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2951 Son and heir, of Lynnen, Kent. Married unknown and had Henry and Edmund. A’DENNE, Michael (I13219)
 
2952 Son of Christopher Batchelor BATCHELOR, Henry (twin) ✝ (I16227)
 
2953 son of John RIGDEN, Gilbert (I14010)
 
2954 son of John RIGDEN, William ^ (I14012)
 
2955 son of John RIGDEN, Henry (I14014)
 
2956 son of John and Elizabeth Bass BASS, William ✝ (I8989)
 
2957 son of John on baptism

National Archives Catalogue:
Grove family estates in Kent, 3 deeds relating to property in Brook, Brabourne and Wye. Other names associated with properties Rygden, Ellys, Lamb and Grove, 1541, 1595, 1602. 
RIGDEN, Thomas (I13431)
 
2958 Son of William Epps, tea dealer residing at Hackney in 1875 and wife Susan.

Age on death registration was recorded as 73 years and was recorded in Edmonton District, Middlesex, England (vol. 3a, p. 1311). 
EPPS, Ferguson Nutt (I3026)
 
2959 Son TESSIER and Susan Dara YOUNG are 5th cousins 1 time removed. Their common ancestors are John MILSTED and Mary NUTT. TESSIER, Son (I20200)
 
2960 SOUDER, Marvin Kenneth "Marv"; 69; Fort Erie ON>Pugwash NS; Chron-Herald; 2008-12-20; kbutler SOUDER, Marvin Kenneth (I11125)
 
2961 Source : :
"Roger Ier de Montgommery (ou Montgomery, Montgoméri) († avant 1048), fut un seigneur normand du XIe siècle.

Biographie
D'ascendance scandinave, Roger Ier de Montgommery est un seigneur possessionné dans le centre de la Normandie . Il fait partie de la coterie de jeune nobles qui gravitent vers 1026 autour du comte d'Hiémois, Robert. Ce dernier devient duc de Normandie en 1027, à la mort de son frère Richard III. Il nomme alors Roger vicomte d'Hiémois (ou d'Exmes ).
Comme son duc Robert le Magnifique, Roger de Montgommery s'enrichit en dépouillant l'Église. Il tente par exemple de détruire le bourg que les moines de Jumièges ont à Vimoutiers pour le remplacer par un autre qu'il installe sur ses terres, à Montgommery (aujourd'hui Saint-Germain-de-Montgommery et Sainte-Foy-de-Montgommery ). Le duc ferme les yeux puis réagit sous la pression de l'abbé de Jumièges et de l'archevêque de Rouen. Dans un premier temps, Robert le Magnifique détruit le marché de Montgommery et restaure celui des moines. Puis, il finit par autoriser la création d'un second marché sur les terres de Roger.
Il est le fondateur d'une collégiale à Troarn. Plus tard, en 1059, son fils Roger II de Montgommery chassera ses occupants (12 chanoines dont la discipline laissait à désirer) et y installera une communauté de moines, fondant ainsi l'abbaye Saint-Martin de Troarn.
Après la mort de Robert le Magnifique en 1035, Roger ne semble plus en faveur. Guillaume de Jumièges explique qu'il est exilé à la cour du roi de France Henri Ier, < à cause de sa perfidie >. On suppose qu'il a dû se rebeller contre l'autorité du nouveau et très jeune duc, Guillaume le Bâtard (futur Guillaume le Conquérant.
Ses cinq fils, restés en Normandie, se livrent à différents crimes. L'un d'eux, Guillaume, assassine Osbern, le sénéchal du duc, vers 1040. Un autre, Roger II de Montgommery, finit par se rallier à Guillaume le Bâtard et poursuivra ainsi le renom de la famille.

Généalogie
Il épousa Josceline, fille Sainsfrida qui avait pour sœur Gunnor de Normandie.
Enfants (d'après Guillaume de Jumièges) :
Hugues de Montgommery
Robert de Montgommery
Roger II de Montgommery, compagnon du duc de Normandie Guillaume le Conquérant
Guillaume de Montgommery, assassin du sénéchal Osbern et lui-même assassiné par le prévot Barnon de Glos
Gilbert de Montgommery"
__________________________
Source :
"... Se battait en 1039 contre Alain de Bretagne. Exilé à Paris."
__________________________
Source :
"Roger 1er de Montgomery + avant 1048 (1045 ?, Paris)
seigneur de Montgomery, Trun et Thin, vicomte d'Hiémois (~1027)
(cité dans une charte à Saint-Wandrille, de Robert 1er, duc de Normandie 1031/32 ; restitue le marché de Vimoutiers, saisi sur les moines, à Jumièges 1028/35), destitué (dès 1040), exilé à Paris au début du règne du duc bâtard Guillaume II (~1035)
ép. Josceline de Bolbec (fille d'un Forestier de Saint-Vaast et d'une des soeurs de la duchesse Gunnor, probablement Senfrie.

Roger 1er de Montgomery, très proche conseiller du Conquérant, nommé par lui à la tête du Conseil de Régence chargé de gérer le duché de Normandie pendant la Conquête de l'Angleterre, ne débarque en Angleterre qu'en décembre 1067."




-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Roger held the lands of Saint-Germain-de-Montgommery and Sainte-Foy-de-Montgommery, both of which show traces of early castles.[3] He acquired the office of vicomte of the Hiémois probably about the time Robert I became Duke in 1027.[a][4] In c. 1031–1032 he witnessed a charter to the abbey of St. Wandrille by Robert I, Duke of Normandy as vicomte.[5] Like Duke Robert, Roger began acquiring church properties, among these, c. 1025–27, half the town of Bernay.[6] He took over a wood at 'Crispus Fagidus' which belonged to Jumièges Abbey in the 1030s.[6] He suppressed a market held by the same abbey and transferred it into his own domain.[7] He later returned the market to the abbey and paid restitution for their losses.[7]

In 1035 at Robert I's death, his great uncle, Robert Archbishop of Rouen ruled Normandy as regent.[8] Roger seems to have lost favor with the young duke as well as his vicomte office as he signed an early charter of Duke William simply as Roger of Montgomery.[9] At the archbishop’s death in 1037, anarchy broke out in Normandy and among the rebels was Roger de Montgomery, formerly one of Duke Robert's closest companions, who, after being defeated in his own territory, fled to the court of Henry I of France.[10] Roger had been forced into exile by Osbern the Steward who was afterwards killed by William de Montgomery, Roger's son.[11] Roger died on February 7th 1055 in exile in Paris, Ile-de-France, France. In 1068 his wife was still holding lands at Bures and Saint-Pair.[citation needed]

Roger married Josceline DE PONT-AUDEMER [1616] about 1012 in , Normandie, France.1 (Josceline DE PONT-AUDEMER [1616] was born in 985 in Pont-Audemer, Normandie , France 1 and died in 1068 in , , France 1.)

3. George Edward Cokayne, The Complete Peerage; or, A History of the House of Lords and all its Members from the Earliest Times, Volume XI, ed. Geoffrey H. White (London: The St. Catherine Press, Ltd., 1949), p. 682, n. (b)
4. Kathleen Thompson, 'The Norman Aristocracy before 1066; The Example of the Montgomerys', Historical research; the Bulletin of the Institute of Historical Research, Vol. 60, Issue 123 (October 1987), p. 256
5. David C. Douglas, William the Conqueror (Berkeley, Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1964), p. 94
6. a b Kathleen Thompson, 'The Norman Aristocracy before 1066; The Example of the Montgomerys', Historical research; the Bulletin of the Institute of Historical Research, Vol. 60, Issue 123 (October 1987), p. 255
7. a b Cassandra Potts, Monastic revival and regional identity in early Normandy (Woodbridge, UK: The Boydell Press, 1997), p. 121
8. The Gesta Normannorum Ducum of William of Jumièges, Orderic Vitalis, and Robert of Torigni, Ed. & Trans. Elizabeth M.C. Van Houts, Vol. I (Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1992), pp. 80-5
9. Kathleen Thompson, 'The Norman Aristocracy before 1066; The Example of the Montgomerys', Historical research; the Bulletin of the Institute of Historical Research, Vol. 60, Issue 123 (October 1987), p. 257
10. François Neveux, The Normans; The Conquests that Changed the Face of Europe, trans. Howard Curtis (London: Constable & Robinson Ltd., 2008), p. 112
11. Kathleen Thompson, 'The Norman Aristocracy before 1066; The Example of the Montgomerys', Historical research; the Bulletin of the Institute of Historical Research, Vol. 60, Issue 123 (October 1987), pp. 257-58

[Source:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roger_de_Montgomery,_seigneur_of_Montgomery] 
DE MONTGOMMERY, Roger I Seigneur of Montgomery, Vicomte d'Hiemois (I13576)
 
2962 Source Par Robert William Eyton:
"... many Immigrants from Brittany and Maine may be presumed to have come to England, and, among them, several members of the family of De Gorram, previously settled at La Tanniere, in Maine. One of these, viz. William de Gorram, appears to have been the person who had Chetton and Berwick by gift of Henry I., and Eudon by gift of Alan fitz Flaald or his son. That this William de Gorram was father of Damietta, the wife of Ranulph de Broc, is quite clear from documentary evidence;\emdash for instance, "William de Gorram gives his land of Staplehurst,1 which he held under Earl William, to Ranulph de Broc and to his (William de Gorram's) daughter Damata, and to their heirs;\emdash to hold under Earl William."

