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Verney 1: Verney of Bromshulfe, Verney of Compton Verney, Verney of Madeley
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William de Vernai b c 1045 Plouigneau Brittany
1. William de Vernai b 1076 Bramshall Stafford a 1119, 1148
A. Roger de Vernai b c 1109 Bramshall Uttoxeter Stafford a temp Henry II who r. 1154-1189
i. Roger de Vernai/Verney of Bromshulfe Staffordshire b c 1140 Bramshall Uttoxeter Stafford
a. Simon de Vernai/Verney b c 1172 Bramshall Stafford a temp Richard I who r. 1189-1199
m Agnes Bagot b 1172 Hyde Kinfare Stafford dau of
+1 William Bagot of the Hide, sister of Hervey of the Hide "progenitor of the Barons of Stafford"
1 Hervey de Verney of Bromshulfe b 1188 Bramshall a temp Edward I who r. 1272-1307
A Richard de Verney of Madeley, Herefordshire b c 1221 Madley Hereford d ?1276 a 1313
i Simon de Verney of Madeley b 1256 Byfield Northampton d there 1277 a 1327
a reported by geni.com was:
John Verney b c 1280
-1 John Verney b c 1300
b William de Verney b c 1295 Byfield Northampton d there 1360 a 1340, a 1353
m Alice de Langley dau of
she m2. Gyles de Bassingburne, m3. John Hemington
-b Thomas de Langley/Langelee b c 1360
+1 Thomas/?John de Langley (geni.com shows her father as John de Langley b 1274 Shipton-under-Wychwood Oxford d 24 Sep 1324)
m Alice
+2 Thomas De Langley b 1258 Langley Manor Shipton-under -Wychwood d 1306
m Joan Langley
+3 William de Langley b 1234 Langley Manor +4 Henry de Langley b c 1210 Lancashire
-b Geoffrey de Langley b c 1223
-b-1 Anne de langley b c 1250 Staffordshire m Sir Nicholas de Stafford
-b-1-1 William Stafford
+5 Thomas de Langley b 1188 Lancashire +6 Geoffrey de Langley b 1164 Lancashire
1 Simon de Verney b c 1347 Byfield d 1367-8
1-1 William Verney b 1364 Langley Manor Shipton-under-Wychwood Oxford
m Elizabeth b 1365
-1 Alice Verney b 1390 Byfield Northampton d by 1429
m John Danvers b 1383 Colthorpe Oxon d 1448 son of Richard Danvers and Agnes Brancestre
-1-1 RICHARD DANVERS b 1428, Oxfordshire England d 1488, Oxfordshire m ELIZABETH LANGSTON b 1430 i Oxfordshire dau of JOHN LANGSTON and ELIZABETH DENTON
-1-2 ROBERT DANVERS b 1424, Epwell Banbury Oxfordshire England d 17.04.1467, Church of Holy Cross London Middlesex m. AGNES DE LA BERE b 1426, Banbury Oxfordshire d. London Middlesex
-1-3 AGNES DANVERS b 1413, Epell Banbury Oxfordshire d. 1476 m 1440 JOHN FRAY b 1395 i Essex d 1461.
-1-1-1 15. i. SIR JOHN DANVERS b 1452, Culworth Northamptonshire England d 12.01.1514, Dauntsey Oxfordshire 14932 Sheriff of Northamptonshire m ANN STRADLING b 1469 i Dauntsey Oxfordshire England, d 29.12.1539 i Dauntsey Oxfordshire
-1-3-1 16. i. CATHERINE FRAY b 1446, Royston Hertfordshire d 12.05.1482, Of, Grafton Worchestershire m 1452 Sir HUMPHREY STAFFORD in Grafton Worchestershire son of HUMPHREY STAFFORD og ELEANOR AYLESBURY. b 1427 i Of, Grafton, Worcestershire, England, d 08.07.1486 i Tyburn
-1-3-2 17. ii. ELIZABETH FRAY b 1440, Smallbridge Suffolk d 1478 m THOMAS WALDEGRAVE, son of RICHARD DE WALDEGRAVE og JOAN DOREWARD. b 1425 i Smallbridge Suffolk , d 29.04.1500.
-1-1-1-1 ANNE DANVERS b 1491, Culworth Oxfordshire d 11.06.1528, Culworth Oxfordshire m THOMAS LOVETT 1514 i Chicheley Buckinghamshire , son of THOMAS LOVET og ELIZABETH LE BOTELER. b 1494 i Ashwell Northamptonshire , d 1561 i Ashwell Northamptonshire
-1-3-1-1 ANNE STAFFORD b 1472, Grafton Worcestershire d 1520, Northamptonshire m RICHARD NEVILLE. b 1468 i Of, Latimer, Buckinghamshire, , d 12.1530 i Snape Castle, Snape, Yorkshire,
-1-3-1-2 JOYCE STAFFORD b 1464, Grafton Worcestershire m MARMADUKE CONSTABLE, son of ROBERT CONSTABLE og AGNES WENTWORTH. b 1456 i Flamborough Yorkshire , d 29.11.1518 i Burton Constable Yorkshire
-1-3-2-1 WILLIAM WALDEGRAVE b 1455, Smallbridge Suffolk d 30.01.1527 m MARJORY WENTWORTH, datter av HENRY WENTWORTH og ELIZABETH HOWARD. b 1453 i Yorkshire , d før 07.05.1540.
-1-3-2-2 RICHARD WALDEGRAVE b 1458, Novestock Essex
-1-3-2-3 JOAN WALDEGRAVE b 1459, Smallbridge Suffolk d 1491 m WILLIAM WINGFIELD b 1457, Suffolk
-1-3-2-4 CATHERINE WALDEGRAVE b 1463, Smallbridge Suffolk
-1-3-2-5 EDWARD WALDEGRAVE b 1465, Borley Essex d 1501, Essex m1 ELIZABETH CHENEY, dau ofv JOHN DE CHENEY and MARGARET KIRKHAM. b 1462 i Devon , d 07.06.1505 i Pinhoe Devon m (2) MARY MANNOCK. b 1471 i
-1-1-1-1-1 23. i. ELIZABETH LOVET b 1521, Chicheley Buckinghamshire d 1577, Chicheley Buckinghamshire
-1-1-1-1-2 THOMAS LOVETT b 1528, Astwell Northamptonshire d 1578, Astwell Northamptonshire m ELIZABETH FERMOR b 1522, Whitney Oxfordshire
-1-3-1-1-1 24. i. MARGARET16 NEVILLE b 09.03.1493, Thorpe Latimer Lincolnshire
-1-3-1-1-2 25. ii. JOHN NEVILLE b 17.11.1493, Snape Yorkshire d 02.03.1543, London Middlesex
-1-3-1-1-3 DOROTHY NEVILLE b 29.03.1496, Scampston Yorkshire m SIR JOHN DAUNAY b 1488, Cowick Yorkshire d 10.03.1552.
-1-3-1-1-4 WILLIAM NEVILLE b 15.07.1497, Snape Hall Snape Yorkshire m ELIZABETH GREVILLE b 1501, Upper Wick Warwickshire
-1-3-1-1-5 26. v. ELIZABETH NEVILLE b 28.04.1500, Snape Hall Snape Yorkshire
-1-3-1-1-6 27. vi. SUSAN NEVILLE b 28.04.1501, Of Snape Hall, Snape, Yorkshire, d 09.04.1588.
-1-3-1-1-7 THOMAS NEVILLE b 24.12.1502, Snape Hall Snape Yorkshire d 28.10.1544.
-1-3-1-1-8 JOAN NEVILLE b 07.03.1503, Snape Yorkshire d 1550, Snape Yorkshire
-1-3-1-1-9 MARMADUKE NEVILLE b 1506, Snape Hall Snape Yorkshire d 28.05.1545.
-1-3-1-1-10 GEORGE NEVILLE b 29.07.1509, Snape Yorkshire d Snape Yorkshire
-1-3-1-1-11 CHRISTOPHER NEVILLE b 02.10.1511, Snape Yorkshire d 1513.
-1-3-1-1-12 KATHERINE NEVILLE b 14.01.1798, Snape Yorkshire d 1536, Snape Yorkshire
-1-3-1-2-1 28. i. ELEANOR CONSTABLE b 1485, Burton Constable Yorkshire d 1525, Bristol Gloucestershire
-1-3-1-2-2 AGNES CONSTABLE b 1481, Flamborough Yorkshire d c 24.02.1529 m SIR WILLIAM PERCY b 1479, Leconfield Yorkshire d 09.1540.
-1-3-2-1-1 29. i. MARGARET WALDEGRAVE b 1491, Smallbridge Suffolk d 1558, Bletsoe Bedford
-1-3-2-5-1 30. i. JOHN WALDEGRAVE b 1491 Borley Essex d 06.10.1543 Borley Essex
-1-1-1 16 23. ELIZABETH16 LOVET (ANNE15 DANVERS, SIR JOHN14, RICHARD13, 1) ble født 1521 i Chicheley Buckinghamshire , d 1577 i Chicheley Buckinghamshire m ANTHONY CAVE. b 1517 i Chicheley Buckinghamshire , d 09.09.1558 i Chicheley Buckinghamshire Notater for ELIZABETH LOVET: Elizabeth Lovet Or Lovett; Female; Birth: About 1535 Of, Astwell, Northampton, ; Chris tening: 1577 Chicheley, Buckingham, ; Death: 1577 Chicheley, Milton Keynes, Buckingham , ; Burial: 21 AUG 1577 Chicheley, Buckingham, ; Father: Thomas Lovet Barn av ELIZABETH LOVET og ANTHONY CAVE er: 31. i. MARY17 CAVE b 01.11.1556, Chicheley Buckinghamshire d 06.10.1593, Roxwell Essex 24. MARGARET16 NEVILLE (ANNE15 STAFFORD, CATHERINE14 FRAY, AGNES13 DANVERS, 1) ble født 09.03.1493 i Thorpe Latimer Lincolnshire m EDWARD WILLOUGHBY, son of ROBERT WILLOUGHBY og ELIZABETH BEAUCHAMP. b 1488 i Wiltshire , d 1517. Notater for EDWARD WILLOUGHBY: Edward Willoughby was born between 1484 and 1487.1 He was the son of Robert Willoughby, 2nd Lord Willoughby de Broke and Elizabeth Beauchamp.1 He died in 1517. Children of Edward Willoughby and Margaret Neville * Elizabeth Willoughby, Baroness Willoughby de Broke+ d. 15602 * Anne Willoughby d. b 1560 * Blanche Willoughby d. b 1560 Barn av MARGARET NEVILLE og EDWARD WILLOUGHBY er: i. ELIZABETH17 WILLOUGHBY b 28.04.1506, Brokenborough Wiltshire d 15.11.1562 m SIR FULKE GREVILLE b før 1505, Milcote Warwickshire d 10.11.1559. Notater for ELIZABETH WILLOUGHBY: Occup 1536-1562 3rd Baroness Of Willoughby De Broke 25. JOHN16 NEVILLE (ANNE15 STAFFORD, CATHERINE14 FRAY, AGNES13 DANVERS, 1) ble født 17.11.1493 i Snape Yorkshire , d 02.03.1543 i London Middlesex m (1) ELIZABETH MUSGRAVE, datter av EDWARD MUSGRAVE. b 1498 i Hartley Westmoreland m (2) KATHARINE PARR, datter av SIR THOMAS PARR. b 1512 i Blackfriars London Middlesex , d 05.09.1548 i Sudeley Castle, Gloucestershire, m (3) DOROTHY DE VERE, datter av GEORGE DE VERE og MARGARET STAFFORD. b 1497 i Oxford Oxfordshire , d 07.02.1526 i Yorkshire Notater for KATHARINE PARR: Catherine Parr From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Jump to navigationJump to search "Katherine Parr" redirects here. For the British actress, see Katherine Parr (actress). Catherine Parr Catherine Parr from NPG.jpg Queen consort of England and Ireland Tenure 12 July 1543 – 28 January 1547 Born 1512 Blackfriars, London, England Died 5 September 1548[1] (aged 36) Sudeley Castle, Gloucestershire, England Burial St Mary's Chapel, Sudeley Castle Spouse Sir Edward Burgh ? ?(m. 1529 d 1533)? John Neville, 3rd Baron Latimer ? ?(m. 1534 d 1543)? Henry VIII of England ? ?(m. 1543 d 1547)? Thomas Seymour, 1st Baron Seymour of Sudeley ? ?(m. 1547)? Issue Mary Seymour Father Sir Thomas Parr Mother Maud Green Signature Catherine Parr's signature Catherine Parr, sometimes alternatively spelled Katherine, Katheryn, Kateryn or Katharine (1512 – 5 September 1548[1][2]), was queen consort of England and Ireland (1543–47) as the last of the six wives of King Henry VIII, and the final queen consort of the House of Tudor. She married him on 12 July 1543, and outlived him by a year and eight months. With four husbands, she is the most-married English queen. Catherine enjoyed a close relationship with Henry's three children and was personally involved in the education of Elizabeth I and Edward VI. She was influential in Henry's passing of the Third Succession Act in 1543 that restored both his daughters, Mary and Elizabeth, to the line of succession to the throne.[3] Catherine was appointed regent from July to September 1544 while Henry was on a military campaign in France and in case he lost his life, she was to rule as regent until Edward came of age. However, he did not give her any function in government in his will. In 1543, she published her first book, Psalms or Prayers, anonymously.[4] On account of Catherine's Protestant sympathies, she provoked the enmity of anti-Protestant officials, who sought to turn the King against her; a warrant for her arrest was drawn up in 1545. However, she and the King soon reconciled. Her book Prayers or Meditations became the first book published by an English queen under her own name. She assumed the role of Elizabeth's guardian following the King's death, and published a second book, The Lamentation of a Sinner. Henry died on 28 January 1547. After the king's death, Catherine was allowed to keep the queen's jewels and dresses as queen dowager. About six months after Henry's death, she married her fourth and final husband, Thomas Seymour, 1st Baron Seymour of Sudeley. The marriage was short-lived, as she died on Wednesday, 5 September 1548 due to complications of childbirth.[1][5] Parr's funeral was held on 7 September 1548.[6] Parr's funeral was the first Protestant funeral in England, Scotland or Ireland to be held in English.[5] Contents 1 Early life 2 Lady Burgh 3 Lady Latimer 4 Queen of England and Ireland 5 Final marriage and death 6 Remains 7 Iconography 8 In media 9 Historiography 10 Historical fiction 11 Citations 12 References 13 Further reading 14 External links Early life Catherine Parr was born in 1512, probably in August.[7] She was the eldest child (surviving to adulthood) of Sir Thomas Parr, lord of the manor of Kendal in Westmorland, (now Cumbria), and of the former Maud Green, daughter and co-heiress of Sir Thomas Green, lord of Greens Norton, Northamptonshire, and Joan Fogge. Sir Thomas Parr was a descendant of King Edward III, and the Parrs were a substantial northern family which included many knights. Catherine's paternal grandparents were Sir William Parr and Elizabeth FitzHugh, a daughter of Henry, Baron FitzHugh of Ravensworth Castle and Lady Alice Neville, sister of Richard Neville, 16th Earl of Warwick ("Warwick, the Kingmaker"). Catherine had a younger brother, William, later created first Marquess of Northampton, and younger sister, Anne, later Countess of Pembroke. Sir Thomas was a close companion to King Henry VIII, and was rewarded as such with responsibilities and/or incomes from his positions as Sheriff of Northamptonshire, Master of the Wards, and Comptroller to the King, in addition to being the lord of Kendal. Catherine's mother was a close friend and attendant of Catherine of Aragon, and Catherine Parr was probably named after Queen Catherine, who was her godmother.[8] It was once thought that Catherine Parr had been born at Kendal Castle in Westmorland. However, at the time of her birth, Kendal Castle was already in very poor condition.[9] During her pregnancy, Maud Parr remained at court, attending the Queen, and by necessity the Parr family was living in their townhouse at Blackfriars. Historians now consider it unlikely that Sir Thomas would have taken his pregnant wife on an arduous two-week journey north over bad roads to give birth in a crumbling castle in which neither of them seemed to spend much time.[10][11] Catherine's father died when she was young, and she was close to her mother as she grew up.[12] Catherine's initial education was similar to other well-born women, but she developed a passion for learning which would continue throughout her life. She was fluent in French, Latin, and Italian, and began learning Spanish after becoming queen.[13] According to biographer Linda Porter, the story that as a child, Catherine could not tolerate sewing and often said to her mother "my hands are ordained to touch crowns and sceptres, not spindles and needles" is almost certainly apocryphal.[14] Lady Burgh In 1529, when she was seventeen, Catherine married Sir Edward Burgh (pronounced and sometimes written as Borough), a grandson of Edward Burgh, 2nd Baron Burgh. Earlier biographies mistakenly reported that Catherine had married the older Burgh.[15][16] Following the 2nd Baron Burgh's death in December 1528, Catherine's father-in-law Sir Thomas Burgh was summoned to Parliament in 1529 as Baron Burgh.[15] Catherine's first husband was in his twenties and may have been in poor health. He served as a feoffee for Thomas Kiddell and as a justice of the peace. His father also secured a joint patent in survivorship with his son for the office of steward of the manor of the soke of Kirton in Lindsey. The younger Sir Edward Burgh died in the spring of 1533, not surviving to inherit the title of Baron Burgh.[15][11] Lady Latimer Following her first husband's demise, Catherine Parr may have spent time with the Dowager Lady Strickland, Katherine Neville, who was the widow of Catherine's cousin Sir Walter Strickland, at the Stricklands' family residence of Sizergh Castle in Westmorland (now in Cumbria). In the summer of 1534, Catherine married secondly John Neville, 3rd Baron Latimer, her father's second cousin and a kinsman of Lady Strickland. With this marriage, Catherine became only the second woman in the Parr family to marry into the peerage.[17] The twice-widowed Latimer was twice Catherine's age. From his first marriage to Dorothy de Vere, sister of John de Vere, 14th Earl of Oxford, he had two children, John and Margaret. Although Latimer was in financial difficulties after he and his brothers had pursued legal action to claim the title of Earl of Warwick, Catherine now had a home of her own, a title and a husband with a position and influence in the north.[17] Snape Castle Latimer was a supporter of the Catholic Church and had opposed the king's first annulment, his subsequent marriage to Anne Boleyn, and the religious consequences. In October 1536, during the Lincolnshire Rising, Catholic rebels appeared before the Latimers' home threatening violence if Latimer did not join their efforts to reinstate the links between England and Rome. Catherine watched as her husband was dragged away. Between October 1536 and April 1537, Catherine lived alone in fear with her step-children, struggling to survive. It is probable that, in these uncertain times, Catherine's strong reaction against the rebellion strengthened her adherence to the reformed Church of [17] In January 1537, during the uprising of the North, Catherine and her step-children were held hostage at Snape Castle in Yorkshire. The rebels ransacked the house and sent word to Lord Latimer, who was returning from London, that if he did not return immediately they would kill his family. When Latimer returned to the castle, he somehow talked the rebels into releasing his family and leaving, but the aftermath would prove to be taxing on the whole family.