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(a child)
(nine children)
Marriage (two children)
(a child)
Marriage (seventeen children)
(three children)
(a child)
(three children)
(three children)
(four children)
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Marriage (six children)
(eight children)
(five children)
(a child)
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(three children)
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(a child)
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(two children)
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1166 - 1235
Piers
fitz
Herbert
69
69
Note: Peter Fitz-Herbert, Baron of Barnstable in Devonshire, the honorof which he obtained from King John with fifteen knight's fees,part of the lands of William de Braose, and he was made Governorof Pickering Castle in Yorkshire, and Sheriff of that county bythe same monarch. This Peter was one of the barons named inMagna Carta and, by his signature, fourth in rank amongst thebarons. He m. first, Alice, dau. of Robert Fitz Roger, a greatbaron in Northumberland, Lord of Warkworth and Clavering, andsister of John, to whom Edward I gave the surname of Clavering,Lord of Callaly in Northumberland. By this lady he had a son andheir, Reginald Fitz Peter. He m. secondly, Isabel, dau. andcoheir of William de Braose, and widow of David Llewellin,Prince of Wales, and by the alliance acquired the lordships andcastle of Blenlevenny and Talgarth in the county of Brecknock,with other possessions in Wales. He fortified his castle ofBlenlevenny, and, dying in 1235, was s. by his son, ReginaldFitzPeter, Lord of Blenlevenny, [John Burke, History of theCommoners 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, wasreputed one of that prince's evil counsellors. In 1214, he wasconstituted governor of Pykering Castle, co. York, and sheriffof the shire; but afterwards falling off in his allegiance, hislands at Alcester were seized by the crown, and given to Williamde 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 inNorthumberland, 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] [de brus.ged] Note: Peter Fitz-Herbert, Baron of Barnstable in Devonshire, the honorof which he obtained from King John with fifteen knight's fees,part of the lands of William de Braose, and he was made Governorof Pickering Castle in Yorkshire, and Sheriff of that county bythe same monarch. This Peter was one of the barons named inMagna Carta and, by his signature, fourth in rank amongst thebarons. He m. first, Alice, dau. of Robert Fitz Roger, a greatbaron in Northumberland, Lord of Warkworth and Clavering, andsister of John, to whom Edward I gave the surname of Clavering,Lord of Callaly in Northumberland. By this lady he had a son andheir, Reginald Fitz Peter. He m. secondly, Isabel, dau. andcoheir of William de Braose, and widow of David Llewellin,Prince of Wales, and by the alliance acquired the lordships andcastle of Blenlevenny and Talgarth in the county of Brecknock,with other possessions in Wales. He fortified his castle ofBlenlevenny, and, dying in 1235, was s. by his son, ReginaldFitzPeter, Lord of Blenlevenny, [John Burke, History of theCommoners 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, wasreputed one of that prince's evil counsellors. In 1214, he wasconstituted governor of Pykering Castle, co. York, and sheriffof the shire; but afterwards falling off in his allegiance, hislands at Alcester were seized by the crown, and given to Williamde 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 inNorthumberland, 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][Isabel de Ros.ged] Note: Peter Fitz-Herbert, Baron of Barnstable in Devonshire, the honorof which he obtained from King John with fifteen knight's fees,part of the lands of William de Braose, and he was made Governorof Pickering Castle in Yorkshire, and Sheriff of that county bythe same monarch. This Peter was one of the barons named inMagna Carta and, by his signature, fourth in rank amongst thebarons. He m. first, Alice, dau. of Robert