Nielsen Hayden genealogy
Milo de Sancto Mauro
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Name Milo de Sancto Mauro [1] Birth Penhow, Monmouthshire, Wales [2] Gender Male Alternate birth of Kingston-Seymour, Somerset, England [3] Person ID I29676 Ancestry of PNH, TNH, and others | Ancestor of LDN, Ancestor of TWK Last Modified 28 Aug 2020
Father Thomas St. Maur Mother Juliane Family ID F17704 Group Sheet | Family Chart
Children + 1. Peter de Sancto Mauro, b. of Weston-in-Gordano, Somerset, England Family ID F17703 Group Sheet | Family Chart Last Modified 27 Aug 2020
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Notes - "In the time of Hen. II, the manor of Kingston was the possession of the family of Malherbe, who were lords also of Shipham, Rowborough, and many other adjacent manors. But in the ninth year of Ric. I. Robert Malherbe, or de Malherbe, (as he is sometimes called) made a grant of this lordship to Milo de Sancto Mauro, or Seymour, from whom the place was afterwards called. This Milo was a Baron, and one of those who conspired in arms against King John. His son Peter de Sancto Mauro lived in the time of Henry III, at Weston in Gordano, in the hundred of Portbury, which manor he held together with this of Kingston. His seal was a port cullis quartered with two chevronels. He left issue one only daughter and heir, Maud…" [The History and Antiquities of the County of Somerset, citation details below]
"Milo was Lord of Kingston Seymour (formerly Kingston St. Maur). He was also was of the rebels Barons at the time of the Magna Carta. He is mentioned in a Fine Roll for the period along with his first wife Agnes. His second wife was Cecily. Milo was born at the family seat of Penhow, and it is believed he had two sons." [The Knights Templar in Somerset, citation details below]
- "In the time of Hen. II, the manor of Kingston was the possession of the family of Malherbe, who were lords also of Shipham, Rowborough, and many other adjacent manors. But in the ninth year of Ric. I. Robert Malherbe, or de Malherbe, (as he is sometimes called) made a grant of this lordship to Milo de Sancto Mauro, or Seymour, from whom the place was afterwards called. This Milo was a Baron, and one of those who conspired in arms against King John. His son Peter de Sancto Mauro lived in the time of Henry III, at Weston in Gordano, in the hundred of Portbury, which manor he held together with this of Kingston. His seal was a port cullis quartered with two chevronels. He left issue one only daughter and heir, Maud…" [The History and Antiquities of the County of Somerset, citation details below]
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Sources - [S4300] A Genealogical History of the House of Yvery; in its Different Branches of Yvery, Luvel, Percival, and Gournay by James Anderson. 2 volumes. London: H. Woodfall, 1742.
- [S4302] The Knights Templar in Somerset by Juliet Faith. Stroud, Gloucestershire: The History Press, 2009.
- [S4301] The History and Antiquities of the County of Somerset by John Collinson. Bath: R. Cruttwell, 1791.
- [S4300] A Genealogical History of the House of Yvery; in its Different Branches of Yvery, Luvel, Percival, and Gournay by James Anderson. 2 volumes. London: H. Woodfall, 1742.