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Family Subtree Diagram : .Katherine Sanford (1642)

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children) (a child) (a child) (a child) (a child) (a child) (a child) (a child) (a child) (a child) (two children) (a child) (two children) (two children) (a child) (a child) (three children) (two children) (four children) (a child) (a child) (two children) (two children) (a child) (a child) (two children) (a child) (a child) (a child) (a child) (a child) (a child) (a child) (a child) (a child) (a child) (a child) (a child) (a child) (a child) (a child) (a child) (a child) (a child) (a child) (a child) (a child) (a child) (four children) (three children) (a child) Marriage (a child) Marriage (a child) (a child) 1436 - 1493 Margaret Bromflete 57 57 Sources:

   1. Title: Southern Familie
      Repository:
      Call Number:
      Media: Book
   2. Title: Some Colonial Dames of Royal Descent, Pedigree LXXXV, Page 351 
1435 John de Clifford 1412 - 1467 Henry Bromflete 55 55 1394 Margaret Saint John 1392 - 1430 Thomas Bromflete 38 38 1625 - 1646 John Scrope Jones Sanford 21 21 1592 Martha Jeanes Sandford Jones 1584 - 1630 Emmanuel Scrope 45 45 1566 John Jeanes 1567 - 1609 Thomas Scrope 42 42 1538 - 1590 Margaret Howard 52 52 1534 - 1592 Henry Scrope 58 58 1393 - 1463 Margaret De Neville 70 70 1510 - 1549 John Le Scrope 39 39 1513 - 1598 Catherine Clifford 85 85 1500 - 1533 Henry Le Scrope 33 33 1476 - 1533 Mabel Dacre 57 57 1468 - 1506 Henry Scrope 38 38 1468 Elizabeth Percy 1496 John Scrope 1437 - 1498 John Scrope 61 61 5th Baron Scrope of Bolton

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JOHN (LE SCROPE), LORD SCROPE (of Bolton), 1st son and heir (a), born 22 July 1437 or 1438. The escheators in cos. Leicester and York were ordered to cause him to have full seisin of his father's lands, 5 May 1459. He was summoned to Parliament from 30 July 1460 16 January 1496/7; knighted before 23 August 1460, when he was on the Commission of the Peace, co. York, North Riding. A Yorkist, he was with Warwick at the battle of Northampton, 10 July 1460; present in London when Thomas Bourchier, Archbishop of Canterbury, surrendered the Great Seal, 25 July 1460; 'sore hurt' at the battle of Towton, 29 March 1461; present at the battle of Hexham, 15 May 1462; attended Edward IV on his journey to Scotland, December 1464; nominated K.G. before 22 April 1463; Captain of Newcastle, winter 1463-64. He headed a rising in Richmondshire, but submitted to Edward at York, 22 March 1469/70; in charge of the East coast before Edward's landing, 14 March 1470. He was a Commissioner to negotiate a marriage between the Lady Cecily, youngest daughter of Edward IV, and James, the infant son of James III [SCT], 29 July 1474, and stood proxy for her at her betrothal, Edinburgh, 26 October following; took part in the King's invasion of France with 20 men-at-arms and 200 archers, 1475; was on a mission to Rome with Earl Rivers, 1476; Commissioner of Oyer and Terminer, Middlesex 12 May 1477 and co. York, 5 May 1481/2; Commissioner of Array, co. York, North Riding, 20 June 1480. With Northumberland he led the van of the English army invading Scotland, July 1482; Commissioner to treat with the Ambassadors of Alexander (Stewart), Duke of Albany [SCT], 12 January 1482/3. He attended the Coronation of Richard III, 6 July 1483; Commissioner to assess and collect certain subsidies, co. York, 1 August 1483; Commissioner of Array to resist the rebels, Devonand Cornwall, 13 November 1483; co. York, North Riding, 8 December 1484; on the Commission of the Peace, Cornwall, 30 December 1483; Devon and Somerset, 5 December 1484. For his good serviccs against the rcbels Richard III granted him and the heirs male of his body certain manors and lands in Devon and Cornwall, 5 December, and appointed him Constable of Exeter Castle for life, 6 December 1484. After the accession of Henry VII he was present at the banquet of the Order of the Garter at York, 22 April 1486, but he supported Lambert Simnel and, with Thomas, Lord Scrope (of Masham), made an unsuccessful attack on Bootharn Bar, York, June 1487. He had a general pardon February 1487/8. He fought against the Scots and assisted in raising the siege of Norham Castle, August 1497.

He married, 1stly (dispensation 22 November 1447, they being related in the 4th degree), Joan, daughter of William(FITZHUGH), 4th LORD FITZHUGH, by Margery, daughter of Sir William (DE WILLOUGHBY), LORD WILLOUGHBY. She, who, as well asher husband, was admitted to the Gild of Corpus Christi, York, 1462-63, died before 1470. He married, 2ndly, before 10 December 1471, Elizabeth, widow of William (LA ZOUCHE), 5th LORD ZOUCHE (of Haryngworth) (died 25 December 1462), daughter of Sir Oliver ST. JOHN, by Margaret, only daughter and eventually heir of Sir John BEAUCHAMP, of Bletsoe, Beds. She was living in 1489 and died before 3 July 1494. He married, 3rdly, after 9 February 1490/1, Anne, widow of (i) Sir William CHAMBERLAINE, K.G. (diedMarch or April 1462), and (ii) Sir Robert WINGFIELD, M.P.,Controller of the Household (died shortly before 13 November 1481), daughter and heir of Sir Robert HARLING, of East Harling, Norfolk, by Jane, daughter and heir of Edmund GUNVILLE. He died 17 August 1498 [a2]. His widow, by whom he had no issue, died 18 September 1498. [Complete Peerage XI:544-6, XIV:573-4,(transcribed by Dave Utzinger)]

(a) He had 2 brothers, Sir Richard Scrope and Ralph Scope, Rector of Hambleden, Bucks, and Archdeacon of Northumberland, d. 2 Mar 1516.

[a2] He held a messuage or tenement in London lately called 'Sergiauntes Inn' opposite St. Andrew's, Holborn, of which he had been enfeoffed by Sir Guy Fairfax, Justice of the King's Bench, by charter, 8 February 1493/4. The 1st Lord's father had acquired a messuage in Holborn as early as 1344. The 5th Lord also held lands in Kent, Bucks, Beds, Leic, co. Cambridge, Rutland, York City, co. York, co. Lincoln and Notts.

Note: http://www.tudorplace.com.ar/SCROPE.htm#John%20SCROPE%20(5ø%20B.%20Scrope%20of%20Bolton) for picture

Note: seriously wounded at the Battle of Towton. Henry VI is reputed to have come to Bolton after losing the Battle of Hexham. Scrope looked after him well for two days before he departed. Within 4 miles of Bolton the King was apprehended by the Earl of Warwick, who conveyed him to the Tower of London, where he was murdered, probably on the orders of Edward IV. Scrope subsequently supported the Earl of Warwick when he rebelled against Edward IV. Scrope was pardoned by Edward and was named as an executor, the Duke of Clarence, executed by being drowned in a butt of Malmsey wine. Scrope subsequently supported Richard III, closely related to both Catesby and Lovell, (The Rat and The Cat and Lovell his dog, rule all of England under The Hog) fighting at The Battle of Bosworth Field. Pardoned again by Henry VII, he then supported Lambert Simnel's Revolt. Thomas Lord Scrope of Masham, with John, Lord Scrope of Bolton besieged York, thinking that the citizens of York would support The Yorkist Pretender. They received no support and were defeated. Both were heavily fined. Scrope of Bolton was ordered to remain within 22 miles ofLondon 2

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Sources:
Title: AFN:
Abbrev: AFN:
Title: Tudor Place
Abbrev: Tudor Place
Author: Jorge H. Castelli
Title: Horrocks, Philips, Winget, Keeler, Clark, Watson, Lockwood, Strong, Gates and ancestors
Abbrev: Horrocks, Philips, Winget, Keeler, Clark, Watson,
Author: Lloyd A. Horocks
Title: The Phillips, Weber, Kirk and Staggs Family
Abbrev: The Phillips, Weber, Kirk and Staggs Family
Author: Jim Weber
1434 Joane Fitzhugh 1642 - 1677 Katherine Sanford 34 34 Ancestral File Number: 3F4Q-GT
Most records list Katherine's birth year as 1652, but some list it as 1642. We've listed her as being born in 1642, because her father, John Sandford, apparently died of the Plague in 1646 at the age of 21.
1242 - 1279 Maud de Briene 36 36 # Note:

    He [Geoffrey de Canville/Camville] m. 1stly, Maud, widow of Nicholas Martin (son and heir apparent of Nicholas fitz Martin, of Cemais or Kemes, co Pembroke, and Blagdon, Somerset), daughter of Guy de Brian, of Laugharne, co. Carmarthen, by Eve (to whom she was heir), daughter and heir of Henry de Tracy, of Barnstaple, Devon. The King took his homage and they had livery of the lands of her grandfather, the said Henry de Tracy, 24 Sep 1274. She, who was b. 25 Dec 1242 (c), d. before Michaelmas 1279. [Complete Peerage III:3-4]

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(c) But she was probably b. before this date, as her 1st son, William Martin is described as 25 and more in Mar 1281/2.

