Carney & Wehofer Family
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Margaret WRENBURY

Margaret WRENBURY

Female Abt 1259 - 1318  (~ 59 years)

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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Margaret WRENBURY was born about 1259 in Egerton, Cheshire, England (daughter of Richard WRENBURY and Catherine de COURTENAY); died in 1318 in Malpas, Cheshire, England; was buried in 1318 in Malpas, Cheshire, England.

    Other Events:

    • FamilySearch ID: LKHK-6KX
    • Name: Margaret DE WRENBURY

    Family/Spouse: Phillip DE EGERTON. Phillip (son of David DE EGERTON and Cecily THORNTON) was born about 1255 in Egerton, Cheshire, England; died in 1315 in Egerton, Cheshire, England; was buried in 1315 in Egerton, Cheshire, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. David DE EGERTON was born about 1277 in Egerton, Cheshire, England; died about 1362 in Egerton, Cheshire, England.
    2. Brian EGERTON was born about 1281 in Of Egerton, Cheshire, England; and died.
    3. Phillip EGERTON was born about 1284 in Egerton, Cheshire, England; died after 1326 in Cheshire, England.
    4. Richard EGERTON was born about 1285 in Of Egerton, Chesh, England; and died.
    5. Joan DE EGERTON was born in 1285 in Nantwich, Cheshire, England; died in in England.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Richard WRENBURY was born in 1233 in Wrenbury, Cheshire, England (son of John DE WRENBURY and Joan, of Cheshire); died in 1306 in Wrenbury, Cheshire, England.

    Other Events:

    • FamilySearch ID: GFXL-CYL

    Richard married Catherine de COURTENAY. Catherine (daughter of Sir William DE COURTENAY and Joan BASSET) was born in 1235 in of Wrenbury, Cheshire, England; died about 1318 in Wrenbury, Cheshire, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Catherine de COURTENAY was born in 1235 in of Wrenbury, Cheshire, England (daughter of Sir William DE COURTENAY and Joan BASSET); died about 1318 in Wrenbury, Cheshire, England.

    Other Events:

    • FamilySearch ID: GFXL-2L5

    Children:
    1. John DE WRENBURY was born in 1250 in Northwich, Cheshire, England; died in 1342.
    2. 1. Margaret WRENBURY was born about 1259 in Egerton, Cheshire, England; died in 1318 in Malpas, Cheshire, England; was buried in 1318 in Malpas, Cheshire, England.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  John DE WRENBURY was born in 1203 in Oulton Lowe, Northwich, Cheshire, England (son of Bleythen WRENBURY and Garneth HULTON); died in 1268 in Wrenbury, Cheshire, England.

    Other Events:

    • FamilySearch ID: G9JY-JCX

    John married Joan, of Cheshire. Joan was born in 1200 in Oulton Lowe, Cheshire, England; died in 1297. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Joan, of Cheshire was born in 1200 in Oulton Lowe, Cheshire, England; died in 1297.

    Other Events:

    • FamilySearch ID: G9FT-55J

    Children:
    1. 2. Richard WRENBURY was born in 1233 in Wrenbury, Cheshire, England; died in 1306 in Wrenbury, Cheshire, England.

  3. 6.  Sir William DE COURTENAY was born about 1220 in Okehampton, Devon, England (son of Sir Robert DE COURTENEY, Baron of Oakhampton and Mary DE VERNON, de Redvers); died after 24 Dec 1262.

    Other Events:

    • FamilySearch ID: LH73-ND7
    • Name: William DE MUSBURY

    William married Joan BASSET about 1238 in Holsworthy, Devonshire, England. Joan was born in 1162 in Headington, Oxfordshire, England, United Kingdom; died in 1213 in Berkhamstead Castle, Hertfordshire, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 7.  Joan BASSET was born in 1162 in Headington, Oxfordshire, England, United Kingdom; died in 1213 in Berkhamstead Castle, Hertfordshire, England.

    Other Events:

    • FamilySearch ID: MJL7-TMG

    Children:
    1. 3. Catherine de COURTENAY was born in 1235 in of Wrenbury, Cheshire, England; died about 1318 in Wrenbury, Cheshire, England.


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  Bleythen WRENBURY was born in 1158 in Wrenbury, Cheshire, England; died in in Wrenbury, Cheshire, England.

    Other Events:

    • FamilySearch ID: G9JY-FQK

    Bleythen married Garneth HULTON. Garneth was born in 1160 in Hulton, Cheshire, England; and died. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 9.  Garneth HULTON was born in 1160 in Hulton, Cheshire, England; and died.

