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| Amicia (?)1,2 (F) b. c 1185 | ||
| Event-Misc | X, Type: Progenitor2 | |
| Event-Misc* | F2 | |
| Birth* | c 1185 | 2 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 12 Apr 2001 | |
| CoParent | John III le Strange , Sheriff of Shropshire | |
| Dau-Bio* | c 1231 | Hawys le Strange+2 |
Alberto Azzo, Count of Lucca (?)1 (M) b. c 0925, d. 15 Oct 0975 Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | a 0900 | Adalbert III, Margrave of Tuscany (?)1 |
| Event-Misc* | M1 | |
| Occupation | Count of Luni2,1 | |
| Name-Var | Oberto I, Count of Lucca (?)1 | |
| Note* | Oberto I (d. Oct. 15, 975), marquis of eastern Liguria and count of Luni,powerful feudal lord of 10th-century Italy under King Berengar II and theHoly Roman emperor Otto I. His descendants, the Obertenghi, foundedseveral famous Italian feudal clans. Oberto was of a family that apparently arrived in Italy in the 9thcentury with Charlemagne, perhaps from Bavaria. Oberto acquired Genoa andLuni (east of Genoa) in 951, when Berengar seized Liguria and gave theeastern section to Oberto. Nine years later Oberto, dissatisfied withBerengar's rule, went to Germany with the bishop of Como and thearchbishop of Milan to ask Otto to intervene in Italy. After Otto'sconquest and coronation as Holy Roman emperor (962), he made Oberto countpalatine, second only to himself in Italy. Four great families, the Este,Malaspina, Pallavicini, and Massa Parodi, are believed to have descendedfrom Oberto's sons. [Encyclopaedia Britannica CD '97] ---------- HOUSE OF ESTE, princely family of Lombard origin that played a great partin the history of medieval and Renaissance Italy. It first came to thefront in the wars between the Guelfs and Ghibellines during the 13thcentury. As leaders of the Guelfs, Estensi princes received at differenttimes Ferrara, Modena, Reggio, and other fiefs and territories. Membersof the family ruled in Ferrara from the 13th through 16th century and inModena and Reggio from the later Middle Ages to the end of the 18thcentury. Origins. The Estensi were a branch of the great 10th-century dynasty of theObertenghi, which held power and wealth in Lunigiana, Genoa, and Milanand which also gave rise to the feudal houses of the Malaspina, thePallavicini, and the margraves of Massa and Parodi. Subsequently, aftervarious vicissitudes, the members of the Obertenghi dynasty removed tothe lands of the Venetians, where they had estates at Este, Monselice,Rovigo, and Friuli. The Estensi took their name from the township andcastle of Este, 17 miles (27 kilometres) southwest of Padua, and the truefounder of the family was the margrave Alberto Azzo II (died 1097). Fromhis son Welf IV, duke of Bavaria, there began a related branch that gaveorigin to the dukes of Bavaria, Brunswick, and Lüneburg, as well as theelectors of Hanover. Another son, Ugo, tried without success to establishin France, while a third son, Folco I (died c. 1136), became second inline in the House of Este. Neither he nor his successor, Obizzo I (died1193), however, achieved any great distinction, beyond the offices andtitles that fell naturally to the upper feudal families; but it wasduring the lifetime of Obizzo I that the Estensi first acquired politicalimportance in Ferrara, through the marriage of his son (Azzo V, whopredeceased him) to the heiress of one of the two great and rivalfamilies of Ferrara. Obizzo was succeeded by his grandson, Azzo VI, whoacquired considerable authority in the city, though his premature deathin 1212 left the family temporarily weakened. Not until 1240 did adescendant, Azzo VII, return to power in the city, in alliance with theGuelf league formed by Pope Gregory IX. This marked the true beginning ofEste rule in Ferrara. Lords of Ferrara. In 1264 Azzo's heir, Obizzo II (1264-93), was created perpetual lord bythe people of Ferrara under the pressure of Guelf strength. The Pope,lawful lord of the Ferrarese territory, at first did not oppose thisaction but afterward began to contest the Estensi government. Obizzo II'spower was growing, however, and he had himself chosen lord of Modena in1288 and of Reggio in 1289. In the 14th century the house of Este wentthrough difficult, stormy periods, not only because of its controversieswith the papacy but also because of domestic dissensions, sometimes veryhazardous. The house succeeded, nevertheless, in strengthening itsposition, and, under Nicolò II (reigned 1361-88), called the Lame, therewas built the famous Este Castle, the work of the architect Bartolino daNovara, which became a symbol of the power of the city of Ferrara and asure defense against external dangers. To the brother and successor ofNicolò II, Alberto V (reigned 1388-93), is due the erection of theUniversity of Ferrara, destined for lasting fame; it was obtained by PopeBoniface IX as a concession in 1391. The reign of Nicolò III (1393-1441), son of Alberto, marked thestrengthening of Estensi domination in Ferrara and the introduction ofEstensi influence generally in Italian politics. After having defeated anattempt by the Paduans to achieve hegemony in Ferrara, the Estensi dukebecame intermediary in the political and military contests in the Italianstates and extended his dominions. Personally, Nicolò was known for hissensuality; a Ferrarese saying runs, 'On both sides of the River Po theyall are Nicolò's sons.' He had his son Ugo and his young second wife,Parisina Malatesta, beheaded because they were found guilty of adulterytogether. But he devoted himself to the exterior manifestations of areligious faith--going on a pilgrimage to the Holy Sepulchre and toVienna's Saint Anthony and