Ninth Generation



9-1 Ralph SALISBURY, son of William and Margaret Salisbury, died in 1405. He was buried in Lleweni Chapel, Wales. He married Margaret.
 
 

9-2 Margaret, daughter of Iguana ap Cawygan ap Llewarch.

“Daughter and heir of Iguana ap Cadwygan ap Llewarch, a descendant of Llewarch Holbwrch, treasurer of Griffith ap Llewelyn, Prince of North Wales.”

Salisburies of Lleweni, http://members.aol.com/dalesman/wales3.htm

 
9-3 John STANLEY (Knight Sheriff of Anglesey), son of John de Stanley and Isabel Lathom, was born about 1386 of Lathom, Lancashire, England. He died on 27 Nov 1437 in Anslesey, Wales. He married Isabel HARRINGTON about 1408 of Hornby, Lancashire, England.
 
“Constable of Carnarvon, Justice of Chester. Steward of Macclesfield; Lord of Man. The house of Stanley came into possession of the Island in 1406, and as it appears to us essential to give a summary account of this little kingdom from the period of their accession, we shall proceed to do so in as concise a manner as the subject demands. In the year 1493, the Earl of Salisbury, then King of the Island, sold it, with his crown and title of king, to Sir William Le Scroop. The deed of sale runs thus: "Sir William Le Scroop bought of William Montacute, Earl of Salisbury, the Isle of Man, with the title of King, and the right of being crowned with a golden crown" Sir Wm. Le Scroop, afterwards Earl of Wiltshire, was found guilty of high treason and beheaded, when Henry Percy, Earl of Northumberland, was granted the Island by King Henry IV, and he also having been attainted, was deprived of it by act of Parliament, and the Island was ordered to be seized for the king’s use; but seven years afterwards it was granted by the king to Sir John Stanley, his heirs and successors, under the title of King.”  www.tudorplace.com

 
 

9-4 Isabel HARRINGTON, daughter of Robert de Haverington and Isabel Loring,was born about 1386 of Aldingham, Lancashire, England. She died in Anslesey, Wales.
 
 

9-5 Robert GOUSHILL (Sir), son of Nicholas de Goushill, was born in 1350 of Hoveringham, Nottinghamshire, England. He died on 2/21 Jul 1403/1404 in Shrewsbury, Shropshire, England. He was buried in Hoveringham, Nottinghamshire, England. He married Elizabeth FITZALAN on 1 Sep 1401 of Hoveringham, Nottinghamshire, England.
 

         “Sir Robert Goushill was born in 1362 at Hoveringham, and was the son of Nicholas Goushill. He was knighted for gallantry at the Battle of Shrewsbury in 1403, and died shortly after of his wounds on July 21, 1403. The Goushill line can be traced back to an earlier Robert Goushill born c. 1130. Sir Robert Goushill married the widowed Duchess of Norfolk, Elizabeth FitzAlan, in 1401. The couple had two daughters, Joan who married Thomas Stanley, and Elizabeth who married Robert Wingfield. Robert Goushill was the third of four husbands of Elizabeth FitzAlan, the others being Sir William de Montagu, Thomas Mowbry who was Duke of Norfolk, and after the death of Robert Goushill, Sir Gerald Usflete.”
 

           http://community-2.webtv.net/BBmorrison/PlantagenetAncestry/page2.html

 

 

9-6 Elizabeth FITZALAN, daughter of Richard Fitzalan and Elizabeth de Bohun, was born in 1366 of Arundel, Sussex, England. She died on 8 Jul 1425 in Heveringham, Nottingham, England. She was buried in Hoveringham, Nottinghamshire, England.
 
 

       “Elizabeth FitzAlan was born about 1372, and was the daughter of Richard FitzAlan, Earl of Arundel, and his wife Elizabeth Bohun. Through her mother, Elizabeth FitzAlan is descended from King Edward I. Through her father, she is descended from Edmund Plantagenet, brother of Edward I, both being sons of King Henry III and Eleanor of Provence. Elizabeth FitzAlan died on July 8, 1425, and was buried at Hoveringham Church next to Robert Goushill. This lovely tomb with marble effigies of Robert and Elizabeth can be found at Hoveringham Church close to the front door.”
 
http://community-2.webtv.net/BBmorrison/PlantagenetAncestry/page2.html

 
 

9-7 Ralph de NEVILLE (Earl of Westmoreland) son of John Neville and Maud de Percy, was born in 1364 of Castle Raby, Raby with Keverstone, Durham, England. He died on 21 Oct 1425/1426 in Castle Raby, Raby with Keverstone, Durham, England. He was buried in Oct 1425 in Collegiate Church, Staindrop, Durham, England. He married Joan de BEAUFORT on 29 Nov 1396 in Chateau De Beaufort, Meuse-Et-Loire, France.
 

