]

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DUKEDOM of CLARENCE (II) 1412 to 1421

Thomas, styled 'of Lancaster', 2nd son of Henry IV, by his 1st wife,Mary, daughter and coheir of Humphrey de Bohun, Earl of Hereford, was b.29 Sep 1388; on 4 Oct 1399 he was appointed Seneschal of England, but onaccount of his youth the Earl of Worcester was appointed Deupty Steward;KB, 12 Oct 1399; KG, circa 1400; Chief Governor of Ireland, under thestyle of 'Thomas of Lancaster', 1401-13; though frequently absent. LordHigh Admiral under the style 'King's Admiral', 1405-6; Member of theCouncil 1411. Constable of Hawarden Castle, Chester, and of MohautCastle, Flint, in reversion 2 Feb 1411/2, and in possession 27 Apr 1415.On 9 Jul 1412 he was created EARL OF AUMALE and DUKE OF CLARENCE,Lieutenant of Aquitaine, 1412-13; High Steward of Chester, 1415. Hepresided at the trial for treason in 1415, of Richard, Earl of Cambridgeand Henry, Lord Scrope of Masham. Constable of the Army, 1417; andLieutenant General of the Army in France and Normandy, 1417-21. He wasin command at the siege of Rouen, which lasted 6 months and ended in itscapture, 19 Jan 1418/9.

He m. 1411 (Papal Disp. to m. 10 Nov 1411), Margaret, widow of JohnBeaufort, Marquess of Somerset (and of Dorset), daughter of Thomas deHoland, 2nd Earl of Kent, by Alice, daughter of Richard FitzAlan, Earl ofArundel. He dsp. legit, aged 31, being slain, while in command, by SirJohn de la Croise, at the battle of Bauge, in Anjou, 22 Mar 1420/1, whenall his honours became extinct. Will dated 10 Jul 1417, probated 23 Nov1423 at Lambeth. His body was conveyed to England, and buried (near hisfather) in Canterbury Cathedral. His widow, who in 1428 desiring 'tolead a celibate life and putting aside worldly pomps', was living hard bythe Augustinian Monastery of St. Saviour's, London, d. 30 Dec 1439, andwas there buried under a magnificent monument to herself and her twohusbands. [Complete Peerage III:258-60] Thomas Plantagenet , KG, KB, Duke of Clarence was also known as 2nd Duke of Clarence , Thomas Plantagenet. Thomas Plantagenet , KG, KB, Duke of Clarence was also known as Thomas of Lancaster , KG, KB, Duke of Clarence.

Citations

  1. [S234] Frederick Lewis Weis additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition.
  2. [S239] Unknown author, Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999, 161-18.
  3. [S269] G. E Cokayne, Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, III:258-60.

Elizabeth Baroness de Berkeley , & Lisle & Teye1,2,3

F, b. circa 1386, d. 28 December 1422
     Elizabeth Baroness de Berkeley , & Lisle & Teye was buried at Kingswood Abbey, Gloucestershire, England. She was born circa 1386 at Berkeley Castle, Thornbury, Gloucestershire, England.1,2,3 She was the daughter of Thomas 5th Baron de Berkeley , MP, Sir and Margaret Baroness de Lisle. Elizabeth Baroness de Berkeley , & Lisle & Teye married Richard de Beauchamp , KG, 13th Earl of Warwick, son of Thomas de Beauchamp , KG, 12th Earl of Warwick and Margaret Ferrers, in September 1393.4 Elizabeth Baroness de Berkeley , & Lisle & Teye married Richard de Beauchamp , KG, 13th Earl of Warwick, son of Thomas de Beauchamp , KG, 12th Earl of Warwick and Margaret Ferrers, before 5 October 1397.3 Elizabeth Baroness de Berkeley , & Lisle & Teye married Richard de Beauchamp , KG, 13th Earl of Warwick, son of Thomas de Beauchamp , KG, 12th Earl of Warwick and Margaret Ferrers, before May 1399.2 Elizabeth Baroness de Berkeley , & Lisle & Teye died on 28 December 1422 at Warwick Caste, Warwickshire, England.1,2,3
     She Elizabeth (dspm 28 Dec 1422), Baroness Berkeley, Lisle and Teyes in herown right, only daughter of 5th Lord (Baron) Berkeley. [Burke's Peerage]

