Nielsen Hayden genealogy

Dyonise Wychingham

Female


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Dyonise Wychingham

    Family/Spouse: William Clere. William (son of Robart Clere and Alice Filby) was born in of Ormesby, Norfolk, England; was buried in 1384. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 2. Robert Clere  Descendancy chart to this point was born in of Stokesby, Norfolk, England; died about 1420.
    2. 3. John Clere  Descendancy chart to this point was buried in Norwich Cathedral, Norwich, Norfolk, England.


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Robert Clere Descendancy chart to this point (1.Dyonise1) was born in of Stokesby, Norfolk, England; died about 1420.

    Family/Spouse: Elizabeth Rede. Elizabeth (daughter of John Rede) died after 1420. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 4. Edmund Clere  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1417 in of Stokesby, Norfolk, England; died in 1488.

  2. 3.  John Clere Descendancy chart to this point (1.Dyonise1) was buried in Norwich Cathedral, Norwich, Norfolk, England.

    Notes:

    From An Essay Towards a Topographical History of the County of Norfolk by Francis Blomefield (citation details below):

    Clere, Ormesby, Snecke, Ormesby, Westlesse, and Wichingham, impaling Branche, arg a lion rampant gul. over all a bendlet sab.

    This John, by reason of his estate in Burgh in Flegg, became a ward to the Countess of Norfolk, of whom it was held by knight's service. In 1390 he and Dionise his mother, purchased lands in Scrouteby. He and his wife are buried in Norwich cathedral, as at vol. iv. p. 35. She remarried to Sir John Rothenhale, Knt. and by will gave to Robert Clere her son, all her goods at Ormesby, and to Edmund Clere her son, all her goods at Castor, and her manor of Horninghall there, and Henstede, Rothenhale, and Cleydon manors in Suffolk.

    Family/Spouse: Elizabeth Branch. Elizabeth (daughter of Philip Branch) was buried in Norwich Cathedral, Norwich, Norfolk, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 5. Robert Clere  Descendancy chart to this point was born in of Ormesby St. Margaret, Norfolk, England; was buried in Norwich Cathedral, Norwich, Norfolk, England.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Edmund Clere Descendancy chart to this point (2.Robert2, 1.Dyonise1) was born in 1417 in of Stokesby, Norfolk, England; died in 1488.

    Notes:

    A member of the royal household from 1443 to 1460. M.P. in 1447. Escheater of Norfolk and Suffolk 1464-65.

    Family/Spouse: Elizabeth Charles. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 6. Robert Clere  Descendancy chart to this point was born in of Stokesby, Norfolk, England.

  2. 5.  Robert Clere Descendancy chart to this point (3.John2, 1.Dyonise1) was born in of Ormesby St. Margaret, Norfolk, England; was buried in Norwich Cathedral, Norwich, Norfolk, England.

    Notes:

    From An Essay Towards a Topographical History of the County of Norfolk by Francis Blomefield (citation details below):

    Clere, &c. as before, impaling Owydale or Dovedale, arg. a cross moline gul. quartering gul. a chevron erm. between three delises or; and Rusteyn, a horse passant sab. trapped, bridled and saddled or.

    This Robert is said by all evidences to be buried in the cathedral in Norwich, with Elizabeth Owydale his wife, as at vol. iv. p. 35; but though she was, it is plain to me now, that he was buried according to his will, in the nave of Ormesby St. Margaret's church, with these inscriptions; the former now remains, though the latter is lost:

    Credo quod Redemptor meus vivit; de Terra surrecturus sum.
    In Carne mea videbo Deum, Salbatorem meum.
    Hic iaret Robeertus Clere, qui obiit iio. Mensis Augusti Anno Dom. Mccccflbioruius anime propicietur Deus.


    He gave all his estate for life to his wife, and at her death William his son was to have the manors of Ormesby, Freethorp, and the manor and advowson of Winterton, &c. and Thomas his son to have Stratton Streeless manor, and Robert his son, Keswick manor in tail, after the death of his sons without issue, to Edmund his brother, remainder to Margaret, daughter of the said Robert.