[17] The King and Thomas Cromwell heard conflicting reports as to whether Latimer was a prisoner or a conspirator. As a conspirator, he could be found guilty of treason, forfeiting his estates and leaving Catherine and her step-children penniless. The King himself wrote to the Duke of Norfolk, pressing him to make sure Latimer would "condemn that villain Aske and submit to our clemency".[18] Latimer complied. It is likely that Catherine's brother William Parr and his uncle, William Parr, 1st Baron Parr of Horton, who both fought against the rebellion, intervened to save Latimer's life.[17] Although no charges were laid against him, Latimer's reputation, which reflected upon Catherine, was tarnished for the rest of his life. Over the next seven years, the family spent much of their time in the south. For several years, Latimer was blackmailed by Cromwell and forced to do his bidding. After Cromwell's death in 1540, the Latimers reclaimed some dignity. In 1542 the family spent time in London as Latimer attended Parliament. Catherine visited her brother William and her sister Anne at court. It was here that Catherine became acquainted with her future fourth husband, Sir Thomas Seymour. The atmosphere of the court was greatly different from that of the rural estates she knew. There, Catherine could find the latest trends, not only in religious matters, but in less weighty secular matters such as fashion and jewellery.[17] By the winter of 1542, Lord Latimer's health had worsened. Catherine nursed her husband until his death in 1543. In his will, Catherine was named as guardian of his daughter, Margaret, and was put in charge of his affairs until his daughter's majority. Latimer left Catherine the manor of Stowe and other properties. He also bequeathed money for supporting his daughter, and in the case that his daughter did not marry within five years, Catherine was to take £30 a year out of the income to support her step-daughter. Catherine was left a rich widow, but after Lord Latimer's death she faced the possibility of having to return north. It is likely that Catherine sincerely mourned her husband; she kept a remembrance of him, his New Testament with his name inscribed inside, until her death.[17] Using her late mother's friendship with Henry's first queen, Catherine of Aragon, Catherine took the opportunity to renew her own friendship with the former queen's daughter, Lady Mary. By 16 February 1543, Catherine had established herself as part of Mary's household, and it was there that Catherine caught the attention of the King. Although she had begun a romantic friendship with Sir Thomas Seymour, the brother of the late queen Jane Seymour, she saw it as her duty to accept Henry's proposal over Seymour's. Seymour was given a posting in Brussels to remove him from the king's court.[citation needed] Queen of England and Ireland The Six Wives of Henry VIII Catalina de Aragón, por un artista anónimo.jpg Catherine of Aragon Anne boleyn.jpg Anne Boleyn Hans Holbein the Younger - Jane Seymour, Queen of England - Google Art Project.jpg Jane Seymour AnneCleves.jpg Anne of Cleves HowardCatherine02.jpeg Catherine Howard Catherine Parr from NPG.jpg Catherine Parr The Melton Constable or Hastings portrait of Queen Catherine[19] Catherine married Henry VIII on 12 July 1543 at Hampton Court Palace. She was the first Queen of England also to be Queen of Ireland following Henry's adoption of the title King of Ireland. Catherine and her new husband shared several common royal and noble ancestors making them multiple cousins. By Henry's mother and Catherine's father they were third cousins once removed sharing Ralph Neville, 1st Earl of Westmorland, and Lady Joan Beaufort (granddaughter of Edward III) and by their fathers they were double fourth cousins once removed, sharing Thomas Holland, 2nd Earl of Kent (son of Joan of Kent) and Lady Alice FitzAlan (granddaughter of Henry, 3rd Earl of Lancaster) and John of Gaunt, 1st Duke of Lancaster (son of Edward III) and Katherine Swynford.[citation needed] On becoming queen, Catherine installed her former stepdaughter, Margaret Neville, as her lady-in-waiting, and gave her stepson John's wife, Lucy Somerset, a position in her household.[17] Catherine was partially responsible for reconciling Henry with his daughters from his first two marriages, and also developed a good relationship with Henry's son Edward. When she became queen, her uncle Lord Parr of Horton became her Lord Chamberlain.[citation needed] Henry went on his last, unsuccessful, campaign to France from July to September 1544, leaving Catherine as his regent. Because her regency council was composed of sympathetic members, including her uncle Thomas Cranmer (the Archbishop of Canterbury) and Lord Hertford, Catherine obtained effective control and was able to rule as she saw fit. She handled provision, finances, and musters for Henry's French campaign, signed five royal proclamations, and maintained constant contact with her lieutenant in the northern Marches, Lord Shrewsbury, over the complex and unstable situation with Scotland. It is thought that her actions as regent, together with her strength of character and noted dignity, and later religious convictions, greatly influenced her stepdaughter Lady Elizabeth (the future Elizabeth I of England).[20] Catherine Parr's arms as queen consort[21] Rose Maiden badge used by the Queen-consort The Queen's religious views were viewed with suspicion by anti-Protestant officials such as Stephen Gardiner (the Bishop of Winchester) and Lord Wriothesley (the Lord Chancellor).[22] Although brought up as a Catholic, she later became sympathetic to and interested in the "New Faith". By the mid-1540s, she came under suspicion that she was actually a Protestant. This view is supported by the strong reformed ideas that she revealed after Henry's death, when her second book, Lamentacion of a synner (Lamentation of a Sinner), was published in late 1547. The book promoted the Protestant concept of justification by faith alone, which the Catholic Church deemed to be heresy. It is unlikely that she developed these views in the short time between Henry's death and the publication of the book. Her sympathy with Anne Askew, the Protestant martyr who fiercely opposed the Catholic belief of transubstantiation, also suggests that she was more than merely sympathetic to the new religion.[citation needed] Title page of Parr's Prayers or Meditations, published in 1545 In 1546, the Bishop of Winchester and Lord Wriothesley tried to turn the king against her. An arrest warrant was drawn up for her and rumours abounded across Europe that the King was attracted to her close friend, the Duchess of Suffolk.[22] However, she saw the warrant and managed to reconcile with the King after vowing that she had only argued about religion with him to take his mind off the suffering caused by his ulcerous leg.[23] The following day an armed guard who was unaware of the reconciliation tried to arrest her while she walked with the King.[24] Final marriage and death Shortly before he died, Henry made provision for an allowance of £7,000 per year for Catherine to support herself. He further ordered that, after his death, Catherine, though a queen dowager, should be given the respect of a queen of England, as if he were still alive. Catherine retired from court after the coronation of her stepson, Edward VI, on 31 January 1547, to her home at Old Manor in Chelsea.[25] Following Henry's death, Catherine's old love and the new king's uncle, Thomas Seymour (who was soon created 1st Baron Seymour of Sudeley), returned to court. Catherine was quick to accept when Seymour renewed his suit of marriage. Since only four months had passed since the death of King Henry, Seymour knew that the Regency council would not agree to a petition for the queen dowager to marry so soon. Sometime near the end of May, Catherine and Seymour married in secret.[citation needed] King Edward VI and council were not informed of the union for several months. When their union became public knowledge, it caused a small scandal. The King and Lady Mary were very much displeased by the union. After being censured and reprimanded by the council, Seymour wrote to the Lady Mary asking her to intervene on his behalf. Mary became furious at his forwardness and tasteless actions and refused to help. Mary even went as far as asking her half-sister, Lady Elizabeth, not to interact with Queen Catherine any further.[26] During this time, Catherine began having altercations with her brother-in-law, Edward Seymour, 1st Duke of Somerset. Like Thomas, Edward was the King's uncle, and also was the Lord Protector. A rivalry developed between Catherine and his wife, her own former lady-in-waiting, Anne Seymour, Duchess of Somerset, which became particularly acute over the matter of Catherine's jewels.[27] The Duchess argued that as queen dowager, Catherine, was no longer entitled to wear the jewels belonging to the wife of the king. Instead she, as the wife of the protector, should be the one to wear them. Eventually, the Duchess won the argument, which left her relationship with Catherine permanently damaged; the relationship between the two Seymour brothers also worsened as a result, since Thomas saw the whole dispute as a personal attack by his brother on his social standing.[26] In November 1547, Catherine published her second book, The Lamentation of a Sinner. The book was a success and widely praised.[citation needed] In March 1548, at the age of 35, Catherine became pregnant. This pregnancy was a surprise, as Catherine had not conceived during her first three marriages. During this time, Seymour began to take an interest in Lady Elizabeth. Seymour had reputedly plotted to marry her before marrying Catherine, and it was reported later that Catherine discovered the two in an embrace. On a few occasions before the situation risked getting completely out of hand, according to the deposition of Kat Ashley, Catherine appears not only to have acquiesced in episodes of horseplay, but actually to have assisted her husband.[28] Whatever actually happened, Elizabeth was sent away in May 1548 to stay with Sir Anthony Denny's household at Cheshunt and never saw her beloved stepmother again, although the two corresponded. Elizabeth immediately wrote a letter to the Queen and Seymour after she left Chelsea. The letter demonstrates a sort of remorse.[citation needed] Kat Ashley, whose deposition was given after Catherine had died and Seymour had been arrested for another attempt at marrying Lady Elizabeth, had developed a crush on Seymour during her time at Chelsea and actually encouraged her charge to "play along." At one point she even made a comment at how lucky Elizabeth would have been to have a husband like Seymour.[29] Ashley even told Lady Elizabeth that Seymour had confided his sentiments to her of wanting to marry Elizabeth before Catherine.[30] After Catherine's death, Ashley strongly encouraged Elizabeth to write to Seymour offering her condolences; to "comfort him of his sorrow...for he would think great kindness therein."[30] In June 1548, Catherine, accompanied by Lady Jane Grey, moved to Sudeley Castle in Gloucestershire. The dowager queen promised to provide education for her. It was there that Catherine would spend the last few months of her pregnancy and the last summer of her life.[31] Catherine gave birth to her only child, a daughter, Mary Seymour, named after Catherine's stepdaughter Mary, on 30 August 1548. Catherine died on 5 September 1548, at Sudeley Castle in Gloucestershire, from what is thought to have been "childbed fever".[1][5] This illness was common due to the lack of hygiene around childbirth.[32] Catherine's funeral was held on 7 September 1548.[6] It was the first Protestant funeral held in English.[5] Her chief mourner was Lady Jane Grey. She was buried in St. Mary's Chapel on the grounds of Sudeley Castle, Gloucestershire, She is the only royal to be buried in a private residence.[5] Marble tomb of Catherine Parr, St. Mary's Chapel, Sudeley Castle Lord Seymour was beheaded for treason on 20 March 1549, and Mary Seymour was taken to live with the Dowager Duchess of Suffolk, a close friend of Catherine's. Catherine's other jewels were kept in a coffer with five drawers at Sudeley and this was sent to the Tower of London on 20 April 1549, and her clothes and papers followed in May.[33] After a year and a half, on 17 March 1550, Mary's property was restored to her by an Act of Parliament, easing the burden of the infant's household on the duchess. The last mention of Mary Seymour on record is on her second birthday, and although stories circulated that she eventually married and had children, most historians believe she died as a child at Grimsthorpe Castle in Lincolnshire.[34] Remains In 1782, John Locust discovered the coffin of Queen Catherine in the ruins of the Sudeley Castle chapel. The coffin was identified by a lead plate with an inscription on the coffin.[6] He opened the coffin and observed that the body, after 234 years, was in a surprisingly good condition. Reportedly the flesh on one of her arms was still white and moist. After taking a few locks of her hair, he closed the coffin and returned it to the grave.[citation needed] The coffin was opened a few more times in the next ten years and in 1792 some drunken men buried it upside down and in a rough way. When the coffin was officially reopened in 1817, nothing but a skeleton remained. Her remains were then moved to the tomb of Lord Chandos whose family owned the castle at that time.[35] The tomb was carefully restored by order of the late Duchess of Buckingham, Lady Anne Greville, daughter of the 3rd Duke of Chandos.[36] In later years the chapel was rebuilt by Sir George Gilbert Scott, who erected a canopied tomb with a recumbent marble figure by John Birnie Philip.[37] Iconography This portrait originally and now identified as Catherine Parr was wrongly identified as Lady Jane Grey for decades. Detail of Catherine's headdress and jewels The full-length portrait of Catherine Parr by Master John in the National Portrait Gallery was for many years thought to represent Lady Jane Grey. The painting has recently been re-identified as Catherine Parr, with whose name it was originally associated. The full-length format was very rare in portraits of this date, and was usually used only for very important sitters. Lady Jane Grey, although of royal blood, was a relatively obscure child of eight when this was painted (circa 1545); it was to be another eight years before the short-lived attempt at placing her on the throne. The distinctive crown-shaped jewel the sitter wears can be traced to an inventory of jewels that belonged to Catherine Parr, and the cameo beads appear to have belonged to Catherine Howard, from whom they would have passed to her successor as queen.