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Elizabeth de Berkeley, Lady Lisle and Teye, age 30 in 1417, d. 28 Dec1422; m. Richard de Beauchamp, KG, Earl of Warwick and Albemarle[France]. [Magna Charta Sureties]

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He [Richard de Beauchamp] married, 1stly (covenant September 1392),before 5 October 1397, Elizabeth, de jure suo jure (according to moderndoctrine) BARONESS BERKELEY, also BARONESS LISLE (of Kingston Lisle) andBARONESS TEYES, only daughter and heir of Thomas (DE BERKELEY), 5th LORDBERKELEY, by Margaret, de jure suo jure (according to modern doctrine)BARONESS LISLE (of Kingston Lisle) and BARONESS TEYES, only daughter andheir of Warin (DE LISLE), 2nd LORD LISLE (of Kingston Lisle) and LORDTEYES. She, who was under 7 in 1392, died s.p.m. 18 December 1422 and wasburied in Kingswood Abbey, co. Gloucester. M.I. On her death the Baroniesof Berkeley, Lisle and Teyes fell, according to modern doctrine, intoabeyance between her 3 daughters and coheirs. [Complete PeerageXII/2:378-82, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)]

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BARONY OF LISLE (IV)

ELIZABETH BERKELEY, according to modern doctrine suo jure BARONESS LISLEof Kingston Lisle and BARONESS TEYES, daughter and heir, succeeded tothese baronies on the death of her mother in 1392. On the death of herfather in 1417, when she was aged 30, she succeeded him, according tomodern doctrine, as BARONESS BERKELEY. She opposed the succession ofJames Berkeley her cousin, heir male of her father, to the Berkeleyestates. She married, before May 1399, as 1st wife, Richard (BEAUCHAMP),EARL OF WARWICK, who styled himself 'Comes de Warrewyk et de Aumale,seigneur L'Isle et capitayne de Rouen.' See fuller particulars of him subWARWICK. She died s.p.m., 28 December 1422, and was buried in KingswoodAbbey, Wilts. At her death the Baronies of Lisle, Teyes and Berkeleyfell, according to modern doctrine, into abeyance (k) among her 3daughters and coheirs: (i) MARGARET; see below. (ii) ELEANOR, bornSeptember 1408, at Walthamstow in Essex, married, 1stly, Thomas, LordROS, 2ndly, Edmund (Beaufort), Duke of Somerset, and, 3rdly, WalterRokesley; in the Inquisition post mortem on her father (1439) she is saidto have been aged 25. (iii) ELIZABETH, born in Warwick Castle, marriedGeorge (Nevill), Lord Latimer; she is said to have been aged 22 in herfather's Inquisition post mortem. [Complete Peerage VIII:54-5,(transcribed by Dave Utzinger)]

