Chris & Julie Petersen's Genealogy

Margaret or Margery de Quincy

Female Bef 1217 - Abt 1266  (> 49 years)


Personal Information    |    Notes    |    All    |    PDF

  • Name Margaret or Margery de Quincy 
    Born Bef 1217 
    Gender Female 
    Died Abt 30 Mar 1266  Hampstead, Middlesex, England Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Buried Church of the Hospitallers, Clerkenwell, Middlesex, England Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Person ID I6734  Petersen-de Lanskoy
    Last Modified 27 May 2021 

    Father Robert de Quincy,   d. 1217, London, England Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Mother Hawise of Chester,   d. Abt 19/19 Feb 1242/3 
    Married From 1197 to 1200 
    Family ID F2974  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

    Family Walter Marshal,   b. Aft 1198, of Hampstead Marshall, Berkshire, England Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 24 Nov 1245, Goodrich Castle, Goodrich, Herefordshire, England Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age < 45 years) 
    Married 6/06 Jan 1241/2 
    Last Modified 28 May 2021 
    Family ID F2968  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

  • Notes 
    • RESEARCH_NOTES:
      1. “Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families,” Douglas Richardson (2013):
      “JOHN DE LACY (or LASCY) (also known as JOHN OF CHESTER), Knt., of Pontefract, Yorkshire, Naseby, Northamptonshire, Hatton, Cheshire, etc., hereditary Constable of Chester, Keeper of Duninton Castle, 1214, Constable of Whitchurch Castle, 1233, Privy Councillor, 1237, Sheriff of Cheshire, 1237, Constable of Chester and Beeston Castles, 1237, son and heir, born about 1192 (of age in 1213). He married (1st) ALICE DE L'AIGLE, daughter of Gilbert de l'Aigle, of Pevensey, Sussex, by Isabel de Warenne, daughter of Hamelin, 5th Earl of Surrey (illegitimate son of Geoffrey Plantagenet, (Count of Anjou) [see WARENNE 7.iv for her ancestry]. They had no issue. She was buried at Norton Priory, Cheshire. He obtained livery of his inheritance in July 1213. In 1213-14 he was with the king in Poitou. He was one of the few English barons to take the Cross for the Crusades along with the king 4 March 1214. In 1215 he joined the confederacy of the barons against the king. He was one of the twenty-five barons elected to guarantee the observance of Magna Carta, signed by King John 15 June 1215. In consequence he was among the barons excommunicated by Pope Innocent III 16 Dec. 1215. At the end of the year he made peace with the king, but next summer was again in rebellion, and King John destroyed his castle of Donington. In August 1217 he was pardoned by King Henry III, and in Nov. 1217 he was commissioned to conduct the King of Scots to him. In 1218 he accompanied Ranulph, Earl of Chester, on crusade, and fought at the Siege of Damietta. He returned to England about August 1220, and in Feb. 1220/1 took part in the reduction of Skipton Castle. He married (2nd) in 1221, before 21 June MARGARET (or MARGERY) DE QUINCY, daughter and heiress of Robert de Quincy, by Hawise, suo jure Countess of Lincoln, daughter of Hugh, Earl of Chester [see QUINCY 6.i for her ancestry]. She was born before 1217. They had one son, Edmund, Knt. [Constable of Chester], and three daughters, including Maud and Margaret. In 1223 he held the prescriptive right to a weekly market held at the manor of Snaith, Yorkshire. In 1226 he acted as itinerant judge in Lincolnshire and Lancashire, and, in the former county in 1233. In 1227 he was sent on an embassy to Antwerp. He presented to the churches of Naseby, Northamptonshire in 1227 and 1231, and Wadenhoe, Rutland, 1237, and two portions of the church of Clipstone, Northamptonshire in 1228, 1229, 1230, and 1235. In 1229 he was appointed to conduct Alexander II, King of Scots to England to meet King Henry III of England at York. From about 1230 he was about the court, and in that year was a commissioner to treat for a truce with France. In 1230 John and Margaret released their claim to the main Quincy estates to her uncle, Roger de Quincy; Roger in return granted them and their issue her mother's dower, including the manor of Grantchester, Cambridgeshire, to hold of Roger and his heirs. In 1231 he was in Wales on the king's service. Sometime before 1232, he exchanged one acre of land in the vill of Kingston with Christchurch Priory, Hampshire, in return for an acre of the priory's land also in Kingston. In 1232 he took a prominent part as the king's commissioner in the proceedings against Hubert de Burgh, Earl of Kent. On 22 Nov. 1232, at the instance of