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Margaret de Brewes

Female - Bef 1316


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  • Name Margaret de Brewes 
    Gender Female 
    Died Bef May 1316 
    Person ID I6167  Petersen-de Lanskoy
    Last Modified 27 May 2021 

    Family Ralph de Camoys,   b. Abt 1282, of Flockthorpe, Norfolk, England Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. Bef Jun 1336  (Age ~ 54 years) 
    Children 
     1. Thomas de Camoys
    Last Modified 28 May 2021 
    Family ID F2672  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

  • Notes 
    • RESEARCH_NOTES:
      1. “Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families,” Douglas Richardson (2013):
      “RALPH DE CAMOYS, Knt., of Flockthorpe (in Hardingham) and Bekerton, Norfolk, Eling and Hambledon, Hampshire, Broadwater, Barcombe, and Trotton, Sussex, Pilton and Tansor, Northamptonshire, etc., Constable of Heleigh and Windsor Castles, Keeper of the Forest of Woolmer, son and heir, born about 1282 (adult in 1303). He married (1st) shortly before 25 June 1303 MARGARET DE BREWES, daughter of William de Brewes, Knt., 1st Lord Brewes, by his wife, Mary, daughter of Robert de Roos, Knt. [see BREWES 8 for her ancestry]. They had one son, Thomas, Knt. [2nd Lord Camoys]. He served in the French and Scottish wars, and was taken prisoner in the latter. At an uncertain date, he successfully claimed his mother's former estate at Lasham, Hampshire on the ground that his father in alienating this property, had violated the statute de donis conditionalibus, this in spite of the fact that this statute was not passed until 1285. In 1299 he witnessed a release of Robert de Harwedon to John de Haudlo, of Boarstall, Buckinghamshire, and his 1st wife, Joan. In 1300 he first appears in the company of Hugh le Despenser the elder. In 1303 he was granted free warren in his demesne lands at Hampnett, Sussex. In 1303-4 he and his wife, Margaret, conveyed the manor of Little Bookham, Surrey to her mother, Mary de Brewes. In 1305 was granted letters of protection, he then going beyond seas with Hugh le Despenser on the king's service. In 1306 he acquired the manor of Woolbeding, Sussex from John son of John de Arundel. In 1309 he was granted free warren in his demesne lands at Woolbeding, Sussex. He presented to the churches of Hardingham, Norfolk, 1309, 1319, and Pilton, Northamptonshire, 1312. A commission was appointed in 1310 touching the persons who felled and carried away the trees of Ralph de Camois at Flockthorpe (in Hardingham), Norfolk. The same year he also witnessed a grant by John de la Mare to Sir Hugh le Despenser of the manor of Asshemere, Dorset. 1312 he was granted a weekly market and a yearly fair at Broadwater, Sussex. He was summoned to Parliament from 26 Nov. 1313 to 1 April 1335, by writs directed Rodolphe de Camoys, whereby he is held to have become Lord Camoys. In 1313 he was granted letters of protection, he then going beyond seas with Hugh le Despenser the elder on the king's service. In 1314-15 he obtained permission to cut down diverse trees to the value of 100 marks in his wood at Pilton, Northamptonshire. He married (2nd) before 20 May 1316 (date of settlement) ELIZABETH LE DESPENSER, daughter of Hugh le Despenser, Knt., Earl of Winchester, by Isabel, daughter of William de Beauchamp, Knt. [see DESPENSER 10 for her ancestry]. They had four sons, Hugh, Knt., John, Knt., Ralph, and Richard, and two daughters, Margaret and Isabel [Abbess of Romney]. In 1318 he was granted free warren in his demesne lands at Lasham and Hambledon, Hampshire, Stukeley, Huntingdonshire, and Pilton and Tansor, Northamptonshire. In 1319 he and his wife, Elizabeth, and Hugh le Despenser were pardoned