Chris & Julie Petersen's Genealogy

Agnes de Cantelowe

Female - Aft 1279


Personal Information    |    Notes    |    All    |    PDF

  • Name Agnes de Cantelowe 
    Gender Female 
    Died Aft 1279 
    Person ID I6562  Petersen-de Lanskoy
    Last Modified 27 May 2021 

    Father William de Cantelowe,   b. of Eaton Bray, Bedfordshire, England Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 22/22 Feb 1250/1 
    Mother Millicent de Gournay 
    Married Bef Jul 1216 
    Family ID F1996  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

    Family 1 Robert de Saint John,   b. of Basing, Hampshire, England Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. Abt 25/25 Mar 1266/7 
    Last Modified 28 May 2021 
    Family ID F2895  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

    Family 2 John de Turville,   d. Aft 1279 
    Married Bef 4 Jun 1271 
    Last Modified 28 May 2021 
    Family ID F2896  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

  • Notes 
    • RESEARCH_NOTES:
      1. “Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families,” Douglas Richardson (2013):
      “ROBERT DE SAINT JOHN, of Basing and Chawton, Hampshire, West Shefford, Berkshire, Halnaker, Barnham, Goodwood, and Walberton, Sussex, etc., Keeper of Portchester and Farnham Castles, 2nd but 1st surviving son and heir. He married AGNES DE CANTELOWE, daughter of William de Cantelowe, Knt. of Eaton Bray, Bedfordshire, Steward of the Royal Household, by his 1st wife, Milicent, daughter of Hugh de Gournay [see CANTELOWE 4 for her ancestry]. They had two sons, John, Knt, and William. He served in the king's campaign in Gascony in 1253-4. In 1253 he leased the manor of Barnham, Sussex to Master Richard, king's cook, and Simon le Devenys, Citizens of Winchester, for a term of 14 years. The same year he was granted free warren in his demesne lands in West Shefford, Berkshire, and Warneford and Chawton, Hampshire, and all his lands in Halnaker, Barnham, Goodwood, Strettington (in Boxgrave), and Walberton, Sussex. In 1257 he was going on the king's service to Wales, and was summoned for service there, 1258, 1260, and 1263. In 1261 he was summoned to London, cum equis et armis, and all possible forces, in a matter touching the king and crown. He had license to fortify Basing, Hampshire in 1261. ROBERT DE SAINT JOHN died shortly before 25 March 1266/7. His widow, Agnes, married (2nd) before 4 June 1271 JOHN DE TURVILLE. They were both living in 1279.
      Burke Gen'l & Heraldic Dict. of the Peerages of England, Ireland & Scotland (1831): 457-458 (sub St. John). C.P.R. 1247-1258 (1908): 173, 245-246. VCH Berkshire 4 (1924): 238-242. C.P. 11 (1949): 322-323 (sub Saint John). VCH Sussex 4 (1953): 140-150. Paget Baronage of England (1957) 480:2 (for marriage cites Mon. Ang. 1594a n 30) (identifies only John as child, not William). Sanders English Baronies (1960): 9.”

      2. “Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families,” Douglas Richardson (2013):
      “WILLIAM DE CANTELOWE, Knt., of Eaton Bray, Bedfordshire, Ellesborough, Buckinghamshire, Cold Hatton, Eyton, Harley, Hope Bowdler, Marton, Meole Brace, Stanwardine-on-campo, Stapleton, Whittingslow, and Wilderley, Shropshire, Aston Cantlow, Hunningham, Ipsley, and [Upper] Shuckburgh, Warwickshire, Poulton, Wiltshire, etc., Steward of the Royal Household, 1239-51, Sheriff of Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire, 1239-40, Keeper of the Town of Shrewsbury, Constable of Nottingham Castle, Keeper of Lundy Island, son and heir. He married (1st) before July 1215 or 1216 (date of pardon) MILICENT DE GOURNAY, Countess of Evreux, widow of Amaury de Montfort, Count of Evreux in Normandy, Earl of Gloucester in