Nielsen Hayden genealogy

Joan Mowbray

Female - Aft 1407


Generations:      Standard    |    Vertical    |    Compact    |    Box    |    Text    |    Text+    |    Ahnentafel    |    Fan Chart    |    Media

Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Joan Mowbray (daughter of John Mowbray and Elizabeth de Segrave); died after 1407.

    Joan married Thomas III Gray before 1384. Thomas (son of Thomas II Gray and Margaret de Presfen) was born about 1359 in of Heaton, Wark-on-Tweed, Northumberland, England; died on 26 Nov 1400. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. Maud Gray was born in of Heaton Castle, Wark-on-Tweed, Northumberland, England; died after 22 Aug 1451.
    2. Thomas Gray was born on 30 Nov 1384; died on 2 Aug 1415 in Southampton, Hampshire, England.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  John Mowbray was born on 25 Jun 1340 in Epworth, Lincolnshire, England (son of John de Mowbray and Joan of Lancaster); died on 17 Jun 1368 in Thrace, near Constantinople; was buried in Church and Convent of St. Mary Draperis of Pera, Constantinople.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate birth: 13 Sep 1340, Bretby, Repton, Derbyshire, England
    • Alternate death: 21 Sep 1368, near Constantinople
    • Alternate death: 9 Oct 1368, near Constantinople

    Notes:

    Summoned to Parliament by writ, 14 Aug 1362 to 20 Jan 1366.

    Killed in battle with the Turks.

    John Mowbray and Elizabeth de Segrave were Gx4-grandparents of Anne Boleyn (d. 1536):

    John de Mowbray = Elizabeth de Segrave
    Thomas de Mowbray = Elizabeth Fitz Alan
    Margaret de Mowbray = Thomas Howard
    John Howard = Katherine de Moleyns
    Thomas Howard = Elizabeth Tilney
    Elizabeth Howard = Thomas Boleyn
    Anne Boleyn = Henry VIII
    Elizabeth I

    Making TNH a sixth cousin to Elizabeth I, fifteen times removed.

    John married Elizabeth de Segrave after 25 Mar 1349. Elizabeth (daughter of John de Segrave and Margaret Marshal) was born on 25 Oct 1338 in Croxton Abbey, Melton Mobray, Leicestershire, England; was christened on 25 Oct 1338 in Croxton Abbey, Melton Mobray, Leicestershire, England; died between 1364 and 1368. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Elizabeth de Segrave was born on 25 Oct 1338 in Croxton Abbey, Melton Mobray, Leicestershire, England; was christened on 25 Oct 1338 in Croxton Abbey, Melton Mobray, Leicestershire, England (daughter of John de Segrave and Margaret Marshal); died between 1364 and 1368.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: Bef 1368
    • Alternate death: 21 Sep 1368
    • Alternate death: 9 Oct 1368
    • Alternate death: Abt 1375

    Notes:

    Suo jure Lady Segrave.

    Notes:

    Married by papal dispensation, being third cousins, both descended from Henry III and Eleanor of Provence.

    Children:
    1. 1. Joan Mowbray died after 1407.
    2. Eleanor Mowbray was born before 1361.
    3. Thomas Mowbray was born on 22 Mar 1368; died on 22 Sep 1399 in Venice, Veneto, Italy; was buried in Venice, Veneto, Italy.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  John de Mowbray was born on 29 Nov 1310 in Hovingham, Yorkshire, England (son of John de Mowbray and Aline de Brewes); died on 4 Oct 1361 in York, Yorkshire, England; was buried in Friars Minor, Bedford, Bedfordshire, England.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate birth: of Axholme, Lincolnshire, England

    Notes:

    Governor of Berwick-on-Tweed. He was summoned to Parliament by writs from 10 Dec 1327 to 20 Nov 1360.

    One of the commanders of the English army at the Battle of Neville's Cross. Present at the Siege of Calais.

    Died "of pestilence" [Royal Ancestry].

    From the original Dictionary of National Biography (article by James Tait):

    MOWBRAY, JOHN (II) de, ninth Baron (d.1361), son of John (I) de Mowbray, was released from the Tower, and his father's lands were restored to him, on the deposition of Edward II in January 1327. Though still under age he was allowed livery of his lands, but his marriage was granted, for services to Queen Isabella, to Henry, earl, of Lancaster, who married him to his fifth daughter, Joan. His mother's great estates in Gower, Sussex, &c., came to him on her death in 1331. Henceforth he styled himself 'Lord of the Isle of Axholme and of the Honours of Gower and Bramber.' The De Brewers inheritance involved him in a protracted litigation with his mother's cousin, Thomas de Brewes which had begun as early as 1338, and was still proceeding in 1347. Mowbray had also had a dispute before his mother's death with her second husband, Sir Richard Peshall, touching certain manors in Bedfordshire, &c., which he and his mother had granted to him for life, and in 1329 forcibly entered them.

    Mowbray was regularly summoned to the parliaments and 'colloquia' from 1328 to 1361, and was a member of the king's council from the former year. In 1327, 1333, 1335, and again in 1337, he served against the Scots; but there is little evidence for Dugdale's statement that he frequently served in France. In 1337, when war with France was impending he was ordered as lord of Gower to arm his tenants; next year he had to provide ships for the king's passage to the continent, and was sent down to his Sussex estates in the prospect of a French landing. According to Froissart, he was with the king in Flanders in October 1339, but this is impossible, for he was present at the parliament held in that month, and was ordered to repair towards his Yorkshire estates to defend the Scottish marches. Next year he was appointed justiciar of Lothian and governor of Berwick, towards whose garrison he was to provide 120 men, including ten knights. In September 1341 he was commanded to furnish Balliol with men from Yorkshire. On 20 Dec. 1342 he received orders to hold himself ready to go to the assistance of the king in Brittany by 1 March 1348, and Froissart makes him take part in the siege of Nantes; but the truce of Malestroit was concluded on 19 Jan., and on 6 Feb. the reinforecments were countermanded.

    At Neville's Cross (17 Oct. 1346) Mowbray fought in the third line, and the Lanercost chronicler loudly sings his praises: 'He was full of grace and kindness -- the conduct both of himself and his men was such as to redound to their perpetual honour'. Froissart, nevertheless, again takes him to France, with the king. In 1347 he was again in the Scottish marches. On the expiration, in 1352, of one of the short truces which began in 1347, he was appointed chief of the commissioners charged with the defence of the Yorkshire coast against the French, and required to furnish thirty men from Gower. The king sent him once more to the Scottish border in 1355. In December 1359 he was made a justice of the peace in the district of Holland, Lincolnshire, and in the following February a commissioner of array at Leicester for Lancashire, Nottinghamshire, Leicestershire, Derbyshire, and Rutland. This, taken with the fact that he was summoned on 3 April 1360 to the parliament fixed for 15 May, makes it excessively improbable that he was skirmishing before Paris in April as stated by Froissart. It is possible, however, that the Sire de Montbrai mentioned by Froissart was Mowbray's son and heir, John.

    Mowbray died at York of the plague on 4 Oct. 1361, and was buried in the Franciscan church at Bedford. The favourable testimony which the Lanercost chronicler bears to the character of John de Mowbray is borne out by a piece of documentary evidence. In order to put an end to disputes between his steward and his tenants in Axholme, he executed a deed on 1 May 1359 reserving a certain part of the extensive wastes in the isle to himself, and granting the remainder in perpetuum to the tenants. This deed was jealously preserved as the palladium of the commoners of Axholme in Haxey Church 'in a chest bound with iron, whose key was kept by some of the chiefest freeholders, under a window wherein was a portraiture of Mowbray, set in ancient stained glass, holding in his hand a writing, commonly reported to be an emblem of the deed'. This window was broken down in the 'rebellious times,' when the rights of the commoners under the deed were in large measure overridden, in spite of their protests, by the drainage scheme which was begun by Cornelius Vermuyden in 1626 and led to riots in 1642, and again in 1697.

