Nielsen Hayden genealogy

Katherine Percy

Female 1423 - 1493  (69 years)


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Katherine Percy was born on 28 May 1423 in Leconfield, Yorkshire, England (daughter of Henry Percy and Eleanor Neville); died between 2 May 1493 and 17 Oct 1493.

    Katherine married Edmund Grey before 1440. Edmund (son of John Grey and Constance Holand) was born on 26 Oct 1416; died on 22 May 1490. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. George Grey died on 21 Dec 1503 in Ampthill, Bedfordshire, England.
    2. Anne Grey died before 1498.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Henry Percy was born on 3 Feb 1393 (son of Henry "Hotspur" Percy and Elizabeth Mortimer); died on 22 May 1455 in St. Albans Abbey, Hertfordshire, England; was buried in St. Albans Abbey, Hertfordshire, England.

    Notes:

    He was restored as Earl of Northumberland in 1416 and regranted his father's entailed estates. He was knighted by the king, to whom he remained faithful all his life. He was slain fighting for the Lancastrian cause at the First Battle of St. Albans.

    Henry married Eleanor Neville. Eleanor (daughter of Ralph de Neville and Joan Beaufort) died about 1473. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Eleanor Neville (daughter of Ralph de Neville and Joan Beaufort); died about 1473.
    Children:
    1. Henry Percy was born on 25 Jul 1421; died on 29 Mar 1461 in near Towton, Yorkshire, England; was buried in St. Dionis, Yorkshire, England.
    2. 1. Katherine Percy was born on 28 May 1423 in Leconfield, Yorkshire, England; died between 2 May 1493 and 17 Oct 1493.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Henry "Hotspur" Percy was born on 20 May 1364 (son of Henry Percy and Margaret de Neville); died on 21 Jul 1403 in Shrewsbury, Shropshire, England.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate birth: 30 May 1364

    Notes:

    The holder of many offices and titles, he was knighted by Edward III in April 1377 along with the future kings Richard II and Henry IV, who were almost exactly his age. Not long after the latter ascended the throne, Henry Percy went into open rebellion, and was slain at the battle of Shrewsbury. His body was buried at Whitchurch, Shropshire, but was disinterred two days later to be exhibited in Shrewsbury. The head was cut off and fixed onto one of the gates of York.

    Henry married Elizabeth Mortimer before 10 Dec 1379. Elizabeth (daughter of Edmund Mortimer and Philippe of Clarence) was born on 12 Feb 1371 in Usk, Monmouthshire, Wales; was christened on 16 Feb 1371; died on 20 Apr 1417. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Elizabeth Mortimer was born on 12 Feb 1371 in Usk, Monmouthshire, Wales; was christened on 16 Feb 1371 (daughter of Edmund Mortimer and Philippe of Clarence); died on 20 Apr 1417.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate birth: 13 Feb 1371, Usk, Monmouthshire, Wales

    Children:
    1. Elizabeth Percy died on 26 Oct 1436; was buried in Staindrop, Durham, England.
    2. 2. Henry Percy was born on 3 Feb 1393; died on 22 May 1455 in St. Albans Abbey, Hertfordshire, England; was buried in St. Albans Abbey, Hertfordshire, England.

  3. 6.  Ralph de Neville was born before 1367 (son of John de Neville and Maud Percy); died on 21 Oct 1425 in Raby Castle, Durham, England; was buried in Collegiate Church of St. Mary, Staindrop, Durham, England.

    Notes:

    Aside from being the maternal grandfather of Edward IV, he was also the paternal grandfather (through his son Richard Neville, 5th Earl of Salisbury (1400–1460), and Alice Montacute) of the "Kingmaker," Richard Neville, 16th Earl of Warwick (1428-1471).

    Ralph married Joan Beaufort before 29 Nov 1396. Joan (daughter of John of Gaunt and Catherine de Roet) was born about 1379; died on 13 Nov 1440 in Howden, Yorkshire, England; was buried in Lincoln Cathedral, Lincoln, Lincolnshire, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 7.  Joan Beaufort was born about 1379 (daughter of John of Gaunt and Catherine de Roet); died on 13 Nov 1440 in Howden, Yorkshire, England; was buried in Lincoln Cathedral, Lincoln, Lincolnshire, England.

    Notes:

    Countess of Westmorland.

    Children:
    1. 3. Eleanor Neville died about 1473.
    2. Anne Neville died on 20 Sep 1480; was buried in Pleshey, Essex, England.
    3. George Neville was born in of Scampston, Yorkshire, England; died in 1458 in Kislingbury, Northamptonshire, England.
    4. Richard Neville was born about 1401; died on 30 Dec 1460 in Pontefract, Yorkshire, England; was buried in Bisham Priory, Berkshire, England.
    5. Cecily Neville was born on 3 May 1415; died on 31 May 1495 in Berkhamsted Castle, Hertfordshire, England; was buried in Fotheringay, Northamptonshire, England.


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  Henry Percy was born on 10 Nov 1341 in of Warkworth, Northumberland, England (son of Henry de Percy and Mary of Lancaster); died on 19 Feb 1408 in Bramham Moor, near Tadcaster, Yorkshire, England; was buried in York Cathedral, York, Yorkshire, England.

    Notes:

    Earl of Northumberland. From Wikipedia:

    Henry Percy was originally a follower of Edward III of England, for whom he held high offices in the administration of northern England. At a young age he was made Warden of the Marches towards Scotland in 1362, with the authority to negotiate with the Scottish government. In February 1367 he was entrusted with the supervision of all castles and fortified places in the Scottish marches. He went on to support King Richard II and was created an Earl and briefly given the title of Marshal of England. Between 1383 and 1384 he was appointed Admiral of the Northern Seas. After Richard elevated his rival Ralph Neville to the position of Earl of Westmorland in 1397, Percy supported the rebellion of Henry Bolingbroke, who became King as Henry IV.

    On King Henry IV's coronation he was appointed Constable of England and granted the lordship of the Isle of Man. Percy and his son, Henry Percy, known as "Hotspur", were given the task of subduing the rebellion of Owain Glynd?r, but their attempts to make peace with the Welsh rebels did not meet with the king's approval.

    In 1403 the Percys turned against Henry IV in favour of Edmund Mortimer, 5th Earl of March, and then conspired with Owain Glynd?r against King Henry. The Tripartite Indenture was signed by all three parties, which divided England up between them. Glynd?r was to be given Wales, and a substantial part of the west of England, Northumberland was to have received the north of England, as well as Northamptonshire, Norfolk, Warwickshire, and Leicestershire. The Mortimers were to have received the rest of southern England, below the river Trent.

    The Percy rebellion failed at the Battle of Shrewsbury, where Hotspur was killed. Since the earl did not directly participate in the rebellion, he was not convicted of treason. However, he lost his office as Constable. In 1405 Percy supported Richard le Scrope, Archbishop of York, in another rebellion, after which Percy fled to Scotland, and his estates were confiscated by the king.

    In 1408 Percy invaded England in rebellion once more and was killed at the Battle of Bramham Moor. Percy's severed head was subsequently put on display at London Bridge.

    Henry married Margaret de Neville on 12 Jul 1358 in Brancepeth, Durham, England. Margaret (daughter of Ralph de Neville and Alice de Audley) died on 11 May 1372; was buried in North Allerton, Yorkshire, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 9.  Margaret de Neville (daughter of Ralph de Neville and Alice de Audley); died on 11 May 1372; was buried in North Allerton, Yorkshire, England.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: 12 May 1372
    • Alternate death: 13 May 1372

    Children:
    1. 4. Henry "Hotspur" Percy was born on 20 May 1364; died on 21 Jul 1403 in Shrewsbury, Shropshire, England.

  3. 10.  Edmund Mortimer was born on 1 Feb 1352 in Llangoed in Llyswen, Breconshire, Wales (son of Roger de Mortimer and Philippe de Montagu); died on 27 Dec 1381 in Dominican Friary, Cork, Ireland; was buried in Wigmore Abbey, Herefordshire, England.

    Notes:

    Earl of March. Earl of Ulster.

    From Wikipeia:

    An infant at the death of his father, Edmund, as a ward of the crown, was placed by Edward III of England under the care of William of Wykeham and Richard Fitzalan, 10th Earl of Arundel.

    The position of the young earl, powerful on account of his possessions and hereditary influence in the Welsh marches, was rendered still more important by his marriage on 24 August 1369 at the age of 17 to the 14-year-old Philippa, the only child of the late Lionel of Antwerp, Duke of Clarence, the second son of Edward III.

    Lionel's late wife, Elizabeth, had been daughter and heiress of William Donn de Burgh, 3rd Earl of Ulster, and Lionel had himself been created Earl of Ulster before his marriage. Edmund inherited the title Earl of Ulster on Lionel's death.