    Other Events:

    • FamilySearch ID: G9JB-JC4

    Children:
    1. 4. John DE WRENBURY was born in 1203 in Oulton Lowe, Northwich, Cheshire, England; died in 1268 in Wrenbury, Cheshire, England.

  3. 12.  Sir Robert DE COURTENEY, Baron of Oakhampton was born in 1183 in Okehampton Castle, Okehampton, Devon, England (son of Renaud Seigneur DE COURTENAY, Of Sutton and Lady Hawise DE COURCY); died on 26 Jul 1242 in Iwerne, Dorset, England; was buried in 1242 in Ford Abbey, Devon, England.

    Other Events:

    • FamilySearch ID: GJNQ-VWK

    Notes:

    "Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families," Douglas Richardson (2013):
    "ROBERT DE COURTENAY, Knt., of Okehampton, Kenn, Musbury, and Sampford Courtenay, Devon, Sutton Courtenay, Berkshire, Waddesdon, Buckinghamshire, lwerne, Dorset, etc., Sheriff of Devonshire, 1215, 1218, Justice for Berkshire and Wiltshire, 1235, son and heir.
    He was heir in 1209 to his uncle, Robert de Courtenay.

    He married in 1210-11 (grant of her marriage) MARY DE VERNON, widow of Peter de Preaux, Knt., of Alton, Hampshire, Sudbury (in West Ham), Essex, etc., lord of the Channel Islands, Constable of Rouen (living 1209), and daughter of William de Vernon, Knt., 5th Earl of Devon, by Mabel, daughter of Robert II, Count of Meulan [see VERMANDOIS 8 for her ancestry].
    Her maritagium included lands in Crewkerne, Somerset, with the foreign hundred and the chace there.
    They had three sons,
    John, Knt.,
    William, Knt., and
    Robert [Dean of Auckland],
    and two daughters,
    Egeline and
    Hawise.
    In 1209 he paid a fine to the king of 400 marks and two great horses to have seisin of the manor of Sutton, Berkshire. In 1211 he owed 1,200 marks to have the honour of Oakhampton, Devon, which had been in the king's hands. In 1217 he was ordered by the king to release Exeter Castle and the stannaries and coinage of Devon to the queen mother. In 1214 he sued Roger Chike and two others regarding lands in Sutton, Berkshire. In April 1218 he offered 5 marks to have a jury concerning the hundred of Redlane which he said was his and pertains to his manor of Iweme, which hundred, and the hundred of Gillingham, were withdrawn from him and his ancestors. In July 1218 the king committed custody of the manor of Sutton, Berkshire to John of Wiggonholt for as long as it pleases the king, so that he answer for the issues of the same manor to Stephen de Croy, merchant of Amiens, for the debt which Robert de Courtenay owed him. In 1219 the king ordered the Sheriff of Devon that he cause Robert de Courtenay to have full seisin of all lands and appurtenances in Devonshire formerly of Hawise de Courtenay, his mother, which fell to the said Robert by inheritance. In 1220 he was granted a two day fair at his manor of Okehampton, Devon. In 1220 John de Saint Helen sued him regarding half a hide of land in Sutton, Berkshire. The same year Maud de Courtenay (his aunt and step-grandmother) sued him regarding the manors of Oakhampton, Chulmleigh, Kenn, and Musbury, and Sampford, Devon and Hemington, Somerset, which she claimed as her right. In 1224 he made fine with the king to render ?30 to him annually at the Exchequer of the ?190 8s. 7d. due from him to the king; he was allowed such costs he incurred, by order of the king and the same justiciar, to fill a breach in the wall of Exeter castle. In 1227 the king committed the manor of Sedborough (in Parkham), Devon with its appurtenances to his wife, Mary. In 1230 he was overseas in the service of the king. In the period, 1230-2, he settled a long standing dispute with Abingdon Abbey regarding digging turves from the manor of Culham for the repair of Sutton mill, Berkshire.

    SIR ROBERT DE COURTENAY died at Iweme, Dorset about 27 July 1242, and was buried at Ford Abbey, Dorset.
    His widow, Mary, was living 15 July 1250.