    Mowbray's wife was Joan, fifth daughter of Henry, third earl of Lancaster. His one son, John (III) de Mowbray (1328?-1368), was probably born in 1329, and succeeded as tenth baron. Before 1353 he had married Elizabeth, the only child and heiress of John sixth lord Segrave, on whose death in that year he entered into possession of her lands, lying chiefly in Leicestershire, where the manors of Segrave, Sileby, and Mount Sorrel rounded off the Mowbray estates about Melton Mowbray, and in Warwickshire, where the castle and manor of Caludon and other lordships increased the Mowbray holding in that county. The mother of Mowbray's wife, Margaret Plantagenet, was the sole heiress of Thomas of Brotherton, the second surviving son of Edward I, and she, on the death of her father in 1338, inherited the title and vast heritage in eastern England of the Bigods, earls of Norfolk, together with the great hereditary office of marshal of England, which had been conferred on her father. Neither her son-in-law, John de Mowbray the younger, nor his two successors were fated to enjoy her inheritance; for the countess marshal survived them, as well as a second husband, Sir Walter Manny, and lived until May 1399. But in the fifteenth century the Mowbrays entered into actual possession of the old Bigod lands, and removed their chief place of residence from the mansion of the Vine Garths at Epworth in Axholme to Framlingham Castle in Suffolk. John III met with an untimely death at the hands of the Turks near Constantinople, on his way to the Holy Land, in 1368. His elder son, John IV, eleventh baron Mowbray of Axholme, was created Earl of Nottingham on the day of Richard II's coronation; his second son, Thomas (I) de Mowbray, twelfth baron Mowbray and first duke of Norfolk, is separately noticed.

    John married Joan of Lancaster between 28 Feb 1327 and 4 Jun 1328. Joan (daughter of Henry of Lancaster and Maud de Chaworth) was born about 1312; died about 1349; was buried in Byland, Yorkshire, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Joan of Lancaster was born about 1312 (daughter of Henry of Lancaster and Maud de Chaworth); died about 1349; was buried in Byland, Yorkshire, England.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: Aft 1345
    • Alternate death: 7 Jul 1349

    Notes:

    Also called Joan Plantagenet.

    Died of the plague.

    Children:
    1. Eleanor de Mowbray died before 10 Jun 1387.
    2. 2. John Mowbray was born on 25 Jun 1340 in Epworth, Lincolnshire, England; died on 17 Jun 1368 in Thrace, near Constantinople; was buried in Church and Convent of St. Mary Draperis of Pera, Constantinople.

  3. 6.  John de Segrave was born on 4 May 1315 (son of Stephen de Segrave and Alice de Arundel); died on 1 Apr 1353 in Bretby, Repton, Derbyshire, England; was buried in Chacombe Priory, Northamptonshire, England.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate birth: of Segrave, Leicestershire, England
    • Alternate death: 20 Mar 1353

    John married Margaret Marshal after 3 Mar 1327. Margaret (daughter of Thomas of Brotherton and Alice de Hales) was born about 1320; died on 24 Mar 1399; was buried in Christ Church Greyfriars, Newgate, London, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 7.  Margaret Marshal was born about 1320 (daughter of Thomas of Brotherton and Alice de Hales); died on 24 Mar 1399; was buried in Christ Church Greyfriars, Newgate, London, England.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate birth: Abt 1322
    • Alternate death: 24 Mar 1400

    Notes:

    Also called Margaret of Norfolk. She was Countess of Norfolk by right. In 1338 she succeeded to the earldom of Norfolk as well, acquiring, by right of that title, the office of Earl Marshal of England. On 29 Sep 1397 she was created Duchess of Norfolk for life.

    Sometimes called "Lady Manny", presumably after her second husband. Also sometimes (albeit inaccurately) called "Margaret Plantagenet."

    Notes:

    Date of dispensation.

    Children:
    1. 3. Elizabeth de Segrave was born on 25 Oct 1338 in Croxton Abbey, Melton Mobray, Leicestershire, England; was christened on 25 Oct 1338 in Croxton Abbey, Melton Mobray, Leicestershire, England; died between 1364 and 1368.


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  John de Mowbray was born on 4 Sep 1286 in of the Isle of Axholme, Lincolnshire, England (son of Roger de Mowbray and Rose de Clare); died on 23 Mar 1322 in York, Yorkshire, England; was buried in Church of the Dominican Friars, York, Yorkshire, England.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate birth: 21 Nov 1286

    Notes:

    Summoned to Parliament by writs from 26 Aug 1307 to 15 May 1321.

    Hanged after the Battle of Boroughbridge, in which he sided with Thomas, 2nd Earl Lancaster, against Edward II.

    From the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography:

    In 1311 on the death of Roger Lestrange, the second husband of his paternal grandmother, Maud de Beauchamp (d. 1273), Mowbray was entitled to succeed to her share of the lands of her father William (II) de Beauchamp of Bedford in Bedfordshire (including Bedford Castle), in Buckinghamshire, Cambridgeshire, and Kent. This represented the largest accrual of land since the original grants made to the Mowbrays in 1106. It is somewhat curious that, at some time before Lestrange's death, possibly at the time of Mowbray's marriage, William de Briouze had petitioned the king to allow Mowbray to enfeoff his father-in-law with all the estates that Lestrange was holding by courtesy. In 1316 Mowbray secured a licence to grant the Beauchamp manors of Hawnes, Stotfold, and Willington, Bedfordshire, to Briouze for life and in the first collaborative action with Edward II's favourite, Hugh Despenser the younger, Briouze agreed to allow the king to grant the reversion of Mowbray's manors to Hugh. In the same year Briouze secured a licence to settle his Sussex lands upon John and Alicia, expressly excluding the lordship of Gower from the settlement, possibly because he was considering its sale. Although in June 1322 a royal commission of inquiry stated that Briouze had never given Gower to Mowbray, it does appear that by a special grant, of unknown date, Briouze had given the couple the lordship, with reversion to Humphrey (VII) de Bohun, fourth earl of Hereford.

    Somewhat precipitately, Mowbray entered Gower in 1320 without royal licence, possibly because he had discovered that his father-in-law was proposing to sell the estates; Bohun indeed had paid a deposit on the lordship. Clearly without scruples, at about the same period Briouze was also bargaining with Roger Mortimer of Chirk, Roger Mortimer of Wigmore, and, most dangerous of all, Hugh Despenser the younger. For the latter, as lord of Glamorgan, acquiring neighbouring Gower was an attractive prospect, so he used Mowbray's entry without a licence to persuade the king to seize the lordship. Mowbray argued that as the lordship was a marcher territory where the king's writ did not run, he had had no need of a licence. In this he was supported by the other marcher lords, ever anxious to maintain marcher immunity and by then fearful of Despenser empire building in south Wales. Mowbray's reaction was violent and briefly successful. He ignored the king's order to him and twenty-nine other lords not to assemble and joined in the ravaging of Glamorgan. It was probably on this account that he was accused of the murder of John Iwayn, although later John Fornaux confessed to Iwayn's decapitation. Edward II was forced to give way; Mowbray attended the parliament that condemned the Despensers in July 1321 and on 20 August received a pardon.

    John married Aline de Brewes in 1298 in Swansea, Glamorgan, Wales. Aline (daughter of William de Brewes and Agnes) was born about 1290 in of Bramber, Sussex, England; died before 23 Jun 1324. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 9.  Aline de Brewes was born about 1290 in of Bramber, Sussex, England (daughter of William de Brewes and Agnes); died before 23 Jun 1324.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: Bef 20 Jul 1331
    • Alternate death: 20 Jul 1331
    • Alternate death: Bef 21 Aug 1331

    Notes:

    Also called Aliva.