for acquiring to them and the heirs of Ralph the bailiwick of the forestership of Alice Holt and Woolmer, Hampshire from Richard de Venuz without license. The same year he was granted free warren in his demesne lands at Eling, Lasham, and Hambledon, Hampshire, Stukeley, Huntingdonshire, and Pilton and Tansor, Northamptonshire. The same year Ralph obtained judgment against Robert, the warden of the house of St. Nicholas, Portsmouth, with respect to the moiety of the manor of Lasham, Hampshire, which had been assigned to the hospital in 1299. In 1320 he witnessed a release from Thomas Fillol to John de Haudlo, Knt., and his 2nd wife, Maud, regarding Fillol's right in 140 acres of land and 4s. of rent in Hatfield Peverel and Borham, Essex. The same year Ralph de Camoys and William de Clie were nominated attorneys for Hugh le Despenser the younger, the said Hugh going beyond the seas with the king. In 1321 Ralph and his wife, Elizabeth, granted 12 messuages, a mill, and various lands in Rogate, Didling, Trotton, etc., in Sussex to William de Rogate for life. The same year he settled the manor of Lasham, Hampshire on himself and his wife, Elizabeth, in fee tail in 1321-2 he conveyed a messuage and lands in Didling, Sussex to Thomas de Dydelyngg and his heirs. In 1323 he settled the manor of Fling, Hampshire on himself and his wife, Elizabeth. In 1323-4 he and his wife, Elizabeth, settled the manor of Cokeham (in Sompting), Sussex on themselves for life, together with the advowson of the hospital of Cokeham, with reversion to their son, Ralph. In 1325-6 he and his wife, Elizabeth, settled a messuage and lands in Woolavington, Sussex on themselves for life, with reversion to their son, John. In 1326 the king out of special grace granted Ralph and his wife, Elizabeth, and their son, John, a yearly fair at Rogate, Sussex, together with free warren at Rogate, Harting, Tortewyk, Tadeham, and Alfradesham, Sussex. He was pardoned in Feb. 1326/7 for his adherence to the Despensers in their rebellion against King Edward II. In March 1327 Margery, widow of Robert Lever, arraigned an assize of novel disseisin against Ralph de Camoys, Elizabeth his wife, and their son, Hugh, for a tenement in Westbury. The said Ralph, Elizabeth, and Hugh proferred a charter of the late king whereby they asserted they held the said tenement; however, it was found by the tenor of the assize that the defendants had disseised the said Margery of the manor of Westbury long before the making of the king's charter. In 1327 he sued John de Saint John regarding a debt. In 1328 he and Edmund, Earl of Kent, were sued by Eve Dautry, wife of Edward de Saint John, for dower in Broadwater, Trotton, Woolavington, Petworth, etc., Sussex. The same year John de Ifeld sued Ralph de Camoys and Richard Macy for trespass at Offington [in Broadwater], Sussex. The same year Ralph sued John de Bohun, of Midhurst, Sussex, for the detention of beasts and Geoffrey Hoghles regarding a debt. His wife, Elizabeth, was living 14 March 1327, but presumably died before 17 February 1331, when Ralph alone granted their son, Hugh de Camoys, for the term of his life the manor of Eling, Hampshire, together with lands and tenements called Winsor, and lands which Margery, once wife of Robert Lewyr held by writ of elegit of the king, remainder to the said Ralph and his heirs. In the period, 1327-8, he sued Walter son of Lucy de Meriet regarding the manor of Bradford, Somerset; Walter de Meriet in turn sued him regarding the wardship of land in Bradford, Sowerset during the minority of the heir of Roger Baudrip. In 1335 he complained that ceratin malefactors broke his park at Trotton, Sussex and hunted deer there. SIR RALPH DE CAMOYS, 1st Lord Camoys, died shortly before June 1336.
