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A54500 Succint genealogies of the noble and ancient houses of Alno or de Alneto, Broc of Stephale, Latimer of Duntish, Drayton of Drayton, Mauduit of Westminster, Green of Drayton, Vere of Addington, Fitz-Lewes of Westhornedon, Howard of Effingham and Mordaunt of Turvey justified by publick records, ancient and extant charters, histories and other authentick proofs, and enriched with divers sculptures of tombs, images, seals, and other curiosities / by Robert Halstead. Peterborough, Henry Mordaunt, Earl of, 1624?-1697. 1685 (1685) Wing P1693; ESTC R21912 735,945 788

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into Possession of the Lordships of Estpullham Westpullham Childeckford Divelish Duntish Winterborn Whitechurch and Newton in the County of Dorset and of Estoket in Somersetshire His Wife was Margaret de Peche the Daughter of Sir William de Peche Knight who was Descended from that Gilbert de Peche that was a great * Look the Barons Letter to the Pope Baron in the time of King Edward the First Their Issue Sir John Latimer SIR JOHN LATIMER who is stiled in his Charters Lord of Estpullham had a Contest with his own Father about certain Lands which by Articles Sir Robert Latimer had bound himself to establish upon his Heirs at the time of his Marriage with Margaret the Mother of this Sir John who was the Daughter of Sir William Peche Knight by reason Sir Robert had burnt the Writings whereupon the Interest of these Lands did depend to make them appear free for an Advantage he intended to himself in a second Marriage which he did at that time design There is Extant a Bill Exhibited by Sir John Latimer complaining thereof to Thomas Langley Bishop of Durham and High Chancellor of England in the sixth year of King Henry the Fifth This Sir John Latimer Married Catharine the Daughter of Sir John Pypard by whom he left Issue Sir Nicholas Latimer SIR Nicholas Latimer we find to have been High Sheriff of the County of Dorset once in the thirty second of Henry the Sixth and again in the eleventh year of King Edward the Fourth and in those turbulent and difficult times this Office might have been indeed properly called Onus cum honore for the men so imployed were at that time sought out among the richest the most popular and the most powerful that the Country would not only obey at home but follow abroad and men then depending upon the Bounty and Hospitality of the Great their Inclinations and Example were of more force than all the Cases of Law and Conscience The Prudence notwithstanding and good Fortune of Sir Nicholas Latimer did happily conduct him through the violent Reigns of three very active Princes King Henry King Edward and King Richard the Third and brought him peacefully to rest with his Fathers in the Twentieth year of King Henry the Seventh at a very great Age although with that Circumstance of leaving no Heir Male to Inherit his Lands and Family and for only Issue of the Lady Joan his Wife the Daughter of Sir John Hoddy Edith Latimer Lady Mordaunt EDITH LATIMER Lady MORDAVNT Lady of Duntish Divelish Estpullham Childeckford Estoket and other Lands and Lordships EDITH LATIMER was by the Consent and Direction of her Father Married to Sir John Mordaunt in the fourteenth year of King Edward the Fourth between whom and Sir Nicholas Latimer several Agreements were made concerning his Inheritance But the hope of Male Issue and his Engagement in a second Marriage caused him so to protract the Settlement as being surpriz'd with Death he left his Estate under several great Incumbrances which notwithstanding the Kings Interest in the same upon pretence of some Debts due to him from the said Sir Nicholas were at last overcome and mastered by the Industry and Prudence of Sir John Mordaunt and the Lands and Lordships of Duntish Divelish Estpullham Childeckford and Estoket left by him to the Lords Mordaunts that were his Successors She outliv'd her first Husband and was again Married to Sir Thomas Carew of Devonshire who was slain in a Sea-Fight on the Coast of Britain in the fourth year of King Henry the Eighth being at that time Captain of the Noble Ship called the Regent which was burnt in the same Occasion Issue by her first Husband John the first Lord Mordaunt Robert Mordaunt William Mordaunt Joan Mordaunt Married to Sir Giles Strangeways of Dorsetshire WILLIAM Lord Latimer Surnamed le Riche ALICIA de Ledet William Ld. Latimer Sibill de Huntingfeild Sr. Iohn Latimer Second Sonne Ioane de Govis Sr. Nicolas Latimer William Ld. Latimer Elizabeth de Botetort Sr. Robert Latimer Catherine Hull William Latimer William Ld. Latimer Chamberlaine to E. 3 Elizabeth Fitz Allan Sr. Robert Latimer Margeret Peche Margeret Latimer Elizabeth Latimer Daughter and Heire Iohn Lord Nevill Sr. Iohn Latimer Catherine Pipard Sr Nicolas Latimer Ioane Hoddy Edith Latimer Sr. Iohn Mordaunt GENEALOGICAL PROOFS Of the HOUSE of LATIMER of Duntish Drawn out of Extant Charters Records Histories and other Authentick Testimonies GENEALOGICAL PROOFS Of the HOUSE of LATIMER of Duntish WILLIAM Lord LATIMER Lord Baron of CORBY Hollinshead Page ON the Kings part these persons are named to stand with him against the Barons First Roger Bigod Earl of Norfolk and Suffolk Humphrey de Bohun Earl of Hereford Hugh Bigod Lord Chief Justice Philip Basset William de Valence Jeffrey de Lusignian Peter de Savoy Robert Wallerand John Mancell Jeffrey Langley John Gray William Latimer Henry Percy Doctor Powel's History of Wales Page 371. WHen the Archbishop could not conclude a Peace he denounced the Prince and his Complices Accursed Then the King sent his Army by Sea to the Isle of Man or Anglesey which they won and slew such as resisted them for the chiefest men served the King as their Oath was So they came over against Bangor where the Arm of the Sea called Menay which divideth the Isle from the main Land is narrowest at the place called Moely-donn and there made a Bridge of Boats and Planks over the Water where before Julius Agricola did the like when he subdued the Isle to the Romans and not between Man and Britain as Polydore Virgil ignorantly affirms This Bridge accomplished so that well threescore men might pass over in a Front William Latimer with a great number of the best Souldiers and Lucas de Thany Steward of Gascony with his Gascoins and Spaniards whereof a great number was come to serve the King passed over the Bridge and there saw no stir of Enemies but as soon as the Sea began to flow down came the Welshmen from the Hills and set upon them fiercely and either slew or chased them to the Sea to drown themselves for the Water was so high they could not attain the Bridge saving William Latimer alone whose Horse carried him to the Bridge and so he escaped Henricus Knighton Canonicus Leicestriensis de Eventibus Angliae Pag. 2497. HIS auditis mox Rex Edwardus quingentos armatos viginti mille peditum misit in Vasconium cum Domino Johanne de Sancto Johanne qui ejusdem Terrae olim Senescallus extiterat cum Domino Johanne de Britanniâ illo Milite strenuissimo Willielmo le Latimer qui apud Portsmouth omnibus ad Expeditionem tantam necessariis paratis posuerunt se in mare circa Festum beati Petri ad vincula irruente vento contrario dispersae sunt naves per partes Cornubiae iterúmque collectae apud Plumeneye circa Festum beati Dionysii ventis vela iterum relaxabant post multa variáque Tempestatum discrimina
fieri fecimus patentes Teste meipso apud Oxford secundo die Septembris Anno Regni nostri sexto Per ipsum Regem de data praedicta autoritate Parliamenti Toung Irrotulatur in Memorandis Scaccarii de Anno nono Regis Henrici octavi videlicet inter Recorda de termino Sanctae Trinitatis rotulo ..... Ex parte Remem Thesaurum A Letter from King Henry the Eight to John Mordaunt To our trusty and welbeloved John Mordaunt Henry R. By the King TRusty and welbeloved we greet you well And forasmuch as we intend that our dearest Sister the Queen of Scots shall now shortly repair unto our City of London at whose coming our mind is That she be honourably accompanied and conveyed from Shire to Shire by such Noble-men and other Gentlemen as be Inhabitants of those paris amongst whom we have appointed you to accompany and attend upon our said Sister from the Town of Stony-stratford to Saint Albans We therefore will and desire you to put your self in a readiness so that against the Fourteenth day of April ye be at our said Town of Stonystratford there to meet with our said dearest Sister and from thence to attend upon her till her coming to the said Town of Saint Albans Not failing hereof as ye intend to do unto us honour and pleasure Given under our Signet at our Maner of Greenwich the Two and twentieth day of March. A Letter from King Henry the Eight to John Mordaunt To our trusty and welbeloved John Mordaunt Henry R. By the King TRusty and welbeloved we greet you well And forasmuch as we understand that at the time of the late repair hither of our dearest Sister the Queen of Scots ye according to our Letters to you then Addressed right thankfully acquitted your self in giving your Attendance for Her conducting and honourable conveyance We therefore give unto you our special thanks And where it is appointed that our said dearest Sister shall now return unto the Realm of Scotland we will and desire you to put your self in a readiness likewise to accompany and conduct her at this her said return from our Castle of Windsor where she intendeth to be the Sixteenth day of this Moneth so to attend upon her to Stony-stratford whereby ye shall deserve a further thanks to be remembred accordingly Given under our Signet at our Maner of Richmond the Eight day of May. A Letter from King Henry the Eight to John Mordaunt To our trusty and welbeloved John Mordaunt Henry R. By the King TRusty and welbeloved we greet you well Forasmuch as a right-great and Honourable Ambassaor shall within short time repair unto our Presence out of France at which