World of HYDE

Discovering our Ancestors and their descendants to all parts of the world. Last updated 5th September 2025

Notes


Matches 2,251 to 2,373 of 2,373

      «Prev «1 ... 6 7 8 9 10

 #   Notes   Linked to 
2251 Vera Dawson born 10th July 1921. One of nine siblings born in the East End of London

Eldest was Constance,followed by Ivy, Alfred Leonard, Edith, Vera, Olive Joan and Sylvia

The father, Samuel Alfred was a butler followed by a green grocer. Violet the daughter of a mariner was a house keeper. Her father a Fortunatus Pella died before she was born. Stories are that he was a victualler and publican.



As a child and later a teenager Vera worked in the green grocer store but was good at school and had a good voice. The family often travelled to Cambridgeshire to harvest hops. When the war commence the family moved away from the East End to somewhere safer. Their house was damaged by a V bomb in 1940. It still stands in 2014 (100 yrs later)



Vera and Olive joined the Land Army and helped on farms doing the milking ans driving the tracrors and harvesting the fruit and vegetables. Afetr the war Vera and Ove joined the Army and travelled through Europe during the repatriation of the various wear affected coutries - Italy was one of the 
Dawson, Vera (I56456)
 
2252 Vessell FRITZ REUTER Andersen, Christian (I58026)
 
2253 Veteran of U.S. Army 1942-1943 Hyde, Ernest Hudson (I1966)
 
2254 Vindex St Winton QueenslandAustralia Hagstrom, Karl Henrich (I57789)
 
2255 Visied James Colin & Betty to see son Peter.
Went home onboard Elsana but very rough trip and left the ship at Rockhampton and continued journey home to Warwick by train. 
Hyde, James Frederick (I55688)
 
2256 Visiting brother Micheal and his wife Minnie, with Michael (7) and Annie (3) in tow. Parents Micheal and Mary Kimmet lived next door with James Catherine,Maggie and Thomas. Kimmett, Annie (I163044)
 
2257 Volume 7, page 532:
[Robert, Earl of Leicester (d. 1190)] m., before 1155-1159, Pernel (Petronilla), heiress of the Norman honour of Grandmesnil, great-granddaughter of Hugh de Grandmesnil, the Domesday tenant, but her ancestry has not been discovered. (h)
Note h:
Hugh de Grandmesnil, the Domesday tenant, had five sons - Robert, William, Hugh, Ives and Aubrey ... Robert, the eldest son, inherited the Norman lands which are later found in Robert FitzPernel's hands [i.e. Robert, Earl of Leicester (d. 1204), the son of Pernel]. He m., 1stly, Agnes, da. of Ranulph de Bayeux; 2ndly, Emma, da. of Robert d'Estouteville; and, 3rdly, Lucy, da. of Savary FitzCana (Orderic, vol. iii, p. 359). ... if she [Pernel] inherited the Norman lands she would in all probability be a daughter of a son of Hugh's son Robert. Hugh's father and son are both called Robert, and if this alternating nomenclature - a very usual system - was continued, a son of Robert the younger would be named Hugh. This is the name given to Pernel's father in the foundation narrative of Leicester Abbey, and although the story told there is fictitious ... it is possible that the writer may have had before him a document such as a list of obits giving the authentic name. It is not claimed that this suggested descent is more than speculative.

[Comment on above:]
In fact, Pernel's father was called William, as shown by a charter for St-Evroult discovered by David Crouch [The Beaumont Twins, p.91, citing the Cartulary of St-Evroult, ii, fo 33v]. However, the argument that her grandfather is likely to have been Robert, the eldest son of Hugh de Grandmesnil, still seems sound. To some extent it is supported by the following evidence.

In 1157, Henry II confirmed gifts made to the hospital of Falaise by William de Grentmesnil and others [Cal. Docs France, no 1157]. By an undated charter (perhaps from 1160 or later), one Beatrix de Rye gave land to the abbey of St Jean of Falaise, for the well-being of her mother Emma and of her brother William de Grentemesnil [Lechaude d'Anisy, Extrait des Chartes ... dans les archives du Calvados, vol.1, p. 323, no 9 (1834)]. It seems likely that this Beatrix was a daughter of Robert de Grandmesnil by his second wife, Emma d'Estouteville, particularly as the name Beatrix occurs in the Estouteville family, and was possibly borne by Emma's mother [C.T. Clay, ed., Early Yorkshire Charters, vol.9, p.2 (1952)]. If so, this would confirm that Robert also had a son William, who would probably be Pernel's father.

Note that K.S.B. Keats-Rohan [Domesday People I, p.263 (1999)] states that Pernel's father William was the son of Robert by Emma d'Estouteville, but no evidence is cited for the relationship.

http://www.medievalgenealogy.org.uk/cp/leicester.shtml 
De Grandmesnil, William (I242399)
 
2258 Voters Lists, Federal Elections, 1935–1980. R1003-6-3-E (RG113-B). Library and Archives Canada, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. Source (S1843)
 
2259 wagon driver
stable labourer in 1871 age 71 
Landells, James (I162858)
 
2260 Waltheof and Edgar Aetheling joined the Dane forces of Sweyn II and took part in the attack on York, in opposition to King William I. In 1070 he submitted to William and was restored to his earldom, and went on to marry William's niece, Judith of Lens.

Uchtred provoked King William I into the "Harrying of the North." He and Edgar Aetheling joined the Dane forces of Sweyn II in the attack on York, Yorkshire, England 
Waltheof II Earl Of Northumbria (I193547)
 
2261 Waltheof was the second son of Siward, Earl of Northumbria. Waltheof was said to be devout and charitable and was probably educated for a monastic life. Waltheof II Earl Of Northumbria (I193547)
 
2262 War Service Record, Commonwealth of Australia, Defence Service Records:-
Service:- RAAF
Service Number:- 25472
Date of Enlistment:- 17 April 1941
Locality of Enlistment:- Hamilton, Qld.
Place of Enlistment:- Brisbane, Qld.
Next of Kin:- Mary Schnitzderling
Date of Discharge:- 3 December 1945
Rank:- Corporal
Posting at Discharge:- 1 Reserve Personnel Pool
Prisoner of War:- No 
Schnitzerling, Basil Lawrence Mossman (I57993)
 
2263 Warden of St James 1886 Greene, Francis William (I157544)
 
2264 Warden of St James church 1862 Halpenny, William D. (I157524)
 
2265 Warren City and Trumbull County Directory, 1889-90 Source (S1499)
 
2266 Warwick Cemetery Locke, Isabella (I57014)
 
2267 Warwick Cemetery Elliot, Ann (I57241)
 
2268 Warwick Cemetery Locke, James (I57244)
 
2269 Warwick Examiner and Times (Qld. : 1867 - 1919), Wednesday 20 November 1895, page 3
OBITUARY
Mrs. Wilson, wife of Mr. John Wilson, of East Warwick, died at her residence on Mon-day last. The deceased, who was 51 years of age, was an invalid for many years, and al-though everything was done for her in the way of medical attendance it was seldom she was able to leave the house. The funeral took place yesterday afternoon, 
Stephenson, Anne (I243477)
 
2270 Warwick General Cemetery Locke, John (I57240)
 
2271 Warwickshire Anglican Registers Source (S1256)
 
2272 Warwickshire Anglican Registers Source (S1281)
 
2273 Was a Printers compositor Hyde, Ebenezer James (I74662)
 
2274 was found not guilty (aquied) of larceny Locke, John (I57240)
 
2275 was Lord of the Manor of Hyde and Newton in Cheshire, Shallcross and Ferneley in Derbyshire, about 1209-1228, and Halghton and Denton in Lancashire about 1225, in which county he had also nine oxgangs of land in Heiton.



He was living in the time of Henry III. He married Agnes de Herdislee, cousin and heiress of Thomas de Norbury, who quitclaimed to Robert Hyde his right in Norbury, Newton and half Hyde, and thus Norbury came to the Hydes by this marriage.



For more information see the "http://www.renderplus.com/hartgen/index.htm" 
De Hyde, Sir Robert Knight Lord Of Norbury (I230)
 
2276 Washam, Sweetwater, Wyoming, United StatesWasham, Sweetwater, Wyoming, United States Hyde, Orson Joseph (I3044)
 
2277 We also know that at some point in his life James went to Australia since a surviving photograph of him was taken in Ballarat, Australia, by Geo Richards, Photographer. Ballarat was the center of the Australian gold rush which began in 1851. A James Arnol Arnold, James (I82427)
 
2278 Wedding Date

http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=document&guid=5e4bbe5e-1627-4e7a-908a-069c0793fc79&tid=30154129&pid=64

Mauch house, Warwick 006
http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=image&guid=9db7eaa3-e994-49ae-88c3-1c0505d29485&tid=30154129&pid=64

Mauch house, Yangan via Warwick
http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=image&guid=b96ea0db-6a03-4371-8f98-58a430a8d589&tid=30154129&pid=64

MIchael and Barbara Mauch_
http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=image&guid=071ae58d-5d46-4977-a043-80c74b05e2d8&tid=30154129&pid=64

Mauch house, Warwick
http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=image&guid=1a360baa-0113-49da-9895-e836855e342e&tid=30154129&pid=64 
Mauch, Johann Michael (I191063)
 
2279 Westminster, Anglican Parish Registers, City of Westminster Archives, Westminster, London, England. Source (S1861)
 
2280 Westminster, Worcester, Massachusetts ssachuses, United StatesWestminster, Worcester, Massachusetts ssachuses, United States Hyde, Eunice (I2910)
 
2281 When Catherine Schnitzerling married Ernest Adolph Burmester she also took responiblity of raising Victor and Ernest Burmester which were two children of Ernest Adolph Burmester' s Previous marriage which had ended of the death of his first wife . Schnitzerling, Katherine (I56103)
 
2282 When Catherine Schnitzerling married Ernest Adolph Burmester she also took responiblity of raising Victor and Ernest Burmester which were two children of Ernest Adolph Burmester' s Previous marriage which had ended of the death of his first wife . Family: Ernst Adolph Heinrich Burmester / Katherine Schnitzerling (F17898)
 
2283 When he was Sheriff of Westmorland, he was one of the English leaders at the Battle of Alnwick, and it was to him that the king of Scotland, William the Lion, surrendered. De Glanville, Lord of Middleton, Baron of the Exchequer 1174 Ranulph Chief Justiciar Of England (I33217)
 
2284 When his father Jonathan married Sarah Ellmer Locke, John (I57240)
 
2285 When Lady Margaret Stewart was born in 1490, in Fife, Scotland, United Kingdom, her father, Sir John Stewart 1st Earl of Atholl, was 51 and her mother, Lady Eleanor Sinclair, was 33. She married Colin Campbell 3rd of Glenorchy about 1502, in Scotland. They were the parents of at least 2 sons and 4 daughters. She died on 26 July 1524, in Perthshire, Scotland, United Kingdom, at the age of 34, and was buried in Killin, Stirlingshire, Scotland, United Kingdom.


Sir William Murray of Castleton1

M, #22270, d. 9 September 1513
Last Edited=7 Aug 2016
Consanguinity Index=0.01%
Sir William Murray of Castleton was the son of Sir William Murray of Tullibardine and Lady Mary Keith.1 He married Lady Margaret Stewart, daughter of John Stewart, 1st Earl of Atholl and Lady Eleanor Sinclair.1 He died on 9 September 1513, killed in action.
In 1490 he acquired Castleton, along with the lands of Drumdewan.1 He lived at Castleton, ScotlandG.1 He fought in the Battle of Flodden on 9 September 1513.1
Children of Sir William Murray of Castleton and Lady Margaret Stewart

Sir William Murray, 10th of Tullibardine+ d. 30 Jan 1562
Margaret Murray+2
Citations

[S8] BP1999 volume 1, page 133. See link for full details for this source. Hereinafter cited as. [S8]
[S6286] Clan MacFarlane and associated clans genealogy, online http://www.clanmacfarlanegenealogy.info. Hereinafter cited as Clan MacFarlane. 
Stewart, Lady Margaret (I44391)
 
2286 When Sir Alexander de Seton 1st Lord Gordon was born in January 1382, in Aberdeenshire, Scotland, his father, William Wyntoun-Seton, was 39 and his mother, Janet Fleming, was 31. He married Lady Elizabeth Gordon Heiress of Gordon in March 1401, in Huntly, Aberdeenshire, Scotland. They were the parents of at least 4 sons and 1 daughter. He died on 3 April 1441, in Huntly, Aberdeenshire, Scotland, at the age of 59, and was buried in Scotland. De Seton, Sir Alexander 1st Lord Gordon (I130341)
 
2287 When Thurbrand the Hold killed Uchtred in 1016 he started a Bloodfeud that lasted into the 1070'S. In the 1020's Ealdred avenged his father's death by killing Thurbrand, this did not end the feud but continued to fuel it. Of Bamburgh, Earl of Northumbria Eadwulf Cudel, Ealdred's uncle, died about 1020 and Ealdred succeeded him. Ealdred II Earl Of Northumbria (I34849)
 
2288 Where he stole a horse Locke, John (I57240)
 
2289 While the other Lords remained locked behind the walls of their castles, including his elderly father Waltheof, Uchtred rallied the men of Northumbria and repelled the attack of Malcolm II. It was a decisive victory for England with many loses for the Kin Ealdorman Uchtred Earl Of Northumbria Becinia (I91198)
 
2290 Widow Jackson, Margaret (I73570)
 
2291 Widow of Capt wood Garland (I106037)
 
2292 wife - Hanna Mansdotter child- Mans, Jons, Inga, Hanna, Anders. btw 1720-? Jonsson, Nils (I193996)
 
2293 Wife of George Cotton and grandmother of Rev. John Cotton. Please see H. G. Somerby, "The English Ancestry of Rev. John Cotton of Boston," (Boston, Ma.: Henry W. Dutton & Son, 1868), H. G. Somerby, "The English Ancestry of Rev. John Cotton of Boston," (Boston, Ma.: Henry W. Dutton & Son, 1868), pages 6 and 7 attached in Memories. Whittacre, Margaret (I242878)
 
2294 wiki
Ecgberht II of Northumbria
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ecgberht
Ruler of Bamburgh
Reign 876 AD – unknown
Predecessor Ricsige
Successor Eadulf
House Northumbria
Ecgberht was a king in Northumbria in the late Ninth Century. Very little is known of his reign.

