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Family Subtree Diagram : ...Walter Devereux (1370)

PLEASE NOTE: If you do not see a GRAPHIC IMAGE of a family tree here but are seeing this text instead then it is most probably because the web server is not correctly configured to serve svg pages correctly. see http://developer.mozilla.org/en/docs/SVG:Server_Configuration for information on how to correctly configure a web server for svg files. ? Parent Parent Biological Child Parent Biological Child Parent Parent Parent Biological Child Parent Parent Biological Child Parent Parent Biological Child Biological Child Parent Parent Biological Child Parent Parent Biological Child Parent Parent Biological Child Biological Child Biological Child Parent Biological Child Biological Child Biological Child Parent Biological Child Parent Parent Biological Child Parent Biological Child Parent Parent Parent Biological Child Biological Child Parent Parent Biological Child Parent Biological Child Parent Parent Biological Child Parent Parent Biological Child Biological Child Biological Child Parent Parent Biological Child Parent Parent Biological Child Parent Parent Biological Child Parent Parent Biological Child Biological Child Parent Parent Biological Child Parent Parent Biological Child Parent Parent Biological Child Parent Parent Biological Child Parent Parent Biological Child Parent Parent Biological Child Parent Parent Biological Child Parent Parent Biological Child Biological Child Parent Parent Biological Child Parent Parent Biological Child Parent Parent Biological Child Parent Parent Biological Child Parent Parent Biological Child Parent Parent Biological Child Parent Parent Biological Child Biological Child Parent Parent Biological Child Biological Child Parent Parent Biological Child Biological Child Parent Biological Child Parent Parent Parent Biological Child Biological Child Parent Parent Biological Child Biological Child Parent Parent Biological Child Biological Child Biological Child Biological Child Parent Biological Child Parent Parent Biological Child Parent Biological Child Parent Biological Child Parent Parent Biological Child Parent Biological Child Parent Parent Parent Parent Biological Child Parent Parent Biological Child Biological Child Parent Parent Biological Child Biological Child Parent Parent Biological Child Parent Parent Biological Child Parent Parent Parent Biological Child Parent Parent Biological Child Parent Parent Biological Child Parent Parent Biological Child Parent Parent Biological Child Biological Child Parent Parent Biological Child Parent Parent Biological Child Parent Parent Biological Child Parent Parent Biological Child Parent Parent Biological Child Parent Parent Parent Biological Child Parent Parent Biological Child Biological Child Biological Child Parent (a child) (two children) (two children) (two children) (two children) (a child) (a child) (five children) (four children) (a child) (two children) (a child) (a child) (three children) (a child) (a child) (a child) (a child) (a child) (two children) (a child) (a child) (a child) (a child) (a child) (a child) (a child) (two children) (a child) (a child) (a child) (a child) (a child) (a child) (two children) (two children) (two children) (a child) (two children) (two children) (a child) (a child) (a child) (two children) (a child) (a child) (a child) (a child) (two children) (a child) (a child) (a child) (a child) (a child) (a child) (a child) (two children) (a child) (a child) (a child) (a child) (a child) (a child) (a child) 1157 Aubree Albareda Marmion # Note:

    Auberee (living 1233), daughter and heir of Geoffrey Marmion, of Clifton, and of Arrow, co. Warwick. Auberee and her husband are stated by Dugdale and others to be the parents - instead of the great-grandparents - of the Geoffrey in the text.
    [Complete Peerage III:3 note (d

# Note:
# Note: Title: Newsgroup: soc.genealogy.medieval, at groups - google.com
# Note: Page: Douglas Richardson, 2 Nov 2003
# Note: Text: no date, 2nd husband
1157 - 1204 Walter de Cormeilles 47 47 From: Douglas Richardson (royalancestry@msn.com)
Note: Note: Subject: Re: Bishop's Kinsfolk: Bishop Godfrey Giffard's kinsman, William de Beauchamp, Earl of Warwick
Newsgroups: soc.genealogy.medieval
Date: 2003-10-30 08:25:54 PST
Dear Chris ~
Yes, you are correct. The "C." stands for Chancery, as in Inquisition Post Mortem. Below please find a copy of the inquisition for Margaret (or Margery) de Cormeilles, one of the daughters and co-heiresses of Walter de Cormeilles. The inquisition is split into two parts, one an inquest held in Herefordshire, the other held in Gloucestershire. The writs for both inquests are dated May 1236.

- - - - - - - - - -

Calendar of Inquisitions Post Mortem 1 (1904): 1-2 Inquisition Post Mortem of Margaret alias Margery de Cormeilles
Writ to the sheriff of Hereford, 16 May, 20 Henry III [1236]. Inq. (undated).