[k] In 1823 Sir John Shelley Sidney, Bart., petitioned for thedetermination of the abeyance in the Barony of Lisle in his favour assole heir of the body of Margaret, the eldest da. and coh. of Elizabeth,Countess of Warwick. The petitioner's descent from Gerard, 1st Lord Lisle[1357] was through the families of Shelley, Perry, Sydney, Dudley, Grey,Talbot, Beauchamp, Berkeley and Lisle. The other coheirs were: George,Earl of Essex, Sir Henry Hunloke, Bart., and Charlotte, Baroness Ros, ascoheirs of the body of Eleanor, the 2nd da; and Hugh, Duke ofNorthumberland Winchcomb Henry Howard Hartley, James Knightley, TrothGrove, Villiers William Villiers, Montagu, Earl of Abingdon, Sir FrancisBurdett, Bart., William Fermor, and John, Lord Rollo, as coheirs of thebody of Elizabeth, the third da. The case is fully set out in Sir N. H.Nicolas's Report of the Proceedings on the Claim to the Barony of L'Isle[1829], which he published with a view to defending the modern doctrineas to barony by writ, in which, as a practising Peerage Counsel, he wasmuch interested. The doctrine was assailed in the judgment delivered byLord Redesdale (18 and 22 May 1826), which did not reject the petition,as has been generally supposed, on the ground of want of proof ofsitting, but because in his Lordship's opinion a writ of summons and asitting thereunder at so early a date did not in fact create anhereditary barony. On 25 May following the House of Lords resolved 'thatthere did not appear to be sufficient ground to advise His Majesty toallow the claim of the Petitioner.' In 1835 the petitioner's only son wascreated Baron De L'Isle and Dudley of Penshurst.

Child of Elizabeth Baroness de Berkeley , & Lisle & Teye and Richard de Beauchamp , KG, 13th Earl of Warwick

Citations

  1. [S239] Unknown author, Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999, 80-9.
  2. [S269] G. E Cokayne, Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, VIII:54-5.
  3. [S269] G. E Cokayne, Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, XII/2:378-82.
  4. [S234] Frederick Lewis Weis additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition.

Thomas 5th Baron de Berkeley , MP, Sir1,2

M, b. between 5 January 1352 and 1353, d. 13 July 1417
     Thomas 5th Baron de Berkeley , MP, Sir was born between 5 January 1352 and 1353 at Berkeley Castle, Thornbury, Gloucestershire, England.1,3 He was the son of Maurice IV 'The Valiant' 4th Baron de Berkeley and Elizabeth le Despenser. Thomas 5th Baron de Berkeley , MP, Sir married Margaret Baroness de Lisle, daughter of Warin 2nd Baron de Lisle , of Kingston, KG, Sir and Margaret Pypard, in November 1367 at Wingrave, Buckinghamshire, England.1,4 Thomas 5th Baron de Berkeley , MP, Sir died on 13 July 1417 at Wotton-under-Edge, Dursley, Gloucestershire, England.1,5,6,3
     He Thomas de Berkeley, b. Berkeley Castle 5 Jan 1352/3, d. 13 July 1417,Lord Berkeley, MP 1381-1415; m. Nov 1367, Margaret, Baroness Lisle, b.1360, d. 20 Mar 1391/2, daughter of Warin de Lisle, Lord Lisle. [MagnaCharta Sureties]

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Thomas de Berkeley, Lord Berkeley, son and heir, who 'may bee calledThomas, the Magnificent.' He was b. at Berkeley Castle, 5 Jan 1352/3,and after having a ward to his father-in-law, Lord Lisle, made proof ofhis age on 5 Jan 1373/4. He was summoned to Parliament from 16 July 1381to 3 Sep 1415. From 1378 to 1385 he served in the wars in France, Spain,Brittany, and Scotland, and in 1386 entertained the King at BerkeleyCastle, for the deposition of whom, however, he was, 30 Sep 1399, one ofthe Commissioners. PC to Richard II and Henry IV. Admiral of the Southand West 1403; Joint Warden of the Welsh Marches 1404, and one of theRegents of the Kingdom, Apr 1416.

He m. Nov 1367, in his 15th year, at Wingrave, Bucks, Margaret, de juresuo jure (according to modern doctrine) Baroness Lisle (of KingstonLisle) and Baroness Tyeys, daughter and heir of Warin de Lisle, LordLisle, by Margaret, daughter and coheir of Sir William Pipard. She wasthen aged but 7, and they remained 4 years apart. At her father's death,28 June 1382, she inherited considerable estates, and, in her own right,her husband appears to have styled himself Lord Lisle. She d. betweenMay and Sep 1392, and was buried at Wotton-under-Edge, co. Gloucester. Hedspm (c) 13 July 1417, in his 65th year and was buried at Wottonaforesaid. M.I. Will dated 2 Feb 1415/6, probated 1417. [CompletePeerage II:130-1, XIV:87]