Unlike his predecessor King Ricsige, who may have ruled most of the kingdom of Northumbria following the expulsion of the first King Ecgberht in 872, this Ecgberht ruled only the northern part of Northumbria, the lands beyond the Tyne in northern England and southern Scotland. The northern frontier of Ecgberht's kingdom is uncertain.

Ricsige's death and Ecgberht's coming to power is recorded by Symeon of Durham, who writes, that in 876:

The pagan king Halfdene divided between himself and his followers the country of the Northumbrians. Ricsig, king of the Northumbrians, died, and Egbert the second reigned over the Northumbrians beyond the river Tyne.[1]

In 883, recording the election of a king of the Vikings in York and southern Northumbria on the death of their leader Halfdene (Halfdan Ragnarsson), Symeon states:

Then St. Cuthbert, aiding by a vision, ordered abbot Eadred (who because he lived in Luel was surnamed Lulisc) to tell the bishop and the whole army of Angles and Danes, that by paying a ransom, they should redeem Guthred, the son of Hardicnut, whom the Danes had sold as a slave to a certain widow at Whittingham, and should raise him, then redeemed, to be king; and he reigned over York, but Egbert over the Northumbrians.[2]

However, elsewhere it said that the second Ecgberht reigned two years, but this may refer to his claims to all Northumbria. Nick Higham sees Symeon's account of Guthred's election as an unhistorical record of a settlement between the York Vikings in southern Northumbria, and Ecgberht in northern, English Northumbria.[3]

Ecgberht was succeeded by Eadulf of Bernicia. 
Of Northumbria, Ecgberht II (I239088)
 
2295 wiki
Eni of East Anglia from wikidia, the free encyclopedia

This article includes a list of general references, but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations. Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations. (November 2019) (Learn how and when to remove this message)

'Eni Tytling' (4th line), as recorded in the Textus Roffensis
Eni or Ennius was a member of the Wuffing family, the ruling dynasty of the kingdom of East Anglia. He was the son of the semi-historical pagan king Tyttla and the brother of Rædwald, who both ruled East Anglia.

There is no historical evidence that Eni ever ruled the East Angles. The principal references to him are in Ecclesiastical History of the English People, written by the Benedictine monk Bede in c. 731, and in the East Anglian dynastic tally preserved in the Anglian collection.[1] The tally is not a regnal list but a series of genealogical affiliations; hence it does not mention Rædwald, who was not a direct ancestor of the line of Eni.[1]

It is possible, but nowhere indicated, that Rædwald associated Eni to his power as an East Anglian regent or sub-king during the period of his own ascendancy, 616–624.[according to whom?] Eorpwald, Rædwald's son, succeeded his father.

Eni is identified by Bede as the father of three East Anglian kings: Anna (r. c. 636–654), Aethelhere (r. 654) and Aethelwold (r. 654–664). In the Anglian collection he is also the grandfather of King Ealdwulf (r. 664–713), whose father was Æthelric.[1] Since royal power reverted to Ealdwulf in 664 after the rule of his uncles, it is often supposed that Æthelric was actually the elder brother of Anna, Æthelhere and Æthelwold and may be the same person as Egric of East Anglia, who shared the throne with Sigeberht (c. 629–634) and died with him in 636. Hereswitha, Ealdwulf's mother, had already left East Anglia for a monastic life in Gaul by 647 (Bede, History, iv. 23) and so Æthelric was probably dead by then.

Many of Eni's descendants appear to have been devout Christians and as an immediate member of Rædwald's household he must certainly have been aware of, and possibly even shared in, Rædwald's baptism, which occurred in Kent under the sponsorship of King Æthelberht before 616, at the hands of the mission sent by Pope Gregory I. Eni's son Anna was presumably resident at Exning in 631 when Anna's daughter Æthelthryth (Saint Audrey) was born there. Exning is close to the Isle of Ely where, at Cratendune, Saint Augustine of Canterbury himself (died c. 604) is stated (in Liber Eliensis) to have established a church. It is possible, therefore, that the Christianity of Eni's descendants had its origins in an East Anglian phase of Augustine's own mission.[according to whom?] 
Wuffingas, King Joint Eni Of East Anglia (I201224)
 
2296 wiki https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Wallace
Guardian of the Kingdom of Scotland
(Second Interregnum)
In office
1297–1298
Preceded by John Balliol (as King of the Scots)
Succeeded by
Robert the Bruce
John Comyn
Personal details
Born c. 1270
Elderslie, Renfrewshire, Kingdom of Scotland
Died 23 August 1305 (aged c. 35)
Smithfield, London, Kingdom of England
Cause of death Hanged, drawn and quartered
Resting place London, in an unmarked grave
Spouse Marion Braidfute[1] (disputed)
Children None recorded
Occupation Military leader
Military service
Allegiance Kingdom of Scotland
Years of service 1297–1305
Rank Commander
Battles/wars
First War of Scottish Independence
Action at Lanark
Raid on Scone
Battle of Stirling Bridge
Battle of Falkirk
Battle of Happrew

Sir William Wallace Guardian of Scotland (1270-1305) born c. 1270 Elderslie, Renfrewshire, Kingdom of Scotland and died 23 August 1305 (age c. 35) Smithfield, London, Kingdom of England.

William Wallace (Scottish Gaelic: Uilleam Uallas, pronounced [ˈɯʎam ˈuəl̪ˠəs̪]; Norman French: William le Waleys was a Scottish knight who became one of the main leaders during the First War of Scottish Independence.

Along with Andrew Moray, Wallace defeated an English army at the Battle of Stirling Bridge in September 1297. He was appointed Guardian of Scotland and served until his defeat at the Battle of Falkirk in July 1298. In August 1305, Wallace was captured in Robroyston near Glasgow and handed over to King Edward I of England, who had him hanged, drawn and quartered for high treason and crimes against English civilians.
Since his death, Wallace has obtained a legendary status beyond his homeland. He is the protagonist of Blind Harry’s 15th century epic poem ‘The Wallace’ and the subject of literary works by Jane Porter and Sir Walter Scott and of the Academy Award winning film Braveheart. The film portrayed William in the Mel Gibson movie leading a rebel army against Edward I (Longshanks) of England and defeating him at the Battle of Stirling Bridge (no bridge shown in the movie) in September 1297.

He was knighted in March 1298 most likely by Sir Robert the Bruce, Earl of Carrick and future King of Scotland. In addition Wallace was made “Guardian” of Scotland and Commander-in-Chief of its armies. These honors are evidence Wallace was no commoner, but a man with excellent connections within established Scottish society. William Wallace was a member of the lesser nobility, but little is definitely known of his family history or even his parentage. William’s own seal, found on a letter sent to the Hanse city of Lübeck in 1297, gives his father’s name as Alan Wallace. This Alan Wallace may be the same as the one listed in the 1296 Ragman Rolls as a crown tenant in Ayrshire, but there is no additional confirmation. Others have speculated this Alan held Ellerslie, near Kilmarnock, Ayrshire and if true the estate could be a possible birthplace for William, though there is no record of Wallaces holding the estate in the mid 13th century.

When Wallace was growing up, King Alexander III ruled Scotland. His reign had seen a period of peace and economic stability. On 19 March 1286 however, Alexander died after falling from his horse. The heir to the throne was Alexander’s granddaughter Margaret the Maid of Norway. As she was still a child and in Norway, the Scottish lords set up a government of guardians. Margaret fell ill on the voyage to Scotland and died in Orkney in late September 1290. The lack of a clear heir led to a period known as the “Great Cause”, with a total of thirteen contenders laying claim to the throne. The most credible claims were John Balliol and Robert Bruce, grandfather of the future king Robert the Bruce.

With Scotland threatening to descend into civil war, King Edward I of England was invited in by the Scottish nobility to arbitrate. Before the process could begin, he insisted that all of the contenders recognize him as Lord Paramount of Scotland. In early November 1292, at a great feudal court held in the castle at Berwick upon Tweed, judgment was given in favor of John Balliol having the strongest claim in law based on being senior in genealogical primogeniture even though not in proximity of blood.

Edward proceeded to take steps to progressively undermine John’s authority, treating Scotland as a feudal vassal state, demanding homage be paid towards himself and military support in his war against France even summoning King John Balliol to stand before the English court as a common plaintiff. The Scots soon tired of their deeply compromised king and the direction of affairs was allegedly taken out of his hands by the leading men of the kingdom, who appointed a Council of Twelve in practice, a new panel of Guardians at Stirling in July 1295. They went on to conclude a treaty of mutual assistance with France known in later years as the Auld Alliance.

In retaliation for Scotland’s treaty with France, Edward I invaded, storming Berwick upon Tweed and commencing the Wars of Scottish Independence. The Scots were defeated at Dunbar and the English took Dunbar Castle on 27 April 1296. Edward forced John to abdicate, which he did at Stracathro near Montrose on 10 July 1296. Here the arms of Scotland were formally torn from John’s surcoat, giving him the abiding name of “Toom Tabard” (empty coat). By July Edward had instructed his officers to receive formal homage from some 1,800 Scottish nobles (many of the rest being prisoners of war at that time).

Some historians believe Wallace must have had some earlier military experience in order to lead a successful military campaign in 1297. Campaigns like Edward I of England’s wars in Wales might have provided a good opportunity for a younger son of a landholder to become a mercenary soldier. Wallace’s personal seal bears the archer’s insignia, so he may have fought as an archer in Edward’s army. Walter Bower’s mid 15th century Scotichronicon, states that Wallace was “a tall man with the body of a giant ... with lengthy flanks ... broad in the hips, with strong arms and legs ... with all his limbs very strong and firm”.

The first act definitely known to have been carried out by Wallace was his killing of William de Heselrig, the English High Sheriff of Lanark, in May 1297. He then joined with William the Hardy, Lord of Douglas and they carried out the raid of Scone. This was one of several rebellions taking place across Scotland, including those of several Scottish nobles and Andrew Moray in the north.

The uprising suffered a blow when the nobles submitted to the English at Irvine in July. Wallace and Moray were not involved and continued their rebellions. Wallace used the Ettrick Forest as a base for raiding and attacked Wishart’s palace at Ancrum. Wallace and Moray met and joined their forces, possibly at the siege of Dundee in early September.

On 11 September 1297, an army jointly led by Wallace and Andrew Moray won the Battle of Stirling Bridge. Although vastly outnumbered, the Scottish army routed the English army. John de Warenne, 6th Earl of Surrey’s feudal army of 3,000 cavalry and 8,000 to 10,000 infantry met disaster as they crossed over to the north side of the river. The narrowness of the bridge prevented many soldiers from crossing together (possibly as few as three men abreast) so, while the English soldiers crossed, the Scots held back until half of them had passed and then killed the English as quickly as they could cross. The infantry were sent on first, followed by heavy cavalry. The Scots’ schiltron formations forced the infantry back into the advancing cavalry. A pivotal charge, led by one of Wallace’s captains, caused some of the English soldiers to retreat as others pushed forward and under the overwhelming weight, the bridge collapsed, and many English soldiers drowned. Thus the Scots won a significant victory, boosting the confidence of their army. Hugh de Cressingham, Edward’s treasurer in Scotland, died in the fighting and it is reputed that his body was subsequently flayed and the skin cut into small pieces as tokens of the victory. The Lanercost Chronicle records that Wallace had “a broad strip [of Cressingham’s skin] ... taken from the head to the heel, to make therewith a baldrick for his sword”. After the battle, Moray and Wallace assumed the title of Guardians of the Kingdom of Scotland on behalf of King John Balliol. Moray died of wounds suffered on the battlefield sometime in late 1297.

Wallace soon mounted an invasion of northern England, crossing into Northumberland. The Scots army followed the English army fleeing south. Caught between two armies, hundreds of refugees fled to safety behind the walls of Newcastle. The Scots laid waste a swathe of countryside before turning west into Cumberland and pillaging all the way to Cockermouth, before Wallace led his men back into Northumberland and fired 700 villages. Wallace then returned from England laden with booty.

