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Ancestry Solutions'
Ancestral Collectives
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Matches 2,301 to 2,350 of 4,853
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Linked to |
| 2301 |
George Jemmett, born Mar 31, 1876 in St. Louis, MO; died 1878 | JEMMETT, George (I8013)
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| 2302 |
George married Caroline Dodd, who was his first cousin through the family of his grandmother, Judith Dodd. Together, they had ten children: George William, born 1857, later to become a mariner; Edward born 1859, also later to become a mariner; Emily Elizabeth who worked as a kitchen maid; Mary Christina who eventually went out to work as a servant; John Charles, a general labourer; Charles and Walter Lynch, the twins in the family; Ernest, Alfred and William. William died a few days before his second birthday.
By 1871 George, Caroline and family were living at the Brents. All children, except Charles and Walter Lynch, were still then attending school.
In 1881 Emily Elizabeth was working as a kitchen maid on Tyndale House farm, which at that time was owned by William Miller. I can imagine that her work was demanding as, in addition to the family, there were also 13 other men, 3 other women and 4 boys employed on the farm. The remaining members of George and Caroline's family were living on the Brents. The two oldest sons, George William and Edward, were working as mariners and John Charles, at age 14 had gone to work as a general labourer. Mary Christina was living and working at Albion Terrace as a domestic servant for Thomas Attwater, the Harbour Master at Faversham.
George, Sr. owned a ship called the 'George William'. He was a freeman and a dredger as had been his ancestors before him. Many of the Gregory ships were built at Sheerness on the Isle of Sheppey.
Both George and Caroline died sometime after 1881, George having died first but both were buried in Preston-next-Faversham churchyard. After George's death, Edward had to pitch in and help his mother look after the family. Caroline took in sewing and whatever else she could do to support the family but continued to raise her children to be hard-working and God-fearing. In recent years, all of the tombstones were moved against the churchyard walls so that the grounds could be groomed more easily. Apparently, Edward's daughter, Winifred, used to read the tombstones frequently as a little girl and wondered what her ancestors were like. Nearly all of the Gregory line had blue or grey eyes with fair or red hair.
Winifred also remembered that all of her family talked very softly. Caroline Dodd's parents had been reasonably well off and owned quite a large farm. They, however, fell on hard times when a sea wall broke and flooded their farm with salt water. Later, a hired hand was swallowed with animals and implements when a large crater-like opening in the ground suddenly and violently appeared. The family lost many of their farm animals during that tragic event. | GREGORY, George (I2241)
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| 2303 |
George married Caroline while he was still a minor at Gillingham Parish Church on 10 Mar 1845. Caroline was the daughter of another victualler. No Kennett witnessed this wedding. George said he was a Clerk, living in Farnborough, Kent. In 1848 George was the Superintendent of a station, presumably Farnborough. Caroline and George lived in Passage West, County Cork, a town just outside of Cork, for two or three years but were back in England, living at 7 Edwin Place, Park Road, Peckham, in 1858. George was "lately a Traffic Manager on a Railway". Caroline died on 13 July 1859 as a result of falling down stairs after being taken ill suddenly. There was an inquest held on 14 July by the Coroner for Surrey.
In 1867 George was living at Adisham, Kent and was the station master. He had a young wife, Elizabeth (nee Saddler) who born circa 1838. In 1881, on the 1881 British Census Index, George and his family were misrecorded under the surname Bennett. The family was living at Sole Street, Railway Station House, Cobham, Surrey. All of Caroline's children had left home by then. George's second wife, Elizabeth, must have died as George was by then married to Sarah Ann, who was born circa 1837 in Chartham, Kent. Maude Annie Peagram, his great niece (Edith Agnes's stepdaughter) aged 2 was staying with them. | KENNETT, George (I2750)
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| 2304 |
George Mattock of Pitminster and Elizabeth Gother of this parish by licence | Family (F5602)
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| 2305 |
GEORGE RUCK, YEOMAN, UPCHURCH NEAR SITTINGBORNE KENT
Fire Insurance Policy Register, 1777-1786, 1st January 1777
13502 1777 SUN 1 259 051179 ML 388075 200 GEORGE RUCK YEOMAN | RUCK, George (I3428)
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| 2306 |
George Tapp, 57, of Murray, died Thursday at 2:20 p.m. at his home, following a brief illness of diphtheria.
Mr. Tapp was born in Union September 14, 1878, a son of John and Elizabeth Tree Tapp.
Surviving are his widow, Mrs. Grace Curtis Tapp, Murray; three sons, Floyd Tapp, Roy Tapp and Clive Tapp, all of Murray; two daughters, Thelma and Della Tapp, of Murray; a stepson, Bartlett Tapp; a stepdaughter, Mrs. Ethel Middlemas and three sisters, Mrs. Sarah Walker, Salt Lake City; Mrs. Alice Stone, Riverton, and Mrs. Annie Brook, California.
Salt Lake Tribune (UT) November 22, 1935
*************************
First wife and mother of Clive & Della - Emmorette Butler, died 1907.
Second wife and mother of Floyd, Roy and Thelma - Matilda Ince Tripp, died 1932. | TAPP, George (I4107)
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| 2307 |
George was a cheesemonger, by trade.
George Dimond is also mentioned in the Last will and Testiment of Charles Dimond in 1849.
The London Gazette, p. 1477, printed and published at the Office, in Cannon Row, Parliament Street, by Robert George Clarke.
The Creditors of George Dimond, formerly of No. 6, New Ormond Street, Queen Square, Loding House keeper, then of High Street, Islington, both in Middlesex, Grocer, Cheesemonger and General Shopkeeper, then of Audley Street, London Road, Liverpool, Lancashire, carpenter, then of Collier Street, Pentonville, then of Theobald's Road, Lamb's Conduit Street, and late of No. 11, Leigh Street, Red Lion Square, all in Middlesex, carpenter, builder and undertaker, an insolvent debtor, who was discharged from the Gaol of the Marshalsea, in the County of Surrey, are requested to meet at Dimond's Hotel, New Ormond Street, Middlesex on Monday the 18th day of August instant, at Six o'Clock in the Evening of the same day precisely, for the purpose of choosing an Assignee or Assignees of the said Insolvent's estate and effects. | DIMOND, George (I722)
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| 2308 |
George was christened at 8 years of age. On his burial he is designated as Clerk of Pluckley parish. | WALKER, George (I3909)
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| 2309 |
George was on the 1881 & 1891 census on board a vessel at Lambeth and Chelsea, respectively, as follows:
1881 - George Gregory 51yrs - Master Bargeman - FavershamJames Harris 67 yrs - Bargeman's mate - FavershamVessel "Monitor" Lett Wharf LambethCensus Place Lambeth, Surrey, England1891 - George Gregory is listed as being on the vessel "Hero ofFaversham" in the registration district of Chelsea, London. | GREGORY, George (I2420)
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| 2310 |
George, Gabriel, George, John 1717, then Mabel married George Lyons. 8x great grandfather | RUCK, George (I5746)
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| 2311 |
George, the eldest son of Thomas Milsted and Ann (nee Gregory), had a very short life, dying a little past his first wedding anniversary. He did, however, manage to father one child before his untimely end: Georgina, born during 1856.
By 1871 George's wife, Emily, had remarried a man by the name of John Pepper, a labourer at the local cement works. By him she had an additional four children. Despite Georgina never having known her father, she must have be raised with his memory ever present as unlike other children of that time Georgina was always recorded with her correct birth surname - that of Milsted, on census and other contemporary records. | MILSTED, George (I2616)
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| 2312 |
Gertrude of Saxony (c. 1030 – August 4, 1113), also known as Gertrude Billung, was a countess of Holland by marriage to Floris I, Count of Holland, and countess of Flanders by marriage to Robert I, Count of Flanders. She was regent of Holland in 1061-1067 during the minority of her son Dirk V, and regent of Flanders during the absence of her spouse in 1086-1093.
Biography
She was the daughter of Bernard II, Duke of Saxony[1] and Eilika of Schweinfurt.
Countess of Holland
In c. 1050, she married Floris I, Count of Holland (c. 1017 – June 28, 1061).[2] Upon the death of her spouse in 1061, her son Dirk V became Count of Holland.[2] Since he was a minor, she became regent.
When Dirk V came into power, William I, Bishop of Utrecht, took advantage of the situation, occupying territory that he had claimed in Holland. Gertrude and her son withdrew to the islands of Frisia (Zeeland), leaving William to occupy the disputed lands.
Countess of Flanders
In 1063 Gertrude married Robert of Flanders (Robert the Frisian),[3] the second son of Baldwin V of Flanders. This act gave Dirk the Imperial Flanders as an appanage – including the islands of Frisia west of the Frisian Scheldt.
She and her husband then acted as co-regents of Holland for her son during his minority.
When her spouse left for a journey to Jerusalem in 1086-1093, Gertrude served as regent of Flanders during his absence.
Family and children
She had a total of seven children with Floris I, Count of Holland:
Albert (b. c. 1051), a canon in Liege.
Dirk V (c. 1052, Vlaardingen–17 June 1091).
Peter (b. c. 1053), a canon in Liége.
Bertha (c. 1055–1094, Montreuil-sur-Mer), who married Philip I of France in 1072.[2]
Floris (b. c. 1055), a canon in Liége.
Matilda (b. c. 1057)
Adela (b. c. 1061), who married Count Baudouin I of Guînes.
