Nielsen Hayden genealogy

Humphrey de Beauchamp

Male Bef 1253 - Bef 1317  (< 63 years)


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Humphrey de Beauchamp was born before Mar 1253 in of Ryme Intrinseca, Dorset, England; died before 9 Feb 1317.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: Bef 8 Jul 1316

    Notes:

    Knight of the shire for Devon, 1312; for Devon and Dorset, 1313. Served in 1296 and 1300 against the Scots.

    Humphrey married Sibyl Oliver after 1276, and was divorced between 1287 and 1290. Sibyl (daughter of Walter Oliver) was born in of Wambrook, Dorset, England; died after 1306. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 2. Eleanor Beauchamp  Descendancy chart to this point
    2. 3. John de Beauchamp  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1285 in of Ryme, Dorset, England; died after 1341.
    3. 4. Hugh de Beauchamp  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1287 in of Lillesdon in North Curry, Somerset, England; died before 10 Jun 1338.


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Eleanor Beauchamp Descendancy chart to this point (1.Humphrey1)

    Eleanor married John Bamfield about 1292. John was born in of Weston, Somerset, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 5. John Bamfield  Descendancy chart to this point was born in of Poltimore, Devon, England; died after 12 May 1340.

  2. 3.  John de Beauchamp Descendancy chart to this point (1.Humphrey1) was born about 1285 in of Ryme, Dorset, England; died after 1341.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: Aft 1345

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

    Children:
    1. 6. John de Beauchamp  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1315 in of Ryme, Dorset, England; died on 8 Apr 1349.

  3. 4.  Hugh de Beauchamp Descendancy chart to this point (1.Humphrey1) was born about 1287 in of Lillesdon in North Curry, Somerset, England; died before 10 Jun 1338.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: Abt 1337

    Family/Spouse: Idonea de Lisle. Idonea (daughter of William de Lisle) was born in 1293; died after 4 Feb 1349. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 7. John Beauchamp  Descendancy chart to this point was born in of Lillesdon in North Curry, Somerset, England; died after 1395.


Generation: 3

  1. 5.  John Bamfield Descendancy chart to this point (2.Eleanor2, 1.Humphrey1) was born in of Poltimore, Devon, England; died after 12 May 1340.

    Family/Spouse: Isabel Cobham. Isabel (daughter of John Cobham and Amicia Bolhay) died before Apr 1337. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 8. John Bamfield  Descendancy chart to this point was born in of Poltimore, Devon, England; died before 1363.

  2. 6.  John de Beauchamp Descendancy chart to this point (3.John2, 1.Humphrey1) was born about 1315 in of Ryme, Dorset, England; died on 8 Apr 1349.

    John married Margaret de Whalesborough about 1340. Margaret (daughter of John de Whalesborough) died after 24 Dec 1355. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 9. Elizabeth Beauchamp  Descendancy chart to this point was born in of Whympston in Modbury, Devon, England; died after 1409.
    2. 10. Joan Beauchamp  Descendancy chart to this point died before 1401.

  3. 7.  John Beauchamp Descendancy chart to this point (4.Hugh2, 1.Humphrey1) was born in of Lillesdon in North Curry, Somerset, England; died after 1395.

    Family/Spouse: Joan de Bridport. Joan (daughter of John de Bridport and Joan de Mountsorell) was born in of White Lackington, Somerset, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 11. Joan Beauchamp  Descendancy chart to this point died between 1381 and 1388.


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  John Bamfield Descendancy chart to this point (5.John3, 2.Eleanor2, 1.Humphrey1) was born in of Poltimore, Devon, England; died before 1363.

    Family/Spouse: Joan Gilbert. Joan (daughter of Geoffrey Gilbert and Joan de Compton) died after 1371. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 12. Thomas Bamfield  Descendancy chart to this point was born before 1346 in of Huxham, Devon, England; died after 1391.

  2. 9.  Elizabeth Beauchamp Descendancy chart to this point (6.John3, 3.John2, 1.Humphrey1) was born in of Whympston in Modbury, Devon, England; died after 1409.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: Aft 1411

    Family/Spouse: William Fortescue. William (son of William Fortescue) was born about 1345 in of Whympston in Modbury, Devon, England; died after 1406. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 13. John Fortescue  Descendancy chart to this point was born in of Holbeton, Devon, England; died between 1432 and 1436.
    2. 14. William Fortescue  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1385 in of Whympston in Modbury, Devon, England; died after 8 Nov 1421.

  3. 10.  Joan Beauchamp Descendancy chart to this point (6.John3, 3.John2, 1.Humphrey1) died before 1401.

    Family/Spouse: Robert Chalons. Robert (son of John Chalons) was born in of Challonsleigh, Devon, England; died before 29 Sep 1410. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 15. Robert Chalons  Descendancy chart to this point was born in of Challonsleigh, Devon, England; died on 6 Feb 1445.

  4. 11.  Joan Beauchamp Descendancy chart to this point (7.John3, 4.Hugh2, 1.Humphrey1) died between 1381 and 1388.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: Bef Mar 1388

    Joan married Thomas Bittlesgate before 1378. Thomas (son of John Bittlesgate) was born in of Over Gabriel, Devon, England; died between 1389 and 1391. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 16. Joan Bittlesgate  Descendancy chart to this point died after 17 Jul 1448.