Margaret's mother, Hawise de Quincy, the king granted John the £20 per annum which Ranulph, late Earl of Chester and Lincoln, had received for the 3rd penny of the county as Earl of Lincoln, and which the Earl had in his lifetime granted to Hawise his sister: to hold in nomine comitis Lincolnie to the said John and his heirs by Margaret his wife, whereby he became Earl of Lincoln. In 1233 he was one of Hubert de Burgh's keepers at Devizes Castle until he should become a Templar. The same year he joined the party against Peter des Roches, Bishop of Winchester, but the Bishop gained him over, and from that time he acted with the Court, becoming one of the king's unpopular councillors. He was a justice in Lincolnshire in 1234. In 1236 he carried one of the State swords at the Coronation of Queen Eleanor. The same year a dispute occured between John, Earl of Lincoln, and Margaret his wife and the Prior of Wimborne, the former alleging that a new market had been raised in Wimborne Minster, Dorset, to the detriment of their existing market in the town. In 1237 he was a plenipotentiary to make peace with Scotland. SIR JOHN DE LACY, Earl of Lincoln, Constable of Chester, died 22 July 1240, and was buried near his father in the monk's choir at Stanlaw Abbey, his body being removed later to Whalley Abbey. She presented to the church of North Thoresby, Lincolnshire in 1241. His widow, Margaret, married (2nd) 6 Jan. 1241/2 WALTER MARSHAL, Knt., 8th Earl of Pembroke, hereditary Master Marshal [see MARSHAL 3.iv], hereditary Steward of Leinster, of Hampstead Marshall, Berkshire, Bere and Sturminster, Dorset, Silchester, Hampshire, Hinxworth, Hertfordshire, Goodrich Castle, Herefordshire, Box, Great Bedwyn, Wexcombe (in Great Bedwyn), and Wootton Rivers, Wiltshire, etc., seigneur of Orbec and Longueville, and, in right of his wife, Earl of Lincoln, 4th son of William Marshal, Knt., 4th Earl of Pembroke (or Sttiguil), by Isabel, daughter of Richard Fitz Gilbert (nicknamed Strongbow), 2nd Earl of Pembroke (or Striguil) [see MARSHAL 3 for his ancestry]. He was born after 1198. They had no issue. In 1233 he supported his brother Richard Marshal against the king's foreign favorites and his lands were forfeited. In 1234 he was in Ireland with his brother Richard, who sent him away before the fatal Battle of Kildare, lest his family should be extirpated. He passed over to Wales with his brothers and was pardoned with them. In 1239 he was alienated from King Henry III, by the king's hostility to his brother Gilbert Marshal. In 1240 he was sent into Wales with a large army to strengthen Cardigan Castle, and he took for his brother Gilbert lands appurtenant to the honour of Carmarthen. In June 1241 he took part in the tournament at which Gilbert Marshal was mortally wounded. The king at first refused to invest Walter in the Earldom of Pembroke as Gilbert's heir, because he had forbidden the tournament, but on 27 October the king relented and invested Walter with both the earldom and office of Marshal. He served as a captain in the king's army in Gascony and Poitou in 1242. In 1243 he surrendered his wife's castle of Bolingbroke, Lincolnshire and her mother's lands in Lincolnshire, which estates were subsequently restored to him and his wife, Margaret. In 1244 he was one of the laymen who was elected to consider the king's demand for a subsidy. He presented to the church of West Halton, Lincolnshire in 1242, and to a mediety of the church of Toynton St. Peter, Lincolnshire in 1245. SIR WALTER MARSHAL, Earl of Pembroke, died at Goodrich Castle, Herefordshire 24 Nov. 1245, and was buried at Tintern Abbey, Monmouthshire. By judgments of the King's court, his widow, Margaret, recovered dower out of lands in Ireland held by Walter Marshal, and she received seisin of one-third of all of the Earl's lands and tenements in Ireland. In 1252 his widow, Margaret, and Richard de Wiltshire were granted a yearly fair at the manor of Chelbury, Lincolnshire. In 1262 an action of recaption was brought against Margaret, Countess of Lincoln, Joce de Stepping [her steward], and John de Lusby. In 1263 the king promised that her executors should have free administration of her goods. In the period, 1263-6, Master Walter of Stainsby filed a writ of attachment against Joce de Stepping, Steward of Margaret, Countess of Lincoln, which required Joce to answer for having distrained Master Walter to perform suit at the court of Lusby contrary to law. Margaret, Countess of Lincoln and Pembroke, died at Hampstead, Middlesex shortly before 30 March 1266, and was buried near her father in the Church of the Hospitallers, Clerkenwell, Middlesex.