    Therefore, the Earl of March not only represented one of the chief Anglo-Norman lordships in Ireland in right of his wife Philippa, but Philippa's line was also the second most senior line of descent in the succession to the crown, after Edward, the Black Prince and his son, King Richard II of England. John of Gaunt, younger brother of Prince Edward, had become the 1st Duke of Lancaster and thus the source of the House of Lancaster's claim to the throne.

    This marriage had, therefore, far-reaching consequences in English history, ultimately giving rise to the claim of the House of York to the crown of England contested in the Wars of the Roses between the Yorks and the Lancasters; Edward IV being descended from the second adult son of Edward III as great-great-grandson of Philippa, countess of March, and in the male line from Edmund of Langley, the first Duke of York and the fourth adult son of Edward III.

    Edmund Mortimer's son Roger Mortimer, 4th Earl of March would become heir presumptive to the English crown during the reign of Richard II.

    Mortimer, now styled Earl of March and Ulster, became Marshal of England in 1369, and was employed in various diplomatic missions during the next following years. He was a member of the committee appointed by the Peers to confer with the Commons in 1373 - the first instance of such a joint conference since the institution of representative parliaments on the question of granting supplies for John of Gaunt's war in France.

    He participated in the opposition to Edward III and the court party, which grew in strength towards the end of the reign, taking the popular side and being prominent in the Good Parliament of 1376 among the lords who supported the Prince of Wales and opposed the Court Party and John of Gaunt. The Speaker of the House of Commons in this parliament was March's steward, Peter de la Mare, (1294-1387 of Little Hereford, Hereford), who firmly withstood John of Gaunt in stating the grievances of the Commons, in supporting the impeachment of several high court officials, and in procuring the banishment of the king's mistress, Alice Perrers. March was a member of the administrative council appointed by the same parliament after the death of Edward, the Black Prince to attend the king and advise him in all public affairs.

    Following the end of the Good Parliament its acts were reversed by John of Gaunt, March's steward was jailed, and March himself was ordered to inspect Calais and other remote royal castles as part of his duty as Marshal of England. March chose instead to resign the post.

    On the accession of Richard II, a minor, in 1377, the Earl became a member of the standing council of government; though as husband of the heir-presumptive to the crown he wisely abstained from claiming any actual administrative office. The richest and most powerful person in the realm was, however, the king's uncle John of Gaunt, whose jealousy led March to accept the office of Lord Lieutenant of Ireland in 1379. March succeeded in asserting his authority in eastern Ulster, but failed to subdue the O'Neills farther west. Proceeding to Munster to put down the turbulent southern chieftains, March was killed at Cork on 27 December 1381. He was buried in Wigmore Abbey, of which he had been a benefactor, and where his wife Philippa was also interred.

    Edmund married Philippe of Clarence about May 1368 in Reading, Berkshire, England. Philippe (daughter of Lionel of Antwerp and Elizabeth de Burgh) was born on 16 Aug 1355 in Eltham, Kent, England; was christened in Eltham, Kent, England; died before 8 Jan 1378; was buried in Wigmore Abbey, Herefordshire, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 11.  Philippe of Clarence was born on 16 Aug 1355 in Eltham, Kent, England; was christened in Eltham, Kent, England (daughter of Lionel of Antwerp and Elizabeth de Burgh); died before 8 Jan 1378; was buried in Wigmore Abbey, Herefordshire, England.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: Between 21 Nov 1378 and 9 Feb 1381

    Notes:

    Countess of Ulster.

    Children:
    1. 5. Elizabeth Mortimer was born on 12 Feb 1371 in Usk, Monmouthshire, Wales; was christened on 16 Feb 1371; died on 20 Apr 1417.
    2. Roger Mortimer was born on 11 Apr 1374 in Usk, Monmouthshire, Wales; died on 20 Jul 1398 in Kells, Meath, Ireland; was buried in Wigmore Abbey, Herefordshire, England.

  5. 12.  John de Neville was born about 1330 (son of Ralph de Neville and Alice de Audley); died on 17 Oct 1388 in Newcastle-upon-Tyne, Northumberland, England; was buried in Durham Cathedral, Durham, Durham, England.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate birth: Abt 1331
    • Alternate birth: Between 1337 and 1340

    Notes:

    "John (de Neville), Lord Neville, son and heir (a), had writs of livery of his father's lands in England and Scotland, after doing homage, October 1367. He was a captain under his father at the battle of Nevill's Cross, 17 October 1346, and was knighted about April 1360. His life of public service was as active as his father's. He served in Aquitaine, 1366 and the following years, and numerous commissions issued to him, December 1367 onwards. In 1368 (September, October) he was joint ambassador to France. K.G. 1369. In 1369 and 1371 trier of petitions in Parliament; Admiral of the North, July 1370, and in November following joint commissioner to treat with Genoa; steward of the King's household, 1372. In July 1372 he sailed for Brittany on an expedition protracted for want of reinforcements. He was then for several years engaged in Scotland and the Marches. In December 1377 he had a patent of the keepership of Bamburgh Castle for life; and in 1378 licence to castellate Raby and Sheriff Hutton in 1382. He was made keeper of Fronsac Castle, on the Dordogne, 3 June, and Seneschal of Gascony in June 1378. Returning to England, he became Warden of the Marches (as above), and in 1381 conservator of the peace, co. Durham and Sedbergh; joint commissioner to treat of peace with Scotland, May 1383 and March 1386/7. In July 1385 he was under orders to accompany the King to Scotland." [Complete Peerage]

    "He was presumably of age when a recognizance was made to him in January 1351/2. His age of 40 and more at his mother's death on 13 Jan. 1373/4 supports this conclusion." [The Ancestry of Charles II, citation details below.]

    John de Neville and Maud Percy were great-grandparents of Edward IV and Richard III, making them the most recent common ancestors of TNH and Elizabeth II:

    John de Neville (1330-1388) = Maud Percy (d. 1379)
    Ralph de Neville (1364-1425) = Joan Beaufort (1379-1440)
    Cecily Neville (1415-1495) = Richard of York (1411-1460)
    Edward IV (1442-1483) = Elizabeth Woodville (1437-1492)
    Elizabeth of York (1466-1503) = Henry VII (1457-1509)
    Margaret Tudor (1489)-1541) = James IV (1473-1513)
    James V (1512-1542) = Mary of Guise (1515-1560)
    Mary, Queen of Scots (1542-1587) = Henry Stuart, Lord Darnley (1545-1567)
    James VI and I (1566-1625) = Anne of Denmark (1574-1619)
    Elizabeth of Bohemia (1596-1662) = Frederick V of the Palatine (1596-1632)
    Sophia of Hanover (1630-1714) = Ernest Augustus, Elector of Brunswick-Lüneberg (1629-1698)
    George I (1660-1727) = Sophia Dorothea of Celle (1666-1726)
    George II (1683-1760) = Caroline of Ansbach (1683-1737)
    Frederick, Prince of Wales (1707-1751) = Augusta of Saxe-Gotha (1719-1772)
    George III (1738-1820) = Charlotte of Mecklenburg (1744-1818)
    Edward, Duke of Kent and Strathearn (1767-1820) = Victoria of Saxe-Coburg (1786-1861)
    Victoria (1819-1901) = Albert of Saxe-Coburg (1819-1861)
    Edward VII (1841-1910) = Alexandra of Denmark (1844-1925)
    George V (1865-1936) = Mary of Teck (1867-1953)
    George VI (1895-1952) = Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon (1900-2002)
    Elizabeth II (1926- )

    boldface: monarchs of England, Great Britain, or the United Kingdom
    italic: monarchs of Scotland
    boldface & italic: James IV and I, king of both

    TNH is therefore 19th cousin once removed to Elizabeth II, no doubt sharing that distinction with literally hundreds of millions of other people.

    John married Maud Percy before 1362. Maud (daughter of Henry de Percy and Idoine de Clifford) was born about 1345 in Alnwick, Northumberland, England; died before 18 Feb 1379; was buried in Durham Cathedral, Durham, Durham, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  6. 13.  Maud Percy was born about 1345 in Alnwick, Northumberland, England (daughter of Henry de Percy and Idoine de Clifford); died before 18 Feb 1379; was buried in Durham Cathedral, Durham, Durham, England.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: 18 Feb 1379

    Notes:

    Richardson's RA has them married "before 1362." The Ancestry of Charles II says their marriage contract was dated July 1344.

    Children:
    1. Eleanor Neville died after 1441.
    2. Thomas Neville died on 14 Mar 1407; was buried in Worksop Priory, Nottinghamshire, England.
    3. 6. Ralph de Neville was born before 1367; died on 21 Oct 1425 in Raby Castle, Durham, England; was buried in Collegiate Church of St. Mary, Staindrop, Durham, England.

  7. 14.  John of Gaunt was born in Mar 1340 in Abbey of St. Bavo, Ghent, Flanders; was christened after 24 Jun 1340 in Ghent, Flanders (son of Edward III, King of England and Philippa of Hainault, Queen Consort of England); died on 3 Feb 1399 in Leicester Castle, Leicester, Leicestershire, England; was buried in St. Paul's Cathedral, London, England.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: 3 Feb 1399, Leicester Castle, Leicestershire, England

    Notes:

    Duke of Lancaster. 527 other titles. Richest European individual of his day.