Fitz Roger, a greatbaron in Northumberland, Lord of Warkworth and Clavering, andsister of John, to whom Edward I gave the surname of Clavering,Lord of Callaly in Northumberland. By this lady he had a son andheir, Reginald Fitz Peter. He m. secondly, Isabel, dau. andcoheir of William de Braose, and widow of David Llewellin,Prince of Wales, and by the alliance acquired the lordships andcastle of Blenlevenny and Talgarth in the county of Brecknock,with other possessions in Wales. He fortified his castle ofBlenlevenny, and, dying in 1235, was s. by his son, ReginaldFitzPeter, Lord of Blenlevenny, [John Burke, History of theCommoners 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, wasreputed one of that prince's evil counsellors. In 1214, he wasconstituted governor of Pykering Castle, co. York, and sheriffof the shire; but afterwards falling off in his allegiance, hislands at Alcester were seized by the crown, and given to Williamde 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 inNorthumberland, 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][William de Trussell 2.ged] Note: Peter Fitz-Herbert, Baron of Barnstable in Devonshire, the honorof which he obtained from King John with fifteen knight's fees,part of the lands of William de Braose, and he was made Governorof Pickering Castle in Yorkshire, and Sheriff of that county bythe same monarch. This Peter was one of the barons named inMagna Carta and, by his signature, fourth in rank amongst thebarons. He m. first, Alice, dau. of Robert Fitz Roger, a greatbaron in Northumberland, Lord of Warkworth and Clavering, andsister of John, to whom Edward I gave the surname of Clavering,Lord of Callaly in Northumberland. By this lady he had a son andheir, Reginald Fitz Peter. He m. secondly, Isabel, dau. andcoheir of William de Braose, and widow of David Llewellin,Prince of Wales, and by the alliance acquired the lordships andcastle of Blenlevenny and Talgarth in the county of Brecknock,with other possessions in Wales. He fortified his castle ofBlenlevenny, and, dying in 1235, was s. by his son, ReginaldFitzPeter, Lord of Blenlevenny, [John Burke, History of theCommoners 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, wasreputed one of that prince's evil counsellors. In 1214, he wasconstituted governor of Pykering Castle, co. York, and sheriffof the shire; but afterwards falling off in his allegiance, hislands at Alcester were seized by the crown, and given to Williamde 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 inNorthumberland, 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]
1175
Sibyl
de
Dinham
1353 - 1390
Anne
Wake
37
37
1345 - 1383
Alice
De
Beauchamp
38
38
1343
Joan
de
Beauchamp
1400 - 1437
Sir Oliver
Saint
John
37
37
1388 - 1439
Elizabeth
Luttrell
51
51
1360 - 24 MAR 1427/28
Sir
Hugh
Luttrell
1390
Robert
Luttrell
1394 - 1430
Sir
John
Luttrell
36
36
1365 - 1453
Catherine
de
Beaumont
88
88
1330
Sir
Andrew
Luttrell
1333 - 1395
Elizabeth
de
Courtenay
62
62
1353
Elizabeth
Harrington
1330
Sir
William
Harrington
1303 - 1377
Hugh
de
Courtenay
73
73
22 MAR 1326/27 - 1349
Hugh
de
Courtenay
1333 - 1391
Joane
De
Courtenay
58
58
1331 - 1385
Margaret
de
Courtenay
54
54
1329 - 1372
Sir
Edward de
Courtenay
43
43
1346 - 1406
Sir
Philip de
Courtenay
60
60
1311 - 1391
Margaret
de
Bohun
80
80
1360
Elizabeth
Bluet
1270
Eve
de
Hauterive
1225 - 1302
John de
Saint
John
77
77
1269 - 1368
Edward
de Saint
John
99
99
1384 - 17 FEB 1461/62
Sir
James
Luttrell
1273 - 1340
Hugh
De
Courtenay
67
67
1287 - 1335
Egeline
De
Courtenay
48
48
1350 - 1372
Sir
John
Touchet
22
22
1337
Isabel
Basset
1378 - 1456
Sir
Thomas
Blount
78
78
1390 - 6 JAN 1466/67
Henry
Bromflete
1233 - 1286
Sir Reginald
FitzPiers
Herbert
53
53
