Nielsen Hayden genealogy

Joan La Warre

Female - 1404


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Joan La Warre (daughter of Roger la Warre and Eleanor de Mowbray); died on 24 Apr 1404.

    Joan married Thomas West before 2 May 1384. Thomas (son of Thomas West and Alice Fitz Herbert) was born in 1365 in of Oakhanger, Hampshire, England; died on 19 Apr 1405. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. Reynold West was born on 5 Sep 1395 in of Hempston Cantilupe, Devon, England; died on 27 Aug 1450; was buried in Broadwater, Sussex, England.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Roger la Warre was born on 30 Nov 1326 in of Ewyas Harold, Herefordshire, England (son of John la Warre and Margaret de Holand); died on 27 Aug 1370 in Gascony, France.

    Notes:

    Knight of the household to the Prince of Wales, 1366. In the retinue of Edward, the Black Prince, at Crécy and the siege of Calais. Summoned to Parliament by writs dated 14 Aug 1362 to 1 Jun 1363.

    Roger married Eleanor de Mowbray before 23 Jul 1358. Eleanor (daughter of John de Mowbray and Joan of Lancaster) died before 10 Jun 1387. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Eleanor de Mowbray (daughter of John de Mowbray and Joan of Lancaster); died before 10 Jun 1387.
    Children:
    1. 1. Joan La Warre died on 24 Apr 1404.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  John la Warre was born in of Wickwar, Gloucestershire, England (son of John la Warre and Joan de Grelle); died before 24 Jun 1331.

    John married Margaret de Holand before 1326. Margaret (daughter of Robert de Holand and Maud la Zouche) died on 20 Aug 1349. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Margaret de Holand (daughter of Robert de Holand and Maud la Zouche); died on 20 Aug 1349.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: 22 Aug 1349

    Children:
    1. 2. Roger la Warre was born on 30 Nov 1326 in of Ewyas Harold, Herefordshire, England; died on 27 Aug 1370 in Gascony, France.

  3. 6.  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]


  4. 7.  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. 3. Eleanor de Mowbray died before 10 Jun 1387.
    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.


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  John la Warre was born between 1276 and 1277 in of Ewyas Harold, Herefordshire, England (son of Roger la Warre and Clarice de Tregoz); died on 9 May 1347.

    Notes:

    Summoned to Parliament from 26 Aug 1307 to 25 Aug 1318. Knighted by the future Edward II at Westminster, 22 May 1306. He was in the sea fight off Sluys in 1340.

    John married Joan de Grelle after 19 Nov 1294. Joan (daughter of Robert de Grelle and Hawise de Burgh) died on 20 Mar 1353. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 9.  Joan de Grelle (daughter of Robert de Grelle and Hawise de Burgh); died on 20 Mar 1353.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: 21 Mar 1353

    Notes:

    Or de Grelley.

    Children:
    1. Katherine la Warre died on 9 Aug 1361.
    2. 4. John la Warre was born in of Wickwar, Gloucestershire, England; died before 24 Jun 1331.

  3. 10.  Robert de Holand was born about 1270 in of Upholland, Wigan, Lancashire, England (son of Robert de Holand and Elizabeth de Samlesbury); died on 7 Oct 1328 in Boreham Wood, Elstree, Hertfordshire, England; was buried in Grey Friars, Preston, Lancashire, England.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate birth: Abt 1283, of Upholland, Wigan, Lancashire, England
    • Alternate death: 15 Oct 1328

    Notes:

    Justice of Chester; Constable of Beeston Castle. Summoned to Parliament by writ, 29 Jul 1314 to 15 May 1321.

    From Wikipedia:

    "He was a member of the noble Holland family and a favourite official of Thomas, 2nd Earl of Lancaster, and had been knighted by 1305. His favoured treatment by the powerful earl caused his rival knights in the area, led by Sir Adam Banastre, Sir Henry de Lea, and Sir William de Bradshagh (Bradshaw), to start a campaign of violence towards him and the earl's other supporters known as the Banastre Rebellion. The rebels protested against the earl's actions and authority by attacking the homes of his supporters and several castles, including Liverpool Castle. Sir Robert later assisted in the hunt for fugitives after the rebels had been routed in Preston by a force under the command of the Sheriff.

    "The manors of Thornton and Bagworth were acquired by him in 1313. From 1314 to 1321 he was called to Parliament as a member of the House of Lords. In 1322 his part in the Battle of Boroughbridge, when he defected from Lancaster to the King, was deemed treacherous and cowardly and led to his disfavour. Although King Edward III of England would later pardon him, the partisans of the Earl of Lancaster considered him a traitor and had him executed. The execution occurred in 1328 by beheading in Essex; his head was sent to the new earl and his body to Lancashire to be buried."

    From Royal Ancestry:

    "SIR ROBERT DE HOLAND, 1st LORD HOLAND, was captured by some adherents of his former patron, Earl Thomas, in Boreham Wood, Elstree, Hertfordshire 7 Oct 1328, who cut off his head for his treachery. His body was buried at Grey Friars, Preston, Lancashire."

    Robert married Maud la Zouche before 13 May 1306. Maud (daughter of Alan la Zouche and Eleanor de Segrave) was born in 1289; died on 31 May 1349; was buried in Brackley, Northamptonshire, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 11.  Maud la Zouche was born in 1289 (daughter of Alan la Zouche and Eleanor de Segrave); died on 31 May 1349; was buried in Brackley, Northamptonshire, England.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate birth: Abt 1290

    Notes:

    "She was of record as preparing to go to Santiago on pilgrimage in 1336." [Medieval English Ancestors of Robert Abell, citation details below.]

    Children:
    1. Elizabeth de Holand was born in of Upholland, Wigan, Lancashire, England; died on 13 Jul 1387 in Chewton, Somerset, England; was buried in Chewton Mendip, Somerset, England.
    2. Thomas de Holand died on 26 Dec 1360 in Normandy, France; was buried in Church of the Grey Friars, Stamford, Lincolnshire, England.
    3. 5. Margaret de Holand died on 20 Aug 1349.
    4. Robert de Holand was born about 1311-1312 in of Thorpe Waterville, Thrapston, Northamptonshire, England; died on 16 Mar 1373 in Halse, Brackley, Northamptonshire, England; was buried in St. James Chapel, Brackley, Northamptonshire, England.
    5. Maud de Holand was born about 1315; died before 10 May 1380; was buried in Swinnerton, Staffordshire, England.

  5. 12.  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]


  6. 13.  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. 6. 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.

  7. 14.  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]


  8. 15.  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. 7. 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.