Her daughters, Alice, the wife of Robert le Archer, and Isabel, the wife of Simon de Solers, are her heirs by Walter de Stokes, her husband.

HEREFORD. Tatinton and Bolingehop' in Clehungre, ½ knight's fee, containing 3 carucates (and) 100 s. rent, held of the king in chief.

Eston town, 1 knight's fee held by Roger de Eston.
Note: GLOUCESTER, Begesoure and Hennemerse, 1 knight's fee held by James de Solers.

Writ to the sheriff of Gloucester, 17 May, 20 Henry III [1236]. Inq. (undated).

GLOUCESTER. The jury know of no land held by any Margaret de Cormailles of the king in chief, but one Albreda de Marmiun sometime held certain lands of the king in chief in dower, which lands Henry de Penebrigg' now holds of Hugh Giffard, and he of the king in chief.
C. Hen. III. File 1. (5.) END OF QUOTE.

- - - - - - - - -

The inquisition above indicates that a certain Aubrey Marmion formerly held Cormeilles property in dower, which property was being held in 1236 by Hugh Giffard, the known husband of Sibyl, one of the four Cormeilles co-heiresses. This suggests that Aubrey Marmion was the widow sometime before 1236 of a Cormeilles male, presumably Walter de Cormeilles himself. Also, it indicates that Aubrey Marmion survived her Cormeilles marriage, and was presumably dead before 1236.Inasmuch as the
inquisition above indicated that the Cormeilles family held lands in Gloucestershire, I checked the Book of Fees for anything pertaining to Walter de Cormeilles. I found the following item in the source: Book of Fees commonly called Testa de Nevill. Part I (1920),pg. 50:

A.D. 1211-1213. Gloucester.

"Feoda Walteri de Cormailles in Wunnestan [Winson] et Elkestr [Elkstone] et Sid' [Syde] cum pertinenciis v. milites." END OF QUOTE.

Finally, I located an article in the Bristol & Gloucestershire Society journal which pertains to the Cormeilles family. The author states unequivocably that Walter de Cormeilles married Aubrey Marmion, but he does not give his source.
Note: Interestingly, the article reveals Bishop Godfrey Giffard's known kinsman, Thomas de Solers, was a descendant of the Cormailles family as was the Bishop.
Note: Transactions of the Bristol and Gloucestershire Archaeological Society, 40 (1917): 115-116:
Note: "… Richard Cormeilles, his son, was father of a second Richard, and grandfather of Walter Cormeilles, who married Albreda de Marmion, and left by her four daughters, his co-heiresses, viz. Albreda, married to John le Brun; Sibyl, the wife of

Hugh Giffard; Alice, married to Godfrey de Craycumbe; and Margaret, the wife of Walter de Stokes. At the death of Walter de Cormeilles his estates were divided between his four daughters. The Manors of Hope and Aston in the                                                  County of Hereford,together with the Manor of Pauntley, and certain other land in Gloucestershire, came to Margaret, the wife of Walter de Stokes. She dying without male issue, her property was divided between her two daughters, co-heiresses. The elder, Alice,carried the Manor of Aston in marriage to Robert le Archer. The younger, Isabel, wife of Simon de Solers, inherited the Manors of Hope and Pauntley. The manors remained in the Solers family until 1310, when by Inquisition P.M. it was found that John, son of Thomas Solers, held at his decease, besides the Manor of Solers Hope, the Manor of Pauntley in Gloucestershire, and that his "kinsman" William de Wytington was his heir (see pedigree post). By the marriage of this William de Wytington of Co. Warwick with Maud, only daughter and heiress of John Solers, the Manors of Solers Hope and Pauntley became vested in the Whittington family from 1310 to 1546." END OF QUOTE.

I don't know who made the connection between Aubrey Marmion, wife of Walter de Cormeilles, and Aubrey Marmion, wife of William de Camville. I believe that Paget is correct that the two women are the same person, especially given Bishop Giffard's claim to kinship to Earl William de Beauchamp. Reviewing my notes, I see that Paget gives two sources for the marriage of Aubrey Marmion and William de Camville:

Plac. temp. Ric. 1 & Joh. rot. 4; Cart. l Joh. m 5
Best always, Douglas Richardson, Salt Lake City, Utah

===================

In 1086 the manor of WINSTONE was held by Ansfrid de Cormeilles who had received it on his marriage to a niece of Walter de Lacy, (fn. 45) although Walter's son Hugh may have held the estate at some stage. (fn. 46) The overlordship of the manor descended with the honor of Cormeilles, (fn. 47) passing in the early 13th century, at the division of the honor among the daughters of Walter de Cormeilles, to Godfrey of Craycombe who married Alice. (fn. 48) From 1303, however, the earls of Hereford were regarded as overlords of Winstone manor, (fn. 49) possibly by virtue of a grant of the overlordship of the honor of Cormeilles made by the Empress Maud to Miles of Gloucester in 1141.