England (died before November 1213), and daughter of Hugh (or Hugues) de Gournay (died 1214), seigneur of Gournay-en-Brie, and of Wendover, Buckinghamshire, Houghton, Bedfordshire, Caister and Cantley, Norfolk, Mapledurham, Oxfordshire, etc, by Juliane, daughter of Aubrey II, Count of Dammartin [see GOURNAY 4 for her ancestry]. They had five sons, William, Knt., [Master] Thomas [Bishop of Hereford, Chancellor of England, Chancellor of Oxford University], [Master] Hugh [Archdeacon of Gloucester], John, and Nicholas, and two daughters, Agnes and Juliane. Like his father, he was named by Roger of Wendover as one of King John's "evil counselors." In 1217 Gilbert de Clare, Earl of Gloucester, granted William's wife, Milicent, the manors of Marlow, Buckinghamshire and Burford, Oxfordshire, together with the life grant of the viii of Hambleden, Buckinghamshire in satisfaction of Milicent's claims to dower in the lands of her former husband, Amaury de Evreux. In 1217 William was at the Siege of Mountsorrel and at the Battle of Lincoln. By the mid-1220s he was a follower of Ranulph, Earl of Chester, and witnessed many of his charters. He participated in Earl Ranulph's armed demonstration at the Tower of London in 1223, but then submitted with the earl. He presented to the churches of Bulwick, Northamptonshire, 1226 and 1247, and Barby, Northamptonshire, 1230. He obtained a confirmation of the manor of Aston Cantlow, Warwickshire in 1227 and again in 1231. He joined Chester on the king's expedition to Brittany in 1230. He married (2nd) after Michaelmas 1233 (date of lawsuit) MAUD FITZ GEOFFREY, widow of Henry d'Oilly (died 1232), of Hook Norton, Kidlington, and Little Minster (in Minster Lovell), Oxfordshire, and daughter of Geoffrey Fitz Peter, Knt., Earl of Essex, by his 2nd wife, Aveline, daughter of Roger de Clare, Earl of Hertford [see ESSEX 2 for her ancestry]. They had no issue. Sometime in the period, 1227-36, Maud had the manor of Gussage St. Michael, Dorset by gift from her half-sister, Maud de Mandeville, Countess of Essex and Hereford. In 1234 he served as one of the executors of the will of Ranulph, Earl of Chester. In 1236 he went on pilgrimage to Santiago de Compostela. In 1237 the king granted him the manors of Great Bowden and Market Harborough, Leicestershire for life. In 1241 he was one of the English arbitrators with Dafydd of Gwynedd. He was appointed one of the guardians of the realm during the king's expedition to Poitou in 1242. In 1242 William son of William Marmion sued him. In 1242-3 he presented to the church of Coningsby, Lincolnshire, in right of his ward, Philip Marmion. In 1244 Peter de Freney conveyed the manor of Clipsharn, Rutland to him. In 1244-5 William de Cantelowe, senior, levied a fine by which William de Haket was bound not to sell, injure, waste, or spoil any part of the manor of Little Merston (in West Camel), Somerset, as it was only his or life, and afterwards should go to the said William de Cantelowe. He was one of the proctors of the English baronage at the Council of Lyons in 1245, delivering a lengthy complaint against Roman exactions. His wife, Maud, had a gift of bucks from Sherwood Forest by the king in 1245 and 1248. SIR WILLIAM DE CANTILOWE died testate 22 Feb. 1250/1. His viscera was buried at Oseney Abbey, Oxfordshire. In 1252 his widow, Maud, went to Scotland with Margaret, the king's daughter, Queen of Scotland, by order of the king. She held the advowson of the Rectory of Berwick St. James, Wiltshire for life. In 1260 Hawise de London, widow of Patrick de Chaworth, Knt., leased to Maud and to Maud's nephew, John son of John Fitz Geoffrey, the manor of East Garston, Berkshire for a term of 11 years. His widow, Maud, died 1 March 1260/1.