      Blomefield Essex towards a Top. Hist. of Norfolk 2 [1805): 277-281; 10 (1809): 221-227. Blore Hist. & Antiqs. of Rutland 1(2) (1811): 19 (Despenser ped.). Brydges Collins’ Peerage of England 6 (1812): 496-511 (sub Despenser) ("[Hugh le Despenser] married Isabel, daughter of William de Beauchamp, Earl of Warwick, and widow of Sir Patrick Chaworth, and by her had ... Ada [sic], married to Sir Ralph Camois, Knt."). Dallaway Hist of the Western Div. of Sussex 1(2) (1832): 217 (Camoys ped.). Lennard & Vincent Vis. of Warwick 1619 (H.S.P. 12) (1877): 282-285 (Spencer ped.: “Ada [Despenser] ux. Dn'i St. Amon 2d Rad'i Dn'i Camois."). Carthew Hundred of Launditch & Deaneary of Brisley 1 (1878): 238-241 (Camoys ped.). Notes & Queries 6th Ser. 1 (1880): 234-235, 298-299, 341 (W.D. Macray states "The following short descent, which I have put together from two seventeenth century MSS. in the Bodleian (Rawinson, B. 74 and 314 [shows] Ralph [Camoys] = Da. of Hugh Le Despenser, Earl of Winchester."). Genealogist 6 (1882): 236-247. Year Books of Edward III, Years XIII & XIV 3 (Rolls Ser. 31b) (1886): 220-223. Desc. Cat. Ancient Deeds 1(1890): 23. C.P.R. 1327-1330 (1891): 20. C.P.R. 1307-1313 (1894): 257, 582. C.P.R. 1318-1323 (1895): 221. C.P.R. 1327-1330 (1896): 71-72. C.P.R. 1301-1307 (1898): 382. C.P.R. 1317-1321 (1903): 325, 449. VCH Hampshire 2 (1903): 206-208; 3 (1908): 239, 241; 4 (1911): 81-82, 547-548. List of Inqs. ad Quod Damnum 1 (PRO Lists and Indexes 17) (1904): 63, 83; 2 (PRO Lists and Indexes 22) (1906): 562, 573, 659, 660, 666, 672. Benolte et at. Vis. of Sussex 1530 & 1633-4 (H.S.P. 53) (1905): 29-30 (Camoys ped.: "Rafe Lord Camoys = d. of Hugh le Spencer Erle of Winchester."). VCH Northampton 2 (1906): 595-596; 3 (1930): 129-131. C.Ch.R. 3 (1908): 36, 127, 194, 397, 417, 469, 493. C.P. 2 (1912): 506-507 (sub Camoys). Salzman Abs. of Feet of Fines Rel. Sussex 3 (Sussex Rec. Soc. 23) (1916): 46, 50, 53, 59. Davies Baronial Opposition of Edward II: Its Character & Policy (1918): 93-94. Moor Knights of Edward II (H.S.P. 80) (1929): 176-177. Sussex Arch. Coll.: 70 (1929): 1-7 (The author, Mr. Lambarde, discusses the Lewknor tapestry dating from the 1560's which tapestry features various coats of arms which involve ancestral marriages of the Lewknor family. Among the coats of arms depicted are the arms of Camoys impaling Despenser. The author, writes: "This records the marriage of Ralph, Lord Camoys, to the daughter of Hugh De Spencer, Earl of Winchester. This is according to the Pedigree recorded in the Visitations of Sussex, 1634, Harl. Soc., LIII, 29."). Salter Boarstall Cartulary (Oxford Hist. Soc. 1st Ser. 88) (1930): 108. VCH Huntingdon 2 (1932): 230-234. VCH Sussex 4 (1953): 34-35 (Camoys arms: Or on a chief pales three roundels argent), 84-87; 6(1) (1980): 53-64, 69-70; 7 (1940): 80-83. Paget Baronage of England (1957) 90: 1-12 (sub Braose); 114: 1-7 (sub Camoys). Ellis Cat. Seals in the P.R.O. 2 (1981): 21 (seal of Ralph de Carnoys, knight dated 1335 - hung from a hook, a shield of arms: on a chief three roundels; the field diapered [CAMOYS]). English Hist. Rev. 99 (1984): 1-33. Himsworth Winchester College Muniments 2 (1984): 269-274. Hanna Cartularies of Southwick Priory 1 (Hampshire Recs. 9) (1988): 209. Brault Rolls of Arms Edward I 2 (1997): 89 (arms of Ralph de Camoys: Or, on a chief gules three roundels argent). Coss Soldiers, Nobles and Gentlemen (2009): 107. National Archives, E 40/215 (grant dated 17 June 1320 by John de la Mare to Sir Hugh le Despenser of his manor of Asshemere, Dorset. Witnesses: Sirs John de Handlo [Haudlo], Ralph de Camoys, Knts., and others); SC 8/61/3011A; SC 8/127/6319 (petition dated c.1334 from Walter de Meryet, clerk to the king and council, requesting the intervention of the justices of King's Bench in his dispute with Ralph de Camoys, stating that although his case against Camoys was adjudged in his favour and damages awarded, Camoys has alienated his lands to other people before the judgment was made, and is thus avoiding paying the necessary damages); SC 8/169/8415; SC 8/261/13033 (petition dated 1334-5 from Luke de Burgh, king's attorney of Common Pleas, to the king and council, asking that an exigent might be granted against Ralph de Camoys, who has persistently taken steps to resist arrest in a case before the justices of Common Pleas, losing the King a redemption of 1000 marks or more, and that the same might be done in every case where the capias is granted) (available at www.catalogue.nationalarchives.gov.uk/search.asp).”

