Chris & Julie Petersen's Genealogy

John de Burgh

Male 1210 - Abt 1275  (65 years)


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  • Name John de Burgh 
    Born 1210  of Burgh, Norfolk, England Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Gender Male 
    Died Abt 7/07 Jan 1274/5 
    Person ID I6858  Petersen-de Lanskoy
    Last Modified 27 May 2021 

    Father Hubert de Burgh,   d. 12 May 1243, Banstead, Surrey, England Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Mother Beatrice de Warenne,   d. Abt 12 Dec 1214 
    Family ID F3048  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

    Family Hawise de Lanvallay,   b. of Walkern, Hertfordshire, England Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 1249 
    Married Bef 1227 
    Last Modified 28 May 2021 
    Family ID F3052  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

  • Notes 
    • RESEARCH_NOTES:
      1. “Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families,” Douglas Richardson (2013):
      “JOHN DE BURGH, Knt., of Burgh, Cawston, and Newton, Norfolk, Aspley Guise, Bedfordshire, Soharn, Cambridgeshire, Hornby and Melling, Lancashire, Sotherton, Suffolk, Banstead, Surrey, Portslade, Sussex, Long Compton, Warwickshire, etc., Constable of the Tower of London and Colchester Castle, Essex, and, in right of his wife, of Walkern and Datchworth, Hertfordshire, Blagrave (in Lambourn), Berkshire, Little Abington, Cambridgeshire, Great Bromley, Lexden, and Stanway, Essex, Hamerton, Huntingdonshire, Chalk, Kent, Wakerley, Northamptonshire, Camel and Kingsbury (in Milbome Port), Somerset, etc., son and heir by his father's 1st marriage, born in 1210. He married before 1227 HAWISE DE LANVALLAY, daughter and heiress of William de Lanvallay, of Walkern and Datchworth, Hertfordshire, Blagrave (in Lambourn), Berkshire, etc., by Maud, daughter of Gilbert Pecche [see LANVALLAY 3 for her ancestry], They had one son, John, Knt. In 1234 the king forgave John and his wife, Hawise, a debt of £125 8d which was formerly owed by Hawise de Lanvallay, late grandmother of Hawise de Burgh. Sometime in or after 1234 he sold the manor of Westley (in Wesdey Waterless), Cambridgeshire to Walter de Crek. About 1235 Adam, Abbot of Colchester quitclaimed to John and his wife Hawise five shillings of rent in a mill called Northmelne. In 1238-9 he and his wife, Hawise, sued Alice de Vipont for land in Eton, Bedfordshire. In 1239-40 he and his wife, Hawise, subinfeudated the manor and advowson of Little Abington, Cambridgeshire to Hugh de Vaux. In 1240 he and his wife, Hawise, claimed land in Sandy, Bedfordshire, as part of her inheritance from her great-grandmother, Gunnor de Saint Clare, wife of William de Lanvallay. The same year he and his wife, Hawise, conveyed the manor of Datchworth, Hertfordshire to Gilbert de Wauton for the rent of a pair of gilt spurs or 6d. at Easter. In 1241 he owed relief for the manor of Portslade, Sussex, which his half-sister, Margaret, held of the Earl de Warenne. In 1241 Richard de Cheveley essoined Adam de Saint Martins, attorney of Hawise wife of John de Burgh, in a plea of land in Cambridgeshire. Sometime in the period, 1242-59, he granted 52 1/2 acres assart within the hedge of his park at Cawston, Norfolk to Baldwin de Cankwell. In 1243 