playing host to the ecumenical council in 1438that represented a fruitless attempt to bring together again the Westernand Eastern churches. (This council was afterward transferred toFlorence.) He even seems to have come close to obtaining the successionof an Estensi heir to the Milanese states, but he died suddenly, perhapspoisoned, on Dec. 26, 1441. Whereas Nicolò III raised the Estensi state to a high position in Italianpolitics in spite of its territorial and financial limits, his bastardson and chosen successor, Leonello (reigned 1441-50), gave Ferraraconsiderable distinction in the fields of art and culture. Leonello hadbeen educated by the humanist Guarino Veronese, called to Ferrara by hisfather, and the period of his reign was one in which Ferrara representeda lively centre of culture and humanism, filled with painters (Pisanello,Jacopo Bellini, Rogier van der Weyden, Andrea Mantegna), architects (LeonBattista Alberti), and scholars (centring on Guarino Veronese). Dukes of Ferrara, Modena, and Reggio. Leonello's brother and successor,Borso (reigned 1450-71), notwithstanding some military failures, not onlymaintained his state and increased its aesthetic and cultural prestigebut also received from the Holy Roman emperor Frederick III the title ofDuke of Modena and Reggio (1452) and from Pope Paul II the title of Dukeof Ferrara (1471). Ercole I. The long rule of Leonello's and Borso's half-brother Ercole I (1471-1505)marked one of the most important periods for the history of the house ofEste and of Ferrara. He succeeded in obtaining considerable politicalsupport with his marriage to Leonora, the daughter of the king of Naples.These were troubled times, however. Ercole had to defeat the attempt of anephew, Nicolò, son of Leonello, to usurp the throne; and then he had toface the hostile coalition of Venice and Pope Sixtus IV, which broughtwar nearly to the walls of the city of Ferrara (1482-84). The subsequentPeace of Bagnolo, however, though not entirely satisfactory, did freeFerrara from immediate dangers. Ercole's crucial problem became one of consolidating his own politicalposition by means of marriages that would bind him to the principalItalian powers: of his three daughters, Lucrezia was married to AnnibaleBentivoglio (of Bologna), Isabella to Francesco Gonzaga (of Mantua), andBeatrice to Ludovico Sforza (of Milan). Ercole's eldest son, Alfonso, wasmarried first to Anna Sforza (of Milan) and then to the famous LucreziaBorgia, the daughter of Pope Alexander VI. In spite of these difficultaffairs of state, Ercole was able to continue his dynasty's patronage ofthe arts, taking the poet Matteo Boiardo as his minister, extending hisfavour to the poet Ludovico Ariosto, espousing the theatre and musicalarts, and enlarging and beautifying Ferrara to such an extent as to makeit one of the first cities of Europe. Alfonso I. Ercole's son Alfonso I (reigned 1505-34), rough and rude when he wasyoung, proved wise and sure of himself once he had taken the reins ofgovernment. First he foiled a plot of a stepbrother, Giulio, and anotherbrother, Ferrante, against him and sentenced them to perpetualimprisonment. Then his attention was completely attracted by the waragainst Venice (1509), in which his skill in mechanics and artillerydesign was proved. He was victorious in the naval battle of Polesella andwon back the Polesine of Rovigo (which had been lost by Ercole I). At thesame time, however, papal ambitions of territorial expansion becamethreatening. By consistent adherence to the French interest in Italy,Alfonso came into collision with Pope Julius II and was deprived ofModena (1510) and Reggio (1512) and was excommunicated. The Medici popes,Leo X and Clement VII, were both determined on the destruction of theEstensi, but the first-mentioned pope was frustrated by death, the secondby political weakness, and Alfonso was able to recover Reggio in 1523 andModena in 1527. He died in 1534. His succession was assured not only byhis legitimate children but also by the issue of his lover LauraEustochia Dianti, from whom derived the future dukes of Modena and Reggio. Ercole II and Alfonso II During the reign of Alfonso's son and successor Ercole II (1534-59), themilitary events proved less interesting (though the wars of 1557-58 weredifficult) than the personal ones. Ercole married Renée, daughter of KingLouis XII of France, and in Ferrara she came to embrace the Lutheranreligion, becoming its ardent defender and establishing at her court ameeting place for the most famous heretics and liberal thinkers of theday. Ercole, who was the pope's vicar in Ferrara, tried restraining her,even to the point of temporary imprisonment, but to no avail. Next torule was his first-born, Alfonso II (reigned 1559-97), the fifth and lastduke of Ferrara. He also tried, vainly, to be elected king of Poland andto organize a crusade against the Turks. More important for the dynasty,however; was the fact that, though Alfonso II had three marriages, he hadno children, and Pope Pius V in 1567 expressly forbade havingillegitimate children rule in ecclesiastical lands. Alfonso was sodisappointed and discouraged that he let the conditions of his statedecay. At his death he bequeathed the duchy to his cousin Cesare, butPope Clement VII refused to recognize the settlement, declaring Cesareillegitimate; in 1598 direct papal rule was established in Ferrara. Themain branch of the Este family had come to an end. Decline of power. Cesare kept Modena and Reggio, but with him the Estensi ceased to play soimportant a part in Italian politics, and the court was culturallyinferior to its brilliant predecessors. Among the several Modenese dukeswho