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1. Eva D'Oyly, between whom and her uncle, Robert D'Oyly, Pushull then fell. At the Oxfordshire Hundred inquisitions, 7 Edw. I, it was found that Robert D'Oyly held the said estate, but paid his niece Eva twenty-one shillings rent per annum for a moiety thereof.[192] Before 12 Edw. I. (1283-4) the said Eva was married to John le Mouner,[193] the member of a family then rising in Bucks, Wilts, and Oxfordshire; and, by fine levied in Trinity term that year, Mouner and his wife released to Robert D'Oyly and Christiana his wife 10s. 6d. rent (half their interest) in Pushull. They were also living in 13 Edw. I. (1285), when by another fine they, the Le Mouners, joined by Robert D'Oyly, remised and quit-claimed all their interest in a mill at Watlington, co. Oxon, to Edmund Earl of Cornwall. To the heir of this Eva (then no doubt a minor) descended the D'Oylys' possessions at Estcote, Kencote, Clanfield, and Bampton, co. Oxon, after the death of her grandfather Roger D'Oyly, 1309; and in February 1315-6, Sir Richard de Goldesbury and Sir John Meus, knights, presented to Kencote church.[194] It is singular that a strong trace of connection appears from the armorial ensigns of' D'Oyly, Moyne or Moone, Millar, and Goldesbury: the arms of Mouner are unknown.