(c) Elizabeth, his sole daughter and heir, aged 30 in 1416, m. RichardBeauchamp, 13th Earl of Warwick, by whom she had three daughters andcoheirs, viz. Margaret, wife of John Talbot, Earl of Shrewsbury; Eleanor,who m. (1) Thomas, Lord Ros, (2) Edmund, Duke of Somerset, and (3) WalterRokesley, Esq; and Elizabeth, wife of George Neville, Lord Latimer.According to the usual descent of Baronies in fee the dignity created bythe Writ of Summons of 1295 and that of 1308, should have devolved on thesaid Elizabeth, daughter and heir of Thomas, Lord Berkeley, and not uponhis collateral heir male; but whether this anomaly arose from an ideathen prevailing, that the tenure of the Castle of Berkeley conferred theBarony, or whether the heir male had the greater political influence,cannot now perhaps be ascertained: the inference which may be drawn fromthe relative situations of the husband of the said Elizabeth, who was oneof the most powerful noblemen of the time, and that of James Berkeley whosucceeded to the Barony, is, that the tenure of Berkeley Castle was thenconsidered to confer the dignity on its possessor, and consequently thatthe said James was allowed that dignity as his right, rather than by thefavour of the Crown. There were, however, other instances, as inBurghersh and De la War, of the heir male of a Baron by Writ, beingsummoned instead of the heir general, and if modern decsisions may beapplied to the subject, the Baronies of Berkeley, created by the Writs ofSummons are now in abeyance between the descendants and representativesof the three daughters and coheirs of Elizabeth, Countess of Warwick,above mentioned, whose names will be found in a Note to the account ofthe Barony of Lisle; and the Barony possessed by the Earls Berkeley(1658-1882) is that created by the Writ of Summons to James Berkeley 1421.

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She [Margaret Lisle] married, in November 1367, at Wingrave, Bucks, whenaged about 7, Thomas BERKELEY, son of Maurice, LORD BERKELEY, byElizabeth, daughter of Hugh DESPENSER the younger, LORD DESPENSER,[e]which Thomas succeeded his father as LORD BERKELEY 8 June 1368. On 7 July1379 Thomas and Margaret had a Papal indult for a portable altar. On 30November 1381 it was agreed between Thomas, Lord Berkeley, and Warin,Lord Lisle, that Margaret wife of Thomas and daughter of Warin shouldhave all Warin's lands; Warin to come and go and dwell at BerkeleyCastle, enjoying free hunting and fishing; he and Thomas to traveltogether in all wars; and the issue of Thomas and Margaret to bear anduse the arms of Lisle after Warin's death. They had livery of herstepmother's dower 29 May 1392. She died between May and September 1392,and was buried at Wotton-under-Edge, co. Gloucester. He died sp.m. 13July 1417, and was buried at Wotton. The brasses remain, but are withoutinscription. [Complete Peerage VIII:53-4, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)]

Child of Thomas 5th Baron de Berkeley , MP, Sir and Margaret Baroness de Lisle

Citations

  1. [S239] Unknown author, Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999, 80-8.
  2. [S269] G. E Cokayne, Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, II:130-1, VIII:53-4.
  3. [S269] G. E Cokayne, Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, II:130-1.
  4. [S269] G. E Cokayne, Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, VIII:53-4, II:131.
  5. [S239] Unknown author, Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999, 28b-9.
  6. [S269] G. E Cokayne, Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, VIII:53-4.