From: 'Winstone: Manors and other estates', A History of the County of Gloucester: Volume 11: Bisley and Longtree Hundreds (1976), pp. 147-48. URL: http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.asp?compid=19070. Date accessed: 07 September 2007.
Change Date: 7 SEP 2007
1370 - 1420 Walter Devereux 50 50 1360 - 1402 Walter Devereux 42 42 1366 - 1421 Agnes Crophull 55 55 1326 - 1403 Walter Devereux 77 77 1288 - 1379 William Devereux 91 91 1312 - 1394 Anne Barre 82 82 1274 John Barre 1350 Anne Devereux 1261 - 1320 Walter Devereux 59 59 1265 - 1335 Margaret de Braose 70 70 1240 - 1308 Alice De Grandison 68 68 1240 - 1315 William Devereux 75 75 BARONY OF DEVEROIS or DEVEROSE (I) 1299

Sir William DEVEROIS, DEVEROSE, or DEVEROUS, of Lyonshall, Holme Lacy, and Stoke Lacy, co. Hereford, and Lower Hayton, Salop, son and heir of Sir William DEVEROIS, of Lyonshall, &c. (who was slain at the battle of Evesham, 4 Aug 1265) (c), by Maud (who d. in Aug 1297), daughter of Sir Hugh Giffard, sometime Constable of the Tower of London. His father's lands had been forfeited, and granted, 20 Nov 1265, to Roger de Mortimer, but he recovered the manors mentioned above. In May 1286 he demised all his lands in Cheddar, Somerset, to the Bishop of Bath and Wells, to hold for a term. He was on the King's service in Wales in July 1287. On 14 Oct 1290 he was sentenced to major excommunication by the Bishop of Hereford for detention of the tithes of his manor of Lyonshall, but was absolved 7 Nov following. He was summoned for Military Service from 12 Dec 1276 to May 1297, and to Parliament 6 Feb 1299, by writ directed 'Willelmo de Ebroicis, whereby he is held to have become LORD DEVEROIS. In 1300 he granted the manors of Holme Lacy and Stoke Lacy, and the castle and manor of Lyonshall, to the Bishop of Coventry and Lichfield, to hold for life. He m. Lucy, who survived him. [Complete Peerage IV:302-3]

(c) In 1166 Roger de Ebroicis held 4 fees, and Walter de Ebroicis 3 fees, of Hugh de Lacy of Ewyas and Weobley, co. Hereford. Roger is usually supposed to have been ancestor of the family of Deverois of Lyonshall, Walter of that of Deverois of Bodenham, but this conjecture is untrue; for it appears from Bracton's "Note Book", no. 227, that Roger de Ebroicis, living in the reign of Henry II, held 2 knights' fees in 'Eylnathestona and Puttelega', and dsp. leaving his sisters his heirs. Stephen de Ebroicis was granted the vill of Frome 'Herberti' by his uncle, Stephen de Longchamp, in 1205, and the manor of Wilby, co. Norfolk, by the Earl of Pembroke. He gave lands in Lyonshall and Frome to Wormsley Priory, m. Isabel de Cantelou (she m. 2ndly, Ralph de Penbrugge), and d. shortly before 17 Mar 1227/8. William de Ebroicis confirmed the grants of his father Stephen to Wormsley, 25 Mar 1250. In 1264 he pledged his manors of Soke Lacy and Lawton for 1,000 marks to Roger de Mortimer for the ransom of Adam le Despenser, taken prisoner at the battle of Northampton. William, son and heir, confirmed the grants of his grandfather, the Lord Stephen de Ebroicis, to Wormsley.
________
from: The Phillips, Weber, Kirk, & Staggs families of the Pacific Northwest Webpage on Rootsweb.com by Jim Weber, November 11, 2004
@http://worldconnect.genealogy.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=jweber&id=I14645

NOTE: CP does not mention any other wife for William (such as Agnes de Grandison). In fact CP indicates that it is usually supposed that the Deverois/Deverux of Bodenham were descended from Walter Ebroicis (and then rejects at least part of the supposition regarding a Roger de Ebroicis). I am following the line of Brian Walls (SGM), who self-admittedly does not have great sources, just a pedigree "given by others". In support for Brian Walls' pedigree, CP doesn't even have birth/death dates for this William (only Brian Walls has), indicating that CP has little information on William. Most importantly CP does not explain how the manor of Lyonshall descended to John 1st Baron Devereux of Lyonshall, according to CP, probably son of William Deverose of Bodenham. The descent through Agnes de Grandison does explain the linkage of this William Deverois of Lyonshall with the later William Deverose of Bodenham, father of John Devereux of Lyonshall.
1232 - 1292 Richard de Braose 60 60 Lord of Stinton, Norfolk, etc.