From her second marriage to Robert of Flanders she had five children:
Robert II of Flanders (c. 1065 – October 5, 1111).[3]
Adela (d. 1115), who first married king Canute IV of Denmark,[3] and was the mother of Charles the Good, later count of Flanders. She then married Roger Borsa, duke of Apulia.
Gertrude, who married Theodoric II, Duke of Lorraine,[3] and was the mother of Thierry of Alsace, also later count of Flanders.
Philip of Loo, whose illegitimate son William of Ypres was also a claimant to the county of Flanders.
Ogiva, abbess of Messines.
References
Rider 2013, p. 65.
Nicholas 1999, p. 117.
Nicholas 1999, p. 113.
Sources
Nicholas, Karen S. (1999). "Countess as Rulers in Flanders". In Evergates, Theodore (ed.). Aristocratic Women in Medieval France. University of Pennsylvania Press.
Rider, Jeff (2013). "Vice, Tyranny, Violence, and the Usurpation of Flanders (1071) in Flemish Historiography from 1093 to 1294". In Guynn, Noah D.; Stahuljak, Zrinka (eds.). Violence and the Writing of History in the Medieval Francophone World. Boydell & Brewer.
External links
Genealogy A-Z
Medieval Lands Project on Gertrude of Saxony | Gertrude of Saxony (I19109)
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| 2313 |
GET = Will Wybarne Geoffrey Goodnestone 1527 1527 PRC/17/17/296b
First name(s) Elizabeth
Last name Wyborn
Gender Female
Birth year -
Birth place -
Baptism year 1583
Baptism date 24 Nov 1583
Residence Chilham, Kent, England
Place Chilham
County Kent
Country England
Father's first name(s) Richard
Father's last name Wyborn
Possible lead to father:
SURNAME GIVEN NAME EVT DATE YEAR PARENTS/SPOUSE PLACE SOURCE
WIBOURNE Marie C 01 Apr 1576 do Matthew Chartham BT
SURNAME GIVEN NAME EVENT YEAR COMMENTS LATHE, HUNDRED SOURCE
WYBARD Richard TAX 1334/35 Sutton, Codsheath LS
WYBARN Robert TAX 1334/35 de Blakehalle Sutton, Codsheath LS
WYBARN Roger TAX 1334/35 Sutton, Codsheath LS
WYBARN Julian TAX 1334/5 Aylesford, Eythorne LS
WYBERD John TAX 1334/5 Shepway, Worth LS
WYBERT ------------------- TAX 1334/5 heirs of Richard Scray, Wye LS
WYBERT' Robert TAX 1334/5 St. Augustine, Ringslow LS | WYBORN, Alice (I14662)
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| 2314 |
Gilber John was born during April 1858 and baptised on 28 May 1858. He died of whopping cough at age 11 months. | KENNETT, Gilbert John (I4767)
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| 2315 |
Gilber John was born on 13 October 1861. In 1881 he was an apprentice on board a ship called the "Estafette" docked in Milton in Gravesend. He was yet another Kennett written down as Bennett. The master of the ship may have been a close family friend through his mother. Samuel Bussell was his name and there were Bussey's who were friends or relations. | KENNETT, Gilbert John (I4782)
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| 2316 |
Gilbert de Clare was also Earl of Pembroke and Lord-Marcher. | DE CLARE, Gilbert 2nd Earl of Surrey, Earl of Pembroke (I1844)
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| 2317 |
Gilbert de Clare, 6th Earl of Hertford,[1] 7th Earl of Gloucester (2 September 1243 – 7 December 1295) was a powerful English noble. He was also known as "Red" Gilbert de Clare or "The Red Earl", probably because of his hair colour or fiery temper in battle. He held the Lordship of Glamorgan which was one of the most powerful and wealthy of the Welsh Marcher Lordships as well as over 200 English manors (172 in the Honor of Clare).[2]
Contents
1 Lineage
2 Massacre of the Jews at Canterbury
3 The Battle of Lewes
4 Excommunication
5 Activities as a Marcher Lord
6 The Welsh war in 1282
7 Private Marcher War
8 Marriage and succession
9 Death and burial
10 Ancestry
11 External links
12 References
Lineage
Gilbert de Clare was born at Christchurch, Hampshire, the son of Richard de Clare, Earl of Hertford and Gloucester, and of Maud de Lacy, Countess of Lincoln, daughter of John de Lacy and Margaret de Quincy.[3] Gilbert inherited his father's estates in 1262. He took on the titles, including Lord of Glamorgan, from 1263. Being under age at his father's death, he was made a ward of Humphrey de Bohun, 2nd Earl of Hereford.
Massacre of the Jews at Canterbury
During the Second Barons' War in April 1264, Gilbert de Clare led the massacre of the Jews at Canterbury,[4] as Simon de Montfort's supporters had done elsewhere.[5] Gilbert de Clare's castles of Kingston and Tonbridge were taken by the King, Henry III. However, the King allowed Clare's Countess Alice de Lusignan, who was in the latter, to go free because she was his niece; but on 12 May Clare and Montfort were denounced as traitors.
The Battle of Lewes
Two days later, just before the Battle of Lewes, on 14 May, Simon de Montfort knighted the Earl and his brother Thomas. The Earl commanded the central division of the Baronial army, which formed up on the Downs west of Lewes. When Prince Edward had left the field in pursuit of Montfort's routed left wing, the King and Earl of Cornwall were thrown back to the town. Henry took refuge in the Priory of St Pancras, and Gilbert accepted the surrender of the Earl of Cornwall, who had hidden in a windmill. Montfort and the Earl were now supreme and Montfort in effect de facto King of England.
Excommunication
Douce Apocalypse, c. 1265–70. The dragon, who is Satan, comes forth again (Rev. 20:7). Among the flags of the host of Satan is that of Gilbert de Clare, Earl of Gloucester, who had opposed Henry III.
On 20 October 1264, Gilbert and his associates were excommunicated by Pope Clement IV, and his lands placed under an interdict.[citation needed] In the following month, by which time they had obtained possession of Gloucester and Bristol, the Earl was proclaimed to be a rebel. However at this point he changed sides as he fell out with Montfort and the Earl, in order to prevent Montfort's escape, destroyed ships at the port of Bristol and the bridge over the River Severn at Gloucester.[citation needed] Having changed sides, Clare shared the Prince's victory at Kenilworth on 16 July, and in the Battle of Evesham, 4 August, in which Montfort was slain, he commanded the second division and contributed largely to the victory.[citation needed]On 24 June 1268 he took the Cross at Northampton in repentance and contrition for his past misdeeds.[citation needed][clarification needed]
Activities as a Marcher Lord
In October 1265, as a reward for supporting Prince Edward, Gilbert was given the castle and title of Abergavenny and honour and castle of Brecknock. At Michaelmas his disputes with Llewelyn the Last were submitted to arbitration, but without a final settlement. Meanwhile, he was building Caerphilly Castle into a fortress.[6] On 6 October 1265 he received the papal absolution of his excommunication, and on 9 October that year the pardon of the King for his former support of Montfort.
At the end of the year 1268 he refused to obey the King's summons to attend parliament, alleging that, owing to the constant inroads of Llewelyn the Last, his Welsh estates needed his presence for their defence. At the death of Henry III, 16 November 1272, the Earl took the lead in swearing fealty to Edward I, who was then in Sicily on his return from the Crusade. The next day, with the Archbishop of York, he entered London and proclaimed peace to all, Christians and Jews, and for the first time, secured the acknowledgment of the right of the King's eldest son to succeed to the throne immediately. Thereafter, he was joint Guardian of England, during the King's absence, and on the new King's arrival in England, in August 1274, entertained him at Tonbridge Castle.
The Welsh war in 1282
See also: Conquest of Wales by Edward I
During Edward's invasion of Wales in 1282, Clare insisted on leading an attack into southern Wales. King Edward made Clare the commander of the southern army invading Wales. However, Clare's army faced disaster after being heavily defeated at the Battle of Llandeilo Fawr. Following this defeat, Clare was relieved of his position as the southern commander and was replaced by William de Valence, 1st Earl of Pembroke (whose son had died during the battle).
Private Marcher War
In the next year, 1291, he quarrelled with the Earl of Hereford, Humphrey de Bohun, 3rd Earl of Hereford, grandson of his onetime guardian, about the Lordship of Brecknock, where Bohun accused Clare of building a castle on his land culminated in a private war between them. Although it was a given right for Marcher Lords to wage private war the King tested this right in this case, first calling them before a court of their Marcher peers, then realising the outcome would be coloured by their likely avoidance of prejudicing one of their greatest rights they were both called before the superior court, the Kings own. At this both were imprisoned by the King, both sentenced to having their lands forfeit for life and Clare, the Earl of Gloucester, as the aggressor, was fined 10,000 marks, and the Earl of Hereford 1,000 marks. They were released almost immediately and both of their lands completely restored to them—however, they had both been taught a very public lesson and their prestige diminished and the King's authority shown for all.
Marriage and succession
Gilbert's first marriage was to Alice de Lusignan, also known as Alice de Valence, the daughter of Hugh XI of Lusignan and of the family that succeeded the Marshal family to the title of the Earl of Pembroke in the person of William de Valence, 1st Earl of Pembroke. They married in 1253, when Gilbert was ten years old. She was of high birth, being a niece of King Henry, but the marriage floundered. Gilbert and Alice separated in 1267; allegedly, Alice's affections lay with her cousin, Prince Edward. Previous to this, Gilbert and Alice had produced two daughters:
Isabella de Clare (10 March 1262 – 1333), after a marriage with Guy de Beauchamp, 10th Earl of Warwick having been contemplated, or possibly having taken place and then annulled, married Maurice de Berkeley, 2nd Baron Berkeley
Joan de Clare (1264 – after 1302), married (1) Duncan Macduff, 7th Earl of Fife; (2) Gervase Avenel.