season it is requisite and right expedient that our Court be Honourably furnished with Lords and other Nobles for the receiving and entertaining of the said Ambassador We therefore have appointed you among others to give your Attendance in our said Court at their coming Wherefore we will that forthwith upon the sight of these our Letters ye put your self in such a readiness in your best aray that ye may be here with us by the Twentieth day of this instant Month at the farthest without failing thus to do as ye tender our Honour and Pleasure Given under our Signet at our Maner of Greenwich the Tenth day of August Alliance of Mordaunt and Elmes THese be the Articles and Agreements had made and concluded the Twelfth day of February the Eleventh Year of the Reign of King Henry the Eighth between John Elmes Son and Heir of William Elmes Esquire and Son and Heir apparent of Elizabeth now Wife to Thomas Pygott Esquire one of the Kings Serjeants at Law and late the Wife of the said William and one of the Daughters and Heirs of John Iwardely Esquire Deceased on the one Partie and John Mordaunt of Turvey in the County of Bedford Esquire on the other Partie for a Marriage by the Grace of God to be had and solemnized between the said John Elmes and Edith Mordaunt one of the Daughters of the said John Mordaunt First it is agreed That the said John Elmes shall by the same Grace of God Marry and take to Wife the said Edith if the said Edith thereunto shall agree and assent And in the like manner the said Edith shall by the same Grace of God Marry and take to Husband the said John Elmes if the said John Elmes will agree and assent thereto The said Marriage to be had and solemnized before the Feast of All-Saints next coming after the date of these present Agreements Item It is agreed by these Presents between the said Parties That the Costs and Charges of the same Marriage as in Meat and Drink and other such things convenient and necessary for the same shall be at the Costs of the same John Mordaunt Item It is also agreed by these Presents That the said John Elmes shall Apparel himself at his pleasure and at his own Costs and Charges And in like manner the said John Mordaunt shall Apparel the said Edith at the same day of Marriage at the proper Costs and Charges of the said John Mordaunt Item The said John Elmes Covenanteth and Granteth by these Presents That he before the Feast-day of All-Saints shall at the Costs and Charges in the Law of the said John Mordaunt his Heirs Executors or Assigns make cause or do to be made to the said John Mordaunt Robert Brudenell Knight one of the Justices of our Sovereign Lord the King at the Pleas before him to be holden Thomas Pygott one of the Kings Serjeants at the Law and to William Gascoign Esquire Walter Luke Nicholas Gardiner John Spencer Robert Latimer Gentlemen and to their Heirs and at all time and times after the said Feast of All-Saints within the space of Eight Years when the said John Elmes thereto shall be required by the said John Mordaunt or by by his Heirs or by his Executors or by his Assigns a sufficient sure and lawful Estate in the Law in Fee-simple by Feoffment Fine Recovery Release with Warranty Confirmation or otherwise of Maners Lands and Tenements with the Appurtenances to the clear yearly Value of Threescore Pounds over all yearly Charges and of such Maners Lands and Tenements with the Appurtenances of the Inheritance of the said John Elmes as by the said John Mordaunt shall be named and appointed the said Persons to be and stand seized of Fifty Pounds parcel of the said Summ of Threescore Pounds to the use of the said John Elmes and of the said Edith Mordaunt after their said Marriage had of the Heirs of the Body of the said John Elmes lawfully begotten And for default of such Issue to the use of the Heirs of the Body of the said William Elmes And for default of such Issue to the right Heirs of the said William according to the Old Interest thereof And of Ten Pounds residue of the said Threescore Pounds that the said Feoffees shall stand
your First Commission but to forbear the same until the new Commission be had and put in Execution as shall appertain Thus I bid your Lordship well to fare from Westminster the Tenth of December Your Lordships Loving Friend W. North. An Exemplification of Depositions concerning the Freeborde of Drayton-Park EDwardus Sextus Dei gratia Angliae Franciae Hiberniae Rex Fidei Defensor in terra Ecclesiae Anglicanae Hibernicae Supremum Caput Omnibus ad quos praesentes literae pervenerint Salutem Inspeximus quandam Petitionem coram nobis in Cancellaria nostra per Johannem Mordaunt militem ad Testes perpetuam rei memoriam examinandum nuper exhibitam in filaciis Cancellariae nostrae praedictae residentem in haec verba To the Right Honourable Sir William Paulet Knight of the most honourable Order of the Garter Lord saint-Saint-John Lord Grand-master of the King 's most honourable Household Lord Keeper of the Great Seal of England and high-High-Justice of all the King's Forests Chaces and Parks on this side the Trent In right humble wise sheweth unto your good Lordship your daily suppliant John Mordaunt Knight Lord Mordaunt That whereas it pleased King Edward the First sometime King of the Noble Realm of England upon the humble Suit of Simon Drayton Knight Ancestor unto your said Suppliant to grant unto the said Simon License for to Empark certain parcels of Ground then parcel of the Maner of Drayton within the County of Northampton whereof some of the said parcels were then before that time within the bounds of the Forest of Rokingham and some of them were without the Forest and that according unto the said License the said Simon made a Park now called Drayton-park for the safeguard of the Game wherein the said Simon made a Ditch double Ditch'd and Quick-set on both sides round about the said Park as well on that side which boundeth and adjoineth now on the said Forest side as on the other parts and quarters thereof as upon the sight thereof more plainly it may appear And the said Simon did leave also within the said Forest one Freeborde without the outer-side of the Ditch of the said Park to the intent to lay upon the said Freeborde all such Wood and Bushes as should be at any time thereafter requisite for the amendment of the said Hedge After the which Park of Drayton so made a Park now called the Little-Park of Brikestock was made of that parcel of the said Forest of Rokingham which bounded along against the West-side of the said Park of your said Suppliant called Drayton-park After the which said Park called Brikestock Little Park so made the Keepers of your said Suppliant's Park called Drayton-park continually and daily at their pleasure without interruption or disturbance accustomed for to go out of Drayton-park into Brikestock-park at a Stile called Snapes-Stile and so keep their walk within Brikestock-park upon the said Freeborde of Drayton-park unto a Gate within Brikestock-park called Plumwell-gate for to view and oversee the decay of the Mounds and Hedges between the said Two Parks And since the said Park of Brikestock thus made the Ancestors of your said Suppliant for the better mending of the said Park of Drayton and for the avoiding of such Contention as might arise by the occasion of a slender Fence between the said Two Parks have caused a Pale to be set upon the top of the Ditch of the said Park of Drayton in such place where before time one of the Quick-hedges did grow and by the occasion of a Pale so made the Ancestors of your said Suppliant have not so much esteemed but have suffered the Quick-hedges which were set on the outer-side of the said Ditch towards the said Park of Brikestock for lack of a pashing and cutting thereof at times convenient to grow to great Wood and Thorn And for because that Timber requisite for the making of Pale is in a manner decayed and waxeth very scant and chargeable in these parts And because your said Suppliant would also renew the double Quick-set and the double Dikes as well which do border between the said Two Parks as betwixt such other Grounds and Woods as your said Suppliant hath adjoining and bordering upon the other quarters of the said Park of Brikestock with new Ditches and Hedges Quick-set for the more sure and better fencing of the same And because also that your said Suppliant would be very sorry to be noted or reputed to contend with his Prince or to encroach or offend upon any parcel of the King's Majesty his Inheritance or to minister any occasion of Unkindness to such as be or should be Keepers unto the King's Majesty of the said Little Park of Brikestock for taking away any of their lawful Commodities or Profits Your said Suppliant doth therefore most humbly desire your good Lordship for the quiet Determination of the matter that it may please your good Lordship to award the King 's Gracious Commission unto such persons as your Lordship shall think meet and convenient for that purpose Authorising and Commanding them thereby to enquire the truth by all such ways means and manner as to their good discretion shall be thought most convenient How far the Freeborde and Ground of your said Suppliant extendeth and lyeth without the said Park of Drayton towards or within the said Little-Park of Brikestock And whether such Wood and Thorn as now groweth upon the side or brink of the Ditch of Drayton-park which lieth and bordereth next unto the said Little Park of Brikestock doth grow upon the Ground and Freeborde of your said Suppliant or upon the King's Majesties Ground And whether the King's Majesty and his Predecessors have used or ought to have any Wood that groweth on the out-side the Pale of the said Park of Brikestock towards and against the Woods and Grounds of your said Suppliant by any Prerogative or any other lawful Custom And in what place the Keepers of your said Suppliant's Park of Drayton have in times past used and may lawfully enter and pass over out of Drayton-park into the said Little-Park of Brikestock And where to depart and go to go out of the said Brikestock-park And here far from the said Pale or Hedge of Drayton-park the said Keepers of Drayton-park have used in times past and may lawfully walk for their Walk within the said Little-Park of Brikestock and to testisie under their Seals the same Inquisition or Depositions into the King's honourable Court of Chancery there to remain of Record for a perpetual memory or Remembrance and for a quiet and full Determination of the said matter And your said Suppliant shall daily pray to God for the Preservation of your Lordship in Honour long to continue Inspeximus etiam quandam Commissionem una cum Returna ejusdem dilectis Fidelibus suis Edwardo Mountague militi Capitali Justiciario de Communi Banco Johanni Saint-John Thomae Tresham militibus Ac dilecto sibi Richardo Humphrey