[38][39][40] In media Unbalanced scales.svg This section may lend undue weight to certain ideas, incidents, or controversies. Please help to create a more balanced presentation. Discuss and resolve this issue before removing this message. (June 2020) This section needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (June 2020) (Learn how and when to remove this template message) Catherine Parr first appeared as a character in cinemas in 1934, in Alexander Korda's film The Private Life of Henry VIII. Charles Laughton played the king, with actress Everley Gregg appearing as Catherine. The film makes no attempt to depict the historical Parr's character, instead portraying the Queen for comic effect as a domineering and over-protective nag. In 1952, a romanticised version of Thomas Seymour's obsession with Elizabeth I saw Stewart Granger as Seymour, Jean Simmons as the young Elizabeth and screen legend Deborah Kerr as Parr in the popular film Young Bess. In 1970, in "Catherine Parr", a 90-minute BBC television drama (the last in a 6-part series, entitled The Six Wives of Henry VIII) Catherine was played by Rosalie Crutchley opposite Keith Michell's Henry. In this, Catherine's love of religion and intellectual capabilities were highlighted. Crutchley reprised her role as Catherine Parr for the first episode of the 6-part follow-up series on the life of Elizabeth I in 1971, Elizabeth R. In 1972, Barbara Leigh-Hunt played a matronly Catherine in Henry VIII and his Six Wives, with Keith Michell once again playing Henry. In 2000, Jennifer Wigmore played Catherine Parr in the American television drama aimed at teenagers, Elizabeth: Red Rose of the House of Tudor. A year later, Caroline Lintott played Katherine in Professor David Starkey's documentary series on Henry's queens. In October 2003, in a two-part British television series on Henry VIII, Catherine was played by Clare Holman. The part was relatively small, given that the drama's second part focused more on the stories of Jane Seymour and Catherine Howard. In The Simpsons episode "Margical History Tour," Catherine is portrayed by Agnes Skinner as an elderly widow during Marge's retelling of Henry's reign. Henry (portrayed by Homer) regrets his marriage to her because of her age. In March 2007, Washington University in St. Louis performed the A.E. Hotchner Playwriting Competition winner Highness, which documents the life of Catherine Parr and her relationships with King Henry and his daughter, the future Queen Elizabeth I, to whom she was a stepmother.[41] Catherine Parr was portrayed by actress Joely Richardson on the fourth and final season of Showtime's The Tudors, which was first broadcast in spring 2010.[42] Richardson's portrayal was largely faithful to what has been recorded of Parr's character. Catherine features in The Dark Rose, Volume 2 of The Morland Dynasty a series of historical novels by author Cynthia Harrod-Eagles. The lead female character, Nanette Morland, is educated alongside Catherine and is later re-acquainted with her when she becomes Queen. She has been the subject of several novels, including two titled The Sixth Wife, and she is a supporting character in C. J. Sansom's Matthew Shardlake mysteries, Revelation, Heartstone and Lamentation. In 2015, the Stratford Festival in Stratford Ontario debuted a new play called The Last Wife about Catherine Parr and her relationships with Henry VIII, Thomas Seymour and Henry's three children. The play was written by Kate Hennig. Maev Beaty played Katherine Parr. In the retelling of Henry VIII's sixth wife by Sara Pascoe in Drunk History (UK version, series 2, episode 9) Catherine Parr is portrayed by Emma Bunton.[citation needed] Catherine Parr is a character in the 2017 musical Six, by Toby Marlow and Lucy Moss. In the West End production, the role of Catherine Parr has been played by Izuka Hoyle, Maiya Quansah-Breed, and Danielle Steers. A United States run in Chicago in May 2019 saw Catherine played by Anna Uzele. Six was set to open on Broadway in April 2020, with Catherine to be played again by Uzele. Rick Wakeman recorded the piece "Catherine Parr" for his 1973 album, The Six Wives of Henry VIII. On his 2009 live version of the album the track's spelling is changed to "Katherine Parr". Historiography This section needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (June 2020) (Learn how and when to remove this template message) The popular myth that Catherine Parr acted more as her husband's nurse than his wife was born in the 19th century from the work of Victorian moralist and proto-feminist, Agnes Strickland. David Starkey challenged this assumption in his book Six Wives, in which he points out that such a situation would have been vaguely obscene to the Tudors—given that Henry had a huge staff of physicians waiting on him hand and foot, and Catherine was expected to live up to the heavy expectations of Queenly dignity. Parr is usually portrayed in cinema and television by actresses who are much older than the queen, who was in her early 30s when she was Henry's wife and was about 36 years old at the time of her death. This change is usually an artistic licence taken to highlight Parr's maturity in comparison to Henry's previous queens, or at least a symptom of the longer lifespans enjoyed by modern audiences (who might be confused as to why a 30-year-old is considered much older and more experienced).[citation needed] Catherine's good sense, moral rectitude, compassion, firm religious commitment and strong sense of loyalty and devotion have earned her many admirers among historians. These include David Starkey, feminist activist Karen Lindsey, Lady Antonia Fraser, Alison Weir, Carolly Erickson, Alison Plowden, Susan James and Linda Porter. Biographers have described her as strong-willed and outspoken, physically desirable, susceptible (like Queen Elizabeth) to roguish charm and even willing to resort to obscene language if the occasion suited. Barn av JOHN NEVILLE og DOROTHY DE VERE er: 32. i. JOHN17 NEVILLE b 1520, Snape Yorkshire England d 22.04.1577, Snape Yorkshire ii. MARGARET NEVILLE b 1522, Snape Hall Snape Yorkshire England d 23.03.1545. 33. iii. MARGARET NEVILLE b 1518, Raby Castle Durham England d 15.10.1559, Holywell Middlesex 26. ELIZABETH16 NEVILLE (ANNE15 STAFFORD, CATHERINE14 FRAY, AGNES13 DANVERS, 1) ble født 28.04.1500 i Snape Hall Snape Yorkshire m CHRISTOPHER DANBY, son of CHRISTOPHER DANBY og MARGARET SCROPE. b 1504 i Thorpe Perrow Yorkshire England, d 14.06.1571 i Thorpe Perrow Yorkshire Notater for CHRISTOPHER DANBY: Links GENUKI County Page Occup 1545-1546 England, Yorkshire Sheriff Barn av ELIZABETH NEVILLE og CHRISTOPHER DANBY er: 34. i. MARY17 DANBY b før 1530, England d c 1571, 27. SUSAN16 NEVILLE (ANNE15 STAFFORD, CATHERINE14 FRAY, AGNES13 DANVERS, 1) ble født 28.04.1501 i Of Snape Hall, Snape, Yorkshire, England, d 09.04.1588. m RICHARD NORTON CONVERS 1520 i York (North), England, son of JOHN CONYERS-NORTON og ANN RADCLIFFE. b 1503 i England, d 1585 i Notater for RICHARD NORTON CONVERS: Esquire Barn av SUSAN NEVILLE og RICHARD CONVERS er: 35. i. JOHN CONVERS17 NORTON b 1525, England d 1580. 36. ii. CLARE NORTON CONYERS b 1528. 28. ELEANOR16 CONSTABLE (JOYCE15 STAFFORD, CATHERINE14 FRAY, AGNES13 DANVERS, 1) ble født 1485 i Burton Constable Yorkshire England, d 1525 i Bristol Gloucestershire m (1) THOMAS BERKELEY. b 1472 i Thornbury Gloucestershire England, d 22.01.1532 i Bristol Gloucestershire m (2) JOHN INGLEBY 1514. Notater for THOMAS BERKELEY: Occup 1523-1532 5th Baron of Berkeley Barn av ELEANOR CONSTABLE og THOMAS BERKELEY er: 37. i. MURIEL17 BERKELEY b 1516, Berkeley Castle Thornbury Gloucestershire England d 1541, Coughton Court Mansion Warwckshire ii. MAURICE BERKELEY, g. FRANCES ROWDON. 29. MARGARET16 WALDEGRAVE (WILLIAM15, ELIZABETH14 FRAY, AGNES13 DANVERS, 1) ble født 1491 i Smallbridge Suffolk England, d 1558 i Bletsoe Bedford m KNIGHT JOHN ST JOHN. b 1488 i Bletsoe Bedford England, d 27.08.1562. Notater for KNIGHT JOHN ST JOHN: Knight of the Body to King Henry VIII, 1516 Justice of the Peace for Bedfordshire, 1528-58 Sheriff of Bedfordshire and Buckinghamshire, 1529-30, 1534-5, 1549-50 Knight of the Shire for Bedfordshire, 1529, 1539, 1542 Guardian to Princess Mary Tudor (later Queen Mary I) 1536 Chamberlain of the Household to Princess Elizabeth Tudor (later Queen Elizabeth I) Org. 1528-1558 Justice of the Peace, England, Bedford Occup 1529-1530 England, Bedford Sheriff Occup 1529-1530 England, Buckinghamshire Sheriff Other 1542 England, Bedford ? More on this location Links GENUKI County Page Knight of the body to Henry VIII, Guardian to Queen Mary I Barn av MARGARET WALDEGRAVE og KNIGHT ST JOHN er: 38. i. MARGARET17 ST JOHN b 1528, Bletsoe Bedford England d 27.08.1562, Strand Middlesex 39. ii. CRESSET ST JOHN b 1540, Bedfordshire Blettsoe Bedford England d 1580, Roxwell Essex 30. JOHN16 WALDEGRAVE (EDWARD15, ELIZABETH14 FRAY, AGNES13 DANVERS, 1) ble født 1491 i Borley Essex England, d 06.10.1543 i Borley Essex m LORA ROCHESTER. b 1495 i Borley Essex England, d 1522. Barn av JOHN WALDEGRAVE og LORA ROCHESTER er: 40. i. EDWARD17 WALDEGRAVE b 1517, Borley Essex England d 11.09.1561, Tower of London London Middlesex -1-1-1 17 31. MARY17 CAVE (ELIZABETH16 LOVET, ANNE15 DANVERS, SIR JOHN14, RICHARD13, 1) ble født 01.11.1556 i Chicheley Buckinghamshire England, d 06.10.1593 i Roxwell Essex m JEROME WESTON, son of RICHARD WESTON og WILBURGA CATESBY. b 1550 i Roxwell Essex England, d 31.12.1603 i Kent Barn av MARY CAVE og JEROME WESTON er: 41. i. RICHARD18 WESTON b 01.03.1577, Roxelle Essex England d 13.03.1635, Wallingford House Whitehall Essex 42. ii. MARY WESTON b 26.04.1579, Roxwell Essex England d 13.07.1614, East Farleigh Kent 32. JOHN17 NEVILLE (JOHN16, ANNE15 STAFFORD, CATHERINE14 FRAY, AGNES13 DANVERS, 1) ble født 1520 i Snape Yorkshire England, d 22.04.1577 i Snape Yorkshire m LUCY SOMERSET, datter av HENRY SOMERSET og ELIZABETH BROWNE. b 1524 i Monmouthshire Wales, d 23.02.1583. Notater for JOHN NEVILLE: John Neville, born about 1520, was the only son of John Neville, 3rd Baron Latimer, by his first wife, Dorothy de Vere, daughter of Sir George Vere (died 1503) by Margaret, daughter and heiress of Sir William Stafford of Bishop's Frome, Herefordshire. Dorothy de Vere was the sister and co-heiress of John de Vere, 14th Earl of Oxford.[1] She died 7 February 1527, and was buried at Well, North Yorkshire. After her death the 3rd Baron married secondly, on 20 July 1528, Elizabeth Musgrave, the daughter of Sir Edward Musgrave, by whom he had no issue. A few years after her death in 1530[citation needed] he contracted a third marriage in 1533 with Katherine Parr, the widow of Sir Edward Borough, by whom he also had no issue.[2] Katherine is said to have been a kind stepmother to the 3rd Baron's two children,[3] John and Margaret. In her will, dated 23 March 1545, Margaret stated that she was unable to render Katherine sufficient thanks 'for the godly education and tender love and bountiful goodness which I have evermore found in her Highness'.[4] There is some indication that Margaret was the 3rd Baron's father's favourite child, which, if true, might explain the turbulence which followed as John got older.[citation needed] As a teenager, John proved to be a confident sulking, lying, and over-sensitive boy.[citation needed] The 3rd Baron did not name his son as heir to his properties, and ensured that his son could not meddle with his inheritance or father's legacy.[citation needed] In the 3rd Baron's will, his wife Katherine was named guardian of his daughter, and was put in charge of the 4th Baron's affairs, which were to be given over to his daughter when she reached the age of majority. In January 1537, Neville, his sister Margaret, and step-mother Katherine were held hostage at Snape Castle during the Pilgrimage of Grace. The rebels ransacked the house and sent word to the 3rd Baron, who was returning from London, that if he did not return immediately they would kill his family. When they returned to the castle he somehow talked the rebels into releasing his family and leaving, but the aftermath to follow with Latimer would prove to be taxing on the whole family.[5] Later life[edit] John Neville became 4th Baron Latimer at his father's death on 2 March 1543. Katherine remained close to her former stepchildren, and made the 4th Baron's wife, Lucy Somerset, a lady-in-waiting when she became queen consort to King Henry VIII.[6] In May 1544 the 4th Baron was involved with the siege of Edinburgh in Scotland and he was there knighted at Butterdean near Coldingham. He then went to war in France where he took part in the siege of Abbeville. The 4th baron was emotionally unstable in later life.[citation needed] In the summer of 1553, he was sent to Fleet Prison on charges of violence done to a servant. He was arrested for attempted rape and assault in 1557, and in 1563 he killed a man. Of the situation in 1553, Thomas Edwards wrote to the Earl of Rutland describing the violence which had taken place with the servant quoting "too great a villainy for a noble man, my thought." That this public violence occurred after the death of his step-mother, Catherine, might suggest that at least she had some sort of control over Neville while she was alive.[7] The 4th Baron died without male issue in 1577, at which time the title was wrongfully assumed by Richard Neville (died 27 May 1590) of Penwyn and Wyke Sapie, Worcestershire, only son of William Neville (15 July 1497 – c. 1545), second son of Richard Neville, 2nd Baron Latimer. However, according to modern doctrine, the barony fell into abeyance among the 4th Baron's four daughters until 1913, when it was determined in favour of Francis Money-Coutts, 5th Baron Latymer, a descendant of the 4th Baron's daughter Lucy.[8] Marriage and issue[edit] Dorothy, Countess of Exeter (1549–1608), Latimer's second daughter and first wife of Thomas Cecil, 1st Earl of Exeter. In 1545, Latimer married Lucy Somerset, the daughter of Henry Somerset, 2nd Earl of Worcester, by his second wife, Elizabeth Browne, the daughter of Sir Anthony Browne, who became a lady-in-waiting to her husband's former step-mother, Queen Catherine Parr. They had four daughters:[9] Katherine (1545–46 – 28 October 1596), who married firstly, Henry Percy, 8th Earl of Northumberland, and secondly, Francis Fitton of Binfield. Dorothy (1548–1609), who married Thomas Cecil, 1st Earl of Exeter. Lucy (c. 1549 – April 1608), who married Sir William Cornwallis (c. 1551 – 1611) of Brome, Suffolk. Elizabeth (c. 1550 – 1630), who married firstly Sir John Danvers (1540–1594) of Dauntsey, and secondly, Sir Edmund Carey. Her eldest son, Sir Charles Danvers (c. 1568 – 1601), was attainted and executed in 1601 for his part in the Essex rebellion. All of their daughters' first marriages above produced children. Barn av JOHN NEVILLE og LUCY SOMERSET er: 43. i. KATHERINE18 NEVILLE b 1542, Snape Hall Snape Yorkshire England d 28.10.1596. ii. LUCY NEVILLE b 1547, Brome Suffolk England d 20.04.1608 m SIR WILLIAM CORNWALLIS, OF BROME b 1545, Brome Suffolk 44. iii. DOROTHY NEVILLE b 1549, Snape Yorkshire England d 23.03.1607, London Middlesex iv. ELIZABETH NEVILLE b 1550, Snape Hall Snape Yorkshire England d 1630, Stowe Northamptonshire England m SIR JOHN DANVERS, OF DAUNTSEY AND DANBY CASTLE b 1540, Dauntsey Wiltshire England d 19.12.1594. 33. MARGARET17 NEVILLE (JOHN16, ANNE15 STAFFORD, CATHERINE14 FRAY, AGNES13 DANVERS, 1) ble født 1518 i Raby Castle Durham England, d 15.10.1559 i Holywell Middlesex m GEORGE GARDINER, son of STEPHEN GARDINER. b 1510 i Tweed Upon Berwick Northumberland England, d 06.03.1558 i Kings Wadden Hertfordshire Barn av MARGARET NEVILLE og GEORGE GARDINER er: 45. i. RICHARD18 GARDINER b 1533, Harwich Essex England d 1621. 46. ii. GEORGE GARDINER b 1535, Berwick Upon Tweed Northumberland England d 06.1589, Stepney Middlesex 34. MARY17 DANBY (ELIZABETH16 NEVILLE, ANNE15 STAFFORD, CATHERINE14 FRAY, AGNES13 DANVERS, 1) ble født før 1530 i England, d c 1571 i m EDMUND MAULEVERER. b 1523 i England, d 27.04.1571 i Bardsley Yorkshire Barn av MARY DANBY og EDMUND MAULEVERER er: 47. i. WILLIAM18 MAULEVERER b 1556, Bardsley Yorkshire England d før 27.04.1618. 