After his marriage to Alice de Lusignan was annulled in 1285, Gilbert married Joan of Acre, a daughter of King Edward I of England and his first wife Eleanor of Castile. King Edward sought to bind Clare, and his assets, more closely to the Crown by this means. By the provisions of the marriage contract, their joint possessions and Clare's extensive lands could only be inherited by a direct descendant, i.e. close to the Crown, and if the marriage proved childless, the lands would pass to any children Joan may have by further marriage.
On 3 July 1290, the Earl gave a great banquet at Clerkenwell to celebrate his marriage of 30 April 1290 with Joan of Acre (1272 – 23 April 1307) after waiting for the Pope to sanction the marriage. Edward then gave large estates to Gilbert, including one in Malvern. Disputed hunting rights on these led to several armed conflicts with Humphrey de Bohun, 3rd Earl of Hereford, that Edward resolved.[7] Gilbert made gifts to the Priory, and also had a "great conflict" about hunting rights and a ditch that he dug, with Thomas de Cantilupe, Bishop of Hereford, that was settled by costly litigation.[8] Gilbert had a similar conflict with Godfrey Giffard, Bishop and Administrator of Worcester Cathedral (and formerly Chancellor of England. Godfrey, who had granted land to the Priory, had jurisdictional disputes about Malvern Priory, resolved by Robert Burnell, the then Chancellor.[9] Thereafter, Gilbert and Joan are said to have taken the Cross and set out for the Holy Land. In September, he signed the Barons' letter to the Pope, and on 2 November, surrendered to the King his claim to the advowson of the Bishopric of Llandaff.
Gilbert and Joan had one son: also Gilbert, and three daughters: Eleanor, Margaret and Elizabeth. Gilbert, Earl of Hertford and Gloucester (1291–1314) succeeded to his father's titles and was killed at the Battle of Bannockburn. Eleanor de Clare (1292–1337) married Hugh Despenser the Younger, favourite of her uncle Edward II. Hugh was executed in 1326, and Eleanor married secondly William de la Zouche. Margaret de Clare (1293–1342) married firstly Piers Gaveston (executed in 1312) and then Hugh de Audley. The youngest sister Elizabeth de Clare (1295–1360) married John de Burgh in 1308 at Waltham Abbey, then Theobald of Verdun in 1316, and finally Roger d'Amory in 1317. Each marriage was brief, produced one child (a son by the 1st, daughters by the 2nd and 3rd), and left Elizabeth a widow.
Death and burial
He died at Monmouth Castle on 7 December 1295, and was buried at Tewkesbury Abbey, on the left side of his grandfather Gilbert de Clare. His extensive lands were enjoyed by his surviving wife Joan of Acre until her death in 1307.
Ancestry
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Ancestors of Gilbert de Clare, 7th Earl of Gloucester
External links
Inquisition Post Mortem No. 371, dated 1295
References
Clare, Gilbert de [called Gilbert the Red], seventh earl of Gloucester and sixth earl of Hertford". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/5438. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
Page, W. (1927) Parishes: Chilton. A History of the County of Buckingham: Volume 4. Ed. London, England: Victoria County History.
Harrison, B.H. (2009). The Family Forest Descendants of Milesius of Spain for 84 Generations. The Family Forest National Treasure Edition. Kamuela, HI: Millicent Publishing Company, Inc.
Richard Huscroft, Expulsion: England's Jewish Solution (2006), p. 105.
Robin R. Mundill (2010), The King's Jews, London: Continuum, ISBN 9781847251862, LCCN 2010282921, OCLC 466343661, OL 24816680M, p89-91
"Llywelyn ap Gruffydd – An unsettled reign". BBC Wales. Retrieved 31 July 2018.
Clive H. Knowles, Clare, Gilbert de [called Gilbert the Red], seventh earl of Gloucester and sixth earl of Hertford (1243–1295), magnate, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography.
Nott, James (1885). Some of the Antiquities of Moche Malvern (Great Malvern). Malvern: John Thompson. p. 14. Retrieved 6 January 2010.
Susan J. Davies, Giffard, Godfrey (1235?–1302), administrator and bishop of Worcester, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. | DE CLARE, Gilbert 6th Earl of Hertford,[1] 7th Earl of Gloucester (I19730)
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| 2318 |
Given the large number of similar names that run throughout the Ruck family and the sometimes small geographic area that they chose to live in, discovering the existence of an entirely separate family group headed by Simon and wife Mary at Chilham came about through a slow and labourious process. My first hint at the existence of a second Simon/Mary family came from the Will of Simon, Sr. 1697 at Canterbury, wherein he refers to his son, "Simon by his then current wife". Following this Simon through, I traced the trail along the following course:
1. A Simon was buried at Chilham during 1722. If this Simon was the fellow who was christened at Chilham in 1719 and if that Simon was also the son of Simon and Mary Fugler, then the Simon of the Will of 1792 would no exist. Yet, the Will of 1792 clearly ties a Simon to brothers named John and William. Furthermore, William's Will (of Canterbury) refers to his brothers Simon and Nathaniel via his nephew John at Norton. Therefore, Simon who died in 1722 at Chilham had to be a separate fellow entirely.
2. Simon of Canterbury on his burial indicates that he was "of Chilham". Also, he had a son named Simon christened in 1663 but no burial for that Simon has yet to be discovered.
3. There is the appearance of a christening for a William, son of Simon and Mary, at Chilham on 11 June 1715. In the very same year, at Throwley there is the christening of Smith on 17 March. At first, it was thought that perhaps Smith was an error in the name of the child and that the parents having travelled between one parish and another merely had the child re-christened. There is no had evidence to support this theory. Furthermore, Smith was buried in Canterbury some years later. Hence, once again, we have two separate individuals being christened by parents called Simon and Mary in the very same year. Additionally, Simon and Mary of Throwley christen a son named William on 15 May 1722 but no burial of the earlier William (1715) can be located.
4. There is a Simon who was buried during 1786 at Chilham. Who is he, if not the son of Simon and grandson of Simon of Canterbury. Therefore, we need a separate Simon christening that is not tied to Simon and Mary Fugler if we are to make this combination work. Alternatively, the Simon buried during 1786 at Chilham is likely the fellow who married Sarah Goodsen. Establishing a second Simon and Mary family with son Simon who married Sarah Goodsen, now also provides amply opportunity for another William to be christened in 1751 at Chilham.
5. Lastly, establishing the Simon and Mary at Chilham during the early 1720s also now provides a possible female candidate to marry Richard Best. On that marriage the parties are described as being Mary Ruck, widow of Chilham to Richard Best, bachelor. That marriage took place during 1725. Simon, the now believed husband of Mary at Chilham appears to have been buried at Chilham during 1722. | RUCK, Simon (I5610)
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| 2319 |
GOLDSWORTHY, Walter year 1973 vol. 14, fol. 566
Newfoundland Wills
Index to estate files, 1830 - 1996
G (Part 1)
Estate Files contain information for people who died intestate
and a surviving relative petitioned the Supreme Court of Newfoundland.
This index transcribed from the LDS FHL Microfilm 2056198 | GOLDSWORTHY, Walter (I635)
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| 2320 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I119)
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| 2321 |
Grandson of John, second Earl of Bridgewater. | EGERTON, William LL.D. (I6949)
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| 2322 |
GREGORY John D 30-Jul 1910 76 Faversham C-748 Barge Captain, 1117 Faversham Cem Bk | GREGORY, John (I2423)
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| 2323 |
GREGORY Mary Ann D 2-Aug 1910 74 Faversham C-748 Wife of John, 1120 Faversham Cem Bk | BRENCHLEY, Mary Ann (I2467)
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| 2324 |
GREGORY, CYRIL ALFRED GEORGE Order
GRO Reference: 1905 J Quarter in MEDWAY Volume 02A Page 740 | GREGORY, Cyril Alfred (I16670)
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| 2325 |
GREGORY, FRANK ERNEST COOK Order
GRO Reference: 1899 J Quarter in FAVERSHAM Volume 02A Page 933 | GREGORY, Frank Ernest (I2373)
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| 2326 |
GREGORY, GEORGE CHARLES HEELEY
GRO Reference: 1889 D Quarter in YORK Volume 09D Page 47
Lived at 172 Simcoe Street, Toronto, Ontario when he enlisted for WWI in May 1916 at Niagara-on-the-Lake. He was single. Sister Mrs. Rose Sparrow was given as next-of-kin. She lived at 62 Carisbrooke Road, Milton, Portsmouth, England at the time. Regt #3110538. | GREGORY, George Charles (I18334)
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| 2327 |
Grimley Surname Origin
The Oxford Dictionary of Family Names in Britain and Ireland
edited by Patrick Hanks, Richard Coates, Peter McClure
p. 1134
Grimley
Variants: Grimbly, Grimbley, Grimsley
Current frequencies: GB 1087, Ireland 387
GB frequency 1881: 632
Main GB location 1881: Warwicks, Leics, and Staffs; also Lancs
Main Irish Location 1847-64: Armagh; also Dublin
1. English: locative name from Grimley (Worcs). Early bearers: [...] Grimeslea, 1186 in Pipe Rolls; Iuo de Grimesl, 1221 in Assize Rolls (Worcs); Geoffrey Grymely, 1329 in Subsidy Rolls (Suffolk); Willelmus Grymleye, 1377 in Poll Tax (Saint Martin, Worcs); Symon Grymley, 1567 in IGI (Lichfield, Staffs); Agnes Grymeley, 1588 in IGI (Harborough Magna, Warwicks); William Grimley, 1592 in ProB 11 (Caythorpe, Lincs); Susanna Grimley, 1611 in IGI (Tamworth, Staffs); Thomas Grimsley, 1634 in IGI (Claybrooke, Leics): Richard Grimsly, 1725 in IGI (Bicester, Oxon); Joseph Grimbley, 1758 in IGI (Austrey, Warwicks); Richard Grimbly, 1765 in IGI (Banbury, Oxon).
