Nielsen Hayden genealogy

John Bardolf

Male 1314 - 1363  (49 years)


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

Generation: 1

  1. 1.  John Bardolf was born on 13 Jan 1314 in of Wormegay, Norfolk, England (son of Thomas Bardolf and Agnes); died on 29 Jul 1363 in Assisi, Italy.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate birth: 1312

    John married Elizabeth Damory before 25 Dec 1327. Elizabeth (daughter of Roger Damory and Elizabeth de Clare) was born before 1321; died before 1363. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. William Bardolf was born on 21 Oct 1349 in of Wormegay, Norfolk, England; died on 29 Jan 1386.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Thomas Bardolf was born on 4 Oct 1282 in Watton at Stone, Hertfordshire, England (son of Hugh Bardolf and Isabel Aguillon); died on 15 Dec 1328; was buried in Shelford Priory, Nottinghamshire, England.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: 15 Dec 1329

    Notes:

    Summoned to Parliament by writ, 26 Aug 1307 to 23 Oct 1330.

    Thomas married Agnes. Agnes died on 11 Dec 1357 in Ruskington, Lincolnshire, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Agnes died on 11 Dec 1357 in Ruskington, Lincolnshire, England.

    Notes:

    David Williams (citation details below) presents circumstantial evidence that she was a daughter of William de Grandison (d. 1335) by his first wife, who may have been Jeanne, daughter of Pierre II, count of Gruyère.

    Children:
    1. Cecily Bardolf died on 23 Nov 1386; was buried in Austin Friars, Norwich, Norfolk, England.
    2. Margaret Bardolf was born between 1310 and 1320; died before 24 Feb 1346; was buried in Greenfield Priory, Aby, Lincolnshire, England.
    3. 1. John Bardolf was born on 13 Jan 1314 in of Wormegay, Norfolk, England; died on 29 Jul 1363 in Assisi, Italy.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Hugh Bardolf was born about 29 Sep 1259 in of Wormegay, Norfolk, England (son of William Bardolf and Juliane de Gournay); died before 20 Aug 1304.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: Sep 1304

    Notes:

    Active in the French and Scottish wars. A retainer of Henry de Lacy, Earl of Lincoln, at Carlaverock.

    Summoned to Parliament by writ 6 Feb 1299 to 2 Jun 1302.

    Hugh married Isabel Aguillon before 1282. Isabel (daughter of Robert Aguillon and Joan de Ferrers) was born on 25 Mar 1258 in of Addington, Surrey, England; died before 28 May 1323. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Isabel Aguillon was born on 25 Mar 1258 in of Addington, Surrey, England (daughter of Robert Aguillon and Joan de Ferrers); died before 28 May 1323.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: Bef 28 May 1325

    Children:
    1. Margery Bardolf died after 24 Feb 1334.
    2. 2. Thomas Bardolf was born on 4 Oct 1282 in Watton at Stone, Hertfordshire, England; died on 15 Dec 1328; was buried in Shelford Priory, Nottinghamshire, England.


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  William Bardolf was born in of Wormegay, Norfolk, England (son of William Bardolf and Nichola); died on 1 Dec 1289.

    Notes:

    Served in the Welsh campaigns of 1277 and 1282.

    William married Juliane de Gournay before 1254. Juliane (daughter of Hugh de Gournay and Maud) was born about 1237 in of Mapledurham, Oxfordshire, England; died before 6 Nov 1295. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 9.  Juliane de Gournay was born about 1237 in of Mapledurham, Oxfordshire, England (daughter of Hugh de Gournay and Maud); died before 6 Nov 1295.
    Children:
    1. 4. Hugh Bardolf was born about 29 Sep 1259 in of Wormegay, Norfolk, England; died before 20 Aug 1304.

  3. 10.  Robert Aguillon was born in of Addington, Surrey, England (son of William Aguillon and Joan); died on 15 Feb 1286.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate birth: of Watton at Stone, Hertfordshire, England

    Notes:

    Sheriff of Surrey and Sussex; constable of Guilford Castle, 1264; license to crenellate manor house of Perching and to ditch, 1268.