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Title: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition, by Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., 1999
Page: 63a-31
Text: Maud de Brian ,c 1242

Title: Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, by G. E Cokayne, Sutton Publishing Ltd, 2000
Page: III:4, VIII:535
Text: bef. Michaelmas 1279,no date
1467 Thomas Dacre 1493 William Dacre 1420 - 1485 Humphrey Dacre 65 65 Catherine Dacre Elizabeth Dacre 1387 - 1457 Thomas de Dacre 69 69 D. 1457 Philippa Neville 1410 Thomas Darcy 1418 Joan Dacre 1364 - 1425 Ralph de Neville 61 61     The "Kingmaker's" grandfather, the 1st Earl of Westmorland settled about half the original Neville estates on the children of his second marriage, whereas the subsequent Earls of Westmorland were the product of his first. It thus came about that the 2nd-6th Earls of Westmorland were actually less well-endowed territorially than their ancestors who had been mere barons. The pre-eminence of that branch of the family represented by the Earls of Salisbury/Warwick, who stemmed from the second marriage, was made correspondingly easier.

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    The 1st Earl of Westmorland had multiplicity of children: nine by the first wife, fourteen by his second. Of his 23 in all, four were peers, three were duchesses and another four daughters the wives of lesser peers; moreover of those three duchesses one was mother of two kings. Between 1450 and 1455 no fewer than 13 members of the family had seats in the House of Lords. This very fecundity like that of Edward III, engendered quarrels. There was rivalry between the two branches of the family, which grew from a dispute about family estates into a difference as to dynastic loyalties. It thus served as an overture to the Wars of the Roses, one which was made even more ominous by a dispute between the Nevilles, represented by the 1st Marquess of Montagu and the Percys. [Burke's Peerage]

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    Sir Ralph de Neville, KG, b. c 1346, d. Raby 21 Oct 1425, created 1st Earl of Westmorland 1397; m. (1) Margaret Stafford, d. 9 June 1396; m. (2) before 29 Nov 1396 Joan Beaufort, d. Howden 13 Nov 1440, widow of Robert Ferrers, daughter of John, Duke of Lancaster and Katharine (Roet) Swynford. [Magna Charta Sureties]

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    Sixth Baron Neville of Raby, became a Knight of the Garter and 1st Earl Westmoreland September 29, 1397. As a Lancasterian, he opposed Richard II in 1399 and conveyed Richard's resignation to the convention. He assisted in the coronation of Henry IV and was a member of the council of regency appointed to rule in the infancy of King Henry V. With his second marriage to Joan Beaufort, a widowed daughter of John Of Gaunt, fourth son of Edward III, this favorably affected Joan and Ralph's wealth and social prestige, making possible brilliant marriages for their children. In 1450, five of Ralph's sons, five sons-in-law and several grandsons were in Parliament.

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    Held many offices, among them Constable of the Tower of London and in 1399, Marshall of England the year he was created Earl of Richmond. He was a member of Richards II's privy council, saw service at Agincourt on October 25, 1415 where Henry won a victory over the superior numbers of French owing to his superior generalship.

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He married his first wife Margaret, daughter of Hugh, Earl of Stafford by special dispensation from Pope Urban V, because of their close relationship.

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The marriage to Joan, his second wife, was a much more distinguished one as the line now descends through the royal house of England. summoned to Parliament from December 6, 1389 to November 30, 1396.

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Some say he is the son of Elizabeth Latimer

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Was created Earl of Westmorland by Richard II on 9-29-1397
------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Ralph de Nevill, 4th baron, summoned to parliament from 6 December, 1389, to 30 November, 1396. This nobleman took a leading part in the political drama of his day and sustained it with more than ordinary ability. In the lifetime of his father (9th Richard II), he was joined with Thomas Clifford, son of Lord Clifford, and was appointed a commissionership for the guardianship of the West Marches. In three years after this he succeeded to the title, and in two years subsequently he was one of the commissioners appointed to treat with the Kings of France and Scotland, touching a truce made by them with the King of England. In the 21st Richard II [1378], he was made constable of the Tower of London and shortly afterwards advanced in full parliament to the dignity of Earl of Westmoreland. His lordship was of the privy council to King Richard and had much favour from that monarch, yet he was one of the most active in raising Henry, of Lancaster, to the throne as Henry IV, and was rewarded by the new king in the first year of his reign with a grant of the county and honour of Richmond for his life, and with the great office of Earl Marshal of England. Soon after this, he stoutly resisted the Earl of Northumberland in his rebellion and forced the Percies, who had advanced as far as Durham, to fall back upon Prudhoe, when the battle of Shrewsbury ensued, in which the gallant Hotspur sustained so signal a defeat, and closed his impetuous career. The earl was afterwards governor of the town and castle of Carlisle, warden of the West Marches towards Scotland, and governor of Roxborough. He was also a knight of the Garter. His lordship m. 1st, Lady Margaret Stafford, dau. of Hugh, Earl Stafford, K.G., for which marriage a dispensation was obtained from Pope Urban V, the earl and his bride being within the third and fourth degrees of consanguinity; by this lady he had issue, John, Lord Nevill; Ralph; Maud; Phillippa; Alice; Margaret; Anne; Margery; and Elizabeth. The earl m. 2ndly, Joan de Beaufort, dau. of John of Gaunt, by Katherine Swynford, and widow of Robert, Lord Ferrers, of Wem, by whom he had issue, Richard; William; George; Edward; Cuthbert; Henry; Thomas; Catherine; Eleanor; Anne; Jane; and Cicely. This great earl d. in 1425 and was s. by his grandson, Ralph Nevill, 5th Baron Nevill, of Raby. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, England, 1883, pp. 393-4, Nevill, Barons Nevill, of Raby, Earls of Westmoreland]

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Title: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition, by Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., 1999
Page: 10-33, 207-34

Title: The Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999
Page: 45-7, 47-7, 8-9, 8a-9

Title: Burke's Peerage & Baronetage, 106th Edition, Charles Mosley Editor-in-Chief, 1999
Page: 12-13, 14

Title: Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, by G. E Cokayne, Sutton Publishing Ltd, 2000
Page: XII/1:450

http://wc.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=tamer&id=I5824

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1st Earl of Westmoreland, 6th Baron Raby, K. G.

Neville, Ralph, 1st Earl of Westmorland (1364?-1425), English soldier and statesman. Born the 4th Baron Neville of Raby, Neville was knighted in 1380 and created earl of Westmorland in 1397 by Richard II in recognition of his assistance to Richard against the lords appellant (a coterie of noblemen who had accused Richard’s supporters of treason).

Neville rebelled against Richard II in 1399 and assisted Henry IV in gaining the crown, for which he was granted the office of marshal of England for life. After the defeat of Henry Percy, 1st earl of Northumberland, and his son Sir Henry Percy, called Hotspur, in their revolt against Henry IV in 1403 at the Battle of Shrewsbury, Westmorland was given the wardenship of the west marches. In the revolt of 1405, in which Archbishop Richard Scrope and Thomas Mowbray, 3rd earl of Nottingham, accused Henry of treason, Neville took Scrope and Mowbray prisoners. Neville was thereafter constantly occupied in negotiations to keep the peace on the Scottish border, and was one of the executors of Henry V's will and regent for his son.

Neville was succeeded in the earldom by his grandson, Ralph Neville, who died in 1484. The title remained with his descendants until it reverted to the crown with the condemnation in 1571 of Charles Neville, 6th earl of Westmorland, for his part in the attempted liberation of Mary, Queen of Scots.

© 1993-2003 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.

