Chris & Julie Petersen's Genealogy

William de Ferrers

Male Abt 1193 - 1254  (~ 61 years)


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  • Name William de Ferrers 
    Born Abt 1193 
    Gender Male 
    Died From 24 Mar 1254 to 28 Mar 1254  Evington, Leicestershire, England Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Buried Merevale Abbey, Merevale, Warwickshire, England Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Person ID I6738  Petersen-de Lanskoy
    Last Modified 27 May 2021 

    Father William de Ferrers,   d. 22 Sep 1247 
    Mother Agnes of Chester,   d. 2 Nov 1247 
    Married 1192 
    Family ID F2978  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

    Family 1 Sibyl Marshal,   d. Bef 1238 
    Married Bef 14 May 1219 
    Children 
     1. Agnes de Ferrers,   d. 11 May 1290
     2. Isabel de Ferrers,   d. 26 Nov 1260
     3. Maud de Ferrers,   d. 12/12 Mar 1298/9
     4. Sibyl de Ferrers,   d. Aft 1260
     5. Joan de Ferrers,   b. of, Derbyshire, England Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. Bef Oct 1267
     6. Agatha de Ferrers
     7. Eleanor de Ferrers,   d. 16 Oct 1274
    Last Modified 28 May 2021 
    Family ID F2972  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

    Family 2 Margaret or Margery de Quincy,   d. Abt 12/12 Mar 1280/1 
    Married Abt 1238 
    Children 
     1. Robert de Ferrers,   b. of Tutbury, Staffordshire, England Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. Abt 27 Apr 1279
     2. William de Ferrers,   b. Abt 1240,   d. Abt 20 Dec 1287, of Groby, Leicestershire, England Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age ~ 47 years)
     3. Elizabeth de Ferrers,   d. Aft 1297
     4. Joan de Ferrers,   d. 19/19 Mar 1309/10
     5. Agnes de Ferrers,   d. Bef 1297
    Last Modified 28 May 2021 
    Family ID F2977  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

  • Notes 
    • RESEARCH_NOTES:
      1. “Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families,” Douglas Richardson (2013):
      “WILLIAM DE FERRERS, Knt., 5th Earl of Derby, Constable of Bolsover Castle, 1235-6, son and heir, born about 1193. He married (1st) before 14 May 1219 SIBYL MARSHAL, died before 1238, 3rd daughter of William Marshal, Knt., 4th Earl of Pembroke (or Strigoil), hereditary Master Marshal, by Isabel, daughter of Richard Fitz Gilbert (nicknamed "Strongbow”), 2nd Earl of Pembroke (or Strigoil) [see MARSHAL 3 for her ancestry]. They had seven daughters, Agnes, Isabel, Maud, Sibyl, Joan, Agatha (wife of Hugh de Mortimer), and Eleanor. He was afflicted from youth with gout, and habitually travelled in a chariot or litter. He accompanied the king to France in 1230. He married (2nd) in or before 1238 MARGARET (or MARGERY) DE QUINCY, daughter and co-heiress of Roger de Quincy, 2nd Earl of Winchester, by his 1st wife, Ellen, daughter and co-heiress of Alan Fitz Roland, lord of Galloway, hereditary Constable of Scotland [see QUINCY 7 for her ancestry]. They had two sons, Robert, Knt. [6th Earl of Derby], and William, Knt., and three daughters, Elizabeth, Joan, and Agnes. He had livery of Chardey Castle and the rest of his mother's lands 10 Nov. 1247. He was invested with the Earldom of Derby 2 Feb. 1247/8. In 1245 he was granted respite of forest offences because he "laboured under infirmity." He presented to the church of Brington, Northamptonshire in 1250. While passing over a bridge at St. Neots, Huntingdonshire, he was accidentally thrown from his chariot sustaining broken limb bones from which he never recovered. SIR WILLIAM DE FERRERS, 5th Earl of Derby, died at Evington, Leicestershire 24 (or 28) March 1254, and was buried at Merevale Abbey, Warwickshire. His widow, Margaret, presented to the churches of Keyston, Huntingdonshire, 1255, Irchester, Northamptonshire, 1267, and Higham Ferrers, Northamptonshire, 1268, 1275. She was co-heiress in 1264 to her father, Roger de Quincy, Knt., Earl of Winchester, by which she inherited the hereditary office of Constable of Scotland, together with the manors of Groby (in Ratby) and Thurnby, Leicestershire, Ware, Hertfordshire, Keyston and Southoe, Huntingdonshire, Chinnor, Oxfordshire, etc. In 1268-9 the Prior and convent of Lenton released the church of Irchester, Northamptonshire to Margaret de Ferrers, Countess of Derby, who in turn levied a fine of it to the use of herself and her heirs. In 1270 she resigned the office of Constable of Scotland to her brother-in-law, Alexander Comyn, Knt., Earl of Buchan. In 1270 Margaret and her sisters, Ellen and Elizabeth, gave license for the election of William de Shaldeston as Prior of the Hospital of St. James and St. John at Brackley, Northamptonshire. In 1272-3 Margaret arraigned an assize of novel disseisin against John le Fauconer, of Thurcaston, and others, touching a tenement in Groby, Leicestershire. In 1273 Philip de Fifife sued her for the next presentation to the church of Fyfield, Berkshire. In 1274-5 Ellen de Quincy and Alexander Comyn and his wife, Elizabeth, sued their sister, Margaret de Ferrers, Countess of Derby, regarding possessions in Eynesbury, Huntingdonshire. On the assignment of Quincy dower lands in 1275, Margaret was assigned a third part of the manor of Southoe Ferrers, Huntingdonshire, together with a third part of the chief messuage. In 1275-6 William de Karuill' arraigned an assize of mort d'ancestor against her touching a messuage and land in Brampton, Northamptonshire. Sometime in the period, 1275-9, she acquired the one-third share of the same manor assigned to her sister, Elizabeth Comyn, thus increasing Margaret's share to two-thirds. In 1276 Margaret had letters of protection, she then going to Scotland. In 1277-8 Alice widow of John de Kent arraigned an assize of novel disseisin against her and others touching a tenement in Chardey, Staffordshire. About 1281 Margaret de Ferrers, Countess of Derby, Ellen la Zouche, and Alexander Comyn, Earl of Buchan, and his wife, Elizabeth, sued Ranulph son of Robert de Neville and his wife, Euphame, regarding 11-1/2 virgates in Syston, Leicestershire. Margaret, Countess of Derby, died shortly before 12 March 1280/1, on which date custody of all lands late of the said Countess Margaret were granted by the king to Richard Fukeram to hold during pleasure, so that he cultivate and sow them and answer for the issues at the Exchequer. In 1282 custody of the manor of Southoe, Huntingdonshire late of Margaret, Countess of Derby, deceased was granted by the king to John de Aese, Vicomte of Tartas to hold during the minority of the heirs. The same month custody of the manor of Keyston, Huntingdonshire late of Margaret, Countess of Derby, deceased was likewise granted by the king to John de Byu.elard to hold during the minority of the heirs. In 1281 the king ratified the demise of John de Aysse, Vicomte of Tartas, to Baldwin Wake and Hawise his wife of custody of the manor of Southoe, Huntingdonshire which he had of the gift of the king by the extent of £40 2s. 8d. yearly to hold during the minority of the heirs of Margery, Countess of Derby.