    "[Sir Robert Aguillon] held a manor, afterward called Bardolf's manor, in the parish of Addington, by Grand Serjeantry, by the service of making a mess called 'gerout' for the King's table. The manor had been held at the time of Domesday by Tezelin, the King's Cook, which accounts for the origin of a culinary service. This service was performed for George III by Mr. Spencer, Lord of the manor of Addington (both manors being then united), but in 1807 the property was sold to the See of Canterbury." [Complete Peerage I:417; see also our entry for Bartholomew de Chesney d. aft 1189.]

    Robert married Joan de Ferrers. Joan (daughter of William de Ferrers and Sybil Marshal) died before Oct 1267. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 11.  Joan de Ferrers (daughter of William de Ferrers and Sybil Marshal); died before Oct 1267.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: Bef Jun 1269

    Children:
    1. Margery Aguillon
    2. 5. Isabel Aguillon was born on 25 Mar 1258 in of Addington, Surrey, England; died before 28 May 1323.


Generation: 5

  1. 16.  William Bardolf was born about 1194 in of Wormegay, Norfolk, England (son of Doun Bardolf and Beatrix de Warenne); died in 1275.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: Bef 5 Jan 1275
    • Alternate death: Bef 5 Jan 1276

    Notes:

    One of the twelve appointed to draft the Provisions of Oxford.

    From the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography:

    He was a middle-ranking baron with a long career in royal service, who supported the baronial reformers in 1258, but took the side of the king when civil war broke out in 1264.

    After the death of Doun in 1205, and of her second husband, Ralph (c.1210), Beatrice married Hubert de Burgh, earl of Kent, who became guardian of her son William Bardolf following her own death in 1214. Although Bardolf had livery of his inheritance in 1215, his stepfather contrived to keep control of the honour of Wormegay until his death in 1243. Bardolf was already married to Nichola, whose parentage is unknown, when he attended Henry III on his visit to France in 1230. He commanded the expedition which captured William de Marisco and other outlaws on Lundy island in 1242, served the king in Scotland and Wales in 1244, and accompanied Queen Eleanor to France in 1254. His rewards included grants of free warren, fairs and markets in his manors, and favourable terms for the payment of his debts to the king.

    In the political crisis of 1258, however, Bardolf was one of the twelve chosen by the barons to reform the realm, and on 22 June he was appointed constable of Nottingham Castle under the terms of the provisions of Oxford. By March 1259 he had been elected to the parliamentary committee of twelve, and in 1261 he used his local influence to obstruct the work of the king's sheriff in Norfolk. He was one of the Montfortians who in December 1263 agreed to the arbitration of Louis IX on the quarrel with the king, but after the rebels were defeated at Northampton in April 1264 he joined the king and was captured at the battle of Lewes that May. He received only modest grants of the lands of rebels after the battle of Evesham in August 1265.

    William married Nichola. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 17.  Nichola

    Notes:

    Named "Nichola" by the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Richardson's RA says that the name of the wife of William Bardolf is "not known."

    Children:
    1. 8. William Bardolf was born in of Wormegay, Norfolk, England; died on 1 Dec 1289.

  3. 18.  Hugh de Gournay was born in of Mapledurham, Oxfordshire, England (son of Hugh de Gournay and Juliane de Dammartin); died in 1238; was buried in Langley Abbey, Norfolk, England.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: 1239

    Hugh married Maud. Maud died before 1273. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 19.  Maud died before 1273.
    Children:
    1. 9. Juliane de Gournay was born about 1237 in of Mapledurham, Oxfordshire, England; died before 6 Nov 1295.

  5. 20.  William Aguillon was born about 1190; died in 1244.

    Notes:

    "[P]erh. son of William Aguillon, who [in] 1200 covenanted to deliver his son William to King John as hostage....He withdrew from allegiance to King John, but returned, lands restored 17 Sep. 1217." [Ancestral Roots, 8th ed., citation details below.]