1365 - 1396 Margaret Stafford 31 31 1385 John Neville Ralph Neville Matilda Neville 1384 Alice Neville Anne Neville Margery Neville Elizabeth Neville 1357 - 1399 William de Dacre 42 42 Joan Douglas 1365 Margaret Douglas 1380 Joan d'Arce 1243 Walter de Beauchamp Margaret de Beauchamp 1255 - 1295 Ralph de Toeni 40 40 1235 - 1264 Roger de Toeni 28 28 1188 - 1239 Ralph de Toeni 51 51 Ralph de Toeni V, Lord of Flamstead, etc., died at sea while on his way to the Holy Land in 1239. He received from Richard, Earl of Cornwall, grant of the lordship of Bliston, and the manors of Carnanton and Helston in Trigg, Helston-Tony. He married after 1232, as her 1st husband, Petronella de Lacy, daughter of Walter de Lacy. She brought to him the manors of Brentford and Jackhull in Hereford.
(Kin of Mellcene Thurman Smith, page 609)
1200 - 1288 Pernel de Lacy 88 88 1255 Ralph de Toeni 1215 Constance de Toeni 1281 - 1323 Alice de Toeni 41 41 1156 - 1208 Roger de Toeni 52 52 1160 - 1226 Constance de Beaumont 66 66 1130 - 1162 Ralph de Toeni 32 32 1125 - 1185 Margaret de Beaumont 60 60 Margaret, daughter of Robert, 2nd Earl of Leicester of the post-Conquest creation made in favour of Robert's father Robert de Beaumont. [Burke's Peerage]

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He [Ralph de Toeni] married Margaret, daughter of Robert, 2nd EARL OF LEICESTER, by Amice, daughter of Ralph, SEIGNEUR OF GAEL AND MONTFORT in Brittany. He died in 1162. His widow had Walthamstow, Essex, in dower; and also held land at Pont-St.-Pierre and other places in Normandy. In 1185 she was said to be 60 years of age. [Complete Peerage XII/1:764-5, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)]

Children
Ida de Toeni b: ABT 1155 in Flamstead, Hertfordshire, England
Roger V de Toeni , de Conches, Lord Flamstead b: ABT 1160 in Flamstead, Hertfordshire, England

Sources:

AFN:91VK-ZD

Title: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition, by Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., 1999 Page: 98a-

Title: Burke's Peerage & Baronetage, 106th Edition, Charles Mosley Editor-in-Chief, 1999 Page: 2679

Title: Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, by G. E Cokayne, Sutton Publishing Ltd, 2000 Page: XII/1:765
1104 - 1158 Roger de Toeni 54 54 1109 Ida de Hainault D. 1514 Thomas Parr 1493 - 1531 Maud Greene 38 38 1512 Catherine Parr Ann Parr 1165 Angharad Gruffydd     He married Ankaret, daughter of Rhys ap GRUFFYDD, prince of South Wales, but in 1191 Rhys, contrary to his oath, expelled William from the castle of Nevern, giving it to his own son Griffin; later another son, Maelgwn, held it under Llewelyn. He died in 1208 or 1209, when William his son and heir owed 300 marks as relief. His widow died in or shortly before August 1226.

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Title: Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, by G. E Cokayne, Sutton Publishing Ltd, 2000
Page: VIII:532 
1145 - 1209 William Fitzmartin 64 64     WILLIAM SON OF MARTIN, son and heir, by 2nd wife, sometimes more fully described as William son of Robert son of Martin, occurs in the Pipe Rolls from 1176 till the time of John. Between 1170 and 1183 he granted a messuage and land in the manor of Blagdon to the canons of St. Augustine's, Bristol. He confirmed to the church of St. Michael on the Steep Holme a grant of land in Uphill which had belonged to Serlo de Burci at the time of the Domesday Survey. In 1176 he was fined by the justices in Somerset. He witnessed two undated charters of Henry II, and in 1187 was assessed for scutage in Somerset and Devon. In 1194 Richard I confirmed to William son of Robert son of Martin the lands and liberties of Serlo de Burci, grandfather of Robert. In 1198 William made an exchange of lands in Combe Martin, Devon, with Warin de Morcells, who had married his sister Sibyl. In 1207 he gave 20 marks that his bailiff might be liberated and his manor of Pidel' (Puddle Waterson, Dorset) be restored.

# Note:

    He married Ankaret, daughter of Rhys ap GRUFFYDD, prince of South Wales, but in 1191 Rhys, contrary to his oath, expelled William from the castle of Nevern, giving it to his own son Griffin; later another son, Maelgwn, held it under Llewelyn. He died in 1208 or 1209, when William his son and heir owed 300 marks as relief. His widow died in or shortly before August 1226.

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Title: The Plantagenet Ancestry, by William Henry Turton, 1968
Page: 120

Title: Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, by G. E Cokayne, Sutton Publishing Ltd, 2000
Page: VIII:532 
1165 Oliver Martin Sir Oliver was a Knight and a Crusader, one of those military enthusiasts who strangely mixed religion and romance; whose exploits form the connecting link between fact and fiction.
He accompanied King Henry II in 1186 in the conquest of Ireland; settled in Galway and his descendents were among the famous "13 tribes of Galway. In 1193 he accompanied Richard Coeur de Lion to the Holy Land and shared his captivity with him.

He was the ancestor of the Irish branch of the family; accompanied King Henry II, in 1186, in the conquest of Ireland.

Colonial Families of the United States of America, New York: 1907, Mackenzie, George Norbury Ed.
~1398 - 1457 Eleanor Fitzhugh 59 59 He [Philip Darcy] married, before 28 October 1412, Alianore, daughter of Sir Henry FITZHUGH, of Ravensworth in Richmondshire [LORD FITZHUGH], by Elizabeth, daughter and heir of Sir Robert GREY. He died s.p.m., 2 August 1419, aged 20. At his death any Barony, that may be supposed to have been created by the writ of 1332 , fell into abeyance. His widow's dower was ordered to be assigned, 5 March 1420/1. She married, 2ndly (pardon for marrying without the King's consent, 18 February 1426/7), Sir Thomas TUNSTALL, of Thurland, co. Lancaster. She married, 3rdly, as 2nd wife, Sir Henry BROUNFLETE, of Londesborough, co. York, afterwards LORD VESSY. She died 30 September 1457. He died 16 January 1468/9. [Complete Peerage IV:65-7, (transcribed by DaveUtzinger)]

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Sources:
Title: British Roots of Maryland Families II
Abbrev: British Roots of Maryland Families II
Author: Robert W. Barnes
Publication: 2002
Title: AFN:
Abbrev: AFN:
Title: The Johns-Alexander Descendants of William the Conqueror
Abbrev: The Johns-Alexander Descendants of William the Con
Author: Nancy and Boyd Alexander
Publication: uploaded Jun 2, 2001
Title: The Phillips, Weber, Kirk and Staggs Family
Abbrev: The Phillips, Weber, Kirk and Staggs Family
Author: Jim Weber
Title: Royal Genealogy
Abbrev: Royal Genealogy
Author: Brian Tompsett
Publication: 1994-1999
Title: Tudor Place
Abbrev: Tudor Place
Author: Jorge H. Castelli
1137 - 1186 Gudeheut de Toeni 49 49 1441 - 1508 Mabel Parr 67 67 1358 - 1413 Katharine Clifford 55 55 1471 Elizabeth Greystoke 1335 - 1402 Maud de Beauchamp 67 67 1333 - 1389 Roger de Clifford 56 56 1371 Philippa Clifford 1367 Margaret de Clifford 1307 - 1362 Isabel de Berkeley 55 55 1305 - 1345 Robert de Clifford 40 40 1336 Isabella de Clifford 1493 - 1542 Henry de Clifford 49 49 1508 - 1540 Margaret Percy 32 32 Henry Clifford 1458 - 1523 Henry de Clifford 65 65 1452 - 1506 Anne St. John 54 54 1497 Margaret Clifford 1500 Elizabeth Clifford 1461 Elizabeth Clifford 1390 - 1437 Elizabeth Percy 47 47 1387 - 1422 John de Clifford 35 35 1414 Thomas de Clifford 1370 Alice de Clifford 1421 Mary de Clifford 1363 - 1391 Thomas Clifford 28 28 Sherriff of Westmorland 1367 - 1424 Elizabeth de Ros 57 57 Maud de Clifford ~1384 - 1408 Joane de Bromflete 24 24 1304 - 1388 Edward St. John 84 84 1340 Anastasia de Aton 1259 - 1368 Edward St. John 109 109 1285 - 1355 Eve de Hauterive 70 70 1225 - 1302 John de St. John 77 77 1255 - 1305 Alice FitzPiers 50 50 1279 Agnes de St. John 1202 Agnes de Canteloupe 1199 - 1266 Robert de St. John 67 67 1173 - 1213 William de St. John 40 40 Saint-Jean-le Thomas: Manche, arr. Avranches, cant. Sartilly.