    "Aline (probably in fact the younger da., aged about 8 in 1298) m. 1stly, in 1298, at Swansea, Sir John de Mowbray, of Axholme, co. Lincoln [Lord Mowbray], who was hanged at York (after the battle of Boroughbridge), 23 Mar. 1321/2. She m., 2ndly, Sir Richard de Peshale, and d. before 21 Aug. 1331." [Complete Peerage II:303-04, as corrected by Volume XIV.]

    Children:
    1. 4. John de Mowbray was born on 29 Nov 1310 in Hovingham, Yorkshire, England; died on 4 Oct 1361 in York, Yorkshire, England; was buried in Friars Minor, Bedford, Bedfordshire, England.

  3. 10.  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. 11.  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. 5. 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. Mary of Lancaster was born about 1320; died on 1 Sep 1362; was buried in Alnwick Abbey, Northumberland, England.

  5. 12.  Stephen de Segrave was born about 1285 in of West Hatch, Wiltshire, England (son of John de Segrave and Christian de Plessets); died before 12 Dec 1325 in Aquitaine, France; was buried in Chaucombe Priory, Chaucombe, Northamptonshire, England.

    Notes:

    Constable of the Tower of London.

    Stephen married Alice de Arundel before 27 Jan 1314. Alice (daughter of Richard Fitz Alan and Alice di Saluzzo) died after 12 Dec 1325. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  6. 13.  Alice de Arundel (daughter of Richard Fitz Alan and Alice di Saluzzo); died after 12 Dec 1325.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: Aft 31 Mar 1342

    Children:
    1. 6. John de Segrave was born on 4 May 1315; died on 1 Apr 1353 in Bretby, Repton, Derbyshire, England; was buried in Chacombe Priory, Northamptonshire, England.

  7. 14.  Thomas of Brotherton was born on 1 Jun 1300 in Brotherton, Yorkshire, England (son of Edward I, King of England and Marguerite of France, Queen Consort of England); died on 22 Aug 1338; was buried in Abbey of Bury St. Edmunds, Suffolk, England.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: Aft 4 Aug 1338
    • Alternate death: 23 Aug 1338, Redenhall with Harleston, Norfolk, England

    Notes:

    Earl of Norfolk. Marshal of England. Warden of St. John's Town of Perth.

    "In 1310 Edward II assigned to his brothers Thomas and Edmund jointly the estates of Roger Bigod, late Earl of Norfolk; and on 16 Dec. 1312 Thomas was cr. Earl of Norfolk, and sum. to Parl. as such 8 Jan 1312/3. On 10 Feb. 1315/6 he was cr. Marshal of England." [Complete Peerage]

    "Brotherton, Yorkshire, a small village twenty-two miles outside of the city of York, was part of the honour of Pontefract. Prior to 1300, it had never been a royal residence, or the site of a royal birth, nor has it been one since. It was not even expected to have been one in 1300. Edward I, his new young wife Margaret, who turned twenty-one that year and was pregnant with their first child, and the royal household, set out north from St Albans on 15 April 1300. The army had been summoned to Carlisle for mid-summer, for a new Scottish campaign. Queen Margaret parted company with the main household at Stamford on 5 May, and continued her own journey northward. Preparations had been made for her to use Cawood Castle, a residence of the Archbishop of York, for her confinement. She stopped in the village of Brotherton to hunt late that month, and went into labour, early and unexpectedly. Margaret had married Edward I on 10 September 1299 and, if conception occurred immediately, she was in her 38th week, but as she was apparently hunting and had not yet reached Cawood, she may have been a week or two earlier in her pregnancy. The labour was difficult, and Margaret reportedly called on St Thomas of Canterbury for assistance. The baby was delivered on 1 June, and named for the saint. Edward I rushed over to the village as soon as he was given the news, and stayed there until 9 June (Waugh, 2004; Johnstone, 1946). Thomas was likely baptised in Brotherton's church of St Edward the Confessor, which lay very close to the original manor house." ["Love Matches and Contracted Misery: Thomas of Brotherton and His Daughters (Part 1)," by Brad Verity. Foundations, journal of the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy, volume 2, number 2, July 2006.]

    "Many sources relay a date of September 1338, for Thomas's death, using testimony from the Proof of Age of his granddaughter Elizabeth de Segrave as a source (see CIPM 1352-1361, p.115). But Watson's date of 23 August appears to be correct, for the king ordered the seizure of Thomas's goods and chattels on 28 August (see Archer, 1987, p.205 n.9)." ["Love Matches and Contracted Misery: Thomas of Brotherton and His Daughters (Part 1)," by Brad Verity. Foundations, journal of the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy, volume 2, number 2, July 2006.] ?

    Thomas married Alice de Hales after Jun 1321. Alice (daughter of Roger de Hales and Alice) was born after 1303 in Norfolk, England; died between 8 May 1326 and 12 Oct 1330. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  8. 15.  Alice de Hales was born after 1303 in Norfolk, England (daughter of Roger de Hales and Alice); died between 8 May 1326 and 12 Oct 1330.
    Children:
    1. 7. Margaret Marshal was born about 1320; died on 24 Mar 1399; was buried in Christ Church Greyfriars, Newgate, London, England.


Generation: 5

  1. 16.  Roger de Mowbray was born about 1257 in of the Isle of Axholme, Lincolnshire, England (son of Roger de Mowbray and Maud de Beauchamp); died in 1296; was buried in Church of the Friars Preachers, Pontefract, Yorkshire, England.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate birth: of Thirsk, Yorkshire, England
    • Alternate death: Bef 21 Nov 1297, Ghent, Flanders

    Notes:

    Summoned to Parliament by writ 24 Jun 1295, and again 26 Aug 1296.

    Summoned for service in Wales, 1282 and 1283; in Scotland, 1291; on the King's service in Gascony, Sep 1294.

    Roger married Rose de Clare after 15 Jul 1270. Rose (daughter of Richard de Clare and Maud de Lacy) was born on 17 Aug 1252; died after 1315; was buried in Church of the Friars Preachers, Pontefract, Yorkshire, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 17.  Rose de Clare was born on 17 Aug 1252 (daughter of Richard de Clare and Maud de Lacy); died after 1315; was buried in Church of the Friars Preachers, Pontefract, Yorkshire, England.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate birth: 1253
    • Alternate birth: Aft 1254

    Children:
    1. 8. John de Mowbray was born on 4 Sep 1286 in of the Isle of Axholme, Lincolnshire, England; died on 23 Mar 1322 in York, Yorkshire, England; was buried in Church of the Dominican Friars, York, Yorkshire, England.

  3. 18.  William de Brewes was born in of Bramber, Sussex, England (son of William de Brewes and Aline de Multon); died before 1 May 1326.

    Notes:

    "Sir William de Brewes or Brewose, Lord of Bramber and Gower, s. and h., by 1st wife. Having done homage, he had livery of his father's lands, 1 Mar. 1290/1. He was sum. cum equis et armis from 14 June (1294) 22 Edw. I to 18 Apr. (1323) 16 Edw. II, to attend the King wherever he might be, 8 June (1294) 22 Edw. I, to attend the King at Salisbury, 26 Jan. (1296/7) 25 Edw. I, and to Parl. from 29 Dec. (1299) 28 Edw. I to 18 Sep. (1322) 16 Edw. II, by writs directed Willelmo de Brewosa. As Willelmus de Breuhosa dominus de Gower, he took part in the Barons' letter to the Pope, 12 Feb. 1300/1. he m., 1stly, Agnes. He m., 2ndly, before 24 Apr. 1317, Elizabeth, da. and h. of Sir Raymund de Sully, of Sully, co. Glamorgan. He d. shortly before 1 May 1326, having alienated his lordships of Bramber and Gower to his son-in-law, John de Mowbray. His widow, who was aged 20 and more at her father's death in 1316/7,(«) d. s.p., before 24 Aug. 1328." [Complete Peerage II:302-03, as corrected by Volume XIV.]

    William married Agnes. Agnes died before 1317. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 19.  Agnes died before 1317.

    Notes:

    Volume XIV of CP names her as Agnes.