or done shall be seized of the same Ten Marks to the use of the said John Mordaunt and of his Heirs for ever Item The said John Elmes Covenanteth and Granteth by these Presents That if the said Edith within the time and space of Six Years after the Marriage solemnized do dye having no Issue by the said John Elmes alive That then the said John Elmes his Executors or Assigns shall repay or cause to be repaid to the said John Mordaunt his Executors or Assigns Two hundred Marks parcel of the said Five hundred Marks within the space of Two Years next and immediately after the Decease of the said Edith To all which Covenants Bargains Promises and Grants on the part of the said John Elmes to be performed and kept the said John Elmes bindeth him his Heirs Executors and Assigns to the said John Mordaunt his Heirs Executors and Assigns in a Thousand Marks And to all the payments well and truly to be performed and kept on the Party of the said John the said John Mordaunt bindeth him his Heirs Executors or Assigns to the said John Elmes his Heirs Executors and Assigns in Six hundred Marks In Witness whereof c. A Letter from King Henry the Eight to John Mordaunt To our trusty and welbeloved Servant John Mordaunt Henry R. By the King TRusty and welbeloved we greet you well And whereas this Year last passed after the conclusion taken between us and our dear Brother Cousin Confederate and Allie the French King as well for firm Peace Love and Amity as of Alliance by way of Marriage God willing to be had and made between our dearest Daughter the Princess and the Dolphin of France a personal meeting and Interview was also to them concluded to be had betwixt us and the said French King which upon urgent considerations and great respects was by mutual consent for that year put over and deferred So it is now that the said French King being much desirous to see and personally to speak with us hath sundry times by his Ambassadors and writings instantly desired us to condescend to this said interview offering to meet with us within our Dominion Pale and Marches of Caleys whereas heretofore semblable honour of preeminence hath not been given by any of the French Kings to any of our Progenitors or Ancestors we therefore remembring the manifold good effects that be in appearance like to ensue of this personal meeting as well for Corroboration and assured Establishment of Peace and Alliance concluded between us as for the universal well tranquility and restfulness of all Christendom taking also to consideration the great honour offered to us by the French King for the said meeting within our Dominion have condescended thereunto accordingly the same to be God willing in the Month of May next coming And in as much as to our Honour and Dignity Royal it appertaineth to be furnished with honourable Personages as well Spiritual as Temporal to give their Attendance upon us at so solemn an Act as this shall be for the Honour of us and our Realm we therefore have appointed you among others to attend upon our dearest Wife the Queen in this Voyage willing therefore and desiring you not only to put your self in a readiness with the number of Ten tall Personages well and conveniently apparelled for this purpose to pass with you over the Sea But also in such wise to appoint your self in Apparel as to your degree the Honour of us and this our Realm appertaineth So that ye repairing to our said dearest Wife the Queen by the First day of May next coming may there give your Attendance in her transporting over the Sea accordingly ascertaining you that albeit ye be appointed to the number of Ten Servants to pass with you as is abovesaid yet nevertheless in as much as that at her arrival at Caleys you shall have no great Journey requisite to occupy many Horses ye shall therefore convey with you over the Sea for your own Riding and otherwise not above the number of Four Horses Howbeit our mind is not to Coact or Restrain you to the said Precise number of Four Horses for your coming up to our said dearest Wife and accompanying you to the Sea side which thing we remit to your Arbitrament but only to ascertain you what number of Servants and Horses be appointed unto you to pass over the Sea like as we have ordered all other Lords and Nobles as shall attend upon our said dearest Wife the Queen according to their Degrees Fail ye not therefore to accomplish the premises as ye tender our Honour and Pleasure Given under our Signet at our Maner of Eltham the Six and twentieth day of March. An Indenture between John Elmes and John Mordaunto. THIS Indenture made the Ninth day of May the Twelfth Year of the Reign of King Henry the Eighth between John Elmes Son and Heir of William Elmes Esquire and Son and Heir Apparent of Elizabeth Pygott Widow one of the Danghters and Heirs of John Iwardeby Esquire deceased and late Wife to the said William Elmes on the one Party and John Mordaunt of Turvey in the County of Bedford Esquire on the other Party Witnesseth That it is Promised Covenanted and Agreed between the said Parties in the manner and form following that is to say The said John Elmes granteth and promiseth by the Grace of God to espouse and take to his Wife Edith Mordaunt one of the Daughters of the said John Mordaunt before the Feast of All-Saints next coming after the date of these Presents if the said Edith thereunto shall agree and assent And in like manner the said John Mordaunt granteth and promiseth That the said Edith shall by the same Grace of God Marry and take to Husband the said John Elmes before the foresaid Feast if the said John Elmes thereunto shall agree and assent And it is agreed by these Presents between the said Parties That the Costs and Charges of the same Marriage as in Meat and Drink and other such things convenient and necessary for the same shall be at the costs of the said John Mordaunt And that the said John Elmes shall apparel himself at his Pleasure at his own cost and charges and in like manner the said John Mordaunt shall apparel the said Edith at the same day of Marriage at his proper cost and charges And the said John Elmes Covenanteth and Agreeth by these Presents That he before the Feast of All-Saints next coming at the cost and charges in the Law of the said John Mordaunt his Heirs Executors or Assigns shall make cause or do to be made to Robert Brudenell Knight the Chief Justice of the Common Pleas and to the said John Mordaunt John Thyney of Drayton in the County of Buckingham Esquire Robert Thyney Thomas Tyrynghin the Elder Thomas Brudenell the Elder William Gascoign Esquire Walter Luke Nicholas Hardyng John Spencer and Robert Latimer Gentlemen and to their Heirs a sure and lawful
Fossatum dicti Parci de Drayton tanquam pertinentem ad cundem Parcum de Drayton ac parcellam ejusdem Parci de Drayton existentem Et ulterius iidem Juratores dicunt super Sacramentum suum Quòd dictus Johannes Dominus Mordaunt ac omnes Antecessores sui ac omnes illi quorum statum idem Johannes Dominus Mordaunt in Manerio Parco de Drayton praedicto modo habet à tempore cujus contrarium memoria hominis non existit ad eorum placitum Voluntatem usi fuerunt consueverunt succidere ad usus suos convertere totum Boscum Subboscum crescentem existentem super dictam Terram vocatam le Freeborde super infra dicta Sepes Fossatum inter praedictum Parcum dicti Domini Regis de Brikestock praedictum Parcum de Drayton Dicunt etiam ulterius Juratores praedicti super Sacramentum suum quòd Custodes dicti Parci de Drayton pro tempore existientes de tempore ad cujus contrarium memoria hominis non existit ad eorum libitum placitum de tempore in tempus exire utebantur de jure exire poterunt de dicto Parco de Drayton in dictum Parcum de Brikestock apud quendam locum vocatum Snapes-Stile sic longanimiter perambulare super praedictam Terram dicti Domini Mordaunt vocatam le Freeborde jacentem ex occidentali parte dicti Parci de Drayton usque ad quendam locum in Parco de Drayton praedicto vocatum le Plumwell-Stile sic ibidem reingredi in dictum Parcum ad supervidendum utrum dictae Sepes inter dictum Parcum de Drayton dictum Parcum de Brikestock de tempore in tempus benè sufficienter reparatae existebant prout congruum fuerat necne Dicunt insuper Juratores praedicti super Sacramentum suum Quod non noscunt quod dictus Dominus Rex nunc aut aliquis Praedecessorum suorum ratione alterius Praerogativae sive alterius legitimae Consuetudinis peranteà habuit aut habere usus fuit seu de jure habere debuit aliquem Boscum sive Subboscum Spinas sive Arbores crescentes ex exteriore parte Paleorum sive Sepium dicti Parci de Brikestock abuttantis sive adjacentis versus aliquos Boscos sive Terras dicti Johannis Domini Mordaunt In cujus rei Testimonium tam praedicti Commissionarii quàm praefati Juratores his praesentibus Sigilla sua apposuerunt die anno loco supradictis Nos autem tenores Petitionis Commissionis Certificationis Testium Depositionum Inquifitionis praedictorum ad Requisitionem praedicti Johannis Mordaunt militis Domini Mordaunt duximus exemplificandum per praesentes In cujus rei Testimonium has Literas nostras fieri fecimus Patentes Teste meipso apud