In a ceremony at the ‘Kirk o’ the Forest’ (Selkirk) towards the end of the year Wallace was knighted. This would have been carried out by one of three Scottish earls Carrick, Strathearn or Lennox. By September 1298 Wallace resigned as Guardian of Scotland in favor of Robert the Bruce, Earl of Carrick and future king and John Comyn, King John Balliol’s nephew. By 1304 Wallace was back in Scotland and involved in skirmishes at Happrew and Earnside.

Wallace’s trial in Westminster Hall. Painting by Daniel Maclise. Wallace evaded capture by the English until 5 August 1305, when John de Menteith, a Scottish knight loyal to Edward, turned Wallace over to English soldiers at Robroyston, near Glasgow a site commemorated by a small monument in the form of a Celtic cross. Letters of safe conduct from Haakon V of Norway, Philip IV of France and John Balliol, along with other documents, were found in Wallace’s possession and delivered to Edward by John de Segrave. 
Wallace, Guardian and High Protector of Scotland Sir William Guardian Of Scotland (I194481)
 
2297 Wilhelm Albrecht Age: 40 Birth Year: abt 1823 Ship Name: Beausite Port of Arrival: Brisbane Arrival Date: 5 Sep 1863 Albrecht, Wilhelm Friedrich (I186245)
 
2298 Will appointing son John Hyde as executor Hyde, Robert (I162814)
 
2299 Will Proved August 15, 1774. Will was Proved, John Ferguson, Charles Hansford, and Samuel Sheild were made trustees of his estate in behalf of his six youngest children: Elizabeth, Massachusetts ry, Lucy, Charles, Robert, and Rebecca. Hyde, John (I18996)
 
2300 William & Hannah opened the first shop in Warwick 1844.
I think "Hannah's" is named after her.
William Andrews purchased one of the first lots in Warwick - on 8/10/1857 he paid 22 pounds 12 shillings for a 6 acre 3 rood lot 56 of Section 37.
------------------ 
Andrews, William (I55680)
 
2301 William and Mary lived in Dowsby in 1841. All their children had been born there. William's brother, Andrew also lived in Dowsby for a short time.
WIlliam and his second wife, Sarah, appear in one Census, living in Bourne.no further records (Mar 2014) William was illiterate and his name was spelt Bromley and Brumley. 
Bromley, William (I80588)
 
2302 William Andrews together with George Pratt were convicted of stealing 2 ducks 2 drakes and 4 hen fowls from John Green farmer of Whiington on the night of 27th November 1835. Second indictment charged them of stealing a fowl from George Dyson of Norton.


lianne_power Information on the convict transport ship the Bengal Merchant: BENGAL MERCHANT (1812)

The British ship BENGAL MERCHANT was built at Calcua, India, in 1812. The 1820 edition of Lloyd's Register (the only edition before 1834 to which I have direct access) indicates that she was 464 tons, her master's surname was Gordon, she belonged to Boehm & Co., she drew 18 feet when loaded, she was last surveyed at London, at that at the time of publication her intended voyage was to Bengal. Between 1829 and 1832, the BENGAL MERCHANT made two voyages between India and Great Britain as an "Extra Ship" for the Honourable East India Company. The annual volumes of Lloyd's Register from 1834/35 through 1855/56 give the following information):

Tonnage: 503

Master:
1834/35-1842/43 - Campbell
1842/43-1844/45 - Ross
1844/45-1847/48 - Thornhill
1848/49-1851/52 - P. Lowen
1852/53-1855/56 - Faldo

Owner:
1834/35-1839/40 - J[oseph] Somes
1839/40-1855/56 - Haviside

Port of Registry: London

Port of Survey (1834/35-1853/54): London

Destined Voyage:
1834/35-1839/40 - New South Wales
1839/40-1842/43 - [not given] [*]
1842/43-1844/45 - Madras
1844/45-1847/48 - Calcua
1848/49-1851/52 - Bombay
1852/53-1853/54 - Adelaide
1854/55-1855/56 - [not given]

[*]
The BENGAL MERCHANT sailed from Greenock on 30 October 1839, with 160 passengers and dropped anchor off Petone Beach, Wellington, New Zealand, 21 February 1840. Ian Hawkins Nicholson, Log of logs; a catalogue of logs, journals, shipboard diaries, leers, and all forms of voyage narratives, 1788 to 1988, for Australia and New Zealand and surrounding oceans, Roebuck Society Publication Nos. 41, 47 (2 vols; Yaroomba, Qld: The Author jointly with the Australian Association for Maritime History, [1990]-1993).
The BENGAL MERCHANT was last surveyed in 1852. The last voyage of the BENGAL MERCHANT for which I have a record departed from London 1 April 1852, arrving at Melbourne on 2 September; she cleared for Adelaide 22 October, sailed 28 October, and arrived 1 November 1852 [Marten A. Syme, Shipping Arrivals and Departures; Victorian Ports, vol. 2: 1846-1855, Roebuck Society Publication No. 39 (Melbourne: [Roebuck Society], 1987), p. 122]. The entries for the BENGAL MERCHANT in Lloyd's Register for 1854/55 and 1855/56 give only her master and owner, but omit her port of registry, port of survey, and destination, often a sign that the vessel in question had ended her sailing career and had been either lost, broken up, or hulked. It is therefore possible that this 1852 voyage from Lottndon to Melbourne was her last.

I have no picture of the BENGAL MERCHANT, but I know that at least one representation of her exists, since there is a modern wall drawing of the BENGAL MERCHANT, by Roger Palmer, modelled after a contemporary engraving, in the Portfolio Gallery, Edinburgh. Contact in the first instance the ANMM in Sydney, which maintains several indexes to pictorial representations of vessels that sailed in Australian waters. If the ANMM has no record of a picture of the BENGAL MERCHANT, contact the National Maritime Museum in Greenwich, http://www.nmm.ac.uk/, which also has an extensive collection of prints and drawings, as well as copies of surveys undertaken by Lloyd's Register of Shipping. 
Andrews, William (I55680)
 
2303 William de Braose had been one of King John's closest associates, but soon after Loretta was widowed, her father began to lose favour rapidly with the king. Disfavour grew into a vendetta against the de Braose family and associates. King John campaigned a De Braose Heir Of Tawstock, Laurette (I97221)
 
2304 William de Lancaster I (d. circa 1170), or William Fitz Gilbert, was a nobleman of the 12th century in Northwest England during the Anarchy, and the period during which his region was ruled by King David I of Scotland. His position survived the return of English rule under King Henry II, and his most important lordship, which had previously come together under Ivo de Taillebois, would evolve into what was eventually known as the barony of Kendal. According to a document some generations later, he was also referred to as William de Tailboys (de Taillebois) when younger, and then became "William de Lancaster, baron of Kendal". He died in about 1170.

Titles and positions
Earliest holdings
Despite his by-name "de Lancaster", which was used by his descendants as a family name, William and his relatives appear in contemporary documents relating mainly to what is now the modern county of Cumbria, not Lancashire, the county of Lancaster. He and his family were especially associated with Copeland in western Cumberland, Furness in the Lake District, the barony of Kendal, which became part of Westmorland, and various areas such as Barton between Kendal and Ullswater. Much of this area was not yet permanently part of England, or divided into counties. Only part of this area was within the later English county of Lancaster or Lancashire. The by-name "de Lancaster", by which William was remembered, therefore referred to the city of Lancaster, to the south of his lordships, and probably more importantly to some area under its jurisdiction which did not necessarily become part of the later county. In 1900, William Farrer claimed that "all of the southern half of Westmorland, not only the Kirkby Lonsdale Ward of Westmorland, but also the Kendal Ward, were linked with Northern Lancashire from a very early time" and formed a single district for fiscal administrative purposes.[1]

Two apparently lost records which are said to have mentioned William's father Gilbert apparently connected him to Cumbria, specifically to the area of Furness.[2]

The following are some of the areas associated with him:

Muncaster in Cumberland. William Farrer, in his 1902 edition of Lancashire Pipe Rolls and early charters, wrote:
It appears that he was possessed of the lordship of Mulcaster (now Muncaster), over the Penningtons of Pennington in Furness, and under Robert de Romille, lord of Egremont and Skipton, who held it in right of his wife, Cecilia, daughter and heiress of William Meschin.[3]

According to Farrer, this title would have been one of those granted by Roger de Mowbray, son of Nigel de Albini, having come into his hands after the decease without male heirs of Ivo de Taillebois. He also believed that this grant to William de Lancaster came to be annulled.
Workington, Lamplugh and Middleton. The manors of Workington and Lamplugh in Cumberland were given by William de Lancaster, in exchange for Middleton in Westmorland, to an apparently close relative, Gospatric, son of Orme, brother-in-law of Waldeve, Lord of Allerdale.[4]
Hensingham. The Register of St Bees shows that both William son of Gilbert de Lancastre, and William's son William had land in this area. William's was at a place called Swartof or Suarthow, "probably the rising ground between Whitehaven and Hensingham, known locally as Swartha Brow". The appears to have come from his father Gilbert. His brother Roger apparently held land at Walton, just outside modern Hensingham, and had a son named Robert. Roger and William also named a brother called Robert.[5]
Ulverston. Farrer argued that this may have been held by William and perhaps his father Gilbert, before it was granted by Stephen, Count of Boulogne and Mortain, to Furness Abbey in 1127.[6] The possible connection of William's father Gilbert to Furness will be discussed further below.
Enfeoffment by King Stephen
King Stephen's reign in England lasted from 1135 to 1154, but only during a small part of this did he control this region. For the majority of his reign all or most of this area was under the rule of David I of Scotland.
During the period when Stephen was in control "we possess distinct and clear evidence that Stephen, as king, enfeoffed a knight of the lands of Warton in Kentdale and the wide territory of Garstang, in Lancashire, to hold for the service of one knight. This was William de Lancaster, son of Gilbert by Godith his wife, described in the Inquest of service made in 1212 as "Willelmus filius Gilberti primus", that is, the first to be enfeoffed of that fee."[7]

Enfeoffment by Roger de Mowbray
At a similar time, during the period 1145-1154, a major enfeoffment by Roger de Mowbray put William in control, or perhaps just confirmed his control, of what would become the barony of Kendal, plus Warton, Garstang, and Wyresdale in Lancashire, as well as Horton in Ribblesdale and "Londsdale". The latter two are sometimes apparently being interpreted as indicating possession for some time of at least part of what would become the Wapentake of Ewcross in the West Riding of Yorkshire.

The Scottish period
During the Scottish occupation, Hugh de Morville became the overlord of much of this area, a position he kept when the area later returned to English control. Farrer and Curwen remark:

William de Lancaster no longer held anything in Kentdale of Roger de Mowbray; but he appears to have held his lands in Westmarieland and Kentdale of Morevill by rendering Noutgeld of £14 6s. 3d. per annum, and some 16 carucates of land in nine vills in Kentdale as farmer under Morevill. In 1166 William de Lancaster I held only two knight's fees, of the new feoffment of Roger de Mowbray in Sedbergh, Thornton, Burton in Lonsdale, and the other places in Yorkshire previously named, which his descendants held long after of the fee of Mowbray by the same service. The Mowbray connexion with Kentdale had come to an end upon the accession of Henry II, who placed Hugh de Morevill in possession of Westmarieland in return, possibly, for past services and in pursuance of the policy of planting his favourites in regions of great strategic importance. Probably the change of paramount lord had little, if any, effect on the position of William de Lancaster in Kentdale.[7]

In Cumberland further west, William was probably castellan in the castle of Egremont under William fitz Duncan. Such proposals are based on his transaction with his cousin Gospatrick son of Orme, whereby castle service at Egremont was due to William for Workington.[8]

The barony of Kendal
William de Lancaster is often described as having been a baron of Kendal. In fact it is not so clear what kind of lordship existed over Kendal, given the lack of clarity of records in this period. The word baron developed specific meanings during the Middle Ages, namely feudal baron and baron by writ. William Farrer wrote, in the introduction to his Records of Kendal:

After a careful review of the evidence which has been sketched above, the author is of opinion that no barony or reputed barony of Kentdale existed prior to the grants of 1189–90; and that neither William de Lancaster, son of Gilbert, nor William de Lancaster II, his son and successor, can be rightly described as "baron" of Kentdale.[7]

What became the barony of Kendal is nevertheless generally accepted to have started to come together already under Ivo de Taillebois (d. 1094) in the time of William Rufus, some generations before William. In later generations William was depicted by his family as having been a Taillebois. A continuity is therefore often asserted between what Ivo held, and what William later held, despite the fact that William had no known hereditary claim on Kendal, and Ivo had no male heirs. (This is also the reason for the frequent assertion that William held the entire wapentake of Ewcross, even though it seems that the family of Roger de Mowbray kept hold of at least Burton in Kendal. William held two parts of it, mentioned above, while Ivo had held another, Clapham. The rest is speculation.)

According to Farrer, the barony of Kendal became a real barony only in the time of William's grand daughter Hawise, who married Gilbert son of Roger fitz Reinfrid. Both he and his son William de Lancaster III were certainly barons of Kendal.