On the conquest of Normandy William de St. John adhered to king John and his lands in Normandy were confiscated by Philip Augustus [King of France]. An entry in the Registers of Philip Augustus makes the place of origin certain. William was the son of Adam de Port of Basing by Mabel, heiress of Oval and through her mother of the St. John honour of Halnaker; and William adopted the name of St. John. Gerville has given a description of the remains of the castle at St-Jean-le-Thomas.
[Origins of Some Anglo-Norman Families]

WILLIAM DE PORT, afterwards WILLIAM DE ST JOHN (d), son and heir by 1st wife, made profer in 1202 of 150 li. for the lands in England of his great-uncle William de St John (h1), i.e. the honor of Halnaker. In 1203 he occurs on the Norman Exchequer Rolls as owing 12 li. 10s. for scutage on the service of 21 knights' due on the fees of William d'Orval. On the separation of England and Normandy in 1204 William adhered to King John and his lands in Normandy were confiscated. Southampton castle was committed to him on his father's death, and he was sheriff of Hants, 1214 and 1215. He was with John in his disastrous expedition in Poitou and Anjou, 1214. In February 1214/5 he was one of the King's emissaries to the Earls, Barons and people of Hants, and in November one of those charged to bring men from Angouleme, and stores from Corfe castle, to the King at Rochester; but later he joined the Dauphin, probably at the siege of Winchester, July 1216.

However, on 16 March 1216/7 he had a safe-conduct to speak with the Earl Marshal, his lands having been granted on the previous day to John Marshal. In February 1219/20 he was "with the King" at the siege of Bytham; in February 1224/5 he witnessed the Forest Charter and the confirmation of Magna Carta. Bailiff of the Channel Islands, May 1227 to October 1232. In 1230 he served in Henry's abortive expedition into France, and in 1233 was employed in defence of the Southeast coast. He married Godeheut (h2); and died in 1239 (i). By 1242-43 his widow had married Richard de Lucy (j). [Complete Peerage XI:321-2, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)]

(d) Ego Willielmus de Sancto Johanne filius et heres Adae de Port. The change of name, of which the first undoubted occurrence is at Trinity 1205, is curious, since the family of Port both in ancestry and landed estate was more important than that of St. John.

(h1) His mother Mabel through whom these lands came to the family being dead, they passed direct to William as his mother's heir and his father Adam took no estate by curtesy.

(h2) She is said, in the Boxgrove "Stemma Funditoris" to have been daughter of ? Paynel. They had younger sons Adam and William. Their daughter Godeheut m., 1stly William de Ros of Kent; 2ndly Hugh de Wyndleshores.

(i) Besides his gifts to Boxgrove, he was a benefactor of Bromholm priory, Norfolk.

(j) They held West Shelford, Berks, of the inheritance of Robert de St. John.

Title: The Origins of Some Anglo-Norman Families, by Lewis C Loyd, 1999
Page: 89

Title: Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, by G. E Cokayne, Sutton Publishing Ltd, 2000
Page: XI:321-322
1177 Godchild Pagenell ~1151 - 1213 Adam de Port 62 62 1105 Muriel de St. John Roger de St. John Cecily de Haya John de St. John 1235 - 1286 Reginald FitzPiers 51 51 1249 - 1314 Joan de Vivonia 65 65 1275 Peter FitzReginald 1259 Peter Herbert 1267 - 1342 Eleanor Fitzpiers 75 75 1190 - 1235 Peter Fitzherbert 45 45 1200 Alice de Warkworth FitzRoger 1196 - 1266 Lucy Brecknock FitzPiers 70 70 1136 - 1220 Lucy de Pitres 84 84 1125 - 1204 Herbert FitzHerbert 79 79 1077 - 1157 Sybil Corbet 80 80 the daughter of Robert Corbet
(Kin of Mellcene Thurman Smith, page 460)

Lady Sybilla Corbet of Alcester was born in 1077 in Alcester, Warwickshire, England. She married Herbert FitzHerbert, son of Herbert "the Chamberlain" of Winchester and Emma de Blois. She died after 1157 and was also known as Adela (or Lucia) Corbet. Sybil was definitely mother of Sybil and Rainald, possibly also of William and Rohese. Some sources suggest that there was another daughter by this relationship, Gundred, but it appears that she was thought as such because she was a sister of Reginald de Dunstanville but it appears that that was another person of that name who was not related to this family.
(Wikipedia)
1087 - 1155 Herbert FitzHerbert 68 68 Emma of Blois 1086 - 1130 Herbert Fitzpeter 44 44 1090 William FitzHerbert 1030 Peter de Vermandois 1000 - 1045 Eudes de Vermandois 45 45 1005 Parvie 1045 Herbert of Vermandois 1034 - 1093 Eudes Pied de Loup de Ham 59 59 Sources:
Title: Human Family Project
Author: Mary Slawson, Chair
Publication: Copyright January 2006
Note: ABBR Human Family Project
1178 - 1212 Robert FitzRoger 34 34 Robert Fitz Roger, 2nd Baron of Warkworth (father of John Fitz Robert). [Ancestral Roots]

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

Robert Fitz-Roger, who m. Margaret, only child and heiress of William de Cheney, by whom he acquired the Barony of Horsford, co. Norfolk, and had an only son, John. This Robert obtained a confirmation, upon the accession of King John, of the castle and manor of Warkworth, of the manor of Clavering, in Essex, and of the manor of Eure, in Buckinghamshire, to hold by the service of one knight's fee each. And in that monarch's reign he served the office of sheriff for Northumberland,

Norfolk, and Suffolk; for each county thrice. In the conflict between John and the barons, this powerful person, although indebted to the crown for immense territorial possessions, took part in the first instance with the latter, but under the apprehension of confiscation, and the other visitations of royal vengeance, he was very soon induced to return to his allegiance. He was s. by his son, John Fitz-Robert. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd.,London, 1883, p. 121, Clavering, Barons Clavering]

The Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999 Page: 156-2

Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition, by Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., 1999
Page: 262-29 ,Page: 246d-27
1165 Margaret de Chesney 1106 Adeliza Eleanor de Vere 1124 - 1178 Roger FitzRichard 54 54 1090 Jane Bigod 1228 - 1298 Maud de Ferrers 70 70 1219 William de Vivonne 1195 Hugh de Vivonne 1199 Mabel Malet D. 1220 William de Fortibus D. 1239 Aveline de Monfichet 1155 - 1195 William de Fortibus 40 40 1159 - 1212 Hawis d'Aumale 53 53 1115 - 1179 Guillaume d'Aumale 64 64 1115 Cicily Fitzwilliam 1070 - 1127 Stephen d'Aumale 57 57 1084 Hawise de Mortimer 1029 - 1087 Adeliza of Normandy 58 58 Eudes de Champagne 1105 - 1153 William Fitzduncan 48 48 1120 - 1187 Alice de Meschines 67 67 1145 Amabilis Fitzwilliam 1060 - 1094 Duncan of Scotland 34 34 1070 Athelreda of Dunbar 1100 - 1182 William de Meschines 82 82 1100 - 1153 Cecily de Rumilly 53 53 1056 - 1096 Robert de Rumilly 40 40 Title: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition, by Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., 1999
Page: 40-24
Text: Robert de Rumilly, lord of Skipton-in-Craven

Title: The Origins of Some Anglo-Norman Families, by Lewis C Loyd, 1999
Page: 87
Text: Robert son of Rainfray de Remilly whose daughter Cecily de Rumilly brought Skipton and Harewood to the Meschins.