Westmonasterium primo die Novembris anno Regni nostri quarto S. Southwell A Letter from the Lords of the Council to the Lord Mordaunt and to Sir John Mordaunt To our very good Lord the Lord Mordaunt and to our Loving Friend Sir John Mordaunt and to either of them AFter our right hearty Commendations for the Safe-guard and Preservation of the King's Majesty's Person which is in no small danger by the Falshood and Treason of the Duke of Somerset who nevertheless to cover the same now bruiteth abroad That we of his Majesty's Council which seek only his Highness's Preservation should intend Evil unto his Highness which God forbid trusting by that means to abuse the People and so by their helps the rather to proceed in his purpose We have thought good to require you not only as much as in you is to let the People know the Truth but also forasmuch as de doth already gather Forces to put your self in order with all the Power you may make presently to repair unto us for the Service and Surety of the King's Majesty in this great and weighty matter as to the office of good and loving Subjects appertaineth From London the Sixth of October Your Lordships assured Friends Ri. Rich Cant. Will. Saint-John W. Northampton J. Warwick Arundell F. Shrewsbury Henry Sussex Thomas Southampton T. Theyn Will. Petres R. Sadlier Edward North. John Gage Nic. Southwell Another Letter from the Lords of the Council to the Lord Mordaunt and to Sir John Mordaunt To our very good Lord the Lord Mordaunt and to our very Loving Friend Sir John Mordaunt Knight and to either of them AFter our most hearty Commendations Where by our former Letters we have signified unto you the state of our doings and upon occasion of such Assemblies of Men as were made by the Duke of Somerset desired you to repair towards us for the surety of his Majesty's Person you shall understand That now by the goodness of God both the King's Majesty's Person is in Health and Surety and that without any Tumult or great business the Duke also is in sure Custody Which thing as we have thought good to signifie unto you so do we pray you to stay your Numbers at home without taking any further Travel for this matter Giving you our most hearty Thanks for your good Readiness at this time and so do bid you most heartily farewel From London the Eleventh of October 1549. Your Loving Friends Will. saint-Saint-John Will. Northampton John Warwick F. Shrewsbury Thomas Southampton Thomas Wentworth John Gage Edward North. Nicholas Wotton John Baker Edw. Montague Another Letter from the Lords of the Council to the Lord Mordaunt and to Sir John Mordaunt To the Sheriff of Bedford and Buckingham to the Justices of Peace of the said Counties and to all other the King's Majesty's Constables Headboroughs and other his Highness's Ministers and Subjects of the said Counties FOrasmuch as the Duke of Somerset abusing the King's Majesties Hand Stamp and Signet and howbeit that without divers of us of his Majesties Council hath sent forth divers and sundry Writings to Levy the King's Majesties Subjects and disturb the Common Peace of the Realm for the maintaining of his own Ill and Outragious doings to no small Peril of the King's Majesties Person and the disturbance of all his Majesties good and Loyal Subjects These be to will and require you nevertheless on his Majesties behalf straitly to Command and Charge you That you nor none of you Levy nor cause to Levied any number of Men by force of any such Writing or Commandment or any other Writing whatsoever except the Hands of us of his Majesties Privy Council or the more part of us shall be Subscribed to the same And further we require you on his Highness's behalf to apply your Labours and Business every of you in your several Vocations quietly and peaceably as becometh good Subjects without giving Credit to any such Rumors and Bruits as by the said Duke be untruly and falsely spread abroad to the Dishonor and Scandal of us his Majesties True and Faithful Counsellors who be and ever shall be during our Lives ready to spend our Bloods for the
cum pertinentiis integrè remanebunt rectis Haeredibns praedicti Johannis tenendum de Capitalibus Dominis Feodi illius per Servitia quae ad praedicta Tenementa Passagium praedictum pertinent imperpetuum Surrey Hertford Kanciae Charta Joannae quae fuit Uxor Johannis le Latimer Militis NOverint universi per praesentes quòd ego Joanna quae fui Uxor Johannis le Latimer Militis recepi de Thomâ Herewauld quadraginta tres solidos quatuor denarios de redditu Paschae Anno Regni Regis Edwardi tertii post conquestum undecimo proveniente de terris tenementis quae de me tenet in Wolwich de quibus quidem quadraginta solidis quatuor denariis fateor me esse plenariè pacatum praedictum Thomam esse quietum per praesentes In cujus rei Testimonium praesentibus Sigillum meum apposui Datum apud Westmonasterium die Martis proximâ post Festum Sancti Barnabae Apostoli Anno Regni Regis supradicto SIGILLVM DNAE IOHANNAE LATIMER Sir Robert Latimer Lord of Duntish and other Lands and Lordships Charta Johannis Mundayne Nicolai Gurthop Capellanorum SCiant praesentes futuri Quòd nos Johannes Mundayne Nicolaus Gurthop Capellani tradidimus concessimus Roberto Latimer Chivalier Catharinae Uxori ejus medietatem Manerii de Childeckford cum pertinentiis habendum tenendum iisdem Roberto Catharinae haeredibus de corpore ipsius Catharinae exeuntibus de Capitalibus Dominis feodi illius per servitia inde debita consueta in perpetuum Et si contingat quòd praedicta Catharina obierit sine haerede de Corpore suo exeunte tunc omnia praedicta tenementa cum pertinentiis integrè remaneant rectis haeredibus ejusdem Catharinae tenenda de Capitalibus Dominis feodi illius per Servitia inde debita consueta in perpetuum In cujus rei Testimonium Sigilla nostra praesentibus apposuimus His Testibus Richardo Turberville Johanne Attehall Militibus Johanne Moore Johanne Stippleton Thomâ de la Were aliis Datum apud Childeckford in Festo Sancti Johannis Baptistae Anno Regni Regis Edwardi tertii post Conquestum Tricesimo Secundo Charta Catharinae Latimer SCiant praesentes futuri quod ego Catharina quondam Uxor Domini Roberti Latimer in purâ ligeâ viduitate meâ dedi concessi hac praesenti chartâ confirmavi Margaretae filiae meae pro homagio servitio suo totam Terram meam cum homagiis servitiis liberorum hominum villanorum quam habui in Rotherhead quae mihi accidebat Jure haereditario ex parte Domini Roberti de Hull patris mei cum omnibus pertinentiis suis ad dictam Terram spectantibus vel quae de jure in posterum spectare poterunt in viis semitis pratis pascuis pasturis boscis caeteris aliis locis libertatibus liberis consuetudinibus dictis Terris pertinentibus habendum tenendum dictam Terram cum omnibus suis pertinentiis de me Haeredibus meis sibi haeredibus suis liberè quietè pacificè honorificè integrè haereditariè in perpetuum Reddendo indè annuatim mihi haeredibus meis à dicta Margareta haeredibus suis unum par Chirothecarum de pretio unius denarii vel unum denarium in Festo Paschae pro omni servitio seculari exactione demanda omnimodò mihi pertinente Salvo tamen servitio Regali quantum pertinet ad tantam Terram in eodem feodo Et si praedicta Catharina sine haerede de se exeunte in fata decesserit tota praedicta Terra cum pertinentiis ad Robertum Latimer Fratrem suum vel haeredes suos revertatur Ego verò Catharina praedictam totam Terram cum omnibus praenominatis pertinentiis servitiis tàm liberorum quàm villanorum dictae Catharinae haeredibus suis ut praedictum est exeuntibus contra omnes homines foeminas pro praedicto servitio warrantizabo acquietabo defendam in perpetuum Et ut haec mea Donatio Concessio praesentis Chartae Confirmatio rata sit stabilis hanc praesentem Chartam Sigilli mei Impressione roboravi His Testibus Radulpho de Rochford Ricardo de Turberville Rogero de Attehall Militibus Willielmo Jolliot Johanne Strode Elisâ Martin Thomâ de Winterborne Roberto Clerico aliis Datum apud Rotherheath die Lunae proximâ post Festum Purificationis Beatae Mariae Virginis Anno Regni Regis Edwardi Tertii post conquestum Tricesimo quarto Sir Robert Latimer Knight Lord of Duntish and other Lands and Lordships Mr Prinn's Abridgment of Records Page 106. THE 21th day of May the King gave thanks to the Lords and Commons for their coming and aid granted on which day all the Lords and sundry of the Commons Dined with the King after which Dinner Sir John de Lee was brought before the King Lords and Commons next aforesaid to Answer to certain Objections following and first to the Complaint of William Latimer as followeth The King had granted the Wardship of Robert Latimer the Son and Heir of Sir Robert Latimer with certain Mannors during the same Minority to the Bishop of Sarum whose Estate the same William had and after the King granted the same to Sir John de Lee. The same William surmised that the said Sir John being of Power sent for him to London where he by duress of Imprisonment inforced the said William to Surrender his Estate to him And by Recognizance therefore the same Sir John excuseth himself for that the Grant was made unto him the which was not allowed for that the said William was not put out by due Process of Law Another matter was objected against the said Sir John for that during such time as he was Steward of the Kings House he should cause sundry men to be attached and to come before him as before the Kings Council in places where he pleased where being out of Council he caused men to answer as to things before the Council That he as Steward having thereby Authority only within the Verge did notwithstanding cause sundry to be attached out of the Verge as John Goddard and others making them to Answer in the Marshalsey of things done out of the Verge and othersome committed to the Tower of his own Authority as John Sibill Edmund Urdsales and others That he had of his own Authority against the Justices Commandment discharged out of Newgate Hugh Lavenham Purveyor who had appealed sundry men of Felony That he bargained with Sir Nicholas Lovayn for the Keeping of the Mannor of Rainham in Kent the which the same Sir Nicholas claimed to hold during the Minority of the Son and Heir of John Saunton where the said John of Lee knew that the said Mannor was holden of the King in Chief as of the Castle of Dover Of all which points for that the same Sir John could not purge himself he was Commanded to the Tower of London there
