39921162. Sir Robert de Chaucombe
1Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists (Genealogical Publishing Co., Baltimore, MD, 7th Ed, 1999), page 78, Line 81-29.
39921163. Lady Julian
1Cokayne, Complete Peerage (Sutton Publishing, 2000 ed.), Bassett, page 6.
identifies her as Robert's wife.
39921168. William de Cherlton
1Carl Boyer, 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Robert Abell (Carl Boyer, 3rd, P.O. Box 220333, Santa Clarita, CA 91322-0333), 57.
39921176. Gwenwynwyn ab Owain
1Carl Boyer, 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Robert Abell (Carl Boyer, 3rd, P.O. Box 220333, Santa Clarita, CA 91322-0333), 205.
39921177. Margaret Corbet
1Carl Boyer, 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Robert Abell (Carl Boyer, 3rd, P.O. Box 220333, Santa Clarita, CA 91322-0333), 205.
39921184. Hervey de Stafford
1Cokayne, Complete Peerage (Sutton Publishing, 2000 ed.), XII/1:171 (Stafford).
39921185. Petronilla de Ferrers
1Cokayne, Complete Peerage (Sutton Publishing, 2000 ed.), XII/1:171 (Stafford).
39921186. Thomas de Corbet 5th Baron of Caus
1Cokayne, Complete Peerage (Sutton Publishing, 2000 ed.), XII/1:172 (Stafford).
2Carl Boyer 3d, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans (Santa Clarita, CA 2000), 63 (Corbet).
39921187. Lady Isabel de Valletort
1Carl Boyer 3d, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans (Santa Clarita, CA 2000), 63 (Corbet).
2Cokayne, Complete Peerage (Sutton Publishing, 2000 ed.), III:417.
39921192. Ralph Basset
1Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists (Genealogical Publishing Co., Baltimore, MD, 7th Ed, 1999), Line 55-29.
2Cokayne, Complete Peerage (Sutton Publishing, 2000 ed.), II:1 (note b).
39921195. Lady Nichole d'Albigny
1Cokayne, Complete Peerage (Sutton Publishing, 2000 ed.), II:1.
39921200. Henry de Aldithley (Audley)
1Cokayne, Complete Peerage (Sutton Publishing, 2000 ed.), I:337 (Audley).
2Carl Boyer, 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Robert Abell (Carl Boyer, 3rd, P.O. Box 220333, Santa Clarita, CA 91322-0333), 8.
3Cokayne, Complete Peerage, I:337.
39921201. Bertred de Mainwaring
1Cokayne, Complete Peerage (Sutton Publishing, 2000 ed.), I:337.
"He [Henry of Aldithley] m. in 1217, Bertred de Mainwaring, da. of Ralf Mainwaring, Seneschal of Chester."2Cokayne, Complete Peerage, I:337.
39921202. Sir William de Longespée
1Frederick Lewis Weis, Magna Carta Sureties, 1215, (Genealogical Publishing Co. 5th ed. 1999), line 143-2.
2Cokayne, Complete Peerage (Sutton Publishing, 2000 ed.), V:382-83 (Salisbury).
"In 1236 he had taken the cross, and he was on crusade from June 1240 to early in 1242. ..In 1247, he again took the cross, starting in July 1249, as leader of the English crusaders. He fell, fighting heroically, at Mansura on the Nile."
39921203. Lady Idoine de Camville
1Cokayne, Complete Peerage (Sutton Publishing, 2000 ed.), V:382-83 (Salisbury).
2Frederick Lewis Weis, Magna Carta Sureties, 1215, (Genealogical Publishing Co. 5th ed. 1999), line 143-2.
39921208. Sir Gilbert de Clare 7th Earl of Clare, Earl of Hertford & Gloucester
1Frederick Lewis Weis, Magna Carta Sureties, 1215, (Genealogical Publishing Co. 5th ed. 1999), line 153-5.
2Frederick Lewis Weis, Magna Carta Sureties, 1215, line 153-5.
3Frederick Lewis Weis, Magna Carta Sureties, 1215, line 153-5.
4Frederick Lewis Weis, Magna Carta Sureties, 1215, page 185, line 153-5.
39921209. Isabel Marshal Countess of Clare, Hertford & Gloucester
1Frederick Lewis Weis, Magna Carta Sureties, 1215, (Genealogical Publishing Co. 5th ed. 1999), line 145-2.
39921210. John de Lacy Earl of Lincoln, 7th Baron of Halton
1Frederick Lewis Weis, Magna Carta Sureties, 1215, (Genealogical Publishing Co. 5th ed. 1999), page 73 (line 54).
2Carl Boyer 3d, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans (Santa Clarita, CA 2000), 211.
39921211. Margaret de Quincey Countess of Lincoln
1Carl Boyer 3d, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans (Santa Clarita, CA 2000), 211.
39921212. Henry III King of England
1Official Website of the British Monarchy, http://www.royal.gov.uk/index.htm, http://www.royal.gov.uk/history/plantage.htm.
