Ancestors of Robert Erwin William Juch
Twenty-Fourth Generation
(Continued)
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9542846. William de Bohun Earl of Northampton was born about 1310. He died 16 Sep 1360. William married Elizabeth de Badlesmere on 1335 in Castle Badlesmere, Kent, England. [Parents]
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9542847.
Elizabeth de Badlesmere is printed as #4882505.
They had the following children:
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Elizabeth de Bohun was born 1330/1348 and died 3 Apr 1385. | |
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Humphrey de Bohun Earl of Hereford 11 was born 25 Mar 1342. He died 16 Jan 1372/1373. |
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9542848. Hugh Heydon 1 was born about 1286 in Heydon, Norfolk, England. He married Alice Loverd about 1320 in Norfolk, England.
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9542849. Alice Loverd 1 was born about 1300 in Heydon, Norfolk, England.
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They had the following children:
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9542896. Thomas Hoo 1 was born in Lutton Hoo, Bedfordshire, England. He married Isabel de Saint Leger in Lutton Hoo, Bedfordshire, England. [Parents]
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They had the following children:
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9542898. Thomas de Saint Omer was born 1318. He married Petronilla Malmayns. [Parents]
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9542899. Petronilla Malmayns was born 1328.
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They had the following children:
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9542904. John Wychingham 1 was born about 1308 in Upton with Fishley, Blofield, Norfolk, England.
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He had the following children:
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Richard De Wychingham 1, 2 was born about 1338 in Witchingham, St Faith's, Norfolk, England.
Alice [de Lisle], married (3rd) Richard Wychingham, of Wychingham, Norfolk. They had no issue. She left a will dated 12 Aug. 1401, proved 19 Jan. 1401/2. [Douglas Richardson, SGM]
Note: I am placing him as son of John, whose son William was of Witchingham, going by the approximate date of Richard's birth. Not exactly sure of his placement within the family. |
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William Wychingham was born about 1344 and died 1374. |
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9542976. Reginald de Frowick 1 was born about 1260 in of London. He married Agnes. [Parents]
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9542977. Agnes 1 was born about 1270 in of London, London, England.
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They had the following children:
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9542978. William de Pouns 1 was born about 1275.
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He had the following children:
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9542980. John de Durham 1 was born about 1278 in London, London, England. He married Joan. [Parents]
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9542981. Joan 1 was born about 1278 in London, London, England.
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They had the following children:
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9543024. Humphrey Cotton 1 was born about 1300 in England. He married Ann Holbrooke. [Parents]
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9543025. Ann Holbrooke 1 was born about 1305 in England. [Parents]
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They had the following children:
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9543026. John de Hastings 1 was born 1315 in Cambridge, England. He married Julianna de Leybourne.
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9543027. Julianna de Leybourne 1 was born 1294 in Leybourne, Kent, England. [Parents]
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They had the following children:
9543074.
Lord Robert I de Clifford Sheriff Westmorland is printed as #4770182.
9543075.
Maud de Clare is printed as #4770183.
They had the following children:
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Lord Roger IV de Clifford was born 21 Jan 1298/1299 in Appleby, Westmorland, England. He died 1326.
Conflict here:
In Burke's Peerage, Baronetage & Knightage books it states that Roger was "b. 21 Jan or 2 Feb. 1299/1300; joined rebellion of Thomas, Earl of Lancaster, against Edward II and his favorites and was taken prisoner at the Battle of Boroughridge 16 March 1321/2: dsp, being executed at York 23 March 1322."
BUT
From this site:
Roger Clifford, 2nd Lord of Skipton
He was involved in a rebellion against King Edward I's favourite Huge Lord de Despencer, and ultimately against the King him self. The rebel forces were brought to battle by the King's forces in Boroughbridge in March 1322 at which Roger Clifford received severe wounds. Forced to surrender, he was condemned to death and held captive in York. Reprieved, probably because of his wounds, he survived until 1326. His estates were forfeited, including Skipton castle. They were restored to Robert, 3rd Lord of Skipton in 1327.
All this is from The Skipton Castle Teachers Resource Pack.
http://battle-of-boroughbridge.wikiverse.org/
The Battle of Boroughbridge was a small but important battle in the conflicts between Edward II of England and his rebellious barons. The battle took place near at important bridge across the Wye called Boroughbridge, northwest of York.
Early in 1322, King Edward took forces north in England to subdue his cousin Thomas, Earl of Lancaster. Lancaster was pushed further north, where he may have been hoping to join up with forces from Scotland. However on March 16, he found his way across the river Wye barred by forces of Sir Andrew Harclay. Sir Andrew used the infantry tactics which were later to prove so effective against the French at Crecy, and the rebels were defeated.
