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Joan de Stuteville

Female - Abt 1276


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  • Name Joan de Stuteville 
    Born of Liddel, Cumberland, England Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Gender Female 
    Died Abt 5 Apr 1276 
    Person ID I6708  Petersen-de Lanskoy
    Last Modified 27 May 2021 

    Family Hugh le Bigod,   b. Abt 1215, of Levisham, Yorkshire, England Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. Abt 7 May 1266  (Age ~ 51 years) 
    Married Bef 5/05 Feb 1243/4 
    Last Modified 28 May 2021 
    Family ID F2955  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

  • Notes 
    • RESEARCH_NOTES:
      1. “Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families,” Douglas Richardson (2013):
      “HUGH LE BIGOD, Knt., of Levisham, Yorkshire, Bosham, Funtington, and Stoughton, Sussex, and, in right of his wife, of Liddel, Cumberland, and Witherley, Leicestershire, Forester of Farndale Forest, Yorkshire, Governor of Dover, Pickering, and Scarborough Castles, 2nd son, born about 1215. He married before 5 Feb. 1243/4 JOAN DE STUTEVILLE, widow of Hugh Wake [see WAKE 7], of Bourne, Lincolnshire, Chesterfield, Derbyshire, etc. (died in the Holy Land before 18 Dec. 1241), and daughter and heiress of Nicholas de Stuteville, of Liddel, Cumberland, and Cottingham, Yorkshire, by Devorguille, daughter of Roland Fitz Uchtted, lord of Galloway. They had four sons, Roger [5th Earl of Norfolk], Ralph, John (clerk), and Richard, and four daughters, Elizabeth, Rohese, Maud, and Joan. In 1251 he witnessed the foundation charter of Marham Abbey, Norfolk, founded by his half-sister, Isabel de Warenne, Countess of Arundel. In 1257 he accompanied the king in his expedition into Wales. He was made Justiciar of England by the Barons in 1257. About the end of 1260, he resigned the position of justiciar, probably from dissatisfaction with the conduct of the Barons. In 1263 he joined the royal party. He was present on the king's side at the Battle of Lewes 14 May 1264, but fled from the field. SIR HUGH LE BIGOD died testate shortly before 7 May 1266. His widow, Joan, presented to the churches of Rowley, Yorkshire, 1268, 1274, and Cottingham, Yorkshire, 1272. In 1269 she and Walter Giffard, Archbishop of York, reached an agreement that all the dams and locks belonging to the said Joan in the water of the Hull be removed, so that there may be free navigation between the Humber and Beverly. Sometime before 1276 she alienated a quarter of the vill of Whissendine, Rutland. Joan died shortly before 5 April 1276.
      Dugdale Antiqs. of Warwickshire (1730): 95 (Stuteville ped.). Clutterbuck Hist. & Antiqs. of Hertybrd 2 (1821): 510-511 (Marshal-Bigod ped.). Dugdale Monasticon Anglicanum 5 (1825): 744 (charter of Isabel d'Aubeney, Countess of Arundel; charter witnessed by her brothers, Sir Roger Bigod, Earl of Norfolk, Sir Hugh Bigod, and John de Warenne). Jour. British Arch. Assoc. (1865): 91-103. Burke Gen. Hist. of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited & Extinct Peerages (1866): 53 (sub Bigod). Shirley Royal & Other Hist. Letters Ill. of King Henry III 2 (Rolls Ser. 27) (1866): 127-128 (letter from King Henry III of England dated 1258 mentions "Rogero le Bygod, comite Norfolchiæ et marescallo nostro Angliæ, et Hugoni le Bigod, fratre suo"), 148-150, 152-153. Marsh Annals of Chepstow Castle (1883): 110-132. Procs. Soc. of Antiqs. of London 2nd Ser. 10 (1885): 272 (deed of Joan de Stuteville