followed in the 17th century, Francesco I (reigned 1629-58), who cameto the throne during the stormy period of the Thirty Years' War, wasperhaps the most important. His people were able to survive the famousplague of 1630. In the wars he was first allied to Spain, then to France,whose alliance he thought would best sustain his claims to Ferrara. Lateron, he attempted reconciliation with Spain, but ironically it was on thefield of battle, fighting the Spaniards, that he died of malaria. He wasa man with enormous aspirations, and, though inclined toward treachery inpolitics, he gave art his patronage, favouring men of letters andcollecting works of art (there is an extraordinary portrait of him byDiego Velázquez and a beautiful bust by Gian Lorenzo Bernini). Among his successors, the one most deserving to be remembered is RinaldoI (1694-1737), whose marriage to Charlotte Felicitas ofBrunswick-Lüneburg reunited the long-separated branches of the house ofEste. Throughout his reign he engaged in imperial politics. His sonFrancesco III (1737-80), known as a libertine, received the governorshipof Lombardy from Empress Maria Theresa of Austria. Ercole III (1780-96),gentle and affable, abandoned Modena in 1796 when the RevolutionaryFrench army invaded it. After the Napoleonic Wars, Duke Francesco IV (1814-46), son of MariaBeatrice d'Este (the only surviving daughter of Ercole III) and ofArchduke Ferdinand of Habsburg-Lorraine, son of Maria Theresa, came backto Modena. He founded the Austro-Este line in Modena, which, however,ended with his son Francesco V (1846-59) when Modena revolted in order tojoin Sardinia-Piedmont and then Italy. Childless, Francesco V selected as his universal heir Francis Ferdinand,heir to the Austrian throne, who was murdered at Sarajevo in 1914. Today,the rightful holder of the surname and heraldic bearings of the Estensiis considered to be Archduke Robert, the second-born of Charles I ofAustria and Zita of Bourbon-Parma. In 1953 he married the princessMargherita of Savoy-Aosta. ---------- MALASPINA FAMILY, feudal family powerful in northern Italy in the MiddleAges. Descended from Marquis OBERTO I, who was created count palatine bythe Holy Roman emperor Otto I, the family at first controlled Tuscany,eastern Liguria, and the March of Lombardy. Early in the 11th century theEste, Pallavicino, and Massa-Corsica family branches separated from theMalaspina. The situation of Malaspina lands, in the mountainous regionsof the Apennines, controlling the great highways connecting the Ligurianand Tuscan ports with north Italian cities, made the Malaspina powerfuland helped them resist the encroachments of neighbouring cities. Repeatedpartition of their territory, first between two lines, the Spino Seccoand the Spino Fiorito, then among many smaller subdivisions, graduallyundermined their resistance to the pressure of the great communes. In the14th century, however, they remained a leading feudal house underFranceschino Malaspina, host to Dante in 1306 during his exile, and underSpinetta Malaspina (d. 1352), who succeeded in extending the familyterritories. But in the 15th and 16th centuries, most of the Malaspinadominions passed under Genoese and Florentine control. One branch of thefamily prospered, Spinetta Malaspina's great-grandnephew Antonio Alberigoacquiring Massa (1421) and Carrara (1428), east of Genoa, his dominionslater becoming the principate (1568) and the duchy (1633) of Massa.[Encyclopaedia Britannica CD '97]1 | |
| Occupation* | Count of Lucca3,1 | |
| Birth* | c 0925 | 1 |
| Occupation | 0960 | Marquis of eastern Liguria3,2,1 |
| Occupation | bt 0962 - 0972 | Pfalzgrave3,1 |
| Death | c 0975 | 3,1 |
| Death* | 15 Oct 0975 | 2,1 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 12 Apr 2001 | |
| CoParent | Guilla of Spoleto (?) | |
| Son-Bio* | c 0955 | Oberto I, Marchese of Este (?)+1 |
Adalbert III, Margrave of Tuscany (?)1 (M) b. a 0900, d. bt 0950 - 0960 Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | c 0890 | Gui, Count of Escuens (?)1 |
| Mother-Bio* | c 0890 | Mariozia, Senatrix and Patria of Rome (?)1 |
| Occupation* | Margrave of Tuscany2,1 | |
| Event-Misc* | M1 | |
| Birth* | a 0900 | 2,1 |
| Death* | bt 0950 - 0960 | 2,1 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 12 Apr 2001 | |
| CoParent | ||
| Son-Bio* | c 0925 | Alberto Azzo, Count of Lucca (?)+1 |
Poppo III von Rot , Count of Rot1 (M) b. c 0998, d. a 1010 Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | c 0968 | Poppo II von Rot , Count in the Isengau1 |
| Note* | Count of Rot and in the Isengau, c 1010 [Royalty for Commoners, 3rd ed.,R. W. Stuart, Genealogical Publishing Co., Baltimore, MD, 1998]1 | |
| Name-Var | Poppo III, Count of Rot (?)1 | |
| Event-Misc* | M1 | |
| Birth* | c 0998 | 1 |
| Death* | a 1010 | 1 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 12 Apr 2001 | |
| CoParent | Hazaga of Karnten (?) | |
| Son-Bio* | c 1028 | Kuno von Rot , Pfalzgrave of Bavaria+1 |
| ||
Hazaga of Karnten (?)1 (F) b. c 1001 | ||
| Event-Misc | X, Type: Progenitor1 | |
| Event-Misc* | F1 | |
| Birth* | c 1001 | 1 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 12 Apr 2001 | |
| CoParent | Poppo III von Rot , Count of Rot | |
| Son-Bio* | c 1028 | Kuno von Rot , Pfalzgrave of Bavaria+1 |
| ||
Poppo II von Rot , Count in the Isengau1 (M) b. c 0968 Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | c 0938 | Poppo I de Rota1 |
| Name-Var | Poppo II, Count in the Isengau (?)1 | |
| Event-Misc* | M1 | |
| Birth* | c 0968 | 1 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 12 Apr 2001 | |
| CoParent | ||
| Son-Bio* | c 0998 | Poppo III von Rot , Count of Rot+1 |