Of the rebel leaders, Humphrey de Bohun, 4th Earl of Hereford, was killed, and the rest captured. The prisoners were later convicted of treason and executed. |
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Idonea (Idoine) de Clifford Lady Alnwick was born about 1300 in Appleby Castle, Westmorland, England. She died 1 24 Aug 1365 in Alnwick, Northumberland, England and was buried in Beverly Minister, Beverly, Yorkshire, England. |
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Margaret de Clifford 1 was born about 1303 in Appleby Castle, Westmorland, England. She died 1 8 Aug 1382. |
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Sir Robert II de Clifford Baron Clifford 1 was born 1 5 Nov 1305 in Clifford Castle, Herefordshire, England. He died 1 20 May 1344. |
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Catherine de Clifford was born about 1307. |
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9543104. Richard de Pympe was born 1263 in Nettlestead, Kent, England. He married Rose.
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They had the following children:
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9543114. Richard Woodville was born in of the Mote, Maidstone, Kent, England.
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He had the following children:
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9765008. Roger de Mortimer 1st Earl of March was born 25 Apr 1287 in Netherwood, Thornbury, Herefordshire, England. He died 29 Nov 1330 in Elms, Tyburn, Warwickshire, England and was buried in Church of Grey Friar, Shrewsbury, Shropshsire, England. Roger married Joan de Greneville.
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9765009. Joan de Greneville was born 2 Feb 1285 in Ludlow, Shropshire, England. She died 19 Oct 1356. [Parents]
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They had the following children:
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9765010. Bartholomew de Badlesmere 1st Lord of Badlesmere was born about 1275. He died 14 Apr 1322. Bartholomew married Margaret de Clare on 28 Apr 1317 in Windsor, Berkshire, England. [Parents]
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9765011. Margaret de Clare 1 was born 1281 in Thormond, Connaught, Clare, Ireland. She died 1333 in Castle Badlesmere, Kent, England. [Parents]
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They had the following children:
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Giles de Badelsmere was born 1287/1321. He died 1299/1402. |
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Margery de Badelsmere was born about 1306. She died 18 Oct 1363. |
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Elizabeth de Badlesmere was born 1313 and died 8 Jun 1356. |
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9765012. William de Montacute was born about 1275 in Salisbury, England. He died 1319. William married Elizabeth de Montfort. [Parents]
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9765013. Elizabeth de Montfort died 1354.
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They had the following children:
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9765020. John de Burgh 1 was born about 1297 in Ulster, Ireland. He died 2 18 Jun 1313 in Galway, Connaught, Ireland. John married 2 Elizabeth de Clare on 30 Sep 1308 in Waltham Abbey, Essex, England.
John de Burgh m. Elizabeth, 3rd dau. of Gilbert, Earl of Gloucester, by his 2nd wife, the Princess Joan, of Acre, and d. 1313, having had one son, William de Burgh, 3rd Earl of Ulster. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, England, 1883, p. 162, de Burgh, Earl of Ulster]
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9765021. Elizabeth de Clare 1, 2 was born 3, 4 16 Sep 1295 in Tewkesbury, England. She died 3, 4 4 Nov 1360 and was buried in Convent of Minoresses, Aldgate, London, England. [Parents]
Elizabeth de Burgh, Lady of Clare, (c. 1294-1360), foundress of Clare College, Cambridge, was the youngest daughter of Gilbert Clare Earl of Gloucester and Hertford (d. 1295) by his second marriage to Edward I's daughter Joan of Acre (1271-1307). She was married first to John Burgh (d. 1313), heir to the earldom of Ulster, to whom she bore her only son William. Following the childless death of her only brother Gilbert at Bannockburn in 1314, she became a great heiress and was abducted in 1316, probably with her consent, by Theobald Verdon, who died later the same year and to whom she bore a posthumous daughter Isabel. A daughter Elizabeth was born by her third marriage to Roger Damory, who died in 1321. Still only in her mid-twenties, with dowers from all three husbands and with an inheritance worth at least 2,000 a year, she was an obvious target both for marriage and for molestation by the Despensers, who defrauded her of her lordship of Usk. This was recovered after their overthrow and she did not marry again, taking a vow of chastity by 1344. At her death her inheritance descended to her granddaughter Elizabeth, wife of Edward III's son Lionel, Duke of Clarence, and thence passed to the Mortimers and house of York.