2. Irish: altered form of Gormley.
Early bearers: Conley Gromley, 1575 in Fiants Elizabeth SS2609: Edmond Gromly 1587-8 in Fiants Elizabeth SS5155 (Couraghston). | GRIMLEY, John (I3234)
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| 2328 |
Grocer and provision merchant in 1881 living at St. Mary Redcliff, Bristol. | CLATWORTHY, William (I15656)
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Groom Last Name: SPILLETT Groom First Name: Ray Lasley Groom Residence: Rockland, Idaho Bride Last Name: BERNARD Bride First Name: Grace Bride Residence: Rockland, Idaho Place: Brigham City Date: 14 Nov 1931 County of Record: Box Elder State: Utah Volume: 5 Page: 102 | SPILLETT, Ray Lasley (I9012)
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| 2330 |
Groom of the Chamber to Charles II | HAMILTON, James (I12837)
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| 2331 |
Groom's birth year 1859
Groom's age 27
Groom's marital status Bachelor
Groom's occupation Iron Plate Worker
Groom's residence All Saints Maidstone
Groom's father's name Walter
Groom's father's occupation Watchmaker?
Bride's age 22
Bride's marital status Spinster
Birth year 1864
Bride's residence All Saint's Maidstone
Bride's father's name Walter
Bride's father's occupation Licensed Victualler
Banns | Family (F6420)
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| 2332 |
Groom's Name: Stuart Mcaloney
Groom's Birth Date:
Groom's Birthplace:
Groom's Age:
Bride's Name: Jane Shaw
Bride's Birth Date:
Bride's Birthplace:
Bride's Age:
Marriage Date: 16 Sep 1865
Marriage Place: Coleraine, Londonderry, Ireland
Groom's Father's Name: James Mcaloney
Groom's Mother's Name:
Bride's Father's Name: Joseph Shaw
Bride's Mother's Name:
Groom's Race:
Groom's Marital Status: Single
Groom's Previous Wife's Name:
Bride's Race:
Bride's Marital Status: Single
Bride's Previous Husband's Name:
Indexing Project (Batch) Number: M70234-1
System Origin: Ireland-EASy
Source Film Number: 101479
Reference Number: p567 cn142
Collection: Ireland Marriages, 1619-1898 | Family (F3325)
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| 2333 |
Groom-porter to Queen Elizabeth I | CORNWALLIS, Edward (I9697)
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| 2334 |
Groom: Raymond E. Mornningstar, a bachelor, electrician, aged 20, Presbyterian, resided Grimsby Beach, Ontario, father Wallace Morningstar, mother Minnie Jackson and Bride: Ida Marie Amiss, a spinster, domestic servant, 18, Baptist, resided 427 Crawford Street, Toronto, Ontario, father William Amiss, mother Lavina CoulsonIntended place of marriage at Toronto, in the County of York. Witnesses: Mrs. J. M. Warner, 192 Northcliffe Blvd., Toronto and Mary L. Warner, 192 Northcliffe Blvd., Toronto on the 12th April 1924. Signature of person solemnizing the marriage J. M. Warner, 192 Northcliffe Blvd., Toronto, denomination Baptist, registration certificate number 6126. | Family (F3561)
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| 2335 |
Grylls
Variants: Grills
• Current frequencies: GB 198, Ireland 0
• GB frequency 1881: 134
• Main GB location 1881: Cornwall
English: variant of Grill with post-medieval excrescent -s .
Early bearers:
Williame Grills, 1563, Agnes Grylls, 1569 in IGI (Morwenstow, Cornwall); Samson Gryles, 1594 in PROB 11 (Launceston, Cornwall); Radulphus Gryles, 1607 in IGI (Saint Ewe, Cornwall); Nathannyell Grylles, 1671 in IGI (Lanreath, Cornwall).
The Oxford Dictionary of Family Names in Britain and Ireland
Patrick Hanks, Richard Coates, and Peter McClure
Publisher: Oxford University PressPrint Publication Date: 2016Print ISBN-13: 9780199677764Published online: 2016Current Online Version: 2016eISBN: 9780191781797
https://www.oxfordreference.com/view/10.1093/acref/9780199677764.001.0001/acref-9780199677764-e-17355?rskey=LAMrt7&result=17341
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | GRILLS, Thomas (I16487)
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| 2336 |
GUILLAUME d'Angoulême, son of VULGRIN II Comte d'Angoulême & his first wife Pontia de la Marche (-Messina 7 Aug 1179). The Historia Pontificum et Comitum Engolismensis names "Guillelmum primogenitum" as son of Comte Vulgrin II and his wife "Pontia filia Comitis de Marcha". "Willelmus Talafars comes Engolismensæ filius Vulgrini comitis" donated property to Saint-Pierre d'Angoulême by charter dated to [1089/1101] which refers to donations by "Willelmi Talafer avi mei et Vulgrini patris mei". He succeeded his father in 1140 as GUILLAUME VI TALAFER Comte d'Angoulême. "Guillelmus Talaferii comes Engolismensis" exempted Notre-Dame de Dalon from taxes on its lands by charter dated 1146. He joined the crusade in 1147. An exchange of territories with Saint-Amant-de-Boixe recorded in a charter dated to [1146/59] recites prior donations by "Vulgrinus comes Engolismæ" and after his death by "filius suus domnus Vuillelmus Talafer". "Wmus Talafer, comes Engolismensis, filius Wlgrini comitis…et Arnaldus Bocardi" issued a charter dated 1163 concerning the forest of Marange, which names "filii mei Wlgrinus et W Talafer". The Chronicon Gaufredi Vosiensis records that "Guillermus filius Wlgrimi Comes Engolismensis, Ademarus Vicecomes Lemovicensis, Oliverius filius Gulpherii senioris de Turribus" were among those who left for Jerusalem in 1178, stating that "Engolismensis Comes Guillermus Sector-ferri" died "VII Id Aug apud Messinam Siciliæ".
m firstly (after 1137) as her third husband, EMMA de Limoges, widow firstly of BARDON de Cognac and secondly of GUILLAUME X Duke of Aquitaine [GUILLAUME VIII Comte de Poitou], daughter of ADEMAR [II] Vicomte de Limoges & his [second wife Marie des Cars]. The Chronicon Gaufredi Vosiensis names "aliam filiam [Ademari]…Ennoa (seu Emma)" stating that she married "Guillermus Dux, frater Raymundi Antiochiæ principis" after the death of her earlier husband "Bardoni de Coniaco", before being abducted by "Willelmus Sector-ferri, filius Wlgrini Comitis Engolismensis". "Emma comitissa, uxor comitis Engolismensis, filia Ademari vicecomitis Lemovicensis" donated property "ripas stagni de Chalamans" to Notre-Dame de Dalon by undated charter.
m secondly ([1150/51]) as her third husband, MARGUERITE de Turenne, widow of ADEMAR [IV] Vicomte de Limoges and divorced wife of EBLES [III] Vicomte de Ventadour, daughter of RAYMOND [I] Vicomte de Turenne & his wife Mathilde du Perche . The Chronicon Gaufredi Vosiensis records that "Ademaro vicecomite Lemovicensi, sponsam illius Margaretam, sororem Bosonis de Torenna" married thirdly "Guillermus Sector-ferri Comes Engolismensis, multorum pater liberorum". Her parentage and first marriage are confirmed by the cartulary of Tulle St Martin which records a donation by "Ademarus vicecomes Lemovicensis et Aimericus de Gordo mariti duarum sororum Bosonis, Mangnæ et Margaritæ" dated 21 Dec 1143 made "pro anima Bosonis vicecomitis de Torenna qui gladio corruit" on the day of his burial, authorised by "Ebolus vicecomes de Ventedorn et Archambaldus vicecomes de Comborn", and made "in manu domni Ebali abbatis Tutellensis patrui ipsius Bosonis". The Chronicon Gaufredi Vosiensis records that "Ademaro vicecomite Lemovicensi, sponsam illius Margaretam, sororem Bosonis de Torenna" married "Ebolus Ventadorensis, filius Eboli Cantatoria" after her first husband died, but that the marriage ended after two years because of their consanguinity. "Vuillelmus Talafers comes Engolismensis Vulgrini filius et Margarita uxor mea et filii nostri Vulgrinus scilicet primogenitus noster, Vuillelmus Talafers, Ademarus, Grisetus, Fulco et Almodis filia nostra uxor Amanei de Lebret" transferred rights to Saint-Amant-de-Boixe by charter dated 1171.