      Throsby Thornton's Hist. of Nottinghamshire 3 (1790): 132-135. Bridges Hist. & Antiqs. of Northamptonshire 1 (1791): 544-545, 574-577. Mastin Hist. & Antiqs. of Nase (1792). Blomefield Essay towards a Top. Hist. of Norfolk 6 (1807): 134-135. Ormerod Hist. of Chester 1 (1819): 28, 512-513. Baker Hist. & Antiqs. of Northampton 1(1822-30): 563 (Beaumont-Quincy ped.). Dugdale Monasticon Anglicanum 5 (1825): 123; 6(1) (1830): 315-317 (Norton Priory) (Ped. and Hist. of the Founders). Burke Dict. of the Peerages... Extinct, Dormant & in Abeyance (1831): 442-443 (sub Quincy). Coll. Top. et Gen. 6 (1840): 147-151. Halliwell Chronicle of the Monastery of Abingdon (1844): 6 (sub A.D. 1248: `Walterus Marescallus, comes de Penbrocke, obiit."). Hulton Coacher Book, or Chartulary, of Whalky Abbey 2 (Chetham Soc. 11) (1847): 394, 419-420, 484 (charters of John de Lacy, Constable of Chester). Lipscomb Hist. & Antiqs. of Buckingham 1 (1847): 200-201 (Clare ped.). Mems. Ill. of the Hist. & Antiqs. of Lincoln (1850): 253-279, esp. 272-274. Giles Matthew Paris's English Hist. 2 (1853): 122 (sub 1245: "The last of the brothers but one, Earl Walter Marshal, followed in his steps; for although he had most faithfully promised a revenue of sixty shillings to the house of St. Mary, belonging to the monks of Hertford, and had given a written promise thereof, because his brother Earl Gilbert died there, and his bowels still remained buried there, he forgot the pledge and promise which he had made for the redemption of his brother, and, after causing much useless vexation to the prior of the said house, he proved himself a manifest deceiver and transgressor."). Hulton Coucher Book or Chartulary of Whalley Abbey 1 (Chethatn Soc. 10) (1867): 32-33 (charters of John de Lascy, Constable of Chester), 36-37 (charter of John de Lascy, Earl of Lincoln), 63-64, 72-74 (charters of John de Lascy, Constable of Chester), 74-75 (charters of John de Lascy, Earl of Lincoln), 131 (charter of Margaret de Lascy, Countess of Lincoln and Pembroke), 138 (charter of John de Lascy, Constable of Chester). Luard Annales Monastici 4 (Rolls Ser. 36) (1869): 456 (Annals of Worcester sub A.D. 1266 - "Obiit Margareta comitissa Lincolniæ."). Whitaker Hist. of Original Parish of Whalley 1 (1872): 236-254 (reproduces seal and privy seal of John de Lacy). Matthew of Paris Chronica Mgjora 2 (Rolls Ser. 57) (1874): 604-605,642-644; 4 (Rolls Ser. 57) (1877): 406 (sub A.D. 1245: "Eodemque anno, comes Marescallus Walterus viam universae carnis ingressus, octavo kalendas Decembris, Londoniis, spud Tinternam, non procul a Strigoil, ubi plures magnifici antecessores sui sunt sepulti, tumulatur."). Doyle Official Baronage of Engknd 2 (1886): 373 (sub Lincoln); 3 (1886): 7 (sub Pembroke). Christie Annales Cestrienses (Lanc. & Cheshire Rec. Soc. 14) (1887): 50-51 (Chron. of St. Werburg sub 1221: "Johannes constabularius Cestrie duxit in uxorem filiam Roberti de Quenci neptam domini Rannulphi comitis Cestrie."). Giles Matthew Paris's English Hist. 1 (1889): 279 (sub 1240: "On the 22nd of July in this year, which was St. Mary Magdalen's day, J., earl of Lincoln, after suffering from a long illness, went the way of all flesh."). Rye Pecks Finium or Fines Rel. Cambridge (1891): 38. Birch Cat. Seals in the British Museum 2 (1892): 313 (seal of John de Lacy, Earl of Lincoln dated 1232-1240 - Obverse. To the right. In armour: hauberk of mail, surcoat, flat-topped helmet, sword, kite-shaped shield of arms: as in the reverse. Horse galloping. In the field, below the horse, a cinquefoil. Legend: * S' IOH'IS : DE: LASCY : COMITIS : LINCOLN': ET : CO [NSTA]BVL': CESTRIE. Reverse. A smaller round counterseal. A shield of arms: quarterly, over all a bend, in chief a label of four points [LACY]. Legend: * SECRETV : IOH'IS : DE : LASCI : COM: LINC : ET: CSTAB' : CESTE. Beaded borders.), 313 (seal of John de Lacy, Earl of Lincoln dated 1232-1240 - To the right. In armour: hauberk, surcoat, flat-topped helmet, sword, shield of arms (indistinct charges). Horse galloping. In the field, below the horse, a large cinquefoil. Legend: * SIGILLVM IOH …), 318-319 (seal of Walter Marshal, Earl of Pembroke dated 1241-45 - To the right. In armour: hauberk, surcoat, flat-topped helmet with vizor down, sword, shield with indistinct device or ornament, slung round the neck by a strap. Legend: .... LTERI MARESCALLI COM…), 391 (seal of Margaret de Lacy, Countess of Lincoln and Pembroke dated post-1245 - Pointed oval. In long dress, fur cloak, flat head-dress, the left hand on the breast, in the right hand a shield of arms. Standing. Above her head a carved canopy, consisting of a round-headed arch, enriched with battlements. In the field on the right a shield of arms: a lion rampant [LACY]; on the left, held by the countess, another, indistinct.) Legend: … [MA]RGARETE: …). Owen Desc. of Penbrokshire (Cymmrodorion Rec. Ser. 1) (1892): 16-25. Rpt. & Trans. Devonshire Assoc. 