    Children:
    1. Joan de Brewes died before 23 Jun 1324.
    2. 9. Aline de Brewes was born about 1290 in of Bramber, Sussex, England; died before 23 Jun 1324.

  5. 20.  Edmund "Crouchback" was born on 16 Jan 1245 in London, England (son of Henry III, King of England and Eleanor of Provence, Queen Consort of England); died on 5 Jun 1296 in Bayonne, Aquitaine, France; was buried in Westminster Abbey, Westminster, Middlesex, England.

    Notes:

    Earl of Leicester; Earl of Lancaster; Earl of Derby. Steward of England 1265; Keeper of the Isle of Lundy 1266; Warden of Sherborne Castle 1267; Lieutenant of Pothieu 1291; Lieutenant of Gascony 1296.

    Nearly King of Sicily.

    Summoned to Parliament by writ 24 Jun 1295; definitely far from the most interesting thing that ever happened to him.

    From Wikipedia (as of 5 Dec 2023):

    Edmund, 1st Earl of Lancaster (16 January 1245 – 5 June 1296), also known by his epithet Edmund Crouchback, was a member of the royal Plantagenet Dynasty and the founder of the first House of Lancaster. He was Earl of Leicester (1265–1296), Lancaster (1267–1296) and Derby (1269–1296) in England, and Count Palatine of Champagne (1276–1284) in France.

    Named after the 9th-century saint, Edmund was the second surviving son of King Henry III of England and Eleanor of Provence and the younger brother of King Edward I of England, to whom he was loyal as a diplomat and warrior. In 1254, the 9-year-old Edmund became involved in the "Sicilian business", in which his father accepted a papal offer granting the Kingdom of Sicily to Edmund, who made preparations to become king. However, Henry III could not provide funds for the operation, prompting the Papacy to withdraw the grant and give it to Edmund's uncle, Charles I of Anjou. The "Sicilian business" outraged the barons led by the Earl of Leicester and Edmund's uncle, Simon de Montfort, 6th Earl of Leicester, and was cited as one of the reasons for limiting Henry's power. Deterioration of relations between the barons and the king resulted in the Second Barons' War, in which the royal government, supported by Edmund, triumphed over the baronage following the death of Montfort in the Battle of Evesham in 1265.

    Edmund received the lands and titles of Montfort and the defeated barons Nicholas Segrave, 1st Baron Segrave and Robert de Ferrers, 6th Earl of Derby, and became Earl of Lancaster, Leicester and Derby. Primarily known as the earl of the first county, he eventually became the most powerful baron of England. Later, Edmund accompanied his elder brother Edward on his crusade in the Holy Land, where his epithet "Crouchback" originated from a corruption of 'cross back', referring to him wearing a stitched cross on his garments. Following the death of his first wife, Aveline de Forz, Edmund's aunt and Dowager Queen of France Margaret of Provence arranged his second marriage to Blanche of Artois, the recently widowed Queen Dowager of Navarre and the Countess of Champagne. With his second wife Blanche, Edmund governed Champagne as count palatine in the name of his stepdaughter Joan until she came of age. Edmund was active in supporting his family members, such as assisting Edward in conquering Wales, advocating for the claims of his aunt Margaret against his uncle Charles I of Anjou in his mother and aunt's homeland of Provence and managing Ponthieu on behalf of his sister-in-law, Eleanor of Castile.

    When Edmund's stepson-in-law, King Philip IV of France, demanded Edward, who was also his vassal through Gascony, to come to Paris to answer charges of damages caused by English mariners in 1293, Edward sent Edmund to mediate the crisis to avert war. Edmund negotiated an agreement with Philip where France would occupy Gascony for 40 days, and Edward would marry Philip's half-sister, Margaret. When the 40 days were over, Philip tricked Edward and Edmund by refusing to relinquish control over Gascony, calling Edward to again answer for his charges. Edmund and Edward then renounced their homages to Philip and prepared for war against France. Edmund sailed for Gascony with his army and besieged the city of Bordeaux. Unable to pay his troops, Edmund was deserted by his army and retreated to Bayonne, where he died from illness in 1296. Edmund's body was brought back to England, where he was buried in Westminster Abbey in 1301.

    Edmund married Blanche of Artois on 18 Jan 1276 in Paris, France. Blanche (daughter of Robert of France and Mahaut of Brabant) was born about 1248; died on 2 May 1302 in Paris, France; was buried in Church of the Cordeliers, Paris, France. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  6. 21.  Blanche of Artois was born about 1248 (daughter of Robert of France and Mahaut of Brabant); died on 2 May 1302 in Paris, France; was buried in Church of the Cordeliers, Paris, France.

    Notes:

    "Her heart was buried in the choir of the conventual church of the Minoresses at Nogent-l'Artaud." [Royal Ancestry]

    Children:
    1. Thomas of Lancaster died on 22 Mar 1322 in Pontefract, Yorkshire, England.
    2. 10. Henry of Lancaster was born about 1280; died on 22 Sep 1345; was buried in The Newarke, Leicester Castle, Leicester, Leicestershire, England.

  7. 22.  Patrick de Chaworth was born about 1254 in of Kidwelly, Carmarthenshire, Wales (son of Patrick de Chaworth and Hawise de London); died before 7 Jul 1283.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate birth: Abt 1254, of Kempsford, Gloucestershire, England
    • Alternate death: Abt 7 Jul 1283, Kidwelly, Carmarthenshire, Wales

    Notes:

    Also called Patric de Chaorces, Patric de Cadurcis, Payn Chaworth. Accompanied Henry III on a crusade to the Near East in 1269.

    Patrick married Isabel de Beauchamp. Isabel (daughter of William de Beauchamp and Maud fitz John) died before 30 May 1306. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  8. 23.  Isabel de Beauchamp (daughter of William de Beauchamp and Maud fitz John); died before 30 May 1306.
    Children:
    1. 11. Maud de Chaworth was born on 2 Feb 1282; died before 3 Dec 1322; was buried in Mottisfont Priory, Hampshire, England.

  9. 24.  John de Segrave was born in of Chacombe, Northamptonshire, England (son of Nicholas de Segrave and Maud de Lucy); died before 4 Oct 1325 in Aquitaine, France; was buried in Chaucombe Priory, Chaucombe, Northamptonshire, England.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate birth: Abt 1256, of Segrave, Leicestershire, England

    Notes:

    Justice of the Forest beyond Trent; King's Lieutenant (or Keeper) of Scotland.

    "A knight in Aug 1282; served in Wales, 1285, in Ireland, 1287, and in Scotland in 1291 and 1297-1322. He was a principal commander at the victorious battle of Falkirk, 22 July 1298; was at the siege of Caerlaverock, July 1300, being then a knight banneret, and was captured by the Scots following the English defeat at Bannockburn, 24 June 1314 and released following a year of captivity. Appointed Warden of Scotland, 10 Mar 1309 and again, 10 Apr 1310." [The Ancestry of Dorothea Poyntz, citation details below.]

    John married Christian de Plessets in 1270. Christian (daughter of Hugh de Plessets) died after 8 May 1331. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  10. 25.  Christian de Plessets (daughter of Hugh de Plessets); died after 8 May 1331.

    Notes:

    Also called de Plescy, de Plessy, de Plessis.

    Children:
    1. (Unknown) de Segrave died before 1316.
    2. Christian de Segrave died after 1332.
    3. 12. Stephen de Segrave was born about 1285 in of West Hatch, Wiltshire, England; died before 12 Dec 1325 in Aquitaine, France; was buried in Chaucombe Priory, Chaucombe, Northamptonshire, England.

  11. 26.  Richard Fitz Alan was born on 3 Feb 1267 in of Arundel, Sussex, England (son of John Fitz Alan and Isabella de Mortimer); died on 9 Mar 1302; was buried in Haughmond Abbey, Shropshire, England.

    Notes:

    Also called Richard de Arundel. Earl of Arundel.