    By his first wife, he was a great-great grandfather to Isabelle of Castile; by his second wife, he was a great-grandfather to her. And the parents of the Spanish wife of his retainer Walter Blount were GX3-grandparents to Ferdinand I.

    "John [was] born in Ghent during the king's absence in March (Edward had left for England in February). The birth happened at the abbey of St Bavo because that is where the pregnant queen lodged from her arrival. The precise date 6 March is not certain." [Peter Stewart, 21 Nov 2021]

    "John's baptism presumably took place in Ghent shortly after the sea battle on 24 June 1340 -- Edward landed at Sluys and rode on to Ghent after sending news of the victory to his allies including Jean III of Brabant and supporters including Jacob van Artevelde at Thun-l'Évêque near Cambrai. Jean of Brabant was the godfather after whom John of Gaunt was named, and he held him at the font according to Froissart. An early-15th-century chronicle written at Saint-Denis claims that Jakob van Artevelde was the boy's godfather and held him at the font, but it is scarcely plausible that a burgess of Ghent was chosen as godfather to an English prince, or that if this actually happened it would not have been widely reported as a very extraordinary incident." [Peter Stewart, 21 Nov 2021]

    John married Catherine de Roet in Jan 1396 in Lincoln Cathedral, Lincoln, Lincolnshire, England. Catherine (daughter of Payne de Roet) was born about 1350; died on 10 May 1403 in Lincoln, Lincolnshire, England; was buried in Angel Choir, Lincoln Cathedral, Lincoln, Lincolnshire, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  8. 15.  Catherine de Roet was born about 1350 (daughter of Payne de Roet); died on 10 May 1403 in Lincoln, Lincolnshire, England; was buried in Angel Choir, Lincoln Cathedral, Lincoln, Lincolnshire, England.

    Notes:

    Frequently called Katherine or Catherine Swynford, after her first marriage to Hugh Swynford, even in the context of her subsequent marriage to John of Gaunt.

    Children:
    1. John Beaufort was born about 1371; died on 16 Mar 1410 in Hospital of St.-Catherine-by-the-Tower, London, England; was buried in Canterbury Cathedral, Canterbury, Kent, England.
    2. Henry Beaufort, Cardinal of England was born about 1374; died on 11 Apr 1447 in Wolvesy Palace, Winchester, Hampshire, England.
    3. 7. Joan Beaufort was born about 1379; died on 13 Nov 1440 in Howden, Yorkshire, England; was buried in Lincoln Cathedral, Lincoln, Lincolnshire, England.


Generation: 5

  1. 16.  Henry de Percy was born between 1322 and 1325 in of Alnwick, Northumberland, England (son of Henry de Percy and Idoine de Clifford); died about 18 May 1368 in Warkworth, Northumberland, England; was buried in Alnwick Abbey, Northumberland, England.

    Notes:

    Keeper of Berwick Castle, joint Warden of the Marches, Sheriff of Roxburghshire. Fought at Crécy and was present at the siege of Calais.

    Henry married Mary of Lancaster before 5 Sep 1334. Mary (daughter of Henry of Lancaster and Maud de Chaworth) was born about 1320; died on 1 Sep 1362; was buried in Alnwick Abbey, Northumberland, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 17.  Mary of Lancaster was born about 1320 (daughter of Henry of Lancaster and Maud de Chaworth); died on 1 Sep 1362; was buried in Alnwick Abbey, Northumberland, England.
    Children:
    1. 8. Henry Percy was born on 10 Nov 1341 in of Warkworth, Northumberland, England; died on 19 Feb 1408 in Bramham Moor, near Tadcaster, Yorkshire, England; was buried in York Cathedral, York, Yorkshire, England.

  3. 18.  Ralph de Neville was born about 1291 in of Raby, Durham, England (son of Ranulph de Neville and Euphemia de Clavering); died on 5 Aug 1367; was buried in Durham Cathedral, Durham, Durham, England.

    Notes:

    "Ralph (de Neville), Lord Neville, 2nd but 1st surviving son, was aged 40 and more at his father's death. He was taken prisoner with his younger brothers at Berwick in 1319. He had begun his long career of public service and official work already in 1322, when he was constable of Warkworth Castle, and serving in the Marches under the Earl of Carlisle. In 1324 he was appointed with the Earl of Angus to escort the envoys of Robert Bruce to York, to treat of peace, and in 1325 commissioner to keep the truce in Northumberland. At the time of his father's death he was already steward of the King's household. In the following January he indented to serve Sir Henry Percy, and in July was commissioned to take over the keepership of the Forest beyond Trent. He was present at the surrender of Berwick Castle to Edward III, July 1333, and again with the King in Scotland in 1334 (June-October) and in the summer of 1335; joint commissioner, 1333 and 1334, to Edward Baliol's Parliament, to demand confirmation of covenants, and in 1334 Warden of the Scottish Marches, some time sole and some time with Percy; in the same year chief of the justices in eyre of the Forest (Notts and Yorks) for that turn; in 1335 he was made keeper of Bamburgh Castle for life, and by Mar. 1336/7 was a banneret. In July 1338 and June 1340 he was appointed on the Council of Prince Edward as Keeper of the Realm, and (by the Bishop) overseer of the keepers of the temporalities of the see of Durham during his absence on the King's service. He commanded the first division at the victory of Durham, or Nevill's Cross, 17 October 1346, where King David of Scotland was taken prisoner; and took part in the naval success against the Spaniards off Winchelsea, 29 Aug. 1350." [Complete Peerage]

    Unmentioned by CP, but he was educated at Oxford. He was the first layman to be buried at Durham Cathedral, in recognition of his role in the victory at Nevill's Cross.

    Ralph married Alice de Audley after 14 Jan 1327. Alice (daughter of Hugh de Audley and Isolde le Rous) was born about 1300; died on 12 Jan 1374; was buried in Durham Cathedral, Durham, Durham, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 19.  Alice de Audley was born about 1300 (daughter of Hugh de Audley and Isolde le Rous); died on 12 Jan 1374; was buried in Durham Cathedral, Durham, Durham, England.
    Children:
    1. 9. Margaret de Neville died on 11 May 1372; was buried in North Allerton, Yorkshire, England.
    2. 12. John de Neville was born about 1330; died on 17 Oct 1388 in Newcastle-upon-Tyne, Northumberland, England; was buried in Durham Cathedral, Durham, Durham, England.

  5. 20.  Roger de Mortimer was born on 11 Nov 1328 in Ludlow, Shropshire, England (son of Edmund de Mortimer and Elizabeth de Badlesmere); died on 26 Feb 1360 in Rouvray, Côte d'Or, Burgundy, France; was buried in Wigmore Abbey, Herefordshire, England.

    Notes:

    Marshal of England. Warden of the Cinque Ports. Fought at Crécy in the first division, with the Prince of Wales. Founder knight of the Order of the Garter. Summoned to Parliament by writ in 1348. In 1354 he obtained a reversal of the sentence against his grandfather, Roger de Mortimer, and was restored to the title of Earl of March and to all of his grandfather's estates which had been forfeited to the Crown. In the following year he was summoned to Parliament by writ as Earl of March. In October 1359 he accompanied Edward III on his unsuccessful invasion of France. He was appointed Constable of the Host and rode at its head. Thereafter he was with Edward in Burgundy, where he died suddenly in February 1360.

    Roger married Philippe de Montagu. Philippe (daughter of William de Montagu and Katherine de Grandison) died on 5 Jan 1382; was buried in Austin Priory, Bisham, Berkshire, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  6. 21.  Philippe de Montagu (daughter of William de Montagu and Katherine de Grandison); died on 5 Jan 1382; was buried in Austin Priory, Bisham, Berkshire, England.
    Children:
    1. 10. Edmund Mortimer was born on 1 Feb 1352 in Llangoed in Llyswen, Breconshire, Wales; died on 27 Dec 1381 in Dominican Friary, Cork, Ireland; was buried in Wigmore Abbey, Herefordshire, England.

  7. 22.  Lionel of Antwerp was born on 29 Nov 1338 in Antwerp, Brabant, Flanders (son of Edward III, King of England and Philippa of Hainault, Queen Consort of England); died on 17 Oct 1368 in Alba, Piedmont, Italy; was buried in Austin Friars, Clare, Suffolk, England.

    Notes:

    Duke of Clarence. In right of his wife, Earl of Ulster. Chief Governor of Ireland.