      Madox Formulare Anglicanum (1702): 184 (charter of Amaury, Count of Evreux). Martene & Durand Veterum Scriptorum et Monumentorum 1 (1724): 1068 (charter of King Philippe Auguste of France dated 1206 mentions land given by Hugh de Gournay at Sotteville in Normandy in marriage with his daughter, [Milicent], Countess of Evreux). Bridges Hist. & Antiqs. of Northamptonshire 1 (1791): 25; 2 (1791): 289. Blomefield Essay towards a Top. Hist. of Norfolk 5 (1806): 507 ("Henry d'Oyly who had two wives, Sibil and Maud, who remarried to William de Cantalupe; he had only one daughter, Maud, who died young. He attended King Ric. I. to Jerusalem, and as he returned, died and was buried in Austria, and was succeeded by his only brother, Robert, who was Baron of Hocknorton, and the King's Constable ..."). Rotuli Hundredorum (Record Commission) (1812): 97, 102. Montmorency-Morres Genealogical Memoir of the Fam. of Montmorency (1817): xxxii-xxxvi. Roberts Excerpta e Rotulis Finium in Turri Londinensi Asservatis, A.D. 1216-1272 2 (1836): 357. Lipscomb Hist. & Antiqs. of Buckingham 1 (1847): 176 (Cantilupe ped.). Sackville-West Hist. Notices of the Parish of Witham (1857): 40-46 (re. Cantelowe fam.). Eyton Antiqs. of Shropshire 6 (1858): 350-357; 11(1860): 82. Luard Annales Monastici 1 (Rolls Ser. 36) (1864): 143 (sub A.D. 1250: "Obiit Willelmus de Cantilupo in Cathedra Sancti Petri"); 3 (Rolls Ser. 36) (1866): 181 (Dunstaple Annals sub A.D. 1250: "Eodem tempore mortuus est Willelmus de Cantilupo secundus."); 4 (Rolls Ser. 36) (1869): 100 (Oseney Annals sub 1250: "Eodem anno obiit dominus Willelmus de Cantilupo, et jacent ejus viscera apud Oseneiam coram altari Sancti Michaelis."), 127 (sub Oseney Annals sub A.D. 1260 [i.e., 1260/11: "Eodem anno primo die Martii obiit bonæ memoriæe domina Matildis de Cantilupo, cujus animæ propicietur Deus."), 440 (Worcester Annals sub A.D. 1251: Willelmus de Cantilupo frater domini episcopi obiit."). Francisque-Michel Roles Garcons 1 (1885): 373, 422. Worthy Devonshire Parishes, or the Antiquities, Docs. Heraldry & Fam. Hist. of Twenty-Eight Parishes in the Archdeaconry of Totnes 2(1889): 31-34. Genealogist n.s. 5 (1889): 129 (seal of Amaury, Earl of Gloucester-A shield of arms: Barry pily over the whole field. Legend: Sig. Almarici Comitis Gloverniæ. Counterseal of the same. Legend: Secretum A. Comitis Gloverniæ.). Desc. Cat. Ancient Deeds 1 (1890): 9-21. Batten Hist. & Topo Colls. Rel. to the early Hist. of Parts of South Somerset (1894): 1-7. Macray Cal. of Charters & Docs. rel. to Selborne & its Priory (1894): 63 (charter of Amaury, Earl of Gloucester dated before 1210, followed by fine dated 1210). Lincolnshire Notes & Queries 5 (1898): 190. List of Sheriffs for England & Wales (PRO Lists and Indexes 9) (1898): 102. Bates Two Cartularies of the Benedictine Abbeys of Mulchelney & Athelney (Somerset Rec. Soc. 14) (1899): 71. Trans. Shropshire Arch. & Natural Hist. Soc. 3rd Ser. 1 (1901): 170-177. Rpt. on MSS in Various Colls. 4 (Hist. MSS Comm. 55) (1907): 97 (charter of Amaury, Earl of Gloucester). C.P.R 1247-1258 (1908): 123, 129, 416. VCH Buckingham 2 (1908): 331-338; 4 (1927): 260-263. C.P.R 1258-1266 (1910): 125, 184-185. VCH Bedford 3 (1912): 369-375. Grosseteste Rotuli Roberti Grosseteste Episcopi Lincolniensis (Lincoln Rec. Soc. 11) (1914): 67. C.C.R. 1242-1247 (1916): 337. G.H. Fowler 'Calendar of Inquisitions Post Mortem. No. I' in Pubs. Bedfordshire Hist. Rec. Soc. 5 (1920): 210-215. C.C.R 1247-1251 (1922): 66. C.P. 5 (1926): 692-693 (sub Gloucester). C.C.R. 1251-1253 (1927): 19, 55, 292, 386, 413. Pubs. Bedfordshire Hist. Rec. Soc. 12 (1928): 79-81. C.C.R. 1254-1256 (1931): 