    From Complete Peerage, 1:240-41:

    Richard fitz Alan, feudal Lord of Clun and Oswestry and [according to the admission of 1443], Earl of Arundel, only son and heir, born 3 February 1266/7, and was only 5 years old at his father's death. He had seizin of his lands 8 December 1287. According to Glover he was created Earl of Sussex (a) in 1289, when he was knighted and "received the sword of the county of Sussex" from Edward I "ut vocatur Comes;", but it seems more probable that this creation was as Earl of Arundel (b). At all events no more is heard of the former title (Sussex) as connected with this family, but only of the title of Arundel. On 12 February 1290/1 there is a grant to him as Richard Arundel, Earl of Arundel. In October 1292 he was summoned by a writ directed to the Earl of Arundel, and was summoned to Parliament 24 June 1295, by a writ directed Ricardo filio Alani Comiti Arundell, ranking him as junior to all the other Earls. He fought in the Welsh wars 1288, in Gascony 1295-7, and in the Scottish wars 1298-1300, being present at the siege of Carlaverock in 1300. He signed the Barons' letter to the Pope, 12 February 1300/1.

    (a) "The Earldom of Sussex must at this period have been a subject of contention between the De Warrens and Fitz Alans, for John de Warren, Earl of Surrey, was receiving, at the very time that this investiture occurred, writs directed to him as Earl of Sussex. John de Warren was perhaps the greatest noble of the time in which he lived, and his power and influence may have operated to induce Fitz Alan to abandon his claim upon the Earldom of Sussex and to adopt that [i.e. the Earldom of Arundel] by which his descendants have ever since been known." (Courthope, p. 29).

    (b) It is worthy of remark, in connection with the very doubtful right, either of his father or grandfather, to the Earldom of Arundel, that it was not till 1282, viz. sometime after their death and during this Earl's minority, that Isabel, Countess of Arundel, widow of Hugh (d'Aubigny), died. It would almost appear (possibly owing to the largess of her dower) that the Earldom was not dealt with during her lifetime. A somewhat parallel case occurs, later on, in the same family, when Richard, Earl of Arundel, who, in 1347, had suc. his maternal uncle the Earl of Surrey, did not assume the Earldom of Surrey till the death of Joan, widow of the afsd. Earl, in 1361.

    Richard married Alice di Saluzzo in Nov 1282. Alice (daughter of Tomasso di Saluzzo and Aluigia del Vasto) was born in of Saluzzo, Cuneo, Piedmont, Italy; died on 25 Sep 1292; was buried in Haughmond Abbey, Shropshire, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  12. 27.  Alice di Saluzzo was born in of Saluzzo, Cuneo, Piedmont, Italy (daughter of Tomasso di Saluzzo and Aluigia del Vasto); died on 25 Sep 1292; was buried in Haughmond Abbey, Shropshire, England.

    Notes:

    Also called Alasia di Saluzzo; Alasia del Vasto di Saluzzo.

    "Along with her aunt Alasia de Saluzzo who married Edmund de Lacy, 2nd earl of Lincoln, in 1247, Alasia was one of the first Italian women to marry into an English noble family. Her marriage had been arranged by the late King Henry III's widowed queen consort Eleanor de Provence." [Leo van de Pas]

    CP has her buried at Todingham Priory, but Chris Phillips's compilation of corrections to CP includes Douglas Richardson's note in Jan 2002 that "the bodies of both Richard and Alesia were at Haughmond Abbey, Shropshire, by 1341, when provision was made for 12 candles to burn in the church of Haughmond around their tombs."

    Children:
    1. 13. Alice de Arundel died after 12 Dec 1325.
    2. Margaret de Arundel died before 1354.
    3. Eleanor de Arundel was born about 1284 in Arundel, Sussex, England; died in 1328; was buried in Beverley, Yorkshire, England.
    4. Edmund Fitz Alan was born on 1 May 1285 in Marlborough Castle, Wiltshire, Engand; died on 17 Nov 1326 in Hereford, Herefordshire, England; was buried in Haughmond Abbey, Shropshire, England.

  13. 28.  Edward I, King of England was born on 17 Jun 1239 in Westminster Palace, Westminster, Middlesex, England; was christened on 21 Jun 1239 (son of Henry III, King of England and Eleanor of Provence, Queen Consort of England); died on 7 Jul 1307 in Burgh-by-Sands, Carlisle, Cumberland, England; was buried in Westminster Abbey, Westminster, Middlesex, England.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate birth: 18 Jun 1239, Westminster Palace, Westminster, Middlesex, England
    • Alternate death: 8 Jul 1307, Burgh-by-Sands, Carlisle, Cumberland, England

    Notes:

    Edward Longshanks, Hammer of the Scots, conqueror of Wales. Although he is acclaimed for his many administrative accomplishments and for establishing Parliament as a permanent institution, he also expelled the Jews from England; significant numbers of them returned only 350 years later. He was tall (6' 4"), personally intimidating, and rigid in personal morality, in marked contrast to most earlier post-Conquest English rulers.

    Edward married Marguerite of France, Queen Consort of England on 8 Sep 1299 in Canterbury, Kent, England. Marguerite (daughter of Philippe III, King of France and Marie of Brabant, Queen Consort of France) was born in 1279; died on 14 Feb 1317 in Marlborough Castle, Wiltshire, Engand; was buried in Christ Church Greyfriars, Newgate, London, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  14. 29.  Marguerite of France, Queen Consort of England was born in 1279 (daughter of Philippe III, King of France and Marie of Brabant, Queen Consort of France); died on 14 Feb 1317 in Marlborough Castle, Wiltshire, Engand; was buried in Christ Church Greyfriars, Newgate, London, England.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate birth: Abt 1275
    • Alternate birth: Abt 1282
    • Alternate death: 14 Feb 1318, Marlborough Castle, Wiltshire, Engand

    Children:
    1. 14. Thomas of Brotherton was born on 1 Jun 1300 in Brotherton, Yorkshire, England; died on 22 Aug 1338; was buried in Abbey of Bury St. Edmunds, Suffolk, England.
    2. Edmund of Woodstock was born on 5 Aug 1301 in Woodstock, Oxfordshire, England; died on 19 Mar 1330 in Winchester, Hampshire, England; was buried in Winchester, Hampshire, England.

  15. 30.  Roger de Hales was born about 1274; died in 1313.

    Notes:

    Coroner of Norfolk from 1303 until his death.

    "Two 16th-century pedigrees in the British Museum state that Roger was the son of one Ranulph de Halys by Demeta le Clauer, of Starston, Norfolk, and that his wife was Jane, daughter and heir of ---- Skogan. None of this information has been verified by 13th or 14th century sources. How exactly Sir Roger fits into the family of Hales that held manors in Norfolk is uncertain. What can be known is that he held two of the Loddon manors, Loddon Hall and Hales Hall, about 12 miles southeast of Norwich, as well as manors in Roughton and Metton, about 15 miles north of Norwich. There were other lands the family held, for example in Wacton and Forncett, several miles west of the Loddon manors, and all were held of the earl of Norfolk. The statement that Sir Roger de Hales was 'of Harwich,' which originated in Ralph Brooke's Catalogue of Nobility (1619) and is repeated in several genealogies, was perhaps a mistake for Norwich, the closest town to the majority of the Hales manors. It is believed Sir Roger was related to Walter de Suffield (d. 1257), bishop of Norwich." ["Love Matches and Contracted Misery: Thomas of Brotherton and His Daughters (Part 1)," by Brad Verity. Foundations, journal of the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy, volume 2, number 2, July 2006.]

    Roger married Alice. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  16. 31.  Alice

    Notes:

    Possibly from a family named Skogan. See "Love Matches and Contracted Misery", citation details below.

    Children:
    1. 15. Alice de Hales was born after 1303 in Norfolk, England; died between 8 May 1326 and 12 Oct 1330.