Elizabeth's widowhood is illuminated by the finest set of household accounts still surviving. These reveal that she lived in stately splendour at Clare in Suffolk, where she received a stream of visitors, including her kinsfolk Edward III and Queen Philippa. 250 people received her livery in 1343, many of them members of her household, and at least 3,000 a year and sometimes more was spent by her wardrobe and household. This was not because Elizabeth was extravagant; she ran her household and estates efficiently, obtained value for her money, and took a strong line with poachers. That 93 esquires took her livery indicates her role as a great local aristocrat, particularly in East Anglia, which also emerges from her religious patronage.
As an heiress, Elizabeth held estates in her own right, not for life, and could thus give generously to the Church without first saving up wealth, as her friend Mary of St Pol had to do. Already before her husbands' deaths, she had vowed to go on pilgrimage to Santiago and the Holy Land, a promise she was unable to fulfill, and from the early 1330s was giving property to Ely cathedral priory, Tremenhall and Anglesey priories, and West Dereham Abbey. Her attention was attracted by 1336 to the notoriously under-financed University Hall at Cambridge, which she was persuaded to take over as Clare Hall, to endow (1346), and for which she devised statutes in 1359. All this involved dealing tactfully but firmly with the university and unsatisfactory fellows. Clare College was the first college deliberately planned to include undergraduates. While Elizabeth's example may have prompted Mary of St Pol to found Pembroke College, certainly it was Mary who interested Elizabeth in the Franciscans. In 1343 Elizabeth gave a church to Mary's abbey of Franciscan nuns (Minoresses) at Denney, in 1347 she founded a Franciscan friary at the pilgrimage centre of Walsingham priory, from 1355 (like Mary) she was authorised to stay overnight in Minoress houses, and in 1360 her will asked for burial at the Aldgate house of Minoresses. Her influence helps explain the foundation of the final English house of Minoresses at Bruisyard by her granddaughter and her husband Clarence with nuns from Denney. [Michael Hicks, Who's Who in Late Medieval England, Shepheard-Walwyn Ltd, London, 1991]
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Elizabeth m. 1st, John de Burgh, son of Richard, Earl of Ulster, by whom she had issue, William, Earl of Ulster, who m. Maud, sister of Henry Plantagenet, Duke of Lancaster, and left a dau. and heiress, Elizabeth de Burgh, who m. Lionel Plantagenet, Duke of Clarence, K.G., and had an only dau. and heiress, Philippa Plantagenet, who m. Edward Mortimer, Earl of March. Elizabeth, widow of John de Burgh, m. 2ndly, Theobald de Verdon, and 3rdly, Roger d'Amory; by the last she had two daus., Elizabeth, m. to John, Lord Bardolph, and Eleanor, m. to John de Raleigh. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, London, 1883, p. 120, Clare, Lords of Clare, Earls of Hertford, Earls of Gloucester]
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Elizabeth de Clare, the youngest sister of Gilbert de Clare, Earl of Hertford and Gloucester, m. John de Burgh, son of Richard, Earl of Ulster, and through this alliance the honour of Clare came into the possession of the de Burghs. The heiress of Clare left a son, William de Burgh, Earl of Ulster, who m. Maud, sister of Henry Plantagenet, Duke of Lancaster. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 434, Plantagenet, Duke of Clarence]
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They had the following children:
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9765022. Henry Plantagenet Earl of Lancaster was born about 1281 in Grosmont Castle, Monmouthshire, Wales. He died 22 Sep 1345 in Leicester, Leicestershire, England. Henry married Maud de Chaworth before 2 Mar 1296/1297. [Parents]
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9765023. Maud de Chaworth was born about 1282 in Kidwelly, Carmarthenshire, Wales. She died after 19 Feb 1316/1317. [Parents]
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They had the following children:
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Blanche Plantagenet was born about 1297 in Stevington, Bedfordshire, England. She died about 12 Jul 1380. |
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Maud Plantagenet was born about 1298 and died 5 May 1377. | |
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Mary Plantagenet was born 1300/1317 in Tutbury, Staffordshire, England. She died 1 Sep 1362. |
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Henry Grosmont Plantagenet Duke Lancaster I was born about 1306 in Grosmont Castle, Monmouthshire, Wales. He died 23 Mar 1360/1361 in Leicester, Leicestershire, England. |
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Joan Plantagenet was born about 1310 in Norfolk, Norfolk, England. She died 7 Jul 1349. |
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Eleanor Plantagenet was born 1311 in Grismond Castle, Monmouth, England. She died 11 Jan 1371/1372 in Arundel, Sussex, England. |
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