         “Active in Border affairs for most of his life, Ralph, first Earl of Westmoreland was a significant political presence in the North, making a successful transition from a supporter of Richard II to one of the Lancastrian regime, and serving both Henry IV and Henry V. Ralph married twice. He had nine children by his first wife. By his second wife, Joan Beaufort, he had fourteen. He took great pains to secure Middleham for Richard Neville, his eldest son from his second marriage, rather than to his heirs from his first marriage. Rivalry between the "senior" and "junior" branches of the Nevill family thus created contributed to the political turmoil in the north of England preceding and during the Wars of the Roses. Ralph died in 1425 and is buried with his two wives at St. Mary's Church, Staindrop (in County Durham)."
 

           http://www.medievalhistory.net/genealog.htm
 

          “The family of Ralph Neville was one of the most powerful in England and shared domination of the northern counties with the Percy family, with whom the Nevilles were closely allied. Neville succeeded his father as Baron Neville of Raby in 1388 and supported Richard II against the baronial party. In 1397 he was created earl of Westmorland. His second wife was Joan Beaufort, daughter of John of Gaunt and half sister of Henry of Lancaster (later Henry IV). When, in 1399, Henry revolted against Richard, Westmorland supported Lancaster. He continued to support Henry as king and helped to put down the Percy revolt in 1403. When a new anti-Lancastrian revolt broke out in 1405, Westmorland captured two of the leaders, Archbishop Richard Le Scrope and the earl marshal of England, by trickery, but he had nothing to do with their quick execution. He was the father of a large family, many of whom made advantageous marriages. His daughter Cecily Neville married Richard, duke of York, and became the mother of Edward IV and Richard III; another of his grandsons was Richard Neville, earl of Warwick, called the Kingmaker.”
 

           http://homepages.shu.ac.uk/~conseal/whos_who.htm#Ralph Neville
 
 

9-8 Joan de BEAUFORT, daughter of John of Gaunt, Prince of England, and Catherine de Roet,  was born about 1375 in Chateau De Beaufort, Maine-Et-Loire, France. She died on 13 Nov 1440 in Howden, Yorkshire, England. She was buried in Lincoln Cathedral, Lincoln, Lincolnshire, England.
 
 

9-9 Thomas MONTAGU (Earl of Salisbury), son of John Montagu and Maud Francis, was born in 1388 of Salisbury, Wiltshire, England. He died on 3 Nov 1428 in Orleans. He was buried in Priory, Bisham, Berkshire, England. He married Eleanor (Alianore) de HOLAND on 23 May 1399.
 

        “Thomas Montagu died 27 October 1428 in Meung, France (of wounds received during the siege of Orleans). He fought with Henry V at Harfleur and Agincourt Lieutenant-General of Normandy; Governor of Champagne and Brie, Lieutenant-General of the Field. He was called by Henry's biographer Desmond Seward the most brilliant commander of the entire Hundred Years War after Henry himself. A complete professional, he was a daring raider into enemy territory who could extricate his men from the most dangerous situations; at the same time he was a skilled artilleryman and expert in siegecraft ... Above all, he had a shrewd grasp of strategy and tactics. He was popular with the troops and dreaded by the enemy."
 