Generation: 5

  1. 12.  Thomas Bamfield Descendancy chart to this point (8.John4, 5.John3, 2.Eleanor2, 1.Humphrey1) was born before 1346 in of Huxham, Devon, England; died after 1391.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate birth: of Poltimore, Devon, England

    Thomas married Agnes Coplestone before 1377. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 17. Agnes Bamfield  Descendancy chart to this point was born between 1377 and 1386; died after 1434.

  2. 13.  John Fortescue Descendancy chart to this point (9.Elizabeth4, 6.John3, 3.John2, 1.Humphrey1) was born in of Holbeton, Devon, England; died between 1432 and 1436.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: Abt 1435
    • Alternate death: Bef 1436

    Notes:

    According to John Morris (citation details below), he fought at Agincourt in 1415, and in 1422 he was governor of Meaux in France. According to the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (citation details below), he was "not a soldier, as historians of the family have claimed, but a local administrator and man of affairs, above all in the service of the Courtenay family."

    Family/Spouse: Eleanor Norris. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    John married Clarice before 1408. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 18. John Fortescue  Descendancy chart to this point died before 18 Dec 1479 in Ebrington, Gloucestershire, England.
    2. 19. Henry Fortescue  Descendancy chart to this point died after 31 Oct 1460.
    3. 20. Richard Fortescue  Descendancy chart to this point was born in of Punsborne, Hertfordshire, England; died on 22 May 1455 in St. Albans Abbey, Hertfordshire, England.

  3. 14.  William Fortescue Descendancy chart to this point (9.Elizabeth4, 6.John3, 3.John2, 1.Humphrey1) was born about 1385 in of Whympston in Modbury, Devon, England; died after 8 Nov 1421.

    William married Maud Falwell before 1411. Maud (daughter of John Falwell) died after 8 Nov 1421. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 21. John Fortescue  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1420 in of Whympston in Modbury, Devon, England; died after 1461.

  4. 15.  Robert Chalons Descendancy chart to this point (10.Joan4, 6.John3, 3.John2, 1.Humphrey1) was born in of Challonsleigh, Devon, England; died on 6 Feb 1445.

    Notes:

    Knight of the shire for Devon, 1420. Sheriff of Devon, 1409-10 and 1420-22.

    Robert married Blanche Waterton in 1393. Blanche (daughter of Hugh Waterton and Ellen Mowbray) was born about 1380; died on 3 Sep 1437. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 22. Katherine Chalons  Descendancy chart to this point died in 1420; was buried in Carmelite Friars, London, England.

  5. 16.  Joan Bittlesgate Descendancy chart to this point (11.Joan4, 7.John3, 4.Hugh2, 1.Humphrey1) died after 17 Jul 1448.

    Notes:

    Also called Jane, Bedlesgate, Bodulgate, Bodulgath.

    Joan married Richard Wydevill about 1403. Richard (son of John de Wydevill and Isabel Gobion) was born in of the Mote, near Maidstone, Kent, England; died about Dec 1441. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 23. Richard Woodville  Descendancy chart to this point died on 12 Aug 1469 in Northampton, Northamptonshire, England.
    2. 24. Joan Woodville  Descendancy chart to this point died before 1462; was buried in Austin Friars, Canterbury, Kent, England.


Generation: 6

  1. 17.  Agnes Bamfield Descendancy chart to this point (12.Thomas5, 8.John4, 5.John3, 2.Eleanor2, 1.Humphrey1) was born between 1377 and 1386; died after 1434.

    Agnes married John Prowse about 1406. John (son of John Prowse and Maud Cruwys) was born about 1377 in of Chagford, Devon, England; died after 1446. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 25. Richard Prowse  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1407 in of Chagford, Devon, England; died after 1449.

  2. 18.  John Fortescue Descendancy chart to this point (13.John5, 9.Elizabeth4, 6.John3, 3.John2, 1.Humphrey1) died before 18 Dec 1479 in Ebrington, Gloucestershire, England.

    Notes:

    MP for Tavistock, May 1421; Dc 1421; 1423; 1425. MP for Tetner, 1426; for Plympton Erle, 1429; for Totnes again, 1432; for Wiltshire, 1437. Governor of Lincoln's Inn 1424-26, 1428-30. Controller of the stannaries of Cornwall and Devon, 5 May 1430-22 Jul 1432. "Chancellor" to Henry VI during the latter's exile.

    From the History of Parliament (citation details below):

    After the battle of Northampton in July 1460 the fortunes of Fortescue inevitably followed those those of the house of Lancaster, to which he remained constantly loyal. In October following he was consulted in Parliament as to the legality of the duke of York’s claim to the throne, a question on which he expressed his opinion more fully in The replication made agenste the title and clayme by the Duke of Yorke to the Crownes and Reaumes of England and France, composed shortly afterwards. It was early in February 1461 that, having hastily made provision for his wife, Fortescue joined forces with Queen Margaret, and probably even took part in the second battle of St. Albans. Certainly, he was present at the battle of Towton on 29 Mar. and the skirmishes at Ryton and Brancepeth (Durham) on 26 June; and accordingly he was attainted in Edward IV’s first Parliament six months later. His forfeited estates were for the most part granted to John, Lord Wenlock.