35. JOHN CONVERS17 NORTON (SUSAN16 NEVILLE, ANNE15 STAFFORD, CATHERINE14 FRAY, AGNES13 DANVERS, 1) ble født 1525 i England, d 1580. m ELIZABETH PITSFORD. b 1528 i Barn av JOHN NORTON og ELIZABETH PITSFORD er: 48. i. LADY ANNE18 NORTON b 1555, Great Mongeham Kent England d 26.05.1624, Great Mongeham Kent 36. CLARE NORTON17 CONYERS (SUSAN16 NEVILLE, ANNE15 STAFFORD, CATHERINE14 FRAY, AGNES13 DANVERS, 1) ble født 1528. m RICHARD GOODRICH, son of HENRY GOODRICK og MARGARET RAWSON. b 1510 i Rippax Yorkshire England, d 08.01.1581 i Ribston Yorkshire Barn av CLARE CONYERS og RICHARD GOODRICH er: 49. i. WILLIAM18 GOODRICH b 1546, Yorkshire England d 24.10.1631, St Edmunds Suffolk 50. ii. SIR KNIGHT RICHARD GOODRICH b 1560, Yorkshire England d 21.09.1601, Ribston Yorkshire 37. MURIEL17 BERKELEY (ELEANOR16 CONSTABLE, JOYCE15 STAFFORD, CATHERINE14 FRAY, AGNES13 DANVERS, 1) ble født 1516 i Berkeley Castle Thornbury Gloucestershire England, d 1541 i Coughton Court Mansion Warwckshire m ROBERT THROCKMORTON, son of GEORGE THROCKMORTON og ANNA VAUX. b 1513 i Coughton Court Mansion Warwckshire England, d 12.02.1581 i Coughton Court Mansion Warwckshire Notater for ROBERT THROCKMORTON: Occup 1553 England Member of Parliament Barn av MURIEL BERKELEY og ROBERT THROCKMORTON er: 51. i. CATHERINE18 THROCKMORTON b 1532, Coughton Warwickshire England d 12.02.1581, Worcestershire ii. THOMAS THROCKMORTON b 1533, Coughton Court Manison Warwickshire England d 13.03.1614, Buckinghamshire England m MARY WHORWOOD b 1533, Coughton Court Manison Warwickshire 52. iii. MARY THROCKMORTON b 1533, Coughton Court Mansion Warwckshire England d 16.12.1603, Bisley Glooucestershire 38. MARGARET17 ST JOHN (MARGARET16 WALDEGRAVE, WILLIAM15, ELIZABETH14 FRAY, AGNES13 DANVERS, 1) ble født 1528 i Bletsoe Bedford England, d 27.08.1562 i Strand Middlesex m (1) FRANCIS RUSSELL, son of SIR RUSSELL og ANNE SAPCOTE. b 1527 i Amersham Buckinghamshire England, d 28.07.1585 i London Middlesex m (2) HENRY GREY. b 1520 i Ruthin Denbighshire Wales, d 1544 i Bletsoe Bedford Notater for FRANCIS RUSSELL: Occup 1552 England, Buckinghamshire Lord Lieutenant Occup 1555-1585 2nd Earl of Bedford Occup 1584-1585 England, Cornwall Lord Lieutenant Occup 1584-1585 England, Devon Lord Lieutenant Occup 1584-1585 England, Dorset Lord Lieutenant Barn av MARGARET ST JOHN og FRANCIS RUSSELL er: 53. i. FRANCIS18 RUSSELL b 1553, Buckinghamshire ii. LADY ANN RUSSELL b 12.1548, Chenies Buckinghamshire England d 06.02.1604, Northaw Hertfordshire England m AMBROSE DUDLEY b 1530, London Middlesex England d 21.02.1590, Westminster Middlesex Notater for AMBROSE DUDLEY: Occup 1561-1590 3rd Earl of Warwick Occup 1569-1570 England, Warwickshire Lord Lieutenant Occup 1587-1590 England, Warwickshire Lord Lieutenant Death 21 FEB 1590 England, Middlesex, Westminster iii. LADY MARGARET RUSSELL b 17.07.1560, Exeter Devon England d 22.05.1616, Brougham Castle Westmoreland England m GEORGE CLIFFORD b 08.08.1558, Brougham Castle Westmoreland England d 29.10.1605, London Middlesex Notater for GEORGE CLIFFORD: Occup 1570-1605 13th Baron Of Clifford Peerage Occup 1570-1605 3rd Earl Of Cumberland Peerage Educ. 1576 England, Cambridgeshire, Cambridge, Trinity College GENUKI County Page Navy 1591 HMS Garland, Admiral Ship Navy 1593 HMS Lion, Admiral Ship Navy 1596 HMS Quittance, Captain Ship Occup 1603-1605 England, Westmorland Lord Lieutenant Flag Occup 1603-1605 England, Cumberland Lord Lieutenant Flag Occup 1603-1605 England, Northumberland Lord Lieutenant George Clifford, 3rd Earl of Cumberland 2 George Clifford, 3rd Earl of Cumberland was born on 8 August 1558.3 He was the son of Henry Clifford, 2nd Earl of Cumberland and Anne Dacre.1,3 He married Lady Margaret Russell, daughter of Francis Russell, 2nd Earl of Bedford and Margaret St. John, on 24 June 1577.4 He died on 29 October 1605 at age 47, without surviving male issue.1 George Clifford, 3rd Earl of Cumberland succeeded to the title of 13th Lord Clifford [E., 1299] on 2 January 1569/70.1 He succeeded to the title of 3rd Earl of Cumberland [E., 1525] on 2 January 1569/70.1 He was educated at Peterhouse College, Cambridge University, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, 3 He graduated from Trinity College, Cambridge University, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, England, in 1576 with a Master of Arts (M.A.).3 He held the office of Counsellor of the Navy in 1582.3 He was invested as a Knight in 1588.3 He was he made nine voyages to the West Indies, capturing the town of Fiall in the Azores and the fort of Puertorico between 1589 and 1598.3 He was invested as a Knight, Order of the Garter (K.G.) in 1592.3 He held the office of Constable and Steward of Knaresborough in 1597.3 He gained the rank of Admiral in 1598.3 He was Lieutenant-General in London in 1599.3 He gained the rank of Colonel in 1599 in the service of the London Trained Bands.3 He was Lieutenant-General in London in 1601.3 He held the office of Ranger of Salcey Forest in 1602.3 He held the office of High Steward of the Honour of Grafton in 1602.3 He held the office of Custos Rotulorum of Cumberland in 1603.3 He was invested as a Privy Counsellor (P.C.) in 1603.3 He held the office of Governor of Harbottle Castle.3 He held the office of Warden of the West and Middle Marches.3 He held the office of Governor of Carlisle Castle.3 He has an extensive biographical entry in the Dictionary of National Biography.5 Children of George Clifford, 3rd Earl of Cumberland and Lady Margaret Russell * Robert Clifford, Lord Clifford d. 24 May 15911 * Francis Clifford, Lord Clifford b. 1584/85, d. Dec 15891 * Anne Clifford, Baroness Clifford+ b. 30 Jan 1589/90, d. 22 Mar 1675/761 iv. WILLIAM RUSSELL b 1558, Strand Middlesex England d 09.08.1613, Northall Buckinghamshire England m ELIZABETH LONG b 1562, Shingay Cambridgeshire England d 12.06.1611, Watford Hertfordshire Notater for WILLIAM RUSSELL: Occup 1603-1613 1st Baron Of Russell Of Thornhaugh v. JOHN RUSSELL b 1553, Chenies Buckinghamshire England d 07.1584, Spms Highgate England m ELIZABETH COOKE b 1555, Gidea Hall Essex England d 02.06.1609, Bisham Berkshire 39. CRESSET17 ST JOHN (MARGARET16 WALDEGRAVE, WILLIAM15, ELIZABETH14 FRAY, AGNES13 DANVERS, 1) ble født 1540 i Bedfordshire Blettsoe Bedford England, d 1580 i Roxwell Essex m JOHN BUTLER, ESQ, son of GEORGE BUTLER og MARY THROCKMORTON. b 1535 i Bedfordshire Sharnrock Tofte Bedford England, d 1613 i Bedfordshire Sharnrock Tofte Bedford Notater for JOHN BUTLER, ESQ: John Butler Esq aka Boteler His father George died in 1551. Since he was given a guardian in 1553, his mother was probably dead by that time. He grew up in the home of his guardian and cousin, Clement Throckmorton in Hasely, about six miles to the northwest of Warwick. In 1553 his cousin Clement Throckmorton was made his guardian. One of his sons, Captain Nathaniel Butler became Governor of the Bermudas, as well as Governor and Admiral of the Bahamas. GENUKI County Page Aged: 78 years John Butler Esq aka Boteler His father George died in 1551. Since he was given a guardian in 1553, his mother was probably dead by that time. He grew up in the home of his guardian and cousin, Clement Throckmorton in Hasely, about six miles to the northwest of Warwick. In 1553 his cousin Clement Throckmorton was made his guardian. One of his sons, Captain Nathaniel Butler became Governor of the Bermudas, as well as Governor and Admiral of the Bahamas. Barn av CRESSET ST JOHN og JOHN BUTLER er: 54. i. JOHN18 BUTLER b 1568, Barham Kent England d 22.11.1632, Kent Island Queen Annes Co Maryland Usa. 40. EDWARD17 WALDEGRAVE (JOHN16, EDWARD15, ELIZABETH14 FRAY, AGNES13 DANVERS, 1) ble født 1517 i Borley Essex England, d 11.09.1561 i Tower of London London Middlesex m FRANCES NEVILLE, datter av EDWARD NEVILLE og ELEANOR WINDSOR. b 1520 i Addington Park Kent England, d 18.10.1599 i Borley Essex Barn av EDWARD WALDEGRAVE og FRANCES NEVILLE er: 55. i. NICHOLAS18 WALDEGRAVE b 1550, -1-1-1 18 41. RICHARD18 WESTON (MARY17 CAVE, ELIZABETH16 LOVET, ANNE15 DANVERS, SIR JOHN14, RICHARD13, 1) ble født 01.03.1577 i Roxelle Essex England, d 13.03.1635 i Wallingford House Whitehall Essex m FRANCES WALDEGRAVE, datter av NICHOLAS WALDEGRAVE og CATHERINE BROWNE. b 1577 i Borley Essex England, d 01.02.1644 i Essex Notater for RICHARD WESTON: Org. 1621-1628 Chancellor of the Exchequer Occup 1628-1635 England Treasurer Org. 1628-1635 First Lord of the Admiralty Occup 1628-1635 1st Baron of Weston Occup 1629-1635 England, Essex Lord Lieutenant Occup 1631-1635 England, Hampshire Lord Lieutenant Occup 1633-1635 1st Earl of Portland Barn av RICHARD WESTON og FRANCES WALDEGRAVE er: 56. i. CATHERINE19 WESTON b 08.06.1607, Roxelle Essex England d 31.10.1645, Rome Lazio Italy. 42. MARY18 WESTON (MARY17 CAVE, ELIZABETH16 LOVET, ANNE15 DANVERS, SIR JOHN14, RICHARD13, 1) ble født 26.04.1579 i Roxwell Essex England, d 13.07.1614 i East Farleigh Kent m WILLIAM CLARKE 10.02.1599 i St Andrew Holborn Above the Bars with St George the Martyr, Holborn, London, England, son of JAMES CLARKE og MARY SAXBY. b 30.12.1569 i East Farleigh, Kent, England, d 12.06.1610 i Holborn, Middlesex, Barn av MARY WESTON og WILLIAM CLARKE er: 57. i. JOANE19 CLARKE b 21.05.1596, Great Bromley, Essex, England d 06.09.1675, Watertown Middlesex Massachusetts Usa. 58. ii. JAMES CLARKE b 1608, London Middlesex England,Connecticut d 19.12.1674, Stratford Fairfield Co Connecticut Usa. 59. iii. JEREMIAH CLARKE b 01.12.1605, Newport Co Rhode Island England d 11.01.1651, Newport Co Rhode Island Usa. iv. WESTON CLARKE b 24.02.1599, London, Middlesex, England d 1625, City of London, 60. v. RICHARD CLARKE b 1600, Street, Kent, England d 1678, Dover, Kent, vi. WILLIAM CLARKE b 05.07.1601, East Farleigh, Kent, England d 04.1633, Watertown, Middlesex, Massachusetts Bay Colony, British Colonial America m JOAN FOSTER, 16.01.1618, West Farleigh, Kent, England b 1597, West Farleigh, Kent, 43. KATHERINE18 NEVILLE (JOHN17, JOHN16, ANNE15 STAFFORD, CATHERINE14 FRAY, AGNES13 DANVERS, 1) ble født 1542 i Snape Hall Snape Yorkshire England, d 28.10.1596. m HENRY PERCY, son of THOMAS PERCY og ELEANOR HARBOTTLE. b 1530 i Petworth Sussex England, d 21.06.1585 i London Middlesex Notater for HENRY PERCY: Occup 1572-1585 8th Earl of Northumberland Barn av KATHERINE NEVILLE og HENRY PERCY er: 61. i. GEORGE19 PERCY b 04.09.1580, Petworth Sussex England d 1632, 62. ii. HENRY PERCY b 27.04.1564, Tynemouth Norhumberland England d 05.11.1632, Petworth Sussex 44. DOROTHY18 NEVILLE (JOHN17, JOHN16, ANNE15 STAFFORD, CATHERINE14 FRAY, AGNES13 DANVERS, 1) ble født 1549 i Snape Yorkshire England, d 23.03.1607 i London Middlesex m THOMAS CECIL, son of WILLIAM CECIL og MARY CHEKE. b 05.05.1542 i Cambridge Cambridgeshire England, d 08.02.1623 i Burghley House Lincolnshire Notater for THOMAS CECIL: Occup 1578-1578 England, Northamptonshire Sheriff Occup 1598-1623 2nd Baron of Burghley Occup 1599-1603 England, Yorkshire Lord Lieutenant Occup 1603-1623 England, Northamptonshire Lord Lieutenant Occup 1605-1623 1st Earl of Exeter Barn av DOROTHY NEVILLE og THOMAS CECIL er: i. LUCY19 CECIL b 07.03.1569, Stamford Lincolnshire England m WILLIAM PAULET b 1562, Winchester Hampshire England d 04.02.1629. 63. ii. SIR THOMAS CECIL b 30.12.1578, Burghley House Lincolnshire England d 03.12.1662, Burghley Lincolnshire iii. WILLIAM CECIL b 1566, England d 1640 m ELIZABETH DRURY b 1579, England d 1654. Notater for WILLIAM CECIL: Occup 1623-1640 2nd Earl of Exeter Occup 1623-1640 England, Northamptonshire Lord Lieutenant iv. CATHERINE CECIL b 15.04.1567, Stanford Dutchess Co New York Usa d 27.06.1567, England m GEORGE PAULET b 1534, Caythorpe Lincolnshire England d 01.05.1608, Londonderry Londonderry Co Ireland. v. MILDRED CECIL b 20.07.1569, Stamford Lincolnshire England d 11.06.1573, vi. RICHARD CECIL b 07.12.1570, Wakerley Northamptonshire England d 04.09.1633, Wakerley Northamptonshire vii. EDWARD CECIL b 29.02.1572, Stamford Lincolnshire England d 16.11.1638, London Middlesex England m THEODOSIA NOEL b 1578, Dalby Leicestershire Notater for EDWARD CECIL: Occup 1625-1638 1st Viscount of Wimbledon Occup 1627-1638 England, Surrey Lord Lieutenant 45. RICHARD18 GARDINER (MARGARET17 NEVILLE, JOHN16, ANNE15 STAFFORD, CATHERINE14 FRAY, AGNES13 DANVERS, 1) ble født 1533 i Harwich Essex England, d 1621. m CATHERINE KIRKENER. b 1537 i East Greenwich Kent England, d 28.12.1603 i Leatherhead Surrey Barn av RICHARD GARDINER og CATHERINE KIRKENER er: 64. i. JOSMIN19 GARDINER b 1550, St Lawrence Suffolk England d 1647, Ipswich Suffolk 46. GEORGE18 GARDINER (MARGARET17 NEVILLE, JOHN16, ANNE15 STAFFORD, CATHERINE14 FRAY, AGNES13 DANVERS, 1) ble født 1535 i Berwick Upon Tweed Northumberland England, d 06.1589 i Stepney Middlesex m DOROTHY CONSTABLE. b 1538 i Wallington Northumberland England, d 06.1589 i Beddington Middlesex Barn av GEORGE GARDINER og DOROTHY CONSTABLE er: 65. i. LIONEL19 GARDINER b 1573, Stepney Middlesex England d 1599, Stepney Middlesex 47. WILLIAM18 MAULEVERER (MARY17 DANBY, ELIZABETH16 NEVILLE, ANNE15 STAFFORD, CATHERINE14 FRAY, AGNES13 DANVERS, 1) ble født 1556 i Bardsley Yorkshire England, d før 27.04.1618. m ELEANOR ALDBURGH. b 29.09.1553 i Yorkshire England, d 1642 i Yorkshire Barn av WILLIAM MAULEVERER og ELEANOR ALDBURGH er: 66. i. JAMES19 MAULEVERER b 01.02.1591, Yorkshire England d 24.04.1664, York Castle Yorkshire 48. LADY ANNE18 NORTON (JOHN CONVERS17, SUSAN16 NEVILLE, ANNE15 STAFFORD, CATHERINE14 FRAY, AGNES13 DANVERS, 1) ble født 1555 i Great Mongeham Kent England, d 26.05.1624 i Great Mongeham Kent m SIR WILLIAM CRAFFORD. b 1555 i Great Mongeham Kent England, d 15.08.1623 i Great Mongeham Kent Barn av LADY NORTON og SIR CRAFFORD er: 67. i. LADY ANNE19 CRAFFORD b 31.05.1581, Great Mongeham Kent 49. WILLIAM18 GOODRICH (CLARE NORTON17 CONYERS, SUSAN16 NEVILLE, ANNE15 STAFFORD, CATHERINE14 FRAY, AGNES13 DANVERS, 1) ble født 1546 i Yorkshire England, d 24.10.1631 i St Edmunds Suffolk England. m MARGARET RICHARDSON. b 1549 i Suffolk England, d 22.03.1630 i Suffolk England. Barn av WILLIAM GOODRICH og MARGARET RICHARDSON er: 68. i. JOHN19 GOODRICH b 1572, St Edmunds Suffolk England d 19.04.1632, St Edmunds Suffolk England. 50. SIR KNIGHT RICHARD18 GOODRICH (CLARE NORTON17 CONYERS, SUSAN16 NEVILLE, ANNE15 STAFFORD, CATHERINE14 FRAY, AGNES13 DANVERS, 1) ble født 1560 i Yorkshire England, d 21.09.1601 i Ribston Yorkshire England. m MURIEL EURE, datter av WILLIAM EURE og MARGARET DYMOKE. b 1557 i Ribston Yorkshire England, d 1674 i Suffolk England. Barn av SIR GOODRICH og MURIEL EURE er: 69. i. JOHN19 GOODRICH b 1582, Yorkshire England d 1646. 70. ii. HENRY GOODRICH b 1582, Ribston Yorkshire England d 20.07.1641. 71. iii. WILLIAM GOODRICH b 18.05.1605, Bury St Edmonds Suffolk England d mel. 21.03.1646 - 1647, Wolverstone Suffolk England. 51. CATHERINE18 THROCKMORTON (MURIEL17 BERKELEY, ELEANOR16 CONSTABLE, JOYCE15 STAFFORD, CATHERINE14 FRAY, AGNES13 DANVERS, 1) ble født 1532 i Coughton Warwickshire England, d 12.02.1581 i Worcestershire England. m HENRY NORWOOD, son of RALPH NORWOOD og JANE KNIGHT. b 1525 i Gloucestershire England. Barn av CATHERINE THROCKMORTON og HENRY NORWOOD er: 72. i. WILLIAM19 NORWOOD b 1548, Leckhampton Gloucestershire England d 23.09.1632, Leckhampton Gloucestershire England. 52. MARY18 THROCKMORTON (MURIEL17 BERKELEY, ELEANOR16 CONSTABLE, JOYCE15 STAFFORD, CATHERINE14 FRAY, AGNES13 DANVERS, 1) ble født 1533 i Coughton Court Mansion Warwckshire England, d 16.12.1603 i Bisley Glooucestershire England. m EDWARD ARDEN. b 1531 i England, d 20.12.1584 i Middlesex England. Barn av MARY THROCKMORTON og EDWARD ARDEN er: 73. i. CATHERINE19 ARDEN b 1548, Park Hall Warwckshire England d 02.11.1627, Asthon Warwckshire England. 53. FRANCIS18 RUSSELL (MARGARET17 ST JOHN, MARGARET16 WALDEGRAVE, WILLIAM15, ELIZABETH14 FRAY, AGNES13 DANVERS, 1) ble født 1553 i Buckinghamshire England. m ANN FORESTER. b 1553 i Badby Northamptonshire England. Barn av FRANCIS RUSSELL og ANN FORESTER er: 74. i. EDWARD19 RUSSELL b 20.12.1572, Badby Northamptonshire England d 03.05.1627, Moor Park Hertfordshire England. 