Ranulph de Broc died, as we have seen, about 1187, holding half a knight's-fee in the Honour of Arundel, and probably at Staplehurst above mentioned. His wife Damietta, known to have been heiress of Berwick, Chetton, and Eudon, survived till about 1204. Ranulph de Broc apparently had a son, Robert, by his wife Damietta, which son survived him. Hence we have a Deed whereby "Damata, formerly wife of Sir Ranulph de Broc, and Robert de Broc, her son, testify that they were present when the said Ranulph gave his land of Combdena to one Fulco de Bollard; and they confirm the donation."

Again, Robert de Broc married Margaret, daughter of Richard de Beauchamp, and had by her a son, Laurence. Hence a Deed whereby "Robert de Broc, for the (souls') health of Margaret his wife, of Sir Ranulph de Broc his father, of Laurence his son, and of Sir Richard de Beauchamp, Margaret's father, makes a grant to the Church of St. Paul of Newnham and to the Canons of Ravensden. Witnesses,\emdash Sir Stephen de Turnham, Sir Thomas Basset." However, the male line of Ranulph de Broc must have expired on the deaths of the above Robert and Laurence, and before the death of Damietta de Gorram. On the last event taking place in 1204, Stephen de Turnham, as husband of Edelina (Damietta's eldest daughter and alleged heir), obtained livery of Frelbury (Southants), and of Berwick, Chetton, and Eudon (Shropshire). The litigation which ensued between Edelina and her sisters, or the heirs and representatives of herself and her sisters, has been given already in most of its details. I now turn back a few years to add something to what has been said under Idsall, about Stephen de Turnham.\emdash ..."
__________________________
Source Par Collectanea topographica et genealogica:
"It is uncertain whether we must refer to the family of Gorram of the Maine, William De Goram who, in the reign of Henry II. waa possessed of half a knight's fee in Staplehurtt [Kent?], and who was Lord of the manor of frelteri, in the county of Southampton. His daughter Damata De Goram married Ralph de Broc of Agenet Castle; she died before 1205. (Close Rolls, 6 John, in. 19.) An undated grant by William de Goram, to Ralph de Broc and Damata his wife, of half a fee in Staplehurst to be held from Earl William, was among the Records of the late Earls of Peterborough, and is printed in that rare volume, Halated's Genealogies ...

The inheritance of Damata de Goram was disputed in 1223 by her two daughters, Edelina, who married Stephen de Turnham (deceased before 1215, Pipe Roll 16 John, Surrey) and Sybilla de Broc ..."
_________________________
Source :
"Damietta de Gorram
Birth 1125 in Shropshire ,England
Death Bef 1204
Father William De Gorham
Mother Lady Of Chetton
Husband Ranulf Broc 1120-1167
Children:
Clemence de Broc 1150-1221
Robert le Broc Marshal 1155-_
Felicia de Broc 1158-1221
Lucia de Broc 1160-1221
Sibil de Broc 1165-1253
Edelina Le Broc 1175-_"
________________________
Source :
"Damietta De Gorram
Birth 1145 Berwick, Shropshire, England
Death 1204 Angmering, Sussex, England
Husband Ranulf Broc 1120-1167"
________________________
Source :
"Ranulf de Broc ...

De Broc married Dametta de Gorron, who brought lands at Frollebury in Hampshire and Chetton, Eudon and Berwick in Shropshire to the marriage. Besides his wife's lands, de Broc also held lands worth half a knight's fee at Angmering in Sussex and lands worth a full knight's fee at Pepperharrow.

De Broc's marriage produced five daughters, who were de Broc's coheiresses when he died around 1179. Dametta died in 1204. The eldest daughter was Edelina, and the other four were Felicia, Sibil, Lucy, and Clemence. Edelina married Stephen of Turnham, Felicia married William Harang, Sibil married William de Arundel and Ralph Belet, and Clemence married William de Tatlington."


Damietta married Ranulph DE BROC, Of Agenet Castle [4121], son of Oin PURCEL, Lord Of Catteshill [4128] and N. DE BROC [4129]. (Ranulph DE BROC, Of Agenet Castle [4121] was born about 1120 and died about 1187 in , , England.) 
DE GORRAM, Damietta (I13565)
 
2963 Source :
"ROGER [II] de Montgommery, son of ROGER [I] Seigneur de Montgommery and Vicomte de l'Hiémois & his wife Josceline --- (-Shrewsbury 27 Jul 1094, bur Shrewsbury Abbey). Guillaume of Jumièges names "Hugo et Robertus, Rogerius et Willelmus atque Gislebertus" as the five sons of "Rogeri[us] de Montegumeri", adding that they had remained in Normandy during their father´s exile. The Chronicle of Alberic de Trois-Fontaines names "Rogerum de Montgommeri" as son of "Iosceline". His father's name is confirmed by the charter dated to [1079/82] under which "Roger ex Northmannis Northmannus son of Roger" donated property to St Martin, Troarn for the soul of "his wife Mabel lately deceased". He succeeded his father as Seigneur de Montgommery, Vicomte de l'Hiémois. Orderic Vitalis records that "Rogerius de Monte-Gomeri, Oximensis vicecomes" expelled the canons from Troarn, where they had been installed by "Rogerius pater suus". "…Rogerii de Monte Gomerici…" witnessed the charter dated to [1055] under which Guillaume II Duke of Normandy donated property to the abbey of Marmoutier. "…Willelmi filii Osberti, Rotgerii de Monte Golmerii, Richardis vicecomitis Abrinchensis…" witnessed the charter dated [1055/56] under which Guillaume II Duke of Normandy "in pago…Constantino, villam…Flotomannum" to Saint-Florent de Saumur. Orderic Vitalis names "...Rogerius de Bellomonte et Rogerius de Monte-Gomerici..." among the leading lords under Guillaume II Duke of Normandy. A charter dated 1066 records his pardoning the abbey of Sainte-Trinité de Rouen for a calumny. The Brevis Relatio de Origine Willelmi Conquestoris records that "Rogero de Montgumeri" contributed 60 ships towards the invasion of England in 1066. He remained in Normandy at the time of the Norman invasion of England in 1066 to assist Duchess Mathilde to govern the duchy, but accompanied King William I to England in Dec 1067: Orderic Vitalis records that, when King William returned to England, 6 Dec 1067, he appointed "Mathildi conjugi suæ filioque suo Rodberto adolescenti" to govern Normandy ("principatum Neustriæ"), adding that the king took with him "Rogerium de Monte-Gomerici" whom he had appointed as "tutorem Normanniæ...cum sua conjuge" when he had left for England for the first time and that King William granted "primo Cicestram et Arundellum...post aliquot tempus Scrobesburiensem" to Roger. [Earl] of Chester and Arundel. Earl of Shrewsbury. Orderic Vitalis records that "Rogerius de Monte-Gomerici", after the fall of "Geroiana progenies", held "totum patrimonium Excalfoii et Monasterioli" for about 26 years. The Chronique de Normandie, based on le Roman de Rou, records that William I King of England made "le Conte Rogier de Montgomery et Guillaume le filz Osber" his two "Marechaulx d´Engleterre" after the conquest of England. He became Sire d´Alençon, de iure uxoris, after the death in 1070 of her paternal uncle Ives Bishop of Seés. ...


m firstly ([1050/54]) MABILE d'Alençon, daughter of GUILLAUME "Talvas" Sire d'Alençon & his first wife Hildeburge --- (-murdered Bures 2 Dec 1079, bur 5 Dec 1079 Troarn). Guillaume of Jumièges records that "Willelmus cognomento Talavatius" married "Hildeburge...filiam Arnulfi" by whom he had "Arnulfum et Mabiliam" and whom he had strangled "a duobus parasitis". Guillaume of Jumièges records that "Willelmus Talavatius", after he was exiled, arranged the marriage of "filiam suam...Mabiliam" to "Rogerium de Monte-Gummeri" who received him in his household. Orderic Vitalis records that "Ivo filius Willermi Belesmensis...neptem...Mabiliam" married "Rogerius de Monte-Gomerici Oximensium vicecomes" who through her obtained "magnam partem possessionis Willermi Belesmensis", adding that Mabile was "a forceful and worldly woman, cunning, garrulous and extremely cruel" ("potens et sæcularis, callida et loquax, nimiumque crudelis"). "Rogerius comes…et sua uxor Mabilia atque suus filius Rotbertus" donated property to Notre-Dame de Bellême by charter dated to [1070/79]. Orderic Vitalis records that she was murdered by Hugh Bunel, son of Robert "de Jalgeio" from whom she had taken his castle, who found her "relaxing in bed after a bath [and] struck off her head with his sword". "Roger ex Northmannis Northmannus son of Roger" donated property to St Martin, Troarn for the soul of "his wife Mabel lately deceased" by charter dated to [1079/82], subscribed by "Rogerii comitis, Rotberti filii eius, Hugonis, Rogerii, Philippi, Arnulfis [filiorum eius]".

m secondly ADELAIS du Puiset [de Breteuil], daughter of ERARD [I] Comte de Breteuil, Vicomte de Chartres & his wife Humberge ---. Orderic Vitalis records that, after the death of his first wife, "Rogerius [de Monte-Gomerici]" married secondly "Adelaisam Ebrardi de Pusacio...filiam", by whom he had "unum...filium...Ebrardum...inter regales capellanos usque hodie...in aula Guillelmi et Henrici, Angliæ regum" for about 26 years.