    Fortescue spent the following two years in Scotland, acting as 'chancellor' and councillor to Henry VI, and it was probably there that he wrote De Natura Legis Naturae and other tracts on the question of the royal succession. In March (?) 1462 Henry gave him letters of credence to Louis XI of France, his mission being to ask support for the exiled Lancastrians. He crossed from Scotland to Sluys with Queen Margaret in July 1463, and they eventually settled at the castle of Koeur in St. Mighel, where they lived in extreme poverty. Fortescue spared no effort to procure assistance from the kings of France and Portugal in order to bring about Henry VI’s restoration and, calling himself ‘Chancellor of England’, he wrote several memoranda on the subject for Louis XI’s attention. During the years of exile he devoted himself to the education of Edward, prince of Wales, and composed De Laudibus Legurn Anglie and The Governance of England. He was a leading negotiator in the talks conducted at Angers in 1470 between King Louis and the earl of Warwick, thus promoting the momentous alliance between the earl and the queen; and on 14 Apr. 1471, after Henry VI’s readeption, he sailed for England with Queen Margaret and Prince Edward. Proclaimed a traitor by Edward IV a week later, he was captured at Tewkesbury on 4 May. Fortescue’s fidelity to the Lancastrian cause was unshaken so long as Henry VI and his son were alive, but after their deaths he sought a general pardon from Edward IV and even offered him his services as a councillor. Nevertheless, it was not until October 1473, after he had written A Declaracion upon certayn wrytinges, refuting his earlier arguments about the royal succession, that he was permitted to present a petition to Parliament for the reversal of his attainder and the restoration of his estates.

    From the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (citation details below):

    With the possible exception of Sir Thomas More, Fortescue is the English common lawyer who until the days of Coke and Bratton had most to say of importance to a reading public outside his own profession. He was the author of nine literary works still extant, and at least five others are known to have been lost (one of them a book of devotion); there is one conjectural work, and in addition the possibility that Fortescue was responsible for the Dialogue between Understanding and Faith, a translation of Alain Chartier's Traite? de l'esperance. There are also four attributed items, probably spurious. Fortescue was fluent in both Latin and French and had an easy familiarity with the standard apparatus and ideas of the late medieval scholar, including the Bible, Aristotle (quoted very frequently), Vincent of Beauvais, Boethius, St Augustine, and St Thomas Aquinas. In some cases he had the texts at first hand, but more often he used one of the compendia of knowledge that were in common circulation. He also knew works by Poggio Bracciolini and Leonardo Bruni. Less surprisingly, Fortescue had a close acquaintance with Roman and canon law. His mental world was also deeply informed by his common-law background, and some of his thinking can be paralleled elsewhere in the profession.

    Ten of Fortescue's pieces were Lancastrian propaganda tracts: De titulo Edwardi comitis Marchie; Of the Title of the House of York; Defensio juris domus Lancastrie; A defence of the title of the house of Lancaster, or, A replication to the claim of the duke of York; Opusculum de natura legis nature et eius censura in successione regnorum suprema; the ascribed Somnium vigilantis, or, A Defence of the Proscription of the Yorkists, and lost works on the succession in English and Latin, a genealogy of the house of Lancaster, and a related genealogy of James II of Scotland. Of the extant works, De titulo was written not earlier than the coronation of Louis XI on 15 April 1461 and the remainder before July 1463. An eleventh political item is the refutation demanded by Edward IV, Declaration upon certayn wrytinges sent oute of Scotteland ayenst the kynges title to the roialme of Englond, written between the defeat at Tewkesbury and 6 October 1473.

    The Yorkist claim to the crown rested on descent from Edward III through the female line, and Fortescue based part of his propaganda case on the history of various countries, which showed that women did not inherit or transmit rights to the crown. He also pointed to the strength of the Lancastrian title by prescription. However, his principal argument (worked out in detail in Opusculum de natura legis nature) was that women were excluded from ruling by natural law, a principle that had also been specifically endorsed by scripture. When it came to recanting these views, the historical precedents presented Fortescue with few problems. He trumped the natural law difficulty by arguing that since 'ther is now noo kingdome in erthe of Cristen men of which the Kynge is not subjecte [to the pope] also welle in temporaltes as spirituelles', the Yorkist claims via the female line did not violate the principle of ultimate male supremacy (Works, 535). The unanswerable Lancastrian claim by prescription was quietly ignored.

    Fortescue's propaganda skills saved his neck in 1471, but the interest of history is in his remaining three works, which deal with English government and the constitution. De laudibus legum Angliae, written in the last years of Fortescue's exile (1468–71), ostensibly to instruct the young prince of Wales, is an exposition of the advantages of English common law over the Roman law of the continent, and contains a uniquely valuable description of the inns of court and the legal profession. The Articles Sent from the Prince to the Earl of Warwick (December 1470–March 1471) is a short blueprint for a council to control the senile Henry VI. In the years immediately after Tewkesbury, elements of this were incorporated in a second and much more substantial assessment of the problems facing the country, written in English but known from the title of its first chapter as De dominio regale et politico (alternatively The Difference between an Absolute and a Limited Monarchy).

    Fortescue's analysis of the problems of his day has had a significant influence on later historical interpretations of the period. He argued that poverty was the root cause of the collapse of royal authority, a poverty caused by the alienation of the royal estate. This had destroyed the king's freedom to act, and had denied him the means to maintain an image of magnificence and to exercise a proper degree of patronage. The beneficiaries had been 'ouer myghtye subgettes'—a memorable term perhaps coined by Sir John (Fortescue, Governance, 127). The landed wealth of such magnates allowed them to eclipse the power of the king and to focus loyalty on themselves. Fortescue's answer was to re-endow the king by a parliamentary resumption of land grants, together with a one-off subsidy to buy the loyalty of those who lost by it, coupled with an exploitation of the custom duties. He also advocated a significant reduction of the influence of the magnates on the council, and their replacement by salaried officials, and particular caution over the future exercise of patronage.