dated 1268). Birch Cat. Seals in the British Museum 2 (1892): 400 (seal of Joan de Stuteville, widow of Hugh Wake and Hugh le Bigod, dated 1265-1275 - To the left. In loosely-fitting cloak, head-dress, gloves. In the right hand a goad, in the left hand a shield of arms: barruly [STUTEVILLE]. Horse with ornamental breastband and fringed saddle. Beaded borders). Desc. Cat. Ancient Deeds 4 (1902): 34. C.Ch.R. 1 (1903): 375-445-446; 2 (1906): 31. Giffard Reg. of Walter Giffard Archbishop of York (Surtees Soc. 109) (1904): 43-44, 50, 58-59, 139-140, 287. Year Books of Edward II 2 (Selden Soc. 19) (1904): 157. D.N.B. 2 (1908): 486 (biog. of Hugh Bigod) ("his character as a judge has been placed high by Matthew Paris"). Clay Extinct & Dormant Peerages (1913): 228-229 (sub Wake). VCH Yorkshire N.R. 1(1914): 513-514. Early Yorkshire Charters 2 (1915): 181-182. C.P. 4 (1916): 261; 9 (1936): 590, footnote c, 593 (sub Norfolk). Cal. Inqs. Misc. 1(1916): 315. Cannon Great Roll of the Pipe for 26th Year of the Reign of King Henry the Third A.D. 1241-1242 (1918): 38, 42, 120. Book of Fees 2 (1923): 1393. Parker Feet of Fines for the County of York, 1232-12466 (Yorkshire Arch. Soc. Recs. 67) (1925): 53. VCH Rutland 2 (1935): 157-159. English Hist. Rev. 65 (1950): 89-91. Early Yorkshire Charters 9 (1952): 18-23. VCH Sussex 4 (1953): 122, 183, 195. Paget Baronage of England (1957) 64: 1-2 (sub Bigod). Sanders English Baronies (1960): 47. Godber Cartulary of Newnham Priory 1 (Pubs. Bedfordshire Hist. Rec. Soc. 43 Pt. 1) (1963): 28. Peckham Reg. of John Pecham Archbishop of Canterbury 2 ( Canterbury & York Soc. 65) (1968): 179. English Yorkshire Hundred & Quo Warranto Rolls (Yorkshire Arch. Soc. Recs. 151) (1996): 141-142, 244. Morris Bigod Earls of Norfolk in the 136 Cent. (2005): opp. 1 (chart). National Archives, SC 8/151/7540 (In 1276 Baldwin Wake petitioned the king that he can have the farms of Easter and other issues from the lands that were his mother's as his mother died before Easter [5 April] in accordance with the statute of Marlborough as he was of full age when she died); SC 8/331/15692 (available at www.catalogue.nationalarchives.gov.uk/search.asp).
      Children of Hugh le Bigod, Knt., by Joan de Stuteville:
      i. ROGER LE BIGOD, 7th Earl of Norfolk, hereditary Marshal of England, hereditary Steward of the Household, hereditary Warden of Romford Forest, Constable of Bristol and Nottingham Castles, Warden of the Coasts, cos. Norfolk and Suffolk, 1295, Privy Councillor, of Bungay, Framlingham, Kelsale, and Stowe, Suffolk, Earsham, Horsham, and Lopham, Norfolk, Levisham and Settrington, Yorkshire, and, in right of his 1st wife, of Soham, Cambridgeshire, son and heir, born in 1245. He presented to the church of Stonegrave, Yorkshire in 1267. He was heir in 1270 to his uncle, Roger le Bigod, Knt., Earl of Norfolk. He married (1st) before 29 October 1271 ALINE (or AVELINE) BASSET, widow of Hugh le Despenser, Knt. (died 1265), and daughter and heiress of Philip Basset, Knt., of Soham, Cambridgeshire, Wycombe, Buckinghamshire, Maplederwell, Hampshire, Wootton Basset, Wiltshire, etc., Justiciar of England, by his 1st wife, Hawise, daughter of Matthew de Lovaine, Knt. They had no issue. In 1274-5 Hugh de Essex arraigned an assize of mort d'ancestor against Roger and his wife, Aline, touching land and pasture in North Waud [?North Weald], Essex. In 1275 the king obliged him to hand over the manor of Soham, Cambridgeshire, until he paid certain debts to the king. He was summoned for service