| ||
Poppo I de Rota1 (M) b. c 0938, d. a 0960 | ||
| Event-Misc | X, Type: Progenitor1 | |
| Name-Var | Poppo I of Rota (?)1 | |
| Event-Misc* | M1 | |
| Birth* | c 0938 | 1 |
| Death* | a 0960 | 1 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 12 Apr 2001 | |
| CoParent | ||
| Son-Bio* | c 0968 | Poppo II von Rot , Count in the Isengau+1 |
| ||
Louis I, Count of Ivoix and of Chiny (?)1 (M) b. c 0965, d. 28 Sep 1025 Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | c 0942 | Otto I, Count of Warcq and Chiny (?)1 |
| Mother-Bio* | c 0942 | Ermengarde of Namur (?)1 |
| Event-Misc* | M1 | |
| Note* | Count of Ivoix in Luxemburg, and of Chiny; Governor of Verdun. He was inItaly in 1013 with the Emperor, Henry III; slain 28 Sept 1025 in battlewith Gonzelon, Duke of Upper Lorraine. [Royalty for Commoners, 3rd ed.,R. W. Stuart, Genealogical Publishing Co., Baltimore, MD, 1998]1 | |
| Birth* | c 0965 | 1 |
| Marriage* | a 1014 | Adelaide (?)1 |
| Death* | 28 Sep 1025 | [slain in battle]2,1 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 12 Apr 2001 | |
| CoParent | Adelaide (?) | |
| Son-Bio* | c 0995 | Louis II, Count of Ivoix and Chiny (?)+1 |
Adelaide (?)1 (F) b. c 0965 | ||
| Event-Misc | X, Type: Progenitor1 | |
| Note* | Benefactress of St. Varne. [Royalty for Commoners, 3rd ed., R. W. Stuart,Genealogical Publishing Co., Baltimore, MD, 1998]1 | |
| Event-Misc* | F1 | |
| Birth* | c 0965 | 1 |
| Marriage* | a 1014 | Louis I, Count of Ivoix and of Chiny (?)1 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 12 Apr 2001 | |
| CoParent | Louis I, Count of Ivoix and of Chiny (?) | |
| Son-Bio* | c 0995 | Louis II, Count of Ivoix and Chiny (?)+1 |
| ||
Otto I, Count of Warcq and Chiny (?)1 (M) b. c 0942, d. 1013 Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | c 0930 | Arnold I, Count (?)1 |
| Mother-Bio* | c 0920 | Mathilde of Chiny (?)1 |
| Event-Misc* | M1 | |
| Note* | Otto I married (1) Almaraide, daughter of Mengoz, Count of Guelders (d.1001). For a time, Otto I was Count of Chiny, 966; dispossessed (recordedafter 990) as Count of Labangau by Adalbert of Ivrea (son of Berenger II,King of Italy, 974); built a castle at Warcq, 971; adherent of Charles,Duke of Lower Lorraine, and an enemy of Archbishop Adalbern of Rheims.[Royalty for Commoners, 3rd ed., R. W. Stuart, Genealogical PublishingCo., Baltimore, MD, 1998]1 | |
| Birth* | c 0942 | 1 |
| Death* | 1013 | 2,1 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 12 Apr 2001 | |
| CoParent | Ermengarde of Namur (?) | |
| Son-Bio* | c 0965 | Louis I, Count of Ivoix and of Chiny (?)+1 |
Ermengarde of Namur (?)1 (F) b. c 0942 Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | Albert I de Namur Comte de Namur1 | |
| Mother-Bio* | Ermengarde de LORRAINE1 | |
| Event-Misc* | F1 | |
| Birth* | c 0942 | 1 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 12 Apr 2001 | |
| CoParent | Otto I, Count of Warcq and Chiny (?) | |
| Son-Bio* | c 0965 | Louis I, Count of Ivoix and of Chiny (?)+1 |
| ||
Arnold I, Count (?)1 (M) b. c 0930, d. 0982 Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | c 0910 | Eberhard III, Count in the Maingau (?)1 |
| Mother-Bio* | c 0910 | Luitgarde of Trier (?)1 |
| Event-Misc* | M1 | |
| Birth* | c 0930 | 1 |
| Death* | 0982 | Calabria, Italy2,1 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 9 Apr 2003 | |
| CoParent | Mathilde of Chiny (?) | |
| Son-Bio* | c 0942 | Otto I, Count of Warcq and Chiny (?)+1 |
Mathilde of Chiny (?)1 (F) b. c 0920, d. 0992 | ||
| Event-Misc* | F1 | |
| Event-Misc | X, Type: Progenitor1 | |
| Birth* | c 0920 | 1 |
| Death* | 0992 | 1 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 12 Apr 2001 | |
| CoParent | Arnold I, Count (?) | |
| Son-Bio* | c 0942 | Otto I, Count of Warcq and Chiny (?)+1 |
| ||
Archarda of Bar-sur-Aube (?)1 (F) b. c 0892 | ||
| Event-Misc | X, Type: Progenitor1 | |
| Event-Misc* | F1 | |
| Birth* | c 0892 | 1 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 12 Apr 2001 | |
| CoParent | Archard de la Ferte | |
| Son-Bio* | c 0922 | Nocher I, Count of Bar-sur-Aube (?)+1 |
| ||
NN di Mosezzo1 (F) b. c 0925 Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | c 0870 | Manfredo, Seignore di Mosezzo (?)1 |
| Event-Misc* | F1 | |
| Birth* | c 0925 | 1 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 12 Apr 2001 | |
| CoParent | Ardvino 'il Glabro,' Marchese of Turino (?) | |
| Son-Bio* | c 0955 | Manfredo I, Marchese di Turino (?)+1 |
| ||
Manfredo, Count of the Sacred Palace of Lodi (?)1,2 (M) b. c 0840, d. 0886 | ||
| Event-Misc | Count of Milan, Type: Titled1,2 | |
| Event-Misc | Marquess of Lombardy, Type: Titled1,2 | |
| Note* | Beheaded by Lambert.2 | |
| Event-Misc | X, Type: Progenitor2 | |
| Event-Misc* | M2 | |
| Birth* | c 0840 | 2 |
| Death* | 0886 | 1,2 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 12 Apr 2001 | |
| CoParent | ||
| Son-Bio* | c 0870 | Manfredo, Seignore di Mosezzo (?)+2 |
Ralph Horbery1 (M) b. c 1259 | ||
| Event-Misc | X, Type: Progenitor1 | |
| Event-Misc* | M1 | |
| Birth* | c 1259 | of North Elmsall, Yorkshire, England1 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 12 Apr 2001 | |
| CoParent | ||
| Dau-Bio* | c 1291 | Isabelle Horbery+1 |
| ||
Isabelle Horbery1 (F) b. c 1291 Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | c 1259 | Ralph Horbery1 |
| Event-Misc* | F1 | |
| Birth* | c 1291 | of North Elmsall, Yorkshire, England1 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 12 Apr 2001 | |
| CoParent | William Pollington | |
| Dau-Bio* | c 1279 | Isabelle Pollington+1 |
| ||
Robert de la Haye1 (M) b. c 1085, d. bt 1134 - 1135 Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | c 1043 | Ralph de la Haye1 |