    Beyond this analysis of the problems of his own day, Fortescue's importance lies in his writing on the nature of political authority. He distinguished three kinds: regal dominion, political dominion, and a combined form: regal and political dominion. Fortescue took the original distinction from St Thomas Aquinas, who had postulated the third form to accommodate the government of imperial Rome which exhibited both regal and political features. Sir John's originality was to realize that other states fell into that category, including England. Its king ruled by hereditary right, and had full regal authority over his subjects. His duty was that imposed by the law of nature on every king—to do justice. On the other hand he was not absolute. His power derived from the body politic, and the laws he had to administer were only such as he and the people assented to. What is more, that limitation on regality was institutionalized in parliament, and enforcement was by judges sworn to uphold those laws, not the king's will.

    Fortescue's authority on constitutional law was widely recognized in his own day and increasingly thereafter. This particularly applied to the De laudibus, of which the first printed edition appeared in 1545–6, and eight further editions were published before the century was out. Interpretation, however, became increasingly anachronistic. When Sir John wrote that in England 'the regal power is restrained by political law' (Chrimes, 27), he had in mind the contrast between the absolutism of French kings and English kings who exercised royal authority within political parameters. However, by the seventeenth century the maxim was being regularly used to justify the imposition of constitutional restrictions on the crown. Fortescue was substantially cited by the lawyers representing John Hampden; Edward Coke said that the De laudibus was 'worthy to be written in letters of gold for the weight and worthiness thereof' (Coke, report no. 8, fol. xiv). After the civil war the whigs interpreted the term dominium politicum et regale as a constitutional formula for the protection of liberty, while in 1778 the philanthropist Granville Sharp claimed Fortescue's authority for colonial resistance to the absolutist pretensions of the Westminster parliament. In the next century interest in Sir John became more scholarly. A respectable edition of the judge's writings was published in 1869 by a distant descendant, Thomas Fortescue, Lord Clermont, supported by an archive-based family history, and in 1885 Charles Plummer produced a modern text of the De dominio regale et politico under a somewhat misleading title, The Governance of England. In 1942 an authoritative edition of the De laudibus legum Angliae by Stanley B. Chrimes set modern scholarship on the soundest of bases.

    John married Elizabeth Brytte before 1423. Elizabeth (daughter of Robert Brytte) died on 26 Apr 1426. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    John married Isabel James before 1436. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  3. 19.  Henry Fortescue Descendancy chart to this point (13.John5, 9.Elizabeth4, 6.John3, 3.John2, 1.Humphrey1) died after 31 Oct 1460.

    Notes:

    MP for Devon, Dec 1421. Appointed chief justice of the king's bench in Dublin on 25 Jun 1426, which position he held until 1429. Sheriff of Devon 4 Nov 1446 to 9 Nov 1447 and 8 Nov 1452 to 5 Nov 1453. Sheriff of Cornwall 9 Nov 1447 to 1448.

    From the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (citation details below):

    Henry trained as a lawyer, and was a member of Lincoln's Inn by 1420. In December 1421 he was returned as a knight of the shire for Devon. His career as a lawyer brought him promotion in Ireland rather than England, for on 25 June 1426 he was appointed chief justice of king's bench in Dublin. His salary was at first to be £40 per annum, but on 8 November following this was increased to a fee of 3s. 4d. a day. Payments fell into arrears, and perhaps for this reason on 4 April 1427 he was granted the custody of lands in Rathmore, Kildare, and elsewhere in Ireland. His tenure of office was not without controversy; twice a spokesman for the Irish parliament in making representations to Westminster, in November 1428 it was alleged that he and Sir Thomas Strange had been assaulted in the course of one of these missions. Fortescue received a new patent on 10 June 1428, but was replaced as chief justice by Stephen Bray on 18 February following.

    The rest of Fortescue's career was spent in England, though he did not at once sever all links with Ireland--in March 1430 he acted as a feoffee for the fourth earl of Ormond. Consistently overshadowed by his brother John, he was one of the Devon notables sworn to keep the peace in 1434, but was only occasionally appointed to judicial commissions. Perhaps because he was from time to time said to be involved in acts of disorder—an alleged assault at Dodbrooke in 1421, a dispute over land in Nethercombe some ten years later, in the course of which he was said to have deployed a troop of Irishmen and Scots against his adversaries—he was not appointed to the Devon bench until November 1447, at the end of a year in which he served as sheriff of the county. He was sheriff of Cornwall in 1447–8, and of Devon again in 1452–3—all appointments that he probably owed to his brother. In 1454 Fortescue was a commissioner of array to defend the coasts of Devon, and in 1457 he was appointed to levy 284 archers in the county. Though last appointed a JP on 21 September 1458, Fortescue was among the feoffees to whom Joan Penells conveyed lands in Bowden and Georges Teign on 28 May 1460, and he was apparently believed to be still alive on 31 October following. But further references are wanting, and he probably died at about this time.

    Henry married Katherine before 4 Feb 1421. Katherine was born in of Wood Barton in Woodleigh, Devon, England; died before 1424. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Henry married Joan Bosom before 1424. Joan (daughter of Edmund Bosom) died before 1437. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Henry married Margaret Fallapit before 20 Nov 1437. Margaret (daughter of Nicholas Fallapit) died in 1465. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 20.  Richard Fortescue Descendancy chart to this point (13.John5, 9.Elizabeth4, 6.John3, 3.John2, 1.Humphrey1) was born in of Punsborne, Hertfordshire, England; died on 22 May 1455 in St. Albans Abbey, Hertfordshire, England.