Other offices
Furness and the Royal forests. According to a later grant to Gilbert Fitz Reinfrid, William must have held some position over the whole forest of Westmarieland (the Northern or Appleby barony of Westmorland), Kendal and Furness. His claims in Furness may have gone beyond just the forest, but this appears to have put him in conflict with the claims of the Furness Abbey, and this conflict continued over many generations. His family may have had links there before him. Some websites report that his father Gilbert was known as "Gilbert of Furness". (This apparently comes from a 17th-century note by Benjamin Ayloffe, mentioned below.)
Lancaster Castle. According to Dugdale, the eminent English antiquarian, he was governor of Lancaster Castle in the reign of Henry II, about 1180. Little is known about how William came to hold the honour of Lancaster and use the surname, but it is sometimes suggested that it implies connections to royalty, perhaps coming from his apparent marriage to Gundred de Warrenne (or was this just yet another reward for some forgotten service, perhaps against the Scots?).
Seneschal. According to a note written by the 17th century antiquarian Benjamin Ayloffe, which is reproduced in the introduction of Walford Dakin Selby's collection of Lancashire and Cheshire Records, p.xxix, William was Seneschallus Hospitii Regis, or steward of the king's household. The same note also states that William's father was the kings "Receiver for the County of Lancaster".[9]
Ancestry 
De Lancaster, William II (I236973)
 
2305 William de Venables,third known lord of the Cheshire barony of Kinderton.

His parents were Gilbert de Venables and Margery de Hatton.[1] He must have been the eldest surviving son, as he inherited the Cheshire barony of Kinderton from his father.

He had probably already assumed the lordship of the barony when he was recorded in a charter of the Earl of Chester, which has been dated as being made between approximately 1164 and 1173.[3] This charter records that he made fine for settling strangers on his land.[3] If this charter was made towards the end of the aforementioned period, and if William had only recently reached the age of majority at that time, then he would have been born about 1150.

His wife is unknown. He had the following children:[1]

Hugh, baron of Kinderton
Robert, parson of Rostherne
Unknown child, the parent of William de la Mere[4]
William
Hamon (sometimes confused with his uncle Hamon de Venables aka Hamon de Legh)
Sometime prior to 1211, he granted the manor of Wincham and a moiety of Picmere to his sister, Maud, upon her marriage.[5]

William was living in 1228.[1][6]

He may still have been living in 1238, when his grant of the vills of Witton and Lindwood to son William was entered on the Cheshire Domesday Roll,[7] although if so, he would likely have been well into his eighties.

Wikiree 
De Venables, William Baron Of Kinderton (I201817)
 
2306 William Douglas, 9th Earl of Angus (died 1 July 1591, at Glenbervie) was a Scottish nobleman and zealous supporter of Mary, Queen of Scots.
He was the eldest son of Sir Archibald Douglas of Glenbervie, Knt., by his spouse Agnes, daughter of William Keith, 3rd Earl Marischal, and upon the death of Archibald Douglas, 8th Earl of Angus without issue, William succeeded to that Earldom as heir-male, in 1588.
Sir Robert Douglas states that "Sir William Douglas of Glenbervie (as he was styled prior to his succession to the earldom) was a man of great honour and integrity, and a steady friend of Queen Mary. He accompanied her in her expedition to the north, and took part in the battle at Corrichie in 1562."
He had two charters under The Great Seal of Scotland, from Queen Mary, of the lands and barony of Glenbervie, Kemnay, and several others.
The earl married Egidia (or Giles), daughter of Sir Robert Graham of Morphie, and had issue nine sons and four daughters, of whom:
William Douglas, 10th Earl of Angus, eldest son and heir
Sir Robert Douglas, 1st Baronet of Glenbervie, 2nd son, received from his father the lands of Glenbervie by charter dated 14 July 1592.
Henry Douglas of Tannachy (d. 5 October 1595) who married Janet Murray of Scotland at sometime before 1580. Had issue Janet Douglas born 16 Apr 1580 Dunfermline Scotland.
John Douglas of Barras
Gavin Douglas (d. bef 1 October 1616) who married Elizabeth Keith; ancestors of the family of Douglas of Bridgeford
From The Scottish Nation:
“ ..., Sir William Douglas of Glenbervie, succeeded as ninth earl. He was the son of Sir Archibald Douglas of Glenbervie, grandson of the fifth earl. The earldom was claimed by James the Sixth, who brought a suit against Sir William, for reducing the charters connected with the title, but on 7th March 1588-9, a decision was given in favour of the latter. The ninth earl died in July 1591, in the 59th year of his age. By his wife, daughter of Sir Robert Graham of Morphie, he had six sons and four daughters. His second son, Sir Robert, was the first baronet of the Glenbervie family. 
Douglas, Sir William 9th Earl Of Angus (I86920)
 
2307 William Mainwaring - died about 1338 . He was the son of Roger Mainwaring and Christian de Birtles. William married Mary Davenport in 1325.316 in Over-Peover, Cheshire, England and died in 1364m 1325 Mary Davenport dau of Henry Davenport6 to 1272, as appeared by a charter transcribed by Sir Thomas Mainwaring in 1666. He died in 1248. His spouse is unknown. shows the first William of Peever to be father of Roger, father of the William who married Joan Praers then Elizabeth Lecester. In other words, the Visitation record misses out 2 of the following generations - a typical lapse of memory of one asked about his ancestry by a Herald - for which we are following BLG1952.)don, Griffith Farran Okeden & Welsh - 1890 Mainwaring, William Of Over Peover (I3072)
 
2308 William Marshal, 1st Earl of Pembroke (1146 or 1147 – 14 May 1219), also called William the Marshal (Norman French: Williame li Mareschal, French: Guillaume le Maréchal), was an Anglo-Norman soldier and statesman.

Knighted in 1166, he spent his younger years as a knight errant and a successful tournament competitor; Stephen Langton eulogised him as the "best knight that ever lived." In 1189, he became the de facto Earl of Pembroke through his marriage to Isabel de Clare, though the title of earl would not be officially granted until 1199 during the second creation of the Pembroke Earldom. In 1216, he was appointed protector for the nine-year-old Henry III, and regent of the kingdom.

Before him, his father's family held a hereditary title of Marshal to the king, which by his father's time had become recognised as a chief or master Marshalcy, involving management over other Marshals and functionaries. William became known as 'the Marshal', although by his time much of the function was delegated to more specialised representatives (as happened with other functions in the King's household). Because he was an Earl, and also known as the Marshal, the term "Earl Marshal" was commonly used and this later became an established hereditary title in the English Peerage.
...
Marshal's health finally failed him early in 1219. In March 1219 he realised that he was dying, so he summoned his eldest son, also William, and his household knights, and left the Tower of London for his estate at Caversham in Berkshire, near Reading, where he called a meeting of the barons, Henry III, the Papal legate Pandulf Verraccio, the royal justiciar (Hubert de Burgh), and Peter des Roches (Bishop of Winchester and the young King's guardian). William rejected the Bishop's claim to the regency and entrusted the regency to the care of the papal legate; he apparently did not trust the Bishop or any of the other magnates that he had gathered to this meeting. Fulfilling the vow he had made while on crusade, he was invested into the order of the Knights Templar on his deathbed.

He died on 14 May 1219 at Caversham, and was buried in the Temple Church in London, where his tomb can still be seen.

Descendants of William Marshal and Isabel de Clare
1. William Marshal, 2nd Earl of Pembroke (1190 – 6 April 1231), married (1) Alice de Béthune, daughter of Baldwin of Bethune; (2) 23 April 1224 Eleanor Plantagenet, daughter of King John of England. They had no children.
2. Richard Marshal, 3rd Earl of Pembroke (1191 – 16 April 1234), married Gervase le Dinant. He died in captivity. They had no children.
3. Maud Marshal (1194 – 27 March 1248), married (1) Hugh Bigod, 3rd Earl of Norfolk, they had four children; (2) William de Warenne, 5th Earl of Surrey, they had two children.
4. Gilbert Marshal, 4th Earl of Pembroke (1197 – 27 June 1241), married (1) Marjorie of Scotland, youngest daughter of King William I of Scotland; by an unknown mistress he had one illegitimate daughter:
- Isabel Marshal, betrothed to Rhys ap Maelgwn Fychan (son of Maelgwn ap Rhys)
5. Walter Marshal, 5th Earl of Pembroke (c. 1199 – November 1245), married Margaret de Quincy, Countess of Lincoln, granddaughter of Hugh de Kevelioc, 3rd Earl of Chester. No children.
6. Isabel Marshal (9 October 1200 – 17 January 1240), married (1) Gilbert de Clare, 4th Earl of Hertford, whose daughter Isabel de Clare married Robert Bruce, 5th Lord of Annandale, the grandfather of Robert the Bruce; (2) Richard Plantagenet, Earl of Cornwall
7. Sibyl Marshal (c. 1201 – 27 April 1245), married William de Ferrers, 5th Earl of Derby; they had seven daughters.
- Agnes Ferrers (died 11 May 1290), married William de Vesci.
- Isabel Ferrers (died before 26 November 1260)
- Maud Ferrers (died 12 March 1298), married (1) Simon de Kyme, and (2) William de Vivonia (de Forz), and (3) Amaury IX of Rochechouart.
- Sibyl Ferrers, married Sir Francis or Franco de Bohun.
- Joan Ferrers (died 1267)
- Agatha Ferrers (died May 1306), married Hugh Mortimer, of Chelmarsh.
- Eleanor Ferrers (died 16 October 1274), married to:
8. Eva Marshal (1203–1246), married William de Braose, Lord of Abergavenny
- Isabella de Braose (born 1222), married Prince Dafydd ap Llywelyn. She died childless.
- Maud de Braose (1224–1301), in 1247, she married Roger Mortimer, 1st Baron Mortimer and they had descendants.
- Eva de Braose (1227 – 28 July 1255), married Sir William de Cantelou and had descendants.
- Eleanor de Braose (c. 1228 – 1251). On an unknown date after August 1241, she married Sir Humphrey de Bohun and had descendants.
9. Anselm Marshal, 6th Earl of Pembroke (c. 1208 – 22 December 1245), married Maud de Bohun, daughter of Humphrey de Bohun, 2nd Earl of Hereford. They had no children.
10. Joan Marshal (1210–1234), married Warin de Munchensi (died 1255), Lord of Swanscombe
- Joan de Munchensi (1230 – 20 September 1307) married William of Valence, the fourth son of King John's widow, Isabella of Angoulême, and her second husband, Hugh X of Lusignan, Count of La Marche. Valence was half-brother to Henry III and Edward I's uncle.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Marshal%2C_1st_Earl_of_Pembroke
..................................................................

“Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families,” Douglas Richardson (2013):
“WILLIAM MARSHAL, Knt., hereditary Marshal of England, Sheriff of Gloucestershire, 1189-94, 1198-1207, Sheriff of Sussex, 1193-1208, Warden of the Forest of Dean and Constable of St. Briavels Castle, 1194-1206, Constable of Lillebonne, 1202, Protector, Regent of the Kingdom, 1216-19, and, in right of his wife, Earl of Pembroke and Striguil, Lord of Leinster, probably born in 1146. In 1152 his father gave him as a hostage to King Stephen at the Siege of Newbury. At a later date, his father sent him to his cousin, William de Tancarville, Chamberlain of Normandy, with whom he remained for eight years as a squire. In 1167, while riding near the castle of Lusigan in Poitou with his uncle, Patrick, Earl of Salisbury, and Queen Eleanor, two of the Lusignan brothers attacked and killed Earl Patrick who was unarmed; William was wounded and taken prisoner while defending the Queen's retreat into the castle. Eventually he was ransomed by Queen Eleanor and returned to England. During the period, 1170-83, he was a member of the household of Henry "the Young King." In 1173 he supported Henry the Young King in his rebellion against King Henry II. Young Henry chose to knight him, and on his death bed in 1183, Henry charged him to carry his cross to the Holy Sepulchre. When William returned to England c.1187, King Henry II made him a member of his household. He was granted the manor of Cartmel, Lancashire by the king in 1187, where the following year he founded a priory for Regular canons of the order of St. Augustine. He was with King Henry II in France in 1188 and 1189. He was present at King Henry II's deathbed at Chinon in July 1189, and escorted the body to Fontevrault. He married in London in August 1189 ISABEL DE CLARE, daughter of Richard Fitz Gilbert [de Clare], 2nd Earl of Pembroke, by Eve, daughter of Dairmait Macmurchada, King of Leinster [see PEMBROKE 4 for her ancestry]. They had five sons, William, Knt. [Earl of Pembroke], Richard, Knt. [Earl of Pembroke], Gilbert, Knt. [Earl of Pembroke], Walter, Knt. [Earl of Pembroke and Lincoln], and Anselm [Earl of Pembroke], and five daughters, Maud, Isabel, Sibyl, Eve, and Joan. She was heiress in 1185-89 of her brother, Gilbert Fitz Richard (otherwise known as Gilbert de Strigoil). He was present at the Coronation of King Richard I in 1189, where he bore the gold scepter with the cross. Shortly afterwards he was appointed one of the subordinate Justiciars of England, first under Hugh, Bishop of Durham, and then under William de Longchamp. In 1190 he fined for 2,000 marks for a moiety of the lands of Walter Giffard, sometime Earl of Buckingham, including the manors of Chilton, Dorton, Long Crendon, and Loughton, Buckinghamshire, Caversham and Long Wittenham, Berkshire, and Wootton Rivers, Wiltshire, together with the fief of Longueville in Normandy. In 1191, when the Archbishop of Rouen superceded Longchamp, William became his chief assistant. When John, Count of Mortain (later King John) revolted in 1193, William besieged and took Windsor Castle. He was heir in 1194 to his elder brother, John Marshal, whereby he succeeded his brother as hereditary Master Marshal. He took part in the Siege of Nottingham Castle in 1194. From 1194 to 1199, he was almost continually in Normandy with King Richard I. One of Richard's last acts was to appoint him custodian of Rouen and the royal treasure there. He was present at the Coronation of King John in 1199. In 1200 the king confirmed the marshalship to him. He served John actively in Gascony, England, and Normandy. William may have paid a brief visit to Ireland in the winter of 1200-1. In 1201 he was granted a yearly fair to be held at the borough of Pembroke in Wales. In 1202 he loaned money to his kinsman, Geoffrey II, Count of Perche, who was preparing to go on crusade. In 1204 he was sent with Robert, Earl of Leicester as ambassadors to negotiate a truce with King Philippe Auguste of France. In 1204 he was granted a weekly market to be held in the vill of Castle Goodrich, Herefordshire. The same year he invaded Wales and captured Kilgerran. In 1206 he gave the Templars the advowson of the church of Speen, Berkshire. He spent most of his time in Ireland from 1207 to 1213. In 1213 he witnessed King John's charter of resignation to the Pope. He was given charge of the Castles of Haverfordwest, Carmarthen, Cardigan, and Gower, and Dunamase in Ireland. He was one of the few English earls to remain loyal to the king through the First Barons' War. He was one of the king's representatives at Runnymede in 1215. 
Marshall, Sir William 1st Earl Of Pembroke (I90084)
 