    [*Mary de Vernon married (1st) in 1201 (date of charter) (betrothal dated early 1200) Peter de Preaux, Knt., of Alton, Hampshire, Sudbury (in West Ham), Essex, etc., lord of the Channel Islands, Constable of Rouen, younger son of Osbert de Preaux, of Normandy. They had no issue. He accompanied King Richard I on crusade in 1190. He distinguished himself at the Siege of Acre in 1192. In the period, 1194-9, he served King Richard I throughout his wars against Philip II of France. In 1203 he was in charge of the escheats of Normandy and the Jews, except for the Jews of Rouen and Caen. The same year he was granted all the land which Peter de Meulan (his Wife's uncle) held at Sens, Normandy. In 1204, in agreement with the leading men of the city, he surrendered Rouen to King Philippe Auguste of France. He was living in 1209.]


    Robert married Mary DE VERNON, de Redvers in 1200 in Devon, England. Mary (daughter of Earl William DE VERNON, de Redvers 5th Earl of Devon and Mabel DE BEAUMONT) was born in 1185 in Carisbrooke, Isle of Wight, Hampshire, England; died after 1242; was buried in Nov 1242. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 13.  Mary DE VERNON, de Redvers was born in 1185 in Carisbrooke, Isle of Wight, Hampshire, England (daughter of Earl William DE VERNON, de Redvers 5th Earl of Devon and Mabel DE BEAUMONT); died after 1242; was buried in Nov 1242.

    Other Events:

    • FamilySearch ID: LLS1-K9M
    • Name: Mary DE REVIERS
    • Reference Number: 16810025

    Notes:

    "Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families," Douglas Richardson (2013):
    "ROBERT DE COURTENAY, Knt., of Okehampton, Kenn, Musbury, and Sampford Courtenay, Devon, Sutton Courtenay, Berkshire, Waddesdon, Buckinghamshire, lwerne, Dorset, etc., Sheriff of Devonshire, 1215, 1218, Justice for Berkshire and Wiltshire, 1235, son and heir. He was heir in 1209 to his uncle, Robert de Courtenay. He married in 1210-11 (grant of her marriage) MARY DE VERNON, widow of Peter de Preaux, Knt.,* of Alton, Hampshire, Sudbury (in West Ham), Essex, etc., lord of the Channel Islands, Constable of Rouen (living 1209), and daughter of William de Vernon, Knt., 5th Earl of Devon, by Mabel, daughter of Robert II, Count of Meulan [see VERMANDOIS 8 for her ancestry]. Her maritagium included lands in Crewkerne, Somerset, with the foreign hundred and the chace there. They had three sons, John, Knt., William, Knt., and Robert [Dean of Auckland], and two daughters, Egeline and Hawise. In 1209 he paid a fine to the king of 400 marks and two great horses to have seisin of the manor of Sutton, Berkshire. In 1211 he owed 1,200 marks to have the honour of Oakhampton, Devon, which had been in the king's hands. In 1217 he was ordered by the king to release Exeter Castle and the stannaries and coinage of Devon to the queen mother. In 1214 he sued Roger Chike and two others regarding lands in Sutton, Berkshire. In April 1218 he offered 5 marks to have a jury concerning the hundred of Redlane which he said was his and pertains to his manor of Iweme, which hundred, and the hundred of Gillingham, were withdrawn from him and his ancestors. In July 1218 the king committed custody of the manor of Sutton, Berkshire to John of Wiggonholt for as long as it pleases the king, so that he answer for the issues of the same manor to Stephen de Croy, merchant of Amiens, for the debt which Robert de Courtenay owed him. In 1219 the king ordered the Sheriff of Devon that he cause Robert de Courtenay to have full seisin of all lands and appurtenances in Devonshire formerly of Hawise de Courtenay, his mother, which fell to the said Robert by inheritance. In 1220 he was granted a two day fair at his manor of Okehampton, Devon. In 1220 John de Saint Helen sued him regarding half a hide of land in Sutton, Berkshire. The same year Maud de Courtenay (his aunt and step-grandmother) sued him regarding the manors of Oakhampton, Chulmleigh, Kenn, and Musbury, and Sampford, Devon and Hemington, Somerset, which she claimed as her right. In 1224 he made fine with the king to render ?30 to him annually at the Exchequer of the ?190 8s. 7d. due from him to the king; he was allowed such costs he incurred, by order of the king and the same justiciar, to fill a breach in the wall of Exeter castle. In 1227 the king committed the manor of Sedborough (in Parkham), Devon with its appurtenances to his wife, Mary. In 1230 he was overseas in the service of the king. In the period, 1230-2, he settled a long standing dispute with Abingdon Abbey regarding digging turves from the manor of Culham for the repair of Sutton mill, Berkshire. SIR ROBERT DE COURTENAY died at Iweme, Dorset about 27 July 1242, and was buried at Ford Abbey, Dorset. His widow, Mary, was living 15 July 1250.
    [*Mary de Vernon married (1st) in 1201 (date of charter) (betrothal dated early 1200) Peter de Preaux, Knt., of Alton, Hampshire, Sudbury (in West Ham), Essex, etc., lord of the Channel Islands, Constable of Rouen, younger son of Osbert de Preaux, of Normandy. They had no issue. He accompanied King Richard I on crusade in 1190. He distinguished himself at the Siege of Acre in 1192. In the period, 1194-9, he served King Richard I throughout his wars against Philip II of France. In 1203 he was in charge of the escheats of Normandy and the Jews, except for the Jews of Rouen and Caen. The same year he was granted all the land which Peter de Meulan (his Wife's uncle) held at Sens, Normandy. In 1204, in agreement with the leading men of the city, he surrendered Rouen to King Philippe Auguste of France. He was living in 1209.]
    Brooke Discoverie of Certaine Errours (1724): 75-76. Risdon Chorographical Desc. or Survey of the County of Devon (1811): 356-357. Burke Gen'l & Heraldic Dict. of the Peerages of England, Ireland & Scotland (1831): 142-146 (sub Courtenay). Coll Top. et Gen. 1 (1834): 62; 2 (1835): 390. Stapleton Magni Rotuli Scaccarii Normanni? 1 (1840): clxix-clxx, clxxii-clxxiii; 2 (1844): cidiv-cxlvi, cc, ccxxix-ccxxxii (Peter de Pr?aux styled "brother" [fratris] by Alice, Countess of Eu). Dugdale Monasticon Anglicanum 5 (1846): 377-382 (Ford Abbey, Fundationis et Fundatorum Historia: "Qui Robertus [de Courtenay] cum tandem vit? su? laudabilem cursum f?liciter consummasset in stadio, septimo calend. Augusti [26 July] apud Ywren, manerium suum, diem clausit extremum anno Domini M.CCXLII. [1242] et regni regis Henrici III. 26..."). Lipscomb Hist. & Antiqs. of Buckingham 1 (1847): 464-472. (Courtenay ped.) Adams Hist., Topog., & Antiqs. of the Isle of Wight (1856): 132-133. Le Quesne Constitutional Hist. of Jersey (1856): 109-110. Collectanea Arch?ologica 1 (1862): 263-284. Shirley Royal & Other Historical Letters illus. of the Reign of King Henry III 1 (1862) (Rolls ser. 27): 40-41, 160, 232-233 (letters of Robert de Courtenay). Teulet Layettes du Tr?sor des Chartes 1 (1863): 250-252. Notes & Queries 4th Ser. 6 (1870): 388; 6th Ser. 3 (1881): 1-3; 8th Ser. 7 (1895): 441-443. Bibuotheque de l'Ecole des Chartes 32 (1871): 403-404. Reliquary 17 (1876-7): 97-104. MSS of the Marquess of Abergavenny (Hist. MSS Comm.) (1887): 72-73. Ouless Ecr?hous, Illustrated (1884): 8-10. Worthy Hist. of the Suburbs of Exeter (1885): 61-62, 81-82, 149. Maitland Bracton's Note Book 2 (1887): 133-134, 137-138 (Robert de Courtenay testified in lawsuit dated 1222 that he was the son of Hawise, the first born daughter of Maud d'Avranches; Hawise's sister, Maud de Courtenay, who was the plaintiff in the lawsuit, in turn testified that the said Hawise was the daughter of Geoffrey de Crimes (or Crunes, Cruues), the 1st husband of Maud d'Avranches), 404-405; 3 (1887): 320, 450-452 (Robert de Courtenay testified in lawsuit dated 1222 that his mother, Hawise, was the daughter of William de Curcy, husband of Maud d'Avranches). Archer Crusade of Richard I, 1189-92 (1889): 326. Notes & Gleanings 2 (1889): 65-68; 5 (1892): 21 (charter of Robert de Courtenay). Curtis Short Hist. & Desc. of the Town of Alton (1896): 21-22. Note-book of Tristram Risdon (1897): 53-56. List of Sheriffs for England & Wales (PRO Lists and Indexes 9) (1898): 34. C.P.R. 1216-1225 (1901): 53 (Robert de Courtenay styled "king's kinsman" by King Henry III of England). Desc. Gat. Ancient Deeds 4 (1902): 69. Wrottesley Peds. from the Plea Rolls (1905): 535. G.Ch.R. 2 (1906): 60. Devon Notes & Queries 4 (1907): 148-149, 229-232 (re. Preaux fam.). Phillimore Rotuli Hugonis de Welles Episcopi Lincolniensis 1209-1235 2 (Canterbury & York Soc. 3) (1907): 79. C.P. 4 (1916): 317 (sub Devon) (ped.), 323 (sub Devon), 465. C.R.R. 7 (1935): 51, 97, 134, 146, 192-193, 244, 259, 333; 9 (1952): 26, 36-37, 104, 237, 294, 305-306, 322, 330, 362; 10 (1949): 22, 115-116, 119-120; 17 (1991): 166. Hatton Book of Seals (1950): 136. Great Roll of the Pipe Michaelmas 1211 (Pubs. Pipe Roll Soc. n.s. 28) (1953): 61. Seversmith Col. Fams. of Long Island 5 (1958): 2413-2419, 2439-2440. Sanders English Baronies (1960): 70. VCH Essex 6 (1973): 68-74. VCH Somerset 4 (1978): 4-38. Schwennicke Europaische Stanmtfeln 3(4) (1989): 629 (sub Courtenay). Bearman Charters of the Redvers family and the Earldom of Devon, 1090-1217 (Devon & Cornwall Soc. n.s. 37) (1994): 172. Reedy Rafret Charters c. 1120 to 1250 (Pub. Pipe Roll Soc. n.s. 50) (1995): 128-129 (charter of Egeline de Courtenay, widow of Gilbert Basset dated 1205-6; charter names her late father, Reynold de Courtenay; charter witnessed by Robert de Courtenay). Barlow English Episcopal Acta XII (1996): 215. Golb Jews in Medieval Normandy (1998): 372. Hobbs Cartulary of Forde Abbey (Somerset Rec. Soc. 85) (1998): 90 (charter of Robert de Courtenay dated 1225-42; charter witnessed by his sons, John and William, and Reynold de Courtenay [presumably his brother]); 109 (charter of Robert de Courtenay dated 1225-42; charter witnessed by his brother, Reynold de Courtenay), 152-153 (charter of John son of Ellis, parson of Crewkeme dated 1228-36; charter witnessed by Sir Robert de Courtenay and Reynold his brother). Church King John: New Interpretations (1999): 135 footnote 114, 202 ("The Courtenays to whom Henry II awarded landed in England, although related to the original Courtenay line, appear to have been only distant cousins. Nonetheless, cousins they were, so that in 1217, when Robert de Courtenay was asked to surrender Exeter to Isabella, he is described in King Henry III's letter as 'our kinsman.' Perhaps because of his kinship to one of the leading families of France, Robert de Courtenay of Okehampton appears to have been singled out for particularly harsh treatment by Louis and the French during the civil war of 1216-17, being deprived of his lands in one of Louis' few surviving English charters. The fact that the original of this charter survived amongst the Courtenay family archives in France provides further proof, if such were needed, of the kinship between the English and French Courtenays. Robert appears as witness to Isabella's charter in favour of the monks of St. Nicholas Exeter, issued at Exeter in May 1217.). Knight Great Roll of the Pipe Michaelmas 1222 (Pubs. Pipe Roll Soc. n.s. 51) (1999): 51. Sayer Original Docs. in Eng. & Wales (1198-1304) (1999): 165-166 ("Lyons, 1250 Jul. 15. 369. Innocentius IV <> Protection for the noble lady, Mary de Cortenay of the diocese of Bath, Hawise de Neville and her other sons and daughters, with all their goods.").


    Children:
    1. Hawisia COURTENAY was born in 1212 in Okehampton, Devon, England; died on 8 Apr 1269 in Okehampton, Devon, England.
    2. Sir John DE COURTENAY was born in 1218 in Okehampton, Devon, England; died on 3 May 1274 in Abbey, Devon, England; was buried on 3 May 1274 in Ford Abbey, Dorset, England.
    3. 6. Sir William DE COURTENAY was born about 1220 in Okehampton, Devon, England; died after 24 Dec 1262.
    4. Robert DE COURTNEY was born about 1220; and died.
    5. Hawise DE COURTNEY was born about 1222 in Okehampton, Devonshire, England; died before 8 Apr 1269.
    6. John DE COURTENAY, Baron of Oakhampton was born on 26 Jul 1224 in Okehampton, Devon, England; died on 3 May 1273 in Okehampton, Devon, England.
    7. Egelina DE COURTENAY was born in 1226 in Okehampton, Devonshire, England; died after 1297 in Sutton Courtenay, Berkshire, England; was buried in 1300 in Heathfield, Honiton, Devonshire, England.