    William married Joan in 1212. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  6. 21.  Joan (daughter of Peter fitz Henry and Isabel de Chesney).
    Children:
    1. 10. Robert Aguillon was born in of Addington, Surrey, England; died on 15 Feb 1286.

  7. 22.  William de Ferrers was born about 1193 in of Tutbury, Burton-on-Trent, Staffordshire, England (son of William de Ferrers and Agnes of Chester); died on 24 Mar 1254 in Evington, Leicestershire, England; was buried on 31 Mar 1254 in Merevale Abbey, Warwickshire, England.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: 28 Mar 1254, Evington, Leicestershire, England

    Notes:

    Earl of Derby. Constable of Bolsover Castle. He died of injuries sustained when he was thrown from a chariot crossing a bridge at St. Neots in Cambridgeshire.

    -----

    So to start with, Sir William de Ferrers, 5th Earl of Derby, born 1193, helpfully had two daughters named Agnes de Ferrers.

    The first Agnes de Ferrers, by Sir William's first wife Sybil Marshal, was born about 1222 and married William de Vescy (b. bef. 16 May 1205).

    The second Agnes de Ferrers, by Sir William's second wife Margaret de Quincy, was born about 1252 and married Sir Robert de Muscegros (b. abt. 1252).

    But that's not all!

    Sir William also had two daughters named Joan de Ferrers.

    Again (you're starting to get the idea by now), the first Joan de Ferrers, by Sir William's first wife Sybil Marshal, was born about 1233 and married, first Sir John de Mohun (b. abt. 1227, d. bef. 1254), and second, Sir Robert de Aguillon (b. 15 Feb 1235/36).

    The second Joan de Ferrers, by Sir William's second wife Margaret de Quincy, was born in 1245 and married Thomas de Berkeley, 1st Baron Berkeley (b. 1245).

    This second pair of Joans is made even more hilarious by the existence of yet a third Joan de Ferrers, contemporary to the other two, born abt. 1256 to a completely different William de Ferrers, the one born c. 1225, of Bere Ferrers, Tavistock, Devon.

    I'm sure they all got together regularly to laugh about how aggravating this would be to people seven hundred years in the future.

    -----

    As a final piece of genealogical curiosa, Eleanor de Ferrers, youngest daughter of William de Ferrers by his first wife, married Roger de Quincy, father of William de Ferrers' second wife Roger de Quincy, thus rendering Eleanor de Ferrers and Margaret de Quincy one another's stepmothers.

    William married Sybil Marshal before 14 May 1219. Sybil (daughter of William Marshal and Isabel de Clare) was born about 1204; died before 1238. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  8. 23.  Sybil Marshal was born about 1204 (daughter of William Marshal and Isabel de Clare); died before 1238.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: Bef 1247

    Children:
    1. Agnes de Ferrers died on 11 May 1290.
    2. 11. Joan de Ferrers died before Oct 1267.
    3. Isabel de Ferrers died before 11 Nov 1260; was buried on 11 Nov 1260.
    4. Agatha de Ferrers died on 22 May 1306.
    5. Eleanor de Ferrers died before 26 Oct 1274; was buried on 26 Oct 1274.
    6. John de Ferrers died before 1238.
    7. Sibyl de Ferrers died before 1260.
    8. Maud de Ferrers was born about 1230; died on 12 Mar 1299.


Generation: 6

  1. 32.  Doun Bardolf was born in of Shelford, Nottinghamshire, England (son of Thomas de Bardolf); died before 24 Feb 1205.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate birth: of Ruskington, Lincolnshire, England
    • Alternate death: 1209

    Notes:

    Also called Dodo Bardolf.