2309 William of the Tower Born at Dunottar Castle� Keith, Sir William 2nd Lord Keith 3rd Earl Of Marischal (I180717)
 
2310 William of Urmston Hall in the parrish of Flixton, an estate obtained through the marriage of Ralph Hyde second son of Thomas Hyde of Norbury and Hydes, with the daughter and heir of Adam Urmston. William Hyde was the second son and successor of William H Hyde, William (I106854)
 
2311 William Reedy, in the genealogical tables in the introduction to his collection of Basset charters, suggests that Gilbert may have been the brother of Ralph Basset. Henry I King of England confirmed property ot Eynsham abbey by charter dated 25 Dec 1109, including the donation of "decimam suam de Strattona" by "Gillebertus Basset" and "decimam suam de una hida de Estelai" by "Radulfus Basset" Basset, Gilbert Lord Of Drayton (I165418)
 
2312 William was the first Norman Earl of Buchan and more interestingly, the first Norman Earl in Scotland. De Comyn, William II Earl Of Buchan Lord Of Badenoch Justiciar Of Scotia Sheriff Of Forfar (I184514)
 
2313 WILLIAM, MASTER OF RUTHVEN
William, Master of Ruthven, is the eldest son and heir of Sir William Ruthven of that Ilk, afterwards first Lord Ruthven, and his first wife Isabel Levington. He and his brother John were born before their mother and father married but they received a legitimation giving them the right to mutual succession on 2nd July 1480. William had a grant of the lands of Ruthven on12th July 1480, resigned by his father. In 1507 he is styled son and heir apparent of, William, Lord Ruthven. He married first, Catherine of Buttergask; secondly, Jean Hepburn of the Ricarton family, and had issue, William, heir to his grandfather; Isobel, who married James Murray of Tibbermore. The Scots Peerage IV: 258

William, Master of Ruthven, is the older brother of William Ruthven of Ballindean who was his father's only son by Christian Forbes his second wife.

Death
William, Master of Ruthven, is said to have been killed in action on 9 September 1513, at the Battle of Flodden, near Branxton in Northumberland, England. The Scots Peerage, iv, page 258

Evidence from the National Records of Scotland
24 October 1493: Extract protest made before the Lords of Council by Andrew Charteris of Cuthilgurdy and Robert Marser, procurators for the provost, bailies, council and community of the town of Perth, relative to action raised against the town by William, Lord Ruthven, and William Ruthven, his son and apparent heir, which should not be heard in judgment due to the pursuers' non-compearance to pursue it and until such time as they paid expenses and summoned anew. National Records of Scotland, Records of Perth Burgh, reference B59/26/1/5

Genealogy
Sir James Balfour Paul, Lord Lyon King of Arms, The Scots Peerage (David Douglas, Edinburgh, 1907), iv, 597 pp. For Ruthven, Earl of Forth, see pp. 101-06. For Ruthven, Earl of Gowrie, see pp. 254-68
Samuel Cowan, JP. (editor), The Ruthven Family Papers (London, 1912), 206 pp. plus index 
Ruthven, Sir William Master Of Ruthven (I181681)
 
2314 With a law he enacted at Wantage in 997, Æthelred has been credited with the formation of the prototype for the English grand jury. Twelve thegns were charged with publishing the names of notorious/wicked men in their respective districts, sworn under sol King Æthelred Of The English (I100244)
 
2315 with husband William and sons William and Alex and daughter Mary, brother and sisters, David(16),Susan(13) and Agnes Todd(11) Todd, Janet (I162857)
 
2316 With parents and siblings on Ship - "General Hewi" Eastwell, Thomas (I90361)
 
2317 With their trip across the Atlantic, Middlemas becomes Middlemiss.

2012 Sept: From typed notes with Lois Downey's handwriting at the bottom: "Walter and Mary (DODS) Middlemiss brought their family from Roxboroughshire, Scotland to Canada in 1859 and purchased a farm in Sandwich South Township opposite to that of Thomas Fairbairn who was on Lot 16 in Concession 7. They had seven children all born in Scotland and were members of the Presbyterian Church. . . . Walter and Mary lived with Thomas Fairbairn [and their daughter Mary's] family during their later years, so are probably buried in Sandwich South Township near a Presbyterian Church."

Walter and Mary were "a prominent family which has been established in Canada since 1859. . . . most estimable people, sincere Christians, and valued members of the Presbyterian Church."

Source: Commemorative Biographical Record of Essex County, Ontario, J.H. Beers & Co. Toronto, 1905, p. 326

Walter was a blacksmith by trade. For a more detailed history, see the document in Memories. 
Middlemass, Walter (I246264)
 
2318 with wife Catherine and Hugh McHeanny (age 25 from Ireland) Could this be Catherie McKanna's brother ? McAdam, Michael (I163045)
 
2319 with wife Janet and sons William and Alex and daughter Mary, brother and sisters in law, David(16),Susan(13) and Agnes Todd(11) Lang, William Boatman (I162856)
 
2320 with wife Janet and sons William and Alex and daughter Mary, brother and sisters in law, David(16),Susan(13) and Agnes Todd(11) Source (S1580)
 
2321 With wife Mary and children James,Catherine,Maggie and Thomas. Living next door were son Michael and wife Minnie, who were being visited by daur Annie and children Michael and Annie. Kimmett, Michael (I163041)
 
2322 with wife Minnie. Sister Annie and niece and nephew Annie and Michael were visiting. Living next door were his parents Micheal and Mary and siblings James,Catherine,Maggie and Thomas. Kimmett, Michael (I163070)
 
2323 Witness to a grant of Marton to Richard de Davenport. page 9 https://brereton.org/images/Genealogy-glh20371705.pdf De Brereton, Radulphus (I189984)
 
2324 Witnesses Robert Hyde George Flavel Family: James Hyde / Ann Jane Flavelle (F17774)
 
2325 Witnesses: William George Redmond (his mark), and Emily May Redmond (David John Hyde's eldest daughter and her husband). David John was listed as a widower, occupation joiner. Martha Jane was listed as a spinster, age 58. Residence 14 Wilson St. Portadown Family: David John Hyde / Martha Jane Seaton (F37548)
 
2326 Woodbine, Harrison, Iowa, United StatesWoodbine, Harrison, Iowa, United States Gamet, Hannah Pember (I1591)
 
2327 Woodbine, Harrison, Iowa, United StatesWoodbine, Harrison, Iowa, United States Hyde, Mary Alice (I1595)
 
2328 Worked as a fruiterer at Queen Vic Market where he met Charlotte Stevens and fathered her illegitimate son born in 1899 Greaves, Arthur George (I191665)
 
2329 World War Two Graham, Noel (I56862)
 
2330 Wounded by Earl Warenne in a murderous attack following a suit with Warenne over estate. He died of his wounds. La Zouche, Alan II (I97397)
 
2331 Abell, Experience (I750)
 
2332 Hyde, Captain James (I753)
 
2333 Shrigley, Thomas (I1125)
 
2334 Dukenfield, William (I1126)
 
2335 Langford, Edward (I1128)
 
2336 Yangan, Queensland, Australia Andersdotter, Karna (I55907)
 
2337 Yorkshire Parish Records Source (S1124)
 
2338 Yorkshire Parish Records Source (S1269)
 
2339 younger of identical twins Lancaster, Leslie James (I57698)
 
2340 Yvonne Draper Draper, Charles Edwin (I56824)
 
2341 [Guy de Ponthieu] m secondly ADILA [Ada], daughter of ---. "Wido comes Pontivensis et uxor eius Adila comitissa" donated property to the abbey of Saint-Martin des Champs for the soul of "filii sui Ingelranni" by charter dated before 1090[1218]. A charter dated 1100 records the foundation of the priory of St-Pierre d´Abbeville by "Guy comte de Ponthieu et Adèle sa femme", sealed by "Guy comte, de Agnèz sa fille, de Mahaut sa fille…"[1219]. "Gulielmus comes Pontivorum" donated property to the abbey of Saint-Sauveur-le-Vicomte for the souls of "his predecessors…count Guy and Adda his wife…" by charter dated 1127[1220].

Comte Guy & his [first] wife had one child:

1. ANNE de Ponthieu (-[after 1067]). "Pontivensium comes Wido" donated property to Compiègne Saint-Corneille, confirmed by "Anne comitisse nostre filie", by charter dated to [1067 or after][1221]. The title "comitisse" in this charter suggests that Anne must have been married to a count at that date. [m ---.]

Comte Guy & his [second] wife had four children:

2. ENGUERRAND de Ponthieu (-before [1079/80]). "Wido comes Pontivensis et uxor eius Adila comitissa" donated property to the abbey of Saint-Martin des Champs for the soul of "filii sui Ingelranni" by charter dated before 1090[1222].

3. AGNES de Ponthieu (-after 6 Oct 1100). "Wido…Pontivi regionis comes" issued a charter dated 1101 relating to the church of Montreuil witnessed by "Agnetis mee filie…"[1223]. This marriage was arranged by William II King of England, according to Orderic Vitalis, who also specifies her father's name[1224]. A charter dated 1100 records the foundation of the priory of St-Pierre d´Abbeville by "Guy comte de Ponthieu et Adèle sa femme", sealed by "Guy comte, de Agnèz sa fille, de Mahaut sa fille…"[1225]. She was treated cruelly by her husband and imprisoned in the castle of Bellême, from where she escaped, took refuge with Adela Ctss de Blois, and retired to Ponthieu. m (before 9 Sep 1087) ROBERT de Montgommery, son of ROGER [II] de Montgommery Sire d'Alençon, Earl of Shropshire and Shrewsbury & his wife Mabile d'Alençon ([1052/56]-[Wareham Castle] 8 May [1131 or later], bur [Wareham Castle]). Comte de Bellême 1101. Sire d'Alençon.

- see below, Part B. COMTES de PONTHIEU (BELLEME).

4. IDA de Ponthieu . The primary source which confirms her parentage has not yet been identified. Abbess of Sainte-Austreberte at Montreuil.

5. MATHILDE de Ponthieu . A charter dated 1100 records the foundation of the priory of St-Pierre d´Abbeville by "Guy comte de Ponthieu et Adèle sa femme", sealed by "Guy comte, de Agnèz sa fille, de Mahaut sa fille…"[1226].


ADILA [Ada], daughter of ---.