    Lionel married Elizabeth de Burgh on 15 Aug 1342 in Tower of London, London, England. Elizabeth (daughter of William de Burgh and Maud of Lancaster) was born on 6 Jul 1332 in Carrickfergus Castle, Ireland; died on 10 Dec 1363 in Dublin, Ireland; was buried in Austin Friars, Clare, Suffolk, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  8. 23.  Elizabeth de Burgh was born on 6 Jul 1332 in Carrickfergus Castle, Ireland (daughter of William de Burgh and Maud of Lancaster); died on 10 Dec 1363 in Dublin, Ireland; was buried in Austin Friars, Clare, Suffolk, England.

    Notes:

    Countess of Ulster.

    The earliest surviving record in which Geoffrey Chaucer is named is a 1357 entry in the account book of her household, in which Chaucer is the recipient of clothing and a small gift "for neccessaries at Christmas." He appears to have been one of her retainers, possibly a page, and was connected with her household until at least 1360. When Prince Lionel came of age in 1359, her household and his merged and Chaucer became one of his retainers.

    Children:
    1. 11. Philippe of Clarence was born on 16 Aug 1355 in Eltham, Kent, England; was christened in Eltham, Kent, England; died before 8 Jan 1378; was buried in Wigmore Abbey, Herefordshire, England.

  9. 26.  Henry de Percy was born in 1299 (son of Henry de Percy and Eleanor de Arundel); died on 26 Feb 1352 in Warkworth, Northumberland, England; was buried in Alnwick, Northumberland, England.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate birth: 2 Feb 1300, Leconfield, Yorkshire, England
    • Alternate birth: 6 Feb 1301, Leconfield, Yorkshire, England
    • Alternate death: 27 Feb 1352, Warkworth, Northumberland, England

    Notes:

    Keeper of Berwick Castle; Keeper of the Coast of Yorkshire and Northumberland; Keeper of Bamburgh and Skipton Castles; Warden of the Scottish Marches; Justiciar of the East March.

    M.P. 1322-52, according to Ancestral Roots.

    Great-grandfather of Henry "Hotspur" Percy.

    "A powerful border lord, he was a justiciar and warden of the Scottish marches, participated frequently in raids, skirmishes, battles and sieges against the Scots, including the battle of Neville's Cross, where he commanded a division." [The Ancestry of Charles II]

    Henry married Idoine de Clifford about 1318. Idoine (daughter of Robert de Clifford and Maud de Clare) was born in of Appleby, Westmorland, England; died on 24 Aug 1365; was buried in Beverley Minster, Yorkshire, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  10. 27.  Idoine de Clifford was born in of Appleby, Westmorland, England (daughter of Robert de Clifford and Maud de Clare); died on 24 Aug 1365; was buried in Beverley Minster, Yorkshire, England.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate birth: Abt 1303, Clifford Castle, Herefordshire, England

    Notes:

    Newsgroups: soc.genealogy.medieval
    Date: Thu, 25 Dec 2014 11:11:50 -0800 (PST)
    Subject: Re: Looking for primary source documents on Idonia [Imania] de Clifford
    Reply-To: Douglas Richardson

    Dear Steve ~

    The correct name of Henry de Percy's wife is Idoine de Clifford. "Idonia" or "Idonea" are the Latin forms of her name and should be avoided.

    The parentage of Idoine de Clifford is hardly elusive as you imagine. There are no less than five separate visitations/medieval sources which name Idoine, wife of Sir Henry de Percy, as a Clifford, or the daughter of Lord Clifford:

    1. Archaeologia Aeliana 3 (1844): 40 (Chronicles of Alnwick Abbey: "Iste Henricus disponsavit idoneam filiam Domini de Clyfford et genuit ex ea Anno Domini 1320 Henricum quartum et tertium Dominum de Alnewyk et alios plures filios et filias inter quos erat Thomas qui postea fuit Episcopus Norwicens ...").

    2. Atkinson, Cartularium Abbathiæ de Whiteby 2 (Surtees Soc. 72) (1881): 690-696 (Percy ped.: "The fourth Henry Lord Percy ... gat on Idonea Clyfford Henry, William, Richard, Maude, Alianour Fitzwater, Roger, and Margarett that was maried to the Erle of Angus Sonne and his heire.").

    3. Flower, Vis. of Yorkshire 1563-4 (H.S.P. 16) (1881): 241-244 (Percy ped.: "Henry 4 Lord Percy. = Ida doughter of the Lord Clyfford.").

    This item is available online at the following weblink:

    books.google.com/books?id=pjMEAAAAIAAJ&pg=PA242

    4. Harvey et al., Vis. of the North 3 (Surtees Soc. 144) (1930): 18-20 (Percy ped.: "Henricus Percy = Idonea Clifforde").

    This item is available online at the following weblink:

    www.uiowa.edu/~c030149a/northern/surtees144text.pdf

    5. Harvey et al., Vis. of the North 4 (Surtees Soc. 146) (1932): 17-24 (Lassels ped.: "Idonæ [Clifford] mar: to Henry lord Percy").

    This item is available online at the following weblink:

    www.uiowa.edu/~c030149a/northern/surtees146text.pdf

    Given that we know that Sir Henry Percy was born in 1300 or 1301, and given that Henry's son and heir, also named Henry, was born about
    1322-5, the birth of Idoine de Clifford would necessarily have to fall about 1300-1310. Given the chronology, Idoine de Clifford can be placed as a daughter of Robert de Clifford (died 1314), 1st Lord Clifford, and his wife, Maud de Clare, which Robert and Maud were married in 1295. Idoine de Clifford was surely named for her father's maternal aunt, Idoine de Vipont (died 1333), wife of Roger de Leybourne, Knt., and John de Cromwell, Knt., Lord Cromwell.

    For interesting references to Idoine, wife of Sir Henry de Percy, see the following weblinks:

    books.google.com/books?id=1MUwhOPhfKcC&pg=PA116&dq=Idoine+Percy

    books.google.com/books?lr=&id=8AMhAAAAMAAJ&dq=Idoine+Percy&q=Idoine&pgis=1#search_anchor

    books.google.com/books?id=RzUdAAAAIAAJ&q=Idoine+Percy&dq=Idoine+Percy&lr=&pgis=1

    books.google.com/books?id=cu8i2yausLcC&pg=PA124&dq=Idoine+Percy&lr=

    The tomb at Beverley Minster, Yorkshire which is now attributed to Idoine de Clifford, wife of Sir Henry de Percy, bears shields with various coats of arms, among them Clifford.

    Best always, Douglas Richardson, Salt Lake City, Utah

    On Wednesday, December 24, 2014 1:15:21 AM UTC-7, The Hoorn wrote:

    So far, I have been unsuccessful in locating any primary or contemporaneous records, documenting the parentage of Idonia [Imania] de Clifford, as the daughter of Lord Robert Clifford (killed in battle Bannockburn 24 Jun 1314) and Matilda de Clare. Idonia was also the wife of Sir Henry Percy (1301-1352).

    I would sincerely welcome any assistance.

    Thanks!

    Children:
    1. Isabel Percy died between 13 Sep 1349 and 25 May 1368.
    2. Eleanor de Percy died before 18 Oct 1361; was buried in Dunmow Priory, Little Dunmow, Essex, England.
    3. Henry de Percy was born between 1322 and 1325 in of Alnwick, Northumberland, England; died about 18 May 1368 in Warkworth, Northumberland, England; was buried in Alnwick Abbey, Northumberland, England.
    4. 13. Maud Percy was born about 1345 in Alnwick, Northumberland, England; died before 18 Feb 1379; was buried in Durham Cathedral, Durham, Durham, England.

  11. 28.  Edward III, King of England was born on 13 Nov 1312 in Windsor, Berkshire, England (son of Edward II, King of England and Isabella of France, Queen Consort of England); died on 21 Jun 1377 in Sheen Palace, Richmond, England; was buried in Westminster Abbey, Westminster, Middlesex, England.

    Edward married Philippa of Hainault, Queen Consort of England on 24 Jan 1328 in York Cathedral, York, Yorkshire, England. Philippa (daughter of William III of Hainault and Jeanne de Valois) was born about 1314; died on 15 Aug 1359 in Windsor, Berkshire, England; was buried in Westminster Abbey, Westminster, Middlesex, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  12. 29.  Philippa of Hainault, Queen Consort of England was born about 1314 (daughter of William III of Hainault and Jeanne de Valois); died on 15 Aug 1359 in Windsor, Berkshire, England; was buried in Westminster Abbey, Westminster, Middlesex, England.