Title: Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, by G. E Cokayne, Sutton Publishing Ltd, 2000
Page: VIII:48-9 chart
Text: Robert de Rumelli, lord of Harewood (Yorks) 
1060 Muriel 1036 Rainfrey de Rumilly Title: The Origins of Some Anglo-Norman Families, by Lewis C Loyd, 1999
Page: 87 
1260 - 1304 John de Hauterive 44 44 1260 Elizabeth de la Stane 1240 - 1304 William de Hauterive 64 64 1245 Cecily de Bohun 1216 - 1273 Sibyl de Ferrers 57 57 1219 - 1273 Francis de Bohun 54 54 1247 John de Bohun 1202 Ralph de Bohun 1200 Saveric Fitzgeoffrey 1299 - 1389 William Aton 90 90 1322 - 1368 Isabel Percy 46 46 1367 Catherine Aton ~1320 - <1402 Elizabeth d'Aton 82 82 1426 - 1488 John St. John 62 62 1426 Alice Bradshaw 1450 John St. John 1400 - 1437 Oliver St. John 37 37 1410 - 1482 Margaret de Beauchamp 72 72 1430 Edith St. John 1428 Oliver St. John 1381 - 1412 John de Beauchamp 31 31 1394 - 1441 Elizabeth Edyth Stourton 47 47 1363 - 1406 Roger de Beauchamp 43 43 1363 Joan Clopton Roger de Beauchamp 1337 - 1371 Roger de Beauchamp 34 34 ~1319 - >1351 Sybil de Pateshull 32 32 Sybil de Pateshull, living 26 Oct 1351, daughter of Sir John de Pateshull and Mabel de Grandison. [Ancestral Roots]

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

He [Roger de Beauchamp] married (1st) before 15 Mar. 1337 SIBYL DE PATESHULLE, daughter of John de Pateshulle, Knt., of Patishall, co. Northampton, Bletsoe and Keysoe, co. Bedford,etc. (descendant of King Henry II), by Mabel, daughter of William de Grandison, Knt., 1st Lord Grandison [see PATESHULLE11 for her ancestry]. She was born about 1319 (aged 40 in 1359).They had two sons, Roger, Knt., and Philip, clerk (warden of Tickhill chapel, co. York), and one daughter, Margaret (wife ofJohn de Blanchminster, Knt., and Gilbert Talbot, Knt.). . . They had the manor of Lydiard Tregoz, co. Wilts, by gift of her uncle, Peter de Grandison, 2nd Lord Grandison, in 1349. The same year he had the manor of Ashmore, Dorset, by gift of his older brother, William de Beauchamp, Knt. She was co-heiress in 1359 to her brother, William de Pateshulle, Knt., by which she inherited the manors of Bletsoe and Keysoe, co. Bedford. He was summoned to Parliament from 1 June 1363 to 20 Oct. 1379 by writs directed Rogero de Bello Campo, whereby he is held to have become Lord Beauchamp. In 1364 they had the advowson of Lydiard Tregoz, co. Wilts by gift of her uncle, John de Grandison, Bishop of Exeter, 3rd Lord Grandison. She was living 1367/8.[Douglas Richardson, SGM]

---

Sources:
Title: AFN:
Abbrev: AFN:
Title: Horrocks, Philips, Winget, Keeler, Clark, Watson, Lockwood, Strong, Gates and ancestors
Abbrev: Horrocks, Philips, Winget, Keeler, Clark, Watson,
Author: Lloyd A. Horocks
Title: The Phillips, Weber, Kirk and Staggs Family
Abbrev: The Phillips, Weber, Kirk and Staggs Family
Author: Jim Weber
Title: Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists Who Came to New England between 1623 and 1650
Abbrev: Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists Who Came to New
Author: Frederick Lewis Weis
Publication: Genealogical Publishing, Inc. Sixth Edition, 1988
D. 1361 Giles de Beauchamp 1315 Catherine de Bures 1276 - 1340 Hawise de Muscegros 63 63 1315 - 1350 John de Bures 35 35 1330 Sylvester Bures 1290 - 1376 William Clopton 86 86 1234 - 1327 Walter Clopton 93 93 1300 Alice Fitzhugh 1210 - 1294 William de Clopton 84 84 1215 Alice Chiperley 1180 Walter de Clopton 1192 Frances Trussell 1154 - 1216 Walter Clopton 62 62 1160 Mary de Cockerell 1340 - 1364 John de Stourton 24 24 1378 Jane Basset Joan de Beauchamp 1335 - 1390 Ralph Basset 55 55 1305 - 1335 Ralph Basset 30 30 1315 - 1359 Alice de Audley 44 44 1334 Isabella Basset 1279 - 1343 Ralph Basset 64 64 1283 - 1353 Joan de Grey 70 70 1289 - 1316 Nicholas de Audley 27 27 1292 - 1322 Joan de Dammartin 30 30 1310 James de Audley 1268 - 1322 Katherine Giffard 54 54 1257 - 1324 William Martin 67 67 1267 - 1342 Eleanor Fitzpiers 75 75 1478 - 1527 Henry Algernon Percy 49 49 1477 - 1542 Catherine Spencer 65 65 1502 Henry Algernon Percy 1480 Thomas Percy Ingeram Percy Maud Percy 1449 - 1489 Henry Percy 40 40 Henry Percy (1449 - 1489), 3rd Earl of Northumberland, son of the 3rd earl, was the only one of the family to appear to take the Yorkist side. His father's earldom was forfeited at the Battle of Towton by the victorious Yorkists, and Percy was imprisoned. After swearing fealty to Edward IV he was released (1469). The earldom was restored in 1473, and Percy held many of the important government posts in the north of England which were traditional in his family. He commanded the Yorkist reserve at the Battle of Bosworth Field, but never committed his forces to the battle, which played an important part in Richard III's defeat.

Percy was again imprisoned by the new king, Henry VII, but was soon released and returned to his old posts. He was killed 28 April 1489 by a mob enraged by his efforts to collect some new and higher taxes.

The Battle of Bosworth or Bosworth Field was fought on the August 22nd 1485 when Richard III of England, the last of the Plantagenet dynasty, fought a pitched battle with the Lancastrian contender for his crown, Henry Tudor. Henry had landed in Pembrokeshire, the county of his birth, on August 7, with a small force - consisting mainly of French mercenaries - in an attempt to claim the throne of England. Note that Richard III was of the Yorkist branch of the Plantagenets.

Richard III had fought similar battles with Lancastrian usurpers in the past, but this one would be his last. Although Henry did not have his opponent's military experience, he was accompanied by his uncle, Jasper Tudor and Edward de Vere, Earl of Oxford, both brilliant and seasoned soldiers. Henry gathered supporters in the course of his journey through his father's native Wales, and by the time he arrived in the Midlands, he had amassed an army estimated at 5,000 men. The king, by contrast, could command nearly 8,000. The decisive factor in the battle was to be the conduct of the Stanley brothers - Sir William Stanley and Lord Thomas Stanley, the latter being Henry's stepfather. Richard had good cause to distrust them but was dependent on their continued loyalty.

The battlefield site, now open to the public, is close to the villages of Sutton Cheney and Market Bosworth in Leicestershire. The actual siting of the battle has been the topic of often contentious debate among professional and amateur historians, with a compelling case being made for siting the battle closer to the villages of Dadlington and Stoke Golding, although most are agreed that Richard's encampment the night before the battle was indeed on Ambion Hill. In any case, the Stanleys seem to have taken up a position some distance away from the two main armies. Richard had taken hostages to ensure that, even if they did not join him, they would at least remain neutral during the battle. The battle lasted about two hours, and began well for the king. Unfortunately for him, the Stanleys chose their moment to enter the fray on Henry's side. Despite a suicidal charge led by Richard in an attempt to remove Henry - who had stayed well clear of most of the fighting - from the equation, the king was overwhelmed by the opposition.

Richard was killed on the field (the last English king to die in battle), and his body was ignominiously treated by the victors. A popular legend says that the crown of England was found in a hawthorn bush after Richard's death, but the truth is probably that it was the circlet Richard wore around his helmet, the common practice so followers could recognize their ruler in battle, even from behind him.

However, the battle proved to be decisive in ending the long-running mediaeval series of English Civil Wars later be to known as the Wars of the Roses, although the last battle was actually to be fought at Stoke two years later (1487).

Henry Tudor's victory in this battle led to his being crowned as Henry VII, and the long reign of the Tudor dynasty in England.