      2. “Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families,” Douglas Richardson (2013):
      “WILLIAM DE BREWES (or BREUSE, BREHUSE, BREOUSE), Knt., of Bramber, Sussex, Buckingham and Bourton (in Buckingham), Buckinghamshire, Tetbury, Gloucestershire, Manningford Bruce, Wiltshire, etc., son and heir, born about 1224 (of full age 15 July 1245). He married (1st) ALINE DE MULTON, daughter of Thomas de Multon, of Burgh-on-Sands, Cumberland, by Maud, daughter and heiress of Hubert de Vaux, of Surlingham, Norfolk and Denham, Suffolk. Her maritagium included the manor of Thorganby, Yorkshire. They had one son, William, Knt. [2nd Lord Brewes]. At some unspecified date, at his mother's request, he gave the monks of Sele Priory half an acre of land near the high road from Bramber to Chichester. In 1249 he sued Maurice de Berkeley in a plea of land in Devon and Gloucestershire. In 1254, for the good of his soul and of Aline his wife, he gave Sele Priory 229 acres in Crockhurst (in Horsham), Sussex, in exchange for an annual payment of 10 marks for tithes in Shoreham, Sussex. He fought in Wales in 1257, 1258, 1260, 1277, 1282, and 1283 being summoned by writs directed Willelmo de Breuse, Brehuse or Brews. He adhered to King Henry III against the Barons. His wife, Aline, died before 1267/8. In 1267-8 he was sued by John de Stonegrave regarding the manor of Thorganby, Yorkshire. He married (2nd) AGNES DE MOELS, daughter of Nicholas de Moels (or Mules), of Cadbury, Somerset, by Hawise, daughter of James de Newmarch. Her maritagium included the manors of Woodlands (in Horton) and Knowlton, Dorset. They had one son, Giles, Knt. He married (3rd) in or before 1271 MARY DE ROOS, daughter of Robert de Roos, Knt., of Helmsley, Yorkshire, by Isabel, daughter and heiress of William d'Aubeney [see ROOS 7 for her ancestry]. Her maritagium included the manor of Weaverthorpe, Yorkshire. They had three sons, Richard, Peter, Knt., and allegedly William, and two or more daughters, including Margaret. In 1272 John Giffard and Maud his wife (William's half-sister) demanded against William the manor of Wickham, Kent as being the right of the said Maud, which manor she claimed she had demised to William while she was under age; William replied he had it by the feoffment of Maud by fine dated 1259 when she was of full age. In 1272-3 Thomas de Clervaus and James his brother arraigned an assize of novel disseisin against William de Breuse and Giles his son touching a tenement in Wickham-near-Ickham, Kent. In 1274-5 James son of James Haunsard arraigned an assize of mort d'ancestor against William and his wife, Mary, touching a messuage and land in Little Bookham, Surrey. In the same period, William de Stane and Alice his wife arraigned an assize of mort d'ancestor against him touching a moiety of the manor of Grinstead, Sussex. In 1275-6 he and his wife, Mary, and others arraigned an assize of novel disseisin against James Haunsard and Gilbert de Clare, Earl of Gloucester and Hertford regarding a tenement in Ockharn, Surrey. In the same year he arraigned an assize of novel disseisin against Roger de Horn (or Herrne) regarding a tenement in Effingham and Bookham, Surrey. In the same year he arraigned an assize of novel disseisin against Robert de Stanton regarding unidentified property