           Salisbury is a desperate homicide,

           He fighteth as one weary of his life. (Shakespeare)
 
http://www.flemingmultimedia.com/Genealogy/ThomasMontagu.html

 

          “Thomas who was summoned as an earl in 1409, his father’s dignities being restored to him in 1421, by which time his services at Harileur and Agincourt had earned him French lordships, the lieutenant-generalship of Normandy and the earldom of Perche. The last of a race of warriors, he ended his service at the famous siege of Orleans, a cannon-ball dashing into his face the stone and ironwork of the window from which he was gazing at the city. By his second wife, the daughter of Thomas Chaucer the Speaker, he had no issue. By his first wife, Eleanor, daughter of Thomas Holand, earl of Kent, he had an only daughter Alice, wife of Richard Neville, a’ younger son of the first earl of Westmorland, who claimed and was allowed the earldom of Salisbury in right of his marriage.”
 

           http://40.1911encyclopedia.org/M/MO/MONTAGU_FAMILY_.htm
 
 

9-10 Eleanor (Alianore) de HOLAND, son of Thomas de Holand and Alice Fitzalan,was born in 1392 in Upholland, Lancashire, England. She died on 18 Oct 1405. She was buried on 23 Oct 1405 in Bisham, Berkshire, England.
 
 
 

9-11 Richard WYDEVILL, son of John de Wydevill and Isabel, was born about 1385 of La Mote, Maidstone, Kent, England. He died after 29 Nov 1441 of Grafton, Northamptonshire, England. He was buried in Maidstone, Kent, England. He married Joan (Jane) BEDLISGATE.
 
 
 

9-12 Joan (Jane) BEDLISGATE, daughter of Thomas Bittlesgate and Mary Beauchamp,was born about 1390 of Bedlisgate, England. She died after 17 Jul 1448.
 
 

9-13 Pierre de LUXEMBOURG (Count de St. Pol), son of Jean de Luxembourg and Marguerite Enghien, was born in 1390 of Luxembourg. He died on 31 Aug 1433. He married Marguerite de BAUX in 1405.
 

         “Jacquetta's father, Pierre of Luxembourg, Count of St Pol, was the representative of a cadet line of the illustrious House of Luxembourg, important players in medieval Europe. The family first came to major prominence when Henry of Luxembourg was elected Henry VII, Holy Roman Emperor, in 1308. Pierre had inherited the County of St Pol from the important French family of de Chatillon and through them could trace his descent from the Dukes of Brittany and Louis VI of France (1108-1137), from Henry III of England (1216-1272) from the great Hohenstaufen Holy Roman Emperor Frederick I Barbarossa (1152-1190) and even from Isaac II Angelus, Emperor of Byzantium (1185-1195 and 1203-1204).”
 

          http://www.quns.cam.ac.uk/Queens/Record/2001/History/elizabeth.html
 
 

9-14 Marguerite de BAUX, daughter of Francois de Baux and Justine Ursins,was born in 1394 of Luxembourg. She died in 1469.
 

        “Pierre de Luxembourg's wife, Jacquetta's mother, was an Italian princess, Marguerite del Balzo (or des Baux) daughter of Francesco, Duke of Andria (in Apulia) Marguerite's grandfather Nicolo des Ursins (or Orsini), Count of Nola, was himself the great-grandson of Guy de Montfort, Count of Nola, the only surviving son and heir of the great Simon de Montfort, Earl of Leicester (the founding father of the English Parliament) and his wife Eleanor, daughter of King John of England. After the Battle of Evesham in which his father was killed Guy fled to Italy and was there granted the County of Nola. The des Ursins themselves were descended from Gentile Orsini, brother of Pope Nicholas III (1272-1280). Marguerite could also trace her ancestry to Adenalfo d'Aquino, the brother of the great philosopher and theologian St Thomas Aquinas, who lived 1225-74 and who had been canonised in 1323.”
 

          http://www.quns.cam.ac.uk/Queens/Record/2001/History/elizabeth.html
 
 

9-15 Ralph HASTINGS, son of Ralph de Hastings and Margaret Herle,was born about 1366 of Kirby, Leicestershire, England. He was christened in York Castle, York Co, England. He died in 1398. He married Maud de SUTTON after 1384.
 
 

9-16 Maud de SUTTON was born about 1370 of Sutton, England. She died in 1398.
 
 

9-17 Thomas CAMOYS, Lord, son of John de Camoys and Margaret Foliot,was born about 1351 in Trotton, Sussex, England. He died on 28 Mar 1421 in Trotton, Sussex, England. He was buried in Trotton, Sussex, England. He married Elizabeth MORTIMER after 1403.
 