    Family/Spouse: Elizabeth Uvedale. Elizabeth (daughter of Thomas Uvedale) died in 1492; was buried in Norwich Cathedral, Norwich, Norfolk, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 7. Robert Clere  Descendancy chart to this point was born in of Ormesby, Norfolk, England; died on 10 Aug 1529; was buried in Ormesby St. Margaret, Ormesby, Norfolk, England.


Generation: 4

  1. 6.  Robert Clere Descendancy chart to this point (4.Edmund3, 2.Robert2, 1.Dyonise1) was born in of Stokesby, Norfolk, England.

    Family/Spouse: Elizabeth Brampton. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 8. Thomas Clere  Descendancy chart to this point was born in of Stokesby, Norfolk, England; died before 1570.

  2. 7.  Robert Clere Descendancy chart to this point (5.Robert3, 3.John2, 1.Dyonise1) was born in of Ormesby, Norfolk, England; died on 10 Aug 1529; was buried in Ormesby St. Margaret, Ormesby, Norfolk, England.

    Notes:

    Knight of the shire for Norfolk, 1495. Sheriff of Norfolk and Suffolk, 1501-02. Admitted a knight of Lincoln’s Inn in 1467; knighted in 1494. He attended the funeral of Henry VII in 1409, and attended Henry VIII at his meeting with emperor Charles V at Gravesend in 1520.

    From An Essay Towards a Topographical History of the County of Norfolk by Francis Blomefield (citation details below):

    Clere and his quarters Ormesby, Snecke, Westlesse, Wichingham, Somerton, Owydale, viz. and his two quarterings of the de-lises, and Rusteyn, impaling Boleyn.

    This Sir Robert was famed for his great wealth, and acquired much reputation for his manly courage; he was knighted on AllSaints eve 1494, by Henry Duke of York, was sheriff of Norfolk in 1501, and was present at that great interview between King Henry VIII. and the French King on the 7th of June 1520, when he attended the Queen with a grand equipage; his testament is dated August 1, 1529, by which he ordered his executors, as soon as they well could, that they should cause 100 masses of the five wounds to be said for him, and also that they should provide a priest to pray for his soul, those of Dame Anne, daughter of Sir William Hopton, Knt. and of Dame Alice, daughter of Sir William Boleyn of Blickling, Knt. his two wives, and of all his ancestors and friends, and ordered that this service should be kept five years in the church he was buried in; but above all, he desired that if any persons could prove, that he had hindered them, or against conscience wronged them, in their goods or substance, that his executors on such proof should make them restitution.

    His first wife lies buried at the altar in Ormesby with this on a brass plate,

    Orate pro anima Domine Anne Clere, nuper Uroris Domini Roberti Clere Militis, de Ormesby, que obiit rriiio die Mensis Januarii, Anno Domini Mcccccv, cuius anime propicietur Deus.

    His second wife is also buried at Ormesby with this, and Clere impaling Boleyn.

    Orate pro anima Domine Alicie Clere, nuper Uroris Robertt Clere Militis, filie Willielmo Boleyn Militis, que obiit io de Mensis Novemb' Anno Domini Mvcxxxviiio cuius anime propicietur Deus.

    He lies buried at the altar by his wives, under a stone circumscribed with these words, and a shield of arms, between each word,

    Orate pro anima Roberti Clere Militis, qui obiit decimo die Mensis Augusti, Anno Domini Millessimo Quingentissimo Uices simo Nono, cuius anime propicietur Deus Amen.

    The arms are: 1, Clere, &c. being the same as on the tomb here.