against the Welsh in 1277, 1282, 1287, and 1294. In 1280 the king approved the grant made by Earl Roger and his wife, Aline, to Hugh de Essex of the manor of Toleshunt, Essex. The same year Roger and his wife, Aline, were called to warranty Hugh de Courtenay and his wife Eleanor (Aline's daughter) to a messuage and lands in Wootton Courtney, Somerset. In 1280-1 the king appointed commissioners to enquire as to, hear, and determine the trespass of certain evildoers unknown in breaking the park of Earl Roger le Bigod at Framlingham, Kelsale, and Stowe, Suffolk, hunting therein, and taking and carrying off his deer, and fishing in his vivaries in the said vills and at Bungay, Suffolk; the same commissioners were appointed to inquire as to, hear, and determining the trespass of certain evildoers unknown in breaking the parks of the said earl in Horsham and Lopham, Norfolk. In 1280-1 he arraigned an assize of darrein presentment against Robert le Wastre regarding the church of Winston, Norfolk. In 1280-1 Henry de Clerbek arraigned an assize of novel disseisin against Earl Roger regarding a tenement in North Lopham, Norfolk. The same year Robert Cokerel arraigned an assize of novel disseisin against Earl Roger regarding a tenement in Rendeshal, Norfolk. His wife, Aline, died shortly before 11 April 1281. He presented to the churches of Setttington, Yorkshire, 1283, 1294, ?1299, and Lancaut, Gloucestershire, 1297. He married (2nd) in 1290 ALICE (or ALIX) OF HAINAULT, daughter of John de Avenes, Count of Hainault, Holland, and Zeeland, lord of Friesland, by Philippe (or Philippine), daughter of Henri II, Count of Luxembourg and Roche, Marquis of Arlon [see HAINAULT 8 for her ancestry]. They had no issue. In 1290 he was one of the guarantors of the treaty of Brigham. In 1293 he was so hard pressed by the exchequer to pay the debts he owed the crown that he made public protest in parliament. He was appointed keeper of the coasts of Norfolk and Suffolk in 1295. In 1297 he was temporarily deprived of his office as Marshal of England for refusing to serve in Gascony unaccompanied by the king. He fought at the Battle of Falkirk 22 July 1298, where he held a command in the Pt division. He joined in the Barons' letter to the Pope in 1301. In 1302 he surrendered his Earldom and the Marshalcy and all his lands to the king, on condition that they should be regranted to him for life, and that he should be given additional lands worth £1,000 per annum for life. He presented to the church of Suffield, Norfolk in 1306. ROGER LE BIGOD, 7th Earl of Norfolk, Marshal of England, died 6 Dec. 1306, when, in accordance with the surrender and regrants of 1302, the Earldom and Marshalcy reverted to the Crown. In the period, 1308-9, his widow, Alice, brought a writ of dower against Eve widow of Robert de Tateshale and demanded a third part of two parts of the manor of "H." In 1309 Alice was granted protection for one year, she going on a pilgrimage to Santiago. She presented to the churches of Aldeburgh, Norfolk, 1308, 1313, Great Wacton, Norfolk, 1310, Gillingham, Norfolk, 1311, 1314, 1316, Stockton, Norfolk, 1315, and Banningham, Norfolk, 1316. Alice, Countess of Norfolk, died testate 26 October 1317. Blomefield Essay towards a Top. Hist. of Norfolk 5 (1806): 70-74; 298-303, 351-355, 483-487; 6 (1807): 326-330, 421-422; 8 (1808): 9-13, 41-44, 165-167. Clutterbuck Hist. & Antiqs. of Hertford 2 (1821): 510-511 (Marshal-Bigod ped.). Dugdale Monasticon Anglicanum 5 (1825): 269 (charter of Roger le Bigod, Earl of Norfolk, Marshal