         “Thomas, Lord de Camoys: Baron by writ and also by tenure of Bekerton Manor, Knight of the Garter and a Privy Counciller. Succeeded on his father's death to Bekerton and Stowe Manors and in 1372 inherited by will the estates of his uncle Lord Thomas de Camoys. Summoned to Parliament as a Peer of the Realm from Richard II (1384) to Henry V (1421) and in 1384 on being elected a Knight of the shire was discharged from serving by reason of his being a Banneret. On 9th July 1381 Lord de Camoys was commissioned with others in Surrey and Sussex to forbid unlawful assemblies and to resist and punish the insurgents, and on 1th October following further commissioned to punish those insurgents who had come out of Kent into Sussex, being on 14th December next ordered to put them down with armed force if necessary. In 1386 he was again in the wars with France. On 25th June 1403 he was directed to convoy safely the Lady Queen Joan from Brittany to England, for which service he was to receive £100; conveyed also with certain ships of war, Henry IV escaping from the pestilence raging in London, from Queenborough in the Isle of Sheppey to Leigh in Essex, when pirates who followed them captured four of their store ships and the King only escaped by reason of the swiftness of his ship. For this misadventure Lord de Camoys was accused of being in correspondence with the enemy and plotting to betray the King into their hands and was therefore tried, but acquitted.”
 

           http://users.qconline.com/~kemmy/book/kemmis04.html
 
 


 

Mural of Sir Thomas Camoys and his son and daughter-in-law
in the church nave at Trotton, Sussex




9-18 Elizabeth MORTIMER, daughter of Edmund Mortimer and Lady Philippa Plantagenet,was born on 12 Feb 1370/1371 in Usk, Monmouthshire, England. She died on 20 Apr 1417 in England.
 

         “Elizabeth, daughter of Edmund Mortimer, Earl of March by his wife Philippa, daughter and heiress of Lionel Plantagenet, Duke of Clarence. She was the widow of the celebrated Henry Percy, K.G., surnamed "Hotspur," who was slain in 1403; she was born at Uske 12th February 1371 and dying in 1418 was buried at Trotton. Her dower as widow of Henry Percy consisted of the Manors of Tadcaster, Gristwaith, Austenby and Thorstanby, Yorks, all held in chief; these Manors reverted after her death to Henry, Earl of Northumberland. It is probable that she held in her own right Nonyden Manor, Bedfordshire.”
 

           http://users.qconline.com/~kemmy/book/kemmis04.html
 
 

9-19 Robert HUNGERFORD (Sir), son of Walter Hungerford and Katherine Peverell,was born in 1409 in Farley, Hungerford, Somersetshire, England. He died on 18 May 1459 in Cathedral, Salisbury, Wiltshire, England. He was buried in Cathedral, Salisbury, Wiltshire, England. He married Margaret BOTREAUX about 1439 in Somerset, England.
 

          “Robert (c. 1400—1459) was also called to parliament as a baron; he was very wealthy, both his mother and his wife being heiresses. Like several other members of the family, Robert was buried in the cathedral at Salisbury.”
 

           http://41.1911encyclopedia.org/H/HU/HUNGERFORD_BARON.htm
 
 

9-20 Margaret BOTREAUX (Baroness Botreaux), daughter of LordWilliam Botreaux and Elizabeth Beaumont, was born about 1410 in Farleigh-Hungerford, Somersetshire, England. She died on 7 Feb 1477 in Heytesbury, Wiltshire, England. She was buried in Salisbury, Wiltshire, England.
 

          "Her will mentions that she had granted "all her Mannors, Castels, Hundreds, Lands, etc to (unnamed) persons with reference to grants made for the "Ransome of Robert Lord Hungerford and Moleyns, her Son, who was then prisoner in Guyen"."
 

           http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~mysouthernfamily/myff/d0025/g0000053.html
 
 

9-21 William de MOLEYNS (Sir), son of Williams Moleyns and Margery Whalesborough, was born on 8 Dec 1405 in Stoke Poges, Buckinghamshire, England. He was christened on 8 Dec 1405 in Stoke Poges, Buckinghamshire, England. He died on 8 May 1429 in the Siege of Orleans, France. He married Anne WHALESBOROUGH on 1 May 1423 in Ewelme, Oxfordshire, England.
 
 

9-22   Anne WHALESBOROUGH, daughter of John Whalesborough, was born about 1412 of Cornwall, England. She died after 28 Feb 1467/1468 in London, Middlesex, England. She was buried in Grey Friars Church, London, Middlesex, England.
 
 


 
 

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