in Manningford, Wiltshire. In the same year he arraigned an assize of novel disseisin against Richard le Bel and others regarding a tenement in Weston, Hampshire. In the same year Daniel Fitz Hubert arraigned an assize of novel disseisin against William de Brewes and others regarding a tenement in Wickham, Kent. In 1275-6 William de Ston' and Alice his wife arraigned an assize of mort d'ancestor against him touching possessions in West Grinstead, Sussex. In 1278 he granted Walter de Arundell, chaplain, various lands in Blakestoonde (in Horsham), Cowfold, Horsham, Midhurst, and Worthe (in Horsham), Sussex. In 1280-1 the Prior of Sele arraigned an assize of novel disseisin against him regarding common of pasture in St. Leonard's, Horsham, Sele, Nuthurst, Cowfold, Slaugham, Selfleg, Ifeld, and Northam, Sussex. He was summoned to attend the king at Shrewsbury in 1283. In 1289 Joan, widow of Reynold Fitz Peter, made claim against William de Brewes, senior to one third of the manor of Manningford, Wiltshire, and to one third of six messuages and four virgates of arable land with appurtenances in Manningford Bruce and Chirton, Wiltshires as being her dower, etc. He is recorded to have sat in the Parliament of April-May 1290, whereby he may be held to have become Lord Brewes. In 1290 he confirmed the gift of his father, John de Brewes, to Acornbury Priory of the rents of ten houses in Tetbury, Gloucestershire. At an unknown date, as "William de Breuse son and heir of John de Breuse," he confirmed to Biddlesden Abbey the gift of Thomas de Dodforde of all his land and right in Dadford, which he held of his fee. SIR WILLIAM DE BREWES, 1st Lord Brewes, died at Findon, Sussex 6 Jan. 1290/1, and was buried at Sell, Sussex 15 January following. In 1291 his widow, Mary, received the manor of Tetbury, Gloucestershire as dower. The following year she and her step-son, William, surrendered the manor of Tetbury to her son, Richard, in place of Brewes family manors in Sussex which had previously been settled on Richard. She presented to the church of Manningford Bruce, Wiltshire in 1314. Mary, Lady Brewes, died testate shortly before 23 May 1326.
      Dugdale Monasticon Anglicanum 6(1) (1830): 491 (charter of William de Breuse dated 1290). Horsfield Hist., Antiqs. Top. of Sussex 2 (1835): 186-187. Coll Top. et Gen. 6 (1840): 75. Sussex Arch. Colls. 5 (1852): 1-28; 8 (1856): 97-103. Arch. Cambrensis 3rd Ser. 8 (1862): 281 (13th Cent. Chronicle: "Anno mccxco. [A.D. 1290] - °hilt Dominus Willielmus de Breusa senior apud Findon infra festum Natalis Domini."). Notes & Queries 3rd Ser. 1 (1862): 489-490; 3rd Ser. 8 (1865): 400-401. Shirley Stemmata Shirleiana (1873): 30 (chart). Fifth Rpt. (Hist. MSS Comm. 4) (1876): 337 (letter of Mary de Breus). Year Books of Edward 1: Years XXXIII-XXXV 5 (Rolls Ser. 31a) (1879): 20, 28-43. Annual Rpt. of the Deputy Keeper 42 (1881): 688; 44 (1883): 34, 119, 169; 45 (1885): 162, 185, 243, 267, 354, 358; 46 (1886): 128, 321; 50 (1889): 138, 179; 47(1886); 214. Genealogist 5 (1881): 161-167; 6 (1882): 236-247;7 (1883): 51-60; n.s. 15 (1898): 92. Rpt. on MSS in Various Colls. 