| Mother-Bio* | c 1047 | Oliva de Albini1 |
| Event-Misc* | M1 | |
| Birth* | c 1085 | of Halnaker, Sussex, England1 |
| Death* | bt 1134 - 1135 | 1 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 12 Apr 2001 | |
| CoParent | Muriel of Lincoln (?) | |
| Son-Bio* | c 1115 | Richard de la Haye+1 |
| ||
Richard de la Haye1 (M) b. c 1115, d. 1169 Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | c 1085 | Robert de la Haye1 |
| Mother-Bio* | 1105 | Muriel of Lincoln (?)1 |
| Event-Misc* | M1 | |
| Birth* | c 1115 | of Brattleby, Lincolnshire, England1 |
| Marriage* | 1146 | Maud de Vernon1 |
| Death* | 1169 | 1 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 12 Apr 2001 | |
| CoParent | Maud de Vernon | |
| Dau-Bio* | c 1150 | Nichola de la Haye+1 |
| ||
Milicent de Réthel1 (F) b. c 1118, d. a 1155 Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | c 1088 | Gervase de Réthel , Count of Réthel1 |
| Mother-Bio* | WFT Est 1092 | Elizabeth of Namur (?)1 |
| Event-Misc* | F1 | |
| Birth* | c 1118 | 1 |
| Marriage* | a 1144 | Richard de Camville1 |
| Death* | a 1155 | 1 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 12 Apr 2001 | |
| CoParent | Richard de Camville | |
| Son-Bio* | c 1150 | Gerard de Camville+1 |
| Son-Bio* | c 1154 | Richard de Camville+1 |
| ||
Sibyl (?)1 (F) b. c 1110 | ||
| Event-Misc | X, Type: Progenitor1 | |
| Event-Misc* | F1 | |
| Birth* | c 1110 | 1 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 12 Apr 2001 | |
| CoParent | Robert Avenal | |
| Dau-Bio* | bt 1158 - 1181 | Isabel Avenal+1 |
| ||
Aubrey de Rumenel1 (F) b. c 1125 | ||
| Event-Misc | X, Type: Progenitor1 | |
| Event-Misc* | F1 | |
| Birth* | c 1125 | of Ilmer and Aston, England1 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 12 Apr 2001 | |
| CoParent | William de Jarpenville | |
| Dau-Bio* | c 1155 | Alice de Jarpenville+1 |
| ||
Ascelin Goel de Perceval , Lord of Breherval1,2 (M) b. c 1076, d. bt 1116 - 1119 Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | c 1046 | Robert d'Ivry2 |
| Mother-Bio* | c 1046 | Hildeburge de Gallardon , Blessed2 |
| Note* | Ascelin Gouel de Perceval, s. his father and, like his predecessor, helda distinguished place in the Norman army of the conquest, and for hisservices had a grant of divers manors, particularly of Weston andStawell, co. Somerset. He was a man of violent temper, and henceacquired the surname of Lupus, or Wolf. Odericus Vitalis gives theparticulars of a long and extraordinary dispute which this Ascelin hadwith the Earl of Breteuil, in Normandy, and which terminated by hisobtaining his own terms after sustaining a siege of two months in hiscastle of Breherval against a powerful army commanded by the ablestcaptains of the age -- which terms included the retention of the fortressand the hand of Isabella, the Earl of Breteuil's only dau., in marriage.This lady, although illegitimate, upon the failure of the earl'slegitimate issue, became, through the favour of Henry I, heir in part toher father, and her husband, Ascelin, was established in the Earldom ofYvery, in Normandy, in 1119. The issue of the marriage were seven sonsand a dau., m. to Radulfus Rufus, a noble Norman. Of the sons, the namesof three alone have been handed down to us, namely, Robert, William, andJohn, of whom the youngest, John, acquired from his father the manor ofHarpetre, and assumed that as a surname, but it was afterwards changed byhis descendants to Gournay. Ascelin d. soon after his accession to theEarldom of Yvery, and was s. by his eldest son, Robert, Earl of Yvery.[Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages,Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 332, Lovel, Baron Lovel of Kary]2 | |
| Name-Var | Ascelin Goel2 | |
| Event-Misc* | M2 | |
| Birth* | c 1076 | of Ivry, Normandy, France2 |
| Death* | bt 1116 - 1119 | 2 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 12 Apr 2001 | |
| CoParent | Isabel de Bréteuil | |
| Son-Bio* | c 1106 | William 'Lupellus' de Perceval , Earl of Ivry+2 |
William Avenal1 (M) b. c 1080, d. a 1130 | ||
| Event-Misc* | M1 | |
| Event-Misc | X, Type: Progenitor1 | |
| Birth* | c 1080 | 1 |
| Death* | a 1130 | 1 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 12 Apr 2001 | |
| CoParent | ||
| Son-Bio* | c 1110 | Robert Avenal+1 |
| ||
Amabilis FitzHenry1 (F) b. c 1140 Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | c 1105 | Henry FitzHenry1 |
| Event-Misc* | F1 | |
| Birth* | c 1140 | of Narbeth, South Wales1 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 12 Apr 2001 | |
| CoParent | Walter de Ridelsford | |
| Dau-Bio* | c 1175 | Basilie de Ridelisford+1 |
| Son-Bio* | c 1190 | Walter de Ridelsford+1 |
| ||
Robert d'Ivry1,2 (M) b. c 1046, d. c 1083 Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | c 1016 | Robert (?)2 |
| Mother-Bio* | c 1016 | Aubree of Bayeux (?)2 |
| Event-Misc* | M2 | |
| Note* | The first of this family that came into England was Robert, Lord ofBreherval, &c., in Normandy (where he likewise held the castle of Yvery,by the service of three knights' fees), a younger son, as it is said, ofEudes, sovereign Duke of Brittany. This nobleman accompanied William theConqueror in 1066, and was rewarded with the lordships of Kary andHarpetre, co. Somerset, but returning into Normandy and being thereattacked by a severe illness, he became a monk in the abbey of Bec, andd. soon after, about the year 1083, leaving three sons, of whom AscelinGouel de Perceval, was the eldest. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant,Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p.331, Lovel, Barons Lovel, of Kary] NOTE: Based upon the above information, I am tempted to merge Robertd'Ivry (son of Robert), and Robert of Brittany (son of Eudes, Count ofBrittany), as one and the same persons, except for the fact that (1)Robert d'Ivry's mother is given as Aubrey of Bayeux, and Robert ofBrittany's mother is given as Agnes de Cornvaille, at least according todata contained on Automated Family Pedigrees #1, Automated Archives,Inc., CD100.2 | |