2nd Ser. 7 (1895): 229. Fry & Fry Abs. of Feet of Fines Rel. Dorset 1 (Dorset Rec. Soc. 5) (1896): 151-152. List of Sheriffs for England & Wales (PRO Lists and Indexes 9) (1898): 17. Holmes Chartulary of St. John of Pontefract 1 (Yorkshire Arch. Soc. Recs. 25) (1899): 36-42, 146 (charters of John de Lacy). C.Ch.R. 1 (1903): 393. Wrottesley Peds. from the Plea Rolls (1905): 100, 470-471, 531-532. C.Ch.R. 2 (1906): 361 (two undated confirmation charters of Walter Marshal, Earl of Pembroke; 3 (1908): 99 (undated charter of Walter Marshal, Earl of Pembroke to Tintern Abbey), 104-105 (undated chatter of Walter Marshal, Earl of Pembroke to Tintern Abbey). C.P.R. 1232-1247 (1906): 3, 125-126. VCH Lancaster 1 (1906): 306. Auvray Registres de Gregoire IX 2 (1907): 89. C.P.R. 1429-1436 (1907): 33-34. Yorkshire Deeds 1 (Yorkshire Arch. Soc. Recs. 39) (1909): 190 (release of John de Lascy, Constable of Chester). D.N.B. 11 (1909): 380 (biog. of John de Lacy). C.P.R. 1258-1266 (1910): 263, 564, 574. C.C.R. 1237-1242 (1911): 1. VCH Hampshire 4 (1911): 51-56. VCH Hertford 3 (1912): 232-240. C.P.R. 1266-1272 (1913): 172. Clay Extinct & Dormant Peerages (1913): 115-116 (sub Lacy). Turner Cal. Feet of Fines Rel. Huntingdon (Cambridge Antiq. Soc. 8o Ser. 37) (1913): 15. Phillimore Rotuli Hugonis de Welles Episcopi Lincolniensis 1209-12352 (Lincoln Rec. Soc. 6) (1913): 142, 150, 160, 168, 237. Grosseteste Rotuli Roberti Grosseteste Episcopi Lincolniensis (Lincoln Rec. Soc. 11) (1914): 61, 82, 111, 129, 145, 162, 168, 212, 343. Stokes Abs. of Wiltshire IPM 3 (Index Lib. 48) (1914): 340-341. Farrer Early Yorkshire Charters 2 (1915): 195 (chart). C.C.R 1242-1247 (1916): 89, 271. Early Yorkshire Charters 3 (1916): 199. Fowler Cat IPM 1 (Bedfordshire Hist. Rec. Soc. 5) (1920): 235-238. Orpen Ireland under the Normans 3 (1920): 49-78. Yorkshire Arch. Soc. Rec. Ser. 61 (1920): 170-171. Stenton Transcripts of Charters Rel. the Gilbertine Houses of Sixle, Ormst, Craig, Bullington & Alvingham (Lincoln Rec. Soc. 18) (1922): 46-47. VCH Berkshire 4 (1924): 178-183. Farnham Leicestershire Medieval Pedr. (1925): 11 (ped. of Earls of Chester). C.P. 7 (1929): 676-680 (sub Lincoln); 10 (1945): 374-376 (sub Pembroke); 12(2) (1959): 748 footnote g, 751 (sub Winchester). Harvey et al. Vis. of the North 3 (Surtees Soc. 144) (1930): 63-64 (Lacy ped.: "Iohannes [de Lacy] mutauit nomen de Hell et se fecit vocari de Lascy."). Cantle Pleas of Ouo Warranto for Lancaster (Chetham Soc. n.s. 98) (1937): 132 (Lacy ped.). Lays Sandford Cartulary 1 (Oxfordshire Rec. Soc. 19) (1938): 69-70. Paget Baronage of England (1957) 3: 1-5 (sub Aigle); 311: 2; 464: 1-8 (sub Quincy). Sanders English Baronies (1960): 18, 138. Painter Feudalism & Liberty (1961): 230-239. Cheney Letters of Pope Innocent III 1198-1216 (1967): 172. VCH Cambridge 5 (1973): 200-201. Ellis Cat. Seals in the P.R.O. 1 (1978): 36-37 (seal of John de Lacy, Earl of Lincoln dated 1232-40 - On horseback, riding to right. He wears mail with surcoat and flat-topped helmet and holds a drawn sword; in front of him he bears his shield with arms: quarterly, a baston, and a label of four points [LACY]. Below, a cinquefoil. Has a counterseal), 37 (seal of John de Lacy, Earl of Lincoln dated 1232-40 - A shield of arms: quarterly, a baston, and a label of four points [LACY]); 2 (1981): 63 (seal of John de Lacy dated early 13th century - On horseback, galloping to right. He wears chain mail, surcoat and flat-topped helmet, and holds a drawn sword and a shield with arms: a bend, and a label of three points [LACY]), 63-64 (seal of Margaret de Lacy, Countess of Lincoln and Pembroke dated c.1242-66 - Under a small round-arched canopy, the countess standing on a corbel. She wears a long gown, mantle and head-dress, holds her left hand before her, and with her right hand supports a small shield of arms, indistinct. To right is a second shield of arms, indistinct. Background diapered with roses. Legend lost). Holt Magna Carta & Medieval Government (1985): 137-139. Kemp Reading Abbey Cartularies 2 (Camden 45 Ser. 33) (1987): 230 (ratification of Margaret de Lacy, Countess of Lincoln and Pembroke dated 1247). Barraclough Charters of the Emir of Chester (Lane. & Cheshire Rec. Soc. 126) (1988): 441-442. Schwennicke Europäische Stammtafeln n.s. 3(4) (1989): 708 (sub Quency). Maddicott Simon de Monfort (1994): 19-21, 23, 132, 137. VCH Wiltshire 15 (1995): 55-61; 16 (1999): 3-7, 8-49, 229-236. Fryde & Greenway Handbook of British Chronology (1996): 477. MacCash Cultural Patronage of Medieval Women (1996): 245-246, 262-263. Curia Regis Rolls 18 (1999): 301. Greenway Fasli Ecclesiæ Anglicanæ 1066-1300 6 (1999): 62-65 (incorrectly identifies Peter of Chester, Provost of Beverley, as illegitimate son of John de Lacy, Earl of Lincoln). Brand Kings, Barons & Justices (2003): 178. Mitchell Portraits of Medieval Women (2003): 148, footnote 19 (rejects Margaret de Quincy's alleged third marriage to Richard de Wiltshire). Hanna Christchurch Priory Cartulary (Hampshire Rec. Ser. 18) (2007): 174. Wilkinson Women in 1310 Cent. Lincolnshire (2007). Gazatteer of Markets & Fairs in England & Wales to 1516 (sub Dorset & Yorkshire) (available at www.history.ac.uk/cmh/ga.z/gazweb2.html). National Archives, DL 25/2336 (available at www.catalogue.nationalarchives.gov.uk/search.asp).