54. JOHN18 BUTLER (CRESSET17 ST JOHN, MARGARET16 WALDEGRAVE, WILLIAM15, ELIZABETH14 FRAY, AGNES13 DANVERS, 1) ble født 1568 i Barham Kent England, d 22.11.1632 i Kent Island Queen Annes Co Maryland Usa. m (1) JANE ELLIOTT, datter av EDWARD ELLIOT og JANE GEDGE. b 22.06.1576 i Essex England, d 16.12.1667 i Kent Island Queen Annes Co Maryland Usa. m (2) JANE ELLIOT. b 22.06.1576, d 16.12.1667. Notater for JOHN BUTLER: The first permanent European settlement in what is now Maryland was established on Kent Island in 1631 by William Claiborne, his daugter's husband. This is the same year he immigrated. Also, Claiborne was the official surveyor of the Jamestown colony, and was appointed secretary of state for Virginia. Notater for JANE ELLIOTT: Note that in 1631 Kent Island was assumed to be part of Virginia, as Maryland was not given to Lord Baltimore until 1632, prior to her death. Barn av JOHN BUTLER og JANE ELLIOTT er: 75. i. ELIZABETH19 BUTLER b 1612, Roxwell Essex England d 1676, Virginia Usa. Barn av JOHN BUTLER og JANE ELLIOT er: 76. ii. ELIZABETH19 BUTLER b 1610, Essex, England d 1668, New Kent Co Virginia Usa. 55. NICHOLAS18 WALDEGRAVE (EDWARD17, JOHN16, EDWARD15, ELIZABETH14 FRAY, AGNES13 DANVERS, 1) ble født 1550 i England. m CATHERINE BROWNE. b 1565 i England. Barn av NICHOLAS WALDEGRAVE og CATHERINE BROWNE er: 77. i. FRANCES19 WALDEGRAVE b 1577, Borley Essex England d 01.02.1644, Essex England. -1-1-1 19 56. CATHERINE19 WESTON (RICHARD18, MARY17 CAVE, ELIZABETH16 LOVET, ANNE15 DANVERS, SIR JOHN14, RICHARD13, 1) ble født 08.06.1607 i Roxelle Essex England, d 31.10.1645 i Rome Lazio Italy. m RICHARD IV WHYTE, son of RICHARD WHYTE og MARY PLOWDEN. b 1580 i Hutton Hall Essex England, d c 1660 i Rome Lazio Italy. Barn av CATHERINE WESTON og RICHARD WHYTE er: 78. i. JOHN20 WHITEHEAD b 1582, Bengeworth, Worchestershire, England d 06.01.1650, Jamaica, Queens, New York Colony, British Colonial America. 57. JOANE19 CLARKE (MARY18 WESTON, MARY17 CAVE, ELIZABETH16 LOVET, ANNE15 DANVERS, SIR JOHN14, RICHARD13, 1) ble født 21.05.1596 i Great Bromley, Essex, England, d 06.09.1675 i Watertown Middlesex Massachusetts Usa. m SIMON STONE, son of DAVID STONE og URSULA _. b 06.02.1585 i Great Bromley, Essex, England, d 22.09.1665 i Cambridge Middlesex Massachusetts Usa. Barn av JOANE CLARKE og SIMON STONE er: i. JOHN20 STONE b 16.03.1635, Bocking, Essex, England m HANNAH BASS, 10.05.1663, Braintree, Massachusetts Bay Colony, British Colonial America b 26.04.1643, Braintree, Suffolk, Massachusetts Bay Colony, British Colonial America d 16.09.1739, Braintree, Suffolk, Massachusetts Bay Colony, British Colonial America. ii. JOHN STONE b 1635, England d 26.03.1691, Watertown Middlesex Massachusetts Usa m SARAH BASS b 26.04.1643, Braintree Norfolk Co Massachusetts Usa d c 16.09.1739. 79. iii. SIMON STONE b 04.02.1631, Boxted Essex England d 27.02.1708, Watertown Middlesex Co Massachusetts Usa. iv. ANNA STONE b før 02.02.1624, Boxted Essex England d 01.05.1680, Watertown Middlesex Co Massachusetts Usa m LEWIS JONES b 1605, Boxted Essex England d 11.04.1684, Watertown Middlesex Co Massachusetts Usa. Notater for ANNA STONE: History 1635 Ship "Increase" Passenger 58. JAMES19 CLARKE (MARY18 WESTON, MARY17 CAVE, ELIZABETH16 LOVET, ANNE15 DANVERS, SIR JOHN14, RICHARD13, 1) ble født 1608 i London Middlesex England,Connecticut, d 19.12.1674 i Stratford Fairfield Co Connecticut Usa. m SARAH HARVEY. b 1622 i New Haven New Haven Co Connecticut Usa, d 17.10.1661 i New Haven New Haven Co Connecticut Usa. Notater for JAMES CLARKE: Source number: 10304.000; Source type: Electronic Database; Number of Pages: 1; Submitter Code: BFO. Birth date: 1602Birth place: ENMarriage date: 1638Marriage place: CT Place: Boston, Massachusetts; Year: 1637; Page Number: 30. Arrival date: 1637Arrival place: Boston, Massachusetts Boston, Massachusetts Barn av JAMES CLARKE og SARAH HARVEY er: 80. i. JAMES20 CLARK b 1640, New Haven Co Connecticut Usa d før 03.02.1714, Stratford Fairfield Co Connecticut Usa. 81. ii. MARY CLARK b 06.01.1645, New Haven New Haven Co Connecticut Usa d 03.02.1722, Wallingford New Haven Co Connecticut Usa. 82. iii. SARAH CLARK b 25.10.1650, New Haven New Haven Co Connecticut Usa d 01.02.1715, New Haven New Haven Co Connecticut Usa. 59. JEREMIAH19 CLARKE (MARY18 WESTON, MARY17 CAVE, ELIZABETH16 LOVET, ANNE15 DANVERS, SIR JOHN14, RICHARD13, 1) ble født 01.12.1605 i Newport Co Rhode Island England, d 11.01.1651 i Newport Co Rhode Island Usa. m FRANCES LATHAM, datter av LEWIS LATHAM og ELIZABETH. b 02.1609 i Kempston Bedford England, d 09.1677 i Newport Newport Co Rhode Island Usa. Notater for JEREMIAH CLARKE: Occup 1648-1649 RI Governor Barn av JEREMIAH CLARKE og FRANCES LATHAM er: 83. i. MARY20 CLARKE b 1641, Rhode Island Usa d 07.04.1711, Newport Newport Co Rhode Island Usa. 60. RICHARD19 CLARKE (MARY18 WESTON, MARY17 CAVE, ELIZABETH16 LOVET, ANNE15 DANVERS, SIR JOHN14, RICHARD13, 1) ble født 1600 i Street, Kent, England, d 1678 i Dover, Kent, England. m JOANE PASCALL 1620. b 1603, d 1679. Barn av RICHARD CLARKE og JOANE PASCALL er: i. MARGARET20 CLARKE, d. 1639. 61. GEORGE19 PERCY (KATHERINE18 NEVILLE, JOHN17, JOHN16, ANNE15 STAFFORD, CATHERINE14 FRAY, AGNES13 DANVERS, 1) ble født 04.09.1580 i Petworth Sussex England, d 1632 i England. m ANNE FLOYD. b 1585 i England, d 1618 i Virginia Usa. Notater for GEORGE PERCY: Education 15972 England, Oxfordshire, Oxford University ? More on this location Links GENUKI County Page 2 graduated Other DEC 16062 Sailed for Virginia Occup 1609-1610 VA Governor Military United Kingdom Army / Commander Low Countries Command Dutch struggle for independence from Spain, Ireland, Barn av GEORGE PERCY og ANNE FLOYD er: 84. i. ANNE20 PERCY b 1600, Pittsylvania Westover Co Virginia Usa d 10.04.1667, York Co Virginia Usa. 62. HENRY19 PERCY (KATHERINE18 NEVILLE, JOHN17, JOHN16, ANNE15 STAFFORD, CATHERINE14 FRAY, AGNES13 DANVERS, 1) ble født 27.04.1564 i Tynemouth Norhumberland England, d 05.11.1632 i Petworth Sussex England. m LADY DOROTHY DEVEREUX, datter av WALTER DEVEREUX og LETTICE KNOLLYS. b 1564 i Chartley Staffordshire England, d 03.08.1619. Notater for HENRY PERCY: Occup 1585-1632 9th Earl of Northumberland Barn av HENRY PERCY og LADY DEVEREUX er: 85. i. DOROTHY20 PERCY b 20.08.1598, Northumberland England d 19.08.1650. 86. ii. LUCY PERCY b 1599, Petworth Sussex England d 05.11.1660, Hertfordshire England. 87. iii. ALGERNON PERCY b 13.10.1602, London Middlesex England d 13.10.1668, Petworth Sussex England. 63. SIR THOMAS19 CECIL (DOROTHY18 NEVILLE, JOHN17, JOHN16, ANNE15 STAFFORD, CATHERINE14 FRAY, AGNES13 DANVERS, 1) ble født 30.12.1578 i Burghley House Lincolnshire England, d 03.12.1662 i Burghley Lincolnshire England. m SUSAN OXENBRIDGE. b 02.12.1617 i Sussex England. Notater for SIR THOMAS CECIL: Knight, engraver, map maker Barn av SIR CECIL og SUSAN OXENBRIDGE er: 88. i. WILLIAM20 CECIL b 1634, England. 64. JOSMIN19 GARDINER (RICHARD18, MARGARET17 NEVILLE, JOHN16, ANNE15 STAFFORD, CATHERINE14 FRAY, AGNES13 DANVERS, 1) ble født 1550 i St Lawrence Suffolk England, d 1647 i Ipswich Suffolk England. m SAMUEL SMITH. b 1549 i England, d 1583 i England. Barn av JOSMIN GARDINER og SAMUEL SMITH er: 89. i. SAMUEL20 SMITH b 19.07.1575, Ipswich Essex Co Massachusetts Usa d 16.06.1618, Ipswich Suffolk England. 65. LIONEL19 GARDINER (GEORGE18, MARGARET17 NEVILLE, JOHN16, ANNE15 STAFFORD, CATHERINE14 FRAY, AGNES13 DANVERS, 1) ble født 1573 i Stepney Middlesex England, d 1599 i Stepney Middlesex England. m ELIZABETH WOODHOUSE. b 1575 i Stepney Middlesex England, d 03.12.1599 i St Dunstans Stepney Middlesex England. Barn av LIONEL GARDINER og ELIZABETH WOODHOUSE er: 90. i. LION (LYON)20 GARDINER b 03.12.1599, London Middlesex England d 1663, Garniers Island Suffolk Co New York Usa. 66. JAMES19 MAULEVERER (WILLIAM18, MARY17 DANBY, ELIZABETH16 NEVILLE, ANNE15 STAFFORD, CATHERINE14 FRAY, AGNES13 DANVERS, 1) ble født 01.02.1591 i Yorkshire England, d 24.04.1664 i York Castle Yorkshire England. m BEATRICE HUTTON. b 24.06.1596 i York St Olaves Yorkshire England. Barn av JAMES MAULEVERER og BEATRICE HUTTON er: i. ELLINER20 MAULEVERER b 16.10.1622, Yorkshire England m ANTHONY NOWERS b 1625, Pluckly Kent England d 1679, Pluckly Kent England. 67. LADY ANNE19 CRAFFORD (LADY ANNE18 NORTON, JOHN CONVERS17, SUSAN16 NEVILLE, ANNE15 STAFFORD, CATHERINE14 FRAY, AGNES13 DANVERS, 1) ble født 31.05.1581 i Great Mongeham Kent England. m JOHN WARREN. b 31.07.1561 i Dover Kent England, d 21.01.1612 i Ripple Court Kent England. Barn av LADY CRAFFORD og JOHN WARREN er: 91. i. WILLIAM20 WARREN b 07.03.1595, Ripple Court Kent England d 21.04.1670, Surry Co Virginia Usa. 68. JOHN19 GOODRICH (WILLIAM18, CLARE NORTON17 CONYERS, SUSAN16 NEVILLE, ANNE15 STAFFORD, CATHERINE14 FRAY, AGNES13 DANVERS, 1) ble født 1572 i St Edmunds Suffolk England, d 19.04.1632 i St Edmunds Suffolk England. m MARGERIE HOWE. b 01.09.1588 i St Edmunds Suffolk England, d 21.04.1632 i Suffolk England. Barn av JOHN GOODRICH og MARGERIE HOWE er: 92. i. JOHN20 GOODRICH b 21.12.1623, Suffolk England d 06.04.1680, Wethersfield Hartford Co Connecticut Usa. 93. ii. SARAH GOODRICH b 10.05.1630, Bassingbourne Cambridgeshire England d 08.03.1700, Wethersfield Hartford Co Connectticut Usa. 94. iii. WILLIAM GOODRICH b 13.02.1621, Bury St Edmunds Suffolk England d 1676, Wethersfield Hartford Co Connectticut Usa. 69. JOHN19 GOODRICH (SIR KNIGHT RICHARD18, CLARE NORTON17 CONYERS, SUSAN16 NEVILLE, ANNE15 STAFFORD, CATHERINE14 FRAY, AGNES13 DANVERS, 1) ble født 1582 i Yorkshire England, d 1646. m (2) JOAN 1642 i Isle Virginia Usa. b 1619 i Upper, Isle of Wight, Virginia, United States, d 1660. Barn av JOHN GOODRICH er: 95. i. THOMAS20 GOODRICH b 1614, Yorkshire England d 1679, Rappahannock Co Virginia Usa. Barn av JOHN GOODRICH og JOAN er: 96. ii. JOHN20 GOODRICH b 1652, Upper, Isle of Wight, Virginia, United States d 09.06.1696, Isle, Virginia, United States. 70. HENRY19 GOODRICH (SIR KNIGHT RICHARD18, CLARE NORTON17 CONYERS, SUSAN16 NEVILLE, ANNE15 STAFFORD, CATHERINE14 FRAY, AGNES13 DANVERS, 1) ble født 1582 i Ribston Yorkshire England, d 20.07.1641. m JANE SAVILE. b 06.02.1581 i Methley Yorkshire England. Barn av HENRY GOODRICH og JANE SAVILE er: 97. i. RICHARD20 GOODRICH b 1617, Ribston Yorkshire England d 07.05.1676, Guilford New Haven Co Connecticut Usa. 71. WILLIAM19 GOODRICH (SIR KNIGHT RICHARD18, CLARE NORTON17 CONYERS, SUSAN16 NEVILLE, ANNE15 STAFFORD, CATHERINE14 FRAY, AGNES13 DANVERS, 1) ble født 18.05.1605 i Bury St Edmonds Suffolk England, d mel. 21.03.1646 - 1647 i Wolverstone Suffolk England. m MARGARET BUTTERFIELD. b 1614 i Wolverstone Suffolk England, d mel. 03.02.1684 - 1685 i Newbury Essex Co Massachusetts Usa. Barn av WILLIAM GOODRICH og MARGARET BUTTERFIELD er: 98. i. MARY ELIZABETH20 GOODRICH b mel. 08.01.1632 - 1633, Suffolk England d Newbury Essex Co Massachusetts Usa. 72. WILLIAM19 NORWOOD (CATHERINE18 THROCKMORTON, MURIEL17 BERKELEY, ELEANOR16 CONSTABLE, JOYCE15 STAFFORD, CATHERINE14 FRAY, AGNES13 DANVERS, 1) ble født 1548 i Leckhampton Gloucestershire England, d 23.09.1632 i Leckhampton Gloucestershire England. m ELIZABETH LYGON. b 1548 i Madresfield Worcestershire England, d 16.04.1598 i Gloucestershire England. Barn av WILLIAM NORWOOD og ELIZABETH LYGON er: 99. i. RICHARD20 NORWOOD b 1573, Leckhampton Gloucestershire England d 12.01.1630. 73. CATHERINE19 ARDEN (MARY18 THROCKMORTON, MURIEL17 BERKELEY, ELEANOR16 CONSTABLE, JOYCE15 STAFFORD, CATHERINE14 FRAY, AGNES13 DANVERS, 1) ble født 1548 i Park Hall Warwckshire England, d 02.11.1627 i Asthon Warwckshire England. m SIR EDWARD DEVEREUX, 1ST BARONET OF CASTLE BROMW, son of WALTER DEVEREUX og MARGARET GARNEYS. b 03.08.1558 i Asthon Warwckshire England, d 22.09.1622 i Bromwich Castle Warwckshire England. Barn av CATHERINE ARDEN og SIR DEVEREUX er: i. WALTER20 DEVEREUX b 1578, Warwickshire England d 1658. Notater for WALTER DEVEREUX: Occup 1614-1614 England Member of Parliament Flag of Occup 1646-1658 5th Viscount Of Hereford 74. EDWARD19 RUSSELL (FRANCIS18, MARGARET17 ST JOHN, MARGARET16 WALDEGRAVE, WILLIAM15, ELIZABETH14 FRAY, AGNES13 DANVERS, 1) ble født 20.12.1572 i Badby Northamptonshire England, d 03.05.1627 i Moor Park Hertfordshire England. m LUCY HARINGTON, datter av JOHN HARINGTON og ANNE KELWAY. b 1580 i England, d 1627. Barn av EDWARD RUSSELL og LUCY HARINGTON er: 100. i. JOHN20 RUSSELL b 1597, Cretingham Suffolk England d 08.05.1680, Hadley, Hampshire, Massachusetts, United States. 75. ELIZABETH19 BUTLER (JOHN18, CRESSET17 ST JOHN, MARGARET16 WALDEGRAVE, WILLIAM15, ELIZABETH14 FRAY, AGNES13 DANVERS, 1) ble født 1612 i Roxwell Essex England, d 1676 i Virginia Usa. m COL./HON. WILLIAM CLAIBORNE, son of THOMAS CLAIBORNE og SARAH SMITH. b 10.08.1600 i Crayford Kent England, d 1676 i King William Co Virginia Usa. Notater for ELIZABETH BUTLER: As a descendant of William Claiborne, you can claim descendancy from English and European royalty all the way back to Charlemagne and beyond through the ancestry of his wife Elizabeth Butler. Notater for COL./HON. WILLIAM CLAIBORNE: William Claiborne From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia This article is about the English pioneer and surveyor. For the United States politician, see William C. C. Claiborne. For the college football player and reverend, see Wild Bill Claiborne. William Claiborne William Claiborne (1600 – 1677).jpg Secretary of State for the Virginia Colony In office 1626–1634 Parliamentary Commissioner and Secretary of the Virginia Colony In office 1648–1660 Personal details Born c. 1600 Crayford, Kent, Kingdom of England Died c. 1677 West Point, Virginia Colony, Kingdom of England Occupation Surveyor, colonial government official, trader, planter William Claiborne also, spelled Cleyburne (c. 1600 – c. 1677)[1] was an English pioneer, surveyor, and an early settler in the colonies/provinces of Virginia and Maryland and around the Chesapeake Bay. Claiborne became a wealthy planter, a trader, and a major figure in the politics of the colonies. He was a central figure in the disputes between the colonists of Virginia and the later settling of Maryland, partly because of his earlier trading post on Kent Island in the mid-way of the Chesapeake Bay, which provoked the first naval military battles in North American waters. Claiborne repeatedly attempted and failed to regain Kent Island from the Maryland Calverts, sometimes by force of arms, after its inclusion in the lands that were granted by a 1632 Royal Charter to the Calvert family. Kent Island had become Maryland territory after the surrounding lands were granted to Sir George Calvert, first Baron and Lord Baltimore (1579–1632) by the reigning King of England, Charles I (1600–1649; reigned from 1625 until his execution in 1649). Claiborne was an Anglican, a Puritan sympathizer, and deeply resentful of the Calverts' Catholicism. He was one of the signers, along with Virginia Governor John Pott, Samuel Matthews, and Roger Smyth, of a letter to the King's Privy Council, dated 30 November 1629, complaining that Lord Baltimore refused to take the Oath of Allegiance and Supremacy to the Church of England.[2] He sided with Parliament during the English Civil War of 1642–1651 and was appointed to a commission charged with subduing and managing the Province of Virginia and Province of Maryland, both British colonies at the time. He played a role in the submission of Virginia to parliamentary rule in this period. Following the restoration of the English monarchy in 1660, he retired from involvement in the politics of the Virginia colony. He died around 1677 at his plantation, Romancoke, on Virginia's Pamunkey River. According to historian Robert Brenner, "William Claiborne may have been the most consistently influential politician in Virginia throughout the whole of the pre-Restoration period".[3] Claiborne was born the county of Kent in England in 1600 to Sarah Smith, the daughter of a London brewer, and Thomas Clayborn, an alderman and lord mayor from King's Lynn, Norfolk, who made his living as a small-scale businessman involved in a variety of industries, including the salt and fish trades.[4] The family name was spelled alternately as Cleburn, Cleyborne, or Claiborne. William Claiborne, who was baptized in 1600, was the younger of two sons.[5] The family's business was not profitable enough to make it rich, and so Claiborne's older brother was apprenticed in London, becoming a merchant involved in hosiery and, eventually, the tobacco trade.