      Bridges Hist. & Antiqs. of Northamptonshire 2 (1791): 174, 180. Shaw Hist. & Antiqs. of Steffordshire 1 (1798): 39 (Ferrers ped). Baker Hist. & Antiqs. of Northampton 1 (1822-30): 123-124 (Ferrers ped.), 563 (Beaumont-Quincy ped). Clutterbuck Hist. & Antiqs. of Hertford 3 (1827): 287-288 (Beaumont-Quincy ped.). Burke Dict. of the Peerages ... Extinct, Dormant & in Abeyance (1831): 442-443 (sub Quincy). Hunter Eccl. Docs. (Camden Soc. 8) (1840): 68. Lipscomb Hist. & Antiqs. of Buckingham 1 (1847): 200-201 (Clare ped.). Baines Hist. of the Commerce & Town of Liverpool 1 (1852): 97-133. Giles Matthew Paris's English Hist. 2 (1853): 251 (sub 1247: "In this year certain nobles died in England, amongst whom was William Fad Ferrers, a peaceable and good man, who died at a great age, about St. Catherine's day [25 Novemberl, after having suffered for a long time from gout ... The said earl therefore was succeeded in the earldom by his eldest son and heir William, a good and discrete man, but who was miserably afflicted with the same disease as his father."). Luard Annales Monastici 1 (Rolls Ser. 36) (1864): 317 (Annals of Burton sub 1254: "Willelmus de Ferrariis comes Derbeiæ obiit v. kal. Aptilis, apud Eventonam juxta Leycestriam, et sepultus est in capitulo de Mirevalle ii kal. Aprilis."). Skene Liber Pluscardensis 1 (Historians of Scotland 7) (1877): 136-137; 2 (Historians of Scotland 10) (1880): 102-103. Year Books of Edward Years XXXIII-XXV 5 (Rolls Ser. 31a) (1879): 100-107. Clark Earls, Earldom, & Castle of Pembroke (1880): 69-75. Annual Rpt. of the Deputy Keeper 42 (1881): 568; 44 (1883): 100; 45 (1885): 107, 152; 47 (1886): 186; 50(1889): 45, 92, 442, 460. Wrottesley Feet of Fines: Henry III (Colls. Hist. Staffs. 4) (1883): 238-259. Godfrey Hist. of the Parish & Priory of Lenton (1884): 82. Doyle Official Baronage of England 1 (1886): 548 (sub Derby). Miktag Service Performed Staffordshire Tenants (Colls. Hist. Staffs. 8(1)) (1887): 1-122. Birch Cat. Seals in the British Museum 2 (1892): 281 (seal of William de Ferrers, Earl of Derby dated 1254 - Obverse. To the right. In armour: hauberk, surcoat, shield, sword. Horse galloping. Fine style of workmanship. Reverse. Small round counterseal. A shield of arms: wire, on a bordure eight horse-shoes [FERRERS]. Legend: * S WILL’I : COMITIS : DERB'.). Norris Baddesley Clinton, its Manor, Church & Hall (1897): 63-64 ("The windows at Baddesley are a treasure in themselves ... Therein may be read, as in open volumes, the descent and the alliances of the house of Ferrers ... Most of the shields were set up in the early part of the seventeenth century, though a few bear date in the sixteenth ... In two large windows of the hall opening on the courtyard are twelve shields of arms surmounted by earls' and barons' coronets, and having inscriptions beneath indicating the alliances commemorated [including] 6. Ferrers impaling Quinci. Gules, seven mascles, conjoined, or, 3, 3 and 1; [inscription:] “William Ferrers, earle of Derby, married Margaret, Lady of Groby, daughter of Roger Quincy, earle of Winchester."), 101-110. C.C.R. 1272-1279 (1900): 225-226. C.P.R. 1272-1281 (1901): 93, 140, 427, 442, 459-460. Wrottesley Peds. from the Plea Rolls (1905): 104, 276, 501, 531-532, 548. Scots Peerage 3 (1906): 142. Cal. IPM 2 (1906): 237, 323. C.P. 4 (1916): 196-198 (arms of William de Ferrers: Sable (or Azure), an escutcheon vairy or and gules, and an orle of 8 horse-shoes argent), 199 (chart) (sub Derby); 5 (1926): foll. 320 (chart), 340; 12(2) (1959): 276-278 (sub Vescy). VCH Hertford 3 (1912): 380-397. Turner Cal. Feet of Fines Rel. Huntingdon (Cambridge Antiq. Soc. 8o Ser. 37) (1913): 35. Grosseteste Rank Roberti Grosseteste Episcopi I incolniensis (Lincoln Rec. Soc. 11) (1914): 246, 248, 511. Year Books of Edward 13 (Selden Soc. 34) (1918): 59-67; 14(2) (Selden Soc. 43) (1927): 75-77. Foster Final Concords of Lincoln from the Feet of Fines A.D. 1244-1272 2 (Lincoln Rec. Soc. 17) (1920): 142 (fine dated 1256 between Ralph, Abbot of Croyland, and Margery countess of Ferrars). Davis Rotuli Ricardi Gravesend Episcopi Lincolniensis (Lincoln Rec. Soc. 20) (1925): 99, 109, 118, 129, 168. Rpt. on the MSS of Reginald Razvdon Hastings, Esq. 1 (Hist. MSS Comm. 78) (1928): 323-342 (partition of estates of Roger de Quincy, Earl of Winchester). Cam Hundred & Hundred Rolls (1930): 276. VCH Huntingdon 2 (1932): 346-354. Paget Baronage of England (1957) 205: 4-6; 464: 1-8 (sub Quincy) (Margaret de Quincy and her step-mother, Eleanor, were each the step-mother and step-daughter of the other, the Earls of Derby, their husbands, having each married the other's daughter). Reid Wigtownshire Charters (Scottish Hist. Soc. 51) (1960): xxxix-xlv. Sanders English Baronies (1960): 61, 63, 149. Painter Feudalism & Liberty (1961): 230-239. Beardwood Trial of Walter Langton, Bishop of Lichfield 1307-1312 (Trans. American Philosophical Soc. n.s. 54 (3)) (1964): 14-17. VCH Leicester 5 (1964): 321-330. Saltman Cartulary of Dale Abbey (Derbyshire Arch. Soc. Recs. 2) (1967): 341 (charter of William de Ferrers). VCH Cambridge 5 (1973): 200-201. DeWindt Royal Justice & Medieval English Countryside 2 (1981): 590. Ellis Cat. Seals in the P.R.O. 2 (1981): 41 (seal of William de Ferrers, Earl of Derby dated 1249 - On horseback, galloping to right. He wears mail, long surcoat and flat-topped helmet, and holds a drawn sword and a shield of arms: vair, and a bordure [FERRERS1. Legend: +SIGILLVM:W/ILLELMEDE/FERRARIIS). VCH Wiltshire 12 (1983): 125-138. Simpson & Galbraith Cal. Docs. Rel. Scotland 5 (1986): 142. Schwennicke Europäische Stammtafeln n.s. 3(4) (1989): 708 (sub Quency). Nottingham Medieval Studies 44 (2000): 69-81. Mitchell Portraits of Medieval Women (2003): 11-28. Derbyshire Rec. Office: Gell Fam. of Hopton, D258/7/1/1 (charter of William de Ferrers, Earl of Derby); D258/7/1/8i (charter of William de Ferrers, Earl of Derby) (available at (available at http://www.a2a.org.uk/search/index.asp). Derbyshire Rec. Office: Okeover of Okeover, D231M/T375 (charter of William de Ferrers, Earl of Derby) (available at (available at http://www.a2a.org.uk/search/index.asp). Shakespeare Centre Library & Archive: Gregory of Stivichall, DR10/723 (quitclaim of Margaret de Ferrers, Countess of Derby, to her son, Sir William de Ferrers).
      Children of William de Ferrers, Knt., by Sibyl Marshal:
      i. AGNES DEFERRERS, married WILLIAM DE VESCY, Knt., of Alnwick, Northumberland [See LONGESPEE 5.vii].
      ii. ISABEL DEFERRERS, married (1st) GILBERT BASSET, of Wycombe, Buckinghamshire [see MOHUN 8]; (2nd) REYNOLD DE MOHUN, Knt., of Dunster, Somerset [see MOHUN 8].
      iii. MAUD DE FERRERS, married (1st) SIMON DE KYME, of Sotby and Croft, Lincolnshire [see MALET 3]; (2nd) WILLIAM DE FORZ (or DE VIVONNE), Knt., of Chewton, Somerset [see MALET 3]; (3rd) AMAURY DE ROCHECHOUART, Knt., Vicomte of Rochechouart [see MALET 3].
      iv. SIBYL DE FERRERS, married FRANK DE BOHUN, Knt., of Midhurst, Sussex [see MIDHURST 4].
      v. JOAN DE FERRERS, married (1st) JOHN DE MOHUN, of Dunster, Somerset [see MOHUN 9], (2nd) ROBERT D'AGUILLON, Knt., of Addington, Surrey [see MOHUN 9].
      vi. ELEANOR DE FERRERS, married (1st) WILLIAM DE VAUX, of Tharston and Houghton, Norfolk [see QUINCY 7]; (2nd) ROGER DE QUINCY, Knt., 2nd Earl of Winchester, Constable of Scotland [see QUINCY 7]; (3rd) ROGER DE LEYBOURNE, of Elham, Kent [see QUINCY 7].
      Children of William de Ferrers, Knt., by Margaret de Quincy:
      i. ROBERT DE FERRERS, Knt., 6th Earl of Derby [see next].
      ii. WILLIAM DE FERRERS, Knt., of Groby (in Ratby), Leicestershire, married (1st) ANNE DURWARD [see GROBY 8]; (2nd) ELEANOR DE LOVAINE [see GROBY 8].