Richard de Braose of Stinton, Norfolk etc., Married Alice le Ros (d 1301), widow of Richard Longespee. He died before 18 June 1292 and is buried at Woodbridge Priory, Suffolk.
(http://freespace.virgin.net/doug.thompson/BraoseWeb/John.htm)

1246 - 1299 Alice le Rus 53 53 1267 - 1312 Mary de Braose 45 45 1270 Giles de Braose 1197 - 1232 John de Braose 35 35 John de Braose, called Tadody (1198-July 18, 1232) was the Welsh Marches lord of Bramber and Gower. He was the eldest son of William de Braose (himself son of William de Braose, Fourth Lord of Bramber) and Matilda de Clare, the daughter of Richard de Clare, 4th Earl of Hertford.
John was nicknamed Tadody ("fatherless" in Welsh) after his father was starved to death in 1210 on the orders of King John I of England. At first he was hidden in Gower, but finally in 1214 his guardian surrendered John and his younger brother Philip. In June 1215 John was present for the signing of the Magna Carta. He was released from custody in 1218, having spent some time with his uncle Giles, Bishop of Hertford.

Much of his adult life was spent in disputes with relatives over his inheritance. In 1219 he married Marared, the daughter of Llywelyn Fawr, and received Gower as her dowry. In 1226 his uncle Reginald de Braose sold him Bramber, and he inherited still more when this uncle died a few years later. He and Marared had three sons, including his heir, William.

In 1232 John was killed in a fall from his horse.
(Wikipedia)

Nicknamed "Tadody" by the Welsh when he was hidden in Gower as a child after King John had killed his father and grandmother, he was later in the custody of Engelard de Cigogny (castellan of Windsor) along with his brother Giles. Cigogny was ordered to give the two boys up to William de Harcourt in 1214. At this time John became separated from his brother. He was present at the signing of Magna Carta in 1215.

John disputed his uncle Reginald's claim to the Braose lands, sometimes resorting to arms. Llywelyn helped him to secure Gower (1219). In 1221, with the advice and permission of Llewelyn, he repaired his castle of Abertawy (Swansea, right) or Seinhenydd. He purchased the Rape of Bramber from Reginald and his son, William, in 1226. In that year John confirmed the family gifts to Sele Priory, near Bramber, and to the Abbey of St. Florent, Saumur, and added others. After the death of Reginald (1228) he became Lord of Skenfrith, Grosmont and Whitecastle, the three Marcher castles, by charter from the king but he lost these in 1230 to Hugh de Burgh at the same time as Gower became a subtenancy of de Burgh's Honour of Carmarthen and Cardigan.

John was killed by a fall from his horse at Bramber in 1232.
(http://freespace.virgin.net/doug.thompson/BraoseWeb/John.htm)
1224 - 1291 William de Braose 66 66 son of John de Braose and Margaret ap Llewellyn. Margaret was a daughter of Llywelyn the Great.

William was only 12 when his father died. The wardship of William and the de Braose lands were granted by Henry III to Peter des Rievaux. On his fall in 1234 these custodies were passed on to the king's brother, Richard, Earl of Cornwall. When William came of age he took control of the Braose lands in Gower, Bramber and Tetbury. He confirmed the grants made by his father of the rents of cottages in Tetbury to the priory at Aconbury, founded in memory of Maud de St Valery by her daughter Margaret.
He was plagued throughout his life by a series of legal battles with his female relatives.

William died at Findon on "the day of Epiphany" (January 6) in the year 1290/1. His funeral was at Sele Priory on January 15.
(http://freespace.virgin.net/doug.thompson/BraoseWeb/William6.htm)
1222 John de Braose 1210 - 1263 Margred Verch Llwelyn 53 53 1225 Llywelyn de Braose 1145 Ralph de Cormeilles Ralph, the Sewer to the Earl of Richmond (living 1166 (f). [Complete Peerage VIII:69]

(f) In 9 [sic. a year?] John Robert claimed the advowson of Wimpole, co. Cambridge, under charter of Conan, lord of the Honour of Richmond, to his grandfather Ralph, sewer of the said Conan.

Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, by G. E Cokayne, Sutton Publishing Ltd, 2000
Page: VIII:69
1219 - 1265 William Devereux 46 46 William Devereax, who in the 42nd of Henry III,. had summons to attend the king at Chester, with horse and arms to restrain the incursions of the Welsh, and in two years afterwards, being then one of the barons marchers, received command, with the others, to repair to the marches without delay, for a similar purpose. He subsequently attended the king at the battles of Lewes, but there he foretook the royal standard, and afterwards fell fighting on the side of the barons at Evesham, in the 49th Henry III, whereupon Maud, his widow, sister of Walter Giffard, bishop of Bath and Wells, applied to the king, for "certain jewels and harnes," which hade been deposited in the church of Hereford by the deceased baron, and obtained precept to the treasurer of the cathedral, for their deliverence to her. [Dominant, Abeyant, Forfeited & Extinct Peerages, p169 Devereux, Barons Devereux]  1220 - 1297 Matilda de Giffard 77 77 1194 - 1256 Hugh de Giffard 62 62 Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans: Many of the English Ancestral Lines Prior to 1300 of those Colonial Americans with known Royal Ancestry but Fully Developed in all Possible Lines
Abbrev: Boyer, Med English Ancestors (2001)
Author: Compiled by Carl Boyer 3rd
Publication: Carl Boyer 3rd, PO Box 220333, Santa Clarita, CA 91322-0333, 2001
Page: p. 105, GIFFARD 9 & 11
Change Date: 15 MAY 2007
1198 - 1279 Sybyl de Cormeilles 81 81 1166 - 1226 Walter Giffard 60 60 Note: The contents of this catalogue are the copyright of Berkeley Castle Muniments
Note: Rights in the Access to Archives database are the property of the Crown, © 2001-2006
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Note: Besides those in common use, the following abbreviations may require elucidation.
Note: BCM Berkeley Castle Muniments.
Note: BIHR Bulletin of the Institute of Historical Research (later called Historical Research)
Note: BL British Library
Note: BL Harl. MS 4748 British Library, Cartulary of the honour of Segrave
Note: Barkley Sir Henry Barkley, 'The Earlier House of Berkeley', TBGAS viii (1883-4)
Note: Blomefield, Norfolk Francis Blomefield, Essay Towards a Topographical History of the County of Norfolk (2nd edn., 11 vols., 1805-10)
Note: Bridges, Northants. John Bridges, History and Antiquities of the County of Northampton (3 vols., 1759-91)
Note: CChR Calendar of Charter Rolls (6 vols., Public Record Office, 1903-27)
Note: CCR Close Rolls of the Reign of Henry III (14 vols.) and Calendar of Close Rolls (47 vols., Edward I to Henry VII, Public Record Office, 1911-63)
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Note: CIPM Hen. VII Calendar of Inquisitions Post Mortem, Henry VII (3 vols., Public Record Office, 1898-1955)
Note: CLibR Calendar of Liberate Rolls (6 vols., Public Record Office, 1916-64)
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Note: Cat.Anct.D. Descriptive Catalogue of Ancient Deeds in the Public Record Office (6 vols., Public Record Office, 1890-1915)
Note: Copinger, Suffolk Manors W. A. Copinger, The Manors of Suffolk (7 vols. 1905-11)
Note: Cornwall Fines, 1195-1377; 1377-1461 Cornwall Feet of Fines, vol. i, 1195-1377; vol. ii, 1377-1461 (Devon and Cornwall Record Society, 1914, 1950)
Note: xviii CATALOGUE OF BERKELEY CASTLE MUNIMENTS
Note: Curia Regis Rolls Curia Regis Rolls (19 vols., Public Record Office, 1922-2002)
Note: d.s.p. died sine prole (i.e. without issue)
Note: Devon CRO Devon County Record Office
Note: Dorset Fines, 1327-1485 Full Abstracts of Feet of Fines relating to the County of Dorset [1327-1485] (Dorset Records vol. 10, 1910)
Note: Ekwall, Dict. of Eilert Ekwall, The Concise Oxford Dictionary of English Place-Names (4th edn., 1960)
Note: Ellis C. A. Ellis, note and pedigree in Smyth, Lives of the Berkeleys, i. 19-20
Note: Farrer William Farrer, Honors and Knights' Fees (3 vols., 1923-5)
Note: Feud. Aids Inquisitions and Assessments relating to Feudal Aids (6 vols., Public Record Office, 1899-1920)
Note: Fryde, Fall of Edward II Natalie Fryde, The Tyranny and Fall of Edward II, 1321-1326 (1979)
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Note: Historical Research See BIHR
Note: Hutchins, Dorset John Hutchins The History and Antiquities of the County of Dorset (4 vols., 1861-70)
Note: Jeayes Descriptive Catalogue of the Charters and Muniments in the possession of the Rt. Hon. Lord Fitzhardinge, at Berkeley Castle, compiled by Isaac Herbert Jeayes (1892)
Note: Lysons, Magna Britannia Daniel and Samuel Lysons, Magna Britannia (1874)
Note: McFarlane, Collected Essays K. B. McFarlane, England in the Fifteenth Century: Collected Essays (1981)
Note: Morant, Essex Philip Morant, History and Antiquities of the County of Essex (1816)
Note: n.d. no date
Note: Nichols, Leics. John Nichols, History and Antiquities of the County of Leicester (4 vols. in 8 parts, 1795-1811)
Note: PNGlos A. H. Smith, The Place-Names of Gloucestershire (English Place-Name Society, 4 vols., 1964-5)
Note: PRO Public Record Office, Kew, London
Note: Pole, Devon Sir William Pole, Collections towards a Description of the County of Devon (1791)
Note: Proc. Som. Arch. & Nat. Hist. Soc. Proceedings of the Somerset Archaeological and Natural History Society
Note: Radford, 'Tretower' C. A. Raleigh Radford, 'Tretower: The Castle and the Court', Brycheiniog (The Brecknock Society), vi (1960)
Note: Reg. Bransford Calendar of the Register of Wolstan de Bransford, Bishop of Worcester, 1339-49 (Worcestershire Historical Society, 1966)
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Note: Reg. Drokensford Calendar of the Register of John de Drokensford, Bishop of Bath and Wells (A.D. 1309-1329) (Somerset Record Society vol. 1, 1887)