    Doun married Beatrix de Warenne before 1194. Beatrix (daughter of William de Warenne and Beatrix de Pierrepont) was born in of Wormegay, Norfolk, England; died before 12 Dec 1214. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 33.  Beatrix de Warenne was born in of Wormegay, Norfolk, England (daughter of William de Warenne and Beatrix de Pierrepont); died before 12 Dec 1214.
    Children:
    1. 16. William Bardolf was born about 1194 in of Wormegay, Norfolk, England; died in 1275.

  3. 36.  Hugh de Gournay was born in of Wendover, Buckinghamshire, England (son of Hugh de Gournay and Millicent de Coucy); died on 25 Oct 1214 in Rouen, Seine-Maritime, Normandy, France.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate birth: of Bledlow, Buckinghamshire, England
    • Alternate death: 1215

    Notes:

    Accompanied Richard I on the Third Crusade, 1191. Commanded 100 knights at Acre. Sheriff of Buckinghamshire and Bedfordshire, 1214. According to Royal Ancestry, he died in Rouen "after donning the garb of a Templar and discarding it by apostasy."

    Hugh married Juliane de Dammartin before 1193. Juliane (daughter of Aubrey II de Dammartin and Mahaut of Clermont) died in 1238. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 37.  Juliane de Dammartin (daughter of Aubrey II de Dammartin and Mahaut of Clermont); died in 1238.
    Children:
    1. Milicent de Gournay died before 1233.
    2. 18. Hugh de Gournay was born in of Mapledurham, Oxfordshire, England; died in 1238; was buried in Langley Abbey, Norfolk, England.

  5. 42.  Peter fitz Henry (son of Henry fitz Ailwin, Mayor of London and Margaret); died in 1207.

    Peter married Isabel de Chesney. Isabel (daughter of Bartholomew de Chesney) died before 1203; was buried in Bermondsey Priory, Surrey, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  6. 43.  Isabel de Chesney (daughter of Bartholomew de Chesney); died before 1203; was buried in Bermondsey Priory, Surrey, England.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: Bef 1207

    Notes:

    Also called de Channay.

    Children:
    1. 21. Joan

  7. 44.  William de Ferrers (son of William de Ferrers and (Unknown wife of William de Ferrers)); died on 22 Sep 1247.

    Notes:

    "Sheriff of Notts and Derby, for 7 weeks, February-March 1194. About that time, before the King's return to England, he supported the justiciar against John, Count of Mortain, and, with the Earl of Chester, besieged Nottingham Castle. Shortly afterwards he took part at Richard's second Coronation, 17 April, being one of the four Earls who bore the canopy. After the King's death, he was at the Council of Northampton, which declared for John as Richard's successor: he was present at the Coronation, 27 May 1199. On 7 June 1199, the King restored and confirmed to him the third penny of all the pleas pleaded per vicecomitem de Dereby, unde ipse Comes est, as amply as any of his predecessors had had the same, to hold, to him and his heirs for ever, and with his own hand girded him with the sword as an Earl. On the same day the King gave him Higham with the hundred and a half, and the park of that town, and Newbottle and Blisworth, as his right and inheritance which descended to him as right heir of the land which was of William Peverel, to hold, to him and his heirs for ever, by the service of a knlght's fee. And the Earl quit-claimed the residue of the land which was of William Peverel to the King, and paid 2,000 marks for his charter. He was present at the Coronation of Henry III, 28 October 1216. On 30 October the King granted him the castles of Peak and Bolsover, co. Derby, with the homages, and on 16 January 1216/7 the manor of Melbourne in that co., to hold till the King was 14 years of age. He assisted the Regent to raise the siege of Lincoln Castle, 20 May 1217, and with his brother-in-law, the Earl of Chester, commanded the royal forces which took and razed the castle of Montsorel. In June 1218 he went on Crusade. He was warned, 26 June 1222, to surrender the castles of Peak and Bolsover before Michaelmas. Sheriff of co. Lancaster and Keeper of the honour of Lancaster, 30 December 1223 to 2 January 1227/8. He accompanied the King in the expedition to Brittany and Poitou, April to October 1230. On 19 January 1230/1 he was given the custody of all the lands of the Normans in England which were of his fee. He was at the Council of London, February 1231/2. He was summoned for Military Service against the Scots 15 May 1244, by writ directed W. de Ferar' comiti Derebi." [Complete Peerage]

    Died of the complications of gout.

