To this Ralph succeeded Hugh de Buron, lord of the castle of Horestan, who, in the 9th year of King Stephen, together with Hugh, his son and heir, gave to the monastery of Lenton, the church of Oscinton, about which there was a dispute (Placita apud Westm. A. 7 R. I. Rot. II.), in the 7th of Richard I. with the prior of the hospital of St John of Jerusalem; when the prior of the hospital of St John of Jerusalem; when the prior of Lenton produced the grant of the said Hugh, and the prior of the hospital of St John, that of Roger de Buron, by which he gave to that house the town of Oscinton, with the appurtenances; whereupon no judgment was given by the court, because the prior of Lenton's attorney knew not whether he should put his cause to an issue, before he had his client's direction.
This Hugh de Buron gave likewise in the said reign, by his charter (wherein he is styled lord of Horstone-castle), the church of Horsley (Thoroton's Nott. p. 260.) to the then prior of Lenton, and his successors; which was confirmed by the Bishop of Coventry and Litchfield, and ratified by the Pope. [Collins Peerage VII:90]
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Hugo de Burun, successor by c 1135/40 of Ralph de Buron, a Domesday tenant-in-chief in Nottinghamshire. Hugh was dead by 1155, when his son Roger (d. 1194) owed 4 marks relief. He was probably also father of Adelina, wife of Robert de somerville; cf. Foulds, Thurgarton Cart. p. 685. [Domesday Descendants p362]
Sources:
Title: Collins' Peerage of England, Genealogical, Biographical, and Historical, Greatly Augmented, etc.; Sir Egerton Brydges {1812}
Page: VII:90
Title: Thoroton's History of Nottinghamshire, 2nd ed; Robert Thoroton {1790-1797}
Page: II:284
Title: Domesday Descendants, A Prosopography of People Occuring in English Documents 1066-1166; K B S Keats-Rohan {2002}
Page: 362
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