Note: Reg. Giffard Register of Bishop Godfrey Giffard, 1268-1301 (2 vols., Worcestershire Historical Society, 1898, 1902)
Note: Reg. Hallum The Register of Robert Hallum, Bishop of Salisbury, 1407-17 (Canterbury and York Society, part cxlv, 1982)
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Note: Rot. Litt. Claus. Rotuli Litterarum Clausarum in turri Londinensi asservati (Record Commission, 2 vols., 1833-4)
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Note: Sanders, English Baronies I. J. Sanders, English Baronies: a Study of their Origin and Descent, 1086-1327 (1960)
Note: Saul, Knights and Esquires Nigel Saul, Knights and Esquires: the Gloucestershire Gentry in the Fourteenth Century (1981)
Note:
Smyth John Smyth of Nibley, The Lives of the Berkeleys, with a Description of the Hundred of Berkeley (The Berkeley Manuscripts, 3 vols., Bristol and Gloucestershire Archaeological Society; vols. i-ii, 1883, are the Lives of the Berkeleys; vol.
iii, 1885, is The Hundred of Berkeley)
Note:
Somerset Fines, 1196-1307; 1307-46; 1347-99; 1399-1461 Pedes Finium, commonly called Feet of Fines, for the County of Somerset, 1196-1307; [second series] 1307-46; [third series], 1347-99; [fourth series], 1399-1461 (Somerset Record Society,
vols. vi, xii, xvii, xxii, 1892-1906)
Note: Staffs. Hist. Collections Collections for a History of Staffordshire (published by the William Salt Archaeological Society, later the Staffordshire Record Society)
Note: TBGAS Transactions of the Bristol and Gloucestershire Archaeological Society
Note: temp. tempore (i.e. in the time of)
Note: VCH Victoria History of the Counties of England (for all counties; in progress)
Note:
Wilts. Fines, 1272-1327; 1327-77 Abstracts of Feet of Fines relating to Wiltshire for the reigns of Edward I and Edward II (Wiltshire Archaeological and Natural History Society, Records Branch vol. i, 1939); for the reign of Edward III
(Wiltshire Record Society vol. xxix, 1974)
Note: Wilts. IPM Abstracts of Wiltshire Inquisitions post mortem, 1242-1326; 1327-77 (British Record Society Index Library and Wiltshire Archaeological and Natural History Society, 2 vols., 1908, 1914)
Note:
In the abstracts of deeds, place-names are usually given in the spelling of the manuscripts. Exceptions include the names of counties used to locate places, the names of places of residence (other than surnames) that occur in the statements of
the parties to deeds or in witness-lists, and the names of the rivers Severn and Wye. The identifiable place-names occurring in notes of accounts and court rolls are similarly modernised. Persons' surnames are given in the abstracts in the
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the original word or words in italic within brackets.
Note:
Illegible parts of documents are represented by an ellipsis (...). Editorial interpolations are in square brackets, with editorial comments in italic. The omission from an abstract of detail, typically listing titles of honour, offices or
varieties of holding, is represented by '[etc.]'.
Note: Work on the arrangement of the muniments is continuing and from time to time reveals documents that had hitherto been overlooked. For that reason, if for none other, the present catalogue should be seen as susceptible to amendment.
Note:
Additional research, chiefly in secondary sources, has been done only where necessary to establish the means by which certain documents reached the archive. The introductions to the several sections, and the references to secondary sources
cited, are consequently uneven in their range.
Note: The following pedigrees can be consulted at Berkeley Castle Muniments:
Note: 1. Descendants of Harding son of Eadnoth
Note: 2. Berkeley: descendants of Maurice (I) de Berkeley
Note: 3. Berkeley: descendants of Thomas (II) de Berkeley
Note: 4. Berkeley: descendants of Elizabeth de Berkeley
Note: 5. Berkeley: descendants of James (I) de Berkeley
Note: 6. Mowbray
Note: 7. Segrave
Note: 8. Drayton
Note: 9. Lovet of Rushton
Note: 10. Prayers
Note: 11. Cranford
Note: 12. Paris and Ivaus
Note: 13. Blount
Note: THE BERKELEY ESTATE
Note: BERKELEY LANDS OUTSIDE THE HUNDRED
Note: HIGH BRAY (DEVON) - ref. BCM/A/2/3
Note:
FILE [no title] - ref. BCM/A/2/3/3 - date: [c. Michaelmas 1209] [from Scope and Content] Witnesses: Roger de Berkeley, Adam son of Nigel, Bernard de Cromhale, Bernard de Stanes, Henry the chaplain, Swigin the chaplain, Thomas de Tiringham,
Maurice son of Nigel, Thomas de Lovent, William de Rotomag' now sheriff, Robert de Albamara, William de Raleg', Walter Giffard, Ranulf de Albemara, John Cole.
Note: ===============
Note: The contents of this catalogue are the copyright of Gloucestershire Record Office
Note: Rights in the Access to Archives database are the property of the Crown, © 2001-2006
Note: Kingscote Family Papers
Note: Catalogue Ref. D471
Note: Creator(s):
Note: Kingscote family of Kingscote, Gloucestershire
Note: DEEDS
Note: AVENING, HORSLEY, KINGSCOTE, LYDNEY, NEWINGTON BAGPATH, OWLPEN, SLIMBRIDGE, ?ULEY, WOTTON-UNDER-EDGE, etc.
Note: FILE [no title] - ref. D471/T1/4 - date: 1186
Note:
[from Scope and Content] Witnesses: Wm. Bishop of Land'[aff], Richard Abbot of St. Augustine's, Bristol, Richard the Canon, Master Maurice, Adam de Sautemar[eis] then Seneshal, Walter Giffard, Maurice son of Nigel, Wm. de Sautemar', Ralph
Fitzroger, Richard de Stintescumbe, Peter de Haia, Robert ?Duket, Laurence de Bocoura, Jocelin Eoco.
Change Date: 1 JAN 2007
1222 Alice Giffard 1134 Richard de Cormeilles 1110 - 1176 Richard de Cormeilles 66 66 1085 Turstin de Cormeilles 1060 - 1102 Ansfrid de Cormeilles 42 42 According to "The Origins of Some Anglo-Norman Families", Ansfrid, who came from Cormeilles, Eure in Normandy, was a tenant-in-chief (ie. of the King) in Herefordshire in 1086.
Note: The Origins of Some Anglo-Norman Families, by Lewis C Loyd, 1999 Page: 34