Comte Guillaume VI & his second wife had six children. | TAILLEFER, Guillaume VI Comte d'Angoulême (I10662)
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| 2337 |
Guncelin de Badlesmere (c.1232–c.1301), son of Bartholomew de Badlesmere (died 1248), was Justice of Chester and Cheshire in England.[1]
Guncelin de Badlesmere was appointed to the office of Justice of Chester and Cheshire on 16 October 1274.[2] He held this position until 1281, when Reynold de Grey was appointed to this role and Gunselm was instructed to deliver the associated premises to him with effect from 29 September of that year.[3]
An example of his close connection with the Crown appears in the account of the delivery of the royal seal of King Edward I by his son Edward to the Lord Chancellor, John de Langeton, which took place at Tonbridge Castle, Kent on 27 August 1297, with Sir Guncelin de Badlesmere being one of the witnesses.[4]
Gunselin was evidently still alive on 22 March 1299/1300, when Walter de Gloucester, as "escheator this side the Trent", was instructed to investigate allegations that Guncelm had damaged property belonging to the estate of Edward, son and heir of Philip Burnel, a minor whom the King had committed into Guncelin's custody.[5]
On 13 April 1301, a writ was issued to initiate enquiries into the identity of the next heir of lands that had been held directly from the King by Guncelin de Badlesmere. Presumably, he had died shortly before that date. An inquisition post mortem held on 30 April of that year in respect of land he held in Kent at Badlesmere and Donewelleshethe confirmed that the next heir was his son Bartholomew de Badlesmere, 1st Baron Badlesmere (c.1275–1322).[6]
By 4 October 1302, it was established that the damage to Edward Burnel's inheritance had taken place before Gunselin became involved. Therefore, the lands concerned were to be delivered to the executors of Gunselin's will.[7]
He died in the 29th year of the reign of Edward I (in 1301), and was buried in Badlesmere church, where in 1800 it was reported that his wooden cross-legged effigy could still be found.[1]
References
Hasted, Edward (1800). "Parishes". The History and Topographical Survey of the County of Kent. Institute of Historical Research. 6: 467–481. Retrieved 8 February 2014.
Calendar of the Fine Rolls, Vol. 1 Edward I, pp. 30–31.
Calendar of the Fine Rolls, Vol. 1 Edward I, p. 155.
Calendar of the Fine Rolls, Vol. 1 Edward I, pp. 390–391.
Calendar of the Close Rolls Edward I, Vol 4, p.339.
Calendar of Inquisitions Post Mortem, 1st series, Vol. 4, No. 38.
Calendar of the Close Rolls Edward I, Vol 4, p.558.
External links
"Calendar of the Fine rolls Preserved in the Public Record Office, Vol. 1, Edward I, 1272–1307". Archived from the original on 14 September 2017. Retrieved 4 January 2015. | DE BADLESMERE, Gunselm (I19769)
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| 2338 |
Gunnor or Gonnor (circa 950-1031), was the wife of the Duke of Normandy Richard I is believed to be Josceline's sister.
Also known as the Gunnor Crépon or Gunnora, its origin is poorly established. It could be from a Danish family established in the Caux , however Crepon today Crépon , refers to a place name of Bessin . Dudo of Saint-Quentin reports that she belongs to a family of Danish nobility . His father Herbast (us) Crépon, son of a Rainulf of Crépon, the progenitor would Roricon Crépon (born around 870), Earl came from Denmark, set in the Duchy of Normandy and becomes the first lord Crépon. Rainulf Crépon wife Gunnor of Denmark, daughter of King Gorm of Denmark and his wife Thyra Danebod. Gunnor Normandy has Herfast brother of Crépon, father of Osbern Crépon , future Seneschal of Normandy .
Following a chance meeting told by Robert de Torigni , Gunnor wife more danico (Danish polygamous way, not according to the Christian rite) the Duke of Normandy, Richard I . This marriage seems to have been then "regularized" vis-a-vis the Church to 980-990, well after the death of the official wife, Emma.
Among the wives of the Dukes of Normandy, it is one of the few to have played an important role. According to the thesis (criticized) by Eleanor Searle , Gunnor belong to the Scandinavian families who settled in eastern Normandy under Richard I. His marriage would mark the rallying of the newcomers to the authority of the Duke . It is however not certain that Gunnor came from eastern Normandy . After the death of her husband, the Duchess seems to have a real regency of the duchy .
Mother of a Duke ( Richard II of Normandy ), an archbishop ( Robert Dane ) and queen ( Emma of Normandy ), it promotes the rise of these nieces and nephews. One of them marries Viscount of Rouen. Another is quite possibly the mother of William I of Warenne . A nephew, Osbern , Seneschal becomes Duke Robert the Magnificent .
Dudo of Saint-Quentin , appreciative towards Gunnor admits having collected a lot of information from his mouth to his De Gestis Normannaie ducum.
Descent [ edit | edit the code ]
Eight children were born of this union including:
Richard, the future Duke Richard II of Normandy
Robert will count of Evreux and Archbishop of Rouen
Mauger , Count of Mortain
Emma , future Queen of England
Havoise (or Hedwig) govern Britain
Mathilde married Eudes , Count of Blois
Men compose themselves and their own children, a powerful aristocratic group at the ducal court: the Richardides .
References [ change | edit the code ]
↑ Francois Neveux , A Brief History of the Normans, London: Constable and Robinson, Ltd., 2008, p. 73.
↑ Elizabeth Van Houts, The Normans in Europe, Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2008, p. 58.
↑ Eleanor Searle , "Fact and Pattern in Heroic History: Dudo of Saint-Quentin," Viator, No. 15, 1984 p.119-137 and Eleaor Searle, Predator Kinship and the establishment of Normand Power, 840-1066, Berkeley , University of California Press, 1988, p.61-67
↑ David Douglas suggests cotentinoise origin.
↑ Pierre Bauduin, First Normandy (tenth-eleventh centuries), Presses Universitaires de Caen, 2002 p.66 | DE PONT-AUDEMER, Josceline (I13577)
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| 2339 |
Guy de Beauchamp, 10th Earl of Warwick
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Guy de Beauchamp
Earl of Warwick
Guy de Beauchamp.jpg
Guy de Beauchamp standing over the decapitated body of Piers Gaveston. From the 15th-century Rous Rolls.[1]
Born c. 1272
Died 12 August 1315
Buried Bordesley Abbey, Worcestershire
Spouse(s) Isabel de Clare ?
Alice de Toeni
See detailsIssue
Elizabeth de Beauchamp
Thomas de Beauchamp, 11th Earl of Warwick
John de Beauchamp, 1st Baron Beauchamp
Father William de Beauchamp, 9th Earl of Warwick
Mother Maud FitzJohn
Arms of Beauchamp: Gules, a fesse between six cross crosslets or
Guy de Beauchamp, 10th Earl of Warwick (c. 1272 – 12 August 1315) was an English magnate, and one of the principal opponents of King Edward II and his favourite, Piers Gaveston. Guy de Beauchamp was the son of William de Beauchamp, the first Beauchamp earl of Warwick, and succeeded his father in 1298. He distinguished himself at the Battle of Falkirk and subsequently, as a capable servant of the crown under King Edward I. After the succession of Edward II in 1307, however, he soon fell out with the new king and the king's favourite, Piers Gaveston. Warwick was one of the main architects behind the Ordinances of 1311, that limited the powers of the king and banished Gaveston into exile.
When Gaveston returned to England in 1312 – contrary to the rulings of the Ordinances – he was taken into custody by Aymer de Valence, 2nd Earl of Pembroke. Warwick abducted Gaveston and, together with Thomas, 2nd Earl of Lancaster, had him executed. The act garnered sympathy and support for the king, but Warwick and Lancaster nevertheless managed to negotiate a royal pardon for their actions. After the disastrous defeat at the Battle of Bannockburn in 1314, King Edward's authority was once more weakened, and the rebellious barons took over control of government. For Warwick the triumph was brief; he died the next year.
Guy de Beauchamp is today remembered primarily for his part in the killing of Gaveston, but by his contemporaries he was considered a man of exceptionally good judgement and learning. He owned what was for his time a large collection of books, and his advice was often sought by many of the other earls. Next to Lancaster, he was the wealthiest peer in the nation, and after his death his lands and title were inherited by his son, Thomas de Beauchamp, 11th Earl of Warwick.
Contents [hide]
1 Family background
2 Service to Edward I
3 Conflict with Edward II
4 Gaveston's death
5 Death and historical assessment
6 References
Family background[edit]
Seal of Guy de Beauchamp, 10th Earl of Warwick, as appended to the Barons' Letter, 1301. The arms shown are those of Newburgh, the family of his predecessors the Beaumont Earls of Warwick. The Beauchamps frequently quartered their own arms with those of Newburgh, on occasion placing the latter in the 1st & 4th quarters, positions of greatest honour
Armorial of Newburgh Earls of Warwick, adopted c. 1200 at start of age of heraldry: Checky azure and or a chevron ermine[3]
Guy de Beauchamp was the first son and heir of William de Beauchamp, 9th Earl of Warwick, (c. 1238 – 1298). His mother was Maud FitzJohn, daughter of John fitz Geoffrey, who was Justiciar of Ireland and a member of the council of fifteen that imposed the Provisions of Oxford on King Henry III.[4] William was the nephew of William Maudit, 8th Earl of Warwick, and when his uncle died without issue in 1268, he became the first Beauchamp earl of Warwick.[5] In 1271 or 1272 his first son was born, and in reference to the new family title, William named his son after the legendary hero Guy of Warwick.[1] William de Beauchamp was a capable military commander, who played an important part in the Welsh and Scottish wars of King Edward I.[5]
A marriage between Guy and Isabel de Clare, daughter of Gilbert de Clare, 6th Earl of Hertford, was contemplated, or possibly even took place and then annulled.[6][a] It was not until early 1309 that Guy married Alice de Toeni, a wealthy Hertfordshire heiress.[7] By this time Guy had already succeeded as Earl of Warwick, after his father's death in 1298.[8] By Alice, Guy had two sons, including his heir and successor, Thomas, and five daughters:
Maud de Beauchamp (died 1366); she married Geoffrey de Say, 2nd Lord Say, by whom she had issue. The Barons Saye and Sele are their descendants.