Earl Roger & his first wife had ten children:
1. ROGER de Montgommery (-[before 1060/62]).
2. ROBERT de Montgommery "de Bellême" ([1052/56]-[Wareham Castle] 1 or 8 May 1118 or [after 1129], bur [Wareham Castle]). ...
3. HUGUES de Montgommery ([1053/59]-Anglesey 31 Jul 1098, bur [17 Aug 1098] Shrewsbury Abbey
4. ROGER de Montgommery "le Poitevin" (-1123). ...
5. PHILIPPE de Montgommery "Grammaticus" (-Antioch 1099).
6. ARNOUL de Montgommery (-after 1119). ...
7. EMMA de Montgommery (-4 Mar 1113).
8. MATHILDE de Montgommery (-[1085], bur abbaye de Grestain). ...
9. MABILE de Montgommery (-after 1132)
10. SIBYLLE de Montgommery. ...

Earl Roger & his second wife had one child:
11. EVERARD de Montgommery (-before [1135/36]). ..."
______________________________________
Source :
"Roger de Montgommery (ou Montgoméri, Montgomery) dit Roger le Grand (vers 1030 - 27 septembre, seigneur de Montgommery, vicomte de l' Hiémois, et sire d'Alençon, fut l'un des seigneurs les plus riches de l' Angleterre nouvellement conquise par Guillaume le Conquérant. Il créa l'une des seigneuries les plus puissantes et stratégiquement importantes apparues après la conquête normande. Il fut 1er comte de Shrewsbury à partir de 1074.

Un proche de Guillaume le Conquérant
Il était le fils d'un autre Roger de Montgommery, vicomte d'Hiémois, un fidèle du duc de Normandie Robert le Magnifique. Roger de Montgommery hérita des vastes domaines de son père, situés principalement dans le sud du pays d'Auge, au centre de la Normandie.
On ne connaît pas vraiment son attitude pendant la minorité de Guillaume le Bâtard, fils et successeur de Robert le Magnifique. Les guerres entre barons normands troublaient cette période (1035-1047) et bafouaient l'autorité ducale. L'historien contemporain Guillaume de Jumièges avoue que Roger et ses 4 frères se livrèrent "à toutes sortes de crimes" mais il ne développe pas. Craint-il d'offenser Roger qui, au temps de la rédaction de l'ouvrage (vers 1070), est devenu l'un des plus puissants barons anglo-normand et l'un des proches collaborateurs de Guillaume le Conquérant ? À l'inverse, on peut penser que si Roger est né vers 1030, il n'a pas pu participer activement à ces troubles en raison de son jeune âge.
Ce qui est sûr, c'est que pendant l'enfance du duc, la famille de Montgommery ne fut pas particulièrement fidèle au prince : le père Roger Ier a dû quitter la Normandie, sûrement parce qu'il s'était révolté ou avait comploté contre le pouvoir ducal ; l'un des frères, Guillaume, a assassiné le sénéchal du jeune duc Osbern ; vers 1040, le tuteur du duc Alain III de Bretagne trouva la mort en assiégeant le château de Montgommery. La position de Roger de Montgommery est beaucoup plus claire après l'affermissement du pouvoir de Guillaume le Bâtard. En 1050, il faisait partie des principaux conseillers du duc : il contresigna une charte du duc en faveur de l'abbaye d'Ouche aux côtés des grands barons et évêques de Normandie.
Le duc Guillaume le nomma vicomte d'Exmes (ou d'Hiémois), une fonction qu'occupait autrefois son père Roger Ier. Conscient de son importance, Roger II n'hésita pas à s'intituler < comte de Montgommery > dans deux chartes ducales alors que son domaine n'était qu'une simple châtellenie.
En 1066, Guillaume le Bâtard partit à la conquête de l'Angleterre mais Roger ne l'accompagna pas. Il fournit tout de même 60 navires pour l'expédition et appuya la duchesse Mathilde, aux côtés de Lanfranc et de Roger de Beaumont, dans le gouvernement et la défense de la Normandie.

L'alliance avec la famille de Bellême ... Roger II de Montgommery en Angleterre ... Révoltes en 1087-1088 ...

Famille et descendance
En premières noces, Roger II de Montgomery épousa Mabille Talvas († 1082), fille de Guillaume II Talvas et héritière d'un vaste domaine aux confins de la Normandie et du Maine: la seigneurie de Bellême. Il en eut 10 enfants.
Roger épousa ensuite Adélaïde de Breteuil, fille d'Évrard, comte de Breteuil et vicomte de Chartres, dont il eut un fils Éverard.
À sa mort, les biens de Roger furent divisés. Robert, le plus âgé de ses enfants survivants reçut la majorité des terres normandes. Le suivant, Hugues, reçut en partage les terres anglaises et le comté de Shrewsbury. À la mort de Hugues, Robert hérita du comté."
___________________________
Source :
"Roger II "Le Jeune>" de Montgomery
(ass., Shrewsbury) seigneur de Montgomery, vicomte d'Hiémois, comte d'Alençon, seigneur de Bellême et de Domfront (par son mariage), Régent en Normandie (1066), en Angleterre (12/1067), fait earl of Sussex (1071) et earl of Shropshire, créé 1er earl of Shrewsbury (01-04/12/1074) sur la marche Galloise, reçoit les château et ville de Chichester et Arundel, rebelle contre Guillaume II (1089)
(charte 1066 à La Sainte-Trinité de Rouen ; charte royale à l'Eglise de Bayeux 24/12/1074 ; fonde les Abbayes de Sées, Trouard et Almenèches ; donateur à Saint-Etienne de Caen, Saint-Pierre-sur-Dive, Grestain et Saint-Evroult ; fonde en Alngleterre l'Abbaye de Saint-Pierre de Scrobesbury)

ép. 1) 10/1054 Mabile (alias Mathilde) de Bellême ou d'Alençon + 02/12/1079 (Bures, ass. par Hugues Bunel, fils de Robert dont elle avait confisqué le château) dame de La Roche-Mabile , Alençon (61) et Sées (61) (fille de Guillaume Talvas de Bellême, fondateur de Domfront, et d'Hildeburge)
(Ordéric Vital lui a fait la réputation - à tort ? au moins partiale - d'une cruauté féroce voire extrême)

ép. 2) après 1082 Adélaïde (Adelaïs, Alix) de Breteuil (alias du Puiset) (fille d'Erard 1er, comte de Breteuil, vidame de Chartres, et d'Humberge)
___________________________
Source (Montgomerie) :
"... little is known of Roger's history prior to the year 1048, the date of his first marriage. We gather the story of his Norman life, chiefly from the pages of the Monk of St. Evroult, Ordericus Vitalis, who while having a high esteem for his character, never lost sight of the fact that Mabel, Roger's wife, was an enemy of the abbey of which he had become a monk. But while Roger " loved and honored the monks," he admits, " the wife could not employ openly her wickedness to destroy them." He says of him " that he was a very prudent and moderate man, pious, a great lover of equity, and of discreet and modest persons. For a long time he had near him three scholars full of prudence, Godebauld, Ordelirius, and Herbert, whose counsels he followed with advantage." Ordelirius, called of Orleans, son of Constantius, was the father of Ordericus; and owned the timber chapel at Shrewsbury, on whose site Roger afterwards built his great Abbey. Besides the personal knowledge the historian must have had of Roger and of his family, he had at his command the fruits of his father's personal intimacy with him; and the statements his history gives in relation to him or to any of his sons, are to be considered as entirely credible....

Roger's marriage into a violent and turbulent family, brought him in connection with some severe family feuds. His wife's family bore " an enduring hatred" to the family of the Giroie, one of whom had been the benefactor of the Abbey of St. Evroult; so far had this been carried, that the abbey and its monks were much annoyed by Mabel, and indeed illtreated out of spite.5 After the fall of the Giroie, Roger during nearly twenty-six years possessed all the patrimony of Echaufour and Montreuil.6 Our historian tells us that after his wife's death, Roger " assidu...