================

In 1086 the manor of WINSTONE was held by Ansfrid de Cormeilles who had received it on his marriage to a niece of Walter de Lacy, (fn. 45) although Walter's son Hugh may have held the estate at some stage. (fn. 46) The overlordship of the manor descended with the honor of Cormeilles, (fn. 47) passing in the early 13th century, at the division of the honor among the daughters of Walter de Cormeilles, to Godfrey of Craycombe who married Alice. (fn. 48) From 1303, however, the earls of Hereford were regarded as overlords of Winstone manor, (fn. 49) possibly by virtue of a grant of the overlordship of the honor of Cormeilles made by the Empress Maud to Miles of Gloucester in 1141.

From: 'Winstone: Manors and other estates', A History of the County of Gloucester: Volume 11: Bisley and Longtree Hundreds (1976), pp. 147-48. URL: http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.asp?compid=19070. Date accessed: 07 September 2007.

=================

List of Knights Accompanying William the Conqueror on his Invasion of England,1066
Note: http://www.three-peaks.net/1066.htm

=======================

The manor of Bullinghope (modern Bullingham, on the southeastern outskirts of Hereford) did not belong to the church of Hereford at Domesday but was divided between 3 tenants in chief, Roger de Lacy, Ansfrid of Cormeilles and Gilbert son of Thorold (DB I 184b, 186b, 186d).