Joan wife of William de Bonville sued John and his wife, Hawise, in a plea regarding land in Somerset and in a plea of customs and service. His wife, Hawise, died in 1249, and was buried in the Chapter House at St. John's Abbey, Colchester, Essex. In 1253 he granted to Baldwin de Cankwell a messuage with a croft and 30 acres of land in Cawston, Norfolk, including the fields of Oulton and Moretoft. In 1260 he was granted free warren in his estates in Milbome Port, Somerset. In 1262 John de Burgh the elder leased lands in Soham, Fordham, Landwade, Wykes, Hanney, etc., Cambridgeshire to Sir Philip Basset for a term of 16 years for the sum of 400l. in hand. In 1269 he presented to the church of Wakerley, Northamptonshire. In 1270 he gave the manor of East Chalk, Kent and the advowson of Chartre (in Little Hallingbury), Essex to Bermondsey Abbey, Surrey. In 1272-3 the king ordered the sheriff of Surrey to take into the king's hands the manor of Banstead, Surrey, which John de Burgh, senior, sold without license to William de Apuldrefield. In 1272-3 Peter de Huntingfend arraigned a jury against him touching a tenement in Lexden and Stanway, Essex. In 1272-3 he arraigned a jury against Joan de Huntingfeud touching a tenement in Hatfield Peverel, Essex. In Dec. 1273 he granted the king the manors of Soham, Cambridgeshire, Winfrith Newburgh, Dorset, Eastwood and Rayleigh, Essex, Cawston, Norfolk, Wheatley, Nottinghamshire, Camel and Kingsbury, Somerset, Nayland, Suffolk, Banstead, Surrey, and Long Compton, Warwickshire, he retaining a life interest in the said manors, plus the grant of lands by the king to the value of £300 a year to hold for life. In 1273 it he conveyed the manor of Stanway, Essex to Thomas de Belhous and his wife, Floria. In Jan. 1274 he was appointed to the farm of the dty of London. SIR JOHN DE BURGH died testate shortly before 7 Jan. 1274/5.
      Brooke Discoverie of Certaine Errours (1724): 36-37. Morant Hist. & Antiqs. of Essex 1 (1768): 268, 440-441; 2 (1768): 190, 511-512. Leland Collectanea 2 (1770): 414. Bridges Hist. & Antiqs. of Northamptonshire 2 (1791): 341-344. Clutterbuck Hist. & Antiqs. of Hertford 2 (1821): 461-467 (Lanvallei ped.). Dugdale Monasticon Anglicanum 5(1825): 88, 90. Chauncy Hist. Antiqs. of Hertfordshire 2 (1826): 85-88. Ireland Hist. of the Count of Kent 4 (1830): 209. Roberts Excerpta é rotulis finium in Turd Londinensi 1 (1835): 269, 406. Palgrave Antient Kalendars & Inventories of the Treasury of His Majesty's Exchequer 1 (1836): 45-46. ColL Top. et Gen. 7 (1841): 273-278. Arch. Aeliana n.s. 1 (1857): 23-24. Jour. British Arch. Assoc. 1858 (1858): 282-284 (undated deed of John de Burgh, with reproduction of his appended seal taken from a collection of drawings of seals in the Herald's College; seal displays masculy armes, with a label of five points, and the legend "Sigillum Johannis de Burgo."). Top. & Gen. 3 (1858): 187. Herald & Genealogist 4 (1867): 337-340. Watson Tendring Hundred in the Olden Time (1877): 161-164. Annual Rpt. of the Deputy Keeper 42 (1881): 572, 599; 43 (1882): 408-409. Wrottesley Feet of Fines: Henry III (Colls. Hist. Staffs. 