Henry III Henry III (reigned 1216-1272), John's son, was only nine when he became King. By 1227, when he assumed power from his regent, order had been restored, based on his acceptance of Magna Carta. However, the King's failed campaigns in France (1230 and 1242), his choice of friends and advisers, together with the cost of his scheme to make one of his younger sons King of Sicily and help the Pope against the Holy Roman Emperor, led to further disputes with the barons and united opposition in Church and State. Although Henry was extravagant and his tax demands were resented, the King's accounts show a list of many charitable donations and payments for building works (including the rebuilding of Westminster Abbey which began in 1245). The Provisions of Oxford (1258) and the Provisions of Westminster (1259) were attempts by the nobles to define common law in the spirit of Magna Carta, control appointments and set up an aristocratic council. Henry tried to defeat them by obtaining papal absolution from his oaths, and enlisting King Louis XI's help. Henry renounced the Provisions in 1262 and war broke out. The barons, under their leader, Simon de Montfort, were initially successful and even captured Henry. However, Henry escaped, joined forces with the lords of the Marches (on the Welsh border), and Henry finally defeated and killed de Montfort at the Battle of Evesham in 1265. Royal authority was restored by the Statute of Marlborough (1267), in which the King also promised to uphold Magna Carta and some of the Provisions of Westminster."
"The Plantagenets2Frederick Lewis Weis, Magna Carta Sureties, 1215, (Genealogical Publishing Co. 5th ed. 1999), page 189, line 161-13.
3Frederick Lewis Weis, Magna Carta Sureties, 1215, page 189, line 161-13.
4Frederick Lewis Weis, Magna Carta Sureties, 1215, page 189, line 161-13.
39921213. Eleanor Countess of Provence, Queen of England
1Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists (Genealogical Publishing Co., Baltimore, MD, 7th Ed, 1999), line 111-30.
39921214. St. Ferdinand III King of Castile & León
1Website, http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/06042a.htm.
"St. Ferdinand III
King of Leon and Castile, member of the Third Order of St. Francis, born in 1198 near Salamanca; died at Seville, 30 May, 1252. He was the son of Alfonso IX, King of Leon, and of Berengeria, the daughter of Alfonso III, King of Castile, and sister of Blanche, the mother of St. Louis IX.
In 1217 Ferdinand became King of Castile, which crown his mother renounced in his favour, and in 1230 he succeeded to the crown of Leon, though not without civil strife, since many were opposed to the union of the two kingdoms. He took as his counsellors the wisest men in the State, saw to the strict administration of justice, and took the greatest care not to overburden his subjects with taxation, fearing, as he said, the curse of one poor woman more than a whole army of Saracens. Following his mother's advice, Ferdinand, in 1219, married Beatrice, the daughter of Philip of Swabia, King of Germany, one of the most virtuous princesses of her time. God blessed this union with seven children: six princes and one princess. The highest aims of Ferdinand's life were the propagation of the Faith and the liberation of Spain from the Saracen yoke. Hence his continual wars against the Saracens. He took from them vast territories, Granada and Alicante alone remaining in their power at the time of his death. In the most important towns he founded bishoprics, reestablished Catholic worship everywhere, built churches, founded monasteries, and endowed hospitals. The greatest joys of his life were the conquests of Cordova (1236) and Seville (1248). He turned the great mosques of these places into cathedrals, dedicating them to the Blessed Virgin. He watched over the conduct of his soldiers, confiding more in their virtue than in their valour, fasted strictly himself, wore a rough hairshirt, and often spent his nights in prayer, especially before battles. Amid the tumult of the camp he lived like a religious in the cloister. The glory of the Church and the happiness of his people were the two guiding motives of his life. He founded the University of Salamanca, the Athens of Spain. Ferdinand was buried in the great cathedral of Seville before the image of the Blessed Virgin, clothed, at his own request, in the habit of the Third Order of St. Francis. His body, it is said, remains incorrupt. Many miracles took place at his tomb, and Clement X canonized him in 1671. His feast is kept by the Minorites on the 30th of May."
(taken from the 1907 Catholic Encyclopedia).2Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists (Genealogical Publishing Co., Baltimore, MD, 7th Ed, 1999), 110-29.
3Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 110-29.
as to year only.
39921215. Joanna de Dammartin Countess de Ponthieu & d'Aumâle, Queen of Castille & Léon
1Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists (Genealogical Publishing Co., Baltimore, MD, 7th Ed, 1999), line 110-29.
39921280. Gilbert le Blount 4th Lord Ixworth
1Carl Boyer 3d, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans (Santa Clarita, CA 2000), 33 (le Blount).
2Carl Boyer 3d, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans, 33 (le Blount).
39921281. Lady Agnes de L'Isle
1Carl Boyer 3d, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans (Santa Clarita, CA 2000), 33 (le Blount).
39921282. Sir William le Blound
1Carl Boyer, 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Robert Abell (Carl Boyer, 3rd, P.O. Box 220333, Santa Clarita, CA 91322-0333), 28.