      iii. ELIZABETH DE FERRERS, married (1st) (as his 2nd wife) WILLIAM LE MARSHAL [see HINGHAM 5], of Greens Norton and Whittlebury, Northamptonshire, King's Charlton, Gloucestershire, Cowley, Oxfordshire, Colton, Staffordshire, Hazlebury (in Box), Wiltshire, etc., deputy Marshal of Ireland, of Hingham and Foulsham, Norfolk, Chirton, Wiltshire, etc., younger son of John Marshal, Marshal of Ireland, by Aline, daughter and co-heiress of Hubert de Rye [see HINGHAM 4 for his ancestry]. They had no issue. He was heir in 1242 to his elder brother, John Marshal. In 1247, as William Marshal, of Norton, he reached agreement with William de Brackley, Prior of Luffield, whereby he quitclaimed the service of a pair of gilt spurs and suit of court every three week in respect of an estate at Monksbarn (in Whittlebury), Northamptonshire, so that the prior should thereafter hold of him in free alms, quit of all secular service. The same year he also reached agreement with the Templars regarding rent owed for land in Cowley, Oxfordshire. He was granted weekly markets to be held at the manors of Haselbury Plucknett, Somerset and Messingham, Lincolnshire in 1265. WILLIAM LE MARSHAL died Sept. 1265. His widow, Elizabeth, married (2nd) before 1274-5 (date of lawsuit) DAVID AP GRUFFUDD, Knt., Prince of North Wales, and, in right of his wife, of Foulsham, Norfolk, Colton, Staffordshire, etc., younger son of Gruffudd ap Llywelyn, by Senena ferch Cadadog. They had two sons, Llywelyn and Owain, and seven daughters, including Gwladus. By his mistress, Tangwystl, daughter of Owain Fflam, of Deheubarth, he also had an illegitimate son, Dafydd Goch. In 1242 his mother, Senena, agreed to give him and his brother, Roderick, as hostages to King Henry III of England. In 1252, as lord of Cwmwd Maen, he entered into a composition with the Abbot and convent of Bardsey. He presented to the church of Plumpton, Northamptonshire 24 Dec. 1273. In 1274-5 Hubert de Rully and Isabel his wife arraigned an assize of mort d'ancestor against David Fitz-Griffin touching a mill in Foulsham, Norfolk. In 1275-6 Hubert de Ruyly and Isabel his wife, and Nicholas de Pulham and Aveline his wife arraigned an assize of mort d'ancestor against David ab Gruffud and Elizabeth his wife touching a mill in Foulsham, Norfolk. In 1278-9 William son of Alexander de Blacoined [Blakesley] arraigned an assize of novel disseisin against David ab Gruffud and others touching a tenement in Great Blakesley, Northamptonshire. In the same year Albric de Wytlebiry arraigned a similar assize against David ab Gruffud and others touching a tenement in Great Blakesley, Northamptonshire. In 1279 David and his wife, Elizabeth, sued her step-son, John le Marshal, for a third of the manor of Colton, Staffordshire as the dower of Elizabeth; John stated he only held a rent of 12s. of which he offered a third. In 1280 the king seised the third part of the manor of Haselbury, Somerset, which David and his wife, Elizabeth, held as the dower of the said Elizabeth of the lands which were of William Marshal her late husband; later the same year the king wishing to grant indulgence to the said David and Elizabeth ordered that the third part of the manor be restored to them. In 1282 David suddenly surprised the Castle of Hawarden, killed many of the knights and squires who formed the garrison, and carried off Roger de Clifford, the Justiciary, as a prisoner into the hills. DAVID AP GRUFFUDD, Prince of North Wales, was executed for treason 3 October 1283. His widow, as "Lady Elizabeth de Ferrers," presented to the church of Plumpton, Northamptonshire in 1285. She presented to the church of Greens Norton, Northamptonshire 20 Dec. 1296, which presentation was disputed by King Edward I, as guardian of William, heir of John Marshal. In 1297 she had a prolonged lawsuit in the royal courts with Sir Hugh de Cave regarding the right of patronage to the church of Plumpton, Northamptonshire. Blomefield Essay towards a Top. Hist. of Norfolk 1 (1739): 672-679. Bridges Hist. & Antiqs. of Northawptonthire 1(1791): 241,255. Ellis Original Letters Ill. of English Hist. 3rd Ser. 1 (1846): 27-29 (letter of King Edward I to the Prior and Prioress of Alvingham, Lincolnshire dated 1283 that they admit one or more of the children of Llewelyn ap Gruffudd, late Prince of Wales, or of David his brother into their House.). Arch. Cambrensis 4 (1849): 134-138. Riley Willelmi Rishanger: quondam Monachi S. Abani; Chronica et Annales (Rolls Ser. 28) (1865): 91 ("David, fuga dilapsus, multis annis cum Rege Anglin stetiri a quo, contra morem gentis suæ, miles factus, in ista guerra, ob probitatem et fidelitatem suam, plurimum erat Regi acceptus: unde et eidem castrum de Dimby penbigh] contulit in Wallia, cum terris ad valorem mille librarum annul redditus; insuper et uxorem dedit, filiam Comitis Derbeyæ, (lux nuper alio viro fuerat viduata.") [also see Hog F. Nicholai Triveti, de ordine frat. praediratorum, Annales (English Hist. Soc.) (1865): 298]. Luard Annales Monastici 3 (Rolls Ser. 36) (1866): 298 (Annals of Dunstable sub A.D. 1283: "Eodem armo David, germanus Leulini, principis Wallin, captus est per gentem domini regis ...et ftlius suns legitirnus captus est cum eo Uxor edam ipsius David, (lux fuit filia comitis de Ferares, alias capta est et inprisonata."). Annual Rpt. of the Deputy Keeper 44 (1883): 109; 45 (1885): 176, 291; 46 (1886): 174-175; 48 (1887): 22. Rye Short Cal. of the Feet of Fines for Norfolk 1 (1885): 84. Wrottesley Staffordshire Suits: Plea Rolls (Colls. Hist. Staffs. 6(1)) (1885): 100. Colls. Hist. Staffs. 8 (1887): 10. Trans. Honourable Soc. of Cymmrodorion Session 1899-1900 (1901): 6-105; Session 1968,1: 43-62. C.Ch.R. 1 (1903): 262-263; 2 (1906): 53. Ramsay Dawn of the Constitution (1908): 338 ("King] Edward [I] knighted him [Dafydd ap Gruffudd], given him charge of Hope and Denbigh Castles, with lands valued at £1,000 a year, and married him to a kinswoman of his own, Elizabeth Ferrers, daughter of the ex-Earl of Derby, a Lusigan on the mother's side, and widow of John [sic] Marshal of Norton."). C.P.R 1258-1266 (1910): 602. Lloyd Hist. of Wales 2 (1911): 259. Somersetshire Pleas 4(1) (Somerset Rec. Soc. 44) (1929): 225-226, 351-352. C.P. 8 (1932): 527-528 (sub Marshal); 10 (1945): 182 footnote h (sub Orty); 14 (1998): 468 (sub Marshal). Leys Sandford Cartulary 1 (Oxfordshire Rec. Soc. 19) (1938): 37-38 (final concord between Master Robert de Saunford and William Marshal dated 1247), 38-40 (final concord between Geoffrey Fitz John and William Marshal dated 1247). Sutton Rails & Reg. of Bishop Oliver Sutton, 1280-1299 2 (Lincoln Rec. Soc. 43) (1950): 48, 141-142. VCH Oxford 5 (1957): 76-96. Sanders English Baronies (1960): 53. Elvey Luffield Priory Charters 1 (Buckingham Rec. Soc. 22) (1968): 163,178-179 (charter dated 1274-5 of Christian de Wayford to Luffield Priory, granted for the souls of Lady Elizabeth wife of Sir David Griffin, Sir William Marshal, and others); 2 (Buckingham Rec. Soc. 26) (1968): 367. Bartrum Welsh Gens. 500-1400 (1980): 447 [Gruffudd ap Cynan 5: "Dafydd d. 1283 [A. of Denbigh & Hope = Elizabeth d. Robt Ferrers, E. of Derby"]. T.G. 1 (1980): 80-95. Cannon Dirt. of British Hist. (2001) (biog. of Dafydd ap Gruffydd). Fritze & Robison Hist. Dict. of Late Medieval England, 1272-1485(2002): 144-145 (biog. of Dafydd ap Gruffydd). National Archives, SC 1/16/103 (available at www.catalogue.nadonalarchives.gov.uk/search.asp).
      iv. JOAN DE FERRERS, married THOMAS DE BERKELEY, Knt., 1st Lord Berkeley [see BERKELEY 5].
      v. AGNES DE FERRERS, married ROBERT DE MUSCEGROS, Knt., of Charlton Musgrove, Somerset [see MUSCEGROS 4].”

      2. “Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families,” Douglas Richardson (2013):
      “AGNES OF CHESTER, married in 1192 WILLIAM DE FERRERS, Knt, 4th Earl of Derby, Sheriff of Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire, 1194, Sheriff of Lancashire, 1223-8, son and heir of William de Ferrers, 3rd Earl of Derby, by Sibyl, daughter of William de Briouze (or Brewes). They had five sons, William, Knt. [5th Earl of Derby], Thomas, Knt, Hugh, Knt., Robert, and Ranulph (parson of St. Michael's on the Wyre, Lancashire), and three daughters, Bertha, Agnes (wife of Richard de Montfitchet), and ___. He had livery of his lands in 1190-91. Before the return of King Richard I from captivity to England, he supported the Justiciar against John, Count of Mortain, and, with the Earl of Chester, he besieged Nottingham Castle. He took part in the second Coronation of King Richard I, which was solemnized in Winchester Cathedral 17 April 1194. He was present at the Coronation of King John 27 May 1199. On 7 June 1199 the king restored and confirmed to him the third penny of Derby, and with his own hand girded him with the sword as an Earl. In 1213 he witnessed the king's surrender of the kingdom to Pope Innocent III. He was a witness to the last will of King John in 1216, and appointed one of its managers and disposers. He was present at the Coronation of King Henry III 28 October 1216. On 30 October following, the king granted him the Castles of Peak and Bolsover, Derbyshire, and, on 16 Jan. 1216/17, he was granted the manor of Melbourne, Derbyshire to hold until the king was 14 years of age. He assisted the Regent to raise the Siege of Lincoln Castle 20 May 1217, and, with his brother-in-law, Ranulph, Earl of Chester, he commanded the royal forces which razed Montsorel Castle. In June 1218 he went on Crusade. In 1225 he witnessed the third great charter of King Henry III. He was heir c.1226/7 to his younger brother, Robert de Ferrers. He accompanied the king in the expedition to Brittany and Poitou in 1230. In 1230 the king pardoned him up to 100 marks of the £170 which were exacted from him for the debts of his uncle, Robert de Ferrers. He was present at the Council of London Feb. 1231/2. His wife, Agnes, was co-heiress in 1232 to her brother, Ranulph, Earl of Chester and Lincoln, by which she inherited the Castle and manor of Chartley, Staffordshire, the Castle and vill of West Derby, Lancashire, and the borough of Liverpool, Lancashire, together with all the lands which Earl Ranulph had held between Ribble and Mersey (including the fiefs of Manchester, Widnes, Warrington, Tottington and Croston, Makerfield and Sefton, Lancashire), and the vills of Bugbrooke, Northamptonshire and Navenby, Lincolnshire. In 1236 he and his wife, Agnes, quitclaimed the advowson of the church of Bolton, Lancashire to Herbert, Prior of Mattersey. He presented to the churches of Brington, Northamptonshire, 1237, and Higham Ferrers, Northamptonshire, 1238. In 1241 Stephen de Meverel sued William de Ferrers, Earl of Derby, and Agnes his wife regarding the advowson of Gatton, Staffordshire; William and Agnes appeared by attorney, and stated that the advowson formed part of the inheritance of Agnes, which fell to her by the death of Ranulph, Earl of Chester, and that they could not answer without their co-parceners. In 1244 he was summoned for military service against the Scots. At an unknown date, he granted 24 acres in his Forest of Needwood to Robert son of Thomas of the Cross. At an unknown date, he granted 19 acres in the manor of Horecross (in Yoxall), Staffordshire to Bartholomew Andwinckle. At an unknown date, he granted all the town of Horecross (in Yoxall), Staffordshire to Hugh Melbourn. SIR WILLIAM DE FERRERS, Earl of Derby, died testate 22 Sept. 1247. His widow, Agnes, died testate 2 Nov. 1247.