| Birth* | c 1046 | of Ivry, Normandy, France2 |
| Death* | c 1083 | Le Bec, Normandy, France1,2 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 12 Apr 2001 | |
| CoParent | Hildeburge de Gallardon , Blessed | |
| Son-Bio* | c 1076 | Ascelin Goel de Perceval , Lord of Breherval+2 |
Ela de Evereux , Countess of Salisbury1,2 (F) b. c 1192, d. 24 Aug 1261 Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | c 1148 | William de Evereux , 2nd Earl of Salisbury2 |
| Mother-Bio* | c 1157 | Alianore de Vitré2 |
| Event-Misc* | F2 | |
| Note* | Ela, 'of whom (writes Dugdale) it is thus reported; that being so greatan inheritrix, one William Talbot, and Englishman and an eminent soldier,tool upon him the habit of a pilgrim, and went into Normandy where,wandering up and down for the space of two months, at length he found herout. Likewise, that he then changed his habit and, having entered thecourt where she resided, in the garb of a harper, being practised inmirth and jesting, he became well accepted. Moreover, that growingacquainted with her, after some time he conducted her to England, andpresented her to King Richard who, receiving her very courteously, gaveher in marriage to William, surnamed Longespee, from the long sword whichhe usually wore, his brother, that is, a natural son of King Henry II byFair Rosamond; and that thereupon King Richard rendered unto him theearldom of Rosmar, as her inheritance.' Be this store true of false, itis certain, however, that the great heiress of d'Evereux, Ela, espousedthe above-named William Longespee, who thereupon became, in her right,Earl of Salisbury. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited andExtinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, England, 1883, p. 167,d'Evereux, Earls of Salisbury]2 | |
| Name-Var | Ela FitzPatrick , Countess of Salisbury2 | |
| Burial* | Oseney Abbey, Oxfordshire, England3,2 | |
| Birth* | c 1192 | Amesbury, Wiltshire, England2 |
| Birth | c 1196 | 3,2 |
| Marriage* | 1198 | William de Longespée , Earl of Salisbury2 |
| Death* | 24 Aug 1261 | Lacock, Wiltshire, England2 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 12 Apr 2001 | |
| CoParent | William de Longespée , Earl of Salisbury | |
| Son-Bio* | c 1216 | Stephen de Longespée , Judiciary of Ireland+2 |
Emaline de Ridelsford , Countess of Ulster1 (F) b. c 1220, d. 1276 Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | c 1190 | Walter de Ridelsford1 |
| Mother-Bio* | c 1200 | Annora (?)1 |
| Note* | Walter de Ridleford, Lord of Bray, co. Dublin, 12 , whose only day andheir, Emelina, was m. 1st, to Hugh de Laci, the younger Earl of Ulster,who d. in 1243; and 2ndly, to Stephen de Longue Espée, who d. lordjustice of Ireland, in 1260, 3whose dau., Emelina, was m. to Gerald, LordOffaley.1 | |
| Name-Var | Emaline de Riddlesford , Countess of Ulster1 | |
| Event-Misc* | F1 | |
| Birth* | c 1220 | of, Kildare, Ireland1 |
| Marriage* | c 1243 | Stephen de Longespée , Judiciary of Ireland1 |
| Death* | 1276 | 1 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 12 Apr 2001 | |
| CoParent | Stephen de Longespée , Judiciary of Ireland | |
| Dau-Bio* | c 1250 | Emeline de Longespée+1 |
| ||
Robert II, Seigneur de Vitré (?)1 (M) b. c 1090, d. c 1155 Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | c 1054 | André, (?) Seigneur de Vitré1 |
| Mother-Bio* | c 1054 | Agnes de Mortaigne1 |
| Event-Misc* | M1 | |
| Birth* | c 1090 | 1 |
| Death* | c 1155 | 1 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 12 Apr 2001 | |
| CoParent | Emma de la Guerche | |
| Son-Bio* | c 1120 | Robert III, Seigneur de Vitré (?)+1 |
| ||
Walter de Ridelsford1 (M) b. c 1190, d. b 1244 Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | c 1140 | Walter de Ridelsford1 |
| Mother-Bio* | c 1140 | Amabilis FitzHenry1 |
| Event-Misc* | M1 | |
| Name-Var | Walter de Riddlesford1 | |
| Birth* | c 1190 | of Carriebenan, Kildare, Ireland1 |
| Death* | b 1244 | 1 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 12 Apr 2001 | |
| CoParent | Annora (?) | |
| Dau-Bio* | c 1220 | Emaline de Ridelsford , Countess of Ulster+1 |
| ||
Emma de la Guerche1 (F) b. c 1100 | ||
| Event-Misc | X, Type: Progenitor1 | |
| Event-Misc* | F1 | |
| Birth* | c 1100 | 1 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 12 Apr 2001 | |
| CoParent | Robert II, Seigneur de Vitré (?) | |
| Son-Bio* | c 1120 | Robert III, Seigneur de Vitré (?)+1 |
| ||
Henry FitzHenry1 (M) b. c 1105, d. 1157 Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | c Sep 1068 | King of England Henry 'Beauclerc' (?) I1 |
| Mother-Bio* | c 1073 | Nest ferch Rhys, Princess of Deheubarth1 |
| Event-Misc* | M1 | |
| Birth* | c 1105 | South Wales, Wales1 |
| Death* | 1157 | Anglesey, Wales1 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 12 Apr 2001 | |
| CoParent | ||
| Dau-Bio* | c 1140 | Amabilis FitzHenry+1 |
| ||
Basilie de Ridelisford1 (F) b. c 1175 Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | c 1140 | Walter de Ridelsford1 |
| Mother-Bio* | c 1140 | Amabilis FitzHenry1 |
| Name-Var | Basilie de Riddlesford1 | |
| Event-Misc* | F1 | |
| Birth* | c 1175 | of Bray, Dublin, Ireland1 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 12 Apr 2001 | |