94, 181, 193-194, 208, 240, 275, 353, 380. C.C.R. 1256-1259 (1932): 21, 257, 264. C.C.R. 1259-1261 (1934): 303. VCH Rutland 2 (1935): 41-45. C.C.R. 1261-1264 (1936): 178-179. Fowler Tractatus de Dunstaple et de Hocton (Pubs. Bedfordshire Hist. Rec. Soc. 19) (1937): 40-41, 74-75. Jenkins Cal. of the Rolls of the Justices on Eyre 1227 (Buckinghamshire Arch. Soc. 6) (1945): 6, 15, 31. VCH Warwick 3 (1945): 31-42, 123-126, 167-172, 193-196; 6 (1951): 117-120, 215-219. Sanders English Baronies (1960): 39-40, 52. Duchy of Lancaster, Descriptive List (with Index) of Carta Miscellanea, Lists and Indexes, Supplementary Ser., No. V, vol. 3, reprinted 1964): 85 ("Announcement dated 1227-36 by Maud de Oylly that Maud de Mandevill', Countess of Essex and Hereford, her sister, has granted her by charter the manor of Gussage St. Michael, co. Dorset."). VCH Leicester 5 (1964): 133-453. C.R.R. 15 (1972): 36, 40-41, 63, 288-290, 438-440, 443. Barraclough Charters of the Earls of Chester (Lanc. & Cheshire Rec. Soc. 126) (1988): 416. Travers Cal. of the Feet of Fines for Buckinghamshire 1239-1307 (Buckinghamshire Rec. Soc. 25) (1989): 106. VCH Oxford 12 (1990): 188-194; 13 (1996): 118-127; 15 (2006): 184-172. VCH Wiltshire 15 (1995): 168-177. Hoskin English Episcopal Ada 13 (1997): xxvii-xxxiii (biog. of Walter de Cantelowe). Fine Rolls of Henry III, C 60/32 (Date: 1232 - Henry de Oilly deceased styled "kinsman" of Thomas [Earl] of Warwick).
      Children of William de Cantelowe, Knt., by Milicent de Gournay:
      i. WILLIAM DE CANTELOWE, Knt. [see next].
      ii. JOHN DE CANTELOWE, of Snitterfield, Warwickshire, married MARGERY (or MARGARET) COMYN [see WEST 5].
      iii. NICHOLAS DE CANTELOWE, of Ellesborough, Buckinghamshire. He married EUSTACHE FITZ RALPH, daughter and heiress of Ralph Fitz Hugh, of Greasley and South Muskham, Nottinghamshire, and Ilkeston, Derbyshire, by Joan, daughter of Ralph de la Haye, Knt., of Burwell, Lincolnshire. They had one son, William. NICHOLAS DE CANTELOWE was living 8 May 1262. His widow, Eustache, married (2nd) in 1268 WILLIAM DE ROOS (or ROS), Knt., of Ingmanthorpe (in Kirk Deighton), Yorkshire, and, in right of his wife, of Greasley, Nottinghamshire, Ilkeston, Derbyshire, etc. Banks Baronies in Fees 1 (1844):149-150 (sub Cantilupe). Lipscomb Hist. & Antiqs. of Buckingham 1 (1847): 176 (Cantilupe ped.). Trans. Shropshire Arch. & Natural Hist. Soc. 3rd Ser. 1 (1901): 170-177. D.N.B. 3 (1908): 900-904 (biog. of Thomas de Cantelupe). Alington St Thomas of Hereford (2001): 4. West Yorkshire Archive Service, Leeds: Ingilby Recs., WYL230/30 (enfeoffment dated 1 March 1290 from William de Ros, lord of Ingmanthorp and Eustacia his wife to William their son, of the manors of Wythale and Kynthorp in Lincolnshire, Elkeston with the advowson of the church in Derbyshire, Greseby and Seleston with the advowson of the churches in Nottinghamshire, Claydon with the advowson of the church and Esilbergh [Ellesborough] in Buckinghamshire, lately granted to them for life, with remainder to William, by Ralph son of William, lord of Grimthorpe, for term of their lives, rendering annually £100); WYL230/31 (power of attorney dated 1 March 1290 from William de Ros, land of Ingmanthorp and Eustacia his wife to Robert de Sallow and Adam de Cossall to deliver to William de Ros their son full seisin of the manors of Wythhale and Kynthorp in Lincolnshire, Elkeston with the advowson of the church in Derbyshire, Greseley and Selseton with the advowsons of the churches in Nottinghamshire, Claydon with the advowson of the church and Esilbergh [Ellesborough] in Buckinghamshire) (available at www.a2a.org.uk/search/index.asp).
