Copied from Jerry L Neville, World Connect db=jerr-bear, rootsweb.com:
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Oliver la Zouche held the manors of South Charford & La Hyde, co. Hants; Southoe, co. Huntingdon; Chinnor, co. Oxford Chadstone in Castle Ashby; Grendon (Northampton), Braunston & Stoke Dry, co. Rutland & 1296 held 1/3 pte. service for Lokeris. He was lord of S. Hoo, Wincestre, Eynesbury, Caldecote, Hardwick and Berkford, (Hunts.) Chinnor, Sydenham, Ocle and Tythorp.
Oliver m1, __(?)__, by whom he had an unnamed daughter. He m2, Joan de Cobham, widow of Michael de Columbers (died 1284), by whom he had a son, John. He d. before 1328, when his son, John, possessed his lands. (The foregoing was in a message to Gen-Medireview 21 Sep 2000 from Douglas Richardson who did not cite sources & I have NOT located this info in Burkes, ES, CP, Weis, Watney, et. al., to corroborate it).
A listing mentioning Alan, Helen & son Oliver in VCH Northamptonshire, v 3 , p. 232:
David son of William (Ashby) appears to have been slain at Evesham in 1265 and in the following year the king made a grant to Isabel his widow, and her children, from David's lands at Ashby, Grendon and Chadstone, extended at £89 11s 9d a year, which had been given to Imbert Guy. David had apparently mortgaged this holding to Moses the Jew of London whose son Elias in 1267 confirmed to Alan la Zouche a yearly fee of £124.00 and a debt of £100 in which David de Ashby had been bound. This resulted in an inquisition two years later between Isabel, daughter of Stephen, son and heir of David de Ashby, and Alan la Zouche, concerning David's estate at the time of the war and the battle of Evesham. That the property was confirmed to Alan is clear from the facts that in 1276 his widow Ellen had view of frankpledge in Ashby and in 1284 her son Oliver held of John de Hastings the fee in Ashby and Grendon. Before 1306 Oliver la Zouche had enfeoffed Walter de Langton, Bishop of Coventry and Lichfield, treasurer and chief minister of Edward I, who in that year received license to crenellate the house he was then building at Ashby David.