      Children of John de Lacy, Knt., by Margaret (or Margery) de Quincy:
      i. EDMUND DE LACY, Knt., Constable of Chester [see next].
      ii. MAUD DE LACY, married RICHARD DE CLARE, Knt., Earl of Gloucester and Hertford [see CLARE, 7].
      iii. MARGARET DE LACY. Sometime after 1240 she was granted a toft and two oxgangs of land in Riby, Lincolnshire by Aline widow of Geoffrey de Thorley. Sometime before 1243 she was granted all the lands held in Riby, Lincolnshire by her grandmother, Hawise de Quincy, Countess of Lincoln. She presumably died without issue sometime before c.1253, when her mother, Margaret, Countess of Lincoln, granted lands in Riby, Lincolnshire to Walter de Loudham. National Archives, DL 25/2408 (grant from Aline de Thorley to Margaret daughter of John de Lascy late Earl of Lincoln) (available at www.catalogue.nationalarchives.gov.uk/search.asp). MSS of the Earl of Ancaster, 2ANC1/41/3 (grant from Hawise de Quincy, Countess of Lincoln, to her "niece" [i.e., ddaughter], Margaret, daughter of John de Lacy) (available at www.a2a.org.uk/search/index.asp).”

      2. “Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families,” Douglas Richardson (2013):
      “Children of Saher de Quincy, Knt., by Margaret of Leicester:
      i. ROBERT DE QUINCY, son and heir apparent. He married c.1197-1200 (date of charter) HAWISE OF CHESTER, suo jure Countess of Lincoln, daughter of Hugh, Earl of Chester, by Bertrade, daughter of Simon de Montfort, Count of Evreux [see CHESTER 5 for her ancestry]. She was born in 1180. She had 10 librates of land in Waddington, land in Sibsey, and the service of three fees in Cabourn in marriage. They had one daughter, Margaret (or Margery). He and his father were captured at the Battle of Lincoln 20 May 1217. ROBERT DE QUINCY died at London in 1217, and was buried at the Church of the Hospitallers, Clerkenwell, Middlesex. In the period, 1217-19, his widow, Hawise, granted a rent to the brethren of the Hospital of Jerusalem in England for the foundation of a chantry at the Hospitallers' house at Clerkenwell, Middlesex, for the soul of her husband, Robert. About 1230-1 his widow, Hawise, received a charter from her brother, Ranulph, Earl of Chester and Lincoln, purporting to convey to her the Earldom of Lincoln. On 27 October 1232, shortly after Ranulph's death, the King granted the 3rd penny of the county of Lincoln to Hawise as the Earl's sister and co-heiress, in consequence of which grant she may be held to have become the Countess of Lincoln. On the preliminary division of the honour of Chester, she received the castle and manor of Bolingbroke, Lincolnshire, with the Earl's lands in Lindsey and Holland. As Hawise, Countess of Lincoln, she presented to the churches of Toynton All Saints, Lincolnshire, 1235, 1237; Little Steeping, Lincolnshire, 1235; a mediety of Toynton St. Peter, Lincolnshire, 1237; and Winceby, Lincolnshire, 1233, ?1246-7. In 1241 she sued Amabel, widow of Richard Rufus, in a plea of dower in Northamptonshire. Hawise de Quincy, Countess of Lincoln, died shortly before 19 Feb. 1242/3. Brooke Cat. Kings, Dukes, etc., of England (1622): 342. Bridges Hist. & Antiqs. of Northamptonshire 1 (1791): 544-545. Blomefield Essay towards a Top. Hist. of Norfolk 6 (1807): 134-135. Ormerod Hist. of Chester 1 (1819): 28. Baker Hist. & Antiqs. of Northampton 1 (1822-30): 563 (Beaumont-Quincy ped.). Burke Dict. of the Peerages... Extinct, Dormant & in Abeyance (1831): 442-443 (sub Quincy). Coll. Top. et Gen. 2 (1835): 247-249. Giles Chronicon Anglia Petributgense (1845): 136 (sub A.D. 1241: "Obiit domina Hawisia Quincy, comitissa Lincolniæ"). Top. & Gen. 1 (1846): 316, 320 (charter and seal of Hawise de Quincy, Countess of Lincoln). Mems. Ill of the Hist. & Antiqs. of Lincoln (1850): 253-279, esp. 271-272 ("The Seal of the Countess Hawise exists in an imperfect impression in the British Museum. The circular device in the centre is slightly sunk, and it was possibly a large antique intaglio, set into the matrix. Above and below, is placed a mascle, the armorial bearing of Quency, her husband's family."). Luard Annales Monastici 2 (Rolls Ser. 36) (1865): 289 (Annals of Waverley sub A.D. 1217: "Obiit Robertus de Quinci filius Secri de Quinci"). Ellis Antiqs. of Heraldry (1869): 195-196. Leycester & Mainwaring Tracts written in the Controversy respecting the Legitimacy of Amicia, daughter of Hugh Cyveliok, Earl of Chester 3 (Chetham Soc. 80) (1869): 334-335. Fraser Registrum Monasterii S. Marie de Cambuskenneth, AD. 1147-1535 (1872): 