1 (Hist. MSS Comm. 55) (1901): 279-280. Giffard Reg. of Walter Geard Archbishop of York (Surtees Soc. 109) (1904): 43 14. List of lnqs. ad Quad Damnum 1 (PRO Lists and Indexes 17) (1904): 262. Wrottesley Peds. from the Plea Rolls (1905): 230. Cal. IPM 6 (1910): 168-169. C.P. 2 (1912): 302 (sub Brewes); 12(1) (1953): 612-614. Clay Extinct & Dormant Peerages (1913): 181-185 (sub Ros). Owen Cat. MSS Rel. Wales in the British Museum 4 (1922): 899. Salzman Chartulary of the Priory of St. Peter at Sele (1923): xiii-xiv, 5-9, 32-33, 49-50, 67, 69, 85-86. VCH Buckingham 3 (1925): 480; 4 (1927): 5, 46, 82. Grainger & Collingwood Reg. & Recs. of Holm Cultram (Cumberland & Westmorland Antiq. & Arch. Soc. Rec. Ser. 7) (1929): 2-3 (Multon ped.). Cam Hundred & Hundred Rolls (1930): 265, 281-282. Jacobus Bulkeley Gen. (1933): 72. Pugh Abs. of Feet of Fines Rel. Wiltshire (Wiltshire Arch. & Nat. Hist. Soc. Recs. Branch 1) (1939): 20. Paget Baronage of England (1957) 90: 1-12 (sub Braose); 473:3 (sub Ros). Sanders English Baronies (1960): 108. Hedley Northumberland Fams. (1968): 224-230. Curia Regis Rolls 15 (1972): 223-226, 249, 269, 303, 321-322. Rees Cal. Ancient Petitions Rel. Wales (Board of Celtic Studies, Hist. & Law 28) (1975): 45-46 (petition of Mary de Brewes to the king dated c.1301-2), 524. VCH Gloucester 11 (1976): 264-265. Ancient Deeds - Ser. BB (List & Index Soc. 137) (1977): 103-104, 110. TAG 56 (1980): 1-11. TG 1 (1980): 80-95; 6 (1985): 85-99. Year Books of Edward II 27 (Selden Soc. 104) (1988): 135-136. Brault Rolls of Arms Edward I 2 (1997): 76 (arms of William de Brewes: Azure crusily and a lion rampant or). NEHGR 150 (1996): 315-324. Curia Regis Rolls 19 (2002): 36, 121, 322, 658. Brand Earliest English Law Rpts. 4 (Selden Soc. 123) (2007): 409-411. National Archives, SC 8/36/1758 (petition dated c.1302 from Mary de Breose [Brewes] to the king); SC 8/185/9233 (petition dated 1291-1307 from Mary de Breuse [Brewes] to the king, requesting remedy, stating that she holds at a certain farm the custody of the manor of Bytham, Lincolnshire, which the king granted to her husband, William, during the minority of Edmund, son and heir of Roger de Colevill. However, parts of these estates have since been granted to Roger's widow, Margaret.); SC 8/67/3318 (petition dated c.1331 from Richard de Peshale to king and council. Peshale states that he has previously petitioned, claiming an error in the record and process held before the Treasurer and Barons of the Exchequer, between the executors of Mary de Breouse [Brewes] and himself, his wife, Aline, and Thomas de Breouse [Brewes], and asking that it be brought into Chancery, and that he has been granted a writ as a result of this petition: but that nothing has been done) (available at www.catalogue.nationalarchives.gov.uk/search.asp). Cartulary of Biddlesden Abbey: Dadford charters, British Library, Harleian MS 4714.
      Child of William de Brewes, Knt., by Aline de Multon:
      i. WILLIAM DE BREWES, Knt., 2nd Lord Brewes [see next].
      Child of William de Brewes, Knt., by Agnes de Moels:
      i. GILES DE BREWES, Knt., of Buckingham, Buckinghamshire, married (1st) BEATRICE DE SAINT HELEN [see FROME 9]; (2nd) MAUD DE WHITNEY [see FROME 9].
      Children of William de Brewes, Knt., by Mary de Roos:
      i. PETER DE BREWES, Knt., of Tetbury, Gloucestershire, married AGNES DE CLIFFORD [see TETBURY 9].
      ii. MARGARET DE BREWES, married RALPH DE CAMOYS, Knt., 1st Lord Camoys [see CAMOYS 6].”