4) (1883): 238-259. Doyle Official Baronage of England 2 (1886): 271-274 (sub Kent). Walter Rye Pedes Finium or Fines Rel. Cambridge (1891): 21, 40. Birch Cat. Seals in the British Museum 2 (1892): 259 (seal of John de Burgh dated 1269 - Obverse. To the right In armour; hauberk of mail, surcoat, flat-topped helmet, sword, shield of arms slung by a band over the night shoulder. Horse caparisoned. Arms: lozengy, [gu.] and vaire [BURGH]. Reverse. Small round counterseaL A shield of arms, as described in the obverse), 581 (seal of John de Burgh dated 1261 - A shield of arms: lozengy [gu. and] vaire [BURGH]). Green Feet of Fines for Somerset 1 (Somerset Rec. Soc. 6) (1892): 74, 163, 370, 378-380. Moore Cartularium Monasterii Sancti Johannis Baptiste de Colcestria 2 (1897): 204 (undated charter of John de Burgh), 205 (undated charter of John de Burgh and his wife, Hawise; charter mentions Maud de Lanvaley mother of Hawise his wife; charter witnessed by William de Say and Geoffrey de Say), 403-405 (undated charter of John de Burgh son of Hubert de Burgh), 472-473, 518-519 (final concord dated 1235 between John de Burgh and Hawise his wife and Adam Abbot of Colchester), 599. Somersetshire Pleas 1 (Somerset Rec. Soc. 11) (1897): 144. Feet of Fines for Essex 1 (1899): 109. Desc. Cat. Ancient Deeds 3 (1900): 130, 159-160; 4 (1902): 21. Gerard Particular Desc. of Somerset (Somerset Rec. Soc. 15) (1900): 90-91. C.P.R. 1272-1281 (1901): 41, 53, 145. Salzman Feet of Fines Rel. Sussex 1 (Sussex Rec. Soc. 2) (1902): 118. Parker Cal. of Lancashire Assize Rolls 1 (Lancs. & Cheshire Rec. Soc. 47) (1904): 124. Rigg et al. Cal. Plea Rolls of the Exchequer of the Jews 1 (1905): 65, 80, 85, 203. Wrottesley Peds. from the Plea Rolls (1905): 387-388, 486. CCh.R 2 (1906): 27. C.P.R. 1258-1266 (1910): 224-225. VCH Surrey 3 (1911): 254. VCH Bedford 3 (1912): 190, 339 (Burgh arms: Gules, seven lozenges vair). VCH Hertford 3 (1912): 78-79, 152, 154. VCH Worcester 3 (1913): 6-7. VCH Lancaster 8 (1914): 192. Book of Fees 1 (1920): 269. Farrer Feudal Cambridgeshire (1920): 55-56, 212-215. Fowler Cal. IPM 1 (Bedfordshire Hist. Rec. Soc. 5) (1920): 225-226. VCH Berkshire 4 (1924): 256. Fowler Justices in Eyre at Bedford 1240 (Bedfordshire Hist. Rec. Soc. 9) (1925): 78, 85, 89, 92, 124-125, 127, 135. English Hist. Rev. 50 (1935): 418-432. VCH Huntingdon 3 (1936): 66-69. Taylor Recs, of the Barony & Honour of the Rape of Lewis (Sussex Rec. Soc. 44) (1939): 73. VCH Sussex 7 (1940): 229, 275, 283. Clay Early Yorkshire Charters 8 (1949): 26-35. VCH Warwick 5 (1949): 52-58. Ellis Hubert de Burgh (1952). Paget Baronage of England (1957) 106: 1 (chart only), 314: 3. Sanders English Baronies (1960): 92. Barnes & Slade Medieval Misc. for Doris Mary Stenton (Pipe Roll Soc. as. 36) (1962): 78,80. Rigg et al. Cal. Plea Rolls of the Exchequer of the Jews 4 (1972): 60-62, 70-71, 78, 82. VCH Somerset 3 (1974): 204-205; 7 (1999): 141-143. Great Roll of the Pipe Michaelmas 1219 (Pipe Roll Soc. n.s. 42) (1976): 173. VCH Cambridge 6 (1978): 6-7, 14, 177-182; 10 (2002): 500. Ancient Deeds - Ser. A 1 (List & Index Soc. 151) (1978): 102-103. VCH Essex 9 (1994): 242, 394; 10 (2001): 263-266. Cooper Oxfordshire Eyre 1241 (Oxfordshire Rec. Soc. 56) (1989): 15. Norfolk Rec. Office: Bulwer of Heydon, Add’l, MC 341/8,706 x 4A (grants by John de Burgh son of Hubert de Burgh formerly Earl of Kent to Baldwin de Cankwell) (available at www.a2a.org.uk/search/index.asp).”