of England). Jour. British Arch. Assoc. (1865): 91-103. Burke Gen. Hist. of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited & Extinct Peerages (1866): 53 (sub Bigod). Arch. Cambrensis 4th Ser. 3 (1872): body-boor (grant of lease dated 1275 by Maud de Clare, Countess of Gloucester & Hertford, to Aline Despenser, Countess of Norfolk). Annual Rpt. of the Deputy Keeper 44 (1883): 46, 200, 213, 305; 45 (1885): 72, 103, 120, 196, 200; 46 (1886): 85, 92, 104, 185, 220, 288; 47 (1886): 178, 221; 49 (1888): 62, 86, 114; 50 (1889): 10, 41, 109, 142, 145, 189, 255. Marsh Annals of Chepstow Castle (1883): 110-132. Doyle Official Baronage of England 2 (1886): 578 (sub Norfolk). Desc. Cat. Ancient Deeds 1 (1890): 63, 89, 99. Lewis Pales Finium; or, Fines Rel. Surry (Surrey Arch. Soc. Extra Volume 1) (1894): 215. Rpt. of the Deputy Keeper... in Ireland 31 (1899): 71. C.P.R. 1272-1281 (1901): 10 (Art MacMurch' [MacMurrough] and Carvel Affortien (or Carnel Alfortien)' [Cearbhaill O Foirchtern], Irishmen, styled "cousins" of Roger le Bigod, Earl of Norfolk in 1281); see also Annual Rpt. of the Deputy Keeper 50 (1889): 10. Howard de Walden Some Feudal Lords &Their Seals (1903): 15 (biog. of Roger le Bigod). Giffard Reg. of Walter Giffard Archbishop of York (Surtees Soc. 109) (1904): 43-44, 206-207. Year Books of Edward II 2 (Selden Soc. 19) (1904): 78. Cal. IPM 2 (1906): 227-229. D.N.B. 2 (1908): 488-489 (biog. of Roger Bigod). Capes Reg. Ricardi de Swinfield Episcopi Herefordensis 1283-1317 ( Canterbury & York Soc. 6) (1909): 530. VCH Hampshire 4 (1911): 51-56. VCH Surrey 3 (1911): 381-390. VCH Berkshire 4 (1924): 178-183. Somersetshire Pleas 4(1) (Somerset Rec. Soc. 44) (1929): 80-82. Cam Hundred & Hundred Rolls (1930): 274, 279, 281. Salter Feet of Fines for Oxfordshire (Oxfordshire Rec. Soc. 12) (1930): 245. VCH Hertford 3 (1912): 232-240. C.P. 9 (1936): 593-596 (sub Norfolk). Paget Baronage of England (1957) 64: 1-2 (sub Bigod). Trans. Essex Arch. Soc. 3rd Ser. 2(1) (1966): 1-13 (identifies Hawise, wife of Philip Basset, as daughter and heiress of Ralph de Hastings, who died c. Mich. 1210, cites Great Roll of the Pepe Michaelmas 1210 (Pipe Roll Soc. n.s. 26) (1951): 35). Dek Généalogie der Graven van Holland (1954): 29. Tremlett et al. Rolls of Arms Henry III (H.S.P. 113-4) (1967): 116 (Roger le Bigod, Earl of Norfolk and Marshal of England "took what seems to have been the arms of the marshalcy, Party per pale, or and vert a lion rampant gules."). VCH Somerset 4 (1978): 38-52. Prestwich Docs. Ill. the Crisis of 1297-98 in England (Camden Soc. 4th Ser. 24) (1980). Ellis Cat. Seals in the P.R.O. 2 (1981): 11 (seal of Roger le Bigod, Earl of Norfolk dated 1296-A shield of arms: per pale, a lion rampant. The dexter side of the seal is hatched.). Lawrance Fasti Parochiaks 5 (Yorkshire Arch. Soc. 143) (1985): 42. Hicks Who's Who in Late Medieval England (1991): 24-26 (biog. of Roger Bigod). Ward Worsen of the English Nobility & Gentry 1066-4500 (1995): 149-150 (arrangements for wardship dated 1280 made by Aline la Despenser, Countess of Norfolk). English Yorkshire Hundred & Quo Warranto Rolls (Yorkshire Arch. Soc. Recs. 151) (1996): 141-142,244. Morrison Women Pilgrims (2000): 157. VCH Cambridge 10 (2002): 500. Morris "The 'Murder' of the English Earldom?" (13th Cent. England 9) (2003): 89-99. Morris Bigod Earls of Norfolk in the 13th Cent. (2005): opp. 1 (chart), 220-221 (William de Mortimer [son of Roger] styled "dear cousin" by Roger le Bigod, Earl of Norfolk in charter dated 1275-1280).