The Earl of Shrewsbury had by his wife, Mabel, several children.
I. Robert, "de Belesme," who succeeded to the Norman estates of his parents, and eventually to the english'possessions of his brother.
II. Hush de Montgomerie, Earl of Shrewsbury and Arundel, succeeded his father"
III. Roger De Montgomerie, called le Poitevin, Earl of Lancaster, and Count of Marche,5 was involved in the misfortunes of his family, which taking part with Robert, Duke of Normandy, in his vain efforts to supplant Henry I. on the throne of England, lost all its possessions both in England and Wales, as well as many of those in Normandy.
IV. Philip De Montgomerie, known as the Clerk, or the Grammarian,... In 1096 he accompanied Duke Robert in his crusade to the Holy Land, and died at the siege of Antioch, which continued from December, 1097, to the month of June following.
V. Arnulph, or Arnaud De Montgomerie, sometimes called Earl of Pembroke, the ancestor of the present male line of the family.
VI. Emma, Abbess of Almeneches
VII. Mathilde, or Maud, married Robert, Earl of Moreton in Normandy, and Earl of Cornwall in England, who was half-brother of William the Conqueror.
VIII. Mabel, married Hugh de Chateau-neuf, nephew and heir of Albert Ribald. (Chateau-neuf in the Thimirais.) Their son-in-law was Gervaise de Neufchatel. Mabel was living in 1131.
IX. Sybille, married Robert Fitz Hamon, descended from Robert, the second son of Rollo."

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Roger came to England in 1967 and received extensive grants of land in different parts of the kingdom. He was created earl of Shropshire in December 1074, a position which gave him palatine control of that county and placed him among the greatest of the Marcher lords; but he and his successors were usually styled earls of Shrewsbury. A great patron of monasticism, he became a monk in his newly founded Abbey of Shrewsbury just before he died in 1094. His Norman inheritance passed to his eldest surviving son, Robert of Bellême, and the title and the English lands went to Robert’s younger brother, Hugh. Upon the latter’s death in 1098, the title went to Robert.
[Source: http://www.britannica.com/biography/Roger-de-Montgomery-1st-earl-of-Shrewsbury]

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Roger was thus one of the half dozen greatest magnates in England during William the Conqueror's reign. William gave Earl Roger nearly all of what is now the county of West Sussex, which at the time of the Domesday Survey was the Rape of Arundel.[2] The Rape of Arundel was eventually split into two rapes, one continuing with the name Rape of Arundel and the other became the Rape of Chichester.[2] Besides the 83 manors in Sussex, his possessions also included seven-eighths of Shropshire which was associated with the earldom of Shrewsbury, he had estates in Surrey (4 manors), Hampshire (9 manors), Wiltshire (3 manors), Middlesex (8 manors), Gloucestershire (1 manor), Worcestershire (2 manors), Cambridgeshire (8 manors), Warwickshire (11 manors) and Staffordshire (30 manors).[3] The income from Roger’s estates would amount to about £2000 per year, in 1086 the landed wealth for England was around £72,000, so it would have represented almost 3% of the nation’s GDP.[4][5]

After William I's death in 1087, Roger joined with other rebels to overthrow the newly crowned King William II in the Rebellion of 1088. However, William was able to convince Roger to abandon the rebellion and side with him. This worked out favourably for Roger, as the rebels were beaten and lost their land holdings in England.

Roger first married Mabel de Bellême, who was heiress to a large territory straddling the border between Normandy and Maine. The medieval chronicler Orderic Vitalis paints a picture of Mabel of Bellême being a scheming and cruel woman.[6] She was murdered by Hugh Bunel and his brothers, who in December 1077? rode into her castle of Bures-sur-Dive and cut off her head as she lay in bed.[6][7] Their motive for the murder was that Mabel had deprived them of their paternal inheritance.[8] Roger and Mabel had 10 children:

Robert de Bellême, Count of Alençon in 1082, he succeeded his younger brother Hugh as 3rd Earl of Shrewsbury. He married Agnes, Countess of Ponthieu and died in 1131.[9]
Hugh of Montgomery, 2nd Earl of Shrewsbury, died without issue 1098.[10]
Roger the Poitevin, Vicomte d'Hiemois, married Adelmode de la Marche.[11]
Philip of Montgomery.[12]
Arnulf of Montgomery,[12] married Lafracota daughter of Muirchertach Ua Briain.[13]
Sibyl of Montgomory, she married Robert Fitzhamon, Lord of Creully.[14]
Emma, abbess of Almenêches.[15]
Matilda (Maud) of Montgomery, she married Robert, Count of Mortain and died c. 1085.[16]
Mabel of Montgomery, she married Hugh de Châteauneuf.[12]
Roger of Montgomery, died young.
Roger then married Adelaide de Le Puiset, by whom he had one son, Everard, who entered the Church.

After his death, Roger's estates were divided.[17] The eldest surviving son, Robert, received the bulk of the Norman estates (as well as his mother's estates); the next son, Hugh, received the bulk of the English estates and the Earldom of Shrewsbury.[17] After Hugh's death the elder son Robert inherited the earldom.[17]

2. Salzmann.'The rape of Chichester: Introduction', A History of the County of Sussex: Volume 4: The Rape of Chichester (1953), pp. 1-2. URL: http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=41682 Date accessed: 8 August 2010
3. Horsfield. History of Sussex. pp.76 - 77
4. Domesday Pase
5. Britnel, R.H.; Campbell, Bruce M. S., eds. (1995). "Appendix 2". A Commercialising Economy: England, 1086 to c1300. Manchester University Press; 1st edition. ISBN 0-7190-3994-0.
6. a b Vitalis.The ecclesiastical history of Orderic Vitalis, Volume 2 Book 3. pp.49-55
7. Vitalis. The ecclesiastical history of Orderic Vitalis, Volume 2 Book 3. Footnote pp.54-55. Discussion on date of death of Mabel of Bellême, 1077 and 1079 being the most likely.
8. Allen Brown. Proceedings of the Battle Conference on Anglo-Norman studies: 1978. p.41.
9. George Edward Cokayne, The Complete Peerage; or, A History of the House of Lords and all its Members from the Earliest Times, Volume XI, Ed. Geoffrey H. White (The St. Catherine Press, Ltd., London, 1949), p. 695
10. George Edward Cokayne, The Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, Extant Extinct or Dormant, Vol. I, Ed. Vicary Gibbs (The St. Catherine Press, Ltd., London, 1910), p. 233
11. George Edward Cokayne, The Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, Extant Extinct or Dormant, Vol. IV, Ed. Vicary Gibbs (The St. Catherine Press, Ltd., London, 1916), p. Appendix I, p. 762
12. a b c K.S.B. Keats-Rohan, Domesday People, Vol. I Domesday Book (The Boydell Press, Woodbridge, UK, 1999), p. 399
13. W.H. Turton, The Plantagenet Ancestry; Being Tables Showing Over 7,000 of the Ancestors of Elizabeth (daughter of Edward IV, and wife of Henry VII) the Heiress of the Plantagenets (Genealogical Publishing Co., Baltimore, 1968), p. 144
14. George Edward Cokayne, The Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, Extant Extinct or Dormant, Vol. V, Ed. H. A. Doubleday & Howard de Walden (The St. Catherine Press, Ltd., London, 1926), p. 683
15. J.R. Planché, The Conqueror and His Companions, Vol. I (Tinsley Brothers, London, 1874), p. 202
16. K.S.B. Keats-Rohan, Domesday People, Vol. I Domesday Book (The Boydell Press, Woodbridge, UK, 1999), p. 372
17. a b c George Edward Cokayne, The Complete Peerage; or, A History of the House of Lords and all its Members from the Earliest Times, Vol XI, Ed. Geoffrey H. White (London: The St. Catherine Press, Ltd., 1949), pp. 688, 689-92

[Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roger_de_Montgomerie,_1st_Earl_of_Shrewsbury]
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Roger married Mabille DE BELLEME [646], daughter of Guillaume II DE BELLEME, Seigneur D'alençon [647] and Hideburge DE BEAUMONT [652], in 1050-1054 in , Normandie, France.1 (Mabille DE BELLEME [646] was born about 1025 in , Normandie, France,1 2 died on 2 Dec 1079 in Bures-Sur-Dives, Normandie, France 1 and was buried in Troarn, Normandie, France 1.) 
DE MONTGOMMERY, Lord Roger II 1st Earl of Shrewsbury, Earl of Arundel (I13575)
 
2964 Source :
---> A very long discussion about the Gorron family ...
__________________________
Source Par Sir Bernard Burke:
"Gorham: The Gorhams came into England immediately after the Conquest; for "W. Filius GoRHaM," occurs in 1086, in Doomsday Survey (II. 441.), at Cippenhall, near Fresingfield, Suffolk.
Their foreign settlement was at, or in the vicinity of, the town of Gorram (now Goron), in Maine, 15 miles N.W. of Mayenne; a fortified place attached to the fief of Normandy by Duke William, shortly before his invasion of England.

Geoffrey De Gorram occurs as early as 922, as witness to a grant to the Monks of Notre Dame de Mars-sur-la-Futaye, at Villarenton (or Villa-Arunton), afterwards called L'Abbeyette (La Bayette, by error, in Cassini's map of France); a small Priory, of which a trace still remains, between Goron and Savigny: but Menage (Histoire de Sable) considers the charter as doubtful.