91-94. Annual Rpt. of the Deputy Keeper 35 (1874): 8. Fourth Rpt. (Hist. MSS Comm. 3) (1874): 460. Stubbs Historical Works of Gervase of Canterbury 2 (Rolls Ser. 73) (1880): 110-111. Ormerod Hist. of the County Palatine & City of Chester 1 (1882): 26-33. Maitland Bracton's Note Book 3 (1887): 280-283. Fry & Fry Abs. of Feet of Fines Rel. Dorset 1 (Dorset Rec. Soc. 5) (1896): 151-152. Dowden Chartulary of the Abbey of Lindores 1195-1479 (Scottish Hist. Soc. 42) (1903): 276-277. Wrottesley Peds. from the Plea Rolls (1905): 531-532. C.P.R. 1232-1247 (1906): 3. Lindsay et al. Charters, Bulls & Other Docs. Rel. the Abbey of Inchaffrray (Scottish Hist. Soc. 56) (1908): lxxxvi-lxxxix, 245 (Robert styled "eldest son" in charter of his father). D.N.B. 16 (1909): 556-559 (biog. of Saer de Quincy). C.P. 3 (1913): 169, footnote a; 7 (1929): 675-676 (sub Lincoln); 12(2) (1959): 748 footnote g, 751 (sub Winchester); 14 (1998): 436 (sub Lincoln). Turner Cal. Feet of Fines Rel. Huntingdon (Cambridge Antiq. Soc. 8° Ser. 37) (1913): 15. Davis Rotuli Hugonis de Welles Episcopi Lincolniensis 1209-1235 3 (Lincoln Rec. Soc. 9) (1914): 211. Grosseteste Rotuli Roberti Grosseteste Episcopi Lincolniensis (Lincoln Rec. Soc. 11) (1914): 9, 11, 17, 23, 44, 87. Farrer Early Yorkshire Charters 2 (1915): 195 (chart). C.C.R. 1242-1247 (1916): 89, 271. Fowler Cal IPM 1 (Bedfordshire Hist. Rec. Soc. 5) (1920): 235-238. Farrer Feudal Cambridgeshire (1920): 96, 247-248. Farrer Honors & Knights' Fees 2 (1924): 10-11, 96-99. Farnham Leicestershire Medieval Peds. (1925): 11 (ped. of Earls of Chester). Easson Charters of the Abbey of Coupar-Angus 1 (Scottish Hist. Soc. 3rd Ser. 40) (1947): 3 (confuses Robert de Quincy, died 1217, with his grandfather, Robert de Quincy, died 1200). Hatton Book of Seals (1950): 79. Major Registrum Antiquissimum of the Cathedral Church of Lincoln 6 (Lincoln Rec. Soc. 41) (1950): 44. Medievalia et Humanistica 11(1957): 3-10. Paget Baronage of England (1957) 464: 1-8 (sub Quincy). Sanders English Baronies (1960): 18, 32-33. Painter Feudalism & Liberty (1961): 230-239 (assigns Robert de Quincy the wrong parentage). VCH Lancaster 1 (1906): 306. Duchy of Lancaster 3 (PRO Lists and Indexes, Supp. Ser. 5) (1964): 73, 82, 101. Tremlett Rolls of Arms Heng III (H.S.P 113-4) (1967): 19 (Matthew Paris shields - arms of Robert de Quincy: Gules, seven voided lozenges conjoined or). Curia Regis Rolls 15 (1972): 162-163, 282, 287, 365-366, 419, 439, 498-499; 16 (1979): 411; 17 (1991): 150, 407-408; 18 (1999): 301. VCH Cambridge 5 (1973): 200-201 ("Hawise's husband was Robert son of Saber and not... a younger brother of Saber called Robert, otherwise unknown;" cities Hardy Rotuli Litterarum Clausarum 1 (1833): 342; Duchy of Lancaster 3 (PRO Lists and Indexes, Supp. Ser. 5) (1964): 82.). TG 5 (1984): 221-225. Barraclough Charters of the Earls of Chester (Lanc. & Cheshire Rec. Soc. 126) (1988): 209, 302, 305-309, 309-310 (Lady Hawise de Quincy styled "my dearest sister" [sorori mee karissimel by Ranulph, Earl of Chester and Lincoln in charter dated 1232), 441-442. Cooper Oxfordshire Eyre 1241 (Oxfordshire Rec. Soc. 56) (1989): 22. Schwennicke Europäische Stammtafeln n.s. 3(4) (1989): 708 (sub Quency). Anderson Early Sources of Scottish Hist. 2 (1990): 488 (Chron. of Peterborough sub anno 1232: "Also in the same year, or in the following year according to some, Randolph, the earl of Chester and lord of Bolingbroke, died at his castle of Wallingford... He was exceedingly renowned and famous in the whole kingdom. And because he had no children, his heritage was divided among his four sisters; namely Matilda, the wife of earl David; Mabel, the wife of the earl of Arundel; and Agnes, the wife of earl William de Ferrieres; and Hawisia, who married Robert Quincey, the earl of Winchester. And Hawisia Quincey, the fourth sister of Randolph, acquired the earldom of Lincoln. And she bore a daughter, Margaret, [wife of Walter] Marshal, earl of Pembroke; upon whose death she married John de Lacy, the constable of Chester: and his son was Edmund Lacy, whose son was Henry Lacy, whose daughter and heir was Alice de Lacy, who died in the year of the Lord 1349."), 488 footnote 4 (cites Chron. of Peterborough, 136, sub anno 1241: "Lady Hawisia Quincey, the countess of Lincoln, died"). Owen Medieval Lindsey Marsh (Lincoln Rec. Soc. 85) (1996): 88-89 (charter of Hawise de Quincy, Countess of Lincoln dated 1240). Haskins Society Jour. 10 (2002): 171-172 (discusses charters dated c.1200 concerning the marriage of Robert and Hawise).