      2. “Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families,” Douglas Richardson (2013):
      “BEATRICE DE WARENNE, daughter and heiress. She married (1st) before 1194 DOUN BARDOLF, of Ruskington, Lincolnshire. They had one son, William, Knt. DOUN BARDOLF died shortly before 24 Feb. 1204/5. She married (2nd) RALPH ___, whose identity is unknown. In Michaelmas 1209 his widow, Beatrice, accounted for 3100 marks to be paid within four years for having her father's lands and tenements which were her inheritance, as well as reasonable dower from the tenements of Doun Bardolf formerly her husband. She married (3rd) HUBERT DE BURGH, Knt., of Henlow, Bedfordshire, Aspley Guise, Buckinghamshire, Soham, Cambridgeshire, Corfe Mullen and Winford, Dorset, Kingsdown, Newington, and Tunstall, Kent, Beeston, Burgh, Cawston, Newton, Rougham, Norfolk, Sotherton, Suffolk, Banstead and Sheen, Surrey, Compton, Warwickshire, etc., Chamberlain to John, Count of Mortain [future King John], 1198-9, King's Chamberlain, 1199-1205, Sheriff of Herefordshire, 1200/1, 1215, Sheriff of Somersetshire and Dorsetshire, 1200-1, Constable of Windsor Castle, 1201, Constable of Dover Castle and Warden of the Cinque Ports, 1201, 1215-24, Warden of the Marches of Wales, 1201, Sheriff of Cornwall, 1202, Sheriff of Berkshire, 1202-4, Sheriff of Lincolnshire, 1208-13, Seneschal of Poitou, 1213-15, Justiciar of England, 1215-32, Sheriff of Kent, 1215-17, Sheriff of Surrey, 1215-16, Warden of the Exchange and Mint, 1215, Sheriff of Norfolk and Suffolk, 1217-27, Sheriff of Westmorland, 1228-34, Justiciar of Ireland, 1232, Constable of the Tower of London, 1232, and, in right of his 1st wife, of Wormegay, North Runcton, and Stow Bardolf, Norfolk, and Finborough, Suffolk, Fletching and Portslade, Sussex, son and heir of [?Walter] de Burgh, by his wife, Alice [see BURGH 1 for his parentage]. They had one son, John, Knt. In or before 1198 he became Chamberlain to John, Count of Mortain [afterwards King John]. At John's accession to the throne, he became the most important official in the country, and received many grants of lands, wardships and offices, including Shrievaltys successively of eleven counties, and the honour of Camel, Somerset formerly belonging to William de Roumare. Sometime before 1202, he gave the church of East Camel, Somerset to Cleeve Abbey, Somerset. He held the castle of Chinon for King John, but after a year's siege, he was obliged to evacuate it. In the fight to break through the French lines was severely wounded and taken prisoner 23 June 1205, after which he was in disgrace and did not appear in public affairs for several years. He temporarily lost the honour of Camel, Somerset between 1205 and 1207, but recovered possession and held it until 1228, when he exchanged it for other royal lands. His wife, Beatrice, died shortly before 12 Dec. 1214. At the meeting at Runnymede he sided with King John, and was named in Magna Carta, and was one of those appointed to uphold the twenty-five Barons who were made custodians thereof. In 1216 he defended Dover Castle against Prince Louis and the Barons. In August 1217 he defeated a French fleet off Dover at the Battle of South Foreland. In Sept. 1217 he was a party to the treaty of peace made by Prince Louis at Lambeth before he left England. Hubert married (2nd) c.17 Sept. 1217 ISABEL OF GLOUCESTER, Countess of Gloucester, lady of Glamorgan, divorced wife of King John of England [see ENGLAND 5], and widow of Geoffrey de Mandeville, Knt., 5th Earl of Essex (died 23 Feb. 1215/6) [see ESSEX 2.i], and youngest daughter and co-heiress of William Fitz Robert, Earl of Gloucester, by Hawise, daughter of Robert of Meulan, Knt., 1st Earl of Leicester [see GLOUCESTER 4 for her