| CoParent | Richard de Cogan | |
| Son-Bio* | c 1201 | John de Cogan+1 |
| ||
John de Vaux1,2 (M) b. 1230, d. 1287 Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | c 1180 | Oliver de Vaux2 |
| Mother-Bio* | 1185 | Petronilla de Craon2 |
| Event-Misc* | M2 | |
| Birth* | 1230 | of Freiston, Lincolnshire, England2 |
| Death* | 1287 | 3,2 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 12 Apr 2001 | |
| CoParent | Sibyl (?) | |
| Dau-Bio* | 1258 | Maud de Vaux+2 |
Thomas Pollington , Kt.1 (M) b. c 1249 | ||
| Event-Misc | X, Type: Progenitor1 | |
| Event-Misc* | M1 | |
| Birth* | c 1249 | of Pollington, Yorkshire, England1 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 12 Apr 2001 | |
| CoParent | ||
| Son-Bio* | c 1287 | William Pollington+1 |
| ||
William Pollington1 (M) b. c 1287 Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | c 1249 | Thomas Pollington , Kt.1 |
| Event-Misc* | M1 | |
| Birth* | c 1287 | of Pollington, Yorkshire, England1 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 12 Apr 2001 | |
| CoParent | Isabelle Horbery | |
| Dau-Bio* | c 1279 | Isabelle Pollington+1 |
| ||
Dionysia de Rotherfield1 (F) b. c 1267, d. 1318 Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | c 1245 | Peter de Rotherfield1 |
| Event-Misc* | F1 | |
| Birth* | c 1267 | of Wentworth Woodhouse, Yorkshire, England1 |
| Marriage* | 1288 | William Wentworth1 |
| Birth | c 1293 | of Wentworth Woodhouse, Yorkshire, England1 |
| Death* | 1318 | 1 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 12 Apr 2001 | |
| CoParent | William Wentworth | |
| Son-Bio* | c 1289 | William Wentworth , Kt.+1 |
| ||
William Wentworth1 (M) b. c 1267, d. 1295 Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | c 1244 | William Wentworth1 |
| Mother-Bio* | c 1246 | Beatrice de Thakel1 |
| Event-Misc* | M1 | |
| Note* | William Wentworth, of Wentworth-Woodhouse, who was married, first in1288, to Dionysia, daughter of Peter de Rotherfield, by whom he had onlytwo sons, viz. :-- 1. William, of whom hereafter, and 2. John, whomarried Alice Bissett. [A Genealogical Memoir of the Wentworth Family ofEngland, From Its Saxon Origin in the Eleventh Century to the Emigrationof one of its Representatives to New England about the Year 1636, JosephLemuel Chester] ---------- William de Wentworth m. 1st, Dionysia, dau. of Peter de Rotherfield, and2ndly, Lucy, dau. of Sir Adam Newmarch, and by the former had two sons,William, his successor; John, m. the dau. and heir of Elmsall, ofElmsall, in Yorkshire, by whom he acquired that estate, and dying s. p.,left it to his nephew, John. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant and ExtinctPeerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 575, Wentworth, BaronsWentworth, of Wentworth-Woodhouse...]1 | |
| Birth* | c 1267 | of Wentworth Woodhouse, Yorkshire, England1 |
| Marriage* | 1288 | Dionysia de Rotherfield1 |
| Birth | c 1289 | of Wentworth Woodhouse, Yorkshire, England1 |
| Death* | 1295 | 1 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 12 Apr 2001 | |
| CoParent | Dionysia de Rotherfield | |
| Son-Bio* | c 1289 | William Wentworth , Kt.+1 |
| ||
Richard le Tyas1 (M) b. c 1309 | ||
| Event-Misc | X, Type: Progenitor1 | |
| Event-Misc* | M1 | |
| Birth* | c 1309 | of Burghwallis, Yorkshire, England1 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 12 Apr 2001 | |
| CoParent | ||
| Dau-Bio* | 1347 | Jane le Tyas+1 |
| ||
Isabelle Pollington1 (F) b. c 1279 Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | c 1287 | William Pollington1 |
| Mother-Bio* | c 1291 | Isabelle Horbery1 |
| Event-Misc* | F1 | |
| Birth* | c 1279 | Elmsall, Yorkshire, England1 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 12 Apr 2001 | |
| CoParent | William Wentworth , Kt. | |
| Son-Bio* | c 1330 | John Wentworth , Esq.+1 |
| ||
William Wentworth , Kt.1 (M) b. c 1289 Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | c 1267 | William Wentworth1 |
| Mother-Bio* | c 1267 | Dionysia de Rotherfield1 |
| Event-Misc* | M1 | |
| Note* | William de Wentworth s. his father in 1295 and m. Isabel, dau. andco-heir of William Pollington, of Pollington, co. York, and had issue,William (Sir), his heir; and John, who inherited Elmsall from his uncleand, marrying Joan, dau. of Richard le Tyas, of Burgh-Walleys, co. York,was ancestor of the Wentworths of Elmsall, of the Wentworths of Bretton,of the Wentworths, Barons and Viscounts Wentworth; and of divers otherbranches. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant and Extinct Peerages, Burke'sPeerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 575, Wentworth, Barons Wentworth, ofWentworth-Woodhouse...] ---------- Sir William Wentworth, of Wentworth-Woodhouse, married Isabel, daughterand co-heir of William Pollington, Esq., of Pollington, in Yorkshire (sonand heir of Sir Thomas Pollington, Kt.), by whom he had also two sons,viz. :-- 1. William, and 2. John [A Genealogical Memoir of theWentworth Family of England, From Its Saxon Origin in the EleventhCentury to the Emigration of one of its Representatives to New Englandabout the Year 1636, Joseph Lemuel Chester]1 | |
| Birth | c 1275 | of Wentworth Woodhouse, Yorkshire, England1 |
| Birth* | c 1289 | of Wentworth Woodhouse, Yorkshire, England1 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 12 Apr 2001 | |
| CoParent | Isabelle Pollington | |
| Son-Bio* | c 1330 | John Wentworth , Esq.+1 |
| ||
Jane le Tyas1 (F) b. 1347 Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | c 1309 | Richard le Tyas1 |
| Event-Misc* | F1 | |
| Birth* | 1347 | of Burghwallis, Yorkshire, England1 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 12 Apr 2001 | |