      Child of Nicholas de Cantelowe, by Eustache Fitz Ralph:
      a. WILLIAM DE CANTELOWE, son and heir. Banks Baronies in Fees 1 (1844):149-150 (sub Cantilupe). Lipscomb Hist. & Antiqs. of Buckingham 1(1847): 176 (Cantilupe ped.). Trans. Shropshire Arch. & Natural Hist. Soc. 3rd Ser. 1 (1901): 170-177.
      iv. [MASTER] THOMAS DE CANTELOWE, Archdeacon of Stafford, Precentor of York, Chancellor of Oxford University, Chancellor of England, Bishop of Hereford, born about 1220. He and his brother, Hugh de Cantelowe, went to Paris in the early 1240s where they pursued arts degrees. He was appointed Rector of Wintringharn, Lincolnshire in 1244. In 1245 Thomas and his brother, Hugh, attended the 1st Council of Lyons in 1245, where Thomas was appointed papal chaplain by Pope Innocent IV, and also received a dispensation allowing him to hold benefices in plurality. After attaining his Master of Arts at Paris, he completed his studies at Oxford in canon law c.1255, incepting as a doctor in that faculty. He was presented to the church of Deighton, Yorkshire by Agatha Trussebut in 1247. He Was Rector of Aston Cantlow, Warwickshire in 1253. In 1261 he was elected Chancellor of Oxford University. In December 1263 he went to Amiens to represent baronial interests in their disputes with King Henry III. He drafted the three documents through which the barons' case was submitted to the arbitrament of Louis IX. The French king's rejection of the baronial proposals, in the mise of Amiens of January 1264, was the catalyst that brought Montfortians into open conflict with King Henry III. After Simon de Montfort's victory at the Battle of Lewes in May 1264, the magnate council of nine, and a compliant King Henry III, in February 1265 appointed Thomas as Chancellor of England. Though his execution of duties as chancellor seems to have been of brief duration, the acts he carried out were performed with his usual fastidious attention to detail and consciousness of iresponskality. Following the Battle of Evesham in 1265, he remained abroad for several years, studying theology at Paris. In 1268 he was granted a dispensation to be absent for three years to study theology. About 1272 be had returned to Oxford where, in June 1273, he became a doctor of theology. He was again appointed Chancellor of the university in Jan. 1274, where he played an important part in quelling a student riot between the `northeners' and the 'southerners'. In May 1274 he attended the 2nd Council of Lyons where, as at the first Lyons council, he was made a papal chaplain. He was elected Bishop of Hereford 15 June 1275, and was consecrated by Archbishop Kilwardby 8 September 1275. THOMAS DE CANTELOWE, Bishop of Hereford, died at Castrum Florenti (Ferento, now in ruins) 25 August 1282. He left a will dated 18 August 1282. His flesh and viscera were buried at the monastery of San Severo outside Orvieto. His bones were returned to England and placed under a slab in the east end of Hereford Cathedral, where they remained until moved into a table tomb in the north transept in 1287. His successor Richard Swinfield (died 1317) became a tireless promoter of Cantelowe's canonization. Between 1287 and 1312 nearly 500 miracles were recorded as evidence of his sanctity, a figure surpassed in the surviving records of medieval England only by the 700 attributed to Thomas Becket. Swinfield's attempts to secure the canonization of his predecessor had little immediate success, though after an inquisition authorized by Clement V found that Cantelowe had died in communion with the church, the pope ordered an investigation of his life and miracles, which took place in London and Hereford. Both inquisitorial processes occurred in 1307. Continued support for the bishop's cause, by Kings Edward I and Edward II and by many other secular and ecclesiastical magnates, resulted in his canonization 17 April 1320. A new shrine was constructed in the east end of the cathedral. On 25 October 1349, in the presence of King Edward III and many other lay and clerical notables, his bones were translated from the north transept to this new location. There the remains lay undisturbed until 1538, when, along with much else that represented papal authority