ancestry]. They had no issue. His wife, Isabel, died 14 October 1217, and was buried in Canterbury Cathedral Church. He married (3rd) at York, Yorkshire in June 1221 MARGARET (or MARGERY) OF SCOTLAND [see SCOTLAND 4.iii], daughter of William the Lion, King of Scots, Earl of Huntingdon, by Ermengarde, daughter of Richard de Beaumont, Vicomte of Beaumont-en-Maine [see SCOTLAND 4 for her ancestry]. They had one daughter, Margaret. In 1221 he demanded that the royal castles, which had been seized by the Barons, and some of which were in the hands of foreigners likes Faukes de Breaute, should be restored to the Crown. In 1221 he gave the advowson of the church of Portslade, Sussex to Bradsole Abbey. About 1221 he founded a house of Dominican friars near Ludgate in London, and gave them land in Holborn for their house. In 1222 he suppressed a riot in London with great severity. In 1222 Matthew nephew of Geoffrey Wake fined 200 marks with him for a quitclaim to Ebbesborne Wake, Wiltshire. In 1223 the Earl of Chester with Faukes de Breaute and others combined against him, but he overcame them; in August 1224 he captured Breautes castle of Bedford and secured his banishment. He was granted a market at Burgh next Aylsham, Norfolk in 1226. He was created Earl of Kent 19 Feb. 1226/7, entailed on the issue of Hubert by his 3rd wife, Margaret In 1227 he and his wife, Margaret, were granted an unspecified number of fairs at three manors, including Nayland, Suffolk. In March 1227 the king granted him the manor of Upper Arleigh, Staffordshire, which formerly belonged to his brother, Thomas de Burgh, Knt. In 1228 he and his wife, Margaret, were granted unspecified markets and fairs at four manors, including Hadleigh, Essex and Haughley and Nayland, Suffolk. In 1229 Roger de Dauntsey, Knt., and his wife, Maud de Mandeville, Countess of Essex and Hereford, sold him one moiety of the manor of Long Compton, Warwickshire, including the capital messuage. In October 1229 he and his wife, Margaret, were granted the manor, castle, and honour of Knaresborough, Yorkshire; he also had a grant of the honour of Eye, Suffolk. He accompanied the king on his expedition to Poitou and Gascony in 1230, for the failure of which he was blamed. In 1231 he was granted a weekly market and a yearly fair at Long Compton, Warwickshire. In 1231 Anketil Mallore was summoned by Earl Hubert to state by what warrant he held the manor of [Upper] Arleigh, Staffordshire, which was the demesne of the king, and which the said Earl had by gift of the king. The king acknowledged that the Earl was in seisin, and had been disseised by him. Thus, it was considered that the Earl should recover his seisin, and that Anketill was in mercy. In early 1231 or early 1232 the pope set up an inquiry into Hubert's marriage on the grounds that Margaret his 3rd wife was related to his 2nd wife. Hubert's anger was widely known and provoked a papal letter of rebuke 9 June 1232. King Henry chafed at the restraints which his powerful minister imposed on him, and found an excuse to break him, depriving him of the Justiciarship. He was ordered to surrender the castles of Dover, Canterbury, Rochester, Windsor, Odiham, Hertford, Colchester, the Tower, and all his other castles. He was pardoned by the king in 1234; his lands were restored to him and he recovered his earldom. However, for the rest of his life he had little part in public affairs. In 1238 Huward de Bikelegh brought a suit against him for seizure of the fair at Holwell, Somerset. SIR HUBERT DE BURGH, Earl of Kent, died testate at Banstead, Surrey shortly before 5 May 1243. His widow, Margaret, Countess of Kent, died 15 Nov. 1259. He and his wife, Margaret, were buried in the church of the Black Friars, London.