Another Geoffrey De Gorram (probably the father of Geoffrey, Abbot of St. Alban's, of whom more hereafter) occurs in a grant of undoubted authenticity, at the end of Century XI., or early in Century XII., as being father of

Euello or Rollo or Ralph De Gorram, who, before 1112, gave the perpetual advowson of Brece, four miles from Gorram, to the Priory of Fountain-Gehard, near Mayenne, a Cell to Marmontier Abbey, at Tours. He married Hersendis, daughter of Walter, Lord of Mayenne. He was a benefactor to Savigny Abbey, and was living in 1120. He was probably the father of Robert, Abbot of St. Alban's. His eldest son,

William De Gorram, shortly before, or in 1128, built a new castle on his demesne at La Tanniere (10 miles W. of Gorram), in the parish of St. Berthevin. He gave both his parish Church, and the Chapel of his Castle, to the Monastery of Mount St.Michael, near Avranches, with a plot of ground for the settlement of some monks, one of whom was to perform divine offices at La Tanniere. He married Matilda, by whom he inherited Livare, La Doree, and (probably) La Tanniere. He and his wife granted lands in Livare to the Abbot and Monks of Savigny. He died about 1155; and was succeeded by his son, Giles De Gorram, Lord of La Tanniere, who occurs 1162. ..."
____________________________
Source :
"De Gorram, of la Tanniere in Maine.
Some of this family must have followed the Conqueror into England ; for, at the time of the Domesday survey, " W[illiam] son of Gorram " was a tenant of land in Cippenhall, near Fresingfield, Suffolk, held of Hervey of Bourdeaux. The Breton family, from which the English settlers were derived, may now be traced oiie step higher than the pedigree hitherto given in the Collectanea ; for it appears that Ralph de Gorram, in the year 1100, gave to the Abbey of Marmoutier, in the suburbs of Tours, the Church of Brece, about four miles from Gorram in Maine. He occurs as a witness, about 1112, to a grant of land between Brittany and the Avranchin to Vitalis Abbot of Savigny. He witnessed, about 1120, another grant, to the same Abbot, of land near the wood of Savigny. He married Hersendis de Mayenne, daughter of Walter, Lord of Mayenne, about l090 : she occurs about 1120. ..."
____________________________
Source :
"AT of Matilda of Mayenne, wife of Hugh II of Burgundy
... Juhel married Clemence, daughter of William Talvas of Ponthieu and Ela of Burgundy, while Hersendis married Ralph (or Rivallon) Fitz Geoffrey Fitz Rivallon de Gorron. ..."
____________________________
Source :
"... Gilles de Gorram, chevalier, seigneur de la Tannière, de Saint-Berthevin, de Levaré et de la Dorée, nommé Juhel dans quelques chartes, était le fils aîné de Guillaume de Gorram, seigneur des mêmes terres et le petit-fils de Paiellon de Gorram et de Hersende de Mayenne, sœur de Juhel II. Son père Guillaume, bâtit en ll'iS, le château de la Tannière, d'où Gilles partit pour la croisade avec son frère Jean de Gorram, qui ne revint pas. Gilles eut le bonheur de revoir ses foyers où il s'adonna aux bonnes œuvres : peu de noms reviennent aussi souvent que le sien dans le cartulaire de Savigny. ..."
__________________________________
Source :
"... Hersende de Meduana * ( ?) Ruellon filius Geoffroy, 1er Seigneur de Gorron ou de Gorham. Nés vers 1070. Rivallonus de Gorron filius Gaufredi donne en 1106 l'église de Brecé à Marmoutier avec l'autorisation de Gautier de Meduana ci-contre alors seigneur du fief. Riwallon étant très probablement l'un de ses sujets féaux.

- William de Gorron * Mathilda. Né vers 1100. Seigneur de St-Berthevin, il érige vers 1128 le château de la Tannière (Cartulaire de St-.Michel de l'Abbayette). Il devient sujet de la Maison de Mayenne. ..."


Rivallon married Hersende DE MAYENNE [4127], daughter of Gauthier II DE MAYENNE [1990] and Adeline or Alix [1991]. (Hersende DE MAYENNE [4127] was born in , Pays de Loire, France and died about 1120 in , , France.) 
DE GORRAM, Rivallon or Ralph (I13569)
 
2965 Source :
"Robert de Conteville dit Robert de Mortain ...

Avant 1058, il épouse Mathilde (ou Maud) de Montgommery (après 1039-1085), fille de Roger II de Montgommery , seigneur de Montgommery, et plus tard 1er comte de Shrewsbury , et de Mabile de Bellême . Elle est inhumée à Grestain. Ils ont pour descendance connue :
Guillaume (prob. v. 1060 - après 1140), comte de Mortain ;
Agnès, qui est promise d'abord à Guillaume de Grandmesnil , et épouse André, seigneur de Vitré en 1091[1] ;
Emma (v. 1058 - après 1080), épouse Guillaume IV (v. 1040-1092), comte de Toulouse. Leur fille Philippa épouse Guillaume IX de Poitiers, duc d'Aquitaine;
Denise († 1090), épouse Guy II, sire de Laval, en 1078.
En secondes noces, avant 1088, il épouse Almodis, très probablement liée aux comtes de la Marche, peut-être une fille du comte Pons de Toulouse. Ils ont un fils prénommé Robert qui meurt jeune.
Il a aussi une fille nommée Sybil qui est abbesse de Notre-Dame de Saintes."


Mathilde married Robert DE MORTAIN, , Earl Of Cornwall, Sire De Conteville [1365], son of Herluin DE CONTEVILLE [499] and Arlette DE FALAISE [633], before 1058 in Evreux, Normandie, France.1 2 3 (Robert DE MORTAIN, , Earl Of Cornwall, Sire De Conteville [1365] was born in 1031 in Avranches, Normandie, France,1 3 died on 8 Dec 1090 in , Normandie, France 1 and was buried in Grestain, Normandie, France.) 
DE MONTGOMMERY, Mathilde aka Maud (I13574)
 
2966 Source Citation
Class: RG14/2411, ED 20, Sch. #160
41 Penwith Road, Earlsfield, London SW 4 rooms
Arthur Alfred Young, head, mar, 30, railway passenger guard, worker, born Wareham, Dorset
Florence Elizabeth Young, wife, mar, 33, married 6 years, 3 children born, 3 children living, born Meavy, Devon
Ena Florence Young, daughter, 4, born Wandsworth, London
Muriel Ethel Young, daughter, 2, born Wandsworth, London born 1 Aug 1908
Kathleen Laura Young, daugher, 1, born Wandsworth, London


Marriages Jun 1935 (>99%)
Young Ena F Cyril King Wimborne 5a 692

Marriages Dec 1934 (>99%)
Young Muriel E Edward C Stout Wimborne 5a 679
She died Jun 1997 Poole, Dorset
he born 13 Mar 1908 schoolmaster 1939
79 Damers Road
Name Muriel E Stout
Gender Female
Marital Status Married
Birth Date 1 Aug 1908
Residence Year 1939
Address 79
Residence Place Dorchester, Dorset, England
Occupation Unpaid Domestic Duties
Schedule Number 218
2
Enumeration District WKCG
Registration district 264/1
Edward C Stout
living with them:
Name Stephen Norman
Gender Male
Marital Status Married
Birth Date 12 Apr 1908
Residence Year 1939
Address 79
Residence Place Dorchester, Dorset, England
Occupation Clerk (Associate Chartered ??
Schedule Number 218
3
Enumeration District WKCG
Registration district 264/1 
YOUNG, Arthur Alfred (I8500)
 
2967 Source cited for obit on Ancestry is
https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/person/tree/118014863/person/232104045249/facts
U.S., Cemetery and Funeral Home Collection, 1847-Current
View Record
NameHarold Garfield BrayGenderMaleDeath DateAbt 2016Source titleobitsforlifeSource locationPortland, Oregon, USAChildrenKelly (Rhoda), Kathy (Dave) Valley, and RandyParentsMarion Bray,Jack BrayHousehold Members
NameAge
Name
Harold Garfield Bray 
BRAY, Harold Garfield (I17363)
 
2968 Source for all vital information drawn from [S6] G.E. Cokayne; with Vicary Gibbs, H.A. Doubleday, Geoffrey H. White, Duncan Warrand and Lord Howard de Walden, editors, The Complete Peerage of England, Scotland, Ireland, Great Britain and the United Kingdom, Extant, Extinct or Dormant, new ed., 13 volumes in 14 (1910-1959; reprint in 6 volumes, Gloucester, U.K.: Alan Sutton Publishing, 2000), volume II, page 47. Hereinafter cited as The Complete Peerage.


He died without surviving male issue.1
He succeeded as the 2nd Baron Beauchamp of Powick, co. Worcester [E., 1447] between 9 April 1475 and 19 April 1475.1 On 8 June 1512 at Tewkesbury, Gloucestershire, EnglandG, an inquest was held.1 On 15 October 1512 at SpittlegateG, an inquest was again held, by Grantham.1
On his death, the Barony of Beauchamp of Powick became extinct.1 
BEAUCHAMP, Richard 2nd Baron Beauchamp of Powick (I15228)
 
2969 Source for name: Feet of F. Surr. 32 Hen. III, 4.
Source for date of death: Chancery, Inquisitions poste-mortem 48 Hen. III, no. 20.