    Notes:

    Genealogist Martin Hollick has pointed out that the marriage of Edward III and Philippa of Hainault marks the point at which descent from William the Conqueror was united with descent from Harold Godwinson, who lost to William at Hastings in 1066:

    Harold II Godwinson, King of England (~1022-1066) = Ealdgyth of Mercia (d. >1066)
    Gytha of Wessex = Vladimir II Monomakh, Grand Prince of Kiev (1053-1125)
    Mstislav I, Grand Prince of Kiev (1076-1132) = Ljubawa Dimitriewna Sawiditsch (d. 1167)
    Euphrosine of Kiev (~1130-1186) = Geisa II, King of Hungary, Croatia, Dalmatia, and Rama (1130-1161)
    Béla III, King of Hungary, Croatia, Dalmatia, and Rama (~1148-1196) = Anna de Châtillon (1154-1184)
    András II, King of Hungary (1176-1235) = Yolanda of Courtenay (~1200-1233)
    Violant of Hungary (d. 1251) = James I, King of Aragón (1208-1276)
    Isabella of Aragón (d. 1271) = Philippe III, King of France (1245-1285)
    Charles of France (1270-1325) = Margaret of Anjou (1272-1299)
    Jeanne de Valois (~1294-1342) = William III of Hainault) (~1286-1337)
    Philippa of Hainault (~1314-1359)

    Children:
    1. Edward of Woodstock was born on 15 Jun 1330 in Woodstock, Oxfordshire, England; died on 8 Jun 1376 in Westminster Palace, Westminster, Middlesex, England.
    2. Lionel of Antwerp was born on 29 Nov 1338 in Antwerp, Brabant, Flanders; died on 17 Oct 1368 in Alba, Piedmont, Italy; was buried in Austin Friars, Clare, Suffolk, England.
    3. 14. John of Gaunt was born in Mar 1340 in Abbey of St. Bavo, Ghent, Flanders; was christened after 24 Jun 1340 in Ghent, Flanders; died on 3 Feb 1399 in Leicester Castle, Leicester, Leicestershire, England; was buried in St. Paul's Cathedral, London, England.
    4. Edmund of Langley was born on 5 Jun 1341 in Kings Langley, Hertfordshire, England; died on 1 Aug 1402 in Kings Langley, Hertfordshire, England; was buried in Church of the Dominicans, Langley, Hertfordshire, England.
    5. Thomas of Woodstock was born on 7 Jan 1355 in Woodstock, Oxfordshire, England; died on 8 Sep 1397 in Calais, France; was buried in Confessor's Chapel, Westminster Abbey, London, England.

  13. 30.  Payne de Roet

    Notes:

    Also called Gilles. Also called Paonet de Roet, de Ruet, de Roelt.

    "[A] knight of Hainault who travelled to England in the service of Philippa, queen of Edward III, and subsequently rose to be Guyenne king of arms." [Oxford Dictionary of National Biography]

    Children:
    1. Philippa de Roet died before 7 Nov 1387.
    2. 15. Catherine de Roet was born about 1350; died on 10 May 1403 in Lincoln, Lincolnshire, England; was buried in Angel Choir, Lincoln Cathedral, Lincoln, Lincolnshire, England.


Generation: 6

  1. 26.  Henry de Percy was born in 1299 (son of Henry de Percy and Eleanor de Arundel); died on 26 Feb 1352 in Warkworth, Northumberland, England; was buried in Alnwick, Northumberland, England.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate birth: 2 Feb 1300, Leconfield, Yorkshire, England
    • Alternate birth: 6 Feb 1301, Leconfield, Yorkshire, England
    • Alternate death: 27 Feb 1352, Warkworth, Northumberland, England

    Notes:

    Keeper of Berwick Castle; Keeper of the Coast of Yorkshire and Northumberland; Keeper of Bamburgh and Skipton Castles; Warden of the Scottish Marches; Justiciar of the East March.

    M.P. 1322-52, according to Ancestral Roots.

    Great-grandfather of Henry "Hotspur" Percy.

    "A powerful border lord, he was a justiciar and warden of the Scottish marches, participated frequently in raids, skirmishes, battles and sieges against the Scots, including the battle of Neville's Cross, where he commanded a division." [The Ancestry of Charles II]

    Henry married Idoine de Clifford about 1318. Idoine (daughter of Robert de Clifford and Maud de Clare) was born in of Appleby, Westmorland, England; died on 24 Aug 1365; was buried in Beverley Minster, Yorkshire, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 27.  Idoine de Clifford was born in of Appleby, Westmorland, England (daughter of Robert de Clifford and Maud de Clare); died on 24 Aug 1365; was buried in Beverley Minster, Yorkshire, England.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate birth: Abt 1303, Clifford Castle, Herefordshire, England

    Notes:

    Newsgroups: soc.genealogy.medieval
    Date: Thu, 25 Dec 2014 11:11:50 -0800 (PST)
    Subject: Re: Looking for primary source documents on Idonia [Imania] de Clifford
    Reply-To: Douglas Richardson

    Dear Steve ~

    The correct name of Henry de Percy's wife is Idoine de Clifford. "Idonia" or "Idonea" are the Latin forms of her name and should be avoided.

    The parentage of Idoine de Clifford is hardly elusive as you imagine. There are no less than five separate visitations/medieval sources which name Idoine, wife of Sir Henry de Percy, as a Clifford, or the daughter of Lord Clifford:

    1. Archaeologia Aeliana 3 (1844): 40 (Chronicles of Alnwick Abbey: "Iste Henricus disponsavit idoneam filiam Domini de Clyfford et genuit ex ea Anno Domini 1320 Henricum quartum et tertium Dominum de Alnewyk et alios plures filios et filias inter quos erat Thomas qui postea fuit Episcopus Norwicens ...").

    2. Atkinson, Cartularium Abbathiæ de Whiteby 2 (Surtees Soc. 72) (1881): 690-696 (Percy ped.: "The fourth Henry Lord Percy ... gat on Idonea Clyfford Henry, William, Richard, Maude, Alianour Fitzwater, Roger, and Margarett that was maried to the Erle of Angus Sonne and his heire.").

    3. Flower, Vis. of Yorkshire 1563-4 (H.S.P. 16) (1881): 241-244 (Percy ped.: "Henry 4 Lord Percy. = Ida doughter of the Lord Clyfford.").

    This item is available online at the following weblink:

    books.google.com/books?id=pjMEAAAAIAAJ&pg=PA242

    4. Harvey et al., Vis. of the North 3 (Surtees Soc. 144) (1930): 18-20 (Percy ped.: "Henricus Percy = Idonea Clifforde").

    This item is available online at the following weblink:

    www.uiowa.edu/~c030149a/northern/surtees144text.pdf

    5. Harvey et al., Vis. of the North 4 (Surtees Soc. 146) (1932): 17-24 (Lassels ped.: "Idonæ [Clifford] mar: to Henry lord Percy").

    This item is available online at the following weblink:

    www.uiowa.edu/~c030149a/northern/surtees146text.pdf

    Given that we know that Sir Henry Percy was born in 1300 or 1301, and given that Henry's son and heir, also named Henry, was born about
    1322-5, the birth of Idoine de Clifford would necessarily have to fall about 1300-1310. Given the chronology, Idoine de Clifford can be placed as a daughter of Robert de Clifford (died 1314), 1st Lord Clifford, and his wife, Maud de Clare, which Robert and Maud were married in 1295. Idoine de Clifford was surely named for her father's maternal aunt, Idoine de Vipont (died 1333), wife of Roger de Leybourne, Knt., and John de Cromwell, Knt., Lord Cromwell.

    For interesting references to Idoine, wife of Sir Henry de Percy, see the following weblinks:

    books.google.com/books?id=1MUwhOPhfKcC&pg=PA116&dq=Idoine+Percy

    books.google.com/books?lr=&id=8AMhAAAAMAAJ&dq=Idoine+Percy&q=Idoine&pgis=1#search_anchor

    books.google.com/books?id=RzUdAAAAIAAJ&q=Idoine+Percy&dq=Idoine+Percy&lr=&pgis=1

    books.google.com/books?id=cu8i2yausLcC&pg=PA124&dq=Idoine+Percy&lr=

    The tomb at Beverley Minster, Yorkshire which is now attributed to Idoine de Clifford, wife of Sir Henry de Percy, bears shields with various coats of arms, among them Clifford.

    Best always, Douglas Richardson, Salt Lake City, Utah

    On Wednesday, December 24, 2014 1:15:21 AM UTC-7, The Hoorn wrote:

    So far, I have been unsuccessful in locating any primary or contemporaneous records, documenting the parentage of Idonia [Imania] de Clifford, as the daughter of Lord Robert Clifford (killed in battle Bannockburn 24 Jun 1314) and Matilda de Clare. Idonia was also the wife of Sir Henry Percy (1301-1352).

    I would sincerely welcome any assistance.

    Thanks!

    Children:
    1. Isabel Percy died between 13 Sep 1349 and 25 May 1368.
    2. Eleanor de Percy died before 18 Oct 1361; was buried in Dunmow Priory, Little Dunmow, Essex, England.
    3. 16. Henry de Percy was born between 1322 and 1325 in of Alnwick, Northumberland, England; died about 18 May 1368 in Warkworth, Northumberland, England; was buried in Alnwick Abbey, Northumberland, England.
    4. Maud Percy was born about 1345 in Alnwick, Northumberland, England; died before 18 Feb 1379; was buried in Durham Cathedral, Durham, Durham, England.