      Shaw Hist. & Antiqs. of Staffordshire 1(1798): 39 (Ferrers ped.), 93 (charter of William de Ferrers, Earl of Derby; charter names his wife, Agnes), 103 (three charters of William de Ferrers, Earl of Derby, one of which is witnessed by his brother, Robert). Dugdale Monasticon Anglicanum 6(2) (1830): 807 (charter of Robert de Ferrers, son of William, Earl of Ferrers; charter witnessed by William de Ferrers, son of William, Earl of Ferrers). Coll. Top. et Gen. 2 (1835): 247-249. Baines Hist. of the Commerce & Town of Liverpool 1 (1852): 97-133. Jour. British Arch. Assoc. 7 (1852): 220-232. Giles Matthew Paris's English Hist. 2 (1853): 251 (sub 1247: "In this year certain nobles died in England, amongst whom was William Earl Ferrers, a peaceable and good man, who died at a great age, about St. Catherine's day [25 November], after having suffered for a long time from gout. His marriage with his wife the Countess was solemnized by St. Thomas, archbishop of Canterbury. In the same month also died his wife M, countess of Ferrers, of the same age and of equal fame and goodness. The said earl therefore was succeeded in the earldom by his eldest son and heir William, a good and discrete man, but who was miserably afflicted with the same disease as his father."). Luard Annales Monastici 1 (Rolls Ser. 36) (1864): 285 (Annals of Burton sub 1247: "Isto anno obiit Wilelinus de Ferrariis, nobilis comes Derbeiae, x. kal. Octobris. Agnes comitissa, uxor ejus, completa quarentena sua, decessit quarto non. Novembris."). Shirley Royal & Other Historical Letters illus. of the Reign of King Henry III 2 (Rolls Ser. 27) (1866): 14 (letter of William de Ferrers, Earl of Derby). Year Books of Edward I: Years XXXIII-XXV 5 (Rolls Ser. 31a) (1879): 100-107. Ormerod Hist. of the County Palatine & City of Chester 1 (1882): 26-33. Wrottesley Staffordshire Suits: Plea Rolls (Colls. Hist. Staffs. 4) (1883): 90-102. Maitland Bracton's Note Book 3 (1887): 280-283. Birch Catalogue of Seals in the British Museum 2 (1892): 280 (seal of William de Ferrers, Earl of Ferrers dated 1191-1199 - To the right. In armour: hauberk, surcoat, sword, long convex shield. Horse galloping; Another undated seal. Obverse. To the right. In armour: hauberk, surcoat, flat-topped helmet, sword, shield of arms: vaire, FERRERS; Reverse. Small oval counterseal. With mark of the handle. Impression of an antique oval intaglio gem. A lion devouring a stag). Delaville le Roulx Cartulaire Général de l'Ordre des Hospitaliers de S. Jean de Jerusalem 1 (1894): 304. Norris Baddesly Clinton, its Manor, Church & Hall (1897): 101-110. List of Sheriffs for England & Wales (PRO Lists and Indexes 9) (1898): 72, 102. Fatter Final Concords of Lancaster 1 (Lancs. & Cheshire Rec. Soc. 39) (1899): 74-93,93-118,216-219. Fatter Lancashire Inquests, Extents & Feudal Aids 1 (Lanc. & Cheshire Rec. Soc. 48) (1903): 120,146. Parker Cal. of Lancashire Assize Rolls 1 (Lancs. & Cheshire Rec. Soc. 47) (1904): 18, 40, 55, 66. Wrottesley Peds. from the Plea Rolls (1905): 531-532. Year Books of Edward II 3 (Selden Soc. 20) (1905): 4-9. C.P. 3 (1913): 169, footnote a (sub Chester); 4 (1916): 194-196 (sub Derby(); 5 (1926): 320 (chart). Grosseteste Rotuli Roberti Grosseteste Episcopi Lincolniensis (Lincoln Rec. Soc. 11) (1914): 169, 178, 184-185, 190, 402. Farrer Early Yorkshire Charters 2 (1915): 195 (chart). Farnham Leicestershire Medieval Peds. (1925): 11 (ped. of Earls of Chester). Rpt. on the MSS of Reginald Rawdon Hastings, Esq. 1 (Hist. MSS Comm. 78) (1928): 83. Gibbs Early Charters of the Cathedral Church of St. Paul (Camden Soc. 3rd Ser. 58) (1939): 37- 39. Sanders English Baronies (1960): 32-33, 148-149. Hockey Beaulieu Cartulary (Southampton Recs. Ser. 17) (1974): 11-12, 44-45. C.R.R. 16 (1979): 69. Ellis Cat. Seals in the PRO. 2 (1981): 41 (seal of William de Ferrer; Earl of Derby - On horseback, riding to right. He wears a long coat of mail and a flat-topped helmet with nasal, and holds a drawn sword and a shield. Legend: ...DEF...R...). Nottingham Medieval Studies 44 (2000): 69-81. Online resource: http://www.finerollshenry3.org.uk/content/calendar/roll_029.html. Lancashire Rec. Office: Clifton of Lytham, DDCL 250 (charter of William de Ferrers, Earl of Derby) (available at http://www.a2a.org.uk/search/index.asp). Lancashire Rec. Office: Molyneux, Earls of Sefton, DDM 19/1 (charter of William de Ferrers, Earl of Derby), DDM 19/2 (charter of William de Ferrers, Earl of Derby); DDM 19/3 (charter of Agnes de Ferrers, Countess of Derby), DDM 19/4 (charter of William de Ferrers, Earl of Derby) (available at http://www.a2a.org.uk/search/index.asp).
      Children of Agnes of Chester, by William de Ferrers, Knt.:
      i. WILLIAM DE FERRERS, Knt., 5th Earl of Derby [see next].
      ii. BERTHA DE FERRERS, married (1st) THOMAS DE FURNIVAL, of Worksop, Nottinghamshire, and Sheffield, Yorkshire [see FURNIVAL 8], (2nd) RALPH LE BIGOD, Knt., of Settrington, Yorkshire [see ASKE 8].
      iii. ___ DE FERRERS, married JOHN DE VIPONT, of Appleby, Westmorland [see CLIFFORD 7].”

      3. “Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families,” Douglas Richardson (2013):
      “HUGH BARDOLF, Knt., of Wormegay, Cantley, Caistor, Fincham, Stow Bardolf, and Strumpshaw, Norfolk, Wendover, Buckinghamshire, Ruskington, Lincolnshire, Shelford, Nottinghamshire, Barlings and Plumpton, Sussex, etc., and, in right of his wife, of Watton at Stone, Hertfordshire, Bures, Suffolk, Addington, Surrey, and Perching (in Fulking), Sussex, son and heir, born about 29 Sept. 1259. He married before 1282 ISABEL D'AGUILLON, daughter and heiress of Robert d'Aguillon, Knt., of Addington, Surrey, Watton at Stone, Hertfordshire, Perching, Sussex, etc., by his 1st wife, Joan, daughter of William de Ferrers, Knt., 5th Earl of Derby [see MOHUN 9 for her ancestry]. She was born 25 March 1257/8. They had two sons, Thomas, Knt. [2nd Lord Bardolf], and William, and two daughters, Nichole (wife of Robert de Ardeme, Knt., and Thomas Wale, Knt.) and Margery (or Margaret). He took an active part in the French and Scottish wars. He was summoned to Parliament from 6 Feb. 1298/9 to 2 June 1302, whereby he is held to have become Lord Bardolf. He was among the retainers of Hugh de Lacy, Earl of Lincoln at Siege of Caerlaverock in 1300. SIR HUGH BARDOLF, 1st Lord Bardolf, died testate shortly before 20 August 1304. His widow, Isabel, died shortly before 28 May 1323.
      Clutterbuck Hist. & Antiqs. of Herford 2 (1821): 477-485 (Bardolf ped.). Palgrave Antient Kalendars & Invs. of the Treasury of His Majesty's Exchequer 1(1836): 37. Genealogist n.s. 17 (1901): 246-247. Copinger Manors of Steak 1(1905): 45-49. Wrottesley Peds from the Plea Rolls (1905): 352,549. C.P. 1 (1910): 417-418 (sub Bardolf). C.F.R. 1 (1911): 225, 285, 497, 503. VCH Hertford 3 (1912): 158-165, 476-480. VCH Surrey 4 (1912): 164-168. Pipe Roll for 1295 Surrey Membrane (Surrey Rec. Soc. 21) (1924): 35 (Aguillon ped.). VCH Sussex 7 (1940): 109-113, 202-204. Norfolk Arch. 30 (1952): 263-286. VCH Middlesex 5 (1976): 149-154. VCH Cambridge 4 (2002): 206-219. National Archives, C 143/124/5, SC 8/4/190, SC 8/4/191, SC 8/95/4735 (available at www.catalogue.nationalarchives.gov.uk/search.asp). Suffolk Rec. Office, Ipswich Branch: The Iveagh (Phillipps) Suffolk MSS, HD 1538/157/1 (feoffment dated 8 Oct. 1309 by and between John son of Thomas de Bassingbourne and Sir Michael de Ponynges, Knt., and wife, Margery, regarding the manor of Bures, Suffolk for £500 of silver sterling, which the grantor had by feoffment of Dame Isabel, formerly wife of Sir Hugh Bardolph, in Bures) (available at http://www.a2a.org.uk/search/index.asp).