thereof King Edward the Third granted him a Patent to that effect in the first year of his Reign He had been Seneschal to Queen Isabel the Kings Mother in all her Forests between Stamford and Oxford as appears by a Brieve directed to him by the King for the tenth of all the Venison that should be taken in the County of Northampton to be delivered to the Abbot of Peterborow according as had been granted by his Ancestors He was pardoned by that same King with his Son John William the Son of Thomas Seymar Richard Molesworth Simon his Squire and other of his friends for his breach of the Kings peace and the death of John of Overton Longville whom he had slain in a Quarrel with other circumstances that certifie the particular favour was born him by that Prince He was afterward with one Sr William Nocton as being one of the most eminent Knights in the Bishoprick of Ely joined with Sir William Shareshull Sir Henry Greene and Sir William Thorpe in the Kings Commission to hear and determine of the felony and misdemeanour of Thomas Lild Bishop of that Diocess who was not only esteemed accessary to the death of William Holmes Servant to the Lady Wake of Lydell that was killed by his Officer Ralph Carcless She being a Princess of that time eminent for great birth as well as Beauty and rare Qualities and the Daughter of Henry Plantagenet Earl of Lancaster but that moreover stood in great and exemplary Contempt against the King himself For the demeanor of Sir Simon in which matter in his duty and compliance to the Kings Commands and Interest he incurred with the rest of the Commissioners the several censures and indignation of the Pope which proceeded even to Excommunication and other great Penalties from which his merit towards the King by his Conduct in that Affair nor the Power of so great a Prince was able to protect him He did finally give and grant in the eighteenth year of King Edward the Third unto Robert the Prior of the Church of Saint Maries of Pavenston and to the Covent of that place two parts of his Mannor of Stoke-Goldington with the Advowson of the Church of that Town out of Devotion to God and the Blessed Virgin and for the good of his Soul to be there prayed for and for the Souls of his Ancestors and Benefactors His Wife was Margaret Daughter to Sir John and Sister to Sir Gilbert of Lindsey Their Issue Sir John of Drayton Sir John of Drayton Lord of Drayton and other Lands and Lordships UNto Sir Simon of Drayton did succeed Sir John of Drayton his Son in the sole Lordship of that place as also in his other Possessions in the Counties of Northampton Huntingdon and Oxford Moved by what inducement it does not appear but this Sir John of Drayton did in the eighth year of King Edward the Third purchase a Licence of Alienation for enabling him to settle upon Sir Henry Greene then Chief Justice of England and that had Married his Fathers Sister his antient Mannor and Lordship of Drayton with those Lands in the Towns adjoining that did belong unto it In consequence whereof it was conveyed unto him with the Reversion to Henry the second Son of the said Sir Henry Greene whom he calls his Cousin and for default of Issue in him to the right Heirs of Sir Henry the Father But it is found notwithstanding by a Deed of this Sir John that in the Life-time of Sir Henry Greene the Chief Justice he did render the Possession of the Chief Seat and the Mannor of Drayton with all the Demesnes the Lands Meadows Pastures and the Park thereunto belonging unto Sir Henry Greene his Cousin the Son of the Chief Justice on Condition that he should ever after bear his Name and his Armes in performance of that Agreement that had before been made between the Father of the said Sir Henry and himself which was the reason why the Greenes of Drayton instead of Azure three Bucks Or which was the Armes of their Family and those born by the Greenes of Norton descended from Sir Thomas Green the Elder Brother did bear ever after for their Coat Argent a Cross Engrailed Gules being that of Drayton which by this Agreement they were obliged to assume The Wife of Sir John of Drayton was Christian the Daughter of Sir Gilbert of Lindsey his Mothers Niece Their Issue Baldwin of Drayton whose Posterity for divers Ages did flourish afterwards Possessors of the Lordships of Stoke-Goldington Bottlebrigg Molesworth and Overton Longville in the County of Huntingdon and South-Newington in Oxfordshire where they had a fair Patrimony and lived in great Estimation WALTER de VERE The Eldest sonne of Henry ye. sonne of Robert that was ye. second sonne of AUBERY de Vere Great Chamberlaine and Lord Cheife Iustice of England who from his Cheife Seat Assumed that Name to him and his decendants Lucie Bassett Sr. HENRY of Drayton Iuetta de Bourdon Sr. Baldwin of Drayton Idonia de Gimeges Sr. Iohn of Drayton Philipa of Arderne Sr. Simon of Drayton Margaret of Lindsey Catharine of Drayton Sr. Henry Greene. Sr John of Drayton Cristian of Lindsey Sr Henry Greene Matilda de Mandnir Sr Thomas Greene Lord of Norton Marie Talbot Baldwin of Drayton GENEALOGICAL PROOFS OF THE DESCENT and SUCCESSION Of the HOUSE of DRAYTON Drawn out of Extant Charters Records Histories and other Authentick Testimonies GENEALOGICAL PROOFS OF THE DESCENT and SUCCESSION Of the HOUSE of DRAYTON Rerum Anglicarum Scriptores Historia Ingulphi Abbatis Croilandiae Pag. 488. inter Confirmationes Regis Witlafii ITem Domum Oswini Militis in Draytonâ videlicet octo Hidas terrae quatuor Virgatas Ecclesiam ejusdem Villae Quinque lineae infrá ET Donum Wulnoti Dapiferi mei in Adingtonâ videlicet duas Hidas terrae Piscariam cum Advocatione Ecclesiae ejusdem Villae in alia Adingtona ex dono ejusdem unam Virgatam terrae Rerum Anglicarum Scriptores Historia Ingulphi Abbatis Croilandiae Pag. 492. inter Confirmationes Beoredi Regis SImiliter confirmo praedicto Monasterio de Croilandiâ de dono Oswini Militis in Draytona octo Hidas terrae quatuor Virgatas Ecclesiam ejusdem Villae Rerum Anglicarum Scriptores Historia Ingulphi Abbatis Croilandiae Pag. 498. inter Confirmationes Abbatis Turketuli Abbatiae Croilandiae IN Draytona unam Carucatam terrae sex Acras Prati quatuor Salinas AUBREY de VERE Great Chamberlain to King Henry the First and Chief Justice of ENGLAND The Baronage of England Page 190. THis last mentioned Albery called Albericus Junior confirmed all those Grants made by his Fater to the Monks of Abington and being in high Esteem with King Henry the First was by him made Lord great Chamberlain of all England to hold the same Office in Fee to himself and his Heirs with all Dignities and Liberties thereto belonging as honourably as Robert Mallet Lord of the Honour of Eye in Suffolk
Henrici Greene Patris praedictae Constanciae nuper Comitissae matris praedicti Edwardi nuper Comitis Et dicunt insuper Juratores praedicti quòd praedicta Elizabetha nuper uxor dicti Thomae Cheyne Militis obiit tertio die Aprilis Anno Regni Henrici nuper Regis Angliae septimi decimo septimo sine exitu de corpore suo exeunte post cujus mortem medietas omnium maneriorum praedictorum advocationum caeterorum praemissorum cum eorum pertinentiis descendebant praefatis Elizabethae uxori Johannis Mordaunt Annae Constanciae uxori Johannis Parre Etheldredae ut Consanguineis haeredibus dictae Elizabethae Cheyne videlicet ut filiabus haeredibus dicti Henrici filii Isabellae sororis dictae Margeriae matris dictae Elizabethae Cheyne Et dicunt Juratores praedicti quòd dicta Constancia nuper uxor dicti Johannis Parre obiit ...... die Augusti Anno Regni dicti Domini Henrici nuper Regis Angliae Septimi decimo septimo sine exitu de corpore suo exeunte post cujus mortem quarta pars praedictorum Maneriorum advocationis ac caeterorum praemissorum cum pertinentiis descendebant praefatis Elizabethae Mordaunt Annae Etheldredae ut sororibus haeredibus ipsius Constanciae Parre Et dicunt ulteriùs Juratores praedicti quòd dicta Anna cepit in vitum Humphridum Browne habuerunt exitum Georgium Browne Et quòd dicta Anna postea obiit videlicet decimo quinto die Septembris Anno Regni dicti Domini Henrici nuper Regis Angliae Septimi vicesimo secundo Et quòd idem Georgius Browne est aetatis sex annorum ampliús Et dicunt Juratores praedicti quod praedictum Manerium de Drayton cum pertinentiis tenetur de Domino Rege in Capite per quae servitia juratores praedicti penitus ignorant Et quòd Willielmus Merbury exitus proficua ejusdem Manerii à tempore mortis dicti Edwardi nuper Comitis usque primum diem Octobris Anno Regni Domini Henrici dicti nuper Regis Angliae Septimi vicesimo octavo percepit habuit Et quod Robertus Merbury à dicto primo die Octobris usque ad diem hujus Inquisitionis percepit habuit Et ulteriùs dicunt quòd praedictum Manerium de Luffwyck cum advocatione ejusdem Ecclesiae de Luffwyck cum eorum pertinentiis tenetur de Abbate de Peterburgh per fidelitatem per quae alia servitia Juratores praedicti penitus ignorant Et quòd dictus Willielmus Merbury exitus proficua ejusdem Manerii à tempore mortis dicti Edwardi nuper Comitis usque dictum primum diem Octobris dicto Anno vicesimo octavo percepit habuit Et quòd Robertus Wittelbury à dicto primo die Octobris usque primum diem Maii Anno Regni Domini Regis nunc primo exitus proficua ejusdem Manerii percepit habuit Et quod ....... Clement ...... uxor ejus exitus proficua à dicto primo die Maii usque diem hujus Inquisitionis perceperunt habuerunt Et dicunt Juratores praedicti quòd praedicta Ecclesia de Luffwyck vacavit circa decimum octavum diem Octobris Anno Regni Domini Henrici nuper Regis Angliae vicesimo