  3. 34.  Henry of Lancaster was born about 1280 (son of Edmund "Crouchback" and Blanche of Artois); died on 22 Sep 1345; was buried in The Newarke, Leicester Castle, Leicester, Leicestershire, England.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate birth: Abt 1281, Grosmont Castle, Monmouthshire, Wales

    Notes:

    Also called "Tortcol"; also called Henry Plantagenet.

    Earl of Lancaster. Earl of Leicester.

    Steward of England; Constable of Abergavenny and Kenilworth Castles 1326; Chief Guardian of the King 1327; Captain-General of the Marches towards Scotland 1327; Councillor of Regency 1345.

    Summoned to Parliament by writs 6 Feb 1299 onward.

    "Served against the Scots and in Flanders, at the siege of Carlaverock in 1300, among the barons forcing restrictions on Edward II's powers, joined the queen's party in 1326 and captured the king later that year, knighted Edward III at his coronation, became blind in about 1330, but continued to participate in public affairs and as a counselor of the king." [Ancestry of Charles II, citation details below.]

    Henry of Lancaster and Maud de Chaworth were great-grandparents of both Henry IV and his queen, Mary de Bohun.

    Henry married Maud de Chaworth before 2 Mar 1297. Maud (daughter of Patrick de Chaworth and Isabel de Beauchamp) was born on 2 Feb 1282; died before 3 Dec 1322; was buried in Mottisfont Priory, Hampshire, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 35.  Maud de Chaworth was born on 2 Feb 1282 (daughter of Patrick de Chaworth and Isabel de Beauchamp); died before 3 Dec 1322; was buried in Mottisfont Priory, Hampshire, England.

    Notes:

    Also called Maud de Chaorces.

    Children:
    1. Maud of Lancaster died on 5 May 1377.
    2. Joan of Lancaster was born about 1312; died about 1349; was buried in Byland, Yorkshire, England.
    3. Henry of Grosmont was born in 1314; died on 24 Mar 1361 in Leicester, Leicestershire, England; was buried in Leicester, Leicestershire, England.
    4. Eleanor of Lancaster was born about 1318; died on 11 Jan 1372 in Arundel, Sussex, England; was buried in Lewes Priory, Sussex, England.
    5. 17. Mary of Lancaster was born about 1320; died on 1 Sep 1362; was buried in Alnwick Abbey, Northumberland, England.

  5. 36.  Ranulph de Neville was born on 18 Oct 1262 in of Raby, Durham, England (son of Robert de Neville and Mary Fitz Ranulph); died after 18 Apr 1331; was buried in Coverham Abbey, Yorkshire, England.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: 18 Apr 1331

    Notes:

    "Randolf or Ranulph (sometimes called, seemingly in error, Ralph, son and heir of Robert de Neville and Mary his wife, was born 18 October 1262, and was heir to the Neville estates on the death of his grandfather, in 1282 (having livery under writ of 11 January 1283/4), and to his mother's inheritance, April 1320. He was summoned, 15 July 1287, with horses and arms to a military council at Gloucester (before Edmund, Earl of Cornwall, in the King's absence abroad), and to attend the King at Westminster, June 1294. He was summoned to Parliament from 24 June 1295 to 18 February 1330/1, by writs directed Ranulpho (and Radulpho) de Neville, whereby he is held to have become Lord Neville. For service in Scotland he was summoned 1291 and in later years; for service in Gascony, 1294, 1297 and 1324; and against the rebels under the Earl of Lancaster, 1322. His seal, as Dominus de Raby, was attached to the letter of the Barons to the Pope, February 1300/1. In 1303 he was chief of the delegates summoned by the King to set forth the grievances of the people against the Bishop of Durham. He, or possibly his son Ralph, was commissioner of array in Durham, 1322, in the North Riding of Yorks, 1324, and in Northumberland, 1324 and 1326; in 1325 Keeper of the Peace and one of the specially appointed keepers of the coast in Northumberland, and in 1326 one of the commissioners to impress shipping in the ports of that county. He m., 1stly, Eupheme, daughter of Robert Fitzroger, Lord Fitzroger (see Clavering), and, 2ndly, Margery, dau. of John de Thweng, by whom he had no issue. He died shortly after 18 April 1331." [Complete Peerage IX:497-8.]

    Dugdale says of him that "It is reported of this Ranulph, that he little minded Secular business; but, for the most part, betook himself to conversation with the Canons of Merton and Coverham; as also, that he committed Incest with his own Daughter, and that Richard de Kellaw, Bishop of Durham, did for that crime compel him to do publick pennance." According to footnote (b) of the CP account quoted previously, this took place in 1313.

    A slightly different version of the incest story is found in the 1875 Preface to Volume III of The Register of Richard de Kellawe, Lord Palatine and Bishop of Durham, 1314-1316, by the volume's editor, Sir Thomas Duffus Hardy. Hardy devotes nearly a page to the conviction and punishment of Ranulph's daughter Anastasia for her adultery with John de Lilleford, dwelling at length on how "proving contumacious, sentence of the Greater Excommunication was pronounced against her." This sentence was subquently commuted by the bishop and replaced with six weeks of elaborate public penance. But "[t]his unhappy woman's troubles seem not to have ended even with this promulgation of her shame and disgrace. On the 9th of November following, a mandate was issued by the bishop for the condemnation of Sur Ranulph de Neville, knight, who had been 'judicially convicted of the crime of incest and adultery with the said Anastasia, his daughter, and wife of Sir Walter de Fauconberg;' to appear in the parish church of Aukland, on the Monday after the feast of St. Andrew the Apostle, there to receive penance for the said crime and for the further offence of contumacy. Sir Ranulph failing to appear, on the 16th of the following month, a mandate was issued, directing him to be excommunicated, in the Galilee at Durham, and all parish churches within the archdeaconry of Durham. We have no further details of this lamentable story. Sir Ranulph de Nevill, of Raby, was a baron of Parliament by writ, succeeded his grandfather Robert, in 1282, and died in 1331. It is only just to add, that Sir Ranulph seems habitually to have been in disfavour with the church; as for other, and apparently, trivial offenses, he had been pronounced excommunicated in the month of August before; but on the Tuesday after Michaelmas day had been absolved. On the 13th of October following, we find him again cited, 'for certain crimes and excesses which he has confessed,' to appear before the bishop or his commissaries, in the Galilee at Durham. In this instance, the nature of his offenses is not named."

    There certainly seems to have been no love lost between the Neville family and the Durham ecclesiastical establishment. Dugdale reports that shortly after Ranulph assumed his inheritance in 1282, he had a feud with the prior of Durham over the terms of a customary presentation of a stag to the priory on St. Cuthbert's Day. And we see from his CP entry that in 1303 "Ranulph was chief of the delegates summoned by the King to set forth the grievances of the people against the Bishop of Durham." The incest case happened in 1313. In 1318, Ranulph's eldest son Robert attacked and killed Richard Marmaduke, seneschal to the bishop, on the Old Bridge of Durham. All of which suggests a cycle of offense and reprisal. (Later in the same year, Robert was killed by James, earl of Douglas, in single combat to which Robert had dared the earl.)

    It should also be noted that Dugdale's characterization of Ranulph as "little minding Secular business" accords oddly with the eventful life of military and civilian service set forth by Complete Peerage. And yet this characterization appears elsewhere. T. F. Bulmer's 1890 History and Directory of Old Yorkshire states that this Ranulph "was so indolent and careless in the management of his affairs, that his mother settled Middleham and the rest of her manors on her grandson, Robert Neville". One wonders if we aren't simply picking through the tattered leavings of a 700-years-gone propaganda war.

    Ranulph married Euphemia de Clavering before 12 Mar 1281. Euphemia (daughter of Robert fitz Roger and Margaret la Zouche) was born after 1265; died about 1320; was buried in Staindrop, Durham, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  6. 37.  Euphemia de Clavering was born after 1265 (daughter of Robert fitz Roger and Margaret la Zouche); died about 1320; was buried in Staindrop, Durham, England.
    Children:
    1. 18. Ralph de Neville was born about 1291 in of Raby, Durham, England; died on 5 Aug 1367; was buried in Durham Cathedral, Durham, Durham, England.

  7. 38.  Hugh de Audley was born about 1267 in of Stratton, Stratton Audley, Oxfordshire, England (son of James de Aldithley and Ela Longespée); died between 1325 and 1326.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: 1 Apr 1325, Wallingford Castle, Oxfordshire, England
    • Alternate death: Bef 12 Apr 1326

    Notes:

    Summoned to Parliament by writ, 1321. Joined the rebellion of Thomas, Earl of Lancaster in 1322, but surrendered before the battle of Boroughbridge. Died while a prisoner in Wallingford Castle.