    William married Agnes of Chester in 1192. Agnes (daughter of Hugh of Chester and Bertrade de Montfort) died on 2 Nov 1247. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  8. 45.  Agnes of Chester (daughter of Hugh of Chester and Bertrade de Montfort); died on 2 Nov 1247.

    Notes:

    According to CP XIV, she may actually have been called Alice. The Ancestry of Dorothea Poyntz calls her "Agnes (?Alice) de Blundeville".

    Children:
    1. Bertha de Ferrers died after 10 Feb 1267; was buried in Grey Friars, Dunwich, Suffolk, England.
    2. Sibyl de Ferrers
    3. 22. William de Ferrers was born about 1193 in of Tutbury, Burton-on-Trent, Staffordshire, England; died on 24 Mar 1254 in Evington, Leicestershire, England; was buried on 31 Mar 1254 in Merevale Abbey, Warwickshire, England.

  9. 46.  William Marshal was born about 1146 (son of John fitz Gilbert and Sybil de Salisbury); died on 14 May 1219 in Caversham, Oxfordshire, England; was buried in Temple Church, London, England.

    Notes:

    Also spelled William le Mareschal. Earl of Pembroke.

    Hereditary Marshal of England; Sheriff of Gloucestershire 1189-94; Sheriff of Sussex 1193-1208; Warden of the Forest of Dean and Constable of St. briavels Castle 1194-1206; Constable of Lillebonne 1202; Protector and Regent of the Kingdom 1216-19; and, in right of his wife, Earl of Pembroke and Striguil and Lord of Leinster. Advisor to King John at Runnymede.

    Wikipedia:

    "William Marshal, 1st Earl of Pembroke [...], also called William the Marshal (Norman French: Williame le Mareschal; Anglo-Norman: Guillaume le Marechal), was an English (or Anglo-Norman) soldier and statesman. Stephen Langton eulogized him as the 'best knight that ever lived.' He served four kings -- Henry II, Richard I, John, and Henry III -- and rose from obscurity to become a regent of England for the last of the four, and so one of the most powerful men in Europe. Before him, the hereditary title of 'Marshal' designated head of household security for the king of England; by the time he died, people throughout Europe (not just England) referred to him simply as 'the Marshal'. He received the title of 1st Earl of Pembroke through marriage during the second creation of the Pembroke earldom."

    William married Isabel de Clare in Aug 1189 in London, England. Isabel (daughter of Richard "Strongbow" fitz Gilbert and Eve of Leinster) was born in 1173; died on 7 Mar 1220; was buried in Tintern Abbey, Monmouthshire, Wales. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  10. 47.  Isabel de Clare was born in 1173 (daughter of Richard "Strongbow" fitz Gilbert and Eve of Leinster); died on 7 Mar 1220; was buried in Tintern Abbey, Monmouthshire, Wales.
    Children:
    1. Eve Marshal died between Jan 1242 and 1246.
    2. Joan Marshal died before Nov 1234.
    3. Walter Marshal died on 24 Nov 1245 in Goodrich Castle, Herefordshire, England.
    4. William Marshal was born about 1190; died on 24 Apr 1231; was buried in New Temple Church, London, England.
    5. Maud Marshal, Marshal Of England was born in 1192; died on 27 Mar 1248; was buried in Tintern Abbey, Monmouthshire, Wales.
    6. Isabel Marshal was born on 9 Oct 1200 in Pembroke, Pembrokeshire, Wales; died on 17 Jan 1240 in Berkhamsted, Hertfordshire, England; was buried in Beaulieu Abbey, Hampshire, England.
    7. 23. Sybil Marshal was born about 1204; died before 1238.