quarto Et quòd Johannes Mordaunt ad eandem Ecclesiam praesentavit Willielmum Hamswayte Capellanum qui ad suam praesentationem fuit admissus institutus inductus In cujus c. Et postea praedictus Johannes Mordaunt Elizabetha uxor ejus Georgius Browne Johannes Browne Etheldreda uxor ejus prosecuti fuerunt breve de forma donationis in distender versus Thomam Mountegue Willielmum Pemberton de Manerio de Drayton cum pertinentiis in Comitatu praedicto continuatur processus quousque praedicti Johannes Mordaunt Elizabetha uxor ejus Georgius Browne Johannes Browne Etheldreda uxor ejus recuperaverunt Manerium praedictum cum pertinentiis versus praedictum Thomam Mountegue Willielmum Pemberton prout pro termino Trinitatis Anno octavo Henrici Octavi apparet Virtute cujus recuperationis ipsi Johannes Mordaunt Johannes Browne intraverunt in Manerium praedictum cum pertinentiis Et aliàs praedicti Johannes Mordaunt Elizabetha uxor ejus Georgius Browne Johannes Browne Etheldreda uxor ejus prosecuti fuerunt breve de forma donationis in distender versus Thomam Mountegue de Manerio de Luffwyck cum pertinentiis in Comitatu praedicto continuatur processu quousque praedicti Johannes Mordaunt Elizabetha uxor ejus Georgius Browne Johannes Browne Etheldreda uxor ejus recuperaverunt Manerium praedictum cum pertinentiis versus praedictum Thomam Mountegue prout pro termino Sanctae Trinitatis Anno octavo Regis octavi apparet Virtute cujus quidem recuperationis praedicti Johannes Mordaunt Johannes Browne intraverunt Manerium praedictum cum pertinentiis An Award between the Earl of Shrewsbury and John Mordaunt concerning the Mannor of Drayton TO all Christian people to whom this present writing Indented shall come heare or see Robert Brudenell and Richard Elliot two of the Kings Justices send greeting in our Lord. Whereas there have been diverse variances and debates moved and had between the Right Honourable Lord George Earle of Shrewsbury on th' one partie and John Mordaunt Squire and Elizabeth his Wife one of the Cossyns and heires to the Right Honourable Edward late Erle of Wiltshire on his Mothers side that is to say by Constance Mother of the said Erle and Daughter and heir of Henry Greene of Drayton in the County of Northampton Squire and Humphrey Browne Squire late Husband to Amye and George Browne his Son and heir apparent and Son and heir to the same Amye another Cossyn and another of the heirs to the said Erle of Wilshire after the forme aforesaid and Sir Wistan Browne Knight and John Browne his Son and heir apparent and Audrey his Wife the third Cossyn and heir to the same Erle after the manner abovesaid on th' other partie of and upon the right title reversion and possession as well to the aforesaid Mannor of Drayton with th' appurtenances as of all other Mannors Lands Tenements and Hereditaments with their appurtenances in the said County of Northampton or elsewhere which late were to the said Constance or to the foresaid Henry Greene or to any other person or persons to th' use of them or th' other of them which Mannors Lands Tenements the foresaid Erle of Shrewsbury claimeth by a Will supposed to be made by the said Erle of Wiltshire by which Will the foresaid Erle of Wiltshire should Will to the said Erle of Shrewsbury all his Fee-simple Land Whereupon the foresaid parties have compromitted themselves to abide th' Award Ordinance and Judgment of us the said Robert Brudenell and Richard Elliot Arbitrators indifferently named and chosen by and between the aforesaid parties to award ordain and deme as well of and upon the premisses as for and upon all manner
or the Bishop of Duresme our Secretary before the Feast of Saint John Baptist next coming at the farthest like as we have semblably written to all Lords Knights Esquires and Gentlemen of every Shire within this our Realm and therefore fail ye not to accomplish the premises as ye tender our honour and the surety of us and of our Realm and Subjects so and in such wise that by our preparation of a good number of able Men we may understand your towardly mind to do unto us service which shall be remembred according to your deserts and these our Letters shall be your sufficient warrant and discharge in that behalf A Letter from King Henry the Eight to John Mordaunt To our trusty and welbeloved John Mordaunt Henry R. By the King TRusty and welbeloved we greet ye well So it is upon the even of Philip and Jacob last passed a great number of insolent Apprentices and malicious Journey-men of their sensual Appetites and rancorous Dispositions against Aliens and Strangers Artificers and others Inhabited within our City of London suddainly assembled themselves within our said City in the night time under colour of Maying breaking up entring and robbing the houses of sundry French and Dutch men making also great Comminations to other Strangers to the marvellous Inquietation and Commotion of our said City and Disturbances of our Peace within the same And albeit the same Commotion and Rebellious Assembly by the Mayor Sheriffs and other substantial and well disposed Citizens with and by the Policies Powers and Assistance of the Noble Men and others of our Council was not only forthwith repressed and pacified but also a great Number of the Malefactors and Offenders taken and according to our Laws and their Demerits openly convicted and put to execution so that it is now throughly pacified and put in Quietness our Lord be thanked Yet we thought right expedient to advertise you thereof as well for the Declaration of the Truth in putting all Sinister and Seditious Bruits to silence if any such shall be made by indisposed Persons as also that ye by your Wisdom should not only foresee and have good espial in the place and Countries near adjoyning to you to know the disposition of our Subjects if upon untrue reports they should be stirred to any semblable Commotions by perverse Councel against Merchants Strangers or upon any other ground or cause But also by your wisdom and power with the assistance of other faithful Servants and Subjects in these parts forthwith to repress the same by taking as well the principal mover and stirrers thereof as also the offenders accompanying them for such unlawful intent and purpose committing them to Ward And also advertising us thereof with all speedy diligence as our special Trust is in you and as ye intend to do unto us acceptable service and pleasure to be remembred hereafter accordingly Given under our Signet at our Maner of Richmond the Third day of May. An Award between the Earl of Shrewsbury and John Mordaunt concerning the Maner of Drayton TO all Christian People to whom this present Writing Indented shall come hear or see Robert Brudenell and Richard Elliot Two of the Kings Justices send greeting in our Lord. Whereas there hath been divers Variances and Debates moved and had between the Right Honourable Lord George Earl of Shrewsbury on the one Partie and John Mordaunt Esquire and Elizabeth his Wife one of the Cousins and Heirs to the Right Honourable Edward late Earl of Wiltshire on his Mothers side that is to say by Constance Mother of the said Earl and Daughter and Heir of Henry Greene of Drayton in the County of Northampton Esquire and Humphrey Brown Esquire late Husband to Amey and George Brown his Son and Heir apparent and Son and Heir to the same Amey another Cousin and another of the Heirs of the said Earl of Wiltshire after the form aforesaid and Sir Wistan Brown Knight and John Brown his Son and Heir apparent and Audrey his Wife the third Cousin and Heir to the same Earl after the manner abovesaid on the other Partie of and upon the Right Title Reversion and Possession as well of the foresaid Maner of Drayton with the Appurtenances as of all other Maners Lands Tenements and Hereditaments with their Appurtenances in the said County of Northampton or elsewhere which late were the said Constance's or to the foresaid Henry Greene or to any other person or persons to the use of them or the other of them Which Maners Lands and Tenements the foresaid Earl of Shrewsbury claimed by a Will supposed to be made by the said Earl of Wiltshire by which Will the foresaid Earl of Wiltshire should will to the said Earl of Shrewsbury all his Fee simple Land Whereupon the foresaid Parties have compromitted themselves to abide the Award Ordinance and Judgment of us the said Robert Brudenell and Richard Elliot Arbitrators indifferently named by and between the foresaid Parties to Award Ordain and Deem as well of and upon the Premises as for and upon all manner of Evidences Charters Escripts Writings and Amuniments concerning the Premises or any part of them and of all manner of Actions Suits Quarrels and Demands had or moved between the foresaid Parties or their Servants or Friends before the date of these presents concerning the Premises And we the foresaid Arbitrators taking upon us the authority and power to Award Ordain and Deem of and upon the Premises calling before us the Counsels of the foresaid Parties hearing and seeing their Titles Answers Replications Evidences Proves and all other their Allegiances concerning their foresaid Titles and Interess by good deliberation and by consent of the said Parties Award Ordain and Deem of and upon the Premises in manner and form following that is to say Forasmuch as the foresaid John Mordaunt Sir Wistan Humphrey Brown George and John Brown have shewed to us the said Arbitrators a Will supposed to be made by the same Earl of Wiltshire and Sealed with his Seal in which Will he revoked all former Wills and willed that same Will to stand in his full strength and virtue and for his last Will. And in that Will there is no clause whereby the same Earl of Shrewsbury should have any of his Maners Lands or Tenements as by the same more plainly appeareth And also they have shewed unto us fair and sufficient Deeds and other Writings proving the aforesaid Maner of Drayton and other the said Maners Lands Tenements and Hereditaments to be given in Tayle to the Ancestors of the said Constance Mother to the said Earl of Wiltshire who had and enjoyed the same by reason of the said Tayles and the foresaid Elizabeth and George Brown and Audrey be Cousins and next Heir to the same Constance Mother to the said Earl of Wiltshire and to the same Earl on his Mothers side and heritable to the foresaid Maners and other the Premises by reason of the said Tayles Wherefore we Award