    Notes:

    According to John Morris (citation details below), he was killed at the Battle of St. Albans fighting on the Lancastrian side.

    He may have been a son of his father's first wife, Eleanor Norreys; secondary sources disagree.

    Family/Spouse: Alice de Windsor. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 26. John Fortescue  Descendancy chart to this point died on 28 Jul 1500 in Punsborne, Hertfordshire, England.
    2. 27. Richard Fortescue  Descendancy chart to this point
    3. 28. John Fortescue  Descendancy chart to this point

  5. 21.  John Fortescue Descendancy chart to this point (14.William5, 9.Elizabeth4, 6.John3, 3.John2, 1.Humphrey1) was born about 1420 in of Whympston in Modbury, Devon, England; died after 1461.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: 11 Mar 1481

    Notes:

    "Not to be confused with his 1st cousin, Sir John Fortescue, lawyer who became Chief Justice in England." [Ancestral Roots] This confusion is present in A History of the Family of Fortescue in All its Branches, citation details below.

    John married Joan Prutteston before 1451. Joan (daughter of John Prutteston) was born in of Preston in Ermington, Devon, England; died on 23 May 1501; was buried in St. George's Churchyard, Modbury, Devon, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 29. John Fortescue  Descendancy chart to this point was born in of Wimpstone, Modbury, Devon, England; died in 1519.
    2. 30. Joan Fortescue  Descendancy chart to this point died after 1523.
    3. 31. William Fortescue  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1460 in of Preston in Ermington, Devon, England; died on 1 Feb 1520.

  6. 22.  Katherine Chalons Descendancy chart to this point (15.Robert5, 10.Joan4, 6.John3, 3.John2, 1.Humphrey1) died in 1420; was buried in Carmelite Friars, London, England.

    Family/Spouse: John St. Aubyn. John died on 14 Oct 1418. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 32. Joan St. Aubyn  Descendancy chart to this point was born between 1410 and 1414; died before 27 Apr 1479.

  7. 23.  Richard Woodville Descendancy chart to this point (16.Joan5, 11.Joan4, 7.John3, 4.Hugh2, 1.Humphrey1) died on 12 Aug 1469 in Northampton, Northamptonshire, England.

    Notes:

    Or Wydeville. Treasurer of England, 4 Mar 1466 to his death. Created Earl Rivers, 24 May 1466, and Constable of England for life, 24 Aug 1467. Following the Yorkist defeat at Edgecote Moor, he and his second son John were put through a hasty show trial and beheaded.

    Richard married Jacquetta of Luxembourg before 23 Mar 1437. Jacquetta (daughter of Pierre de Luxembourg and Margherita del Balzo) was born in 1415; died on 30 May 1472. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 33. Anne Woodville  Descendancy chart to this point died on 30 Jul 1489; was buried in Warden Abbey, Bedfordshire, England.
    2. 34. Elizabeth Woodville, Queen Consort of England  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1437 in Grafton Regis, Northamptonshire, England; died on 8 Jun 1492 in Bermondsey Priory, Surrey, England; was buried on 12 Jun 1492 in St. George's Chapel, Windsor, Berkshire, England.
    3. 35. Katherine Woodville  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1458; died on 18 May 1497.

  8. 24.  Joan Woodville Descendancy chart to this point (16.Joan5, 11.Joan4, 7.John3, 4.Hugh2, 1.Humphrey1) died before 1462; was buried in Austin Friars, Canterbury, Kent, England.

    Joan married William Haute after 18 Jul 1429 in Calais, France. William (son of Nicholas Haute and Alice Cawne) was born about 1390 in of Bishopsbourne, Kent, England; died between 9 May 1462 and 4 Oct 1462; was buried in Austin Friars, Canterbury, Kent, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 36. Elizabeth Haute  Descendancy chart to this point


Generation: 7

  1. 25.  Richard Prowse Descendancy chart to this point (17.Agnes6, 12.Thomas5, 8.John4, 5.John3, 2.Eleanor2, 1.Humphrey1) was born about 1407 in of Chagford, Devon, England; died after 1449.

    Notes:

    The 1564 visitation of Devon puts a "William Prows" between the Richard Prowse who married Margaret Norton and the John Prowse who married Agnes Bamfield. To our knowlwdge, no other source does this.

    Richard married Margaret Norton about 1435. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 37. John Prowse  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1436 in of Chagford, Devon, England; died on 24 Sep 1526.

  2. 26.  John Fortescue Descendancy chart to this point (20.Richard6, 13.John5, 9.Elizabeth4, 6.John3, 3.John2, 1.Humphrey1) died on 28 Jul 1500 in Punsborne, Hertfordshire, England.

    Notes:

    "Sir John, who was an Esquire of the Body to King Edward the Fourth, was sent by him as Sheriff into Cornwall, where he had to conduct the siege of St. Michael's Mount, which was defended by the Earl of Oxford. This was in 1471; in 1481 he was Sheriff of Hertfordshire and Essex, and in a year or two the King made him "Master Porter" of Calais. King Richard the Third, who had succeeded by the murder of his nephew, sent Sir John Fortescue a fresh appointment as Esquire of the Body to the King, with a salary of fifty marks, which appointment carried with it the title of 'Sir;' but Sir John Fortescue joined his old adversary the Earl of Oxford, and they offered their services to the Earl of Richmond, who soon after became Henry the Seventh. Landing at Milford Haven on August 6, 1485, on the 22nd the decisive battle of Bosworth Field was fought, in which Sir John, who had been knighted by Henry on his landing, took his part. The victory gave the throne without a rival to Henry the Seventh, and the King rewarded Sir John by making him, within a month of the battle, Chief Butler of England, and by many grants of forfeited manors. At the coronation he was made Knight banneret. Sir John was much at Court henceforward, among other occasions at the festivities in 1494, when Prince Henry, afterwards Henry the Eighth, then but two years old, was created Duke of York and a Knight of the Bath. At length, crossing over to Calais with the King and Queen, in May, 1500, to avoid the plague, of which thirty thousand persons died in London in that year, his own life came to a close immediately after a speedy return to England, for he died at Punsborne July 28, 1500." [John Morris, citation details below]