      Children of Hugh Bardolf, Knt., by Isabel d'Aguillon:
      i. THOMAS BARDOLF, Knt., 2nd Lord Bardolf [see next].
      ii. MARGERY (or MARGARET) BARDOLF, married MICHAEL DE POYNINGS, Knt., of Poynings, Sussex [see POYNINGS 12].”

      4. “Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families,” Douglas Richardson (2013):
      “FRANK DE BOHUN, Knt., of Midhurst, Didling, Dumpford, Ford, Rustington, and Trotton, Sussex, son and heir. In 1246, at the request of his uncle, John Fitz Geoffrey, the king granted him permission to pay the residue of his father's debts to the king, namely £58, by installments of £8 a year. He married before 21 Sept. 1247 SIBYL DE FERRERS, daughter of William de Ferrers, Knt., 5th Earl of Derby, by his 1st wife, Sibyl, daughter of William Marshall, Knt., 4th Earl of Pembroke (or Striguil), hereditary Master Marshal [see FERRERS 7 for her ancestry]. She was co-heiress in 1245 to her uncle, Anselm Marshal, Earl of Pembroke, by which she inherited lands in Sturminster Marshal, Dorset. They had two sons, John, Knt., and Thomas, and one alleged daughter, Cecily. His wife, Sibyl, was living in 1259-60. He married (2nd) NICHOLE ___, widow of Bartholomew de [la] Chapelle, of Waltham, Lincolnshire, Otterbourne, Hampshire, etc., Serjeant of the King's Chapel. In 1272 he held three fees of John Fitz Alan, doing suit to the court of Arundel and ward there for 40 days in time of war at his own charge. Sometime before 1273 he sold lands in Sussex without license to Amaury de Lucy. SIR FRANK DE BOHUN died 14 Sept. 1273. In 1275-6 Adam de Climpinge, chaplain, arraigned an assize of novel disseisin against John le Sage and Nichole, widow of Frank de Bohun, touching a tenement in Rustington, Sussex.
      Banks Dormant & Extinct Baronage of England 1 (1807): 244-245 (sub Bohun). Burke Dict. of the Peerages... Extinct, Dormant & in Abeyance (1831): 63 (sub Bohun). Sussex Arch. Colls. 20 (1868): 1-33. Cal. Docs. Rel. Ireland 1(1875): 439-440, 459; 2 (1877): 68, 91, 102, 104, 171, 172. Elwes Hist. of the Castles, Mansions & Manors of Western Sussex (1876): 150-152: Clark Earls, Earldom, & Castle of Pembroke (1880): 69-75. Notes & Queries 6th Ser. 6 (1882): 289-290. Annual Rpt. of the Deputy Keeper 45 (1885): 296. Somersetshire Pleas 1 (Somerset Rec. Soc. 11) (1897): 380-381. Cal. IPM 2 (1906): 27-28. C.P. 2 (1912): 199-200 (sub Bohun); 4 (1916): 199 (chart). C.F.R. 2 (1912): 10-13, 19. Fatter Honors & Knights' Fees 3 (1923): 66-68. VCH Sussex 4 (1953): 74-80. Sanders English Baronies (1960): 63. Dibben Cowdray Archives 2 (1964): 330. Blake Cartulary of the Priory of St. Denys near Southampton 2 (Southampton Rec. Ser. 25) (1981): 234-235. Mitchell Portraits of Medieval Women (2003): 11-28.
      Children of Frank de Bohun, Knt., by Sibyl de Ferrers:
      i. JOHN DE BOHUN, Knt. [see next].
      ii. THOMAS DE BOHUN. In 1275-6 William Paynel arraigned an assize of novel disseisin against him and William de Keleshal touching a tenement in Sturminster, Dorset. In 1276 he acknowledged that he owed John de Bohun a debt of £200, to be levied in default of payment out of his lands and chattels in England and Ireland. In 1276-7 he was granted letters of protection, he then going in the king's suite to the parts of Wales. Cal. Docs. Rel. Ireland 2 (1877): 230, 247. Annual Rpt. of the Deputy Keeper 45 (1885): 322; 46 (1886): 261. Cal. IPM 2 (1906): 27-28.
      iii. CECILY DE BOHUN (alleged daughter), married WILLIAM DE HAUTERIVE (or DAUTRY), Knt., of Barlavington, Sussex, and Kemberton, Shropshire, son and heir of Andrew de Hauterive, of Barlavington, Sussex, and Kemberton, Shropshire. They had one son, John. He witnessed a charter for his brother-in-law, John de Bohun, Knt., in 1283. SIR WILLIAM DE HAUTERIVE was living 9 Sept. 1302 and died before 21 Feb. 1304/5. Sussex Arch. Colls. 20 (1868): 1-33. Yorkshire Arch. & Topog. Jour. 6 (1881): 422-423 ("The pedigree of Aske, given by Ashmole in the same MS. vol., shows the descent of the family from Bohun, Alta Ripa, Shelfered, St. John, and Camoys. William de Alta Ripa miles, m. Cecilia de Bohun; whose d. & h. m. Roger de Shelfered miles 13 Edw. II.; whose grand. & h. Johanna m. John Aske of Ousthorpe; her mother having been Margaret, d. of Ralph de Camoys."). Trans. East Riding Antiq. Soc. 6 (1898): 43-53. Fatter Honors & Knights' Fees 3 (1923): 24.”

      5. “Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families,” Douglas Richardson (2013):
      “WILLIAM DE FORZ (or DE VIVONNE), Knt., of Chewton, Compton Dundon, Midsomer Norton, Shepton Mallet, Sutton Mallet, etc., Somerset, Wolfeton, Dorset, Dullingham, Cambridgeshire, Kilve, Somerset, Woodmansterne, Surrey, Fisheton de la Mare, Wiltshire, etc., seigneur of Vivonne, Forz, and Château-Larcher in Poitou. He married about 30 July 1248 MAUD DE FERRERS (generally known as MAUD DE KYME), widow of Simon de Kyme, of Sotby, Burgh, Croft, Elkington, Friskney, and Winthorpe, Lincolnshire (died shortly before 30 July 1248), and daughter of William de Ferrers, Knt., 5th Earl of Derby, by his 1st wife, Sibyl, 3rd daughter of William Marshal, Knt., 4th Earl of Pembroke (or Striguil), hereditary Master Marshal [see FERRERS 7 for her ancestry]. She was born about 1230. Maud was co-heiress in 1245 to her uncle, Anselm Marshal, Earl of Pembroke, by which she inherited the manor of Carbury, co. Kildare, Ireland and a third part of the seal of the chancery of co. Kildare, Ireland. They had four daughters, Joan, Sibyl, Mabel, and Cecily. In 1249 he and his 1st cousin, Nicholas Poyntz, were called to warranty by John de la Stane for 1/2 knight's fee in Fisherton, Wiltshire. The same year he reached agreement regarding the dower of his grandfather, William Malet's widow, Alice Basset. In 1252 the king confirmed his demise of the manors of Chewton, Compton Dundon, Midsomer Norton, Shepton Mallet, and Welton, Somerset to the Abbot and convent of St. Augustine, Bristol until the abbot and convent receive £224 which they borrowed from some foreign merchants for his use. In 1255 he made homage to the Abbot of Glastonbury for 10 knights' fees. In 1257 he granted the canons of St.-Hilaire the right of usage which he had in the woods of Champagne, for which the canons in turn granted him the third part of a wood between Ferriere and the road leading from Champagne to Chateau-Larcher. SIR WILLIAM DE FORZ died shortly before 22 May 1259. His widow, Maud, married (3rd) by contract dated 28 April 1264 (as his 2nd wife) AMAURY (or EMERY) DE ROCHECHOUART, Knt., Vicomte of Rochechouart (in Haute Vienne) in Poitou, seigneur of La Cossiere-en-Perigord, Brigueil-l'Aine, Mas-de-Gegelar, Perusse, etc., son and heir of Amaury de Rochechouart, Vicomte of Rochechouart, by Marguerite, daughter of Guy V, Viscount of Limoges. They had no issue. He accompanied King Philippe III in his attack on Foix in 1271. In 1275 the king ordered Emetic Bechet to deliver to him the king's horse to the use of the said Amaury's brother, William de Rochechouart, for the purpose of waging a duel in the parts of Limoges. In 1275-6 he and his wife, Maud, arraigned an assize of novel disseisin against Philip de Kyme and others touching a tenement in Skegness, Lincolnshire. In 1276 he and his wife, Maud, granted letters to attorney to Benard de Coudroy, they then about to proceed with the king's license to parts beyond the seas. In 1276-7 he and his wife, Maud, arraigned an assize of novel disseisin against Philip de Kyme regarding a tenement in Keal, Lincolnshire. He and his wife, Maud, presented to the church of Thornton in Craven, Yorkshire in 1280 and 1283. He went on the Aragon expedition in 1283. SIR AMAURY DE ROCHECHOUART, Vicomte of Rochechouart, died about 1283, and was buried in the monastery at Tirzay. He left a will dated 25 June 1283. His widow, Maud, presented to the church of Thornton in Craven, Yorkshire in 1292. Maud, Vicomtesse of Rochechouart, died 12 March 1298/9.