purpose limit assign and set forth by these Presents And the said Lord Mordaunt doth further by these Presents for him his Heirs Executors and Administrators and for every of them Covenant and Grant to and with the said Earls Sir Francis Fane Sir Edward Ratcliff Sir Thomas Compton and George Sherley in manner following that is to say That he the said Lord Mordaunt shall and will on this side and before the Feast day of Saint Andrew the Apostle now next ensuing the day of the date hereof at the costs and charges of the said Lord Mordaunt by Fine or Fines in due form of law to be levied before the King's Majesty's Justices of the Court of Common-pleas at Westminster whereupon Proclamations shall and may be had according to the Statutes in that case made and provided recognized and acknowledged all those other Maners Lordships Messuages Mills Lands Tenements Rents Fee-Farms Royalties Courtleets Franchizes Fairs Liberties Advowsons and Hereditaments whatsoever of him the said Lord Mordaunt hereafter in these Presents mentioned expressed and declared that is to say The Maners of Turvey Carleton Chillington Delwike Staggesden Duckford Jempses Bosomes Stasmore Wilchamsted and Westcotton with all their and every of their Rights Members and Appurtenances and the Parks of Turvey and Delwike and the Free Warren in Turvey and Staggesden and all other the Lands Tenements and Hereditaments of the said Lord Mordaunt in the several Towns Parishes Villages and Hamlets of Turvey Wilchamsted alias Wilshamsteed Carleton Chillington Delwike Duckford Staggesden Stanford alias Jempses Bosomes Steventon and Westcotton in the foresaid County of Bedford with all the Rights Members and Appurtenances to the same Maners Lands or Tenements or any of them appertaining or belonging And the Maner of Snelston with the Appurtenances in the Counties of Bedford and Buckingham or in both or in one of them and all those Pastures and Meadow Grounds and Closes called Snelston in the said Counties or in one of them and all other the Lands Tenements and Hereditaments of him the said Lord Mordaunt in the several Parishes of Lavenden Brayfield alias Coldbrayfield and Harrold in the Counties of Bedford and Buckingham and all those the Maners and Farms of Walterhall Oldlayton Brayfield Coldbrayfield Willen Wolston Parva Woughton upon the Green aliàs Woughkington upon the Green Lavenden and the Castle Maner in Lavenden with their and every of their Appurtenances in the County of Buckingham And all that the Free Warren with the Appurtenances in Lavenden and Brayfield otherwise called Brafeld next Lavenden Olney and Warrington in the said County of Buckingham And all other Lands Tenements and Hereditaments of him the said Lord Mordaunt the Maner of Clifton Raynes aliàs Week's Fee with the Appurtenances excepted in the foresaid County of Buckingham And all those the Maners of Hardwike Grafton and Sudburgh with all their and every of their Rights Members and Appurtenances in the County of Northampton and the Parks called Drayton-Park and Sudborow-Park aforesaid and the Capital Messuage or Mansion-house of Drayton aforesaid and the Closes aforesaid to the said Mansion-house adjoining or lying near unto the same And the Parsonages of Denford and Ringsteed And all those Lands called the Assart-Lands in the County of Northampton And all other the Lands Tenements and Hereditaments Rents and Services of him the said Lord Mordaunt in the several Parishes of Hard-wike Grafton Alwinkle Sudburgh Tychmarch and Denford in the foresaid County of Northampton to be the Right of the said Thomas Lock and John Row as those which the said Thomas Lock and John Row shall have of the gift of the said Lord Mordaunt with general Warranties for the said Lord Mordaunt and his Heirs against all Men Which Fine so or in any other sort to be levied and all other Fine or Fines which shall be levied of the Premises or of any part thereof by the said Lord Mordaunt to the said Thomas Lock and John Row abovenamed or to either of them on this side the Feast of St. Andrew the Apostle aforesaid shall be and enure and shall be taken to be and enure and the Parties Cognizees therein their Heirs and Assigns shall stand and be seized for ever of all the said Maners Lands Tenements and Hereditaments in the said Fine or Fines to be comprised to the use of them the said Thomas Lock and John Row and of their Heirs for ever and to no other use Yet withal upon this Trust and Confidence That they the said Thomas and John shall and will permit and suffer them the said Earls Sir Francis Fane Sir Edward Ratcliff Sir Thomas Compton and George Sherley upon one or more Writ or Writs of Entry Sur dessein in le post to be brought or prosecuted out of his Majesty's Court of Chancery by and in the names of the said Earls Sir Francis Fane Sir Edward Ratcliff Sir Thomas Compton and George Sherley against the said Thomas and John retornable before the King's Majesties Justices of his Highness's Court of Common-Pleas at Westminster to recover from and against them the said Thomas and John according to the usual course of common Recoveries used for Assurance of Lands all and singular or any part or parcel of the said Maners Lands Tenements Rents and Hereditaments with their Appurtenances in the same Fine or Fines to be comprised or contained by such name or names and quantities as in the said Writ or Writs of Entry shall be contained In which Recoveries the said Thomas and John shall appear as Tenants and vouch over to Warranty the said Lord Mordaunt and the said Lord Mordaunt shall appear and vouch over the common Vouchee who shall appear gratis and after inparlance depart in despite of the Court according to the form and course of common Recoveries in such cases used And all the said Parties are agreed by these Presents to demeane themselves either in the course aforesaid or in some other course that a perfect common Recovery with such Vouchees as is aforesaid may and shall be had and suffered of the said Maners Lands Tenements Rents and Hereditaments in the same Fine or Fines to be comprised in all points and to all intents and purposes according to the usual order and form of common Recoveries for assurance of Land Which said Recovery or Recoveries so or in any other manner to be Sued Prosecuted or Executed of the Maners Lands Rents Tenements and Hereditaments or of any part thereof and the Execution of them or every of them and all and every other Recovery or Recoveries to be had sued and prosecuted of the Premises or of any part thereof against the said Thomas and John as Tenants and the said Lord Mordaunt as Vouchee on this side the Feast of St. Andrew and the full force and Execution of them and either of them shall be judged esteemed deemed and taken to be and ever remain to the use hereafter expressed and declared and to no other intents or purposes that is to say
unde dicunt quòd praedicti Galfridus Henricus Vere Capellanus dederunt Manerium praedictum cum pertinentiis praefato Roberto Vere Elizabethae Uxori ejus Haeredibus de Corporibus suis exeuntibus in forma praedicta per quod donum iidem Robertus Vere Elizabetha fuerunt inde seisiti in Dominico suo ut de feodo jure per formam c. tempore pacis tempore Domini _____ nuper Regis Angliae _____ post Conquestum capiendo inde ex _____ ad valentiam c. Et de ipsis Roberto Vere Elizabetha Uxore ejus descendit jus per formam c. cuidam Roberto ut Filio Haeredi c. Et de ipso Roberto Filio descendit jus per formam c. cuidam Margaretae ut Filiae Haeredi c. Et de ipsa Margareta eo quòd obiit sine Haerede de Corpore suo exeunte resorciebatur jus per formam c. cuidam Baldewino ut consanguineo Haeredi c. videlicet ut Fratri praedicti Roberti Fratris praedictae Margaretae de ipso Baldewino descendit jus per formam c. cuidam Ricardo ut Filio Haeredi c. Et de ipso Ricardo descendit jus per formam c. cuidam Henrico ut Filio Haeredi c. Et de ipso Henrico descendit jus per formam c. istis Elizabethae Mordaunt Amiae Brown Etheldredae Vere quae nunc petunt simul cum c. ut Filiabus Haeredibus c. Et quòd post mortem c. Et inde producunt sectam c. Et praedicti Thomas Cheyne Johannes Bloxham Johannes Walker per Thomam Spriotte Attornatum suum ven ' defend ' jus suum quando c. Et nichil dicunt in barram sive praeclusionem praedictae Actionis praedictorum Johannis Mordaunt Elizabethae Uxoris ejus Humfridi Brown Amiae Etheldredae per quod iidem Thomas Cheyne Johannes Bloxham Johannes Walker remanent versus praefatos Johannem Mordaunt Elizabetham Uxorem ejus Humfridum Brown Amiam Etheldredam inde indefensi Ideo cons ' est quòd praedicti Johannes Mordaunt Elizabetha Uxor ejus Humfridus Brown Amia Etheldreda recuperent seisinam suam versus praefatos Thomam Cheyne Johannem Bloxham Johannem Walker de Manerio praedicto cum pertinentiis Et nichil de misericordia eorundem Thomae Cheyne Johannis Johannis quia venerunt primo die per suum c. Mordaunt Termino Sanctae Trinitatis Anno Regni Regis Henrici Septimi vicesimo Rotulo Dviii North. ss JOhannes Mordaunt Elizabetha Uxor ejus Humfridus Browne Amia Uxor ejus Etheldreda Vere per Willielmum Gylbert Attornatum suum petunt versus Thomam Cheyne Militem Johannem Bloxham Capellanum Johannem Walker duodecim Messuagia quadraginta Acras Terrae sex Acras Prati viginti solidatos redditus cum pertinentiis in parva Addington de quibus Ricardus Vere Avus praedictarum Eiizabethae Amiae Etheldredae cujus Haeredes ipsae sunt fuit seisitus in Dominico suo ut de Feodo die quo obiit c. Et unde dicunt quòd praedictus Ricardus Avus c. fuit seisitus de Tenementis