1477 Joan Percy 1480 Eleanor Percy William Percy Alan Percy Jocelyn Percy 1476 Anne Percy Elizabeth Percy 1445 - 1554 Robert Spencer 109 109 1450 - 1527 Anna Peake 77 77 Alice Spencer 1424 Margaret Smith 1470 William Spencer 1163 - 1235 Piers FitzHerbert 72 72 Note: Peter Fitz-Herbert, Baron of Barnstable in Devonshire, the honor of which he obtained from King John with fifteen knight's fees, part of the lands of William de Braose, and he was made Governor of Pickering Castle in Yorkshire, and Sheriff of that county by the same monarch. This Peter was one of the barons named in Magna Carta and, by his signature, fourth in rank amongst the barons. He m. first, Alice, dau. of Robert Fitz Roger, a great baron in Northumberland, Lord of Warkworth and Clavering, and sister of John, to whom Edward I gave the surname of Clavering, Lord of Callaly in Northumberland. By this lady he had a son and heir, Reginald Fitz Peter. He m. secondly, Isabel, dau. and coheir of William de Braose, and widow of David Llewellin, Prince of Wales, and by the alliance acquired the lordships and castle of Blenlevenny and Talgarth in the county of Brecknock, with other possessions in Wales. He fortified his castle of Blenlevenny, and, dying in 1235, was s. by his son, Reginald FitzPeter, Lord of Blenlevenny, [John Burke, History of the Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland, Vol. IV, R. Bentley,London, 1834, p. 728, Jones, of Llanarth]

----------

Peter Fitz-Herbert, who, being very obsequious to King John, was reputed one of that prince's evil counsellors. In 1214, he was constituted governor of Pykering Castle, co. York, and sheriff of the shire; but afterwards falling off in his allegiance, his lands at Alcester were seized by the crown, and given to William de Camvill. Returning, however, to his duty upon the accessionof Henry III, those lands were restored to him. He m. 1st, Alice, dau. of Roger Fitz-Roger, a great baron in Northumberland, but by her had no issue; and 2ndly, the 3rd dau. and co-heir of William de Braose, Baron of Brecknock, and d.1235, leaving a son, Herbert Fitz-Peter. [Sir Bernard Burke,Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages, Burke'sPeerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 206, Fitz-Herbert, BaronFitz-Herbert]
1335 Hugh de Dacre 1408 Elizabeth de Dacre 1433 Margaret de Dacre 1412 Randolf de Dacre 1300 - 1361 Margaret de Multon 61 61 1276 - 1321 Thomas de Multon 45 45 1304 Joan de Multon 1309 Elizabeth de Multon 1250 - 1280 Thomas de Multon 30 30 1255 - 1287 Emoine de Butler 32 32 1230 - 1279 John de Butler 49 49 1225 - 1294 Thomas de Multon 69 69 1230 - 1293 Isabel de Bolteby 63 63 1200 - 1276 Amabel de Lucy 76 76 1200 - 1200 Lambert de Multon 1205 Adam de Bolteby 1175 Nicholas de Bolteby 1175 Philippa de Tyndall 1150 Adam de Tyndall 1125 Robert de Tyndall 1282 - 1325 Eleanor de Burgh 43 43 1552 - 1627 Philadelphia Carey 75 75 1215 Richard Clopton 1212 Robert Clopton 1125 William de Perche 1135 Anne de Grey 1088 William de Perche WILLIAM PECCHE was in 1086 an undertenant in Essex, Suffolk and Norfolk (f). In 1088 he had a grant from the Abbot of Ramsey of Over, Cambs for the lives of himself and his wife Alfwen. He married, 1stly, Alfwen, and, 2ndly, Isilia, probably daughter and heir of Hervey de Bourges, who survived him (h). The date of his death is not known. [Complete Peerage X:331, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)]

(f) He held under Richard FitzGilbert, lord of Clare, at Dalham and Clopton, Suffolk, and Gestingthorpe, Essex; under Aubrey de Vere at Belcham Walter, Essex; and under Roger Bigod at Stoke Holy Cross, Norfolk [Domesday Book].

(h) Between 1121 and 1148 Hamon Pecche confirmed to St. Edmund's Abbey the gifts of his grandmother Jenita and his mother Isilia, the latter witnessing his charter

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

Our family settled first at Cloptunna, which was at that time within the town of Wickhambrook. By 1135 they were well on their way to fortune, if not fame. A surviving deed, preserved in the British Museum,[13] was written by Walter DeCloptunne, of Clopton Hall, the grandson of Guillaume Peche and Alfwen. He gives some land in the village of Stanfield,[14] about three miles east of Wickhambrook, to Laurence de Danardeston[15] to hold, “to him and his heirs forever.”

According to the first Clopton genealogist, Sir Simonds D’Ewes,[16] William De Cloptone, who died in 1294, had “so large an estate in the town of Wickhambrook in the 43 Henry III, as it was called Feodum Wilhelmi de Cloptone.”[17] His son Clement owned land in Cowlinge, about 3 miles west of Wickhambrook, and sold a bit of it in 1323.[18] Documents have not survived to tell us how long Clement and his brothers, Adam, William, Hugo, and Robert continued to reside in the vicinity of Wickhambrook. But documents[19] place their eldest brother, Walter, the son and heir, about three miles south of Clopton Hall, and refer to him as Lord of Chiperley Manor. Walter and his wife, Alice FitzHugh, were buried in the Church of the Blessed Mary, near Chipley Priory.[20]

In the early 1100’s, there was a great push by the Catholic Church to establish places of worship in England. The great Norman lords of England demonstrated their piety and devotion by erecting cathedrals, monasteries and priories. The very earliest surviving documented building connected to the ancient Cloptons is found at the ruins of Chipley Priory,[21] located on land granted to the Cloptons.[22] The exact date of the foundation of this priory is not known, however, the earliest records pertaining to it are of the year 1235. It seems very likely the priory was built much earlier than this as the stones may have come from Caen, Normandy. Only a few beautifully carved stones remain from the original building. Gene Carlton Clopton’s A Brief History of Chipley Priory[23] states: “The style of the moulding is typical of the beautiful work done by the East Anglian school of Anglo-Saxon masons. Their work was strongly influenced by ideas imported from Norman architectural developments in France to which they added their own flair for creativity to ease the stern and austere effects common in much of Norman design.”

The priory was annexed to the College of Stoke-by-Clare in 1468. A large part of the original structure, and probably the adjoining church, seems to have been incorporated into the farmhouse, which now occupies the site of the priory. The owners of the house, which is known as Clopton Hall,[24] once discovered numerous human bones when digging a new garden beside their farmhouse. They re-interred the bones in the garden. They also discovered a chapel bell and stone sarcophagus, which have been placed at Poslingford Church.[25] A lead coffin known to have once been on the site and used as a watering trough for many years has been lost. No remains of Chiperley Manor has been found.

Source: The Clopton Chronicles
http://homepages.rootsweb.com/~clopton/norman.htm
1115 Hamon de Perche 1067 - 1121 Guillaume de Perche 54 54 1069 - 1088 Alfwen 19 19 1110 Henry de Grey 1115 Ellen de Bohun 1133 John de Grey 1074 - 1127 Reynald de Graye 53 53 1079 - 1127 Joan de l'Arch 48 48 1099 John de Grey 1053 Pont de l'Arch 1130 William de Cockerell 1160 William de Trussell 1190 William de Trussell 1197 Richard de Trussell 1143 - 1214 John de Meschines 71 71 1124 William de Meschines 1132 - 1187 Amice de Meschines 55 55 1317 Thomas de Audley 1287 Hugh de Audley 1299 Petronilla de Audley 1284 Edmund de Dammartin 1286 Eleanor de Dammartin 1288 William de Dammartin 1290 Maria de Dammartin 1295 Nicholas de Dammartin 1157 Clementia de Port 1117 - 1168 John de Port 51 51 1135 Maud 1096 Henry de Port 1100 Hawise de Basing 1118 Hugh de Port 1122 William de Port 1130 Etheldreda de Port 1066 - 1097 Hugh de Port 31 31 1070 Orence de Basing 1035 Hubert de Port 1005 Hughes Gospatric de Port 1037 Emma de Port 1120 - 1176 Rohese FitzHerbert 56 56 1187 - 1241 John Fitz Robert Clavering de Warworth 54 54 John Fitz Robert, Magna Charta Surety 1215, lord of Warkworth, co. Northampton, d. 1240; m. (2) Ada de Baliol, d. Stokesley 29 July 1251, daughter of Hugh de Baliol of Barnard Castle and Cicely de Fontaines. Ada was sister of John de Baliol who m. Devorgilla of Galloway. [Magna Charta Sureties]