      Anselme Hist. de la Maison Royale de France 4 (1726): 649-654 (sub Rochechouart). Chesnaye Dictionnaire de la Noblesse 12 (1778): 164. Dugdale Monasticon Anglicanum 5 (1825): 270 (Abbey of Tinturn - Lacy Gen.: "Quarta filia dicti Willielmi Marescalli, vocabatur Sibilla, et nupta fuit Willielmo de Ferrers comiti Derbiæ, de qua procreatæ fuere septem Quarum prima vocabatur Agnes, secunda Isabella, tertia Matilda, quarta Sibilla, quinta Johanna, sexta Alianora, septima Agatha. Matylda de Kyme, tertia filia, nupta Almarico de Rupe-Edwardi, de quibus Johanna de Vynon [recte Vivonia], Cecilia de Bellocampo, Sibilla nupta Almarico de Archiaks in Piganra."). Coll. Top. et Gen. 7 (1841): 136-138, 146-147. Cole Docs. illus. of English Hist. in the 13th & 14th Cents. (1844): 15. Mémoires de la Société des Antiq. de l'Ouest 14 (1848): 283-284 (charter of Guillaume Fort, chevalier, seigneur of Vivonne dated 1257), 284-287. Boutaric Actes du Parlement de Paris 1st Ser. 1 (1863): 152. Cal. Docs. Rel. Ireland 1 (1875): 439-440, 459. Clark Earls, Earldom, & Castle of Pembroke (1880): 69-75. Whitaker Hist. & Antiqs. of the Deanery of Craven (1878): 119. Archives Hist. du Poitou 9 (1880): 65-70. Bull. de la Société historique et archéologique du Périgord 7 (1880): 69. Clark Earls, Earldom, & Castle of Pembroke (1880): 69-75. LeRoux Inventaire-sommaire des Archives Départmentales: Haute-Vienne, Archives Civiles, Serie D (1882): 221. Annual Rpt. of the Deputy Keeper 44 (1883): 225; 45 (1885): 289-290, 308; 46 (1886): 199. Francisque-Michel Rôles Gascons 1 (1885): 90, 269, 371, 382, 410, 413. Brown Yorkshire Inqs. 1 (Yorkshire Arch. Soc. Rec. Ser. 12) (1892): 85. Fry & Fry Abs. of Feet of Fines Rel. Dorset 1 (Dorset Rec. Soc. 5) (1896): 139. Somersetshire Pleas 1 (Somerset Rec. Soc. 11) (1897): 380-381. Lincolnshire Notes & Queries 5 (1898): 155; 6 (1901): 168. List of Ancient Corr. of the Chancery & Exchequer (PRO Lists and Indexes 15) (1902): 355. Cal. IPM 1(1904): 298; 3 (1912): 400-401. C.Ch.R. 1 (1903): 386. Ancestor 11 (1904): 61-70. List of Inqs. ad Quad Damnum 1 (PRO Lists and Indexes 17) (1904): 106. Wrottesley Peds. from the Plea Rolls (1905): 497. Bull de la Soc. les Amis des Sciences et Arts de Rochechouart 16 (1907): 26-35. Rpt. on MSS in Various Colls. 4 (Hist. MSS Comm. 55) (1907): 101. Wickwane Reg. of William Wickwane, Lord Archbishop of York, 1279-128 (Suttees Soc. 114) (1907): 27, 45. Bull de la Société Arch. et Hist. du Limousin 58 (1908): 490. C.P.R. 1247-1258 (1908): 23. Procs. Somerset Arch. & Nat. Hist. Soc. 53 (1908): 64-66. Weaver Feodary of Glastonbury Abbey (Somerset Rec. Soc. 26) (1910): 59-63. VCH Surrey 4 (1912): 247-248. C.P. 2 (1912): 48 (sub Beauchamp); 4 (1916): 199; 10 (1945): 364, footnote a (sub Pembroke). Maxwell-Lyte Two Regs. formerly belonging to the Fam. of Beanchamp of Hatch (Somerset Rec. Soc. 35) (1920): 66-68. Pipe Roll for 1295 S urrey Membrane (Surrey Rec. Soc. 21) (1924): 45. C.C.R. 1253-1254 (1929): 246 (Amaury de Rochechouart, vicomte of Rochechouart, styled "king's kinsman" by King Henry III of England). Moor Knights of Edward I 1 (H.S.P. 80) (1929): 80; 4 (H.S.P. 83) (1931): 156. Somersetshire Pleas 4(1) (Somerset Rec. Soc. 44) (1929): 145, 254, 282, 305, 344-345, 350, 359-362. Cam Hundred & Hundred Rolls (1930): 278. C.C.R. 1256-1259 (1932): 409-410. Parker Feet of Fines for the County of York, 1246-1272 (Yorkshire Arch. Soc. Rec. Ser. 82) (1932): 105-106. C.C.R. 1268-1272 (1938): 97, 101. Sayles Select Cases in the Court of King's Bench 3 (Selden Soc. 58) (1939): cxv. Watkin Great Chartulary of Glastonbury 1 (Somerset Rec. Soc. 59) (1947): 234-235. Williams Collectanea (Wiltshire Arch. & Natural Hist. Soc. Recs. Branch 12) (1956): 114-115. Clay York Minster Fasti 2 (Yorkshire Arch. Soc. Recs. 124) (1959): 5. Sanders English Baronies (1960): 38-39, 62-64, 79-80. VCH Wiltshire 8 (1965): 34-46. Tremlett Rolls of Arms Henry III (H.S.P 113-4) (1967): 153 (arms of William de Forz de Vivonne: Argent a chief gules). Clanchy Civil Pleas of the Wiltshire Eyre 1249 (Wiltshire Rec. Soc. 26) (1971): 83, 102-103, 120, 157. Fasti Parochiales 4 (Pubs. Yorkshire Arch. Soc. 133) (1971): 116-118, 120. Clanchy Roll & Writ of the Berkshire Eyre of 1248 (Selden Soc. 90) (1973): 199. VCH Somerset 3 (1974): 120-129, 157-158; 5 (1985): 97-98; 8 (2004): 184-190. VCH Cambridge 6 (1978): 159-160. London Cartulary of Bradenstoke Priog (Wiltshire Rec. Soc. 35) (1979): 120 (charter of William de Forz). Adams Select Cases from Eccl. Courts of Canterbury 1200-1301 (Selden Soc. 95) (1981): 441-448. Schwennicke Europäische Stammtafeln 3(4) (1984): 777 (sub Rouchechouart). Martin Hist. et Gen. de la Maison de Rochechouart (1990). Roccafortis, Bull de la Société de Géographie de Rochefort 3rd Ser. 4 (2000):149-153. Curia Regis Rolls 19 (2002): 342-343 (Gilbert Malet styled "ancestor" [antecessoris] of William de Forz), 385, 409-410. Mitchell Portraits of Medieval Women (2003): 11-28. National Archives, SC 8/1/46; SC 8/32/1571; SC 8/138/6882; SC 8/180/8983 (available at www.catalogue.nationalarchives.gov.uk/search.asp).
      Children of William de Forz, Knt., by Maud de Ferrers:
      i. JOAN DE VIVONNE, married (1st) INGRAM DE PERCY, Knt., of Dalton, co. Durham [see FITZ HERBERT 5]; (2nd) AMAURY (or EMERY) X DE ROCHECHOUART [see FITZ HERBERT 5]; (3rd) REYNOLD FITZ PETER, Knt., of Blaen Llyfni (in Cathedine), Breconshire [see FITZ HERBERT 5].
      ii. SIBYL DE VIVONNE, daughter and co-heiress, born about 1253 (aged 6 in 1259). She married after 9 August 1269 (by contract dated 28 April 1264) (as his 1st wife) GUY DE ROCHECHOUART, Knt., seigneur of Tonnay-Charente, Cercigny, La Perusse, and Salagnac, and in right of his wife, seigneur of Vivonne in Poitou, 2nd son of Amaury IX de Rochechouart, Knt., Vicomte of Rochechouart (in Haute Vienne) in Poitou, seigneur of La Cossiere-en-Perigord, Brigueil-l'Aine, Mas-de-Gegelar, Perusse, etc., by his 1st wife, Jeanne, daughter and heiress of Geoffroi de Tonnay, seigneur of Tonnay-Charente. They had two sons, Guyard [seigneur of Tonnay-Charente] and Guillaume [seigneursof Tonnay-Charente]. He was a legatee in the 1283 will of his father. His wife, Sibyl, was living 2 July 1306. He married (2nd) AGNES ___. GUY DE ROCHECHOUART died shortly before 28 August 1314. He left a will dated 26 June 1313, requesting burial in the monastery of Tirzay near his father. Coll. Top. et Gen. 7 (1841): 136-138. Redet Cartulaire de l'Eviche de Poitiers (Archives Hist. du Poitou 10) (1881): 364. Cal. Docs. Rel. Ireland 4 (1881): 275. Annual Rpt. of the Deputy Keeper 45 (1885): 289. C.C.R. 1272-1279 (1900): 551-552. Ancestor 11 (1904):61-70. C.C.R. 1302-1307 (1908): 391, 403. Procs. Somerset Arch. & Nat. Hist. Soc. 53 (1908): 64-66. Somersetshire Pleas 2 (1923) (Somerset Rec. Soc. 36): 96-99; 4(1) (Somerset Rec. Soc. 44) (1929): 8-9, 229. Sayles Select Cases in the Court of King's Bench 3 (Selden Soc. 58) (1939): cxv. Williams Collectanea (Wiltshire Arch. & Natural Hist. Soc. Recs. Branch 12) (1956): 114-115. Martin Hist. et Gen. de la Maison de Rochechouart (1990). Roccafortis, Bull. de la Société de Géographie de Rochefort 3rd Ser. 4 (2000):149-153. Mitchell Portraits of Medieval Women (2003): 11-28. National Archives, SC 8/1/40; SC 8/1/46; SC 8/138/6882; SC 8/180/8983 (available at www. catalogue. nationalarchives.gov.uk/ search. asp).