Isabella de Beauchamp; she married John Clinton.
Emma de Beauchamp; she married Rowland Odingsells.
Thomas de Beauchamp, 11th Earl of Warwick (14 February 1313/1314 – 13 November 1369), he married Katherine Mortimer, by whom he had fifteen children.
Lucia de Beauchamp; she married Robert de Napton.
John de Beauchamp, Lord Beauchamp KG (1315 – 2 December 1360); he carried the royal standard at the Battle of Crecy.
Elizabeth de Beauchamp (c. 1316–1359); she married in 1328 Thomas Astley, 3rd Lord Astley, by whom she had two sons, William Astley, 4th Lord Astley and Sir Thomas Astley, ancestor of the Astleys of Patshull.
Service to Edward I[edit]
Edward I knighted Guy de Beauchamp at Easter 1296.[9] Warwick's career of public service started with the Falkirk campaign in 1298.[1] Here he distinguished himself, and received a reward of Scottish lands worth 1000 marks a year.[10] At this point his father was already dead, but it was not until 5 September that Guy did homage to the king for his lands, and became Earl of Warwick[9] and hereditary High Sheriff of Worcestershire for life. He continued in the king's service in Scotland and elsewhere. In 1299 he was present at the king's wedding to Margaret of France at Canterbury, and in 1300 he took part in the Siege of Caerlaverock.[6] The next year he was a signatory to a letter to the Pope, rejecting Rome's authority over the Scottish question, and also participated in negotiations with the French over the release of the Scottish King John Balliol.[6][11] He was present at the Siege of Stirling in 1304, serving under Edward, the Prince of Wales.[9] In March 1307 he made preparations to accompany Prince Edward to France, but this journey never took place.[6]
Early in 1307, Edward I made his last grant to Warwick, when he gave him John Balliol's forfeited lordship of Barnard Castle in County Durham.[6] On 7 July that year, near Burgh by Sands in Cumberland, Warwick was present when King Edward died.[12] Together with Thomas, Earl of Lancaster, and Henry de Lacy, Earl of Lincoln, he carried the ceremonial swords at the coronation of King Edward II on 25 February 1308.[9]
Conflict with Edward II[edit]
Before his death, the old king had exiled Prince Edward's favourite Piers Gaveston, and Warwick was among those charged with preventing Gaveston's return.[13] The new king, however, not only recalled his favourite, but soon also gave him the title of earl of Cornwall. Warwick was the only one of the leading earls who did not seal the charter, and from the start took on an antagonistic attitude to Edward II.[10] Gaveston was a relative upstart in the English aristocracy, and made himself unpopular among the established nobility by his arrogance and his undue influence on the king.[14] He gave mocking nicknames to the leading men of the realm, and called Warwick the "Black Dog of Arden".[b]
Warwick was in constant opposition to King Edward II. Great seal of Edward II
Gaveston was once more forced into exile, but Edward recalled him in less than a year. The king had spent the intervening time gathering support, and at the time, the only one to resist the return of Gaveston was Warwick.[15] With time, however, opposition to the king grew. Another source of contention was Edward abandoning his father's Scottish campaigns, a policy that opened the Border region up to devastating raids from the Scots.[16] This affected Warwick greatly, with his extensive landed interest in the north.[17] Tensions grew to the point where the king in 1310 had to ban Warwick and others from arriving at parliament in arms.[6] They still did, and at the parliament of March 1310, the king was forced to accept the appointment of a commission to draft a set of ordinances towards reform the royal government.[18]
The leaders of these so-called Lords Ordainers were Robert Winchelsey, Archbishop of Canterbury, on the side of the clergy, and Warwick, Lincoln and Lancaster among the earls.[18][19] Henry de Lacy, Earl of Lincoln, was the most experienced of the earls, and took on a modifying role in the group.[20] Thomas of Lancaster, who was Lincoln's son-in-law and heir, was the king's cousin and the wealthiest nobleman in the realm, but at this point he took a less active part in the reform movement.[21] Warwick is described by some sources as the leader of the Ordainers; he was certainly the most aggressive.[6] The set of Ordinances they drafted put heavy restrictions on the king's financial freedom, and his right to appoint his own ministers. It also – once more – ordered Gaveston to be exiled, to return only at the risk of excommunication.[22]
Gaveston's death[edit]
Gaveston's third and final exile was of even shorter duration, and after two months he was reunited with Edward in England.[23] Archbishop Winchelsey responded by excommunicating Gaveston, as the Ordinances had stipulated.[24] Lancaster, who had by this time inherited his father-in-law Lincoln, had taken over leadership of the baronial opposition.[25] A number of the barons set out in pursuit of Gaveston while the king left for York. Gaveston ensconced himself at Scarborough Castle, and on 19 May 1312 agreed on a surrender to Aymer de Valence, Earl of Pembroke, as long as his security would be guaranteed.[26]
Pembroke lodged his prisoner in Deddington in Oxfordshire. On 10 June, while Pembroke was away, Warwick forcibly carried away Gaveston to Warwick Castle.[27] Here, in the presence of Warwick, Lancaster and other magnates, Gaveston was sentenced to death at an improvised court. On 19 June he was taken to a place called Blacklow Hill – on Lancaster's lands – and decapitated. According to the Annales Londonienses chronicle, four shoemakers brought the corpse back to Warwick, but he refused to accept it, and ordered them to take it back to where they found it.[28] Gaveston's body was eventually taken to Oxford by some Dominican friars, and in 1315, King Edward finally had it buried at Kings Langley.[28]
The brutality and questionable legality of the earls' actions helped win political sympathy for the king.[29] Pembroke was particularly offended, as he had been made to break his promise of safety to Gaveston, and his chivalric honour had been damaged. From this point on Pembroke sided firmly with King Edward in the political conflict.[30] The king himself swore vengeance on his enemies, but found himself unable to move against them immediately, partly because they were in possession of a number of highly valuable royal jewels taken from Gaveston.[31][32] A settlement was reached in October, whereby the rebellious barons and their retainers received a pardon.[33] The king nevertheless emerged strengthened from the events, while Warwick and Lancaster were largely marginalised.[34] This all changed in 1314, when the king decided to stage his first major campaign against the Scots. Warwick and Lancaster refused to participate and the campaign ended in a humiliating English defeat at the Battle of Bannockburn on 24 June. This led to another political reversal and Edward was forced to reconfirm the Ordinances, and submit to the leadership of the rebellious barons.[35]
Death and historical assessment[edit]
The coat of arms of the Beauchamp family
In mid-July Warwick had to withdraw from government to his estates on account of illness.[36] When he died on 12 August 1315, political leadership was soon left almost entirely to Lancaster. The chronicler Thomas Walsingham reported rumours that the king had had Warwick poisoned.[37] He was buried at Bordesley Abbey in Worcestershire, an establishment to which his family had been benefactors.[6] In value, his possessions were second only to those of the earl of Lancaster among the nobility of England.[2] His lands, though primarily centred on Warwickshire and Worcestershire, were spread over nineteen counties as well as Scotland and the Welsh Marches.[6] His heir was his eldest son, whom he had named Thomas after the earl of Lancaster.[6] Thomas, born probably on 14 February 1314, did not succeed to his father's title until 1326, as Thomas de Beauchamp, 11th Earl of Warwick.[8][38] In the meanwhile Warwick's possessions went into the hands of the king, who donated Warwick's hunting dogs to the earl of Pembroke.[39] A younger son, named John, also became a peer, as John de Beauchamp, 1st Baron Beauchamp. Like his elder brother, he distinguished himself in the French wars, and was a founding member of the Order of the Garter.[40]
Guy de Beauchamp is probably best remembered for his opposition to King Edward II, and for his part in the death of Gaveston.[6] To contemporaries, however, he was considered a man of considerable learning and wisdom. His library, of which he donated 42 books to Bordesley Abbey during his lifetime, was extensive. It contained several saints' lives as well as romances about Alexander and King Arthur.[1] As mentioned, Edward I entrusted the supervision of his son to Warwick. Likewise, when the earl of Lincoln died in 1311, he supposedly instructed his son-in-law Thomas of Lancaster to heed the advice of Warwick, "the wisest of the peers".[41] Chronicles also praised Warwick's wisdom; the Vita Edwardi Secundi says that "Other earls did many things only after taking his opinion: in wisdom and council he had no peer".[1][6] Later historians have reflected this view, in the 19th century William Stubbs called Warwick "a discriminating and highly literate man, the wisdom of whom shone forth through the whole kingdom".[6] He was politically and economically well connected by traditional ties of kinship and marriage.
Warwick's death came at an inconvenient time and Thomas of Lancaster proved unequal to the task of governing the nation, so that further years of conflict and instability followed. Nevertheless, the problems of Edward II's reign were deep, and in the words of Michael Hicks: "one must doubt whether even Warwick could have brought unity as one chronicler supposed".[1]
References[edit]
^ Jump up to: a b c d e f Hicks, Michael (1991). Who's Who in Late Medieval England (1272-1485). Who's Who in British History Series. 3. London: Shepheard-Walwyn. ISBN 0-85683-092-5.