Held Cateshull and Ertindon confirmed to him, the gift of Thomas de Bavelingham and Mabel (nee de Thurnham) his wife, 30 Nov. 1235. (Rot. Chart. 19 H. III. m. 19). He held them 1241, as given to him "in maritagium cum Isabella filia corum." (Quo War. Roll, as above.) See also Charter XXIV. Robert de Gatton held them, 1263, on the same tenure (Id. 47 H. III. rot. 26 dors.) and died 1264 (Inquis. 48 H. III. Arch. Cant. Vol. V.). Release to the heirs of Robert de Manekesy, defuncti, of 30 marks owed by him to the Exchequer, 1266. (Rot. Fin. 50 H. III., 28 Sep.)
[Source: Gatton pedigree. See KAS journal.http://www.kentarchaeology.org.uk/Research/Pub/ArchCant/005-1863/005-09.pdf]

Held estates at Boughton [Malherbe]

This Robert de Gatton and the family lineage are mentioned in Edward Hasted's 1798 History of Kent thus:

In the reign of king Henry III. Robert de Gatton [died 1253/4], who took his name from the lordship of Gatton, in Surry [sic], of which his ancestors had been some time owners, was in possession of the manor Thrule [Throwley, which manor was immediately previously held by Robert de Manekesey who is believed to have assumed the surname of de Gatton], and died in the 38th year of that reign, holding it by knight's service of the king, of the honor of Peverel, by reason of the escheat of that honor, &c. (fn. 2) He was succeeded in it by this eldest son Hamo de Gatton, who resided here, and served the office of sheriff in the 14th year of Edward I. His eldest son of the same name left one son Edmund, then an instant, who afterwards dying under age, his two sisters became his coheirs, and divided his inheritance, of which Elizabeth entitled her husband William de Dene to this manor, and all the rest of the estates in Kent; and Margery entitled her husband Simon de Norwood to Gatton, and all the other estates in Surry. 
DE GATTON OR DE MANEKESEY, Robert (I13559)
 
2970 Source for name: Feet of Fines Surrey 11 Hen. III, 38.


He was appointed escheator of the Crown for Surrey in 1232, [Source: Cal. Close, 1231–4, p. 130] but died in or before 1235, when his lands, saving the dower of his widow Beatrice, were given into the custody of William of York during the minority of his heir. [Source: Cal. Pat. 1232–47, p. 130; Excerpta e Rot. Fin. i, 292.] 
DE GATTON OR DE MANEKESEY, Hamon (I14062)
 
2971 Source Information: Batch No.: M111644 Dates: 1819 - 1854 FHL Microfilm #0991193 Family (F3233)
 
2972 Source of the following:
Vol. 1: Atwater History And Genealogy, 1901
by Atwater, Francis, p. 15

Robert Atwater of Royton, in Lenham, was a man of fortune and a Justice of the Peace of the county. He married, probably shortly after 1500, Catherine Bright, [Honywood Evidences," Topographer and Genealogist—Vol. 2, 175] of Royton. They had twelve sons and two daughters. The sons all died of the plague before the birth of the daughters. These were Joyce, who married Humphrey Hales, only son of Sir James Hales of the Dungeon, Canterbury, and Mary, the youngest, born in 1527, who married Robert Honywood, then of Hene- wood, in Postling, in Kent.

In the lists of tenures [Landsdowne MSS., No. 309.] and in the histories of the county of Kent, Robert Atwater appears as owner in the reign of Henry VIII., of the following named manors.: Puttwood in Ospringe, Provenders in Norton, fcewley in Houghton, Malherbe, Petts and Newcourt in Charing, Down Court and Royton in Lenham. The first two are stated to have been sold to Sir James Hales, the remaining five are shown by histories of Kent, to have passed by the marriages of the daughters to the Hales and Honywood families.

p. 16-17
The manor of Bewley remained in possession of the Hales, descendants of Robert Atwater, for many generations.

Down Court continued in possession of the Honywood family in 1798, the date of the latest history.
Petts and Newcourt were at that date in possession of de¬ scendants of Robert Atwater, by his daughter Mary.
Honywood and Royton were in possession of such descendants at least until the year jj 6 i.
The will of Robert Atwater, dated at Charing, three miles from Royton, last day of August, 1563, and proved May 5th, 1563, is on record in Canterbury. In the will he mentions other lands in Egertoh, Smarden, Ulcomb and Headcorn, adjoining parishes, and names his two sons-in-law, executors. He makes bequests to “every of my brother’s children without naming them as would be / natural, if well known in'the neighborhood.” His brother was probably not living for he makes no other mention of him'.

Robert Honywood, grandson of Robert Atwater, eldest son of his daughter Mary, began in 1612, during the life of his mother and continued after her death in 1620, records of his family and estate. “This MSS., which is in the possession of George Booth Tyndale, Esq., E. S. A., is a volume of one hundred and fifty-seven leaves of paper partially filled, stitbhed in a stout parchment cover."

These records were published in different volumes of the “Topographer and Genealogist," London, in 1853, and after under the titles, “ Posterity of Mary Honywood,”* and “ Honywood Evidences,” already referred to under fhe latter title. From these the following extract is taken:

“Katherine Bright was married to Robert at Waters,-.my grandfather, and by him had twelve sohnes who all died of ye plague after wh wear borne. Joice, who afterwards was ye wife of Humphrey Hales, Esq., and after of Edward Isaak, Esq., and after that was wife of Sir Rowland Clark, Knight, and Mary who was married to Robert Honywood, my father.”!

There can be no doubt that Robert Atwater was a devoted adherent of the reformed religion. His two daughters and only children visited the reformers in the prison. Letters are published written to them by the martyr, John Bradford, while im¬ prisoned in the Tower of London 
HONYWOOD, Sir Robert (I20092)
 
2973 SOURCE RECORD:

1. Leland Duncan, Monumental Inscription (England, Kent: Kent Archaeological Society, http://www.kentarchaeology.org.uk), Bethersden, Kent, England, 1829.
"George SMALL of this parish yeoman, 15 August 1829 aged 78. Mary his wife 7 January 1814 aged 43. Leaving 7 sons and 2 daughters George, Charles, James, William, Edward, Elias, Thomas, Phebe and Mary. Martha their daughter 2 March 1810 aged 16 years."

The above monumental inscription relates to George Small, the son of William Small and Mary (nee Small). This George Small, therefor, would have been the grand-uncle of Lewis Small.

Partial proof of the parentage of Lewis comes by way of this monumental inscription which lists the children of George Small and Mary (nee Gurr). At the same time as this family was living at and having children at Bethersden, there was also the family of George Small and Mary (nee Smith). The Bishop's Transcript of Bethersden contains a number of christening entries that simply do not record the parents' names. Even if those entries had borne the typical style of recording, there would still be argument as to which George and Mary Small couple had which children. Therefore, this monumental inscription serves well the need for differentiating between the two George and Mary Small families. A further monumental inscription at Bethersden for William Small and Elizabeth Bingham also serve to identify some of the Bishop's Transcript christening entries that bear no parents names. 
SMALL, Lewis (I8103)
 
2974 Source:
Taken from the Memorandum of Assessment for Willoughby Township 1837 
MORNINGSTAR, Mary (I18004)
 
2975 Source:
Taken from the Memorandum of Assessment for Willoughby Township 1837 
MORNINGSTAR, Daughter (I18005)
 
2976 Source:
[S22] Sir Bernard Burke, C.B. LL.D., A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire, new edition (1883; reprint, Baltimore, Maryland: Genealogical Publishing Company, 1978), page 399. Hereinafter cited as Burkes Extinct Peerage. 
DE NEWBURGH, Henry 1st Earl of Warwick (I15815)
 
2977 Source:
[S22] Sir Bernard Burke, C.B. LL.D., A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire, new edition (1883; reprint, Baltimore, Maryland: Genealogical Publishing Company, 1978), page 399. Hereinafter cited as Burkes Extinct Peerage. 
DE WARENNE, Gundred (I8287)
 
2978 Source:
[S22] Sir Bernard Burke, C.B. LL.D., A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire, new edition (1883; reprint, Baltimore, Maryland: Genealogical Publishing Company, 1978), page 569. Hereinafter cited as Burkes Extinct Peerage. 
DE NEWBURGH, Roger 2nd Earl of Warwick (I8288)
 
2979 Source:
[S6] Cokayne, and others, The Complete Peerage, volume XII/1, page 610. 
MORTIMER, Joan DE (I15137)
 
2980 Source: Annals and antiquities of the counties and county families of Wales by Thomas Nicholas, pp 708-709

RUCK, Laurence, Esq., of Pantlludw, Merionethshire, and Newington Manor House, Kent.