      iii. MABEL DE VIVONNE, daughter and co-heiress, born about 1255 (aged 4 in 1259). She married after 9 August 1269 and before 1279 FULK (or FOUCAUD) D'ARCHIAC, seigneur of Archiac in Saintonge, and, in right of his wife, of Woodmanteme, Surrey. They had five sons, Aymer, Knt. [seigneur of Archiac], Foucaud, Amaury (or Airnery) [seigneur of Saint-Germain], Simon [Archbishop of Vienne, Cardinal of Sainte-Prisque], and Guillaume (monk), and one daughter, Anne (wife of Simon de Lezay). In 1278-9 he claimed view of frankpledge, assize of bread, etc. in the manor of Woodmansterne, Surrey. His wife, Mabel, died before 1 Nov. 1299. FULK (or FOUCARD) D'ARCHIAC died in or about 1304. Coll. Top. et Gen. 7 (1841): 136-138. Audiat Saint-Pierre de Saintes (1871): 94-97 (biog. of Cardinal Simon d'Archiac). Cal. Doc. Rel. In 4 (1881): 320. Beauchet-Filleau Dict. Hist. et Genealogique des Fam. du Poitou 1(1891): 83. C.C.R. 1272-1279 (1900): 551-552. Ancestor 11 (1904): 61-70. C.C.R. 1302-1307 (1908): 391, 403. Procs. Somerset Arch. & Nat. Hist. Soc. 53 (1908): 64-66. VCH Surrey 4 (1912): 247-248. Somersetshire Pleas 2 (1923) (Somerset Rec. Soc. 36): 96-99; 4(1) (Somerset Rec. Soc. 44) (1929): 8-9, 229. Pipe Roll for 1295 Surrey Membrane (Surrey Rec. Soc. 21) (1924): 45. Sayles Select Cases in the Court of King's Bench 3 (Selden Soc. 58) (1939): cxv. Williams Collectanea (Wiltshire Arch. & Natural Hist. Soc. Recs. Branch 12) (1956): 114-115. Mitchell Portraits of Medieval Women (2003): 11-28. National Archives, SC 8/138/6882 (available at www.catalogue.nationalarchives.gov.uk/search.asp).
      iv. CECILY DE VIVONNE, married JOHN DE BEAUCHAMP, Knt., of Hatch Beauchamp, Somerset [see SEYMOUR 10].”

      6. “Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families,” Douglas Richardson (2013):
      “ROGER DE QUINCY, Knt., 2nd Earl of Winchester, of Ware, Hertfordshire, Eynesbury, Keyston and Southoe, Huntingdonshire, Belgrave, Burton Overy, Braunstone, Galby, King's Norton, and Laughton, Leicestershire, Shipton (in Shipton-on-Cherwell), Oxfordshire, Seckington, Warwickshire, etc., and Leuchars, Fife, Scotland, and, in right of his 1st wife, hereditary Constable of Scotland, 2nd but eldest surviving son. He married (1st) ELLEN OF GALLOWAY, 2nd but let surviving daughter and co-heiress of Alan Fitz Roland, Lord of Galloway, hereditary Constable of Scotland, by his 1st wife, ___, daughter of Roger de Lacy, Knt., of Pontefract, Yorkshire, hereditary Constable of Chester [see LACY 2.iii for her ancestry]. Her maritagium included the manor of Kippax, Yorkshire. They had three daughters, Margaret (or Margery), Elizabeth (or Isabel), and Ellen. He was excommunicated with his father by Pope Innocent III 16 Dec. 1215. He was presumably on Crusade at Damietta at the time of his father's death in 1219. His eldest brother, Robert, then being dead, Roger did homage and received livery of his father's lands 16 Feb. 1221. In 1222 he served as a captain in the king's army in Poitou. In 1230 his niece, Margaret de Quincy, wife of John de Lacy, released her claim to the main Quincy inheritance to him; in return he granted to John and Margaret and their issue her mother, Hawise's dower, including the manor of Grantchester, Cambridgeshire, to hold of him and his heirs. In 1233 a notification of Walter, Archbishop of York, stated that the priory of St. John of Pontefract had recovered the advowson of Kippax, Yorkshire against Roger de Quincy in an assize of darrein presentment. He succeeded to the earldom of Winchester in 1235 on his mother's death. In 1235 the Gallwegians, being opposed to the partition of Alan of Galloway's dominions among his three daughters (including Roger's wife, Ellen), petitioned King Alexander II to make Alan's illegitimate son, Thomas, their overlord. The king rejected the petition, and an insurrection took place, but was soon suppressed. He presented to a mediety of the church of Croxton, Leicestershire, 1235, and to the churches of Markfield, Leicestershire, 1254, 1257; Laughton, Leicestershire, 1248, 1254, 1258, 1269; and Wadenhoe, Northamptonshire, 1261. In 1237 he had license to import corn and victuals from Ireland through a merchant named Erskin of Kirkcudbright in Scotland. In 1239 he joined other nobles in writing a letter of remonstrance to Pope Gregory IX, complaining of the Pope's infringement of the rights of English patrons. Roger served with the king in Guienne in 1242. His wife, Ellen, was living 21 Nov. 1245. She was buried at BracIdey, Northamptonshire. In 1246 he again joined in a letter sent to the pope with reference to the grievances of England against the Roman see. On the death of his wife's sister, Christian, Countess of Aumale, in 1246, he obtained a further portion of Galloway in right of his wife. He ruled the chiefs there with great severity; they rose against him in 1247, and besieged him in one of his castles. Preferring a quick death by the sword to a lingering one of starvation, he suddenly caused the gates to be thrown open, and almost unattended, cut his way through the besiegers, and rode until he reached the court of the King of the Scots. King Alexander punished the rebels and re-established Roger in his possessions. About 1250 Roger quitclaimed to the church of St. Mary and St. Nicholas, Littlemore, Oxfordshire the suit of his court at Chinnor, Oxfordshire, required for the 18 acres in the fields of Svdenham, Oxfordshire, which the said nuns of Littlemore had of the gift of Saher de Quincy his father. He married (2nd) before 12 June 1250 MAUD DE BOHUN, widow of Anselm Marshal, 9th Earl of Pembroke, hereditary Master Marshal, hereditary Steward of Leinster (died at Chepstow 22, 23, or 24 Dec. 1245) [see MARSHAL 3.v], and daughter of Humphrey de Bohun, Knt., Earl of Hereford and Essex, hereditary Constable of England, by Maud, daughter of Raoul (or Ralph) d'Exoudun, 7th Count of Eu. They had no issue. About 1250 he witnessed a charter of Richard de Harcourt, Knt., of Stanton Harcourt, Oxfordshire in favor of his son, William de Harcourt [see BOHUN 6 for her ancestry]. His wife, Maud, died at Groby (in Ratby), Leicestershire 20 October 1252, and was buried at Brackley, Northamptonshire. In the period, 1252-7, he exchanged the manors of Kippax and Scholes and the advowson of the church of Kippax, Yorkshire with his great nephew, Edmund de Lacy, for the manor of Elmsall (in South Kirkby), Yorkshire. He married (3rd) shortly before 17 Jan. 1252/3 ELEANOR DE FERRERS, widow of William de Vaux, of Tharston and Houghton, Norfolk (died testate shortly before 5 Dec. 1252), and daughter of William de Ferrers, Knt., 5th Earl of Derby, by his lst wife, Sibyl, 3rd daughter of William Marshal, Knt., 4th Earl of Pembroke (or Striguil), hereditary Master Marshal [see FERRERS 7 for her ancestry]. They had no issue. Eleanor was co-heiress in 1245 to her uncle, Anselm Marshal, 9th Earl of Pembroke. In 1253 he granted the manor of Ware, Hertfordshire to his younger brother, Robert de Quincy, to hold of him and his heirs at the yearly rent of half a mark and by service of a knight's fee. In 1257 the king appointed him a joint commissioner for composing the disputes between King Alexander III of Scotland and certain of Alexander's nobles. He fought in Wales 1258, and the same year, was one of the twenty-four elected by the Barons for the observance of the Provisions of Oxford. About 1260 he granted a charter to the burgesses of Brackley, Northamptonshire, and made many gifts to the Hospital there, including that of a sarcophagus, 1240, to lie on the right side of the heart of his mother, Margaret de Quincy, and to be filled three times a year with winnowed corn for the use of the Hospital. About 1264 he granted Nicholas de Clacmanan, the king's brewer, the whole land of the constabulary of Clacmannan. At an unknown date, he granted to the monks of Lindores Abbey that they and their men should have a free road through the middle of his wood at Kinloch near Collessie and through the whole of his land as far as to the moor of Eden for heather and through the middle of the moor for peats. At an unknown date, he likewise confirmed the grant of his father to St. Andrews Priory of three silver marks annually from the mill of Leuchars, Fife. SIR ROGER DE QUINCY, 2nd Earl of Winchester, Constable of Scotland, died 25 April 1264, and was probably buried at Brackley, Northamptonshire. His widow, Eleanor, married (3rd) before 8 Sept. 1267 (as his 2nd wife) ROGER DE LEYBOURNE, Knt., of Elham, Kent, Steward of the King's Household, Warden of the Cinque Ports, Sheriff of Kent, Warden of the Forests beyond Trent, son of Roger de Leybourne, of Leybourne, Kent, by Eleanor, daughter and co-heiress of Stephen de Turnham. SIR ROGER DE LEYBOURNE died 5 Nov. 1271. Eleanor, Countess of Winchester, died 16 October 1274.