    John married Alice Boleyn before 1473. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 38. Adrian Fortescue  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1476; died on 10 Jul 1539 in Tower of London, London, England.

  3. 27.  Richard Fortescue Descendancy chart to this point (20.Richard6, 13.John5, 9.Elizabeth4, 6.John3, 3.John2, 1.Humphrey1)

  4. 28.  John Fortescue Descendancy chart to this point (20.Richard6, 13.John5, 9.Elizabeth4, 6.John3, 3.John2, 1.Humphrey1)

    Notes:

    "[Richard Fortescue] left three sons: the eldest, another Sir Richard, with whom we are not concerned, and two others both of whom were called Sir John. In the case of the first of the two Sir Johns, there was the singular coincidence that while he had a brother of his own name, he married Alice Montgomery, who had a sister of her own name. Genealogists would learn with relief that they died without issue." [John Morris, citation details below]

    Family/Spouse: Alice Montgomery. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  5. 29.  John Fortescue Descendancy chart to this point (21.John6, 14.William5, 9.Elizabeth4, 6.John3, 3.John2, 1.Humphrey1) was born in of Wimpstone, Modbury, Devon, England; died in 1519.

    Family/Spouse: Isabella Gibbs. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 39. Thomas Fortescue  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1490; died about 1554.

  6. 30.  Joan Fortescue Descendancy chart to this point (21.John6, 14.William5, 9.Elizabeth4, 6.John3, 3.John2, 1.Humphrey1) died after 1523.

    Notes:

    Or Jane.

    Family/Spouse: Thomas Hext. Thomas was born in of Kingston, Staverton, Devon, England; died before 8 May 1497. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 40. Thomas Hext  Descendancy chart to this point was born in of Pickwell, Devon, England; died before 1 Dec 1555 in Georgeham, Devon, England; was buried on 1 Dec 1555 in Georgeham, Devon, England.

  7. 31.  William Fortescue Descendancy chart to this point (21.John6, 14.William5, 9.Elizabeth4, 6.John3, 3.John2, 1.Humphrey1) was born about 1460 in of Preston in Ermington, Devon, England; died on 1 Feb 1520.

    Family/Spouse: Elizabeth Champernowne. Elizabeth (daughter of Richard Champernoun and Elizabeth Reynell) was born about 1465 in of Inceworth in Maker, Cornwall, England; died before 1518. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 41. Jane Fortescue  Descendancy chart to this point was born in of Preston in Ermington, Devon, England; died before 12 May 1527.

  8. 32.  Joan St. Aubyn Descendancy chart to this point (22.Katherine6, 15.Robert5, 10.Joan4, 6.John3, 3.John2, 1.Humphrey1) was born between 1410 and 1414; died before 27 Apr 1479.

    Joan married William Denys before 17 Jan 1448. William was born in of Combe Raleigh, Devon, England; died on 27 Apr 1479. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 42. Alice Dennis  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1451; died after 1500.

  9. 33.  Anne Woodville Descendancy chart to this point (23.Richard6, 16.Joan5, 11.Joan4, 7.John3, 4.Hugh2, 1.Humphrey1) died on 30 Jul 1489; was buried in Warden Abbey, Bedfordshire, England.

    Family/Spouse: William Bourchier. William (son of Henry Bourchier and Isabel of Cambridge) died before 14 Feb 1480. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 43. Ciceley Bourchier  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1473; died on 9 Feb 1493.

    Anne married George Grey after 1482. George (son of Edmund Grey and Katherine Percy) died on 21 Dec 1503 in Ampthill, Bedfordshire, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  10. 34.  Elizabeth Woodville, Queen Consort of England Descendancy chart to this point (23.Richard6, 16.Joan5, 11.Joan4, 7.John3, 4.Hugh2, 1.Humphrey1) was born in 1437 in Grafton Regis, Northamptonshire, England; died on 8 Jun 1492 in Bermondsey Priory, Surrey, England; was buried on 12 Jun 1492 in St. George's Chapel, Windsor, Berkshire, England.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate birth: Aft 23 Mar 1437

    Notes:

    Through both of her husbands, she was a great-great grandmother of English monarchical footnote Lady Jane Grey, the nine-day queen (~1536-1554).

    Elizabeth Woodville = John Grey
    Thomas Grey = Cecily Bonville
    Thomas Grey = Margaret Wotton
    Henry Grey = Frances Brandon
    Jane Grey (d. 1554)

    Elizabeth Woodville = Edward IV
    Elizabeth of York = Henry VII
    Mary Tudor = Charles Brandon
    Frances Brandon = Henry Grey
    Jane Grey (d. 1554)

    Elizabeth married John Grey in 1452. John (son of Edward Grey and Elizabeth Ferrers) was born about 1432; died on 17 Feb 1461 in St. Albans Abbey, Hertfordshire, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 44. Thomas Grey  Descendancy chart to this point died on 20 Sep 1501.