Mr. Ruck is descended from an old Kentish family, one of whom, by name Laurence Ruck, in the time of Henry VIII. was bow-bearer to the king; b. 1820; ed. at Magdalen College, Oxford; m, 1841, Mary Anne, dau. of Richard Matthews, Esq., of Esgair Lleferin, Merionethshire;and has issue 4 sons - Arthur, Richard, Ithel, Edwald; and 2 daughters = Mary and Amy.
Residence: Pantlludw, Machynlleth, Merionethshire.
Arms: The arms of Ruck, impaling those of Morris of Esgair Lleferin, and Jones of Esgair Evan.

Mrs. Ruck, as shown in an extensive pedigree in possession of the family, is descended both on the paternal and maternal side from a long line of Welsh ancestry. Her father, Richard Matthews of Esgair Lleferin (who was of the old family of Matthews of Trenannau), was an officer in the 23rd Reg. Welsh Fusiliers.His father, Richard Matthews, m. Ann Morris, heiress of Esgair Lleferin, from whom Mrs. Ruck has inherited that property. Her mother was Mary, daughter of John Jones, Esq., of Esgair Evan, by Mary Morgan, of the Morgans of Fronfraith, Cardinganshire, claiming a pedigree from Gwaethfoed, Prince of Ceredigion in the 11th cent.

Note. - The residence of Pantlludw, erected about fifty years ago, is delightfully situated on an elevation commanding a view of the valley of the Dyfi above and below Machynlleth, and the spurs of Penllyman (Plinlimmon) to the east. In the tastefully arranged grounds is a remarkable yew of enormous size, one of the branches of which was some years ago blown dwn, and converted into elegant pieces of furniture. The age of this tree is calculated at nearly a thousand years. The mansion of Esgair, occupied by Col. Stewart, is a pretty place, boldly planted in the midst of highly picturesque scenery. 
MATTHEWS, Mary Anne (I3525)
 
2981 Source: Histoire genealogique et chronologique de la maison royale de France, Anselme de Sainte-Marie, augustin dechausse, (13th ed., la Compagnie des Libraries, Paris, 2 aout 1726-1733), Vol. 6, p. 33. Family (F4115)
 
2982 Source: http://www.unithistories.com/officers/RM_officersM.html
Lt. 26.09.1940
A/Capt. 21.09.1943
(07.1945) 46 RM Commando
Capt. 26.09.1948 (retd 31.07.1957)
War Service Rank of Maj. 31.07.1957
Also has photo of him on review parade

WW2 Lieutenant, Royal Navy. Acting Captain 21 Sep 1943. Captain, Royal Marines. 
MULDOWNEY, Ronald Samuel Ivor (I13358)
 
2983 Source: [S37] Mosley, Charles, editor. Burke's Peerage, Baronetage & Knightage, 107th edition, 3 volumes. Wilmington, Delaware, U.S.A.: Burke's Peerage (Genealogical Books) Ltd, 2003. ST. JOHN, John 3rd Lord St. John of Lageham (I15791)
 
2984 Source: [S37] Mosley, Charles, editor. Burke's Peerage, Baronetage & Knightage, 107th edition, 3 volumes. Wilmington, Delaware, U.S.A.: Burke's Peerage (Genealogical Books) Ltd, 2003. DE SAY, Katharine (I15792)
 
2985 Source: [S6] Cokayne, and others, The Complete Peerage, volume II, page 46. Family (F4808)
 
2986 Source: Archdeaconry Court of Canterbury Death Duty, IR\26\298 #681, Probate 10 Jun 1800 Richard West of Ospringe, yeoman, under £300 Son James, executor Wife Children: Thomas, William, James, Sarah wife of Thomas Smith, Mary wife of Edmond Packman, Ann wife of John Higgins, Anne wife of James Barber, Elizabeth wife of Robert Clackett, and Martha, wife of George Epps. WEST, Martha (I8004)
 
2987 Source: Archdeaconry Court of Canterbury Vol 102, Probate 14 Jul 1794
Martha Scott of Faversham, widow, will dated 1 May 1790
Son in law Francis Scott of London, tidewaiter
Grandson Thomas Scott of Faversham, dredger
Edward Kingsland Smith son of my cousin Edward Smith of Faversham, barber
Edward Shilling of Hernhill, yeoman
Elizabeth Robinson of Faversham
John Smith Esq.
Sarah Smith daughter of my said cousin
Elizabeth Shilling daughter of my said cousin
Edward Smith and his wife Ann. 
SMITH, Edward (I9023)
 
2988 Source: Archdeaconry Court of Canterbury Vol 68 f.277, Probate 11 Aug 1632
Katherine Rigden of Netherhards, widow, will dated 15 Nov 1630
Sons Thomas and Edmund
Daughters Annis and Margaret Rigden
Grandchildren Elizabeth, Mary, Susan, Margaret and Mary Rigden
Ann Austen and Elizabeth Austen
Witnesses Thomas Page, Annis Mallowe. 
Katharine ? (I14728)
 
2989 Source: Consistory Court of Canterbury PRC32/53/113a
Transcribed by Brian Denn
In the name of God Amen the seventh day of August in the year of the Reign of our Sovereign Lord Charles the Second by the grace of God of England Scotland France and Ireland King Defender of the Faith the thirteenth Ano Domini 1661, I Christopher Denne of the town and port of Hythe in the County of Kent, draper being sick and weak in body yet of perfect memory (praised be God) do make this my last Will and Testament in manner and form following. First I bequeath my Soul into the hands of Almighty God hoping through the merits of Jesus Christ my Saviour to be made partaker of life everlasting and I commend my body to the Earth to be decently buried beside my wife in ? churchyard after the discretion of my Executor hereafter named.
Item I give and bequeath unto my brother Thomas Denne the sum of two hundred pounds to be paid unto him within two years next after my decease.
Item I give and bequeath unto my brother John Denne the sum of fifty pounds to be paid unto him within two years next after my decease.
Item I give and bequeath unto my sister Susan Denne the sum of fifty pounds to be paid unto her within two years next after my decease.
Item I give and bequeath unto my sister Elizabeth Denne the sum of fifty pounds to be paid unto her within two years next after my decease.
Item I give unto my sister Anne Denne the sum of fifty pounds to be paid unto her within two years next after my decease.

Lastly I ordain and make my wellbeloved father Thomas Denne full and sole Executor of this my last Will and Testament to do the same ? my debts and legacies paid and my funeral expenses discharged unto whom I give the overplus of all and singular my moveable goods and chattels whatsoever.

In witness whereof I the said Christopher Denne to this my present last Will and Testament containing one sheet of paper have subscribed my name and set my seal the day and year first above written. Christopher Denne. Sealed published and declared in the presence of
John Campledon by his mark, Matthew Mansell.

Probatum 1661

----------------------------
Source: Archdeaconry Court of Canterbury Vol.78 f.9
Transcribed by Brian Denn
In the name of God Amen, I Christopher Denne of the Parish of Preston next Faversham in the County of Kent, carpenter being sick and weak in body but of sound and perfect mind memory and understanding praised be God therefore revoking all former wills by me made do make and ordain this my last Will and Testament in manner and form following that is to say. First I commend my Soul to Almighty God my Creator hoping by the all sufficient merits of my blessed Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ to enjoy eternal ? and my body I commit to the Earth to be decently interred at the discretion of my Executor hereafter named.
Item I give and bequeath unto my dear and loving wife Elizabeth the sum of fifty pounds of lawful money of England to be paid unto her by my Executor within one year next after my death over and above fifty pounds which I gave bond on marriage to pay to her for her use.

Item I give and bequeath unto my said loving wife convenient goods to furnish a room that is to say one bedstead mat(?) and ? green mattress(?) and furniture thereunto belonging with the feather bed bolsters(?) and other bedding therewith used one silver cup two silver spoons one ? with the furniture therewith used one case of drawers six pairs of sheets ? napkins two tablecloths six ? four pair of pillowcases one little oval table six of my best chairs four pewter dishes one ? one pair of tongs one kettle and one ? ? skillet

all the rest of my goods chattels(?) and personal estate not herein given and bequeathed I give and bequeath unto my two sons Christopher Denne and Michael Denne equally to be divided share and share alike my debts legacies and funeral expenses being first paid and discharged.
Item I give and bequeath unto my friend John ? of Canterbury one and twenty shillings and six pence.

Item I give and devise unto my said two sons and their heirs and assigns for ever all my messuages with their appertuances and all other my lands tenements and hereditaments whatsoever in the Parish of St Mildred in the City of Canterbury charged with the payment of the mortgages thereon and I do hereby make and constitute my said son Christopher Denne sole Executor of this my will and my loving friend Joseph Webb of the said City Gent Overseer of this my will ? him to do the same performed attending to my fine intent and meaning and for his care and trouble therein and the ? and kindness I have received of him.
I give and bequeath unto my said Overseer the sum of five pounds of lawful money of England provided always that if my personal estate shall not be sufficient to pay all my debts and legacies then I do hereby will order and appoint my said Executor and Overseer to make sale of such of my said messuages or tenements as they shall think fit to pay my said debts and legacies and not otherwise.