    By his first wife he had a son, William, who died without issue; but by the 2d, he had three sons, John, Richard, and Thomas, and four daughters; Elizabeth, wife of Sir Robert Peyton of Iselham, Knt.; Anne, a nun at Denny; Dorothy, who married Robert Cotton; and Etheldred or Audrey, who espoused William Jenney; Thomas, the youngest son, was buried at Lambeth in 1545, and was a great favourite with that learned peer, Henry Howard Earl of Northampton, who to perpetuate his memory, hath enumerated his services in the following epitaph,

    Norfolk sprang thee, Lambeth holds the dead, Clere of the County of Cleer-mont, though hight, Within the Womb of Ormond's Race thou bred, And sawest thy Cosin Crowned in thy Sight; Shelton for Love, Surry for Lord thou chuse, Aye me! while Life did last, that League was tender, Tracing whose Steps, thou sawest Kelsall blaze, Laundersey burnt, and batter'd Bullen render; At Muttrel Gates, hopeless of all Re-cure Thine Earl, half Dead, gave in thy Hand his Will; Which Cause did thee, this pining Death procure, E're Summers, Seven times Seven, thou could'st fulfill.

    Ah! Clere, if Love had booted, Care, or Cost, Heaven had not wonn, nor Earth so timely lost.

    Family/Spouse: Alice Boleyn. Alice (daughter of William Boleyn and Margaret Butler) died on 1 Nov 1538; was buried in Ormesby St. Margaret, Ormesby, Norfolk, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 9. John Clere  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1511 in of Ormesby St. Margaret, Norfolk, England; died on 21 Aug 1557 in At sea.

    Family/Spouse: Agnes Hopton. Agnes (daughter of William Hopton and Margaret Wentworth) died on 23 Jan 1506; was buried in Ormesby St. Margaret, Ormesby, Norfolk, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 10. William Clere  Descendancy chart to this point
    2. 11. Elizabeth Clere  Descendancy chart to this point died before 6 Apr 1546.


Generation: 5

  1. 8.  Thomas Clere Descendancy chart to this point (6.Robert4, 4.Edmund3, 2.Robert2, 1.Dyonise1) was born in of Stokesby, Norfolk, England; died before 1570.

    Notes:

    Knighted at Leath, in Scotland, 1544.

    Family/Spouse: Ann Gyggs. Ann (daughter of Robert Gyggs) died between 21 Jun 1570 and 7 Dec 1570. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 12. Frances Clere  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1531; died in 1610.

  2. 9.  John Clere Descendancy chart to this point (7.Robert4, 5.Robert3, 3.John2, 1.Dyonise1) was born about 1511 in of Ormesby St. Margaret, Norfolk, England; died on 21 Aug 1557 in At sea.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate birth: of London, England
    • Alternate birth: of Norwich, Norfolk, England

    Notes:

    Burgess for Bramber. Burgess for Thetford. Knight of the shire for Norfolk. Vice Admiral. Treasurer for the Army in France.

    From the History of Parliament:

    Rarely on good terms with his neighbours, above all the Pastons, Clere was not infrequently in the Star Chamber, where one complainant criticized his ‘covetous appetite and ungodly disposition’. At least in Henry VIII’s time he could treat such attacks the more lightly in that he enjoyed the patronage of the Howards: the 3rd Duke of Norfolk had been overseer of his father’s will and his younger brother Thomas, a servant of the Earl of Surrey, was to be commemorated in one of Surrey’s sonnets after dying from wounds received when he saved the earl’s life in France in 1545. It was during this phase of Clere’s career that he attended his first two Parliaments as Member for Bramber, one of the Howard boroughs in Sussex. He was one of a group around Surrey arrested during the second session of the Parliament of 1542 for eating flesh in Lent.

    If it was as a courtier and a dependant of the Howards that he first came to public notice, it was as a naval captain and an administrator that Clere made his name. Early in 1548 he commanded a patrol in the North Sea and two years later he served in the Channel. His service at sea commended him to the admiral John Dudley, Viscount Lisle, whom in 1546 he accompanied to France to negotiate peace. Presumably he served under Dudley’s successor as admiral, Thomas, Baron Seymour of Sudeley, but nothing has come to light about his part in the Scottish war. Clere’s plundering of West Somerton church perhaps helped to foment Ket’s rebellion during 1548: he answered the Marquess of Northampton’s call for support from Norfolk gentlemen and after Northampton’s replacement by Dudley, then Earl of Warwick, he assisted in restoring order. Dudley rewarded him with lands said to have been promised to him by Henry VIII and with the treasurership of the army stationed in northern France until the surrender of Boulogne in 1550. His closeness to Dudley probably accounts for his Membership of the Parliament of March 1553 as much as his friendship with the leading resident at Thetford, Richard Fulmerston. During the succession crisis Clere seems to have declared for Lady Jane Grey and to have prevented a military force from Great Yarmouth from reaching Mary. When the tide turned in Mary’s favour his arms were impounded but he is not known to have been imprisoned. […]