^ Jump up to: a b Maddicott, J. R. (1970). Thomas of Lancaster, 1307–1322: A Study in the Reign of Edward II. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 22–23. ISBN 0-19-821837-0.
Jump up ^ Source: Arms of "Thomas, Earl of Warwick" stated in several 13th-century Rolls of Arms, incl. Collins' Roll, c. 1296
Jump up ^ Carpenter, David (2004). "John fitz Geoffrey (c. 1206–1258)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford: Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/38271.
^ Jump up to: a b Coss, Peter (2004). "Beauchamp, William (IV) de, ninth earl of Warwick (c. 1238–1298)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford: Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/47242.
^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h i j k l m Hamilton, J. S. (2004). "Beauchamp, Guy de, tenth earl of Warwick (c. 1272–1315)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford: Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/1835.
Jump up ^ Cokayne, George (1910–59). The Complete Peerage of England, Scotland, Ireland, Great Britain and the United Kingdom. xii (New ed.). London: The St. Catherine Press. p. 774.
^ Jump up to: a b Fryde, E. B. (1961). Handbook of British Chronology (Second ed.). London: Royal Historical Society. p. 453.
^ Jump up to: a b c d Cokayne (1910–59), xii, pp. 370–2.
^ Jump up to: a b Maddicott (1970), p. 69.
Jump up ^ Prestwich, Michael (1997). Edward I (updated ed.). New Haven: Yale University Press. p. 495. ISBN 0-300-07209-0.
Jump up ^ Prestwich (1997), p. 24.
Jump up ^ Phillips, J.R.S. (1972). Aymer de Valence, Earl of Pembroke 1307-1324 (updated ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 557. ISBN 0-19-822359-5.
Jump up ^ McKisack, May (1959). The Fourteenth Century: 1307–1399. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 2–4. ISBN 0-19-821712-9.
Jump up ^ Maddicott (1970), p. 90.
Jump up ^ Maddicott (1970), pp. 108–9.
Jump up ^ Maddicott (1970), pp. 72, 111, 325.
^ Jump up to: a b McKisack (1959), p. 10.
Jump up ^ Prestwich, M.C. (2005). Plantagenet England: 1225–1360. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 182. ISBN 0-19-822844-9. OCLC 185767800.
Jump up ^ Phillips (1972), p. 9.
Jump up ^ Maddicott (1970), pp. 9, 84–7.
Jump up ^ The text of the Ordinances can be found in Rothwell, H. (ed.) (1975). English Historical Documents III, 1189–1327. London: Eyre & Spottiswoode. pp. 527–539. ISBN 0-413-23310-3.
Jump up ^ Hamilton, J. S. (1988). Piers Gaveston, Earl of Cornwall, 1307-1312: Politics and Patronage in the Reign of Edward II. Detroit; London: Wayne State University Press; Harvester-Wheatsheaf. pp. 92–3. ISBN 0-8143-2008-2.
Jump up ^ Hamilton (1988), p. 94.
Jump up ^ Maddicott (1970), p. 119.
Jump up ^ Hamilton (1988), p. 96.
Jump up ^ Hamilton (1988), p. 97.
^ Jump up to: a b Hamilton (1988), p. 99.
Jump up ^ McKisack (1959), pp. 28–9.
Jump up ^ Phillips (1972), pp. 36–7.
Jump up ^ Roberts, R. A. (ed.) (1929). "Edward II, the lords ordainers, and Piers Gaveston's jewels and horses, 1312-1313". Camden Miscellany. London: Royal Historical Society. viii: 26.
Jump up ^ Maddicott (1970), 130–54.
Jump up ^ McKisack (1959), p. 30.
Jump up ^ Maddicott (1970), p. 158–9.
Jump up ^ Prestwich (2005), p. 190.
Jump up ^ Phillips (1972), p. 92.
Jump up ^ Maddicott (1970), p. 170.
Jump up ^ Cokayne (1910–59), xii, pp. 372–5.
Jump up ^ Phillips (1972), p. 94.
Jump up ^ Cokayne (1910–59), ii, pp. 50–1.
Jump up ^ Maddicott (1970), p. 115. | DE BEAUCHAMP, Guy 10th Earl of Warwickshire (I8274)
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Gwendoline Doris Ford (born Fisher), 1922 - 2011
Gwendoline Doris Ford was born in 1922, to Charles Mortimer Fisher and Daisy Fisher.
Gwendoline married Geoffrey Evan Ford.
Gwendoline passed away in 2011, at age 89. | FISHER, Charles Mortimer (I16107)
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Gwladys ferch Dafydd Gam (died 1454) was a Welsh noblewoman, the daughter of Dafydd ap Llewelyn ap Hywel, otherwise known as Dafydd Gam, who was killed at the Battle of Agincourt in 1415.[1]
Gwladys was named "the star of Abergavenny" (Welsh: Seren-y-fenni)[2] —"Gwladys the happy and the faultless" by Welsh poet Lewys Glyn Cothi.[3] He describes the lady of Raglan Castle, which she became upon her second marriage, as a brilliant being, "like the sun—the pavilion of light."[4] She has been compared to the legendary Queen Marcia for her discretion and influence.[5]
Gwladys' father, Dafydd, was a gentleman of considerable property and a celebrated military figure, descended from the native Welsh rulers of Brycheiniog.[6][7] He was a prominent opponent of Owain Glyndŵr. Accounts of her mother are unclear. According to Prichard, Dafydd married Gwenllian, daughter of wealthy gentleman Gwilym ab Howel and grew up on an estate named "Petyn Gwyn" near the town of Brecon, in the parish of Garthbrengy,[2] The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography more recently reports that some genealogists claim Dafydd's wife to have been Gwladys, daughter of Gwilym ap Hywel Crach. (1374–6).[7]
On 16 September 1400, Owain Glyndŵr instigated the Welsh Revolt against the rule of Henry IV of England from the House of Lancaster. Dafydd, "one of Owain's most die-hard opponents," supported the English monarchy for the next twelve years[7] in opposition to his Welsh countrymen.[8]
During opposition to Owain Glyndŵr, Dafydd's lands in and around Brecon became a target for Glyndŵr's attacks. Owain is recorded to have arrived at the family's principal residence at Petyn Gwyn where he captured and assaulted Lady Gwenllian. After imprisoning her inside the house, he burnt the mansion to the ground.[9][10]
Driven from their last home in Wales, Gwladys, with her father, grandfather, and her two brothers, found refuge at King Henry IV's court,[10][11] where Gwladys served as a Maid of Honour firstly to Mary de Bohun (c. 1368–1394), wife of Henry IV, and afterwards to Queen Joan (c. 1370–1437), his second wife and only queen consort.[8][12]
First marriage[edit]
Sir Roger Vaughan[edit]
Gateway and country lane near Bredwardine
Gwladys married her first husband, Sir Roger Vaughan of Bredwardine also known as Roger Fychan (the younger),[13] after her family returned to Wales. Roger, a gentleman of wealth, rank, and high respectability was a special friend of her father's, and would later be his companion in arms at the Battle of Agincourt.[14][15]
Following her marriage, she never again left Wales. Gwladys was a supporter of Welsh culture, especially of the bards and minstrels of her time. In Lewus Glyn Cothi's elegy, Gwladys is called "the strength and support of Gwentland and the land of Brychan" (later the counties of Monmouth and Brecon): which she supported extensively.[14]
Battle of Agincourt[edit]
Battle of Agincourt
Roger and Gwladys' father, Dafydd, had been part of the Welsh contingent that fought with Henry V of England; they both died at the Battle of Agincourt in France in 1415.[13] Legends appeared in the 16th century claiming that[7] upon saving the life of Henry V at the expense of their own lives, both men were knighted by the king on the battlefield before they died.[15][16] However, there is no contemporary validation that the legends are true.[7]
Issue[edit]
In contrast to Gwladys and Roger's allegiance to the House of Lancaster[17] and Sir William ap Thomas's daughter,[13] their three sons were staunch Yorkists during the Wars of the Roses. The brothers would fight with their Herbert half-brothers during the Battle of Edgecote Moor in 1469. Beyond their political pursuits, the Bredwardine and Hergest Vaughans supported Welsh poets. They took residence at the main Vaughan holdings of Bredwardine, Hergest, and Tretower, respectively.[13]
Watkin (Walter) Vaughan (d. 1456) of Bredwardine, Esquire,[18] married Elinor, daughter of Sir Henry Wogan,[17][19] On Easter 1456, Watkin was murdered at home, Bredwardine Castle for which half-brother William Herbert and Walter Devereux forcibly ensured prosecution of execution of the culprits at Hereford.[13]
Thomas Vaughan (c.1400–1469) of Hergest, Esquire,[18] married Ellen Gethin,[17][19] daughter of Cadwgan ap Dafydd. From the mid-1440s, Thomas had interests in the Stafford lordships of Huntington, Brecon and Hay.[13] September 1461, supporting the three Vaughan brother's allegiance to Yorkist rule, Edward IV appointed Thomas receiver of Brecon, Hay, and Huntington during the minority of Henry Stafford, 2nd Duke of Buckingham. In 1461, Thomas died at the Battle of Edgecote and entombed at Kington church, near Hergest.[13]
Tretower Court. A 15th-century manor house, rebuilt close to Tretower Castle by Sir Roger Vaughan.