In witness whereof I have hereunto set my hand and seal this five and twentieth day of August in the year of our Lord one thousand six hundred ninety and one. Christopher Denne. Signed sealed published and declared by the said Testator to be his last Will and Testament in the presence of us whose names are subscribed who also have set our hand in the presence of the said Testator
Mary Church, John ?, Mary Jennings her mark.

Probatum 1691 
A’DENNE, Christopher (I13438)
 
2990 Source: Consistory Court of Canterbury Vol.53 folio 376 Probate 10 Apr 1662 William Carter of Godmersham, yeoman, will dated 15 Mar 1658 Sons Thomas, John and William Daughter Mary, wife of William Norton of Brabourne Daughter Jone, wife of Edward Vally? of Godmersham Daughter Elizabeth Carter. CARTER, William (I7708)
 
2991 Source: Mike Cozens, Archdeaconry Court of Canterbury PRC17/50/213, Probate 5th March 1596/7

Thomas Cloke of Elmsted, will dated 20th January 1596
Wife Joan, sole executor, All lands, houses, orchards, farmland, tenements, rents and debts owing to me in the parishes of Elmsted and Waltham for the rest of her natural life unless she remarries. (She did)
Sons Christopher, Edward, Thomas, John
Daughters Sarah & Margaret
To John my son and his male heirs after my wife Joan’s death all my lands etc and pay all my legacies in full. If John dies without issue then all passes in turn to Christopher, Edward, Thomas then divided between daughters.
Witnesses Brother Daniel Cloke, Nephew Thomas Bett son of my sister (Alse Bett?). 
CLOOKE OR CLOKE, Thomas (I14191)
 
2992 Source: Mike Cozens, Archdeaconry Court of Canterbury PRC17/68/490, Probate 30th July 1633
Daniel Cloake of Elham, will dated 24th December 1627
Wife Elizabeth, Land at Elmsted, House, Livestock, Household effects
Nephew Richard Woolet, sole executor, inherits land after wife’s decease or remarriage
Samuel Cloke son of Edmund, Edward son of Thomas, John son of Edward, the occupation of lands at Elmsted paying rents to my wife Elizabeth and then my nephew Richard Woolet. (Son of sister Katherin?)
Witnesses Henry Barnte, Samuel Cloke. 
CLOOKE OR CLOKE, Daniel (I14194)
 
2993 Sources:
Histoire genealogique et chronologique de la maison royale de France, Anselme de Sainte-Marie, augustin dechausse, (13th ed., la Compagnie des Libraries, Paris, 2 aout 1726-1733), Vol. 6, p. 33.

Dictionnaire de la noblesse, 2nd and 13th ed., Francois-Alexandre Aubert de la Chenaye-Debois, (La Veuve Duchesne, libraire, ANtoine Boudet, l'auteur, rue Saint-Andre-des-Arcs, Schlesinger Brothers, Parish, 1770-1778), Tome 3, p. 120 
DE BAUDEMENT, Eustachie (I14097)
 
2994 Sources:
http://mount-royal.ca/heritage/getperson.php?personID=I10855&tree=mrll
Histoire genealogique et chronologique de la maison royale de France, Anselme de Sainte-Marie, augustin dechausse, (13th ed., la Compagnie des Libraries, Paris, 2 aout 1726-1733), Vol. 3, p. 155; vol. 6, p. 33; vol 8, p. 863.

Dictionnaire de la noblesse, 2nd and 13th ed., Francois-Alexandre Aubert de la Chenaye-Debois, (La Veuve Duchesne, libraire, Antoine Boudet, l'auteur, rue Saint-Andre-des-Arcs, Schlesinger Brothers, Parish, 1770-1778), Tome 3, pp. 120 & 199

Europaische Stammtafeln: Stammtafeln zur Geschichte der Europasichen Staaten, Neue Folge, Herausgegeben von Detlev Schwennicke, (Verlag Von J. A. Stargardt, Marburg, Deutschland, editions 1978 a 1993), Vol. 3, p. 681; Vol. 14, p. 51 
DE BAUDEMENT, Andre (I14099)
 
2995 Sources:
University of Cambridge, UK, Darwin Correspondence Project
http://darwinproject.ac.uk/letter/?docId=nameregs/nameregs_7646.xml;query=amy%20ruck;brand=default;hit.rank=1#hit.rank1

Emily Gardner
1826–73

Daughter of Elizabeth Ann Ruck and John Ruck, wine merchant. Married William Gardner, vicar of Orpington, Kent, in 1852. A distant cousin of Amy Ruck.

Sources

BMD (Marriage index, Death index)

Census returns of England and Wales 1851 (The National Archives: Public Record Office HO107/1601/51069), 1871 (RG10/878/38/3)

Kent online parish clerks, Kent family garden (www.kent-opc.org/opcfamilydata, accessed 18 February 2016)

London, England, Church of England births and baptisms, 1813–1906 (Ancestry.com, accessed 18 February 2016) 
Family (F4351)
 
2996 Sources:
[S6] Cokayne, and others, The Complete Peerage, volume XII/1, page 610.
[S22] Sir Bernard Burke, C.B. LL.D., A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire, new edition (1883; reprint, Baltimore, Maryland: Genealogical Publishing Company, 1978), page 399. Hereinafter cited as Burkes Extinct Peerage. 
DE NEWBURGH, Alice (I8282)
 
2997 Sources:
[S6] G.E. Cokayne; with Vicary Gibbs, H.A. Doubleday, Geoffrey H. White, Duncan Warrand and Lord Howard de Walden, editors, The Complete Peerage of England, Scotland, Ireland, Great Britain and the United Kingdom, Extant, Extinct or Dormant, new ed., 13 volumes in 14 (1910-1959; reprint in 6 volumes, Gloucester, U.K.: Alan Sutton Publishing, 2000), volume II, page 47. Hereinafter cited as The Complete Peerage.
[S108] Medieval Genealogy, corrections and additions to the Complete Peerage, online http://www.medievalgenealogy.org.uk/cp/. Hereinafter cited as Medieval Genealogy. 
USFLETE, Catherine (I15784)
 
2998 South transept of Ash Church

Daughter of John Brooke of Brooke Street Ash. She was buried in Ash church 9 June 1560
Her will was proved 14 Oct 1560
She is recorded in Knights visitation 1619 as wife of Stephen Hougham and after the death of her nephew, she or her descendants become heirs of the Brooke coat of Arms as he is the last male Brooke. The same thing is explained by the Brook wills. John Brook, her father, was father of John Brooke who was married to her husband's sister Joan. John and Joan had a son John who died 16 Jan 1583 will proved 7 Feb 1583. Thus from 1583 the Brooke coat is quartered with Hougham. The son of Benetta (Michael, died in Dec 1583) entitled to the quartering as were all his descendants. Her will was proved 14 Oct 1560 she names herself in it "Benedict Huffam, widow" and desires to be buried near her husband in Ash church. She mentions Michael and Richard, Joan, Margaret and Elizabeth Solly, her daughters children and Bennet, Daughter of Michael 
BROOKE, Bennetta (I11848)
 
2999 SOUTHOUSE is an estate in this parish, which had owners of that name in very early times. Valentine Southouse was possessed of lands in Selling in 1449, and his eldest son William gave the south window in this church. Of this branch was Thomas Southouse, esq. author of the Monasticon Favershamiense, and other tracts, who died in 1676, and was buried there, whose second son Filmer Southouse, was a man of learning, and studious in his father's line of knowledge. (fn. 5) They bore for their arms, Argent, on a bend cotized, three martlets, gules. Other branches of it were settled in this neighbourhood, in Sheldwich, and in Faversham; but though they continued in this parish till the beginning of the present century, yet this estate in particular, for there were others belonging to them, called likewise by their name, which were at times alienated to different persons, which had been the antient inheritance of this family, was alienated from them before the reign of queen Elizabeth, when Robert Dodde was possessed of it, and conveyed it in separate parcels, anno 4 Elizabeth, back again to John, George, and Thomas Southouse. That part of it, which consisted of the house, with the land adjoining to it, was in Charles II.'s reign, become the property of Mr. Richard Southouse, who by his will in 1675 devised it to his sister Elizabeth, and the next year conveyed it to James Hardres, esq. whose descendant John Hardres, in 1702, conveyed it to Isaac Denew, esq. who in 1719 passed it away by sale to John Wotton, of Sturry, whose descendant John Wotton, in 1777, conveyed is to Lewis, lord Sondes, whose son the right hon. Lewis-Thomas, lord Sondes, is the present owner of it.

From: 'Parishes: Selling', The History and Topographical Survey of the County of Kent: Volume 7 (1798), pp. 38-50. URL: http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=63389&strquery=carter. Date accessed: 17 January 2008.

Will made in 1652 
SOUTHOUSE, Thomas (I5379)
 
3000 Spelling of bride's surname is a little in doubt as the page on which this entry appeared was partially obscured by water damage and mildew. RAYNES, Elizabeth (I10315)
 

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