    [H]is appointment as vice-admiral at Portsmouth in the following year shows that he was regarded as politically reliable as well as professionally competent. His first mission, to escort Charles V on his voyage to retirement in Spain, brought him a gold chain from the ex-emperor, but his second was to prove fatal. In July 1557 he was given command of a fleet against Scotland which on 21 Aug. was surprised by an enemy force in the Orkneys, and in the engagement which followed he was drowned. Following his death the Council ordered an inquiry to be held into alleged disorders committed by his men in churches and religious houses in Scotland.

    John married Anne Tyrrell before 19 Aug 1529. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 13. Edward Clere  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 15 Jun 1536 in of Blickling, Norfolk, England; died on 8 Jun 1606 in London, England; was buried in Blickling, Norfolk, England.

  3. 10.  William Clere Descendancy chart to this point (7.Robert4, 5.Robert3, 3.John2, 1.Dyonise1)

    Family/Spouse: Elizabeth Paston. Elizabeth (daughter of John Paston and Margery Brewse) died in 1539. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 11.  Elizabeth Clere Descendancy chart to this point (7.Robert4, 5.Robert3, 3.John2, 1.Dyonise1) died before 6 Apr 1546.

    Family/Spouse: Robert Peyton. Robert (son of Thomas Peyton and Jane Calthorpe) was born in of Isleham, Cambridgeshire, England; died on 18 Mar 1518. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 14. Robert Peyton  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1498 in of Isleham, Cambridgeshire, England; died on 1 Aug 1550; was buried in St. Andrew's, Isleham, Cambridgeshire, England.
    2. 15. John Peyton  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1503 in of Knowlton, Kent, England; died on 22 Oct 1558.


Generation: 6

  1. 12.  Frances Clere Descendancy chart to this point (8.Thomas5, 6.Robert4, 4.Edmund3, 2.Robert2, 1.Dyonise1) was born in 1531; died in 1610.

    Frances married William Paston on 5 May 1551 in St. Margaret's, Paston, Norfolk, England. William (son of Erasmus Paston and Mary Wyndham) was born about 1528; died on 20 Oct 1610; was buried in St. Nicholas, North Walsham, Norfolk, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 16. Anne Paston  Descendancy chart to this point was born before 16 Jul 1553; was christened on 16 Jul 1553 in St. Margaret's, Paston, Norfolk, England; died in 1637.

  2. 13.  Edward Clere Descendancy chart to this point (9.John5, 7.Robert4, 5.Robert3, 3.John2, 1.Dyonise1) was born on 15 Jun 1536 in of Blickling, Norfolk, England; died on 8 Jun 1606 in London, England; was buried in Blickling, Norfolk, England.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: 3 Jun 1606, London, England

    Notes:

    Burgess for Thetford 1557-58, 1562-63. Burgess for Grampound 1571. Sheriff of Norfolk and Suffolk 1567-68. Sheriff of Norfolk 1580-81.

    From the History of Parliament (citation details below):

    Though a younger son, Clere succeeded to an extensive patrimony on the north-east coast of Norfolk, being licensed to enter his lands on 22 Feb. 1558. In May of that year he purchased further property at Wymondham, and in 1561, on the death of his great-uncle Sir James Boleyn he inherited Blickling, which he made his chief seat. On the death of his father-in-law (Sir) Richard Fulmerston in 1567, Clere and his wife came into possession of most of his extensive estates in and around Thetford as well as inheriting most of his personal property.