    Elizabeth married Edward IV, King of England and lord of Ireland on 1 May 1464. Edward (son of Richard of York and Cecily Neville) was born on 28 Apr 1442 in Rouen, Seine-Maritime, Normandy, France; died on 9 Apr 1483 in Westminster, Middlesex, England; was buried in Windsor, Berkshire, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 45. Elizabeth of York, Queen Consort of England  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 11 Feb 1466 in Westminster Palace, Westminster, Middlesex, England; died on 11 Feb 1503 in London, England; was buried in Westminster Abbey, Westminster, Middlesex, England.
    2. 46. Edward V, King of England  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 2 Nov 1470 in Westminster, Middlesex, England; died about 1483 in London, England.

  11. 35.  Katherine Woodville Descendancy chart to this point (23.Richard6, 16.Joan5, 11.Joan4, 7.John3, 4.Hugh2, 1.Humphrey1) was born about 1458; died on 18 May 1497.

    Katherine married Jasper Tudor before 7 Nov 1485. Jasper (son of Owen ap Maredudd ap Tudur and Catherine of Valois, Queen Consort of England) was born about 1431 in Hatfield, Hertfordshire, England; died on 21 Dec 1495; was buried in Keynsham Abbey near Bristol, Gloucestershire, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Katherine married Richard Wingfield on 24 Feb 1496. Richard (son of John Wingfield and Elizabeth fitz Lewis) was born in of Kimbolton, Huntingdonshire, England; died on 22 Jul 1525 in Toledo, Toledo, Castilla-La Mancha, Spain; was buried in Church of the Friars Observants of San Juan de los Reyes, Toledo, Toledo, Castilla-La Mancha, Spain. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  12. 36.  Elizabeth Haute Descendancy chart to this point (24.Joan6, 16.Joan5, 11.Joan4, 7.John3, 4.Hugh2, 1.Humphrey1)

    Family/Spouse: Robert Baynton. Robert (son of John Baynton and Joan) was born about 1439; died before 6 Oct 1472. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 47. John Baynton  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1460 in of Bromham, Wiltshire, England; died on 31 Oct 1516; was buried in St. Nicholas, Bromham, Wiltshire, England.


Generation: 8

  1. 37.  John Prowse Descendancy chart to this point (25.Richard7, 17.Agnes6, 12.Thomas5, 8.John4, 5.John3, 2.Eleanor2, 1.Humphrey1) was born about 1436 in of Chagford, Devon, England; died on 24 Sep 1526.

    John married Joan Orchard about 1467. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 48. Robert Prowse  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1475; died before 6 Aug 1529; was buried in St. Peter's, Tiverton, Devon, England.

  2. 38.  Adrian Fortescue Descendancy chart to this point (26.John7, 20.Richard6, 13.John5, 9.Elizabeth4, 6.John3, 3.John2, 1.Humphrey1) was born about 1476; died on 10 Jul 1539 in Tower of London, London, England.

    Notes:

    From the Catholic Encyclopedia (1913), citation details below:

    Knight of St. John, martyr, b. about 1476, executed 10 July, 1539. He belonged to the Salden branch of the great Devonshire family of Fortescue, and was a true country gentleman of the period, occasionally following the King in the wars with France (1513 and 1522), not unfrequently attending the court, and at other times acting as justice of the peace or commissioner for subsidies. He was knighted in 1503 (Clermont; but D.N.B. gives 1528), attended the Field of the Cloth of Gold (1520), and late in life (1532) became a Knight of St. John. When Anne Boleyn became queen, Sir Adrian (whose mother, Alice Boleyn, was Anne's grand-aunt) naturally profited to some extent, but, as we see from his papers, not very much. The foundations of his worldly fortunes had been laid honourably at an eartier date. He was a serious thrifty man painstaking in business, careful in accounts, and a lover of the homely wit of that day. He collected and signed several lists of proverbs and wise saws, which, though not very brilliant, are never offensive or coarse, always sane, and sometimes rise to a high moral or religious level.

    All of a sudden this quiet, worthy gentleman was overwhelmed by some unexplained whim of the Tudor tyrant. On 29 August, 1534, he was put under arrest, no one knows why, but released after some months. On 3 February, 1539, he was arrested a second time and sent to the Tower. In April he was condemned untried by an act of attainder; in July he was beheaded. No specific act of treason was alleged against him, but only in general "sedition and refusing allegiance". The attainder, however, went on to decree death against Cardinal Pole and several others because they "adhered themselves to the Bishop of Rome". Catholic tradition was always held that Sir Adrian died for the same cause, and modern Protestant critics have come to the same conclusion. His cultus has always flourished among the Knights of St. John, and he was beatified by Leo XIII in 1895.


  3. 39.  Thomas Fortescue Descendancy chart to this point (29.John7, 21.John6, 14.William5, 9.Elizabeth4, 6.John3, 3.John2, 1.Humphrey1) was born in 1490; died about 1554.

    Family/Spouse: Florence Bonville. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 49. Henry Fortescue  Descendancy chart to this point was born in of Wimpstone, Modbury, Devon, England; died on 1 Dec 1587.

  4. 40.  Thomas Hext Descendancy chart to this point (30.Joan7, 21.John6, 14.William5, 9.Elizabeth4, 6.John3, 3.John2, 1.Humphrey1) was born in of Pickwell, Devon, England; died before 1 Dec 1555 in Georgeham, Devon, England; was buried on 1 Dec 1555 in Georgeham, Devon, England.