Margaret Baroness de Lisle1,2

F, b. circa 1360, d. between May 1392 and September 1392
     Margaret Baroness de Lisle was born circa 1360 at Kingston Lisle, Sparsholt, Berkshire, England.1,2 She was the daughter of Warin 2nd Baron de Lisle , of Kingston, KG, Sir and Margaret Pypard. Margaret Baroness de Lisle married Thomas 5th Baron de Berkeley , MP, Sir, son of Maurice IV 'The Valiant' 4th Baron de Berkeley and Elizabeth le Despenser, in November 1367 at Wingrave, Buckinghamshire, England.1,2 Margaret Baroness de Lisle died between 20 March 1391 and 1392.1 She died between May 1392 and September 1392 at Wotton-under-Edge, Dursley, Gloucestershire, England.3
     She Margaret, Baroness Lisle, b. 1360, d. 20 Mar 1391/2, daughter of Warin deLisle, Lord Lisle. [Magna Charta Sureties]

Note: Her death date given above is wrong, being based on CP II:131,which was corrected by CP XIV:87 to agree with CP VIII:54, whichcorrectly states 'between May and September 1392'.

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BARONY OF LISLE (III)

MARGARET LISLE, according to modern doctrine suo jure BARONESS LISLE ofKingston Lisle and BARONESS TEYES, daughter and heir by 1st wife, beingheir of her father after her brother Gerard's death. She was aged 22 andmore at her father's death, and 30 and more at the death of herstepmother. She married, in November 1367, at Wingrave, Bucks, when agedabout 7, Thomas BERKELEY, son of Maurice, LORD BERKELEY, by Elizabeth,daughter of Hugh DESPENSER the younger, LORD DESPENSER,[e] which Thomassucceeded his father as LORD BERKELEY 8 June 1368. On 7 July 1379 Thomasand Margaret had a Papal indult for a portable altar. On 30 November 1381it was agreed between Thomas, Lord Berkeley, and Warin, Lord Lisle, thatMargaret wife of Thomas and daughter of Warin should have all Warin'slands; Warin to come and go and dwell at Berkeley Castle, enjoying freehunting and fishing; he and Thomas to travel together in all wars; andthe issue of Thomas and Margaret to bear and use the arms of Lisle afterWarin's death. They had livery of her stepmother's dower 29 May 1392. Shedied between May and September 1392, and was buried at Wotton-under-Edge,co. Gloucester. He died sp.m. 13 July 1417, and was buried at Wotton. Thebrasses remain, but are without inscription. [Complete Peerage VIII:53-4,(transcribed by Dave Utzinger)]


[e] On account of Margaret's youth it had been agreed that they shouldremain apart for four years. 'The sicknes of the lord Maurice Berkeleyincreasing, notwithstanding the former agreement [Wednesday after Trinity41 Edw. III] of fower years stay: they were by his request maryed at thesaid lord Lisle his house at Wengrave in Buckinghamshire in November nextfollowing And being himself unable to travell to his sons marriage sentwith his son to attend him three of his houshold Knights. Sir Richard deActon, Sr John Tracy and St Nicholas de Berkeley, and 23 of his housholdEsquiers (all named in his houshold accompt;) The Knights were suted intheir liveries of fine cloth of ray furred with miniver, And the Esquiresin their liveries of coarser ray and less costly furre: And the youngbridgegroom himself was in scarlet and sattin and a silver girdle And thelord Maurice himselfe that kept home, infirmed in body, in honornotwithstanding of the mariage, made himself a sute de panno deaurato,which I think I may English, cloth of gold; And at the day of thesolemmization of the marriage, Sr Richard de Acton gave the minstrelsfourty shillings . . . The lord Thomas bringeth his wife the ladyMargaret to Berkeley about the fifth of Richard the second, whom her saidfather accompanyeth.' (J. Smyth, Berkeley MSS. (Bristol and Glos.Arch.Soc.), vol. ii, pp, 2, 3, 4) Smyth describes the wife as 'a verymild and devout lady but nothing active in her family.'

Child of Margaret Baroness de Lisle and Thomas 5th Baron de Berkeley , MP, Sir

Citations

  1. [S239] Unknown author, Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999, 80-8.
  2. [S269] G. E Cokayne, Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, VIII:53-4, II:131.
  3. [S269] G. E Cokayne, Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, VIII:53-4, II:131, XIV:87.