    Thus, after 1567 Clere was one of the greatest landowners in Norfolk, appearing in 1588 on Lord Burghley’s list of ‘knights of great possessions’ able to support a peerage. He was a second cousin to the Queen and to Lord Hunsdon, and brother-in-law to Walter Haddon, the master of requests. His connexion with the Duke of Norfolk through his father-in-law Fulmerston, the Duke’s servant, caused him to be among those questioned on Norfolk’s arrest in October 1569, and in September 1571 he and others were ordered to take an inventory of the Duke’s goods at Kenninghall. In 1570 he was made collector in Norfolk of the forced loan. This inevitably made him unpopular with his fellow gentry, and gave rise to probably well-founded accusations of fraud and extortion. He was also in conflict with his manorial tenants, and at loggerheads with the Thetford corporation. He had to attend upon the Privy Council for a while after the forced loan episode, but he never lost the Council’s confidence. In 1578 he entertained the Queen during her Norfolk progress, ‘worthily feasted’ her retinue, and was knighted by the Queen at Norwich. In 1583 he signed a petition on behalf of certain puritan ministers and four years later was noted by the bishop of Norwich as a ‘favourer of religion’.

    Clere’s election at Thetford to the Parliaments of 1558 and 1563 was due to the local influence of his father-in-law, Fulmerston. Clere succeeded to Fulmerston’s land in 1567 and what made him resort to Grampound for a seat in 1571 is not evident, nor is it clear who was his patron there. Possibly there was a court connexion with the 2nd Earl of Bedford. Clere’s committee work concerned the continuance of statutes (20 Mar. 1563), priests disguised as servants (1 May 1571), and tillage and the navy (25 May 1571). He spoke on the treasons bill (9 Apr. 1571), the anonymous diarist commenting, ‘Mr. Clere of Norfolk, a gentleman of great possessions, made hereupon a staggering speech: his conclusion I did not conceive’. Of another speech, again on a religious topic (11 Apr.), he wrote ‘such was my ill hap I could not understand what reason he made’. D’Ewes records Clere as speaking on the bill for Bristol, also on 11 Apr. In the discussion on Strickland’s case on 20 Apr., he defended the prerogative of the Crown.

    In 1572 Clere decided to try for the county seat, Sir Thomas Cornwallis reporting just before the election that Clere ‘leaveth no stone untouched that may further his part’, and that ‘a great number of the shire’ were ‘evil affected towards him’. Unsuccessful, he wrote a series of letters to Richard Southwell, whom he had addressed as ‘loving cousin and friend’ when canvassing support beforehand, describing his ‘found falsehood’, and contrasting Southwell’s ‘overt action in so great an assembly’ with his ‘former pretended opinion’.

    In October 1586 he and his fellow deputy lieutenant Sir William Heydon were ordered by the Privy Council to ensure that at the new election of knights of the shire ‘fit men may be chosen, known to be well affected to religion and the present estate’, and Clere wrote to his friend, Bassingbourne Gawdy, suggesting that he stand, adding that if he himself were not incapacitated by a rupture, he ‘should be willing to be with you there’. The Norfolk gentry at this time were divided. In the north of the county Clere and Sir William Heydon, after initial quarrels over the rights of Clere’s second wife to the Heydon manor of Saxlingham, had united against Nathaniel Bacon, the Knyvet and Wyndham families and others of their neighbours. Soon after the 1586 election they apparently persuaded the lord lieutenant, Hunsdon, to replace Sir Thomas Knyvet by their friend Sir Arthur Heveningham as a deputy lieutenant, and had several of their opponents turned off the commission of the peace. During the next few years Clere can generally be found on the side of Heveningham in the latter’s quarrels with the Bacon faction over such contentious matters as the organisation of county musters.