From: 'Prebendaries: Bullinghope', Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae 1066-1300: volume 8: Hereford (2002), pp. 31-2. URL: http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.asp?compid=34430. Date accessed: 07 September 2007.
Change Date: 7 SEP 2007
1065 de Lacy 1280 Richard de Braose 1262 Margery de Braose 1210 - 1253 William le Rus 43 43 Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition, by Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., 1999
pg 246

# Title: Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999
# Note: Page: 28a-4
1224 - 1261 Agatha de Clere 37 37 1180 - 1248 Roger de Clere 68 68 1200 - 1249 Maud de Fay 49 49 1060 Ralph de Clere 1162 Margaret Fitzpeter 1145 - 1207 Peter Fitzhenry 62 62 1145 - 1203 Isabel de Chesney 58 58 1182 Joan FitzHenry 1130 Bartholomew de Chesney 1105 Reynold de Caisneto 1075 Philip de Caisneto 1125 - 1212 Henry FitzAilwin 87 87 1100 Ailwin Saxon 1070 Lefstan Saxon 1048 Ongar Saxon 1190 - 1230 Hugh le Rus 40 40 Sources:

   1. Title: Magna Carta Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families; Douglas Richardson {2005}
      Repository:
      Media: Book
      Page: 446
   2. Title: Honors & Knights Fees; William Farrer {1923-1925}
      Repository:
      Media: Book
      Page: III:439 
1190 Isabel 1215 Hugh le Rus 1155 - 1215 Ernald le Rus 60 60 1130 - 1166 Ernald le Rus 36 36 Sources:

   1. Title: Honors & Knights Fees; William Farrer {1923-1925}
      Repository:
      Media: Book
      Page: III:438 
1100 - 1159 Ernald le Rus 59 59 Sources:

   1. Title: Honors & Knights Fees; William Farrer {1923-1925}
      Repository:
      Media: Book
      Page: III:438 
1075 - 1125 Roger le Rus 50 50 1015 - 1066 Leofstan Ailwinsson 51 51 0980 Ailwin Horne 1130 Beatrix de Chamberlain 1179 - 1228 Stephen Devereux 49 49 1179 Isabel de Cantilupe 1220 Margaret Devereux 1160 - 1204 Eustace Devereux 44 44 1159 Cicily de Longfield 1181 Cicily Devereux 1118 William Devereux 1133 Heloise de Lacy 1160 Roger Devereux 1160 Sibil 1159 - 1239 William Cantelou 80 80 Note: William de Cauntelo the elder, steward of the household to King John. [Complete Peerage IX:123 note (a)] 1092 - 1140 Reginald Devereux 48 48 1115 Eustace Devereux 1066 Reginald Devereux of Salisbury 1074 de Longchamp 1090 Walter Devereux 1130 - 1205 Ralph de Clare 75 75 Mabel 1355 Anne Devereaux 1295 Thomas Barre 0965 Adelaise de Saumur ~1120 - >1187 Grecia de Chatellerault 67 67 1095 - 1160 Matilde de Montsoreau 65 65 1060 - 1124 Gautier de Montsoreau 64 64 1067 Grecia Demontreuil Bellay 1020 - 1067 Giraud le Bon de Montreuil 47 47 0980 - 1052 Bellay de Montreuil 72 72 0985 - 1050 Grecia du Plessis Mace 65 65 0950 - 1025 Bellay de Montreuil- Bellay 75 75 1130 - 1223 Ralph de Fay 93 93 1115 Elizabeth de Faye 1095 - 1175 Aimery de Faye 80 80 1168 Walter de Cormeilles 1108 - 1165 Robert le Chamberlayne 57 57 1085 Hugh Chamberlain 1105 Paganus le Chamberlayne 1060 Odo de Chamberlain Elizabeth Devereux 1138 - 1197 Hugh de Longfield 59 59 1185 - 1245 Beatrice de Turnham 60 60 1100 - 1154 Raoul De Châtellerault 54 54 1075 - 1116 Aimery de Faye 41 41 1050 - 1120 Aimery de Faye 70 70 1050 - 1100 Eustache 50 50 1020 - 1061 Aimery de Faye 41 41 1025 Arsende 0995 Aimery de Loudun 1000 Nives de Faye 0945 - 1015 Ansolde de Maule 70 70 0992 Emmeline de Loudun 0975 Ayard de Faye 0950 - 0999 Ebles de Faye 49 49 0925 - 0980 Landry de Faye 55 55 1025 - 1087 Guillaume de Montsoreau 62 62 0980 Gauthier Chevalier de Montsoreau 1000 Mabile 1000 - 1060 Adelaide d'Anjou 60 60 0935 - 0992 Hugo du Maine 57 57 Mace Duplessis Mace
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