Note: Reginald FitzPeter, Lord of Blenlevenny, with his members de la Mere and Talgarth. This feudal chief, who appears to have been a person of great rank in the time of Henry III, was especially summoned in the 41st of that monarch to aid Humphrey de Bohun, Earl of Hereford, in defence of the Marches, and in the next year had another summons to march against Llewellin. He m. Joande Vivonia, dau. and coheir of William de Vivonia, surnamed "deFortibus," from his valour in the field, Lord of Chewton in the county of Somerset, by Matilda de Kyme, dau. and coheir of William, Earl of Ferrers (by his first wife). With this lady Reginald acquired the Manor of Chuyton or Chewton, which he recevied the day of his marriage. They had issue, JohnFitz-Reginald, Reginald Fitz-Reginald, and Peter Fitz-Reginald. [John Burke, History of the Commoners of Great Britain andIreland, Vol. IV, R. Bentley, London, 1834, p. 729, Jones, ofLlanarth] ---------- Reginald Fitz-Herbert. This feudal lord had summons to march against the Welsh in the 42nd Henry III [1258], and in two years afterwards received orders, as one of the barons marchers, to reside in those parts. In the 45th of the same reign [1261], he was made sheriff of Hampshire, and governor of the Castle of Winchester; and in the 48th [1264], he was one of those barons who undertook for the king's performance of what the king of France should determine regarding the ordinances of Oxford. Hem. Joane, dau. of William de Fortibus, Lord of Chewton, co.Somerset, and dying in 1285, was s. by his son, JohnFitz-Reginald. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p.206, Fitz-Herbert, Baron Fitz-Herbert]
1300 - 1341
Joan De
Saint
John
41
41
2 MAR 1339/40 - 12 FEB 1372/73
Fulk VIII
Fitz-
Warren
1337
Margaret
De
Audley
1335
Hugh
De
Audley
1333
Joan
de
Audley
1308
John de
Saint
John
1347
Anastasia
de
Aton
1304 - 7 MAR 1388/89
Edward
de Saint
John
1385
Jean
Brownflete
14 MAR 1298/99 - 25 FEB 1341/42
Sir
Ralph
Basset
1315
Alice
De
Audley
1289 - 1316
Nicholas
De
Audley
27
27
1292 - 1322
Joan
De
Dammartin
30
30
8 JAN 1310/11 - 1386
Sir James
De
Audley
1317
Thomas
De
Audley
1257 - 1324
William
De
Dammartin
67
67
1267 - 1342
Eleanor
FitzReginald
Herbert
75
75
1248 - 1314
Joan
De
Vivonia
66
66
1268
Reginald
FitzReginald
Herbert
1272 - 10 FEB 1309/10
John
FitzReginald
Herbert
1270 - 1322
Peter
FitzReginald
Herbert
52
52
1256
John
de
Mohun
1372
Margaret
Saint
John
1330 - 1384
Joan
de
Bridport
54
54
1365
Mary
de
Beauchamp
1306 - 1343
Sir John
III De
Beauchamp
36
36
1295 - 1322
Roger
FitzPeter
Herbert
27
27
1298 - 1322
Joan
De
Lorty
24
24
1314
Joane
de
Mortimer
1360
Thomas
Bromflete
1332
Elizabeth
De
Beaumont
1235 - 1305
Alice
FitzPiers
Herbert
70
70
1279 - 1345
Agnes
de Saint
John
66
66
1360 - 1418
Sancha
de
Ayala
58
58
1380 - 1432
Constance
Blount
52
52
1350 - 1403
Sir
Walter
Blount
53
53
1308 - 1361
Margaret
De Saint
John
53
53
1326 - 1391
Eleanor
De
Beauchamp
65
65
1336
Margaret
De
Beauchamp
20 JAN 1328/29 - 1381
John
IV De
Beauchamp
1330
Edward
De
Beauchamp
1332
William
De
Beauchamp
1334 - 1394
Cecily
De
Beauchamp
60
60
1308 - 1358
Sir
John
Blount
50
50
1352
Thomas
Blount
1273 - 1329
John II
de Saint
John
55
55
1325
Henry
Lunet
1309
William
De Saint
John
1310 - 1335
Hugh
De Saint
John
25
25
1320
John
de
Meriet
1382 - 1414
Sir
James
Blount
32
32
1384
Peter
Blount
1386
Anne
Blount
1388
Sir
John
Blount
1385 - 1448
Joan
Bedlisgate
63
63
1344
Edward
Saint
John
1393 - 18 FEB 1460/61
Sir William
II De
Bonville
Created Baron Bonville and Knight of the Garter in 1449. He took the side of the Yorkists in the Wars of the Roses. He was later beheaded by order of Margaret, wife of Henry the Sixth, this was shortly after the Yorkists were defeated at St Albans in 1461 and he was taken prisoner there. --- The manor of Trelawny passed from the families of Bodrugan, Champernowne, Polglass, and Herle, to [this] Lord Bonville. --- Of Chewton Mendip, Somerset; aged 5 years at his father's death and 21 at the death of his mother. Aged 35 years 24 December 1425. Cousin and heir of John Herle of Cornwall Sheriff of Devon Summoned to parliament from 10 Mar 1448/9 as Lord Bonville of Cheston/Chuton, 28 Hen. VI; K.G. Member of Parliament for Somerset & Devonshire. 1st Lord Bonville. Named together with Isabella Kirkeby in the Inq. taken on the death of their natural son John On the Yorkist side in Battle of Northampton despite earlier loyalty to Henry VI.