    Clere’s eldest son Edward, already in 1585 ‘in peril divers ways of imprisonment and shame’, was accused in the next reign of sheltering a seminary priest and from 1606 spent much of his life in prison. Clere therefore did his best to keep his property out of his eldest son’s hands, though he could not break the entail on the Fulmerston estate. By various settlements and by his will, made in April 1605, he divided the rest between the younger sons, Sir Francis and Robert, and his grandson Henry. Most of the land eventually reverted to Henry, who became a baronet in 1620 and died s.p. in 1622. Clere’s will contained bequests to other relatives, and arranged for the foundation of a fellowship and scholarship at St. John’s, Cambridge. Most of the personal property was left to the widow, the sole executrix, who had a life interest in Blickling. One of the two supervisors was his ‘old well tried friend’ Dru Drury. Clere died in London on 3 June 1606, and was buried at Blickling.

    Edward married Frances Fulmerston about 16 Dec 1554. Frances (daughter of Richard Fulmerston and Alice Lonzam) died on 20 Mar 1580 in Blickling, Norfolk, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 17. Anne Clere  Descendancy chart to this point died before 4 Nov 1616.

  3. 14.  Robert Peyton Descendancy chart to this point (11.Elizabeth5, 7.Robert4, 5.Robert3, 3.John2, 1.Dyonise1) was born about 1498 in of Isleham, Cambridgeshire, England; died on 1 Aug 1550; was buried in St. Andrew's, Isleham, Cambridgeshire, England.

    Notes:

    Sheriff of Cambridgeshire and Huntingdonshire 1526, 1535-36. Knight of the shire for Cambridgeshire. Groom of the Privy Chamber to Henry VIII.

    Robert married Frances Hasilden in Jan 1516. Frances (daughter of Francis Hasilden and Elizabeth Calthorpe) died on 18 Mar 1582 in Isleham, Cambridgeshire, England; was buried in St. Andrew's, Isleham, Cambridgeshire, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 18. Robert Peyton  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1523 in of Isleham, Cambridgeshire, England; died on 19 Oct 1590 in London, England; was buried in Isleham, Cambridgeshire, England.

  4. 15.  John Peyton Descendancy chart to this point (11.Elizabeth5, 7.Robert4, 5.Robert3, 3.John2, 1.Dyonise1) was born about 1503 in of Knowlton, Kent, England; died on 22 Oct 1558.

    Family/Spouse: Dorothy Tyndall. Dorothy (daughter of John Tyndall and Amphyllis Coningsby) died after 18 Oct 1559. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 19. John Peyton  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1541 in of Doddington, Cambridgeshire, England; died on 4 Nov 1630; was buried in Doddington, Cambridgeshire, England.


Generation: 7

  1. 16.  Anne Paston Descendancy chart to this point (12.Frances6, 8.Thomas5, 6.Robert4, 4.Edmund3, 2.Robert2, 1.Dyonise1) was born before 16 Jul 1553; was christened on 16 Jul 1553 in St. Margaret's, Paston, Norfolk, England; died in 1637.

    Anne married Anthony Cope on 7 Apr 1600. Anthony (son of Edward Cope and Elizabeth Mohun) was born between 1548 and 1550; died on 6 Jul 1614. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 17.  Anne Clere Descendancy chart to this point (13.Edward6, 9.John5, 7.Robert4, 5.Robert3, 3.John2, 1.Dyonise1) died before 4 Nov 1616.

    Anne married William Gilbert on 23 Apr 1578 in Blickling, Norfolk, England. William died before 21 Feb 1608; was buried on 21 Feb 1608 in Mickleover, Derbyshire, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 20. Temperance Gilbert  Descendancy chart to this point died before 6 Nov 1648.

    Anne married Okeover Crompton about 1610. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  3. 18.  Robert Peyton Descendancy chart to this point (14.Robert6, 11.Elizabeth5, 7.Robert4, 5.Robert3, 3.John2, 1.Dyonise1) was born about 1523 in of Isleham, Cambridgeshire, England; died on 19 Oct 1590 in London, England; was buried in Isleham, Cambridgeshire, England.

    Notes:

    Knight of the shire for Cambridgeshire.

    Family/Spouse: Elizabeth Rich. Elizabeth (daughter of Richard Rich, Speaker of the House of Commons and Elizabeth Jenkes) died on 17 Oct 1591; was buried in Isleham, Cambridgeshire, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 21. John Peyton  Descendancy chart to this point was born in of Isleham, Cambridgeshire, England; died before 19 Dec 1616; was buried on 19 Dec 1616 in Isleham, Cambridgeshire, England.