    "Hugh Audley, of Stratton Audley, Oxon, yst. s. of James Audley or Aldithley, of Heleigh, co. Stafford by Ela, da. of William Longespée (s. and h. ap. of Ela, suo jure Countess of Salisbury); was b. c. 1267, and obtained from his mother, soon after her husband's death, a reversionary grant, (1272-73) 1 Edw. I, of Stratton Audley, afsd., which had been her inheritance. He was in the French wars, 1294, &c.; a prisoner in France 2 Apr. 1299; in the Scottish wars, 1299-1302, and again 1313; he was in Gascony in 1304/5; Justice of North Wales 1306; and was Governor of Montgomery Castle, 1309. He was sum. to Parl. 15 May (1321) 14 Edw. II, the writ being directed Hugoni de Audele seniori, to distinguish him from his 2nd s., Hugh Audley, Junior, who had been so sum. in 1317. In 1321/2 he joined the insurrection of the Earl of Lancaster, but surrendered before the battle of Boroughbridge, 16 Mar. 1321/2, and was confined in Wallingford Castle. He m., before 7 Jan. 1293, and probably in 1288, Isolt, widow of Sir Walter de Balun, of Much Marcle, co. Hereford (who was living and m. to her in 1286/7), da. of Sir Edmund de Mortimer, 1st Lord Mortimer, of Wigmore, co. Hereford, by (____). She brought him the manors of Eastington, co. Gloucester, and of Thornbury, Co. Hereford. He d. between Nov. 1325, and Mar. 1325/6, probably while still a prisoner. No trace can be found of the pardon which he is sometimes said to have received, and any peerage which he may be held to have possessed, may be treated as having been forfeited by attainder. His widow was living 1336." [Complete Peerage I:347-48, as corrected in Volume XIV. See the entry on his wife for doubt she was was a daughter of Edmund de Mortimer.]

    Hugh married Isolde le Rous before Jul 1291. Isolde (daughter of Roger le Rous and Eleanor de Avenbury) died before 4 Aug 1338. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  8. 39.  Isolde le Rous (daughter of Roger le Rous and Eleanor de Avenbury); died before 4 Aug 1338.

    Notes:

    Complete Peerage and Ancestral Roots give her as a daughter of Sir Edmund Mortimer, 7th Baron Mortimer of Wigmore, by an unidentified first wife, but various discussions on SGM and elsewere led to a consensus that this is chronologically improbable and that her parentage must be regarded as unknown. See also this page on Chris Phillips' site.

    More recently, on 17 Dec 2017, Douglas Richardson posted to SGM evidence that she was a daughter of Roger le Rous and his wife Eleanor de Avenbury. Both pieces of evidence have to do with the known fact that her first husband was Walter de Balun, who died in 1287. In 1296 one Isolde sued Reynold de Balun in the Court of Common Pleas regarding the manor of Eastington, Gloucester, which she claimed as her right and which she was in fact holding at that time. Reynold de Balun was Walter de Balun's brother and heir. The record identifies Isolde, the plaintiff, as "daughter of Roger le Rus." The other document is a record of Walter de Balun and his wife, Isolde, being enfeoffed with the manor of Much Marcle, Herefordshire by Roger le Rous. Between these two it seems clear that the wife of Hugh de Audley, widow of Walter de Balun, was a daughter of Roger le Rous.

    Complete Peerage and Ancestral Roots give her as a daughter of Sir Edmund Mortimer, 7th Baron Mortimer of Wigmore, by an unidentified first wife, but various discussions on SGM and elsewere led to a consensus that this is chronologically improbable and that her parentage must be regarded as unknown. See also this page on Chris Phillips' site.

    More recently, on 17 Dec 2017, Douglas Richardson posted to SGM evidence that she was a daughter of Roger le Rous and his wife Eleanor de Avenbury. Both pieces of evidence have to do with the known fact that her first husband was Walter de Balun, who died in 1287. In 1296 one Isolde sued Reynold de Balun in the Court of Common Pleas regarding the manor of Eastington, Gloucester, which she claimed as her right and which she was in fact holding at that time. Reynold de Balun was Walter de Balun's nephew and heir. The record identifies Isolde, the plaintiff, as "daughter of Roger le Rus." The other document is a record of Walter de Balun and his wife, Isolde, being enfeoffed with the manor of Much Marcle, Herefordshire by Roger le Rous. Between these two it seems clear that the wife of Hugh de Audley, widow of Walter de Balun, was a daughter of Roger le Rous.

    Children:
    1. Hugh de Audley was born about 1289 in of Great Marcle, Herefordshire, England; died on 10 Nov 1347; was buried in Tonbridge Priory, Kent, England.
    2. 19. Alice de Audley was born about 1300; died on 12 Jan 1374; was buried in Durham Cathedral, Durham, Durham, England.

  9. 40.  Edmund de Mortimer was born between 1305 and 1306 in of Wigmore, Herefordshire, England (son of Roger de Mortimer and Joan de Geneville); died before 21 Jan 1332 in Stanton Lacy, Shropshire, England.

    Notes:

    Knighted at the coronation of Edward III, 1 Feb 1327. Summoned to Parliament by writ, 20 Nov 1331. Also in 1331, the king restored to him certain of his father's lands, but as the attainder of his father was not reversed in his lifetime, he was never Earl of March.

    Edmund married Elizabeth de Badlesmere on 27 Jun 1316 in Ernwood in Kinlet, Shropshire, England. Elizabeth (daughter of Bartholomew de Badlesmere and Margaret de Clare) was born about 1313; died on 8 Jun 1356 in Rochford, Essex, England; was buried in Black Friars, Holborn, London, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  10. 41.  Elizabeth de Badlesmere was born about 1313 (daughter of Bartholomew de Badlesmere and Margaret de Clare); died on 8 Jun 1356 in Rochford, Essex, England; was buried in Black Friars, Holborn, London, England.
    Children:
    1. 20. Roger de Mortimer was born on 11 Nov 1328 in Ludlow, Shropshire, England; died on 26 Feb 1360 in Rouvray, Côte d'Or, Burgundy, France; was buried in Wigmore Abbey, Herefordshire, England.

  11. 42.  William de Montagu was born between 1302 and 1303 in of Shepton Montague, Somerset, England (son of William de Montagu and Elizabeth de Montfort); died on 30 Jan 1344.

    Notes:

    1st Earl of Salisbury. He was the leader of the party that seized Roger de Mortimer at Nottingham Castle on the night of 19 Oct 1330. He died of injuries sustained at a tournament at Windsor.

    William married Katherine de Grandison before 1328. Katherine (daughter of William de Grandison and Sibyl de Tregoz) died on 23 Apr 1349. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  12. 43.  Katherine de Grandison (daughter of William de Grandison and Sibyl de Tregoz); died on 23 Apr 1349.
    Children:
    1. 21. Philippe de Montagu died on 5 Jan 1382; was buried in Austin Priory, Bisham, Berkshire, England.
    2. Sybil Montagu
    3. John de Montagu was born about 1329 in of Wark-upon-Tweed, Northumberland, England; died on 25 Feb 1390; was buried in Lady Chapel, Salisbury Cathedral, Wiltshire, England.

  13. 28.  Edward III, King of England was born on 13 Nov 1312 in Windsor, Berkshire, England (son of Edward II, King of England and Isabella of France, Queen Consort of England); died on 21 Jun 1377 in Sheen Palace, Richmond, England; was buried in Westminster Abbey, Westminster, Middlesex, England.

    Edward married Philippa of Hainault, Queen Consort of England on 24 Jan 1328 in York Cathedral, York, Yorkshire, England. Philippa (daughter of William III of Hainault and Jeanne de Valois) was born about 1314; died on 15 Aug 1359 in Windsor, Berkshire, England; was buried in Westminster Abbey, Westminster, Middlesex, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  14. 29.  Philippa of Hainault, Queen Consort of England was born about 1314 (daughter of William III of Hainault and Jeanne de Valois); died on 15 Aug 1359 in Windsor, Berkshire, England; was buried in Westminster Abbey, Westminster, Middlesex, England.