      Brooke Discoverie of Certaine Errours (1724): 36-37. Martene & Durand Veterum scriptorum et monumentorum 1 (1724): 1253 (letter of Hubert de Burgh). Morice Memoires pour Servir de Preuves a l'Hist. de Bretagne 1 (1742): 876-877 (letter of Hubert de Burgh). Morant Hist. & Antiqs. of Essex 1 (1768): 268. Watson Memoirs of the Ancient Earls of Warren and Surrey 1 (1782): 66-76. Throsby Thoroton's History of Nottinghamshire 3 (1790): 8-11. Blomefield Essay towards a Top. Hist. of Notfolk 3 (1806): 39-41 & 10 (1809): 263-269 (author misidentifies parents of Earl Hubert de Burgh as Reyner de Burgh, and his wife, Joan, daughter and coheir of John Pouchard, lord of North Tudenharn, Norfolk). Cobbett's Complete Collection of State Trials 1 (1809): 13-22 (articles of accusation against Hubert de Burgh). Baker Hist. & Antiqs. of Northampton 1 (1822-30): 544-545 (Mandeville-Fitz Peter ped.). Dunkin Hist. & Antiqs. of the Hundreds of Bullington & Ploughley 1 (1823): 138. Dugdale Monasticon Anglicanum 5 (1825): 325 (charter of Hubert de Burgh, Earl of Kent; charter witnessed by Walter de Burgh); 6(1) (1830): 74 (gifts by Sir Hubert de Burgh of the churches of Oulton, Norfolk and Badingham, Suffolk to Walsingham Priory), 171 (charter of Beatrice de Warenne naming her late husband, Ralph; her parents, William de Warenne and Beatrice his wife; and her grandparents, Reynold de Warenne and his wife, Alice); 6(2) (1830): 942 (two charters of Hubert de Burgh). James Maidment Analecta Scotica: Collections illus. of the Civil, Ecclesiastical, and Literary Hist. of Scotland (1834): 229-230 (charter of Margaret, Countess of Kent, widow of Hubert de Burgh, formerly Earl of Kent, in which she styles herself "sister of the King of Scotland" [soror regis Scotie]). Roberts Excerpta è rotulis finium in Turri Londinensi asservatis, Henrico Tertio rege 1 (1835): 405-406, 465. Stevenson Chronica de Madras (1835): 138 (sub A.D. 1221: "Eodem anno tradita est domina Margareta, filia pie recordationis Willelmi regis Scotie, et soror domini Alexandri regis, domino Huberto de Burc, justiciario Anglie, scilicet et Scotie ..."). Gilbert Parochial Hist. of Cornwall 3 (1838): 350 (charter of Hubert de Burgh, King's Chamberlain). Hodgson Hist. of Northumberland Pt. 2 Vol. 3 (1840): 6-8 (ped.). Extracta e variis Cronicis Scocie (1842): 92 (sub A.D. 1220: "Humbertus de Burgo, justiciarius Anglie, disponsauit Margaret = sororem regis Alexandri apud Londone, anno predicto."). Giles Roger of Wendover's Flowers of Hist.: The Hist. of England from the Descent of the Saxons to A.D. 1235 2 (1849): 373-375. Thorpe Florentii Wigorniensis Monachi Chronicon Ex Chmnicis 2 (1849): 174 (sub 1225: "Johannes, episcopus Eliensis, obiit II. non. Maii [6 Maii]; successit ei Galfridus, frater Huberti de Burgo justitiarius"), 174 (sub 1228: "Galfridus de Burgo, episcopus Eliensis, obiit XVI. kal. Januar. [17 Dec.]"), 179 (sub 1243: "Hubertus de Burgo, comes Cantin, obiit III. id. Maii [13 May]."). Sussex Arch. Colls. 6 (1853): 107-128 ([Alice], Countess of Eu, styled "niece" [neptis] by William de Warenne, 6th Earl of Surrey, and "kinswoman" [cognate] of Hubert de Burgh, Earl of Kent, in a letter dated pre-1227); 11 (1859): 84 (Warenne ped.). Jour. British Arch. Assoc. 