[4] The Province of Virginia was still a frontier settlement in March 1622 when William Claiborne, (c.1600–c.1677), survived attacks by native Indian Powhatans that killed more than 300 Virginia colonists. However, Claiborne was offered a position as a land surveyor in the new colony of Virginia, and arrived at Jamestown, on the north shore of the James River in 1621. The position carried a 200-acre (80 hectare) land grant, a salary of £30 per year, and the promise of fees paid by settlers who needed to have their land grants surveyed. His political acumen quickly made him one of the most successful Virginia colonists, and within four years of his arrival he had secured grants for 1,100 acres (445 hectares) of land and a retroactive salary of £60 a year from the Virginia Colony's council. The native/Indian Powhatans Powhatan were frightened by the influx of immigrants, the expansion of new villages on traditional farming lands, the subsequent need to purchase food from the settlers, and the enforced placement of Indian youth in "colleges." In March 1622, they attacked the Jamestown plantations killing hundreds. The settlers quickly sought retaliation, killing hundreds of tribesmen and their families, burning fields, and spreading smallpox.[6] Claiborne managed to survive all of these attacks. His financial success was followed by political success, and he gained appointment as Councilor in 1624 and Secretary of State for the Colony in 1626. Around 1627, he began to trade for furs with the native Susquehannock Indians from further north on the shores of the Chesapeake Bay and two of its largest tributaries, the Potomac and Susquehanna Rivers. To facilitate this trade, Claiborne wanted to establish a trading post on Kent Island in the mid-way of the Chesapeake Bay, which he intended to make the center of a vast mercantile empire along the Atlantic Coast.[4] Claiborne found both financial and political support for the Kent Island venture from London merchants Maurice Thomson, William Cloberry, John de la Barre, and Simon Turgis.[7] Kent Island and the first dispute with Maryland Map of the Virginia colony showing its location relative to the proprietary colony, Province of Maryland controlled by Lord Baltimores of the Calvert family. In 1629, George Calvert, 1st Baron Baltimore, arrived in Virginia, having traveled south from Avalon, his failed colony on Newfoundland. Calvert was not welcomed by the Virginians, both because his Catholicism offended them as Protestants, and because it was no secret that Calvert desired a charter for a portion of the land that the Virginians considered their own.[8] After a brief stay, Calvert returned to England to press for just such a charter, and Claiborne, in his capacity as Secretary of State of Virginia colony, was sent to England to argue the Virginians' case.[9] This happened to be to Claiborne's private advantage, as he was also trying to complete the arrangements for the trading post on Kent Island. Calvert, a former high official in the government of King James I, asked the Privy Council for permission to build a colony, to be called Carolina, on land south of the Virginia settlements in area of the modern-day North Carolina, South Carolina, and Georgia. Claiborne arrived soon afterwards and expressed the concerns of Virginia that its territorial integrity was being threatened. He was joined in his protests by a group of London merchants who planned to build a sugar colony in the same area.[10] Claiborne, still intent on his own project, received a royal trading commission through one of his London supporters in 1631, one which granted him the right to trade with the natives on all lands in the mid-Atlantic where there was not already a patent in effect.[11] Claiborne sailed for Kent Island on 28 May 1631 with indentured servants recruited in London and money for his trading post, likely believing Calvert's hopes defeated.[12] He was able to gain the support of the Virginia Council for his project and, as a reward for London merchant Maurice Thomson's financial support, helped Thomson and two associates get a contract from Virginia guaranteeing a monopoly on tobacco.[13] Claiborne's Kent Island settlers established a small plantation on the island and appointed a clergyman.[14] While the settlement on Kent Island was progressing, the Privy Council had proposed to Sir George Calvert, former Secretary of State for the King that he be granted a charter for lands north of the Virginia colony, in replacement for the unsuccessful settlements of his earlier colony of Avalon in Newfoundland (eastern modern Canada), in order to create pressure on the Dutch settlements further north along the Delaware and Hudson Rivers (modern states of Delaware, New Jersey and New York). Calvert accepted, though he died in 1632 before the charter could be formally signed by King Charles I, and the Royal Grant and Charter for the new colony of Maryland was instead granted to his son, Cecilius Calvert, on 20 June 1632.[15] This turn of events was unfortunate for Claiborne, since the Maryland charter included all lands on either side of the Chesapeake Bay north of the mouth of the Potomac River, a region which included Claiborne's proposed trading post on Kent Island, mid-way on the Bay. The Virginia Assembly, still in support of Claiborne and now including representatives of the Kent Island settlers, issued a series of proclamations and protests both before and after when the news of the granting of the Maryland charter reached across the ocean, claiming the lands for Virginia and protesting the charter's legality.[16] Map of the modern State of Maryland with Kent Island highlighted in the mid-way of the Chesapeake Bay which nearly splits the region into an Eastern Shore (Delmarva peninsula) and a Western Shore (mainland). This island was the touchpoint for a long conflict between Claiborne and the Maryland colony. Claiborne's first appeal to royal authority in the dispute, which complained both that the lands in the Maryland charter were not really unsettled, as the charter claimed, and that the charter gave so much power to Calvert that it undermined the rights of the settlers, was rejected by the Lords of Foreign Plantations in July 1633.[17] The following year, the main body of Calvert's settlers arrived in the Chesapeake and established a permanent settlement on Yaocomico lands at St. Mary's City.[18] With the support of the Virginia establishment, Claiborne made clear to Calvert that his allegiance was to Virginia and royal authority, and not to the proprietary authority in Maryland.[19] Some historical reports claim that Claiborne tried to incite the natives against the Maryland colonists by telling them that the settlers at St. Mary's were actually Spanish and enemies of the English, although this claim has never been proven.[20] In 1635, a Maryland commissioner named Thomas Cornwallis swept the Chesapeake for illegal traders and captured one of Claiborne's pinnaces in the Pocomoke Sound. Claiborne tried to recover it by force, but was defeated; although he retained his settlement on Kent Island. These were the first naval battles in North American waters, on 23 April and 10 May 1635; three Virginians were killed.[21] During these events, Governor John Harvey of Virginia, who had never been well liked by the Virginian colonists, had followed royal orders to support the Maryland settlement and, just before the naval battles in the Chesapeake, removed Claiborne from office as Secretary of State.[22] In response, Claiborne's supporters in the Virginia Assembly expelled Harvey from the colony.[23] Two years later, an attorney for Cloberry and Company, who were concerned that the revenues they were receiving from fur trading had not recouped their original investment, arrived on Kent Island. The attorney took possession of the island and bade Claiborne return to England, where Cloberry and Company filed suit against him. The attorney then invited Maryland to take over the island by force, which it did in December 1637. By March 1638 the Maryland Assembly had declared that all of Claiborne's property within the colony now belonged to the proprietor.[24] Maryland temporarily won the legal battle for Kent Island and won again when Claiborne's final appeal was rejected by the Privy Council in April 1638.[25] Parliamentary Commissioner and the second dispute with Maryland In May 1638, fresh from his defeat over Kent Island, Claiborne received a commission from the Providence Land Company, who were advised by his old friend Maurice Thomson, to create a new colony on Ruatan Island off the coast of Honduras in the Caribbean Sea. At the time, Honduras itself was a part of Spain's Kingdom of Guatemala, and Spanish settlements dominated the mainland of Central America. Claiborne optimistically called his new colony Rich Island, but Spanish power in the area was too strong and the colony was destroyed in 1642.[26] Soon after, the chaos of the English Civil War gave Claiborne another opportunity to reclaim Kent Island. The Calverts, who had received such constant support from the King, in turn supported the monarchy during the early stages of the parliamentary crisis. Claiborne found a new ally in Richard Ingle, a pro-Parliament Puritan merchant whose ships had been seized by the Catholic authorities in Maryland in response to a royal decree against Parliament. Claiborne and Ingle saw an opportunity for revenge using the Parliamentary dispute as political cover, and in 1644 Claiborne seized Kent Island while Ingle took over St. Mary's.[27] Both used religion as a tool to gain popular support, arguing that the Catholic Calverts could not be trusted. By 1646, however, Governor Leonard Calvert had retaken both St. Mary's and Kent Island with support from Governor Berkeley of Virginia, and, after Leonard Calvert died in 1648, Cecil Calvert appointed a pro-Parliament Protestant to take over as governor.[28] The rebellion and its religious overtones was one of the factors that led to passage of the landmark Maryland Toleration Act of 1649, which declared religious tolerance for Catholics and Protestants in Maryland.[29] In 1648 a group of merchants in London applied to Parliament for revocation of the Maryland charter from the Calverts.[30] This was rejected, but Claiborne received a final opportunity to reclaim Kent Island when he was appointed by the Puritan-controlled Parliament to a commission which was charged with suppressing Anglican disquiet in Virginia; Virginia in this case defined as "all the plantations in the Bay of the Chesapeake."[31] Claiborne and fellow commissioner Richard Bennett secured the peaceful submission of Virginia to Parliamentary rule, and the new Virginia Assembly appointed Claiborne as Secretary of the colony.[32] It also proposed to Parliament new acts which would give Virginia more autonomy from England, which would benefit Claiborne as he pressed his claims on Kent Island. He and Bennett then turned their attention to Maryland and, arguing again that the Catholic Calverts could not be trusted and that the charter gave the Calverts too much power, demanded that the colony submit to the Commonwealth.[32] Governor Stone briefly refused but gave in to Claiborne and the commission, and submitted Maryland to Parliamentary rule.[33] Claiborne made no overt legal attempts to re-assert control over Kent Island during the commission's rule of Maryland, although a treaty concluded during that time with the Susquehannocks claimed that Claiborne owned both Kent and Palmer Islands.[34] Claiborne's legal designs on Maryland were once again defeated when Oliver Cromwell returned Calvert to power in 1653, after the Rump Parliament ended.[35] In 1654, Governor Stone of Maryland tried to reclaim authority for the proprietor and declared that Claiborne's property and his life could be taken at the Governor's pleasure.[36] Stone's declaration was ignored and Claiborne and Bennett again overthrew him, creating a new assembly in which Catholics were not allowed to serve.[37] Calvert, now angry at Stone for what he perceived as weakness, demanded that Stone do something, and in 1655 Stone reclaimed control in St. Mary's and led a group of soldiers to Providence (modern Annapolis). Stone was captured and his force defeated by local Puritan settlers, who took control of the colony.[38] Given the new situation, Claiborne and Bennett went to England in hopes of convincing Cromwell to change his mind but, to their dismay, no decision was made and, lacking royal authority, the Puritans gave power over to a new governor appointed by Calvert.[39] Going behind Claiborne's back, Bennett and another commissioner reached an agreement with Calvert that virtually guaranteed his continued control over Maryland through the remainder of the Protectorate.[40] With no authority left in Maryland, Claiborne turned to his political offices in Virginia. However, as a consequence of his continuous conflict and disruption, over several years, of authority and government in both Maryland and Virginia in pursuit of his commercial interests, as well as his alliance with the Parliament faction during these activities, upon the restoration of the British monarchy in 1660 he had few friends left in government. Claiborne therefore retired from political affairs in 1660 and spent the remainder of his life managing his 5,000 acre (2,023 hectare) estate, "Romancoke", near West Point on the Pamunkey River, dying there in about 1677.[41] Family life and descendants In the midst of the political turmoil of the conflict over Kent Island, Claiborne married Elizabeth Butler of Essex, who would remain his wife at least through 1668.[5] Claiborne was also the forebear of a number of lines of American Claibornes, and among his descendants are William C. C. Claiborne, first governor of Louisiana, fashion designer Liz Claiborne,[42] the late minister Jerry Falwell, Folk musician/science and linguistics writer Robert Claiborne, and a number of political figures from Tennessee and Virginia.[43] Descendants of the Claiborne family have formed a society to advance the genealogical study of Claiborne's lineage Christen 10 AUG 1600 England, Kent, Crayford ? More on this location Links GENUKI County Page Immigrate 1621 VA ? More on this location Links Cyndislist.com State Page FamilySearch State Page Other 1621 VA ? More on this location Links Cyndislist.com State Page FamilySearch State Page surveyor for the Virginia Company of London Occup 1626 VA Secretary of State Occup 1642 VA Treasurer Claiborne was appointed by Charles I Treasurer of Virginia f Occup 1653 VA Governor Deputy Governor. Seated at "Romancoke," King William County, Virginia. Military 1653 VA Militia / Colonel CLAIBORNE was colonel of a command against the Indians History 1676 Bacon's Rebellion Member of court to try rebels. Barn av ELIZABETH BUTLER og COL./HON. CLAIBORNE er: 101. i. LTC THOMAS20 CLAIBORNE b 17.08.1647, New Kent Co Virginia Usa d 07.10.1683, Romancoke King William Co Virginia Usa. 102. ii. WILLIAM CLAIBORNE b 17.08.1636, New Kent, Virginia, British Colonial America d 07.10.1683, King William, Virginia, British Colonial America. 103. iii. MARY CLAIBORNE b 1630, King William Co Virginia Usa d 09.02.1708, Doswell Hanover Co Virginia Usa. 76. ELIZABETH19 BUTLER (JOHN18, CRESSET17 ST JOHN, MARGARET16 WALDEGRAVE, WILLIAM15, ELIZABETH14 FRAY, AGNES13 DANVERS, 1) ble født 1610 i Essex, England, d 1668 i New Kent Co Virginia Usa. m WILLIAM CLAIBORNE 1635 i Virginia, British Colonial America. b 10.08.1600 i Crayford, Kent, England, d 21.03.1677 i Romancoke, King William, Virginia, British Colonial America. Barn av ELIZABETH BUTLER og WILLIAM CLAIBORNE er: i. MARY20 CLAIBORNE b 1635, Prince William, Virginia, British Colonial America d 09.02.1709, Doswell, Hanover, Virginia, British Colonial America m ROBERT HARRIS b 1635, Henrico, Virginia, British Colonial America d 1701, New Kent Co Virginia Usa. 77. FRANCES19 WALDEGRAVE (NICHOLAS18, EDWARD17, JOHN16, EDWARD15, ELIZABETH14 FRAY, AGNES13 DANVERS, 1) ble født 1577 i Borley Essex England, d 01.02.1644 i Essex England. m RICHARD WESTON, son of JEROME WESTON og MARY CAVE. b 01.03.1577 i Roxelle Essex England, d 13.03.1635 i Wallingford House Whitehall Essex England.