Adila (Ada) parentage unknown married Guy de Ponthieu Issue: Enguerrand, Agnes, Ida and Mathilde From FMG Medlands: http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/NORTHERN%20FRANCE.htm#_Toc336929886 [Guy de Ponthieu] m secondly ADILA [Ada], daughter of ---. "Wido comes Pontivensis et uxor eius Adila comitissa" donated property to the abbey of Saint-Martin des Champs for the soul of "filii sui Ingelranni" by charter dated before 1090[1218]. A charter dated 1100 records the foundation of the priory of St-Pierre d´Abbeville by "Guy comte de Ponthieu et Adèle sa femme", sealed by "Guy comte, de Agnèz sa fille, de Mahaut sa fille…"[1219]. "Gulielmus comes Pontivorum" donated property to the abbey of Saint-Sauveur-le-Vicomte for the souls of "his predecessors…count Guy and Adda his wife…" by charter dated 1127[1220]. Comte Guy & his [first] wife had one child: 1. ANNE de Ponthieu (-[after 1067]). "Pontivensium comes Wido" donated property to Compiègne Saint-Corneille, confirmed by "Anne comitisse nostre filie", by charter dated to [1067 or after][1221]. The title "comitisse" in this charter suggests that Anne must have been married to a count at that date. [m ---.] Comte Guy & his [second] wife had four children: 2. ENGUERRAND de Ponthieu (-before [1079/80]). "Wido comes Pontivensis et uxor eius Adila comitissa" donated property to the abbey of Saint-Martin des Champs for the soul of "filii sui Ingelranni" by charter dated before 1090[1222]. 3. AGNES de Ponthieu (-after 6 Oct 1100). "Wido…Pontivi regionis comes" issued a charter dated 1101 relating to the church of Montreuil witnessed by "Agnetis mee filie…"[1223]. This marriage was arranged by William II King of England, according to Orderic Vitalis, who also specifies her father's name[1224]. A charter dated 1100 records the foundation of the priory of St-Pierre d´Abbeville by "Guy comte de Ponthieu et Adèle sa femme", sealed by "Guy comte, de Agnèz sa fille, de Mahaut sa fille…"[1225]. She was treated cruelly by her husband and imprisoned in the castle of Bellême, from where she escaped, took refuge with Adela Ctss de Blois, and retired to Ponthieu. m (before 9 Sep 1087) ROBERT de Montgommery, son of ROGER [II] de Montgommery Sire d'Alençon, Earl of Shropshire and Shrewsbury & his wife Mabile d'Alençon ([1052/56]-[Wareham Castle] 8 May [1131 or later], bur [Wareham Castle]). Comte de Bellême 1101. Sire d'Alençon. - see below, Part B. COMTES de PONTHIEU (BELLEME). 4. IDA de Ponthieu . The primary source which confirms her parentage has not yet been identified. Abbess of Sainte-Austreberte at Montreuil. 5. MATHILDE de Ponthieu . A charter dated 1100 records the foundation of the priory of St-Pierre d´Abbeville by "Guy comte de Ponthieu et Adèle sa femme", sealed by "Guy comte, de Agnèz sa fille, de Mahaut sa fille…"[1226]. 
Damiens, Adila (I238607)
 
2342 [NI01296] Oliver Stowell was baptized in 1783 at Windsor, VT. Four years after his first marriage, in March 1806, he moved from Vermont to Antwerp, NY where he farmed. Oliver Stowell is mentioned in the 1878 "History of Jefferson County (NY)" as being an early seler of Antwerp, NY - before 1810.

On 22 October 1839, administration of his will granted to widow Sally; heirs included "Betsey Thomas, wife of Salmon Thomas." The estate valued at $12,000 and included a farm of 227 acres.

Married 3 times, he had children only with first wife. His second wife, Ruth, was sister of the first, Elizabeth. On 13 July 1828 he married widow Mrs. Sally Pepper at age 49. (Stowell Genealogy). However, according to the information in the Stowell genealogy re: Jacob Stowell, first husband of Ruth Hoisington, removed to Lawrence Co., NY in 1835, meaning that Jacob was still alive at the time his wife allegedly married Oliver Stowell. This requires more research, as does the birth date of daughter "Betsey" and of wife Elizabeth to determine the true mother of Betsey (also see Notes: Elizabeth Hoisington). 
Stowell, Oliver (I1209)
 
2343 [[Category:Eden Gardens Memorial Park, Warwick, Queensland]]
== Biography ==
Elsie was born in 1916. She was the daughter of [[Eastwell-131|Richmond Eastwell]] and [[Girke-11|Annie Girke]]. She passed away in 2006.
== Sources ==

* Elsie Merle Eastwell
Event date: 26/12/1916
Event type: Birth registration
Registration details: 1917/C/3717
Mother: Annie Catherine Gerke
Father/parent: Richmond Eastwell
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/183754348/elsie-merle-clarson#view-photo=172179606 
Eastwell, Elsie (I196446)
 
2344 [[Category:Eden Gardens Memorial Park, Warwick, Queensland]]
== Biography ==
Sam was born in 1923. He was the son of [[Eastwell-131|Richmond Eastwell]] and [[Girke-11|Annie Girke]].
After marrying Viv Reis, they started farming near Mt Sturt. One of their two children, Diana went to school in Yangan.He passed away in 1988.

== Sources ==

* Cecil Richmond Eastwell
Event date: 19/05/1923
Event type: Birth registration
Registration details: 1923/C/6976
Mother: Annie Catherine Gerke
Father/parent: Richmond Eastwell

Cecil Richmond Eastwell
Event date: 31/10/1988
Event type: Death registration
Date of birth: 1923
Registration details: 1988/57808
Mother: Annie Catherine Girk
Father/parent: Richmond Eastwell
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/184149382/cecil-richmond-eastwell#view-photo=165348463 
Eastwell, Cecil (I196450)
 
2345 _STAT: Never Married
REFN: HWS134980

Ancestral FILE Z:\Volumes\IMWA_Ext\MyDocuments-External\FamilyTree\HydeFamilies_Photos\Number: 96WB-M5 
Hyde, Edward (I611)
 
2346 Family: First Earl of Hereford Sir Henry De Bohun, First Earl Of Hereford / Maud Fitzpiers de Mandeville (F56)
 
2347 Family: Raoul I. De Lusignan / Alice D'Eu (F96)
 
2348 Family: Humphrey V. Bohun, 2nd Earl Of Hereford And Essex / Maud De Lusignan (F33159)
 
2349 Family: Roger De Toeni, V. Lord Of Flamstead / Alice De Bohun (F58845)
 
2350 Family: Humphrey De Bohun, III / Margaret Eanric, Of Huntingdon Princess Of Scotland Dutchess Of Brittany (F67184)
 
2351 “RoyalAncestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families,”Douglas Richardson (2013): “JOHN DE MOHUN, son and heir apparent. He married after 1245 JOAN DE FERRERS, 5th daughter of William de Ferrers, 5th Earl of Derby, by his 1st wife, Sibyl, 3rd daughter of William Marshal, Knt., 4th Earl of Pembroke (or Striguil), hereditary Master Marshal [see FERRERS 7 for her ancestry]. They had two sons, \b3 1. John and \b3 2. Robert. Joan was co-heiress in 1245 to her uncle, Anselm Marshal, 9th Earl of Pembroke. \b3 JOHN DE MOHUN died in Gascony in 1254. His body was buried in Bruton Priory, Somerset, and his heart buried at Newenham Abbey, Devon.
--------------------------------------------------------------------
Greywelle. The manor sometime belonged to a certain Reginald de Mohun, to him and his heirs in fee, who gave it to William, his younger son, and the heirs of his body. The said William had two daughters, viz-Mary and Eleanor was espoused to one John de Carru and they had a son, Nicholas, who died without issue. The other daughter Mary was espoused To John Meryet, and had a son Henry, who died without issue. Through such failure of issue, the manor ought to revert to one John de Mohun as kingsman and heir of the said Reginald. From the said Reginald the right of reversion of the said manor descended to John his son and heir, and from him to John his son, and from the said John son of John son of John to John his son and heir who now claims, he is aged 40 years and more.\cb3 Source: Southampton inquisition for John Meriet 1327. 
De Mohun, Sir John I. Of Dunster (I51266)
 
2352 “RoyalAncestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families,”Douglas Richardson (2013):\b3 “JOANDE NEVILLE, married (1st) HENRY DE LA MARE, Knt., of Ashtead, Surrey, and Diddenham (in Shinfield), Farley Hill (in Swallowfield), Hinton (in Hurst), and Sheepbridge (in Swallowfield), Berkshire, royal justice, Seneschal of William Longespee, Earl of Salisbury, Constable of Stogursey Castle, son and heir of William de la Mare, Knt., of Ashtead and Mitcham, Surrey, and Harlaxton and Londonthorpe, Lincolnshire, deputy Sheriff of Surrey and Sussex, 1217-26, by his wife, Basile. They had one daughter, Maud. In 1243 he was exempted from being put on juries, assizes, or recognitions, as long as he was with William Longespee. In 1245 he was granted letters of protection, he then going as a royal messenger to the court of Rome. In 1246 he delivered Stogursey Castle to the king, he then acting as constable for John de Neville. SIR HENRY DE LA MARE died testate in 1257. His widow, Joan, married (2.) before 1260 WALTER DE LA HYDE, Knt., of Cokeharn (in Sompting), Stammerharn (in Horsham), and Waldron, Sussex, Stow Bedon, Norfolk, etc. They had one daughter, Hawise (wife of Robert le Veel, Knt.). In 1275 he had the assize of bread and ale at Stow Bedon, Norfolk by warrant of Baldwin Wake. His wife, Joan, died before 1280 (date of lawsuit). SIR WALTER DE LA HYDE was living in 1281, and died before 1285. \b3 Blomefield Essay towards a Top. Hist. of Norfolk 2 (1805): 278. Placitorum Abbreviatio (Rec. Commission) (1811): 152. Roberts Excerpta e Rotuilis Finium 2 (1836): 228. Halliwell-Phillipps Chron. of William de Rishanger (Camden Soc. 15) (1840): 90, 101-102. Wood Letters of Royal & Ill. Ladies (1846): 42-46. Foss Judges of England 2 (1848): 397. Sussex Arch. Colls. 13 (1861): 85-96, 99. Roberts Calendarium Genealogicum 1 (1865): 136. Matthew of Paris Chronica Majora 4 (Rolls Ser. 57) (1877): 551, 560; 5 (Rolls Ser. 57) (1880): 56-57, 443, 560, 618, 628, 629. Procs. Somersetshire Arch. & Nat. Hist. Soc. 28(2) (1882): 197-200. Rye Short Cal. Feet of Fines for Norfolk 1 (1885): 96, 118, 129. Maitland Bracton's Note Book 3 (1887): 286-287. List of Sherffs for England & Wales (PRO Lists and Indexes 9) (1898): 135. Archaeologia 2nd Ser. 6 (1899): 351-370. C.C.R. 1272-1279 (1900): 378. C.P.R. 1232-1247 (1906): 357, 453, 468, 483. Surrey Arch. Colls. 19 (1906): 27-32. C.P.R. 1247-1258 (1908): 463, 478. Salzman Feet of Fines Rel. Sussex 2 (Sussex Rec. Soc. 7) (1908): 54. VCH Surrey 3 (1911): 248. Foster Final Concords of the County of Lincoln, A.D. 1241-1272 (Lincoln Rec. Soc. 17) (1921): 62. Farrer Honors & Knights' Fees 1 (1923): 12. VCH Berkshire 3 (1923): 253. Sussex N&Q 1 (1927): 215-216. Somersetshire Pleas 4(1) (Somerset Rec. Soc. 44) (1929): 60-62. C.C.R. 1254-1256 (1931): 277. C.C.R. 1256-1259 (1932): 159. C.C.R. 1259-1261 (1934): 11, 473. C.C.R. 1264-1265 (1937): 55. Hatton Book of Seals: (1950): 136-138. Watkin Great Chartulary of Glastonbury 3 (Somerset Rec. Soc. 64) (1956): 631-632. Meekings 1235 Surrey Eyre (Surrey Rec. Soc. 31) (1979): 218-220. VCH Sussex 6(1) (1980): 53-64; 6(2) (1986): 156-166. Meekings Studies in 13th Cent. Justice & Administration (1981): I 218, VII 141, VIII 1, IX lxx-IX lxxi, XV 168, XV 172. Kemp Reading Abbey Cartularies 2 (Camden 4th Ser. 33) (1987): 100-101, 101 (acknowledgement by Henry de la Mare to Reading Abbey dated c.1238-50). Stewart 1263 Surrey Eyre (Surrey Rec. Soc. 40) (2006): 5-6. National Archives, C 49/66/5; C 143/1/5; E 40/536; E 210/141; JUST 1/870 (available at www.catalogue.nationalarchives.gov.uk/search.asp). Cassidy 1259 Pipe Roll: 282 (available at http:// www.cmjk.com/1259/1259_pipe_roll.htrn1). \b3 Child of Joan de Neville, by Henry de la Mare, Knt.: \b3 i. MAUD DE LA MARE, married PETER DE MONTFORT, Knt., of Beaudesert, Warwickshire [see MONTFORT 6].” De la Hyde, Sir Walter (I126211)
 
2353 Ælfflæd was the daughter of Ealdred, Earl of Bernicia, and his wife Edgina. She was also the granddaughter of Uchtred the Bold, Ealdorman of Northumbria. Born in Bamburgh sometime before 1020, Ælfflæd had 2 older sisters of the same name.

Simeon of Durham identifies 5 daughters of Ealdred and tells us there were 3 who were named "Aelfleda". There is no other record of 2 of the "Aelfledas". This leads to the conclusion that they died young.

It is not uncommon to see the same name used multiple times in families of this time period. If a child died young, often the next child born of the same sex was given the same name.

This is the 3rd born "Aelfleda", who would have been born after her sisters of the same name had died. She is the only daughter of this name to be found in sources other than that of Simeon of Durham, and the only daughter of this name to survive to adulthood.

Ælfflæd (Aelfleda) also had 2 younger sisters named Ealdgyth (Aldgitha) and Etheldreda (Etheldritha).