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

John Fitz-Robert, to whom King John in the 14th year of his reign [1213], ratified the grant of the castle and manor of Warkworth, made by King Henry II to his grandfather, Roger Fitz-Richard, as also of the manor of Clavering. In three years afterwards, he was appointed joint governor with John Marshall of the castles of Norwich and Oxford; but joining in the insurrection of the barons, and being chosen one of the twenty-five appointed to exercise the regal authority, his lands were seized by the king and a part confiscated. Returning, however, to his allegiance in the next reign, his castles and estates were restored to him. In the 9th of Henry III [1225], he was constituted sheriff of Northumberland and governor of the town of Newcastle-upon-Tyne; and in the 13th of the same monarch [1329], he was one of the great northern barons appointed by special command of the king to wait upon Alexander, King of Scotland, at Berwick-upon-Tweed, and to conduct that
prince to York, there to meet the king of England, "to treat upon certain affairs of great importance." His lordship m. Ada, dau. and heir of Hugh de Baliol, and grand-aunt of Baliol, King of Scotland, and had issue, Roger, his successor; Hugh, surnamed "de Eure," from whom the Lords Eure descended; and Robert, ancestor of the Eures of Axholm, in Lincolnshire. He d. in 1240, and was s. by his eldest son, Roger Fitz-John. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 121, Clavering, Barons Clavering]

The Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999 ,Page: 44-1

Change Date: 3 JUL 2007
1137 - 1174 William de Chesney 37 37 1137 - 1174 Aubreye de Poynings 37 37 1170 - 1222 Sarah de Chesney 52 52 1085 Sibyl de Chesney 1080 - 1130 Robert FitzWalter 50 50 Sheriff of Norfolk

Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, by G. E Cokayne, Sutton Publishing Ltd, 2000
Page: V:72 chart
C
hange Date: 3 JUL 2007
1050 Walter de Caen Notes under Reginald de Peyton son of Walter:

The first of the family on record by the name of Peyton was Reginald de Peyton, second son of Walter, Lord of Sibton, younger brother of Mallet, sheriff of Yorkshire. This Reginald held the lordships of Peyton Hall, in Ramshold, and Boxford, in Suffolk, of Hugh de Bigod; he was stewerd to Roger Bigod, Earl of Norfolk, and gave lands to the monks of Thetford, to pray for the soul of Hugh Bigod. He had two sons, William, who held certain lands in Boxford, of the fee of the abbey of St. Edmundsbury, as appears by charter of his nephew John, and John de Peyton. [John Burke & John Bernard Burke, Extinct and Dormant Baronetcies of England, Ireland, and Scotland, Second Edition, Scott, Webster, & Geary, London, 1841, p. 408,Peyton, of Isleham]

The Domesday book states that Walter de Caen was Lord of Sibton, given to him by Robert Malet's mother (William Malet's widow).

The giving of Sibton to Walter de Caen by William Malet's widow implies some relationship, possibly brother (but most likeley bastard son--see below). See Domesday Book for history of Sibton.

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

The following quotation from the "Butler Family History" indicates that Walter is son of William Malet, which would explain the age difference between Walter & William (ie. they weren't brothers as
indicated above.}:

Theobald Blake Butler, a leading authority on the history of the family, who died only this year [1965] and whose works are now available to scholars in the National Library, Dublin, the British Museum and the Irish Genealogical Research Society, laboriously traced back to Domesday the lands which this family subsequently held in East Anglia and Lancashire and discovered that at least nine of the sixteen or more holdings which our Hervey was believed to have owned in Norfolk and Suffolk were entered in Domesday Book under the ownership of Walter de Caen. The discovery led him to surmise that the paternal ancestor of the Butlers was Walter de Caen (son of William Malet who accompanied the Conqueror and, being half Saxon, was entrusted with the burial of King Harold after the Battle of Hastings).

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

Based on the "Butler Family History" and the approximate birth dates, I am making Walter de Caen son of William Malet. I think, however, that the name may imply an illegitmate birth (or he was simply born in Caen), so he may not be the son of  Walter's wife, even though her giving him Sibton would imply blood relationship. Perhap he was son of her, but not William Malet?

The Plantagenet Ancestry, by William Henry Turton, 1968

The Domesday Book, England's Heritage, Then and Now, by Ed Thomas Hinde, London 1985

Butler Family History, 7th Edition 1991, by Lord Dunboyne, Kilkenny Castle Book Shop Page: 5

Change Date: 25 APR 2007
1107 - 1148 Adam de Poynings 41 41 Note: (a) Adam the elder had two other sons, John and William, who according to the deduction made "Ante", p. 656, note (c), were younger sons. John witnessed as John de Puninges a Norfolk charter of the (third) Earl to Lewes Priory, and as John de Punigges, in company with the (third) Earl, another Norfolk charter to the priory. After his death several benefactions were made to his memory. The (third) Earl made a gift to Castle Acre Priory for his soul; and confirmed the gift made to Lewes Priory by William and Adam sons of Beatrice de Puningis for the soul of John their brother, namely 10 marks, from Poynings mill. This latter gift was confirmed by Adam de Ponnynges (the younger), describing it as made by William his brother and Beatrice his mother for the soul of John his brother. Another commemorative gift was made by William de Chesney and Aubreye his wife, which Aubreye is described as sister of Adam son of Adam de Pynyngis in a charter post 1164. This
evidence suggests that John died after his father Adam the elder, who must therefore have died during the tenure of the Earldom by the third Earl, and therefore before his departure for the crusade in 1147. [Complete Peerage X:657, note (a)]

William de Warenne was the 3rd Earl.

Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, by G. E Cokayne, Sutton Publishing Ltd, 2000
Page: X:657 (a)

Change Date: 8 OCT 2007
1112 Beatrix de Sussex 1170 Michael de Poynings 1077 William de Poynings WILLIAM (son of RAINALD) was the tenant of William de Warenne in 1086 in Poynings, Pangdean, and elsewhere in Sussex, in Foulden, Norfolk, and in Wrentham and elsewhere in Suffolk. Although there is no evidence to prove that he was the lineal ancestor, he was certainly the predecessor in Sussex of ADAM DE POYNINGS, who with Beatrice his wife and Adam their son gave to Lewes Priory the churches of Poynings and Pangdean, with 12 solidates of land in specified places in Sussex and 5 messuages in Lewes, which gifts were confirmed by William, (third) Earl de Warenne, 1138-47. Adam de Poynings the elder died ante 1148 (d). [Complete Peerage X:656, (d) See page 657, note (a). [This note actually says bef. 1147.]

Change Date: 4 JUN 2007
1047 Rainald de Pierrepont Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, by G. E Cokayne, Sutton Publishing Ltd, 2000
Page: X:656 Text: Rainald (no last name)
1260 Mary Clarissa 1241 - 1264 Alice de Bohun 23 23 1155 Ida de Toeni 1383 - 1421 John St. John 38 38 1387 Elizabeth Paulett 1346 Oliver St. John 1319 John St. John 1324 Isabel Paveley 1293 John St. John 1296 Elizabeth de Umfreville 1267 John St. John 1270 Beatrix Broye 1234 - 1305 William St. John 71 71 1245 Isabel Combmartin 1234 - 1305 William St. John 71 71 1210 Jane St. John 1217 - 1306 William de Combmartin 89 89 1221 Margery 1235 John Broye 1267 - 1329 Henry de Umfreville 62 62 1271 Isabella 1240 - 1314 John de Umfreville 74 74 1214 - 1245 Gilbert de Umfreville 31 31 1215 - 1261 Maud of Angus 46 46 1296 John de Paveley 1300 Joan D. 1346 Robert de Paveley 1255 - 1329 Lawrence de Paveley 74 74 1227 - 1288 Robert de Paveley 61 61 1231 - 1299 Sarah 68 68 1199 - 1250 Robert de Paveley 51 51 1203 - 1245 Petronilla 42 42 D. 1217 Beoffrey de Paveley Matilda D. 1196 Robert de Paveley 1320 Elizabeth de la Bere 1257 - 1320 Cecilia de Vivonne 63 63 1158 Herbert FitzHerbert 1160 William FitzHerbert 1165 Godwin fitz Herbert 1167 Matthew fitz Herbert 1102 Agnes D'Aumale 1110 Guillaume of York 1105 Ada d' Aumale 1120 Adelize D'Aumale 1210 - 1281 Nicholas Martin 71 71 #