      Child of Robert de Quincy, by Hawise of Chester:
      a. MARGARET (or MARGERY) DE QUINCY, married (1st) JOHN DE LACY (also known as JOHN OF CHESTER), Knt., Earl of Lincoln, hereditary Constable of Chester, Magna Carta baron [see LACY 31; (2nd) WALTER MARSHAL, Knt., Earl of Pembroke, hereditary Master Marshal [see LACY 3; MARSHAL 3.iv].”

      3. “Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families,” Douglas Richardson (2013):
      “WILLIAM MARSHAL, Knt., hereditary Marshal of England, Sheriff of Gloucestershire...
      Children of William Marshal, Knt., by Isabel de Clare...
      iv. WALTER MARSHAL, Knt., 8th Earl of Pembroke, hereditary Master Marshal, hereditary Steward of Leinster, of Hampstead Marshall, Berkshire, Bere and Sturminster, Dorset, Silchester, Hampshire, Himtworth, Hertfordshire, Goodrich Castle, Herefordshire, Box, Great Bedwyn, Wexcombe (in Great Bedwyn), and Wootton Rivers, Wiltshire, etc., seigneur of Orbec and Longueville in Normandy, and, in right of his wife, Earl of Lincoln, 4th son. His father in his lifetime gave him Sturminster, Dorset. His father or his brother gave him Goodrich Castle, Herefordshire and Bere, Dorset. In 1233 he supported his brother, Richard, against the king's foreign favorites and his lands were forfeited. In 1234 he was in Ireland with his brother Richard, who sent him away before the fatal Battle of Kildare, lest his family should be extirpated. He passed over to Wales with his brothers and was pardoned with them. In 1239 he was alienated from King Henry III, by the king's hostility to his brother, Gilbert Marshal. In 1240 he was sent into Wales with a large army to strengthen Cardigan Castle, and he took for his brother Gilbert lands appurtenant to the honour of Carmarthen. In June 1241 he took part in the tournament at which Gilbert Marshal was mortally wounded. The king at first refused to invest Walter in the Earldom of Pembroke as Gilbert's heir, because he had forbidden the tournament, but on 27 October the king relented and invested Walter with both the earldom and office of Marshal. He married 6 Jan. 1241/2 MARGARET (or MARGERY) DE QUINCY, widow of John de Lacy (or Lascy) (also known as John of Chester), Knt., Earl of Lincoln, hereditary Constable of Chester (died 22 July 1240) [see LACY 3], and daughter and heiress of Robert de Quincy, by Hawise, sue jure Countess of Lincoln, daughter of Hugh, Earl of Chester [see QUINCY 6.i for her ancestry]. She was born before 1217. They had no issue. He served as a captain in the king's army in Gascony and Poitou in 1242. In 1243 he surrendered his wife's castle of Bolingbroke, Lincolnshire and her mother's lands in Lincolnshire, which estates were subsequently restored to him and his wife, Margaret. In 1244 he was one of the laymen who was elected to consider the king's demand for a subsidy. He presented to the church of West Halton, Lincolnshire in 1242, and to a mediety of the church of Toynton St. Peter, Lincolnshire in 1245. SIR WALTER MARSHAL, Earl of Pembroke, died at Goodrich Castle, Herefordshire 24 Nov. 1245, and was buried at Tintern Abbey, Monmouthshire. By judgments of the King's court, his widow, Margaret, recovered dower out of lands in Ireland held by Walter Marshal, and she received seisin of one-third of all of the Earl's lands and tenements in Ireland. In 1252 his widow, Margaret, and Richard de Wiltshire were granted a yearly fair at the manor of Chelbury, Lincolnshire. In 1262 an action of recaption was brought against Margaret, Countess of Lincoln, Joce de Stepping [her steward], and John de Lusby. In 1263 the king promised that her executors should have free administration of her goods. In the period, 1263-6, Master Walter of Stainsby filed a writ of attachment against Joce de Stepping, Steward of Margaret, Countess of Lincoln, which required Joce to answer for having distrained Master Walter to perform suit at the court of Lusby contrary to law. Margaret, Countess of Lincoln and Pembroke, died at Hampstead, Middlesex shortly before 30 March 1266, and was buried near her father in the Church of the Hospitallers, Clerkenwell, Middlesex, Baker Hist. & Antiqs. of Northampton 1 (1822-30): 563 (Beaumont-Quincy ped.). Halliwell Chronicle of the Monastery of Abingdon (1844): 6 (sub A.D. 1248: "Walterus