      ii. JOHN LE BIGOD, clerk. His mother, Joan, presented him to the church of Rowley, Yorkshire in 1268, and to the church of Cottingham, Yorkshire in 1272. In 1294 his nephew, John Wake, had license to let to farm the manors of Kirkby and Cottingham, Yorkshire for seven years to John le Bigod and two other clerics. During the crisis of 1297-8, the king ordered that he not be taken back into royal protection, even if he paid a required fine. In 1297 the king ordered that the manor of Skellingthorpe, Lincolnshire and his other lay fees be restored to him. He was presented to the church of Settrington, Yorkshire in ?1299 by his brother, Roger le Bigod, Earl of Norfolk. He witnessed two of his brother, Roger's charters to Tintern Abbey in 1301. In 1306 he was granted a papal dispensation at the request of his brother, Roger le Bigod, Earl of Norfolk, to retain the churches of Acle, Norfolk, Framlingham, Suffolk, and Cottingham and Settrington, Yorkshire, he resigning the churches of Earsham, Norfolk, and Eyke and Theberton, Suffolk. He was a querens in a Yorkshire fine in Michaelmas term 1306. He was heir in 1306 to his older brother, Roger le Bigod, Earl of Norfolk. Some of his expenses were charged to his brother, Roger's manor of Lopham, Norfolk in 1306. JOHN LE BIGOD died shortly before Jan. 1312. Blomefield Essay towards a Top. Hist. of Norfolk 1 (1805): 228-241. Clutterbuck Hist. & Antiqs. of Hereford 2 (1821): 510-511 (Marshal-Bigod ped.). Dugdale Monasticon Anglicanum 5 (1825): 269. Burke Gen. Hist. of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited & Extinct Peerages (1866): 53 (sub Bigod). Marsh Annals of Chepstow Castle (1883): 110-132. Duckett Visitations of English Cluniac Foundations (1890): 34-35. CP.R 1292-1301 (1895): 98, 118, 273. Papal Regs.: Letters 2 (1895): 13. Desc. Cat. Ancient Deeds 4 (1902): 228. Giffard Reg. of Walter Gebrd Archbishop of York (Surtees Soc. 109) (1904): 50, 58-59, 114. C.C.R. 1296-1302 (1906): 25. Wickwane Reg. of William Wickwane, Lord Archbishop of York, 1279-1285 (Surtees Soc. 114) (1907): 240. Clay Early Yorkshire Charters 9 (1952): 69. Wood English Monasteries & their Patrons in the 13th Cent. (1955): 104. Paget Baronage of England (1957) 64: 1-2 (sub Bigod). Feet of Fines for York[shire] 1300-1314 (Yorkshire Arch. Soc. Recs. 127) (1965): 58. Prestwich Docs. Ill. the Crisis of 1297-98 in England (Camden Soc. 4th Ser. 24) (1980): 13, 46, 157. Lowrance Fasti Parochiales 5 (Yorkshire Arch. Soc. 143) (1985): 42. Morris "The 'Murder' of the English Earldom?" (13th Cent. England 9) (2003): 89-99. Morris Bigod Earls of Norfolk in the 13th Cent. (2005): opp. 1 (chart), 174.
      iii. JOAN LE BIGOD, married PHILIP DE KYME, Knt., 1st Lord Kyme [see KYME 8].”