  4. 19.  John Peyton Descendancy chart to this point (15.John6, 11.Elizabeth5, 7.Robert4, 5.Robert3, 3.John2, 1.Dyonise1) was born about 1541 in of Doddington, Cambridgeshire, England; died on 4 Nov 1630; was buried in Doddington, Cambridgeshire, England.

    Notes:

    "He served with distinction in the Irish Wars until the end of 1576, when he returned to England. [...] He served in the English army expedition in the Netherlands under the command of the Earl of Leicester in 1586. From this time he was in constant favor with Queen Elizabeth I. He was made Lieutenant of the Tower, and a member of the Queen's Privy Council. After Queen Elizabeth's death he was made Governor of Jersey by King James I." [Royal Ancestry, citation details below]

    John married Dorothy Beaupré on 8 Jun 1578 in Outwell, Norfolk, England. Dorothy (daughter of Edmund Beaupré and Katherine Bedingfield) died in Feb 1603. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 22. John Peyton  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1579 in of Doddington, Cambridgeshire, England; died between 24 Feb 1635 and 22 Apr 1635.


Generation: 8

  1. 20.  Temperance Gilbert Descendancy chart to this point (17.Anne7, 13.Edward6, 9.John5, 7.Robert4, 5.Robert3, 3.John2, 1.Dyonise1) died before 6 Nov 1648.

    Notes:

    Her second husband was William Hopkins. Administration on the estate of Temperance Hopkins who died overseas was granted to him on 6 Nov 1648 by the Prerogative Court of Canterbury. For this reason it is believed that she emigrated to New England with her daughter.

    Temperance married John Alsop on 1 May 1617 in Mickleover, Derbyshire, England. John (son of Anthony Alsop and Jane Smith) was born about 1596 in of Alsop-le-Dale, Ashbourne, Derbyshire, England; died between 28 Mar 1631 and 8 Jun 1631. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 23. Elizabeth Alsop  Descendancy chart to this point was born in Derbyshire, England; died in Jul 1688 in Milford, New Haven, Connecticut.

  2. 21.  John Peyton Descendancy chart to this point (18.Robert7, 14.Robert6, 11.Elizabeth5, 7.Robert4, 5.Robert3, 3.John2, 1.Dyonise1) was born in of Isleham, Cambridgeshire, England; died before 19 Dec 1616; was buried on 19 Dec 1616 in Isleham, Cambridgeshire, England.

    Notes:

    Created a baronet by James I on 22 May 1611.

    John married Alice Osborne on 29 Jun 1580 in St. Dionis Backchurch, Langbourn, London, England. Alice (daughter of Edward Osborne, Lord Mayor of London and Anne Hewitt) was born before 4 Mar 1563; was christened on 4 Mar 1563 in St. Dionis Backchurch, Langbourn, London, England; died between 29 Jan 1626 and 6 Dec 1626. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 24. Alice Peyton  Descendancy chart to this point died after 1637.

  3. 22.  John Peyton Descendancy chart to this point (19.John7, 15.John6, 11.Elizabeth5, 7.Robert4, 5.Robert3, 3.John2, 1.Dyonise1) was born about 1579 in of Doddington, Cambridgeshire, England; died between 24 Feb 1635 and 22 Apr 1635.

    Notes:

    Lieutenant-Governor of Jersey. Admitted 1594 a Fellow Commoner of Queen's College, Cambridge.

    "On the death of Queen Elizabeth in 1603, he was dispatched by his father to Edinburgh to assure King James I of his father's loyalty and that the Tower was being held at the king's disposal. The king received him with much distinction, and, recognizing his father's services, selected him as the first person on whom he bestowed knighthood." [Royal Ancestry, citation details below]

    John married Alice Peyton on 25 Nov 1602 in Isleham, Cambridgeshire, England. Alice (daughter of John Peyton and Alice Osborne) died after 1637. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 25. Anne Peyton  Descendancy chart to this point