Simion goes on to say that this 3rd 'Aelfleda' "married earl Siward, by whom she became the mother of Waltheof ; and as this Aelfleda was countess, being the daughter of earl Aldred, and he the son of earl Ucthred and the daughter of bishop Aldun, — she laid claim to these lands following, as belonging to her by hereditary right: namely, Bemetun, Kymingeim, Eltun, Carltun, Heaclif, and He- seldene, which earl Siward her husband had given her ; and she gave to her son Waltheof the earldom of Northumberland, as it had been held by Waltheof s grandfather, earl Aldred."

In 1033 Ælfflæd became the 2nd wife of Siward Björnsson, Earl of Northumbria, a powerful theng of King Cnut. The marriage strengthened Siward's position in Northumbria, so much so that he rose to become sub-ruler of most of northern England.

Ælfflæd and Siward had 2 sons:
- Osbjorn (Osbearne) who died in 1054
- Waltheof, Earl of Northumbria

Osbjorn was much older than Waltheof and while many sources report him as the son of Ælfflæd, his mother was never identified in records, therefore, it is possible he was the son of Siward's 1st wife Godgifu. Waltheof, however, was definitively identified as the son of Ælfflæd.

Oldest son Osbjorn died in battle against MacBeth in 1054. Siward died in 1055. Waltheof was but 10 years old at the time of his father's death. It is not recorded when Ælfflæd died, it is believed she survived her husband and continued to raise Waltheof.

There is no record of Ælfflæd marrying a 2nd time.

Waltheof grew up to eventually become Earl of Northumbria himself. He married Judith of Lens, the niece of William the Conqueror. Waltheof and Judith had children, their oldest daughter Maud married David I King of Scotland. Through her granddaughter Ælfflæd became one of the many ancestors of the later Scottish and British monarchs.
--------------------------------------------------------

"Ealdred's daughter, Aelfflaed, WAS THE SECOND WIFE of Siward and her son was Waltheof, Earl of Northumbria."
--> https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Earl_Ealdred,_son_of_Uchtred

"[Siward] entrenched his position in northern England by marrying Ælfflæd, the daughter of Ealdred, Earl of Bamburgh. After killing Ealdred's successor Eadulf in 1041, Siward gained control of all Northumbria."
--> https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Siward,_Earl_of_Northumbria

In 1033 Siward married into the Northumbrian princely house, that of Bamburgh (after winning their admiration as a warrior) by taking Aelfled, granddaughter of Uchtred, former Earl of Northumbria, as his wife and thus strengthening his own position in that domain.
https://enacademic.com/dic.nsf/enwiki/937974

Siward then entrenched his position in northern England by marrying Ælfflæd, the daughter of Ealdred, Earl of Bamburgh and granddaughter of Uhtred the Bold.
http://www.englishmonarchs.co.uk/vikings_18.html

----------------------------------------
http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/ENGLAND,%20AngloSaxon%20nobility.htm#AelfledMSiward 
Of Bernicia, Ælfleda III (I34816)
 
2354 Ælfgifu Lady of Northumbria was the daughter of King Æthelred the Unready and wife of Uchtred; Aelfgifu Mallet was the sister of William Mallet (not a son of King Æthelred) and married Aelfgar. Both had a daughter named Ealdgyth but they were born at least 10 years apart and had very different roles in history. Of Wessex, Ælfgifu (I91199)
 
2355 Æthelflæd was the 1st wife of Edgar the Peaceful and daughter of Ordmaer, Ealdorman of the East Anglians; Ælfthryth was the 3rd wife of Edgar the Peaceful, the widow of Æthelwald, Ealdorman of East Anglia, and the daughter of Ordgar, Ealdorman of Devon in Queen Ælfthryth Of England (I137989)
 
2356 Æthelflæd, known as Æthelflæd of Damerham to distinguish her from other women of the same name, was the second wife of King Edmund I of England.

Æthelflæd was a daughter of ealdorman Ælfgar, probably the ealdorman of Essex. Her mother's name is not recorded. She had at least one brother and at least one sister, Ælfflæd (died circa 1002). Ælfflæd was married to Byrhtnoth, who probably succeeded her father as ealdorman of Essex. Byrhtnoth was killed at the Battle of Maldon in 991. Æthelflæd and Ælfflæd were Ælfgar's heirs at his death, some time between 946 and 951 based on the dating of his will, S1483.

Æthelflæd married Edmund in 944 following the death of his first wife Ælfgifu, mother of the future kings Eadwig and Edgar. She and Edmund are not known to have had any children, and Edmund was killed in 946, leaving Æthelflæd as a wealthy widow. Records of Ely Cathedral, to which she, her sister, and her brother-in-law, were generous benefactors, say that she then married an ealdorman named Æthelstan. There were several ealdormen of that name active in the reign of Edmund's brother and successor Eadred, and it most likely that Æthelflæd married the man known as Æthelstan Rota, although she could have married Æthelstan Half-King.

Æthelflæd's will survives, S1494, and her will, and thus her death, is dated to between 962, and more probably 975, and 991. In addition to gifts to Ely, the will endowed Glastonbury, Canterbury, Bury, and the family monastery of Stoke-by-Nayland.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%86thelfl%C3%A6d_of_Damerham 
Of Damerham, Queen of England Æthelflæd (I137986)
 
2357 Æthelred and Emma returned to England after Sweyn's death in 1014 at the request of the English nobles. De Normandie, Emma returned from exile in Normandy in 1014, after the death of Sweyn, and resumed her queenship Emma (I99960)
 
2358 Æthelred and Emma returned to England after Sweyn's death in 1014 at the request of the English nobles. De Normandie, Emma returned from exile in Normandy in 1014, after the death of Sweyn, and resumed her queenship Emma (I99960)
 
2359 Æthelred died while besieged in London with his son Edmund and their remaining army, surrounded by the forces of Cnut. Emma may have been there also or may have been safely in Normandy.

Æthelred died while besieged in London with his son Edmund and their remaining army, surrounded by the forces of Cnut. Emma may have been there also or may have been safely in Normandy. 
De Normandie, Emma returned from exile in Normandy in 1014, after the death of Sweyn, and resumed her queenship Emma (I99960)
 
2360 Æthelred died while besieged in London with his son Edmund and their remaining army, surrounded by the forces of Cnut. Emma may have been there also or may have been safely in Normandy. De Normandie, Emma returned from exile in Normandy in 1014, after the death of Sweyn, and resumed her queenship Emma (I99960)
 
2361 Æthelred issued a charter in 862 as "King of the West Saxons"; as this was during the reign of his brother, he was likely acting as Under-king in his brother's absence. King Æthelred I. Of Wessex (I137969)
 
2362 Æthelred sent Emma and her children to her brother Richard II, in Normandy to escape a pending invasion by Sweyn in 1013, he soon fled before Sweyn and joined his family.

Æthelred sent Emma and her children to her brother Richard II, in Normandy to escape a pending invasion by Sweyn in 1013, he soon fled before Sweyn and joined his family. 
De Normandie, Emma returned from exile in Normandy in 1014, after the death of Sweyn, and resumed her queenship Emma (I99960)
 
2363 Æthelred sent Emma and her children to her brother Richard II, in Normandy to escape a pending invasion by Sweyn in 1013, he soon fled before Sweyn and joined his family. De Normandie, Emma returned from exile in Normandy in 1014, after the death of Sweyn, and resumed her queenship Emma (I99960)
 
2364 Æthelred was not yet old enough to rule when he was consecrated king by Archbishop Dunstan and Archbishop Oswald. His mother Queen Ælfthryth acted as regent (along with advisors) until about 984 when Æthelred reached his majority. King Æthelred Of The English (I100244)
 
2365 Æthelred's older half-brother, King Edward, died at the age of 15 or 16, stabbed while visiting Æthelred and his mother. Ælfthryth had supported her own son to be king instead of Edward and was blamed for Edward's death. There was no evidence of collusion King Æthelred Of The English (I100244)
 
2366 Æthelstan chose to use the title 'King of the Whole of Britain'. On his coins and charters he is described as 'Rex totius Britanniae'. A gospel book he donated to Christ Church, Canterbury is inscribed "Æthelstan, king of the English and ruler of the whol King Æthelstan Of The Anglo-Saxons (I137949)
 
2367 “del counte de Dunfres” the count of Dunfres
He granted a charter to Sir William of Karlyle, Knight, and the Lady Margaret, his spouse (sister of King Robert The Bruce) of an acres of land, held of the Lord of Annandale, in the tenement of Keypatrick. No date. Circel 1296. -(Original at Drumlandrig.) He swore fealty to King Edward the First of England for his lands in Dumfriessire, in 1296. William de Heriz and Robert de Tilliol held Lochmaben Castle for King Edward in 1301. (Stevenson's Historcal Documents, vol ii. p. 432.)(Quoted from The Book of Calavarock pp 586) 
De Herries, William (I239164)
 
2368 “Ireland, Civil Registration Indexes 1845–1958,” Index. FamilySearch, Salt Lake City, Utah. General Register Office, Republic of Ireland. "Quarterly Returns of Marriages in Ireland with Index to Marriages.". Source (S1538)
 
2369 “Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families,” Douglas Richardson (2013):
“ISABEL DE SENLIS, married WILLIAM MAUDUIT, of Hanslope, Buckinghamshire, Hartley Mauduit and Shaldem, Hampshire, Great Bowden and Harborough, Leicestershire, Barrowden, Morcott, and South Luffenham, Rutland, etc., hereditary Chamberlain of the Exchequer, son and heir of William Mauduit, of Hanslope, Buckinghamshire, Hartley Mauduit and Shaldern, Hampshire, hereditary Chamberlain of the Exchequer, by his wife, Alice. Her maritagium included a demesne in Grendon, Northamptonshire, together with lands in Braybrooke, Great Oakley, and Great Newton, Northamptonshire and Othorpe, Leicestershire. They had one son, Robert. In the period, 1174-84, he witnessed a charter for his brother-in-law, Earl Simon [de Senlis]. In 1180 he was put in charge of treasure sent for the king's use from Newark to Doncaster, and from Doncaster to York. In the period, 1180-9, he granted the manor of Shalden, Hampshire to his brother, Robert Mauduit. He acquired property in Westminster, Middlesex from the 1180s, including a messuage in Longditch from Adam of Westminster and his wife Maud; land in Longthtch adjoining that messuage from Alexander son of William the priest and his wife Alice; and half an acre of meadow in Lousmede from Peter son of Thomas the mariner. WILLIAM MAUDUIT died 2 October 1194, and was buried at Waverley Abbey, Surrey. In 1198 his widow, Isabel, was charged 30 marks to have her own marriage. In 1204 she was sued by Emald Fitz Richard regarding the advowson of the church of Morcott, Rutland; Isabel called to warranty her son, Robert. In 1210 she sued John Fitz Geoffrey for her dower in lands in Morcott, Rutland. The same year she was sued by the daughters or representatives of Alice de Bidun (sister of Isabel's husband, William Mauduit) for the vill of Morcott, Rutland, in which Isabel claimed dower; Isabel called to warranty her son, Robert. Baker Hist. & Antiqs. of Northampton 2 (1836-41): 129 (Mauduit ped.). Luard Annales Monastici 2 (Rolls Ser. 36) (1865): 249-250 (Annals of Waverley sub A.D. 1194 -"Obiit Willelmus Maldut vi. non. Octobris, et sepultus est ante ostium capituli apud Waverleiam."). Herald & Genealogist 7 (1873): 385-394. Trans. Leicestershire Architectural & Arch. Soc. 3 (1874): 155. Ratcliff Hist. & Antiqs. of the Newport Pagnell Hundreds (1900): 108-112. Ancestor 5 (1903): 207-210. VCH Hampshire 4 (1911): 101-103. G.H. Fowler 'Shire of Bedford and the Earldom of Huntingdon' in Pubs. Bedfordshire Hist. Rec. Soc. 9 (1925): 23-34. C.R.R. 3 (1926): 179, 183, 225, 233, 276; 4 (1929): 7-8; 5 (1931): 198-199; 6 (1932): 8, 47, 224-225. VCH Buckingham 4 (1927): 348-362. Stenton Facsimiles of Early Charters from Northamptonshire Coils. (1930): 90-92 (charter of William Mauduit dated 1180-9). Stenton Great Roll of the Pipe Michaelmas 1198 (Pipe Roll Soc. n.s. 9) (1932): 125. VCH Northampton 4 (1937): 11-17 (Mauduit arms: Gules three piles wavy or). VCH Rutland 2 (1935): 170-175 (Mauduit arms: Argent two bars gules). Hatton Book of Seals (1950): 238-239 (charter of Earl Simon [de Sculls] dated 1174-84). Mason Beauchamp Cartulary Charters (Pipe Roll Soc. n.s. 43) (1980): lix (Mauduit ped.), 103-104 (charter of Earl Simon [de Senlis] dated c.1158-74). Stringer Earl David of Huntingdon, 1152-1219 (1985). Columbia Law Rev. 88 (1988): 433-536.” 
De Senlis, Isabel (I239094)
 