      2. “Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families,” Douglas Richardson (2013):
      “HUGH WAKE, of Bourne, Lincolnshire, Chesterfield, Derbyshire, Goodleigh, Devon, Lamcote and Hucknall Torkard, Nottinghamshire, Alsthorpe (in Burley), Rutland, etc., Sheriff of Yorkshire, Constable of Scarborough Castle, and, in right of his wife, of Buttercrambe (in Bossall) and Scrayingham, Yorkshire, son and heir, born about 1203 (minor in 1219, came of age after 1224). He married (without license) before 29 May 1229 JOAN DE STUTEVILLE, daughter and co-heiress of Nicholas de Stuteville, of Liddel, Cumberland, Cottingham, Yorkshire, etc., by Devorguille, daughter of Roland Fitz Uchtred, lord of Galloway, hereditary Constable of Scotland. They had three sons, Baldwin, Knt., Nicholas, and Hugh, and allegedly one daughter, Isabel (wife of Simon de Beauchamp, of Bedford). He was co-heir in 1233 to his uncle, William Briwerre, Knt. In 1233 he had a dispute with the Prior and Convent of Trentham regarding the advowson of the church of Stenigot, Lincolnshire. In 1234 he granted a moiety of the manor of Lower Winchendon, Buckinghamshire to the Abbot of Nutley for a yearly rent of £16. In 1236 Joan's mother, Devorguille de Stuteville, had license to make a concord with Hugh and his wife, Joan. About 1236 he witnessed a charter of Roger de Huntingfield to Longeville Priory. In 1239 he and his wife, Joan, reached granted Henry, Abbot of Belland one knight's fee in Sutton, Martherby, Hod, Laysthorp, and the vill of Saint Felix, Yorkshire. In 1241 Peter de Montfort quitclaimed to Hugh and his wife, Joan, a moiety of two parts of the manors of Buttercrambe (in Bossall) and Scrayingham, together with a moiety of the advowson of the church of Scrayingham, Yorkshire. HUGH WAKE died in the Holy Land before 18 Dec. 1241. His widow, Joan, married (2nd) before 5 Feb. 1243/4 HUGH LE BIGOD, Knt., Chief Justiciar of England [see BIGOD 8]. SIR HUGH LE BIGOD died testate shortly before 7 May 1266. Sometime before 1276 his widow, Joan, alienated a quarter of the vill of Whissencline, Rutland. She died shortly before 5 April 1276.
      Dugdale Antiq. of Warwickshire (1730): 95 (Stuteville ped.). Betham Baronetage of England 1 (1801): 238-243 (sub Wake). Surrey Arch. Colls. 5 (1871): 67-68. Rpt. & Trans. of the Devonshire Assoc. 2nd Ser. 7 (1905): 446 152. Parker "Cal. of Feet of Fines for Cumberland" in Trans. Cumberland &' Westmorland Antiq. Soc. n.s. 7 (1907): 223, 227. Yorkshire Deeds 1 (Yorkshire Arch. Soc. Recs. 39) (1909): 54-55. Chambers Beauchamps (Bedfordshire Hist. Rec. Soc. 1) (1913): 1-25. Clay Extinct & Dormant Peerages (1913): 228-229 (sub Wake). Davis Rotuli Hugonis de Welles Episcopi Lincolniensis 1209-1235 3 (Lincoln Rec. Soc. 9) (1914): 215. Bony Yorkshire Charters 2 (1915): 181-182. Fowler Cal. IPM 1 (Bedfordshire Hist. Rec. Soc. 5) (1920): 206-209. Salter Newington Longeville Charters (Oxfordshire Rec. Soc. 3) (1921): 78-79. Parker Feet of Fines for the County of York, 1232-1246 6 (Yorkshire Arch. Soc. Recs. 67) (1925): 53, 97. VCH Rutland 2 (1935): 112-119, 157-159. Curia Regis Rolls 8 (1938): 51. English Hist. Rev. 65 (1950): 89-91. C.P. 12(2) (1959): 298-299 (sub Wake). Sanders English Baronies (1960): 37, 107-108, 123. Godber Cartulary of Newnham Priory 1 (Pubs. Bedfordshire Hist. Rec. Soc. 43 Pt. 1) (1963): 28. Curia Regis Rolls 15 (1972): 110-111. National Archives, SC 8/151/7540 (available at www.catalogue.nationalarchives.gov.uk/search.asp).”