Marescallus, comes de Penbrocke, obiit."). Lipscomb Hist. & Antiqs. of Buckingham 1 (1847): 200-201 (Clare ped.). Giles Matthew Paris's English Hist. 2 (1853): 122 (sub 1245: "The last of the brothers but one, Earl Walter Marshal, followed in his steps; for although he had most faithfully promised a revenue of sixty shillings to the house of St. Mary, belonging to the monks of Hertford, and had given a written promise thereof, because his brother Earl Gilbert died there, and his bowels still remained buried there, he forgot the pledge and promise which he had made for the redemption of his brother, and, after causing much useless vexation to the prior of the said house, he proved himself a manifest deceiver and transgressor."). Shirley Royal & Other Historical Letters illustrative of the Reign of King Henry III 1 (1862) (Rolls ser. 27): 438. Hulton Coucher Book or Chartulary of Whalley Abbey 1 (Chetham Soc. 10) (1867): 131 (charter of Margaret de Lascy, Countess of Lincoln and Pembroke). Luard Annales Monastici 4 (Rolls Ser. 36) (1869): 456 (Annals of Worcester sub A.D. 1266- "Obiit Margareta comitissa Lincolniæ."). Matthew of Paris Chronica Majora 4 (Rolls Ser. 57) (1877): 406 (sub A.D. 1245: "Eodemque anno, comes Marescallus Walterus viam universae camis ingressus, octavo kalendas Decembris, Londoniis, spud Tinternam, non procul a Strigoil, ubi plures magnifici antecessores sui sunt sepulti, tumulatur."). Doyle Official Baronage of England 2 (1886): 373 (sub Lincoln); 3 (1886): 7 (sub Pembroke). Christie Annales Cestrienses (Lanc. & Cheshire Rec. Soc. 14) (1887): 50-51 (Chron. of St. Werburg sub 1221: "Johannes constabularius Cestrie duxit in uxorem filiam Roberti de Quenci neptam domini Rannulphi comitis Cestrie."). Birch Cat. Seals in the British Museum 2 1892): 318-319 (seal of Walter Marshal, Earl of Pembroke dated 1241-45 - To the right. In armour: hauberk, surcoat, flat-topped helmet with vizor down, sword, shield with indistinct device or ornament, slung round the neck by a strap. Legend: ... LTERI MARESCALLI COM…), 391 (seal of Margaret de Lacy, Countess of Lincoln and Pembroke dated post-1245 Pointed oval. In long dress, fur cloak, flat head-dress, the left hand on the breast, in the right hand a shield of arms. Standing. Above her head a carved canopy, consisting of a round-headed arch, enriched with battlements. In the field on the right a shield of arms: a lion rampant [LACY]; on the left, held by the countess, another, indistinct.) Legend: ... [MA]RGARETE: …) Owen Desc. of Penbrokshire (Cymmrodorion Rec. Ser. 1) (1892): 16-25. Wrottesley Peds. from the Plea Rolls (1905): 100, 470-471, 531-532. C.Ch.R 2 (1906): 361 (two undated confirmation charters of Walter Marshal, Earl of Pembroke; 3 (1908): 99 (undated charter of Walter Marshal, Earl of Pembroke to Tintern Abbey), 104-105 (undated charter of Walter Marshal, Earl of Pembroke to Tintern Abbey). C.P.R. 1232-1247 (1906): 125-126. Auvray Registres de Grégoire IX 2 (1907): 89. C.P.R. 1429-1436 (1907): 33-34. D.N.B. 11 (1909): 380 (biog. of John de Lacy). VCH Hampshire 4 (1911): 51-56. VCH Hertford 3 (1912): 232-240. G.H. Fowler 'Calendar of Inquisitions Post Mortem. No. I' in Pubs. Bedfordshire Hist. Rec. Soc. 5 (1920): 235-238. Orpen Ireland under the Normans 3 (1920): 49-78. Orpen Ireland under the Normans 3 (1920): 49-78. VCH Berkshire 4 (1924): 178-183. C. P. 10 (1945): 374-376 (sub Pembroke). Ellis Cat. Seals in the PRO. 1 (1978): 63-64 (seal of Margaret de Lacy, Countess of Lincoln and Pembroke dated c.1242-66 - Under a small round-arched canopy, the countess standing on a corbel. She wears a long gown, mantle and head-dress, holds her left hand before her, and with her right hand supports a small shield of arms, indistinct. To right is a second shield of arms, indistinct. Background diapered with roses. Legend lost). Kemp Reading Abbey Cartulcaies 2 (Camden 4th Ser. 33) (1987): 230 (ratification of Margaret de Lacy, Countess of Lincoln and Pembroke dated 1247). Schwennicke Europäische Stammtafeln n.s. 3(4) (1989): 708 (sub Quency). VCH Wiltshire 15 (1995): 55-61. Fryde & Greenway Handbook of British Chronology (1996): 477. Mitchell Portraits of Medieval Women (2003): 148, footnote 19 (rejects Margaret de Quincy's alleged third marriage to Richard de Wiltshire)..."