2370 “Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families,” Douglas Richardson (2013):
“JOHN DE BEAUCHAMP, Knt., of Holt, Worcestershire, Hawridge, Buckinghamshire, etc., younger son. He married ___. They had one son, Richard. In the period, 1258-69, he was granted the manor of Holt, Worcestershire by his father. Sometime before 1268, he was enfeoffed with the manor of Hawridge, Buckinghamshire by his uncle, William Mauduit, Earl of Warwick. In 1290 he presented to the church of Holt, Worcestershire. SIR JOHN DE BEAUCHAMP was living in 1316.
Baker Hist. & Antiqs. of Northampton 2 (1836-41): 218-219 (Beauchamp ped.). Giffard Register of Bishop Godfrey Giffard 1 (Episcopal Regs., Dioc. of Worc.) (1902): ccxvii. C.P. 2 (1912): 45, footnote d. VCH Worcester 3 (1913): 403-404. VCH Buckingham 3 (1925): 367-368 (Beauchamp arms: Gilles a fesse between six crosslets or). Mason Beauchamp Cartulary Charters (Pipe Roll Soc. n.s. 43) (1980): hill (Beauchamp ped.), 11.” 
De Beauchamp, John (I90105)
 
2371 “Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families,” Douglas Richardson (2013):
“WILLIAM DE BEAUCHAMP, Knt., of Elmley, Acton Beauchamp, Comberton, Naunton Beauchamp, Salwarpe, Stoulton, and Wadborough (in Pershore), Worcestershire, Hanslope and Hawridge, Buckinghamshire, etc., Keeper of the Forest of Dean, 1270, Captain of cos. Chester and Lancaster, 1276, Constable of St. Briavels and Rockingham Castles, Steward of the Forest between Oxford and Stamford, son and heir, born about 1238 /12 (aged 26 and 30 in 1268). He married before 1270 MAUD FITZ JOHN, widow of Gerard de Furnival, Knt., of Sheffield, Yorkshire, Worksop, Nottinghamshire, etc. (died shortly before 18 October 1261), and daughter of John Fitz Geoffrey, Knt., of Shere, Surrey, Fambridge, Essex, etc., Justiciar of Ireland, Justice of the Forest south of Trent, by Isabel, daughter of Hugh le Bigod, Earl of Norfolk [see VERDUN 8 for her ancestry]. They had two sons, John and Guy, Knt. [10th Earl of Warwick] and three daughters, Isabel, Anne (nun at Shouldham), and Amy (nun at Shouldham). He was heir in 1268 to his uncle, William Mauduit, 8th Earl of Warwick, by which he inherited the Earldom of Warwick, the office of Chamberlain of the Exchequer, and the baronies of Warwick, Warwickshire and Hanslope, Buckinghamshire. He served as a pledge to Robert de Ferrets, late Earl of Derby, in 1269. In 1270 and 1274 he was appointed a commissioner to treat with Llywelyn about certain incidents on the Welsh border. In 1274-5 Simon de Beauchamp and Pemel his wife arraigned an assize of mort d'ancestor against him and others touching rent in Hanslope, Buckinghamshire. In the same period, Anastasia de Hamslap arraigned an assize of novel disseisin against him and others touching a tenement in Hanslope, Buckinghamshire. In 1276-7 he arraigned an assize of darrein presentment against William Murdak' touching the advowson of the church of Compton Murdak, Warwickshire. He presented to the chapel of St. Peter's in the Castle of Worcester, Worcestershire in 1276, and to the churches of Barrowden, Rutland, 1280, 1297, South Luffenham, Rutland, 1291, Hanslope, Buckinghamshire, 1293 or 1296, and Spelsbury, Oxfordshire, 1296. In 1278 he leased the manor of Brailes, Warwickshire to Richard de Mundeville and his wife, Maud, for their lives. He was summoned for service against the Welsh, 1277-94, against the Scots, 1296-8, and beyond seas, 1297. In the period, 1279-80, the Abbot of Evesham arraigned an assize of novel disseisin against William de Beauchamp, Earl of Warwick, and others touching a tenement in Chedworth, Gloucestershire. In the same period, John de Braham and another arraigned an assize of novel disseisin against William de Beauchamp, Earl of Warwick, and others touching a tenement in Cottesmore, Rutland. In 1280-1 he and his wife, Maud, arraigned an assize of novel disseisin against Roger FizWyot and others touching common of pasture in Sheffield, Yorkshire. In 1280-1 he and his wife, Maud, arraigned an assize of novel disseisin against Thomas de Furnival and others touching a tenement in Sheffield, Yorkshire. In 1280-1 Emeric le Despenser arraigned an assize of novel disseisin against William de Beauchamp, Earl of Warwick and others regarding a fosse destroyed in Oldberrow, Warwickshire. He took part in the Siege and capture of Dryslwyn, Carmarthenshire in 1282. He was summoned to the assembly at Shrewsbury in 1283. In 1284 he obtained a grant of free warren in Barrowden, lMorcott, nd South Luffenham, Rutland. He had license to fortify his manor house at Hanslope, Buckinghamshire 10 June 1292. In 1293 he obtained a grant of a weekly market and an annual fair at Hanslope, Buckinghamshire. He defeated the Welsh at Maes Moydog, Montgomeryshire 5 March 1294/5. The following year, he was one of the leaders of the force which defeated the Scots at Dunbar 27 April 1296. During the king's absence in Flanders in 1297-8, he was a member of Prince Edward's council. His wife, Maud, was co-heiress in 1297 to her brother, Richard Fitz John, Knt., Lord Fitz John, by which she inherited the manors of Cherhill, Wiltshire, Potterspury, Northamptonshire, and Quarrendon, Buckinghamshire, and townships in the cantred of the Isles in Thomond in Ireland. He was with the English army which was defeated at Battle of Stirling in Scotland in 1297. In 1298 he was granted a weekly market and a yearly fair at his manor of Hanslope, Buckinghamshire. At an unknown date, he confirmed to the nuns of Cokehill, Worcestershire the church of Nettleton, which gift was previously made to the nuns by his mother, Isabel; her brother, Earl William, and her grandfather, Earl Waleran. SIR WILLIAM DE BEAUCHAMP, 9th Earl of Warwick, died at Elmley, Worcestershire 5 (or 9) June 1298, and was buried at Friars Minor, Worcester 22 June 1298. He left a will dated 3 May or 14 Sept. 1297. In 1299 his widow, Maud, presented her nephew, Nicholas Boteler, clerk, to the church of Wickwar, Gloucestershire. Maud, Countess of Warwick, died 16 (or 18) April 1301, and was buried at Friars Minor, Worcester 7 May 1301.
Rawlinson Hist. & Antiqs. of the City, and Cathedral-Church of Hereford (1717): Addenda, 15 (Kalendar of Obits: "V Id. Junius [9 June]. Obitus Domini Willielmi de Bello Campo, Comitis Warwick, qui dedit jus sui patronatus quod habebat in Ecclesia de Leydeneya, Decano 8c Capitulo hujus Ecclesie."). Edmondson Hist. & Genealogical Acount of the Noble Fam. of Greville (1766): 26-56. Hutchinson Hist. & Antiqs. of the County Palatine of Durham 3 (1794): chart foll. 228 (Beauchamp ped.). Clutterbuck Hist. & Antiqs. of Hertford 1(1815): 293 (chart), 353-360 (chart). Montmorency-Morres Genealogical Memoir of the Fam. of Montmorency (1817): xxxii-xxxvi. Hunter Hallamshire (1819): 30 41. Dugdale Monasticon Anglicanum 5 (1825): 736 ("Tanner, however, observes .... there is the abstract of a deed of William Beauchamp earl of Warwick, confirming to the Nuns of Cokehill the gift which Isabel the countess his mother, William the earl her brother, and Waleran the earl her grandfather, who died 6 Joan. as Dugd. Baron, tom. i. p 71, made unto them, viz. the Church of Netelton."). Holland Hist., Antiqs., & Desc. of the Town & Parish of Worksop (1826): 17-56. Nicolas Testamenta Vetusta 1 (1826): 52 (will of William de Beauchamp, Earl of Warwick). Archaeologia 21 (1827): 199-200. White Hist., Gazeteer, & Directory of Nottinghamshire (1832): 458. Coll. Top. et Gen. 1 (1834): 256. Baker Hist. & Antiqs. of Northampton 2 (1836-41): 218-219 (Beauchamp ped.). Banks Baronies in Fees 1 (1844): 310-311 (sub Mauduit). Eastwood Hist. of the Parish of Ecclesfield (1862): 59-77. Sheahan Hist. & Topog. of Buckinghamshire (1862): 539-540. Roberts Calendarium Genealogicum 1 (1865): 130-131. Burke Gen. Hist. of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited & Extinct Peerages (1866): 225 (sub Fumival). Luard Annales Monastici 4 (Rolls Ser. 36) (1869): 537 (Annals of Worcester sub A.D. 1298 - "Willelmus de Bello Campo comes Warewike graviter infirmatus, in absentia omnium amicorum per consilium fratris Johannis de Olneye condidit testamentum; qui avertit voluntatem ejus, ne cum prxdecessoribus sins in cathedrali ecclesia Wygornix, sed inter fratres Minores sibi eligerat sepulturam; qui quinto idus Junii [9 June] obiit."), 549 (Annals of Worcester sub A.D. 1300- "Nonis Maii [7 May] annuente archiepiscopo, Wydo comes Warewyk sepelivit matrem suam in ecclesia fratrum Minorum Wygorniæ juxta comitem patrem suum."). Notes & Queries 4th Ser. 3 (1869): 484-485 (Fitz Peter ped.). Jour. British Arch. Assoc. 30 (1874): 237-277. Tegg Wills of their Own (1876): 5-6 (will of William de Beauchamp, Earl of Warwick). Annual Rpt. of the Deputy Keeper 44 (1883): 124; 45 (1885): 89, 104, 142, 254; 46 (1886): 142; 47 (1886): 379; 49 (1888): 39, 49; 50 (1889): 173, 202. Doyle Official Baronage of England 3 (1886): 577-578 (sub Warwick). Genealogist n.s. 10 (1893): 213; n.s. 13 (1896): 36-37. Bund Inqs. Post Mortem for the County of Worcester 1 (1894): (Warwick ped.), 59-65; 2 (1909): xxii. C.Ch. R. 2 (1898): 428. List of Sheriffs for England & Wales (PRO Lists and Indexes 9) (1898): 157. Giffard Episc. Reg. Diocese of Worcester, Reg. of Bishop Godfrey Giffard 1 (Worcester Hist. Soc. 15) (1902): cclxi; 2(3) (1900): 266 ([William de Beauchamp], Earl of Warwick, styled "kinsman and friend" by Godfrey Giffard, Bishop of Worcester), 498, 529. Ratcliff Hist. & Antiqs. of the Newport Pagnell Hundreds (1900): 108-112. Cal. IPM 1 (1904): 212-214. Wrottesley Peds. from the Plea Rolls (1905): 72, 137-138. Bloom English Seals (1906): 165-166. D.N.B. 13 (1909): 83-84 (biog. of William Mauduit, Earl of Warwick). VCH Nottingham 2 (1910): 125-129. VCH Worcester 3 (1913): 339, 341-342 (Beauchamp arms: Gules, a fesse between six crosslets or). C.P. 4 (1916): 265; 5 (1926): 437 (chart), 439-441 (sub FitzJohn); 12(2) (1959): 368-370 (sub Warwick). Kingsford Stonor Letters & Papers 1290-1483 1 (Camden 3rd Ser. 29) (1919): 4. VCH Buckingham 3 (1925): 6-7, 367-369; 4 (1927): 348-362. Corbridge Reg. of Thomas of Corbridge 1 (Surtees Soc. 138) (1925): 55-56. VCH Rutland 2 (1935): 134-138, 170-171. English Hist. Rev. 58 (1943): 51-78 (St. Edmundsbury Chronicle, 1296-1301: "Interea obiit dominus Willelmus de Bello Campo comes Warwyci."). VCH Warwick 4 (1947): 230-245; 5 (1949): 17-26. Year Books of Edward II 10 (Selden Soc. 63) (1947): 196-208. Paget Baronage of England (1957) 39: 1-13 (sub Beauchamp of Elmley), 220: 1. Sanders English Baronies (1960): 51, 76, 94. Ancient Deeds - Ser. B 2 (List & Index Soc. 101) (1974): B.6295, B.6697, B.8616. Mason Beauchamp Cartulary Charters (Pipe Roll Soc. n.s. 43) (1980): xxiii-xxiv, lviij (Beauchamp ped.). Ellis Cat. Seals in the P.R.O. 2 (1981): 7 (seal of William de Beauchamp, Earl of Warwick dated 1296 - A shield of arms: a fesse between six crosses crosslet. Above and on either side, an elongated leopard. Legend: S'.WILL[I :DE :BEL]LO CAM 
De Beauchamp, John (I90000)
 
2372 “Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families,” Douglas Richardson (2013): “ROGER DE TONY (or DE CONCHES), of Flamstead, Hertfordshire, Whittlesford, Cambridgeshire, South Tawton, Devon, Walthamstow, Essex, Holkham and Necton, Norfolk, Painsca De Hainault, Ida Gertrude (I103667)
 
2373 • He worked as a Carpenter at 2 Sadlers Row in 1881 in Sundridge, Kent.150 Living with wife, mother-in-
law and brother-in-law Joseph Whitebread 
Langley, Henry (I90980)
 

      «Prev «1 ... 6 7 8 9 10