1376 - 1402
Jane
Basset
26
26
1339
Maud
Basset
1367
Matilda
de
Camoys
1355 - 1398
Thomas
Boteler
43
43
1384 - 1406
John
De
Courtenay
22
22
1404 - 1459
Sir
Robert
Hungerford
55
55
1374 - 1420
Sir
William
Bourchier
46
46
William Bourchier, Count of Eu From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia William Bourchier (1386 — Troyes, 28 May 1420), founder of the fortunes of the Bourchier family, was Count of Eu, in Normandy. He was the son of William Bourchier, comte d'Eu, and Eleanor of Louvain. He married Anne Plantagenet, Countess of Stafford, the daughter of the Plantagenet prince, Thomas of Woodstock. Children Henry Bourchier, 1st Earl of Essex. (1404 – 4 April 1483) Eleanor Bourchier, (c. 1417 – November, 1474) she became Duchess of Norfolk, as wife to John de Mowbray, 3rd Duke of Norfolk William Bourchier, 1st Baron FitzWarin. Thomas Bourchier, (c. 1404 – 30 March 1486) later cardinal John Bourchier, 1st Baron Berners (1415 – 16 May 1474)
1370 - 1403
Sir
Giles
d'Aubigny
32
32
3rd Baron d'Aubigny
1395 - 11 JAN 1444/45
Giles
d'Aubigny
4th Baron d'Aubigny
1374 - 1420
Marguerite
de
Beauchamp
46
46
1390
Elizabeth
de
Courtenay
1388
Joan
Champernon
1370
Elzabeth
FitzJohn
Herbert
1350
Thomas
Basset
1365
Thomasine
Meynell
1362 - 1389
Sir
Ralph
Meynell
27
27
1334 - 1376
Richard
De
Meynell
42
42
1340 - 1398
Joan
de
Kirk
58
58
1357
Ralph
Basset
1330
John
Basset
1335
Joan
De
Brailsford
1395 - 1471
Elizabeth
de
Courtenay
76
76
1331 - 28 FEB 1370/71
Emeline
Daunay
1337 - 1399
Catherine
de
Courtenay
62
62
1386
Hugh
de
Courtenay
1410 - 1477
John
Hastings
67
67
1382 - 6 JAN 1438/39
Edward
Hastings
1380 - 1412
Muriel
de
Dinham
32
32
1340 - 7 JAN 1380/81
John III
de
Dinham
1350 - 1389
Muriel
de
Courtenay
39
39
1311 - 1356
Thomas
De
Courtenay
45
45
1322 - 1362
Muriel
de
Moels
40
40
1404 - 1463
Sir
Philip de
Courtenay
59
59
1406 - 1476
Elizabeth
Hungerford
70
70
1378 - 1449
Walter
Hungerford
71
71
1382 - 1426
Katherine
Peverell
44
44
1340 - 1416
Thomas
Peverell
76
76
1352 - 1422
Margaret
De
Courtenay
70
70
1369 - 1428
John
IV de
Dinham
59
59
1395 - 1428
John
V de
Dinham
33
33
1397 - 1410
John
d'Aubigny
13
13
1345 - 1397
Eleanor
de
Louvaine
52
52
1335
Henry
Bourchier
1375 - 1465
Philippe
Lovel
90
90
1334
Sir
John
Bluet
1409 - 1484
Edmund
Hungerford
75
75
1396
Sir
Walter
Blount
1359 - 1401
Maurice
VI de
Berkeley
42
42
1400 - 1464
Maurice
VII de
Berkeley
64
64
1371 - 1407
Joan
de
Dinham
36
36
1345
John
FitzHenry
Herbert
1350
Alice
1318 - 1352
Henry
FitzRoger
Herbert
34
34
1322 - 1387
Elizabeth
De
Holand
65
65
1273
Ela
Martel
1348 - 5 MAR 1423/24
Sir
Hugh de
Courtenay
1356 - 1387
Maud
de
Beaumont
31
31
1380
Margaret
de
Courtenay
1382
Sir
Hugh de
Courtenay
1328 - 1375
Elizabeth
De
Brienne
47
47
1286 - 1330
Sir
Richard
Le Fleming
44
44
1282 - 1 MAR 1310/11
William de
Hastings. Baron
of Aergavenny
1335
John
de
Vere
1364
Andrew
Luttrell
1327 - 1371
Sir
John
Touchet
43
43
1355
Elizabeth
De La
Bere
1402 - 1462
Joan
Saint
John
60
60
1316
John III
De Saint
John
1327
Elizabeth
D'Umfreville
1280
Herbert
FitzReginald
Herbert
1385 - 1471
Elizabeth
de
Courtenay
86
86
1400
Katherine
de
Dynham
1375
Elizabeth