    Notes:

    Genealogist Martin Hollick has pointed out that the marriage of Edward III and Philippa of Hainault marks the point at which descent from William the Conqueror was united with descent from Harold Godwinson, who lost to William at Hastings in 1066:

    Harold II Godwinson, King of England (~1022-1066) = Ealdgyth of Mercia (d. >1066)
    Gytha of Wessex = Vladimir II Monomakh, Grand Prince of Kiev (1053-1125)
    Mstislav I, Grand Prince of Kiev (1076-1132) = Ljubawa Dimitriewna Sawiditsch (d. 1167)
    Euphrosine of Kiev (~1130-1186) = Geisa II, King of Hungary, Croatia, Dalmatia, and Rama (1130-1161)
    Béla III, King of Hungary, Croatia, Dalmatia, and Rama (~1148-1196) = Anna de Châtillon (1154-1184)
    András II, King of Hungary (1176-1235) = Yolanda of Courtenay (~1200-1233)
    Violant of Hungary (d. 1251) = James I, King of Aragón (1208-1276)
    Isabella of Aragón (d. 1271) = Philippe III, King of France (1245-1285)
    Charles of France (1270-1325) = Margaret of Anjou (1272-1299)
    Jeanne de Valois (~1294-1342) = William III of Hainault) (~1286-1337)
    Philippa of Hainault (~1314-1359)

    Children:
    1. Edward of Woodstock was born on 15 Jun 1330 in Woodstock, Oxfordshire, England; died on 8 Jun 1376 in Westminster Palace, Westminster, Middlesex, England.
    2. 22. Lionel of Antwerp was born on 29 Nov 1338 in Antwerp, Brabant, Flanders; died on 17 Oct 1368 in Alba, Piedmont, Italy; was buried in Austin Friars, Clare, Suffolk, England.
    3. John of Gaunt was born in Mar 1340 in Abbey of St. Bavo, Ghent, Flanders; was christened after 24 Jun 1340 in Ghent, Flanders; died on 3 Feb 1399 in Leicester Castle, Leicester, Leicestershire, England; was buried in St. Paul's Cathedral, London, England.
    4. Edmund of Langley was born on 5 Jun 1341 in Kings Langley, Hertfordshire, England; died on 1 Aug 1402 in Kings Langley, Hertfordshire, England; was buried in Church of the Dominicans, Langley, Hertfordshire, England.
    5. Thomas of Woodstock was born on 7 Jan 1355 in Woodstock, Oxfordshire, England; died on 8 Sep 1397 in Calais, France; was buried in Confessor's Chapel, Westminster Abbey, London, England.

  15. 46.  William de Burgh was born on 17 Sep 1312 (son of John de Burgh and Elizabeth de Clare); died on 6 Jun 1333 in Le Ford (now Belfast), Ireland.

    Notes:

    Summoned to Parliament from 10 Dec 1327 tp 15 Jun 1328 by writs directed Willelmo de Burgh. Murdered at Le Ford (now Belfast) by Richard de Mandeville, John de Logan, and others.

    William married Maud of Lancaster before 16 Nov 1327. Maud (daughter of Henry of Lancaster and Maud de Chaworth) died on 5 May 1377. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  16. 47.  Maud of Lancaster (daughter of Henry of Lancaster and Maud de Chaworth); died on 5 May 1377.
    Children:
    1. 23. Elizabeth de Burgh was born on 6 Jul 1332 in Carrickfergus Castle, Ireland; died on 10 Dec 1363 in Dublin, Ireland; was buried in Austin Friars, Clare, Suffolk, England.

  17. 52.  Henry de Percy was born on 25 Mar 1273 in Petworth, Sussex, England (son of Henry de Percy and Eleanor de Warenne); died on 2 Oct 1314 in Alnwick, Northumberland, England; was buried in Fountain Abbey, Yorkshire, England.

    Notes:

    Warden of Galloway and Ayrshire 1296; Justiciar in Dumfries and joint Justiciar in Lancaster, Cumberland, and Westmorland 1297; constable of Scarborough Castle 1308; Justice of the Forest Beyond Trent 1311; Keeper of Bamburgh Castle 1313; Keeper of the Marches.

    M.P. 1299-1314, according to Ancestral Roots.

    Fought at Bannockburn.

    Henry married Eleanor de Arundel. Eleanor (daughter of Richard Fitz Alan and Alice di Saluzzo) was born about 1284 in Arundel, Sussex, England; died in 1328; was buried in Beverley, Yorkshire, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  18. 53.  Eleanor de Arundel was born about 1284 in Arundel, Sussex, England (daughter of Richard Fitz Alan and Alice di Saluzzo); died in 1328; was buried in Beverley, Yorkshire, England.
    Children:
    1. 26. Henry de Percy was born in 1299; died on 26 Feb 1352 in Warkworth, Northumberland, England; was buried in Alnwick, Northumberland, England.

  19. 54.  Robert de Clifford was born about 1 Apr 1274 (son of Roger de Clifford and Isabel de Vipont); died on 24 Jun 1314 in Bannockburn, Stirlingshire, Scotland; was buried in Shap Abbey, Westmorland, England.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate birth: 14 Apr 1274
    • Alternate birth: Abt 5 Apr 1276, of Appleby, Westmorland, England

    Notes:

    Served in Edward I's wars in Scotland. On the death of his mother, he succeeded to the hereditary shrievalty of Westmorland. Justice in Eyre North of Trent 1297-1307. Governor of Nottingham Castle, July 1298. Summoned to Parliament 29 Dec 1299 to 26 Nov 1313 by writs directed Roberto de Clifford. Signed the 1301 Barons' Letter to Pope Boniface VIII as Robertus de Clifford Castellanus de Appelby. By Edward II he was made, for a few months in 1308, Marshal of England; Justice South of Trent 1307-8; Warden of the Scottish Marches 1308. Pardoned 16 Oct 1313 for participation in the death of Piers Gaveston. Killed at the Battle of Bannockburn.

    Robert married Maud de Clare on 13 Nov 1295. Maud (daughter of Thomas de Clare and Juliane fitz Maurice) died on 1 Feb 1325. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  20. 55.  Maud de Clare (daughter of Thomas de Clare and Juliane fitz Maurice); died on 1 Feb 1325.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: Between 4 Mar 1327 and 24 May 1327

    Children:
    1. 27. Idoine de Clifford was born in of Appleby, Westmorland, England; died on 24 Aug 1365; was buried in Beverley Minster, Yorkshire, England.
    2. Margaret de Clifford died on 8 Aug 1382.
    3. Robert de Clifford was born on 5 Nov 1305 in of Appleby, Westmorland, England; died on 20 May 1344; was buried in Shap Abbey, Westmorland, England.

  21. 56.  Edward II, King of England was born on 25 Apr 1284 in Caenarfon, Gwynedd, Wales (son of Edward I, King of England and Eleanor of Castile, Queen Consort of England); died on 21 Sep 1327 in Berkeley Castle, Berkeley, Gloucestershire, England; was buried in Abbey of St. Peter, Gloucester, Gloucestershire, England.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: 22 Sep 1327, Berkeley Castle, Berkeley, Gloucestershire, England

    Notes:

    He is widely held to have died 21 (or 22) Sep 1327 in Berkeley Castle, but Ian Mortimer has presented arguments to the contrary that seem to us not easily dismissed.

    Edward married Isabella of France, Queen Consort of England on 25 Jan 1308 in Boulogne-sur-Mer, Pas-de-Calais, France. Isabella (daughter of Philippe IV "the Fair", King of France; King of Navarre and Joan, Queen of Navarre; Queen Consort of France) was born in 1292 in Boulogne, France; died on 22 Aug 1358 in Hertford Castle, Hertford, Hertfordshire, England; was buried in Church of the Grey Friars, London, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  22. 57.  Isabella of France, Queen Consort of England was born in 1292 in Boulogne, France (daughter of Philippe IV "the Fair", King of France; King of Navarre and Joan, Queen of Navarre; Queen Consort of France); died on 22 Aug 1358 in Hertford Castle, Hertford, Hertfordshire, England; was buried in Church of the Grey Friars, London, England.
    Children:
    1. 28. Edward III, King of England was born on 13 Nov 1312 in Windsor, Berkshire, England; died on 21 Jun 1377 in Sheen Palace, Richmond, England; was buried in Westminster Abbey, Westminster, Middlesex, England.
    2. Joan, Queen Consort of Scotland was born on 5 Jul 1321 in Tower of London, London, England; died on 7 Sep 1362; was buried in Church of the Grey Friars, London, England.

  23. 58.  William III of Hainault was born about 1286 (son of John II of Hainault and Philippa of Luxembourg); died on 7 Jun 1337 in Valenciennes, Nord-Pas-de-Calais, France; was buried in Church of the Franciscans, Valenciennes, Nord-Pas-de-Calais, France.

    Notes:

    Count of Hainault, Holland, and Zeeland.

    William married Jeanne de Valois on 19 May 1305 in Chauny, Aisne, France. Jeanne (daughter of Charles of France and Margaret of Anjou) was born about 1294; died on 7 Mar 1342 in Fontenelles, Burgundy, France; was buried in Abbey of Fontenelles, Burgundy, France. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  24. 59.  Jeanne de Valois was born about 1294 (daughter of Charles of France and Margaret of Anjou); died on 7 Mar 1342 in Fontenelles, Burgundy, France; was buried in Abbey of Fontenelles, Burgundy, France.

    Notes:

    As a widow she became abbess of Fontenelles.

    Children:
    1. Margareta of Hainault was born on 24 Jun 1310; died on 23 Jun 1356 in Le Quesnoy, Nord, France.
    2. Johanna of Holland and Hainault was born about 1312; died in 1374.
    3. 29. Philippa of Hainault, Queen Consort of England was born about 1314; died on 15 Aug 1359 in Windsor, Berkshire, England; was buried in Westminster Abbey, Westminster, Middlesex, England.