Generation: 6

  1. 32.  Roger de Mowbray was born about 1220 in of Thirsk, Yorkshire, England (son of William de Mowbray and Avice); died before 18 Oct 1263; was buried in Church of the Friars Preachers, Pontefract, Yorkshire, England.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate birth: Abt 1220, of the Isle of Axholme, Lincolnshire, England
    • Alternate death: 1266
    • Alternate death: Abt Nov 1266, Axholme, Lincolnshire, England

    Notes:

    "He was sum. for service in Scotland in Jan. 1257/8, and in 1260 was ordered to be at Chester to serve against the Welsh, being appointed in Dec. with James de Audley to dictate, on the King's behalf, the terms of the truce with Llewelyn. He appears to have sided with Henry III, at any rate in the earlier days of the opposition of the Barons." [Complete Peerage]

    Roger married Maud de Beauchamp before 1257. Maud (daughter of William de Beauchamp and Idonea de Longespée) was born in of Bedford, Bedfordshire, England; died before 4 Apr 1273; was buried in Church of the Friars Preachers, Pontefract, Yorkshire, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 33.  Maud de Beauchamp was born in of Bedford, Bedfordshire, England (daughter of William de Beauchamp and Idonea de Longespée); died before 4 Apr 1273; was buried in Church of the Friars Preachers, Pontefract, Yorkshire, England.
    Children:
    1. 16. Roger de Mowbray was born about 1257 in of the Isle of Axholme, Lincolnshire, England; died in 1296; was buried in Church of the Friars Preachers, Pontefract, Yorkshire, England.

  3. 34.  Richard de Clare was born on 4 Aug 1222 in of Clare, Suffolk, England (son of Gilbert de Clare and Isabel Marshal); died in Jul 1262 in Ashenfield, Waltham, Kent, England; was buried in Tewkesbury Abbey, Tewkesbury, Gloucestershire, England.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: 15 Jul 1262, Ashenfield, Waltham, Kent, England

    Notes:

    Earl of Gloucester; Earl of Hertford; High Marshal and Chief Butler to the Archbishop of Canterbury; Privy Councillor 1255, 1258; Warden of the Isle of Portland, Weymouth, and Wyke, 1257.

    From the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography:

    Richard de Clare was a minor at the time of his father's death, and heir to one of the greatest collections of estates and lordships in all of England and Wales. His wardship and marriage were thus matters of the keenest interest to the politically powerful and ambitious of the day. The justiciar Hubert de Burgh, using his position in the government of Henry III, managed to have custody of Richard assigned to himself. On Hubert's fall from power in 1232, the king transferred custody of both Richard and his lands to the new royal favourites, Peter des Roches, bishop of Winchester, and his nephew Peter des Rivaux. Hubert de Burgh's wife, in an apparent effort to rescue the family fortunes, secretly married Richard de Clare to her daughter Margaret; but the marriage was apparently never consummated, and was in any event mooted by Margaret's death in 1237. In the meantime both Peter des Roches and Peter des Rivaux had themselves fallen from power in 1234, and thereafter King Henry kept the wardship in his own hands, although allowing custody of at least some of the Clare lands to be secured by Richard de Clare's uncle Gilbert Marshal, earl of Pembroke. During this time the king began searching for a suitable marriage. A proposed arrangement with the great French comital family, the Lusignans, fell through, and in 1238 Richard de Clare was married to Maud, daughter of John de Lacy, earl of Lincoln. The prime mover in the marriage negotiations seems to have been the king's brother, Richard of Cornwall, who was Richard de Clare's stepfather, having married the widowed Isabel Marshal in 1231. Notwithstanding his marriage Clare remained the ward of the king until 1243, when he came of age and received both official seisin of his inheritance and formal dubbing to knighthood.

    The complexities, intricacies, and rivalries involved in the story of Richard de Clare's wardship are an excellent case study of the stakes and resources at issue when contemplating the lives of the upper aristocracy in the thirteenth century. A connection to Richard de Clare was a prize well worth pursuing at full tilt. His inheritance was vast. [...] Richard de Clare was, by every criterion--annual income (close to £4000), knight's fees (nearly 500), and both the sheer number of and the strategic location of his estates and lordships--easily the richest and potentially the most powerful baron, next to the members of the immediate royal family, in the British Isles (excluding Scotland) as a whole.

    From Wikipedia:

    He joined in the Barons' letter to the Pope in 1246 against the exactions of the Curia in England. He was among those in opposition to the King's half-brothers, who in 1247 visited England, where they were very unpopular, but afterwards he was reconciled to them.

    In August 1252/3 the King crossed over to Gascony with his army, and to his great indignation the Earl refused to accompany him and went to Ireland instead. In August 1255 he and John Maunsel were sent to Edinburgh by the King to find out the truth regarding reports which had reached the King that his son-in-law, Alexander III, King of Scotland, was being coerced by Robert de Roos and John Balliol. If possible, they were to bring the young King and Queen to him. The Earl and his companion, pretending to be two of Roos's knights, obtained entry to Edinburgh Castle, and gradually introduced their attendants, so that they had a force sufficient for their defense. They gained access to the Scottish Queen, who made her complaints to them that she and her husband had been kept apart. They threatened Roos with dire punishments, so that he promised to go to the King.

    Meanwhile the Scottish magnates, indignant at their Castle of Edinburgh's being in English hands, proposed to besiege it, but they desisted when they found they would be besieging their King and Queen. The King of Scotland apparently traveled South with the Earl, for on 24 September they were with King Henry III at Newminster, Northumberland."

    *****

    In July 1258 Richard de Clare and his brother William both fell ill. The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography describes contemporary reports that this was due to an attempted poisoning, "supposedly instigated by King Henry's uncle, William de Valence, earl of Pembroke, in retaliation for Clare's support of the baronial reform movement; and Valence's purported agent in the plot, Clare's seneschal, Walter de Scoteny, was tried and hanged." William died, but Richard survived with the loss of his hair and nails. In 1259 Richard was appointed chief ambassador to the Duke of Brittany, presumably in hopes of frightening the duke by sending a hairless, nailless creature to his court. Three years later, Richard died at Ashenfield, Waltham, Kent, on the 15th, the 16th, or the 22nd of July 1262. It was again bruited about that he had been poisoned, this time by the Queen's uncle Peter of Savoy, but the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, noting that "the annals of Tewkesbury Abbey are the single most valuable literary source for the reconstruction of [de Clare] family history for this period", points out that "the silence of the Tewkesbury account on this point strongly indicates that such rumours were unfounded."

    In a perfectly medieval series of postmortem events, Richard de Clare's body was borne to the Cathedral Church of Christ at Canterbury, where his entrails were buried before the altar of St. Edward the Confessor; it was then taken to the Collegiate Church of Tonbridge, Kent, where his heart was buried; finally, what remained of his body was taken to Tewkesbury Abbey in Gloucestershire where it was buried in the choir at his father's right hand.

    Richard married Maud de Lacy about 25 Jan 1238. Maud (daughter of John de Lacy and Margaret de Quincy) died before 10 Mar 1289. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 35.  Maud de Lacy (daughter of John de Lacy and Margaret de Quincy); died before 10 Mar 1289.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: Between 1288 and 1289
    • Alternate death: Aft 1288

    Children:
    1. Thomas de Clare was born between 1243 and 1248; died on 29 Aug 1287 in Ireland.
    2. Gilbert de Clare was born on 2 Sep 1243 in Christchurch, Hampshire, England; died on 7 Dec 1295 in Monmouth Castle, Monmouthshire, Wales; was buried in Tewkesbury Abbey, Tewkesbury, Gloucestershire, England.
    3. 17. Rose de Clare was born on 17 Aug 1252; died after 1315; was buried in Church of the Friars Preachers, Pontefract, Yorkshire, England.

  5. 36.  William de Brewes was born about 1224 in of Bramber, Sussex, England (son of John de Brewes and Margaret ferch Llywelyn); died on 6 Jan 1291 in Findon, Sussex, England; was buried on 15 Jan 1291 in Sele Priory, West Sussex, England.