      Bridges Hist. & Antiqs. of Northamptonshire 1 (1791): 526, 544-545; 2 (1791): 390. Nichols Hist. & Antiqs. of Leicester 2(1) (1795): Appendix: 97 (confirmation charter of Roger de Quincy), 116-117 (charters of Roger de Quincy, Earl of Winchester); 3(1) (1800): 121. Blomefield Essay towards a Top. Hist. of Norfolk 6 (1807): 134-135. Baker Hist. & Antiqs. of Northampton 1 (1822-30): 544-545 (Mandeville-Fitz Peter-Bohun ped.), 563 (Beaumont-Quincy ped.). Dugdale Monasticon Anglicanum 4 (1823): 493 (charter of Roger de Quincy, Earl of Winchester; charter witnessed by Robert de Quincy his brother). Clutterbuck Hist. & Antiqs. of Hertford 3 (1827): 287-288 (Beaumont-Quincy ped.). Burke Dict. of the Peerages... Extinct, Dormant & in Abeyance (1831): 63-65 (sub Bohun), 442-443 (sub Quincy). Liber Sancte Marie de Metros 1 (1837): 246. Liber Cartarum Sancte Crucis (1840): 49-50, 67-68 (charter of Roger de Quincy). Bruce Liber Cartarum Prioratus Sancti Andree in Scotia (1841): 232-236, 255-257 (charters of Roger de Quincy), 336-337 (charters of Roger de Quincy). Turnbull Chartularies of Balmenno & Lindores: Liber Sancte Marie de Balmorinach (1841): 29 (charter of Roger de Quincy), 60-61; Liber Sancte Marie de Lundoris (1841): 41-42. Extracta e Variis Cronicis Scocie (1842): 94-95. Lyon Hist. of St. Andrews 2 (1843): 286-287. Innes Liber S. Marie de Dryburgh (1847): 99-102 (charters of Roger de Quincy). Laing Desc. Cat. Impressions from Ancient Scottish Seals (1850): 113 (seal of Roger de Quinci, Earl of Winchester. An exceedingly beautiful seal. An armed knight on horseback at full speed; a drawn sword in his right hand, and his left protecting his body with a long pointed shield, much curved. Over a chain armour a surcoat very gracefully disposed. On the shield are five mascles, 2, 2 and 1, of which there are twelve on the housings of the horse. Beneath the horse is a wyvern. Legend: "SIGILL. ROGER[l DE QUINC1] COMITIS WINCESTRIE." Counter Seal. A knight on foot, habited precisely as in the former, in chain armour and surcoat, in combat with a lion, rearing on his hind-legs. On the top of the helmet is a wyvern; and in the lower part of the seal a rose of six leaves. Appended to a charter by Roger de Quinci granting to the Abbey of Holyrood permission to grind all corn required for the Abbey, at his mill at Tranent, free of multure. Legend: "SIGILL. ROGERI DE QUINCI CONSTABULARII SCOCIE." A.D. 1250. - Panmure Charters.). Giles Matthew Paris's English Hist. 2 (1853): 533 (sub AD. 1252: "At this time died, at Groby, a manor belonging to the earl of Winchester, not far from Leicester, the countess, wife of the said earl, and daughter of the earl of Hereford. Dying young, she left no offspring by the earl, as was also the case with his former wife, the daughter of Alan of Galway, who died previously, leaving him only female children. The first mentioned countess died on the 20th of Oct., and was buried at Brackley, where the earl's former wife was also buried. The house at that place had been founded by his ancestors; and for those reasons he chose it for his wife's burial-place. He then at once espoused another woman, hoping still to obtain from the Lord the favour of begetting a son."). Notes & Queries 3rd Ser. 2 (1862): 466-467. Seton Law & Practice of Docs. Heraldry in Scotland (1863): 192-194 ("Saer [de Quincy]'s son and successor was Roger de Quinci, second Earl of Winchester ... His beautiful seal (1250) exhibits a shield of arms totally different from that of his father, viz., five (or more probably seven) mascles, which also appear, along with the fess and chevronels (in two different shields), upon the seal of his widowed mother, Margaret, daughter and co-heiress of Robert de Bréteuil, Earl of Leicester. Beneath his equestrian figure is a wyvern, which is also placed - as a species of crest - on top of the helmet of the knight, on foot, in combat with a rampant lion, represented on the counter-seal."). Ellis Antiqs. of Heraldry (1869): 195-196. Jour. British Arch. Assoc. 27 (1871): 179-191. Mundy et al. Vis. of Nottingham 1569 & 1614 (H.S.P. 4) (1871): 80-81 (charter of Roger). Notes & Queries 4th Ser. 11 (1873): 290-291 (Cartulary of Garendon Abbey: "Item dominus Rogerus de Quyncy, Comes Wintonie, filius et heres predicti Saeri de Quyncy et Margarete Sororis Roberti Comes Leyc', obiit die Sanctii Marci Evangeliste [25 April] anno domine MoCCmoLXIIIIto [1264], et sepultus est apud Gerendoniam."), 290-291 (Simon de Montfort, Earl of Leicester, styled "kinsman" [consanguineo] by Roger de Quincy, Earl of Winchester in undated charter). Fourth Rpt. (Hist. MSS Comm. 3) (1874): 460. Fraser Lennox 2 (1874): 13-15. Hazlitt Tenures of Land & Customs of Manors (1874): 41-42. Matthew of Paris Chronica Majora 2 (Rolls Ser. 57) (1874): 642-644; 5 (1880): 341. Skene Liber Pluscardensis 1 (Historians of Scotland 7) (1877): 72-74, 99-100, 136-137; 2 (Historians of Scotland 10) (1880): 50-52, 102-103. Turner Cal. Charters & Rolls: Bodleian Lib. (1878): 299 (charter of Roger de Quincy, Earl of Winchester). Clark Earls, Earldom, & Castle of Pembroke (1880): 69-75. Procs. Soc. Antiquaries of Scotland 14 (1880): 338-346 (charter of Roger de Quincy). Annual Rpt. of the Deputy Keeper 42 (1881): 650, 658. Doyle Official Baronage of England 3 (1886): 7 (sub Pembroke), 694-695 (sub Winchester). Genealogist n.s. 5 (1889): 130 (seal of Roger de Leybume temp. Henry III - A shield of arms: Six lions rampant ensigned with a banner inscribed with a cross. Legend: Sigillum Rogeri de Leybume.); n.s. 7(1890): 17-21. Birch Cat. Seals in the British Museum 2 (1892): 342 (seal of Roger de Quincy, Earl of Winchester dated c.1250 - Obverse. To the right. In armour: hauberk of mail, surcoat, fiat-topped helmet with vizor down, sword, shield of arms. Horse galloping, caparisoned. Arms: seven mascles, three, three, and one [QUINCY]. Below the horse a wyvern. Reverse. The Earl of armour, as in the obverse, with the wyvern on the helmet for a crest, standing, turned to the left, in combat with a lion springing upon his shield. In base, a six-foiled rose. Beaded borders). Jeayes Desc. Cat. of the Charters & Muniments in the Possession of the Rt. Hon. Lord Fitzhardinge (1892):118. D.N.B. 33 (1893): 209-212 (biog. of Roger de Leyboume); 16(1909): 556-559 (biog. of Saer de Quincy). Fry & Fry Abs. of Feet of Fines Rel. Dorset 1 (Dorset Rec. Soc. 5) (1896): 151-152. Somersetshire Pleas 1 (Somerset Rec. Soc. 11) (1897): 380-381. Holmes Chartulary of St. John of Pontefract 1 (Yorkshire Arch. Soc. Recs. 25) (1899): 74-75. C.CR. 1272-1279 (1900): 225-226. Procs. Soc. of Antiqs. of Scotland 3rd Ser. 10 (1900): 241-251. Dowden Chartulary of the Abbey of Lindores 1195-1479 (Scottish Hist. Soc. 42) (1903): 175-176 (charter of Roger de Quincy), 242, 276-277. Cal. IPM 1 (1904): 187-188, 233, 254-258. Macdonald Scottish Armorial Seals (1904): 280-281 (seal of Roger de Quincy, Earl of Winchester: A knight in chain armour with surcoat and cylindrical helmet, a sword in right hand and a shield on left arm, bearing arms: - Mascaly, or eight mascales (3,3, and 2). Horse with caparisons also bearing mascles, a wyvern between its legs. Legend: SIGILL: ROGERI : DE: QVINCI : COMITIS : WINCESTRIE :), 280-281 (Counterseal. A knight on foot, facing dexter, in chain armour with surcoat and cylindrical helmet latticed in front, thereon a wyvern for crest, a sword in left hand and a shield on right arm charged with mascles, combating a lion on dexter. Between them in base a rose of six petals. Legend: SIGILL: ROGERI : DE : QVINCI : CONSTABVLARII : SCOCIE :). Clark English Reg. of Godstow Nunnery 1 (1905): 205-206 (charter of Roger de Quincy). MSS of the Duke of Rutland 4 (Hist. MSS Comm. 24) (1905): 9 (charter of Richard de Harcourt dated c.1250; charter witnessed by Sir Roger de Quincy, Earl of Winchester, Sir Robert de Quincy, and Philip Lovell), 166 (charter of Roger de Quincy). Wrottesley Peds. from the Plea Rolls (1905): 548. Desc. Cat. Ancient Deeds 5 (1906): 508 (Philip Luvell [Lovel] styled "kinsman" [cognatus] by Roger de Quincy, earl of Winchester, in 1258). VCH Northampton 2 (1906): 151-153. Scots Peerage 4 (1907): 139-143 (sub Galloway). Lindsay et al. Charters, Bulls & Other Docs. Rel the Abbey of Inchaffray (Scottish Hist. Soc. 56) (1908): lxxxvi-lxxxix, 191 (charter of Roger de Quincy), 283. Yorkshire Deeds 1 (Yorkshire Arch. Soc. Recs. 39) (1909): 68. VCH Hertford 3 (1912): 386 (Quincy arms: Gules, seven voided lozenges or); 4 (1971): 455. Turner Cal. Feet of Fines Rel. Huntingdon (Cambridge Antiq. Soc. 80 Ser. 37) (1913): 15, 24-25, 29. Grosseteste Rotuli Roberti Grosseteste Episcopi Lincolniensis (Lincoln Rec. Soc. 11) (1914): 8, 179-180, 387-388, 404, 412, 431, 439. C.P. 4 (1916): 197; 10 (1945): 376-377 (sub Pembroke); 12(2) (1959): 751-754 (sub Winchester). Genealogist n.s. 34 (1918): 113-114, 180; 36 (1920