Paulet
1346
Oliver
Saint
John
1404 - 1426
Isabel
Saint
John
22
22
1328 - 1391
Nicholas
De
Audley
63
63
1394
Gertrude
de
Berkeley
1396
Elizabeth
de
Berkeley
1398
Anne
de
Berkeley
1368 - 13 JAN 1433/34
Joan
De La
Pole
1348 - 1367
Sir
John
La Pole
19
19
1324 - 10 JAN 1407/08
Sir John
De
Cobham
John de Cobham, 3rd Baron Cobham From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia John de Cobham, 3rd Baron (d.1408) was the son of John de Cobham and Joan de Beauchamp. He was given a licence to crenellate by Richard II in 1381 and built a castle at the family seat in Cowling or Cooling, Kent. Around 1332, Sir John married Margaret Courtenay, daughter of Hugh Courtenay, 2nd Earl of Devon. She died on 2 August 1385 or 95. In 1398 Sir John was exiled to Guernsey. Henry IV restored the estate and Sir John died in Cooling, 1408. He was buried in the church of St Mary Magdalene, Cobham near his wife. Rochester Bridge Wardens Sir John and Sir Robert Knolles (or Knollys), paid for the building of a stone bridge at nearby Rochester, finished in 1391. A bridge across the River Medway had been essential for traffic between London and Dover (the port for France and hence continental Europe) since Roman times. To ensure the maintenance of their new bridge, the two men instituted the Wardens and Commonalty of Rochester Bridge, two elected wardens with permission from Richard II to own land and use the income for the bridge. The Wardens and Commonalty received grants of land from Henry IV and Henry V, and the trust became very wealthy. Rochester Bridge Trust still owns much of this land, which paid for new Rochester bridges in 1856 (now the west bound lanes of the A2) and 1970 (east bound A2). The trust also helped to build the Medway Tunnel (1996), a few miles downstream, which it owns and will take charge of in 2021.
1295 - 1335
Sir
Ralph
Bluet
40
40
1296
Amice
Pichard
1270 - 1306
Sir
John
Pichard
36
36
1276
Katherine
FitzReginald
Herbert
1315 - 1362
Sir
Ralph
Bluet
47
47
1317
Elizabeth
verch
Rhys
1345
Katherine
verch
Gwrgan
1343 - 1367
Sir
John de
Wodhull
24
24
1282 - 1342
Eleanor
De
Dammartin
60
60
1364
Thomas
Bedlisgate
1365
Mary
De
Beauchamp
1367 - 8 FEB 1441/42
Alice
De
Beauchamp
1395
Joan
Boteler
1352
Joan
Touchet
1395
Richard
Hoorde
1370
Thomas
Hoorde
1377
Alice
Palmer
1303 - 1364
Hugh
De
Meynell
61
61
1346
James
De
Audley
1375 - 1405
Isabel
De
Audley
30
30
1358 - 1403
Sir
Hugh de
Shirley
45
45
1336
Thomas
de
Shirley
1340
Isabel
de
Meynell
1341 - 1399
Joanna
de
Bretagne
58
58
1335
Ralph
Basset
1339
Matilda
de
Courtenay
1195 - 1235
Piers
FitzPiers
Herbert
40
40
1212 - 1264
Alice
de
Stanford
52
52
1376
Joan
Taillebois
1278
Lucia
FitzReginald
Herbert
1309
Merebelle
De
Wake
1405
Alice
Seymour
1370
John
Seymour
1375
Mary
D'Arcy
1400
John II
Seymour
1352
William
Seymour
1325 - 1391
Sir
Roger
Seymour
66
66
1355
Richard
Seymour
1364
Lettice
Seymour
1360
Roger
Seymour
1350
Margaret
de
Courtenay
1353
Elizabeth
de
Courtenay
1357 - 1419
Edward
de
Courtenay
62
62
1387
Edward
de
Courtenay
1389
Hugh
de
Courtenay
1391
James
de
Courtenay
1385
Alice
Bradshaigh
1373
Sir John
Saint
John
1360 - 1434
Joan