    Notes:

    "Sir William de Breuse, s. and h. of John de Breuse, Lord of Bramber and Gower, by Margaret, da. of Llewelyn ap Iorwerth, Prince of North Wales. He suc. his father in 1232, before 18 July, and was of full age before 15 July 1245. He was sum. cum equis et armis from 14 Mar. (1257/8) 42 Hen. III to 14 Mar. (1282/3) 11 Edw. I, and to attend the King at Shrewsbury, 28 June (1283) 11 Edw. I, by writs directed Willelmo de Breuse, Brehuse, or Brewes. He is recorded to have sat in the Parl. of Apr.-May 1290, whereby he may be held to have been Lord Brewose. He m., 1stly, Aline, da. of Thomas de Multon of Burgh-on-Sands, Cumberland, by Maud, da. and h. of Hubert de Vaux, of Gilsland in that co. He m., 2ndly, Agnes, da. of Nicholas de Moels, of Cadbury, Somerset by Hawise, widow of John de Botreaux, yr. da. and coh. of James de Newmarch, of Cadbury afsd. [See Moels.] He m., 3rdly, in or before 1271, Mary, da. of Robert de Ros of Helmsley, by Isabel, da. and h. of William d'Aubigny, of Belvoir. He d. 6 Jan. 1290/1 at Findon, West Sussex and was bur. at Sele Priory 15 Jan. His widow, whose dower was settled by deeds dated 21, 23 Mar. 1290/1, d. shortly before 23 May 1326." [Complete Peerage II:302, as corrected in Volume XIV.]

    William married Aline de Multon before 1253. Aline (daughter of Thomas de Multon and Maud de Vaux) died before 1268. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  6. 37.  Aline de Multon (daughter of Thomas de Multon and Maud de Vaux); died before 1268.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: Bef 1271

    Children:
    1. 18. William de Brewes was born in of Bramber, Sussex, England; died before 1 May 1326.

  7. 40.  Henry III, King of England was born on 1 Oct 1207 in Winchester Castle, Hampshire, England (son of John, King of England and Isabel of Angoulême, Queen Consort of England); died on 16 Nov 1272 in Bury St. Edmunds, Suffolk, England; was buried in Westminster Abbey, Westminster, Middlesex, England.

    Henry married Eleanor of Provence, Queen Consort of England on 14 Jan 1236 in Canterbury Cathedral, Canterbury, Kent, England. Eleanor (daughter of Raymond Berenger and Beatrice of Savoy) died on 24 Jun 1291 in Amesbury Priory, Wiltshire, England; was buried in Amesbury Priory, Wiltshire, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  8. 41.  Eleanor of Provence, Queen Consort of England (daughter of Raymond Berenger and Beatrice of Savoy); died on 24 Jun 1291 in Amesbury Priory, Wiltshire, England; was buried in Amesbury Priory, Wiltshire, England.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: 25 Jun 1291, Amesbury Priory, Wiltshire, England

    Notes:

    "She was buried on 11 September 1291 in the Abbey of St Mary and St Melor, Amesbury on 9 December. The exact site of her grave at the abbey is unknown making her the only English queen without a marked grave. Her heart was taken to London where it was buried at the Franciscan priory." [Wikipedia]

    Children:
    1. 28. Edward I, King of England was born on 17 Jun 1239 in Westminster Palace, Westminster, Middlesex, England; was christened on 21 Jun 1239; died on 7 Jul 1307 in Burgh-by-Sands, Carlisle, Cumberland, England; was buried in Westminster Abbey, Westminster, Middlesex, England.
    2. Beatrice of England was born on 25 Jun 1242 in Bordeaux, Aquitaine, France; died on 24 Mar 1275 in London, England; was buried in Grey Friars, Greenwich, Kent, England.
    3. 20. Edmund "Crouchback" was born on 16 Jan 1245 in London, England; died on 5 Jun 1296 in Bayonne, Aquitaine, France; was buried in Westminster Abbey, Westminster, Middlesex, England.

  9. 42.  Robert of France was born on 17 Sep 1216 (son of Louis VIII, King of France and Blanche of Castile, Queen Consort of France); died on 9 Feb 1250 in Mansourah, Egypt.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: 7 Feb 1250, Mansourah, Egypt

    Notes:

    Called "the Good." First Count of Artois.

    "Robert died while leading a reckless attack on Al Mansurah, without the knowledge of his brother King Louis IX. He and the Templars accompanying the expedition charged into the town and became trapped in the narrow streets. According to Jean de Joinville, he defended himself for some time in a house there, but was at last overpowered and killed. In Egypt it is believed that Sultan Qutuz killed him, although it is more likely that an anonymous soldier did so." [Wikipedia]

    Robert married Mahaut of Brabant on 14 Jun 1237. Mahaut (daughter of Henri II of Brabant and Maria von Hohenstaufen) was born about 1224; died on 29 Sep 1288; was buried in Cercamp Abbey, Artois, France. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  10. 43.  Mahaut of Brabant was born about 1224 (daughter of Henri II of Brabant and Maria von Hohenstaufen); died on 29 Sep 1288; was buried in Cercamp Abbey, Artois, France.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: 29 Oct 1288

    Notes:

    Also called Mathilde of Brabant.

    Children:
    1. 21. Blanche of Artois was born about 1248; died on 2 May 1302 in Paris, France; was buried in Church of the Cordeliers, Paris, France.
    2. Robert II was born after Aug 1250; died on 11 Jul 1302.

  11. 44.  Patrick de Chaworth was born before 1216 in of Kempsford, Gloucestershire, England (son of Pain de Chaworth and Gundred de la Ferté); died before 23 Sep 1258.

    Notes:

    Also called Patric de Cadurcis. "[In 1245] he was ordered to use his power to annoy the Welsh." [Medieval English Ancestors of Robert Abell, cittion details below.]

    Patrick married Hawise de London before 19 Dec 1243. Hawise (daughter of Thomas de London and Eve Fitzwarine) was born about 1212; died before 23 Sep 1274. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  12. 45.  Hawise de London was born about 1212 (daughter of Thomas de London and Eve Fitzwarine); died before 23 Sep 1274.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: 1273

    Children:
    1. Eve de Chaworth was born in 1252; died before 14 Jun 1300.
    2. 22. Patrick de Chaworth was born about 1254 in of Kidwelly, Carmarthenshire, Wales; died before 7 Jul 1283.

  13. 46.  William de Beauchamp was born in 1237 in of Elmley, Worcestershire, England (son of William de Beauchamp and Isabel Mauduit); died in 1296; was buried on 22 Jun 1298 in Friars Minor, Worcester, Worcestershire, England.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate birth: Abt 1240, of Elmley, Worcestershire, England
    • Alternate death: 5 Jun 1298, Elmley, Worcestershire, England
    • Alternate death: 9 Jun 1298, Elmley, Worcestershire, England

    Notes:

    Earl of Warwick. Hereditary Chamberlain of the Exchequer, an office he inherited from the Mauduit family. Hereditary Sheriff of Worcestershire.

    William married Maud fitz John before 1270. Maud (daughter of John fitz Geoffrey and Isabel le Bigod) died on 16 Apr 1301; was buried on 7 May 1301 in Friars Minor, Worcester, Worcestershire, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  14. 47.  Maud fitz John (daughter of John fitz Geoffrey and Isabel le Bigod); died on 16 Apr 1301; was buried on 7 May 1301 in Friars Minor, Worcester, Worcestershire, England.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: 18 Apr 1301

    Children:
    1. 23. Isabel de Beauchamp died before 30 May 1306.
    2. Guy de Beauchamp was born about 1273 in of Elmley, Worcestershire, England; died on 10 Aug 1315 in Warwick Castle, Warwickshire, England; was buried in Bordesley Abbey, Warwickshire, England.