in England, the shrine, its ornaments, and its contents were removed. Lipscomb Hist. & Antiqs. of Buckingham 1 (1847): 176 (Cantilupe ped.). Notes & Queries 2nd Ser. 9 (1860): 171. Gray Reg., or Rolls, of Walter Gr6, Lord Archbishop of York (Surtees Soc. 56) (1872): 99. Birch Cat. Seals- in the British Museum 1 (1887): 238 (seal of Thomas de Cantelowe, Bishop of Hereford-Pointed oval: the Bishop, full-length, lifting up the right hand in benediction, in the left hand a pastoral staff. In the field on each side, three fleurs-de-lis in allusion to the armorial charges of CANTELOWE, viz, three leopards' faces reversed jessants-de-lis. The feet of the Bishop rest on a wolf couchant, enraged, in allusion to the name CANTELOWE. Legend: .... OMAS : DEI : GRA: HEREFORDENSIS : EPS.). Papal Regs.: Letters 1(1893): 205, 228 (Thomas and Hugh, clerks, styled "sons of William de Cantalupo"), 417 (Master Thomas de Cantilupe styled "nephew of the bishop of Worcester" in 1264). Trans. Shropshire Arch. & Natural Hist. Soc. 3rd Ser. 1 (1901): 170-177. List of Ancient Corr. of the Chancery & Exchequer (PRO Lists and Indexes 15) (1902): 338 (letter dated 17 Aug. 1276 written by Thomas de Cantelowe, Bishop of Hereford, requesting that his nephew, John de Cantelowe, have courtesy of England in Aylestone, Leicestershire [it being the inheritance of John's late wife, Margery de Harcourt]); see also Index to Ancient Correspondence of the Chancery and the Exchequer, Vol. 1: A-K (Lists and Indexes, Supplementary Series, No. XV): 221, 535. Giffard Episc. Reg. Diocese of Worcester, Reg. of Bishop Godfrey Ge-ard 1 (Worcester Hist. Soc. 15) (1902): 2-3, 26, 40. Cantilupe Reg. Thome de Cantilupo Episcopi Hertfordensis (Canterbury & York Soc. 1) (1906): 171 (Nicholas de Hodenet styled "kinsman" [consanguineo] by Bishop Thomas de Cantelowe in charter dated c.1270) [see also Robinson Hist. of the Mansions & Manors of Herefordshire (1872): 37]. Capes Charters & Recs. of Hereford Cathedral (1908). D.N.B. 3 (1908): 900-904 (biog. of Thomas de Cantelupe). G.H. Fowler 'Calendar of Inquisitions Post Mortem. No. I' in Pubs. Bedfordshire Hist. Rec. Soc. 5 (1920): 210-215. Greenway Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae 1066-1300 1 (1968): 91-96. Jancey St.Thomas Cantilupe, Bishop of Hereford: EsseDls in his Honour (1982). Prestwich English Politics in the 13th Cent. (1990). Finucane Miracles & Pilgrims: Popular Beliefs in Medieval England (1995): 136-137, 173-190. Carpenter Reign of Henry III (1996): 293-307. Hoskin English Episcopal Acta 13 (1997): 118-119. Alington St Thomas of Hereford (2001). Hicks Who's Who in Late Medieval England, 1272-1485(2001): 14-16 (biog. of St. Thomas Cantilupe).
      v. [MASTER HUGH DE CANTELOWE, Rector of Skendleby, Lincolnshire, 1244, Archdeacon of Gloucester, Papal chaplain, Treasurer of Salisbury. He is said to have been installed as Archdeacon of Gloucester 16 April 1256, but first occurs 7 July and 16 August 1255, and prob. the unnamed Archdeacon who occurs 18 May 1255. In 1268 he was granted a dispensation to be absent for three years to study theology. He and his brother, Thomas de Cantelowe, served as executors of the will of their uncle, Walter de Cantelowe, Bishop of Worcester, in 1269. [MASTER] HUGH DE CANTELOWE was living 14 May 1270, and died testate before 6 July 1279. Little Grey Friars in Oxford Pt. 2 (1892): 218 (lohn de Clara was executor of Hugh de Cantelowe, Archdeacon of Gloucester, in 1285). Papal Regs.: Letters 1 (1893): 205,223 (Thomas and Hugh, clerks, styled "sons of William de Cantalupo"), 417. Giffard Episc. Reg. Diocese of Worcester, Reg. of Bishop Gocberey Giffard 1 (Worcester Hist. Soc. 15) (1902): 3, 26, 40. Reg. Thome de Cantilupo Episcopi Herefordensis (Canterbury & York Soc. 1) (1906): 213. D.N.B. 3 (1908): 900-904 (biog. of Thomas de Cantelupe). Greenway Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae 1066-13002 (1971): 107-109. Alington St. Thomas of Hereford (2001): 4.
      vi. AGNES DE CANTELOWE, married (1st) ROBERT DE SAINT JOHN, of Basing, Hampshire [see PAULET 6]; (2nd) JOHN DE TURVILLE [see PAULET 6].
      vii. JULIANE DE CANTELOWE, married ROBERT DE TREGOZ, Knt., of Ewyas Harold, Herefordshire [see TREGOZ 3].”