De
Cobham
74
74
1401 - 1470
Sir
Theobald
Gorges
68
68
Knight Banneret. Born in 1401, on the vigil of Saint Andrew (29 Nov). On the death of his elder brother, John, in 1415, he became heir and a ward of the King, his father, Thomas, having died in 1403. The fact that his mother survived until 1419 may have somewhat mitigated the hardships of the long minority for Agnes was a woman of decided views and executive mind. Somersetshire Arch. and Nat. Hist. Soc., Proceedings, vol. 79, pp. 64-69
1370 - 1408
Sir
Thomas
Gorges
38
38
1403
John
Gorges
1405
William
Gorges
1407
Isabel
Gorges
1381 - 1419
Agnes
de
Beauchamp
38
38
1330 - 1381
Sir
Theobald
Gorges
51
51
1360
Sir
Theobald
Gorges
1363
Benjamin
Gorges
1372
Ralph
Gorges
1374
William
Gorges
1386
Margaret
Luttrell
1392
Anne
Luttrell
1396
Joan
Luttrell
1398
William
Luttrell
1312
Elizabeth
De Saint
John
1357 - 5 JAN 1410/11
Margaret
Clyvedon
1342 - 2 FEB 1404/05
Peter
de
Courtenay
1340 - 1396
William
de
Courtenay
56
56
1344
John
de
Courtenay
1348
Guenora
de
Courtenay
1351
Anne
de
Courtenay
1353
Isabel
de
Courtenay
1355 - 1405
Humphrey
de
Courtenay
50
50
1357
Philippa
de
Courtenay
1360
Robert
de
Courtenay
1353
John
Cheverston
1333
John
Honington
1350
Elizabeth
Hungerford
1339 - 1380
Robert
Palmer
41
41
1343 - 1386
Isabel
De
Stopham
43
43
1365 - 1406
Robert
Palmer
41
41
1397 - 1428
John
Palmer
31
31
1291 - 1345
Thomas
de
Louvaine
53
53
1322 - 30 JAN 1346/47
John
de
Louvaine
1323 - 1349
Margaret
de
Weston
26
26
2 MAR 1361/62 - 1391
Fulk IX
Fitz-
Warren
1398 - 1482
John
Barttelot
84
84
1370 - 1428
John
Barttelot
58
58
1375 - 1399
Joan
De
Stopham
24
24
1328
John
De
Stopham
1340
Joanne
Atte
Forde
1300
John
De
Stopham
1310
Isabella
de Saint
John
1330
Assoline
De
Stopham
1336
Soffildus
De
Stopham
1348 - 1375
Adam
Barttelot
27
27
1326
Thomas
Barttelot
1350
Alicia
1368 - 1423
Joan
Basset
55
55
1337 - 1384
William
Basset
47
47
1347 - 1422
Margaret
Fleming
75
75
1374 - 1463
John
Basset
89
89
1312 - 1368
Sir
Baldwin
Le Fleming
56
56
1336 - 1370
Simon
Fleming
34
34
1318 - 1362
Matilda
De
Geneville
44
44
1344
Matilda
Fleming
1347 - 1392
Cicely
Champernon
45
45
1368
Thomas
Fleming
1290 - 1332
Maria
De
Dammartin
42
42
1284
Edmund
De
Dammartin
1288
William
De
Dammartin
1295
Nicholas
De
Dammartin
1274 - 1307
Adam
FitzReginald
Herbert
33
33
1277 - 1365
Christian
Verch
Gwaring
88
88
1301
Jenkin
FitzAdam
Herbert
1385
Alice
Boteler
1363
John
V De
Beauchamp
1389
John
VI De
Beauchamp
1370
Margaret
Bennerton
1400 - 1455
Sir
Christopher
Luttrell
55
55
1390
Ralph
Boteler
1376 - 1420
John
Bluet
44
44
1350 - 1397
Walter
Bluet
47
47
1354 - 1404
Ellen
Malet
50
50
1320
Walter
Bluet
1329
Christian
Greenham
1354
Gilbert
Gamage
1386 - 1419
William
Gamage
33
33
1360
Janet
Fleming
1336
Philip
Fleming
1366
Philip
Fleming
1340
Ffelis
Austin
1314
Sir
Richard
Le Fleming
1375
Sir Thomas
De
Halighwell
1346
Sir John
De
Halighwell
1356
Joan
Cheverston
1330
John
Cheverston
1393
Matilda
d'Aubigny
1397
Alice
Hoorde
1405
Otes
de
Dinham
1406 - 1476
Elizabeth
Hungerford
70
70
1375 - 1399
Joan
De
Stopham
24
24
1390
Elizabeth
de
Courtenay
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