| CoParent | John Wentworth , Esq. | |
| Son-Bio* | c 1369 | John Wentworth+1 |
| ||
John Wentworth , Esq.1 (M) b. c 1330 Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | c 1289 | William Wentworth , Kt.1 |
| Mother-Bio* | c 1279 | Isabelle Pollington1 |
| Note* | John, who inherited Elmsall from his uncle and, marrying Joan, dau. ofRichard le Tyas, of Burgh-Walleys, co. York, was ancestor of theWentworths of Elmsall, of the Wentworths of Bretton, of the Wentworths,Barons and Viscounts Wentworth, and of divers other branches. [SirBernard Burke, Dormant and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd.,London, 1883, p. 575, Wentworth, Barons Wentworth, ofWentworth-Woodhouse...] ---------- John Wentworth, Esq., of North Elmsall, in Yorkshire, inherited thatestate from his uncle John, and which is at no great distance fromWentworth-Woodhouse, being in the parish of South Kirkby, about ninemiles from Doncaster. He married Joan, daughter of Richard le Tyas, ofBurghwallis, in Yorkshire, and was succeeded by his only son, JohnWentworth, Esq. [A Genealogical Memoir of the Wentworth Family ofEngland, From Its Saxon Origin in the Eleventh Century to the Emigrationof one of its Representatives to New England about the Year 1636, JosephLemuel Chester]1 | |
| Event-Misc* | M1 | |
| Birth* | c 1330 | North Elmsall, Yorkshire, England1 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 12 Apr 2001 | |
| CoParent | Jane le Tyas | |
| Son-Bio* | c 1369 | John Wentworth+1 |
| ||
Joan Cheney1 (F) b. c 1279, d. bt 09 Feb 1326 - 1327 | ||
| Event-Misc | X, Type: Progenitor1 | |
| Name-Var | Joan Chenduit1 | |
| Event-Misc* | F1 | |
| Birth* | c 1279 | Hatch, Somerset, England1 |
| Marriage* | c 1301 | John de Beauchamp , 1st Lord Beauchamp of Hache1 |
| Death* | bt 09 Feb 1326 - 1327 | 1 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 12 Apr 2001 | |
| CoParent | John de Beauchamp , 1st Lord Beauchamp of Hache | |
| Dau-Bio* | c 1305 | Joan de Beauchamp+1 |
| ||
John de Beauchamp , 1st Lord Beauchamp of Hache1,2 (M) b. 25 Jul 1274, d. a 20 Oct 1336 Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | c 1249 | John de Beauchamp , of Hache2 |
| Mother-Bio* | 1257 | Cecily de Vivonia2 |
| Event-Misc* | M2 | |
| Note* | John de Beauchamp, who was summoned to parliament as a baron by the styleof 'Io de Bello Campo (de Somerset),' on 29 December, 1229, 28th ofEdward I, and in the 34th of the same reign [1306] was one of thedistinguished persons who received the honour of knighthood with PriceEdward, the king's eldest son, being in the expedition made into Scotlandin that year. In the 8th of Edward II [1315], his lordship was again inthe Scottish wars; and in the 14th of the same king he succeeded to thevery extensive landed possessions of his mother, comprising the manor ofSturminster-Marshal, in the co. Dorset, a moiety of the manor of WestKington, in the co. Wilts, of the whole manor of Wadmersh, in the co.Surrey, of the manor of Bullingham, in the co. Cambridge, also thehamlets of Watweton and Widecombe. In the two years afterwards Lord Beauchamp was made governorof the castle of Bridgewater. In the 7th of Edward III (1333-4), heobtained license to fortify his manor houses at Hacche, Estokes, andSouth Hainedon, and to embattle their walls. His lordship d.. in 1336,up to which period he had regular summonses, and was s. by his son, Johnde Beauchamp, 2nd Lord Beauchamp, of Hacche. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormantand Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 33,Beauchamp, Barons Beauchamp, of Hache, in the co. Somerset]2 | |
| Birth* | 25 Jul 1274 | Hatch, Somerset, England2 |
| Marriage* | c 1301 | Joan Cheney2 |
| Death* | a 20 Oct 1336 | 2 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 12 Apr 2001 | |
| CoParent | Joan Cheney | |
| Dau-Bio* | c 1305 | Joan de Beauchamp+2 |
Joan de Beauchamp1 (F) b. c 1305, d. a 1343 Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | 25 Jul 1274 | John de Beauchamp , 1st Lord Beauchamp of Hache1 |
| Mother-Bio* | c 1279 | Joan Cheney1 |
| Event-Misc* | F1 | |
| Birth* | c 1305 | of Hache, Somerset, England1 |
| Marriage* | 1314 | John de Cobham1 |
| Death* | a 1343 | 1 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 12 Apr 2001 | |
| CoParent | John de Cobham | |
| Dau-Bio* | c 1317 | Joan de Cobham+1 |
| ||
Maud de Moreville1 (F) b. c 1230, d. a 1285 Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | c 1200 | Eudes de Moreville1 |
| Event-Misc* | F1 | |
| Birth* | c 1230 | 1 |
| Death* | a 1285 | 1 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 12 Apr 2001 | |
| CoParent | Henry de Cobham | |
| Son-Bio* | c 1260 | John de Cobham+1 |
| ||
Henry de Cobham1 (M) b. c 1260, d. 25 Aug 1339 Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | c 1240 | John de Cobham1 |
| Mother-Bio* | c 1230 | Joan de Septvans1 |
| Event-Misc* | M1 | |
| Birth* | c 1260 | of Cobham, Kent, England1 |
| Death* | 25 Aug 1339 | 1 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 12 Apr 2001 | |
| CoParent | Maud de Moreville | |
| Son-Bio* | c 1260 | John de Cobham+1 |
| ||
Daughter von Hohenwart1,2 (F) b. c 1025 | ||
| Birth* | c 1025 | 2 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 12 Apr 2001 | |
| CoParent | Berthold II, Count in the Upper Isar (?) | |
| Son-Bio* | c 1054 | Otto II von Wolfratshausen , Count of Diessen+2 |
For comments or corrections please contact
Compiler:
Benjamin McAlester Brink
Saint Louis, Missouri, USA
This page was created by John Cardinal's Second Site v1.4.7. Site updated on 4 Oct 2003 at 9:13:21 PM BRINK; 15565 people. Copyright 2003 Ben & Janet Brink