Sir Roger Vaughan (d. 1471) of Tretower Court married twice. Once to Cicely, daughter of Thomas ab Philip Vychan, of Talgarth[19] and second Lady Margaret, daughter of Lord James Audley, another of the heroes of Agincourt.[3][17] Roger fought with his father and grandfather at the Battle of Agincourt in 1415. Roger was knighted for his activities supporting the Yorkist regime. In May 1471 Roger was captured by Jasper Tudor and beheaded at Chepstow.[13]
Elizabeth Vaughan married gentleman Griffith ab Eineon.[17][19]
Blanch Vaughan married wealthy Englishman John Milwater,[17][19] commissioned by Edward IV to accompany Blanch's half-brother, William Herbert, to the siege of Harlech Castle.[20]
There are other children less reliably attributed to this union: John Vaughan of Dursley, William Vaughan of Clifford and three more daughters not specifically identified.[18]
William ap Thomas[edit]
The main entrance of Raglan Castle, now ruined
Her second marriage was to Sir William ap Thomas of Raglan Castle who also fought at the Battle of Agincourt. William was the son of Thomas ap Gwilym ap Jenkyn, a local landowner and his wife Maud, daughter of Sir John Morley.[21] He was knighted in 1426 and was known, because of the colour of his armour, as "The Blue Knight of Gwent."[22]
As Lady of Raglan Castle, Gwladys was able to entertain her guests and assist the needy and afflicted on an even greater scale than when the mistress of Bredwardine Castle.[21]
Gwladys and William's children were raised with the Vaughan children[13]
Issue[edit]
The children of Gwladys and William were:
William Herbert, 1st Earl of Pembroke (1423–1469) took the surname Herbert.[3][23] William's allegiance to Richard, Duke of York, and Richard Neville, 16th Earl of Warwick, branded him Edward IV's Welsh "master-lock". He was the first full-blooded Welshman to enter the English peerage and he was knighted in 1452. He married Anne Devereux daughter of Sir Walter Devereux in 1449, by whom he had issue.[24]
Sir Richard Herbert of Coldbrook, near Abergavenny; died on the battlefield of Danesmoor.[3][23]
Elizabeth married Sir Henry Stradling[3][23] (1423–1476), son of Sir Edward Stradling (d. c.1394) and Gwenllian Berkerolles, sister and co-heir of his neighbour, Sir Lawrence Berkerolles. Reversing alliances from the previous generation, Henry and his brothers-in-law were hostile to the Henry VI reign. Henry went on a pilgrimage to the Holy Land in 1476. Henry died on 31 August 1476 on his journey back to England and was buried at Famagusta, Cyprus. Thomas, Elizabeth and Henry's young son died on 8 September 1480.[25]
Margaret married Sir Henry Wogan,[3][23] steward[26] and treasurer of the Earldom of Pembroke, tasked with securing war material for the defence of Pembroke Castle.[27] Henry and his father, John Wogan of Picton, witnessed an act of Bishop Benedict in 1418. Their son, Sir John Wogan, was killed at the battle of Banbury in 1465, fighting by the side of his uncle, William Herbert, Earl of Pembroke.[28]
Other issue less consistently attributed to Gwladys and William include: Maud, Olivia, Elizabeth (who married Welsh country gentlemen, John ab Gwilym),[3] and Thomas Herbert.[23]
Lady Gwladys mourned at length when William died in 1446.[29]
Death[edit]
She died in 1454.[30] Gwladys and her husband William ap Thomas were patrons of Abergavenny Priory where they were both buried; their alabaster tomb and effigies can still be seen in the church of St Mary's.[22][31][32]
Gwladys was so beloved by her people that, according to legend, 3,000 knights, nobles and weeping peasantry followed her body from Coldbrook House (her son Richard's manor) to the Herbert Chapel of St. Mary's Priory Church where she was buried.[31][33]
Notes[edit]
References[edit]
Jump up ^ Prichard pp. 431-433
^ Jump up to: a b Prichard p. 416
^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g Prichard p. 437
Jump up ^ Prichard p. 436
Jump up ^ Prichard p. 441
Jump up ^ Prichard p. 416, 441
^ Jump up to: a b c d e Tout, T; Davies, R (2004–2011). "Oxford Dictionary of National Biography - Dafydd (David) Gam (d. 1415), warrior". Oxford University Press 2011. Retrieved 2011-02-08. (subscription or UK public library membership required)
^ Jump up to: a b Hodgdon & Thomas pp. 128-129
Jump up ^ Prichard p. 419
^ Jump up to: a b Wilkins, C (1879). Tales and Sketches of Wales. Cardiff: Daniel Owen, Howell & Company. p. 15. OCLC 13012228.
Jump up ^ Prichard p. 421
Jump up ^ Burke, J.; Burke, J. B. (1847). A Genealogical and Heraldic Dictionary of the Landed Gentry of Great Britain. 2. London: Henry Colburn. p. 1471.
^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h i Griffiths, R (2004–11). "Oxford Dictionary of National Biography - Vaughan Family(per. c.1400–c.1504), gentry". Oxford University Press 2011. Retrieved 2011-02-08. Check date values in: |date= (help) (subscription or UK public library membership required)
^ Jump up to: a b Prichard p. 422
^ Jump up to: a b Nicholas, T. (1991) [1872]. Annals and Antiquities of the Counties and County Families of Wales: containing a record of all ranks of the gentry with many ancient pedigrees and memorials of old and extinct families (Facsimile reprint ed.). Genealogical Publishing.Com. p. 95. ISBN 978-0-8063-1314-6.
Jump up ^ Prichard pp. 424-433
^ Jump up to: a b c d e f Theophilus, Jones (1809). A history of the county of Brecknockshire. 3. Self-published. pp. 503–505.
^ Jump up to: a b c Hodgdon & Thomas p. 120.
^ Jump up to: a b c d e Prichard p. 423
Jump up ^ Davies, W; Evans, Daniel (1861). English works of the Rev. Walter Davies (Gwallter Mechain). London: Simpkin, Marshall & Co. p. iii.
^ Jump up to: a b Prichard pp. 435-437
^ Jump up to: a b "Abergavenney Priory-William ap Thomas, Sir". Aberystwyth University. Retrieved 2011-02-07.
^ Jump up to: a b c d e Evans p. 244
Jump up ^ Griffiths, R. A. (2004–11). "Herbert, William, first earl of Pembroke (c.1423–1469),". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Online ed.). Oxford University Press. Check date values in: |date= (help) (subscription or UK public library membership required)
Jump up ^ Griffiths, R. A. (2004–11). "Stradling (Stradelinges, de Estratlinges) family". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Online ed.). Oxford University Press. Check date values in: |date= (help) (subscription or UK public library membership required)
Jump up ^ "Sloane Charters". Cymmrodorion Record Series. London: Honourable Society of Cymmrodorion. 4: 618. 1908.
Jump up ^ Evans p.214
Jump up ^ Owen, Henry (1902). Old Pembroke Families in the Ancient County Palatine of Pembroke. London: C. J. Clarke. LCCN 05015821.
Jump up ^ Prichard p. 440
Jump up ^ "Gwladys". Aberystwyth University. Retrieved 2011-05-28.
^ Jump up to: a b Prichard p. 440-441
Jump up ^ "St. Mary's Priory of Abergavenny, William ap Thomas and Gwladys Monuments". St Mary's Priory Church. 2008. Retrieved 2011-02-07.
Jump up ^ "St Mary's Priory Church". Abergavenny Local History Society. Retrieved 2011-02-07.
Bibliography[edit]
Prichard, T. J. Llewelyn. (1854). The Heroines of Welsh History: Or Memoirs Of The Celebrated Women Of Wales. London: W & F G Cash.
Prichard, T. J. Llewelyn. (2007) [1854]. The Heroines of Welsh History: Or Memoirs Of The Celebrated Women Of Wales (Reprinted ed.). Kessinger Publishing, LLC. ISBN 978-1-4325-2662-7.
Hodgdon, George E.; Hancock, Thomas W. (1918). Reminiscences and genealogical record of the Vaughan family of New Hampshire. New York: Rochester. LCCN 18007045.
Evans, Howell T. (1915). Wales and the wars of the Roses. Cambridge University Press. LCCN 15019453.
Further reading[edit]
Cadw (1994). Guidebook for Raglan Castle (Section transcribed at CastleWales.com). Cadw. Retrieved 2011-02-10. | GAM, Gladys (I15046)
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At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I8406)
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Hackington
Brodbridge John c 4 Dec 1643 s/o Christopher [image 29/68]
SURNAME GIVEN NAME EVT DATE YEAR PARENTS/SPOUSE PLACE SOURCE
*GAYE Elizabeth C 11 Jan 1592/3 d/o John, which begot her mother with child and being asked to her in the church ran away, child christened when her mother had married to George Broadbridge ten weeks or thereabouts the child died the same day and she was buried the 17 of January 1592/3. Chilham PR | BROADBRIDGE, George (I14661)
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Hackington
Brodbridge John c 4 Dec 1643 s/o Christopher [image 29/68] | BROADBRIDGE, Christopher (I14666)
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had 3 sons, 1 daughter | THURSTEN, Victor Henry (I11570)
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had a child BarbaraJLB at RootsTechRelative | unknown (I19174)
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Had a spinal affliction | JEMMETT, Jane ^ (I7563)
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Had different parents than her spouse. | ARTHUR, Maryanne (I15835)
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had issue | A’DENNE, Michael (I13096)
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had issue | A’DENNE, John (I13098)
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