2 William de Verney of Byfield-cum-Trafford, Northamptonshire b 1346-7 Langley Manor Shipton-under-Wychwood Oxford d 1400 Byfield Northampton a 1377
m1 Elizabeth Bereham b 1347 Langley + 3 ch dau of she m1 William Bowers
m2 Juliane
+1 Henry de Bereham III b 1285 Cranbrook Kent d 1352 Kent +2 Henry de Bereham Jr b 1258 Barham Kent d 1289 Cranbrook Kent
m Elizabeth Colepepper
+3 Henry de Bereham Sr b 1225 Barham Kent d 1289 Cranbrook Kent
-a Nicholas Colepeper
-b Walter Culpepper
-c Margaret Culpepper
-d Sir John Culpeper of Hardreshull and Bayhall
+3 Richard Colepepper b c 1307
m1 x
m2 Elizabeth
+4 Gilbert de Bereham b c 12�� Kent d 24 Jul 1255 Barham Kent
m Lucy de Ocholte b c 1202 Kent d c 1232
-b John Culpeper of Lynleigh
-c Walter Culpeper of Preston Hall
-d Nicholas Culpeper
+4 Sir Thomas Culpeper b c 1260 Brenchley Kent ex 1321 Winchelsea Sussex
m Margery Bayhall b 1265 Bay Hall Pepenbury Kent
+5 Warin de Bereham b 1175 Barham Kent d there 1210
m x Fitz-Urse
+5 Thomas de Ocholte b 1175
+5 Sir Thomas Culpeper de Brenchesie b 1230 Brenchley Kent d 1309 Brenchesie
+5 John de Bayhall b 1260 Bayhall Manor pembury Kent
m Joanna b 1266
+6 Richard FitzUrse b 1155 Kent son of Richard FitzUrse and Maud de Boulers b 1097 Northamptonshire d 1138
+6 Sir John Colpeper de Brenchesle b 1200 Bay Hall Pepenbury Kent d 1286
m Joanna b c 1208 Kent d 1248
+6 William de Bayhall b 1230 Bayhall Pembury Kent
A John de Verney b c 1369 ?Langley Manor - continued below
m Alice b c 1379 d c 1419 Langley Manor
B Alice de Verney b c 1385 Byfield Northampton d 1429 Shipton-under-Wychwood
m John Danvers b c 1382 Colthorpe Oxford d 3 Jan 1448 Banbury
+1 Richard Danvers/d`Anvers b 1330 Ipswell Oxford d there 1409
Agnes de Bancestra b c 1350 Ipwell Oxford d there 1395
-a Alice d'Anvers b Apr 1286 Ipswell m Geoffrey de Stokes b 1284
-a-1 Katherine de Stokes b c 1305 Scrivelsby Lancashire m Thomas de Ludlowe of Scrivelsby b c 1299 Lincolnshire d 1336 Scrivelsby Lincoln
-a-1-1 Margaret Ludlow b c 1327, d c 1415
m Sir John Dymoke d 1381 Through this marriage, the Dymoke family obtained the hereditary position of being the King's Champion of which the main requirement was to meet any challengers at the King's Coronation.
-a-1-2 John de Ludlow b c 1330 dsp
-a-2 Geoffrey de Stokes
-b Isabel d'Anvers b c Apr 1289 Ipswell m William de Rufford
+2 John d'Anvers of Bourton & Ipswell b c 1295 Ipswell Oxford d there 1347
m Isabel la Lee b c 1349 Epwell Oxford d c 1384 Ipswell
+2 Sir John de Brancestre bc 1348 Oxfordshire d 1391 Colthorpe Manor Banbury Oxford
m Margaret Mile b c 1360 d c 1392 Doncaster S York she m1 William de WElham
+3 Simon d'Anvers of Bourton & Tetworth b c 1256 Tetsworth Oxford d c 1331 Parva Bourton Oxford
m Alice Opswell b Apr 1262 Ipswell Oxford d there 1364
+3 William de la Lee of Swalcliffe b c 1273 Ipwell d aft 1347 Ipswell
m Isabel x
+3 John de Brancestre b c 1319 London m x Houghton
+3 Henry Mile/Maule b c 1330 Oxfordshire
-b Richard d'Anvers b c 1227 Tetsworth Oxford
+4 Robert d'Anvers of Bourton, Ipswell & Chiselhampton b c 1225 Tetsworth d there 1274
+4 Alan de Brancestre b c 1280 St Andrews Castle Baynard d c 1300? m Imania
+4 Walter de Maule
-a Geoffrey d'Anvers b c 1195 Tetsworth and Bourton Oxford
-c Nicholas d'Anvers of Fanflore b c 1199
-d Ralph d'Anvers b c 1201
+5 William d'Anvers of Bourton & Chiselhampton b 1197 Tetsworth
m Matilda Thalmasche b c 1201 Tetsworth d there 1250
+6 Robert d'Anvers of of Bourton & Chiselhampton b 1172 Tetsworth d there 1223
-b Ralph Danvers b c 1174 Tetsworth
-c William Danvers Jr b c 1176 Tetsworth Oxford
-d Roger Danvers b c 1178
-e Walter Danvers b c 1180
+6 Richard Talemasche
m Amicia Taillard of Gharlbury b 1177
+7 Sir William d'Alvers of Bourton b c 1135 Tetsworth Oxford d there 1197
m Emma Chevauchesul b c 1142 Tetsworth d there 1200 dau of
+7 Lord Petrus de Talmescha/Talmage b c 1090 Stoke Talmage Oxford d 1151
m 1st cousin Matilda Chevauchesul b 1120 Chard Somerset
+8 Sir Robert d'Anvers/d'Alvers of Bourton b c 1109 d 1145 Tetsworth Bourton
+8 Awcher Chevauchesul b c 1116 Normandy d 1145 Tetsworth
m Mabilia Talesmasche b c 1118 Tetsworth d there 1145
-a Sir Roland d'Anvers of Little Marlow b c 1085
-a-1 Sir Raufe d'Anvers of Little Marlow b c 1120
-a-1-1 Sir Roland d'Alvers of Little Marlow b c 1140
-a-1-1-1 Sir Raufe d'Anvers of Little Marlow b c 1145
-a-1-1-1-1 Sir Raufe d'Anvers of Little Marlow & Hitcham b c 1170 m Neimuit
-a-1-1-1-1-1 William d'Anvers of Little Marlow b c 1200 had Hugh and John
-a-1-2 Sir Raufe d'Alvers of Winterbourn
-c Ralph d'Anvers b c 1089 Little Marlow Bucks
+9 Geoffrey d'Alvers b 1087 Bourton d there 1110
+9 Arthur Chevauchesul b c 1085 Chard Somerset
m Mabilia d�Oyly b c 1089 Chard Somerset
+9 Hugo Talesmasche b c 1065
m x St John b c 1092
-b Sir Roger d'Anvers of Soleburie and Wigham
-c Almar d'Anvers of Bourton
+10 Ranulph d'Alvers b c 1061 Normandy d Little Marlow Bucks
m Adelia le Poure b c 1063 ?Bourton d there dau of
+10 Robert d'Oyly, Constable of Oxford Castle
m Lady Ealdgyth/Algitha de Wallingford
-b Sir Roger d'Anvers of Soleburie and Wigham
-c Almar d'Anvers of Bourton
+11 Roland d'Alvers b 1027 Normandy/?Bretagne d 1081 Oxfordshire
+11 Humphrey le Poure
+12 Ralph d�Alvers b c 1010 Ploeuc-sur-Li�, Bretagne
B-1 -1
B-2 -1
B-3 B-4 -1
B-5 -1
C Anne de Verney
m Digby
ii Reported by geni.com was:
Roger de Verney of Madeley b c 1250 Madley Hereford d 1377
ii-1 Margaret Elizabeth de Verney b c 1273 Madley Hereford d aft 1293 Staffordshire
m Richard de Blithfield b 1269 Blithfield Staffors son of James de Blithfield
-1 Richard de Blithfield b c 1295 Staffordshire m Cecily
John de Verney b c 1369 ?Langley Manor escheator of Worcestershire - continued from above
m Alice b c 1379 d c 1419 Langley Manor
1. Sir Richard Verney of Compton, Warwickshire b 1403 Compton Verney d 1489-90
m Eleanor Loutham dau/heir of
+1 John Loutham of Northampton
A. Edmund Verney b c1440, d 26.02.1494, escheator of Warwickshire & Leicestershire
m Elizabeth Fielding dau of Sir William Fielding
i. Richard Verney of Compton d 28.09.1527
m Anne Danvers dau of judge William Danvers
a. Sir Thomas Verney of Compton
m Alice Tame sister/coheir of Sir Edmund Tame of Fairford
1 Sir Richard Verney of Compton d 26.07.1566-7
This is probably the Sir Richard who was, so it appears, confused with the Sir Richard, Sheriff of Warwickshire & Leicestershire, who was younger brother of Sir Edmund Verney of Penley and Middle Claydon, ancestor of the Earls Verney.
m Frances Raleigh dau of George Raleigh of Farnborough
A George Verney of Compton b c1544, d 08.04.1574
m Jane Lucy dau of William Lucy of Charlcot
i Sir Richard Verney of Compton Verney b 1563, d 07.08.1630
m Margaret Grevillle, de jure Baroness Willoughby de Broke b c1561, d 26.03.1631, dau of Sir Fulke Greville, de jure 5th Lord Willoughby de Broke
B Dorothy Verney
m _ Danvers
C Eleanor Verney
m _ Roydon
D+ other issue - Richard, John, Stephen
2+ other issue - Peter, Timothy
b. Anne Verney
m Edward Odingsells of Long Itchington d 1523
-1 Edmund Odingsells b 1502 d 2 Sep 1558 m Anne Tresham
c.+ 8 sons and 4 daughters
ii. Elizabeth Verney
m Thomas Grey of Enville
iii.+ other issue - Leonard, Michael
B. Anne Verney
m Sir Richard Montfort
2. John Verney a 1432, dsp, rector of Breedon, Dean of Litchfield
possibly of this family and generation Ralph Verney
from http://www.tudorplace.com.ar/VERNEY.htm
VERNEY FAMILY
I. PENDLEY LINE
Ve23.Ralph De VERNEY , Born: BEF 1246, Died: AFT 1279,
m Agnes De HOMMET
Ve22 Robert De VERNEY, Died: 1322 , Married: ¿?
Ve21 John De VERNEY , Died: AFT 1322 , Married: ¿?
Ve20 John De VERNEY , Died: AFT 1378 , Married: ¿?
Ve19 Edward VERNEY , Father: John De VERNEY , Mother: ¿? , Married: ¿?
Ve18 Ralph VERNEY , Died: 1446/1447 , Married: ¿?
Ve17 Ralph VERNEY Lord Mayor of London , Born: ABT 1410, Fleet Marston, Buckinghamshire, England , Died: 11 Jun 1478 , Buried:25 Jun 1478,St. Martin Pomeroy, London, Middlesex, England , Notes: Lord Mayor London. The king in 1472, in consideration of the good services of Ralph Verney, removed the attainder upon Sir Robert Whittingham, whose daughter and heir Margaret had married Ralph Verney's son John, whereupon Margaret succeeded to Pendley, subject to the life-interest of Thomas Montgomery. John Verney died seised of the manor in right of Margaret, who survived him, in 1505, and was succeeded by his son Ralph Verney, who was subsequently knighted. Sir Ralph died in 1525, leaving his son Ralph a minor. He died in l556, and the manor came to his son Edmund, a minor at the time of his father's death. The wardship and marriage of Edmund and an annuity from the manor were granted in l547 to Sir Edmund Peckham. Edmund Verney seems to have fallen into disgrace under Queen Mary, and was in 1553 ordered to keep to his house during the Queen's pleasure. He died in 1558, without leaving issue, and the manor came to his third brother, Edmund Verney, jun., who died seised of it in 1600, leaving his son Francis a minor. Edmund's second wife Mary survived him, and having persuaded her husband before his death to divide the inheritance between her son Edmund and her stepson Francis, an Act of Parliament was obtained to ratify this, and on the attainment of his majority Sir Francis tried to obtain a reversal of it. He failed to do so, however, and after selling his inheritance he went abroad, and dissipated it. He was an associate of Richard Giffard, captain of a pirate fleet, and died at the Hospital of St. Mary of Pity at Messina in 1615. The manor of Pendley had been sold in 1606/7 by Mary Verney and Sir Francis and Ursula his wife to Richard Anderson, from whom the manor descended in the same way as Wiggington q.v. , In 1506 it was stated that about eighty years before, Pendley was 'a great town, whereof part lay in the parish of Tring and part in the parish of Aldbury. The part in the parish of Tring was held of the Archbishop of Canterbury as of his manor of Tring and the part in the parish of Aldbury of the manor of Aldbury, At that time there was no great mansion-house there, but there were in the town above thirteen plows besides divers handicraft men, as tailors, shoemakers and cardmakers with divers others. The town was afterwards cast down and laid to pasture by Sir Robert Whittingham, who built the said place at the west end there as the town sometimes stood, for the town was in the east and south part of the same place'. From further proceedings it seems that Sir Robert Whittingham also ploughed up a common way and in 1491/2 vestiges of the hedges still remained.
m Emma PYKING ABT 1435, Fleet Marston, Buckinghamshire, England
Ve16 Margaret VERNEY , Born: ABT 1445, London, Middlesex, England, Died: AFT 1478 / 20 Jun 1509, Farnborough, Warwickshire, England
m Sir Edward Raleigh 1467 Sir Edward Raleigh born 20 Jan 1443 Thornborough, Warwickshire,d before 20 Jun 1509 in Farneborough, Warwickshire, son of William Raleigh Ra17 and Elizabeth Greene Gr17
Ra15-1 Sir Edward Raleigh
Ra15-2 Emma Raleigh
Ra15-3 Anne Raleigh
Ra15-4 Alice Raleigh
Ra15-5 Joan Raleigh
Ra15 Anthony Raleigh
Ra15 Mary Raleigh b 1487 d 20 Mar 1576 Wantage Berks
m Sir Nicholas Wodhull b c 1482 Warkworth Northampton d there 5 May 1551 son of Baron Fulke Woodhull and Anne Newenham he m2 Elizabeth
-1 Anthony Wahull b c 1517 Warkworth d 4 Feb 1542 m Anne Smith b 1520 Essex dau of Sir John Smith of Cressing Temple and Agnes
-2 Joyce Wodhull
-1-1 Agnes Woodhull b c b 18 Jan 1541 Warkworth d 29 Mar 1576 Hocliffe Bedford m1 Richard Chetwode b 1530 Worleston Cheshire d 1560 West London son of Roger Chetwode and Ellen Masterson, MP m2 Sir George Calverley, MP -1-1-1 Richard Chetwood, II b 1560 d 1631 m1 Jane Drury b 1561 Warkworth dau of Sir William Drury MP and Margaret Wentworth m2 Dorothy Needham b 1570 Shavington Cheshire East d aft 1629 dau of Robert Needhamof Shenton Ne11 d 18 Dec 1603 Sheriff of Shropshire and FrancesAston dau of Sir Edward Aston
-1-1-2 James Chetwode
-1-1-1-1 Anne Chetwood b 1581 Staffordshire m Sir Giles Bray
-1-1-1-2 Grace Chetwood b 1602 Odell Bedford d 21 Apr 1669 New London CT m REv Peter Bulkeley
-1-1-2-1 Henry Chetwood
-1-1-1-1-1
Ve16-2 Beatrice VERNEY , Born: ABT 1449, Fleet Marston, Buckinghamshire, England , Died: AFT 1478
m Henry DANVERS son of John Danvers and Joan Bruley ABT 1464, Middle Clayton, Berkshire, England
Ve16-2-1 Agnes DANVERS, b. ABT 1465
Ve16-2-2 Emma DANVERS, b. ABT 1469
Ve16-2-3 John DANVERS, b. ABT 1471
Ve16-2-4 Paul DANVERS, b. ABT 1473
Ve16-2- Dorothy DANVERS b. ABT 1479 m. Thomas Darrell
Ve16-3 John VERNEY Sir Knight , Born: 1450, Fleet Marston, Buckinghamshire, England , Died: 1505 , Buried:Albury, Hertfordshire, England
m- Margaret WHITTINGHAM dau. of Robert Whittingham and Catherine ? ABT 1475, Fleet Marston, Buckinghamshire, England
Ve16-3-1 SirRalph VERNEY of Pendley Sir, Born: ABT 1482, Middle Claydon, Buckinghamshire, England, Died: 8 May 1525, Buried: 20 May 1525, Albury, Hertfordshire, England
m1 Margaret IWARDBY ABT 1507, Quainton, Buckinghamshire, England
Ve16-3-1-1
Sir Ralph VERNEY, Born: 1509, Pendley Manor, Tring, Hertfordshire, England, Died: 1546, Buried: Albury, Hertfordshire, England,
Married: Elizabeth BRAY 1528/9, Hertford, England , Children:
1. Sir Edmund VERNEY
2. Edmund VERNEY
3. Anne VERNEY
4. Frances VERNEY b. ABT 1529 - d. 1543
5. John VERNEY
6. Jane VERNEY
7. Francis VERNEY
8. Ralph VERNEY
9. Urian VERNEY
10. Richard VERNEY

m2 Anne WESTON ABT 1509, Boston, Lincolnshire, England
Ve16-3-1-2 Anne VERNEY, Born: 1514, Pendley Manor, Tring, Hertfordshire, England
m1 William CAVE
m2 Thomas GREY ABT 1538 Enville, Stafford, England,
Ve16-3-1-2-1 Catherine GREY
Ve16-3-1-2-2 Eleanor GREY
Ve16-3-1-2-3 John GREY
Ve16-3-1-2-4 Edward GREY
Ve16-3-1-2-5 George GREY
Ve16-3-1-2-6 Elizabeth GREY
Ve16-3-1-2-7 Robert GREY
Ve16-3-1-2-8 Son GREY
Ve16-3-1-2-9 Margaret GREY
Ve16-3-1-2-10 Dau. GREY
Ve16-3-1-2-11 Jane GREY
Ve16-3-1-3 Catherine VERNEY, Born: 1516, Pendley Manor, Tring, Hertfordshire, England, Died: 22 Jul 1553
m John CONWAY of Arrow Sir
Ve16-3-1-3-1 John CONWAY Sir Knight m. Helen Eleanor Greville See his Biography
Ve16-3-1-4 Edmund VERNEY
Ve16-3-1-5 Son VERNEY
Ve16-3-1-6 Son VERNEY
Ve16-3-1-7 Francis VERNEY
Ve16-3-1-8 Eleanor VERNEY
m Married: John GREVILLE 1 Sep 1527
m3 Elizabeth BROUGHTON
Ve16-3-2 John VERNEY b. 1485
Ve16-3-3 Robert VERNEY b. ABT 1489
Ve16-3-4 Anne VERNEY, Born: ABT 1493, Middle Claydon, Buckinghamshire, England , Married: Son DAME ABT 1512
Ve16-4 Ralph VERNEY , Born: ABT 1452, Fleet Marston, Buckinghamshire, England, Died: 6 Jul 1528, King's Langley, Hertfordshire, England
m Eleanor POLE ABT 1477, Fleet Marston, Buckinghamshire, England
Ve16-4-1 John VERNEY , Born: 1488, King's Langley, Hertfordshire, England, Died: 22 Jul 1540
m1 1: ¿? ABT 1510, Mortlake, Surrey, England
Ve16-4-1-1 Robert VERNEY b. ABT 1512 - d. BEF 1547
Ve16-4-1-2 Mary VERNEY , Born: 1516, Mortlake, Surrey, England
m2 Dorothy ?