    NICHOLAS SON OF MARTIN, son and heir, sometimes called Nicholas son of William son of Martin, was a minor at his father's death, having been born probably about 1210, and was at first in ward to Fulk de Breauté. In 1222, during his minority, the King granted to Nicholas nephew of Fulk de Breauté licence to have a fair at his manor of Combe Martin in Devonshire every year until he should come of age. In 1225 his wardship was granted to Henry de Turbervill or Trubleville, and in the following year began the dispute as to the Martins' tenure of the barony of Kemeys. Nicholas came of age before September 1231, when the Earl of Pembroke entered on the manor of Tresgrue, still in Trubleville's custody. In 1235 he was assessed at 6 1/2 knights' fees in Somerset and 5 1/2 in Devon. As Nicholas son of William son of Martin he confirmed to his burgesses of Newport all the liberties his father William son of Martin had given them. In 1240 a perambulation was ordered between his lands in Devon and those of Robert de Sydeham. Nicholas son of Martin was ordered to take action against the King's enemies in Gloucestershire in 1245, and was allowed to buy in Somerset provisions for his castle of Newport. In 1246 he obtained a grant of a market and fair in South Molton. In 1253 he had orders to attend diligently to the King's affairs while he was abroad, and in 1256 had respite of suit of counties, being in the service of Edward the King's son. In 1257 he had the custody of the castles of Cardigan and Kilgarran, but in that year he was taken prisoner by the Welsh, and his tenants were exhorted by the King to contribute to his ransorn. In the following year he was constable of Carmarthen, and orders were issued that amends were to be made for the injuries inflicted by him on Llewelyn and his men, contrary to the truce. In 1260 he had licence to hold a yearly fair and weekly market at West Lydford, and in 1265 a similar licence for his manor of Combe Martin. In May 1267 he was granted 10 oaks in Melksham Forest, and the next year, being a justice in Surrey, was allowed 50 marks out of the fines of that county for his expenses. Edmund the King's son in 1271 gave him custody of the castles and counties of Carmarthen and Cardigan. In the following year he was on a commission of oyer and terminer for pleas affecting the Bishop of St. David's and his men. In October 1273 he acknowledged that he owed suit to the Earl of Pembroke for his land of Kemeys. Sir Nicholas son of Martin was in 1275 charged with waste in Kilgarran during his custody of it. He took part in person in the Welsh campaign of Edward I in 1277. In 1278 he was one of the justices appointed to hear and determine complaints concerning the Bishop of St. David's in Wales, and in 1279 to take assizes of mort d'ancestor.

# Note:

    The name of his first wife is unknown. He married, 2ndly, in 1259 or 1260, Isabel, widow of Hugh PEVEREL, and granddaughter and coheiress of Ralph FITZWILLIAM, of Brompton Ralph and Withycombe, which Isabel held the manor of Brown in Treborough, a third of the original manor of Withycombe, and other lands. He died early in 1282, an inquisition after his death being taken 22 March 1281/2.

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Title: The Royal Descents of 500 Immigrants to the American Colonies or the United States, by Gary Boyd Roberts, 1993
Page: 431

Title: Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, by G. E Cokayne, Sutton Publishing Ltd, 2000
Page: VIII:534 
1210 1185 - 1264 Avice de Toriton 79 79 1185 - 1215 William Martin 30 30     WILLIAM SON OF MARTIN, son and heir, in 1209 had letters of protection while staying in Wales. He held Blagdon, Dartington, and other manors in 1212. He married Avice DE TORITON, apparently sister of Fulk DE BREAUTÉ. He died before 15 February 1215/6, when the custody of his lands and heir was granted to Fulk de Breauté. His widow Avice (in one place called Alice) had dower allowed her in April 1216. She married Nicholas DE BOLEWILL, and was apparently living in 1246.

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Title: Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, by G. E Cokayne, Sutton Publishing Ltd, 2000
Page: VIII:532-3 
1236 Nicholas Martin [NICHOLAS MARTIN, son and heir apparent. He was born probably circa 1236. He married Maud, daughter and heir of GUY DE BRIAN, of Laugharne, co. Carmarthen, by Eve, daughter and heir of Henry DE TRACY (died 1274), lord of Barnstaple. He died v.p., about 1260. His widow married, 2ndly, Geoffrey DE CAMVILLE, or CANVILLE (LORD CANVILLE], and died before Michaelmas 1279. At the death of Geoffrey, Lord Canville, shortly before 21 September 1308, Maud's inheritance came to her eldest son, William Martin. 1163 David Martin Robertus Martin 1075 Robertus Fitz Martin Maud Peverel Oliver Fitzmartin Robertus Fitzmartin 1113 Sibyl Fitzmartin 1031 - 1094 William Martyn DeTours 63 63 The Martins of Virginia are descendents of Baron Martyn de Tours of the Darlington House in Devonshire, England - who was a direct descendent of Bishop Martin de Tours of France.

Baron Martyn de Tours was born in 1030 -1033 - he came over from Normandy with William the Conqueror....he was a General in William's army and was at the Battle of Hastings in 1066. He was Lord of the Courts , also made Lord of Combe-Martin of Martinshire in the northern part of Devon. In Wales he was called Camais or Kemys. One writer said: He was Cemais or Keymes in Pembroke Co. England about 1077.

Martin de Tours founded a monastery for Benedictine Monks near Cardigan. This institution was endowed with lands by his son and successor Baron Robert Fitz-Martin (born 1080) and his successors were summoned to the King's council as Barons of Cammaes and continued to be Lords of the English Parliment.

The barony of Kemes, of which Baron Martin DE TOURS was the first loard, was in a great measure independent of the crown of England, and embraced twenty-two parishes. The Lords of Kemes exercised many important privileges, and in the reign of King John, 1208, the town of Newport was incorporated by a charter granted by William Martin, Lord of Kemes. So many privileges do they possess, that the barony of Kemes is virtually an independent sovereignty. Newport Castle, founded by Martin DE TOURS, is believed to have been completed by his great-grandson, Sir William Martin, son of Sir William Martin, who m. the dau. of Lord Rys AP Gryffidth; Martin DE TOURS was succeeded by his son, Baron Robert FITZ-MARTIN, who, besides the barony of Kemes, possessed the barony of Dartington, in Devonshire, where he lived; m. Maud Peverell.

Colonial Families of the United States of America, New York: 1907, Mackenzie, George Norbury Ed.

The descent of the ancient house of Bronwydd is paternally Cymric and maternally Norman, tracing in the latter line without interruption from Martin de Tours, the Norman Conqueror of Cemmaes, in virtue of which descent and tenure of the barony, the representative of the Bronwydd House is inheritor of the title of Lord or Baron of Cemmaes.
1030 Geva DeBurci Nicholas Martin Avice Martin 1000 William DeFalaise 1005 Serlo DeBurci 1080 Lucy de Rumilly 1131 - 1190 Matilda de Meschines 59 59 1244 - 1280 Alice de la Hurne 36 36 1261 - 1299 Nicholas de Audley 38 38 1440 - 1485 Maud of Pembroke Herbert 45 45 1420 - 1521 Thomas F. Spencer 101 101 1289 - 1339 Randolf de Dacre 50 50 1335 Elizabeth de Maxwell 1273 - 1329 John St. John 55 55 ~1345 Bradshagh I agree with most people that Thomas Bradshagh, of Haigh, is descended from Roger Bradshagh, but the birth dates require more generations in between.

http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=hayes-drake&id=I633139
~1389 Thomas Bradshagh Downloaded from the Nick Hayes-Sue Drake family tree ~1406 Miss Sherburne Downloaded from the Nick Hayes-Sue Drake family tree 1125 - 1178 Richard FitzEustace Clavering de Lacy 53 53 ~1215 Jane Saint John ~1350 Ivetta de Grey ~1437 - >1489 Elizabeth St. John 52 52 He [John le Scrope] married, 2ndly, before 10 December 1471, Elizabeth, widow of William (LA ZOUCHE), 5th LORD ZOUCHE (of Haryngworth) (died 25 December 1462), daughter of Sir Oliver ST.JOHN, by Margaret, only daughter and eventually heir of Sir John BEAUCHAMP, of Bletsoe, Beds. She was living in 1489 and died before 3 July 1494. [Complete Peerage XI:544-6, XIV:573-4,(transcribed by Dave Utzinger)]

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Sources:
Title: Tudor Place
Abbrev: Tudor Place
Author: Jorge H. Castelli
Title: The Phillips, Weber, Kirk and Staggs Family
Abbrev: The Phillips, Weber, Kirk and Staggs Family
Author: Jim Weber
Title: Royal Genealogy
Abbrev: Royal Genealogy
Author: Brian Tompsett
Publication: 1994-1999
Robert de Haya
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