    Notes:

    Escheator of Devon, 1528.

    Thomas married Wilmot Pointz about 1510. Wilmot died on 15 Apr 1558. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 50. Margery Hext  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1510; died before 22 Aug 1551 in Braunton, Devon, England; was buried on 22 Aug 1551 in Braunton, Devon, England.

  5. 41.  Jane Fortescue Descendancy chart to this point (31.William7, 21.John6, 14.William5, 9.Elizabeth4, 6.John3, 3.John2, 1.Humphrey1) was born in of Preston in Ermington, Devon, England; died before 12 May 1527.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate birth: Abt 1485

    Jane married John Cobley about 1501. John (son of John Cobley and Alice Cockworthy) was born about 1479 in of Brightley in Chittlehampton, Devon, England; died on 24 Oct 1540. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 51. Margaret Cobley  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1502 in of Brightley in Chittlehampton, Devon, England; died before 15 Oct 1547.

  6. 42.  Alice Dennis Descendancy chart to this point (32.Joan7, 22.Katherine6, 15.Robert5, 10.Joan4, 6.John3, 3.John2, 1.Humphrey1) was born about 1451; died after 1500.

    Alice married John Bonville before 1478. John (son of William Bonville and Elizabeth Kirkby) was born in of Comberleigh, Devon, England; died on 7 May 1499. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 52. Florence Bonville  Descendancy chart to this point

  7. 43.  Ciceley Bourchier Descendancy chart to this point (33.Anne7, 23.Richard6, 16.Joan5, 11.Joan4, 7.John3, 4.Hugh2, 1.Humphrey1) was born about 1473; died on 9 Feb 1493.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: 9 Jun 1493

    Family/Spouse: John Devereux. John was born in 1464; died about 7 May 1501. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 53. Walter Devereux  Descendancy chart to this point died on 17 Sep 1558; was buried in Stowe-by-Chartley, Staffordshire, England.

  8. 44.  Thomas Grey Descendancy chart to this point (34.Elizabeth7, 23.Richard6, 16.Joan5, 11.Joan4, 7.John3, 4.Hugh2, 1.Humphrey1) died on 20 Sep 1501.

    Family/Spouse: Cecily Bonville. Cecily (daughter of William Bonville and Catherine Neville) was born between 1460 and 1461; died on 12 May 1529 in Shacklewell, Hackney, Middlesex, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 54. Thomas Grey  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 22 Jun 1477; died on 10 Oct 1530.

  9. 45.  Elizabeth of York, Queen Consort of England Descendancy chart to this point (34.Elizabeth7, 23.Richard6, 16.Joan5, 11.Joan4, 7.John3, 4.Hugh2, 1.Humphrey1) was born on 11 Feb 1466 in Westminster Palace, Westminster, Middlesex, England; died on 11 Feb 1503 in London, England; was buried in Westminster Abbey, Westminster, Middlesex, England.

    Elizabeth married Henry VII, King of England and lord of Ireland on 18 Jan 1486 in Westminster, Middlesex, England. Henry (son of Edmund Tudor and Margaret Beaufort) was born on 28 Jan 1457 in Pembroke Castle, Pembrokeshire, Wales; died on 21 Apr 1509 in Richmond, Surrey, England; was buried in Westminster Abbey, Westminster, Middlesex, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 55. Arthur, Prince of Wales  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 19 Sep 1486 in St. Swithun's Priory, Winchester, Hampshire, England; was christened on 24 Sep 1486 in Winchester Cathedral, Winchester, Hampshire, England; died on 2 Apr 1502 in Ludlow, Shropshire, England; was buried in Worcester Cathedral, Worcestershire, England.
    2. 56. Margaret Tudor  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 28 Nov 1489 in Westminster Palace, Middlesex, England; died on 18 Oct 1541 in Methven Castle, Perthshire, Scotland; was buried in Perth, Perthshire, Scotland.
    3. 57. Henry VIII, King of England  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 28 Jun 1491 in Greenwich, Kent, England; died on 28 Jan 1547 in Hampton Court Palace, Richmond upon Thames, London, England; was buried in St. George's Chapel, Windsor, Berkshire, England.
    4. 58. Mary Tudor  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 18 Mar 1496 in Richmond Palace, Surrey, England; died on 24 Jun 1533 in Westhorpe, Suffolk, England; was buried on 22 Jul 1533 in Bury St. Edmunds Abbey, Suffolk, England.

  10. 46.  Edward V, King of England Descendancy chart to this point (34.Elizabeth7, 23.Richard6, 16.Joan5, 11.Joan4, 7.John3, 4.Hugh2, 1.Humphrey1) was born on 2 Nov 1470 in Westminster, Middlesex, England; died about 1483 in London, England.

  11. 47.  John Baynton Descendancy chart to this point (36.Elizabeth7, 24.Joan6, 16.Joan5, 11.Joan4, 7.John3, 4.Hugh2, 1.Humphrey1) was born about 1460 in of Bromham, Wiltshire, England; died on 31 Oct 1516; was buried in St. Nicholas, Bromham, Wiltshire, England.

    Notes:

    "In 1504 he obtained a reversal of the attainder of his father, with a restoration in blood and inheritance, and thus recovered his father's lands." [Royal Ancestry]

    Family/Spouse: Joan Digges. Joan (daughter of Thomas Digges) died before 31 Oct 1516. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 59. Edward Baynton  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1480 in of Bromham, Wiltshire, England; died on 27 Nov 1544.