m Lewis REYNOLDS BEF 1547
Ve16-3-1-1. Sir Ralph VERNEY, continued from above
m Elizabeth BRAY
Ve16-3-1-1-1 Edmund VERNEY, Born: 1529, Pendley Manor, Tring, Hertfordshire, England, Died: 13 Dec 1558
Father: Ralph VERNEY Sir
Mother: Elizabeth BRAY
Married: Dorothy PECKHAM dau. of Edmund Peckham
Ve16-3-1-1-2 Edmund VERNEY Sir, Born: 1535, Pendley Manor, Tring, Hertfordshire, England, Died: 11 Jan 1599, Chalfont, St.Giles, Stonehouse, Buckinghamshire, England, Buried: 15 Feb 1599/1600, Aldbury, Hertfordshire, England, Notes: his third wife, Mary Blackeney, persuaded him to divide some property settled on Francis by his uncle with young Edmund and married Francis to her daughter in 1599. As soon as he came of age, however, Sir Francis petitioned the House of Commons to overturn these arrangements. He lost the case, but rather than let his stepmother's plan succeed, he sold his estates in 1607 and by 1608 had left England. He never returned to his homeland or to the wife forced upon him.
Married 1: Frances HASTINGS ABT 1583, Elford, Oxfordshire, England
Children:
1. Francis VERNEY Sir
Married 2: Audrey GARDNER, dau. of Sir John Gardner w. of Sir Peter Carew ABT 1583, Fulmer, Buckinghamshire, England
Married 3: Mary BLACKENEY b. ABT 1540 - d. AFT 1600 dau. of John Blackeney of Sparham w.1 of Geoffrey Turville of New Park Hall - w.2 of William St. Barbe of Broadlands ABT 1589, Sparrowham, Norfolkshire, England
Children: 2. Edmund VERNEY Sir
Ve16-3-1-1-2-1 Francis VERNEY Sir, Born: 1583, Pendley Manor, Tring, Hertfordshire, England, Died: 6 Sep 1615, Messina, Italy
Married: Ursula St. BARBE b. 1587 - d. 1670 dau. of William St. Barbe of Broadlands and Mary Blackeney 4 Jun 1599
Ve16-3-1-1-3 Anne VERNEY, Born: ABT 1538, Pendley Manor, Tring, Hertfordshire, England, Died: BEF 1575
m Nicholas POYNTZ Sir Knight 12 May 1555, Pendley, Hertfordshire, England
Ve16-3-1-1-3-1 Ursula POYNTZ
Ve16-3-1-1-3-2 Mary POYNTZ
Ve16-3-1-1-3-3 John POYNTZ Sir
Ve16-3-1-1-5 John VERNEY, Born: ABT 1531, Pendley Manor, Tring, Hertfordshire, England, Died: BEF 1558
Ve16-3-1-1-6 Jane VERNEY, Born: ABT 1532, Pendley Manor, Tring, Hertfordshire, England, Married: Francis HYNDE
Ve16-3-1-1-7 Francis VERNEY, Born: 1531, Pendley Manor, Tring, Hertfordshire, England, Died: 1559/60, Buried: 6 Feb 1559/60, St. Andrew's, Holborn, Notes: See his Biography.
Married 1: Margaret VAUX 2 Apr 1548
Married 2: Mary DUNCOMBE ABT 1560, Morton in Dinton, Buckinghamshire, England
Ve16-3-1-1-9 ,Urian VERNEY , Born: ABT 1538, Pendley Manor, Tring, Hertfordshire, England, Died: 14 Jan 1608, Buried: Jan 1608, Middle Claydon, Buckinghamshire, England
Married: Lettice GIFFARD, BEF 1 Nov 1593, Claydon House, Buckinghamshire, England, Children:
1. Edmund VERNEY
Edmund VERNEY Sir Born: 7 Apr 1596, Died: 23 Oct 1642, battle of Edgehill , Notes: although he disapproved of and voted against the policies of Charles I, Verney's personal loyalty to the King was such that he fought for the Royalist side in the Civil War. His family was divided, as his eldest son supported Parliament. Appointed standard-bearer, Verney killed sixteen Parliamentarians at the Battle of Edgehill before meeting his own death. His hand was later found still grasping the standard, but his body was never recovered.
Father: Edmund VERNEY Sir , Mother: Mary BLACKENEY
m Margaret DENTON> dau. of
-1 Ralph VERNEY 1° Bt. b. 1613
-2 Richard VERNEY
-3 Mary VERNEY
-4 Susan VERNEY
-5 Henry VERNEY
-6 Carey VERNEY
-7 Penelope VERNEY
-8 John VERNEY
-9 Elizabeth VERNEY
-10 Margaret VERNEY
-11 Thomas VERNEY
-12 Edmund VERNEY
II. COMPTON VERNEY LINE
William de VERNAI, Born: ABT 1045, Normandy, France , Married: ¿? ABT 1070, Normandy, France
1 William de VERNEY , Born: ABT 1076, Bramshall, Staffordshire, England, Married: ¿? ABT 1101, Bramshall, Staffordshire, England
Roger de VERNEY, Born: ABT 1109, Bramshall, Staffordshire, England
Married: ¿? ABT 1134, Bramshall, Staffordshire, England
Roger de VERNEY, Born: ABT 1140, Bramshall, Staffordshire, England
Married: ¿? ABT 1165, Bramshall, Staffordshire, England
Simon de VERNEY , Born: ABT 1172, Bramshall, Staffordshire, England,
m Agnes BAGOT dau. of William Bagot ABT 1187, Bramshall, Staffordshire, England
Harvey de VERNEY, Born: ABT 1188, Bramshall, Staffordshire, England , Married: ¿? ABT 1213, Bramshall, Staffordshire, England
Richard de VERNEY , Born: ABT 1221, Madley, Herfordshire, England , Married: ¿? ABT 1246, Madley, Herclordshire, England
Simon de VERNEY , Born: ABT 1256, Byfield, Northamptonshire, England , Married: ¿? ABT 1277, Byfield, Northamptonshire, England
William de VERNEY , Born: ABT 1290, Byfield, Northamptonshire, England , Died: 1360
2 Simon VERNEY , Born: ABT 1347, Langley Manor, Shipton Under Wychwood, Oxfordshire, England , Died: 1 Oct 1367
1 William VERNEY , Born: 1344, Langley Manor, Shipton Under Wychwood, Oxfordshire, England
m1 Elizabeth ? ABT 1368, Langley Manor, Shipton Under Wychwood, Oxfordshire, England
1 John VERNEY , Born: ABT 1369, Langley Manor, Shipton-Under-Wychwood, Oxford, Father: William VERNEY , Mother: Elizabeth ?
m Alice ? ABT 1394, Langley Manor, Shipton Under Wyckwood, Oxfordshire, England
1 Richard VERNEY , Born: ABT 1403, Compton Verney, Warwickshire, England, Died: 5 Feb 1489,
m Eleanor LOUTHAM ABT 1433, Compton Verney, Warwickshire, England
2 John VERNEY Born: ABT 1418, Compton Verney, Warwickshire, England Died: 1457 Father: John VERNEY Mother: Alice ?
m2 Juliana ?
2 Alice VERNEY, Born: ABT 1381, Byfield, Northamptonshire, England , Father: William VERNEY , Mother: Juliana ?
m John DANVERS
1 Anne DANVERS m. Reginald Digby
1 Richard VERNEY continued from above, Born: ABT 1403, Compton Verney, Warwickshire, England , Died: 5 Feb 1489
m Eleanor LOUTHAM ABT 1433, Compton Verney, Warwickshire, England
1 Edmund VERNEY, Born: 1441, Compton Verney, Warwickshire, England , Died: 26 Feb 1495 , Buried: 20 May 1495
m Elizabeth FIELDING b. 1432 - d. 1507 dau. of William Fielding and Agnes De St. Liz ABT 1466, Compton Verney, Warwickshire, England
1 Richard VERNEY, Born: ABT 1464, Compton Verney, Warwickshire, England , Died: 28 Sep 1527 , Buried: 29 Jan 1527/8, Compton, Warwickshire, England ,
m Anne DANVERS dau. of William Danvers and Anne Pury ABT 1489, Compton Verney, Warwickshire, England
1 Anne VERNEY, Born: ABT 1482, Compton Verney, Warwickshire, England , Died: 1523 ,
m Edward ODINGSELLS son of Gerald Odingsells and Margaret Sharpe ABT 1500, Long, Itchington, Warwickshire, England
1 Edmund ODINGSELLS b. ABT 1502 - d. 2 Sep 1558
m Anne Tresham
2 >Thomas VERNEY, Born: ABT 1490, Compton Verney, Warwickshire, England ,
m Alice TAME d. BEF 1545 son of Edmund Tame of Fairford and Catherine ? ABT 1515, Compton Verney, Warwickshire, England ,
1 Richard VERNEY , Born: ABT 1516, Compton Verney, Warwickshire, England ,
m Frances RALEIGH ABT 1541, Compton Verney, Warwickshire, England
1 George VERNEY , Born: ABT 1543, Compton Verney, Warwickshire, England , Died: 8 Apr 1574 , Buried: Compton Verney, Warwickshire, England ,
m Jane LUCY dau. of William Lucy and Anne Fermor ABT 1559, Charlecote, Warwickshire, England
1 Richard VERNEY, Born: ABT 1560, Compton Verney, Warwickshire, England , Died: 7 Aug 1630 , Buried: 8 Nov 1631, Alcester, Warwickshire, England , Notes: Richard of Compton - Mordak , Warwickshire, Eng. He predeceased his wife, she may have remarried. Sir Richard whilst Sheriff of Warwickshire pursued and captured the members of the Gunpowder Plot at Holbech House.
mMargaret GREVILLE 29 Oct 1582, Alcester, Warwickshire, England
1Elizabeth VERNEY
2Greville VERNEY

Born: ABT 1588, Compton Verney, Warwickshire, England

Died: 12 May 1642, Buried: St. Margaret's, Westminster, Middlesex, England

mCatherine SOUTHWELL 13 May 1618, St. Margaret's, Westminster, Middlesex, England
1 Greville VERNEY
2John VERNEY ,
3Elizabeth VERNEY
4Son VERNEY
5George VERNEY
6 Son VERNEY
7Anne VERNEY
8Margaret VERNEY
9Mary VERNEY
10Richard VERNEY
3John VERNEY, Born: ABT 1589, Compton Verney, Warwickshire, England

Died: BEF 1641

mElizabeth BERKELEY ABT 1614, Compton Murdock, Warwickshire, England ,
1
4Mary VERNEY, Born: ABT 1590, Compton Verney, Warwickshire, England,
mRichard SAMWELL
5Anne VERNEY, Born: ABT 1592, Compton Verney, Warwickshire, England,
mJohn BRITTON
6Richard VERNEY
7George VERNEY, Born: ABT 1598, Compton Verney, Warwickshire, England , Died: BEF 2 Dec 1644,
mTriphenia SHEFFIELD ABT 1523, Butterwicke, Lincolnshire, England
1Richard VERNEY b. ABT 1628 - d. 11 Aug 1752
8Margaret VERNEY, Born: ABT 1601, Compton Verney, Warwickshire, England

Died: BEF 1641,

mRobert SHIRLEY
2 Elizabeth VERNEY, Born: ABT 1566, Compton Verney, Warwickshire, England , Died: 18 Jan 1612
m John BOURCHIER
1 Mary BOURCHIER b. ABT 1598 - d. Henrico County, Virginia m. Jabez Whitaker ABT 1616
2 Richard VERNEY
3 Dorothy VERNEY, Born: ABT 1546, Compton Verney, Warwickshire, England , Buried: 2 Oct 1590, Banbury, Oxfordshire, England
m John DANVERS b. 1546 - d. ABT 1591 dau. George Danvers and Margaret Doyley ABT 1570, Compton Verney, Warwickshire, England
1 George DANVERS b. ABT 1569 - d. 1630 m.1 Margaret Wake - m.2 Maria Edolphe
2 John DANVERS b. ABT 1571 m. Mary White
3 Elizabeth DANVERS b. ABT 1573
4 Margaret DANVERS b. ABT 1575
5 Mary DANVERS b. ABT 1577 m. Abel Roswell
6 Anne DANVERS b. ABT 1579 m. Son White
4 Eleanor Elizabeth VERNEY , Born: ABT 1547, Compton Verney, Warwickshire, England Married: Son ROYDON
5 John VERNEY
6 Stephen VERNEY
2 Peter VERNEY ,
3 Timothy VERNEY
4 Edmund VERNEY
5 Thomas VERNEY
6 Elizabeth VERNEY
3 John VERNEY
4 George VERNEY b. ABT 1506 - d. BEF 1540
2 Leonard VERNEY
3 Elizabeth VERNEY, Born: ABT 1470, Compton Verney, Warwickshire, England ,
m Thomas Grey
4 Thomas VERNEY
5 Michael VERNEY
2 Anne VERNEY, Born: 1443, Compton Verney, Warwickshire, England ,
2 Richard MONTFORD
3 Elizabeth VERNEY, Born: 1445, Compton Verney, Warwickshire, England
m John GRESWOLD
1 Richard GRESWOLD
probably of this family Cecily VERNEY, Born: ABT 1495, Penley, Hertfordshire, England,
m Edward CHAMBERLAIN Sir Knight b. 1480 - d. 10 Sep 1543 son of Richard Chamberlayne, Esq., and Sybill Fowler
1 1. Leonard CHAMBERLAIN of Shirburn Castle Sir Knight d. 1561 m. Dorothy Newdigate
2 Mary CHAMBERLAIN ,
3 Sybill CHAMBERLAIN m. Son Sccudamore
4 Margaret CHAMBERLAIN m. Ralph Kingston
5 Ralph CHAMBERLAIN m. Dau. Sccudamore
6 Mary CHAMBERLAIN m. Ralph Giffard
7 Edward CHAMBERLAIN m. Elizabeth Lawrence
probably of this family ,John VERNEY, Born: ABT 1504, Married: ¿?
,Sir Henry VERNEY, Born: ABT 1530, Fairfield, Somerset, England, Married: ¿?
Elizabeth VERNEY , Born: ABT 2 Sep 1557/8, Fairfield, Stoke Courey, Somersetshire, England, Notes: some sources call her Eleanor. She was god-daughter of Queen Elizabeth.
William PALMER Sir ABT 1575, Parham, Sussex, England,
Married 2: Sir John PALMER ABT 1579, Parham, Sussex, England
-1 Catherine PALMER
-2 Thomas PALMER Sir
-3 Abraham PALMER
-4 Walter PALMER
-5 Sarah PALMER
-6 William PALMER
-7 John PALMER b. 1589
-8 John PALMER
-9 Nathaniel PALMER
Sources: Collins 1812, vol 6, Willoughby de Broke and Visitation Warwickshire, 1619, Verney