redditu praedictis cum pertinentiis in Dominico suo ut de feodo jure tempore pacis tempore Domini Edwardi nuper Regis Angliae Quarti post Conquestum Capiendo inde exp ' _____ ad valentiam c. Et de ipso Ricardo descendit feodum c. cuidam Henrico ut Filio Haeredi c. Et de ipso Henrico descendit feodum c. istis Elizabethae Amiae Etheldredae quae nunc petunt similiter c. ut Filiabus Haeredibus c. Et de quibus c. Et inde producunt sectam c. Et praedicti Thomas Johannes Bloxham Johannes Walker per Thomam Spriotte Attornatum suum ven ' defend ' jus suum quando c. Et nichil dicunt in barram sive praeclusionem praedictae Actionis praedictorum Johannis Mordaunt Elizabethae Humfridi Amiae Etheldredae per quod iidem Thomas Johannes Bloxham Johannes Walker remanent versus praefatos Johannem Mordaunt Elizabetham Humfridum Amiam Etheldredam inde indefensi Ideo cons ' est quòd praedicti Johannes Mordaunt Elizabetha Humfridus Amia Etheldreda recuperent sectam suam versus praefatos Thomam Cheyne Johannem Bloxham Johannem Walker de Tenementis redditu praedictis cum pertinentiis Et nichil de misericordia eorundem Thomae Johannis Johannis quia venerunt primo die per suum c. Mordaunt Termino Sanctae Trinitatis Anno Regni Regis Henrici Septimi vicesimo Rotulo Dviii North. ss JOhannes Mordaunt Elizabetha Uxor ejus Humfridus Browne Amia Uxor ejus Etheldreda Vere per Willielmum Gylbert Attornatum suum petunt versus Thomam Cheyne Militem Johannem Bloxham Capellanum Johannem Walker quatuordecim Messuagia quadraginta Acras Terrae octo Acras Prati decem octo solidatos redditus cum pertinentiis in Wolleston Craneford Herdwyk Farnedishe de quibus Ricardus Vere Avus praedictarum Elizabethae Amiae Etheldredae cujus Haeredes ipsae sunt fuit seisitus in Dominico suo ut de feodo die quo obiit c. Et unde dicunt quòd praedictus Ricardus Avus c. fuit seisitus de Tenementis redditu praedictis cum pertinentiis in Dominico suo ut de feodo jure tempore pacis tempore Domini Edwardi nuper Regis Angliae quarti post Conquestum Capiendo inde exp ' _____ ad valentiam c. Et de ipso Ricardo descendit feodum c. cuidam Henrico ut Filio Haeredi c. Et de ipso Henrico descendit feodum c. istis Elizabethae Amiae Etheldredae quae nunc petunt similiter c. ut Filiabus Haeredibus c. Et de quibus c. Et inde producunt sectam c. Et praedicti Thomas Johannes Bloxham Johannes Walker per Thomam Spriotte Attornatum suum veniunt defendunt jus suum quando c. Et nichil dicunt in barram sive praeclusionem praedictae actionis praedictorum Johannis Mordaunt Elizabethae Humfridi Amiae Etheldredae per quòd iidem Thomas Johannes Bloxham Johannes Walker remanent versus praefatos Johannem Mordaunt Elizabetham Humfridum Amiam Etheldredam inde indefensi Ideo cons ' est quòd praedicti Johannes Mordaunt Elizabetha Humfridus Amia Etheldreda recuperent sectam suam versus praefatos Thomam Cheyne Johannem Bloxham Johannem Walker de Tenementis redditu praedictis cum pertinentiis Et nichil de misericordia eorundem Thomae Johannis Johannis quia venerunt primo die per suum c. An Award between the Earl of Shrewsbury and John Mordaunt concerning the Mannor of Drayton TO all Christian people to whom this present Writing indented shall
come hear or see Robert Brudenell and Richard Elliot two of the Kings Justices send gretyng in our Lord. Whereas there hath been divers variances and debates moved and had betwyne the Right Honourable Lord George Earle of Shrewsbury on th' one party and John Mordaunt Esquyer and Elizabeth his Wife oon of the Cosynes and Heires of the Right Honourable Edward late Earle of Wiltshire oon his Moders side that is to say by Constance Moder of the sayd Earle and Daughter and Heire of Henry Greene of Drayton in the Countye of Northampton Esquier and Humfrey Brown Esquier late Husband to Amye and George Brown his Sonne and Heyre apparent and Sonne and Heire to the same Amye another Cosyne and another of the Heires of the sayd Earle of Wiltshire after the forme aforesayd and Sir Wistan Brown Knight and John Brown his Sonne and Heyre apparent and Audree his Wife the third Cosyne and Heire to the fame Earle after the manner abovesayd on the other party of and upon the Right Title Reversion Inheritance and Possession as well of the foresayd Mannor of Drayton with th' appurtenances as of all other Mannors Lands Tenements and Hereditaments with their appurtenances in the sayd Countye of Northampton or elsewhere which late were to the sayd Constance or to the sayd Henry Greene or to any other person or persons to the use of them or th' other of them which Mannors Lands and Tenements the aforesayd Earle of Shrewsbury claymeth by a Will supposed to be made by the sayd Earle of Wiltshire by which Will the foresayd Earle of Wiltshire should will to the sayd Earle of Shrewsbury all his Fee-simple Lond Whereupon the foresayd Partyes have compromitted themselfe to abide the Award Ordinance and Judgment of us the sayd Robert Brudenell and Richard Elliott Arbitrators indifferently named and chosen by and betwyne the foresayd Partyes To award ordein and deme as well of and upon the premisses as for and upon all manner Evidences Charter Escripts Writeings and Aminiments concerning the premisses or any part of them and of all manner of Actions Suites Quarrels and Demands had or moved betwyne the foresayd Partyes or other Servaunts or Frynds before the Date of these Presents concerning the premisses And we the sayd Arbitrators takeing upon us th' auctority and power to award ordein and deme of and upon the premisses calling before us the Counsells of the foresayd Partyes hereing and seeing their Tytyls Answers Replications Evidences Proffes and all other their Alleadgeances concerning their foresayd Tytyls and Interesse by good deliberation and by consent of the sayd Partyes award ordein and deme of and upon the premisses in manner and forme following that is to say Forasmuch as the foresayd John Mordaunt Sir Wistan Humfrey Brown George and John Brown have shewed to us the Arbitrators a Will supposed to be made by the same Earle of Wiltshire and sealed with his Seal in which Will he revoked all former Wills and willed that same Will to stand in his full strength and virtue and for his last Will And in that Will there is no Clause whereby the same Earle of Shrewsbury should have any of his Mannors Lands or Tenements as by the same more playnly appeareth And alsoe they have shewed unto us fair and sufficient Deedes and other Writings proveing the aforesayd Mannor of Drayton and other the sayd Mannors Lands and Tenements and Hereditaments to be yeven in tayle to the Auncestors of the sayd Constance Moder of the sayd Earle of Wiltshire And the sayd Earle of Wiltshire had and enjoyed the same by reason of the same Tayles And that the sayd Elizabeth and George Brown and Audree be Cousyns and next Heyres to the same Constance Moder to the sayd Earle of Wiltshire and to the same Earle on his Moders side and heritable to the foresayd Mannors and other the premisses by reason of the same Tayles Wherefore we award ordein and deme that the aforesayd Elizabeth George Brown and Audree shall have and enjoy all the foresayd Mannors Lands Tenements and Hereditaments and other the premisses to them and to their Heires according to their foresayd Tytylls of Inheritance And that the foresayd Earle of Shrewsbury shall by his severall Deedes sufficient in the Law to be enrolled release unto the sayd John Mordaunt and Elizabeth Humfrey Brown George Brown and John Brown Audree his Wife and to such persons or person as they shall name to the use of the sayd Elizabeth George and Audree and their Heires and all such Right Tytyl Clayme Interest and Demand as the sayd Earle of Shrewsbury or any person or persons to his use hath in the foresayd Mannors Lands and Tenements or other the premisses by reason of any guift or Will in the premisses or any part of them made by the aforesayd Earle of Wiltshire to the foresayd Earle of Shrewsbury at the Costs and Charges of the sayd John Mordaunt John and George Brown in all things And furthermore the sayd Earle of Shrewsbury shall deliver or cause to be delivered to the sayd John Mordaunt Humfrey Brown John and George Brown or to their Deputy or Deputies in London all such Charters Evidences and Writeings as he to his own use or any other to his use to his knowledge hath only concerning the premisses as soon as it may be conveniently done For the which Releases and other things above-specified and for other Costs and Charges which the foresayd Earle of Shrewsbury hath had by occasion of the premisses We the sayd Arbitrators award ordein and deme That the sayd Sir Wistan John Mordaunt Humfrey Brown and John Brown shall content and pay to the sayd Earle of Shrewsbury his Executors or Assignes two hundred Marks of lawful money in forme following that is to say The sayd John Mordaunt shall content and pay to the foresayd Earle of Shrewsbury his Executors or Assignes in the Day of the Feast of Sainct George the Martyr next comeing after the Date above-written at the Rode of the North-Door in the Cathedrall-Church of Pauls in the Citty of London betwyne the howrs of nine and eleven of the Clock of the same Day a hundred Marks And the foresayd Wistan Humfrey Brown and John Brown shall content and pay to the foresayd Earle his Executors or Assignes in the Day of the Feast of Sainct Andrew the Apostle then next ensueing at the sayd Rode in the same Church betwyne the howrs of nine and eleven of the same day a hundred Marks residue of the foresayd two hundred Marks Alsoe we award ordein and deme that the sayd John Mordaunt Sir Wistan Brown Humfrey and John Brown by their Deede and Deedes as sufficient as the sayd Earle of Shrewsbury or his Counsell shall advise shall release to the sayd Earle of Shrewsbury and to as many persons as the sayd Earle shall name and appoynt in Writeing before the Feast of Sainct Michael th' Arch-Angel next comeing after the Date hereof which hath done laboured or spoken for the