  15. 48.  Nicholas de Segrave was born about 1238 (son of Gilbert de Segrave and Amabil de Chaucombe); died before 12 Nov 1295; was buried in Chaucombe Priory, Chaucombe, Northamptonshire, England.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate birth: 17 Dec 1238, of Seagrave, Leicestershire, England
    • Alternate death: 12 Nov 1295

    Notes:

    From Medieval English Ancestors of Robert Abell (citation details below):

    On 28 March 1259 he was recorded as going on a pilgrimage to Pontigny, and on 28 Oct 1259 he crossed with the king to France. On 16 Sep 1261 he was at Windsor to swear he would never oppose the king, but in May 1262 he did so in Parliament. In July 1263 he joined the king in Worcester, where he was knighted on 1 Aug before going with the king to Wales. He was at the siege of Rochester with the Earl of Gloucester, Henry de Hastings and others in April 1264, and commanded the Londoners at the battle of Lewes on 14 May 1264.

    On 4 Aug 1265 he was wounded and taken prisoner at the battle of Evesham, and on 25 Oct. his lands were granted to Edmund, the king's son, but on 28 April 1266 he was coming to the king’s court to make peace. On 1 July 1267 he was pardoned, and on 12 May 1270 he was going to the Holy Land with the king and Prince Edward. He was summoned to serve in Wales in 1276, 1277, 1282 and 1283, and on 28 June 1283 was summoned to Shrewsbury to treat with Dafydd ap Gruffudd. He served on various commissions from 1290 to 1294, and was summoned to Parliament at Westminster on 24 June 1295.

    Nicholas married Maud de Lucy. Maud (daughter of Geoffrey de Lucy and Nichole de Cantelowe) was born between 1240 and 1245; died in 1337. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  16. 49.  Maud de Lucy was born between 1240 and 1245 (daughter of Geoffrey de Lucy and Nichole de Cantelowe); died in 1337.
    Children:
    1. 24. John de Segrave was born in of Chacombe, Northamptonshire, England; died before 4 Oct 1325 in Aquitaine, France; was buried in Chaucombe Priory, Chaucombe, Northamptonshire, England.
    2. Eleanor de Segrave was born in 1270.

  17. 50.  Hugh de Plessets was born in of Hooknorton, Oxfordshire, England.

    Notes:

    Also called de Plescy, de Plessy, de Plessis.

    Children:
    1. 25. Christian de Plessets died after 8 May 1331.

  18. 52.  John Fitz Alan was born on 14 Sep 1246 in of Arundel, Sussex, England (son of John Fitz Alan and Maud de Verdun); died on 18 Mar 1272; was buried in Haughmond Abbey, Shropshire, England.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate birth: 14 Sep 1246, of Clun, Shropshire, England

    Notes:

    Chief Butler of England.

    "John Fitz Alan, feudal lord of Clun and Oswestry, and (according to the admission of 1433 abovenamed) Earl of Arundel, only s. and h., b. 14 Sep. 1246. He did homage for his estates 10 Dec. 1267. He, also (as Courthope remarks), though '22 years at his father's decease, was never known as Earl of Arundel, and it is incredible that, if he had ever borne that title, as annexed to the Castle and Honour, the fact would have been omitted in the inquisition which finds him to have died seized (1272), 56 Hen. III, of that Castle and Honour held by the 4th part of a Barony.' He m. Isabel, da. of Roger de Mortimer, of Wigmore, by Maud, da and coh. of William de Briouze, of Brecknock. He d. 18 Mar. 1271/2, and was bur. in Haughmond Abbey, Salop." [Complete Peerage I:240]

    John married Isabella de Mortimer before 14 May 1260. Isabella (daughter of Roger de Mortimer and Maud de Briouze) died before 1 Apr 1292; was buried in Haughmond Abbey, Shropshire, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  19. 53.  Isabella de Mortimer (daughter of Roger de Mortimer and Maud de Briouze); died before 1 Apr 1292; was buried in Haughmond Abbey, Shropshire, England.

    Notes:

    Complete Peerage volume I contains some misinformation about this Isabella. Kathryn Warner has shown that rather than being alive in 1300, she died before 1 Apr 1292. This is in fact corrected in CP volume XIV. Uncorrected, however, is its confused account of her subsequent marital history. Douglas Richardson, in a 2016 post to SGM, demonstrated that contrary to CP, she did not marry Ralph d'Arderne after the death of her first husband John fitz Alan; rather, the Isabel who married Ralph d'Arderne was the widow of an entirely different John Fitz Alan, of Wolverton, Buckinghamshire. Our Isabel "occurs in various records as the unmarried widow of John Fitz Alan, of Arundel, from the time of his death in 1272 up through 1284-5, when she is on record as having presented to Cold Norton Priory, Oxfordshire. She subsequently married (2nd) on 2 September 1285, to Robert de Hastang, as indicated by the historian, Scott Waugh, Lordship of England (1988): 131-132, who states as follows: 'It turned out that Henry III had granted the right of her [Isabel's] marriage to her father, that after he died his executors accepted her fine for the right to marry whomever she pleased, and that she had married Robert de Hastang on 2 September 1285.'"

    Children:
    1. Maud Fitz Alan died before 17 Nov 1326.
    2. 26. Richard Fitz Alan was born on 3 Feb 1267 in of Arundel, Sussex, England; died on 9 Mar 1302; was buried in Haughmond Abbey, Shropshire, England.

  20. 54.  Tomasso di Saluzzo was born in 1239 in Cuneo, Piedmont, Italy (son of Manfredo III di Saluzzo and Beatrice of Savoy); died on 3 Dec 1296.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate birth: Abt 1240, of Saluzzo, Cuneo, Piedmont, Italy
    • Alternate birth: 1244
    • Alternate death: 1299

    Notes:

    Fourth marquis of Saluzzo. "Built a great palace for his family in 1270. In the battle of Roccavione in 1275 he caused Charles d'Anjou to lose Piedmont; fought Savoy in 1290." [The Ancestry of Dorothea Poyntz, citation details below.]

    Tomasso married Aluigia del Vasto in 1258. Aluigia (daughter of Giorgio del Vasto and Menzia) died on 22 Aug 1291. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  21. 55.  Aluigia del Vasto (daughter of Giorgio del Vasto and Menzia); died on 22 Aug 1291.

    Notes:

    Also called Aluyisia; Aloisia; Luisia; Luigia; Alusia di Ceva.

    Children:
    1. 27. Alice di Saluzzo was born in of Saluzzo, Cuneo, Piedmont, Italy; died on 25 Sep 1292; was buried in Haughmond Abbey, Shropshire, England.

  22. 58.  Philippe III, King of France was born on 1 May 1245 in Poissy, Yvelines, Île-de-France, France (son of St. Louis IX, King of France and Margaret of Provence, Queen Consort of France); died on 5 Oct 1285 in Perpignan, Pyrénées-Or, France; was buried in Abbey of Saint-Denis, Saint-Denis, France.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate birth: 30 Apr 1245

    Notes:

    Nicknamed "The Bold".

    Philippe married Marie of Brabant, Queen Consort of France on 21 Aug 1274. Marie (daughter of Henri III of Brabant and Alix of Burgundy) was born about 1256 in Leuven, Vlaams-Brabant, Flanders; died on 12 Jan 1322 in Les Mureaux, Yvelines, Île-de-France, France; was buried in Church of the Franciscans, Paris, France. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  23. 59.  Marie of Brabant, Queen Consort of France was born about 1256 in Leuven, Vlaams-Brabant, Flanders (daughter of Henri III of Brabant and Alix of Burgundy); died on 12 Jan 1322 in Les Mureaux, Yvelines, Île-de-France, France; was buried in Church of the Franciscans, Paris, France.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: 12 Jan 1321

    Children:
    1. Louis was born in May 1276; died on 19 May 1319 in Paris, France.
    2. 29. Marguerite of France, Queen Consort of England was born in 1279; died on 14 Feb 1317 in Marlborough Castle, Wiltshire, Engand; was buried in Christ Church Greyfriars, Newgate, London, England.