1858 (1858): 282-284 (reproduction of an early seal of Hubert de Burgh, king's chamberlain, dated pre-4215 which exhibits three lions passant in pale; a 2nd seal dated 1220-27 appended to two different docs. exhibits his well known arms, masculy). Shirley Royal & Other Hist. Letters Ill. of King Henry III 1 (Rolls Ser. 27) (1862): 42 ([Alice], Countess of Eu, styled "your kinswoman" [neptis vestri] by Earl William de Warenne in letter to Hubert de Burgh dated 1219), 79-80 (letter of William Brewer to Hubert de Burgh, Justiciar of England), 523-526 (docs. Rel. to the fall of Hubert de Burgh). Luard Annales Monastici 2 (Rolls Ser. 36) (1865): 282 (Annals of Waverley sub A.D. 1215: "Obiit Gaufridus de Mandevilla comes de Essexia."), 289 (Annales de Waverleia sub A.D. 1217: "Obiit Isabel comitissa Gloucestrin"); 3 (Rolls Ser. 36) (1866): 45 (Dunstable Annals sub AD. 1214: "... ex quibus miles unus Galfridum de Mandevilla ludendo percussit, et mortuus est. Qui paulo ante guerram Johannam, comitissam Gloucestrin, repudiatam a Johanne, rage Angliæ (archiepiscopo Burdegalensi divortium celebrante,) duxit in uxorem, licet invitus … Cui sine Ellis mortuo, successit Willelmus frater ejus, et relictam ipsius duxit Hubertus de Burgo, justiciarius Anglin; guæ post paucos dies decessit, et apud Cantuariam sepelitur."), 102-103 (Annals of Dunstable sub A.D. 1226: "Eodem anno Hubertus de Burgo, justiciarius domini regis, factus est comes Cantiæ; et Remendus, nepos ejus, duxit in uxorem comitissam Essexiæ; et filia ejus nupsit primogenito filio comitis Glocestriæ."), 128 (Dunstable Annals sub A.D. 1232: "Hubertus de Burgo, justiciarius Angliæ, conventus super peregrinatione sanctæ Crucis per literas Papæ, per absolutionem Pandulfi legatt tunc Angliæ, se rationabiliter expedivit. Super divortio vero tertiæ uxoris suæ, scilicet filin regis Scotiæ, conventus, super eo quod erat consanguinea secundæ uxoris sun, scilicet comitissæ Gloverniæ ...."); 4 (Rolls Series 36) (1869): 419 (Annals of Worcester sub A.D. 1226: "T[homas de Blunville] nepos Huberti de Burgo consecratur in episcopum Norwicensem Dominica proxima ante Natale Domini [20 December]."). Matthew of Paris Matthai Parisiensis 2 (Rolls Ser. 44) (1866): 477 (sub A.D. 1243: "Et eodem anno, iiio idus Maii [12 May], post multas, quas in mudlo toleraverat patienter, persecutiones, comes Canciæ Hubertus de Burgo, de quo multa praescribuntur, laudabiliter diem clausit extremum apud Banstude, manerium suum. Et delatum est corpus suum tumulandurn Londoniis, in domo fratrum Prædicatorum, quibus vivens multa bona contulerat, et corpus veneranter intumulandum delegaverat."). Herald & Gen. 4 (1867): 337-340. Cal. Docs. Rel. Ireland 1 (1875): 329 (Hubert de Burgh, Earl of Kent styled "uncle" of Richard de Burgh, of Connacht in Ireland in 1234). Clark Land of Morgan (1883): 64-166. Wrottesley Feet of Fines: Henry III (Colls. Hist. Staffs. 4) (1883): 238-259. Colls. Hist. Staffs. 6(1) (1885): 29-36. Rye Short Cal. of Feet of Fines for Norfolk 1 (1885): 62. Doyle Official Baronage of England 2 (1886): 271-274 (sub Kent). Archaeologia 50 (1887): 494. Luard Flores Historiarum 2 (Rolls Ser. 95) (1890): 437 (sub A.D. 1259: "Circa idem tempos, oblit comitissa Cantin, dierum plena et matura morte dejecta. Hæc autem multum dapsilis et commendata uxor fuit quondam Huberti de Burgo, quandoque justiciarii Anglin et comitis Kantiæ."). East Anglian n.s. 5 (1893-1894): 104-107. Birch Catalogue of Seals in the British Museum 2 (1892): 258-259 (seal of Hubert de Burgh, Earl of Kent, dated 1227-1233 - Obverse. To the right. In armour: hauberk of mail, surcoat, sword, shield of arms. Horse caparisoned. Arms: seven lozenges, three, three, and one wire (or lozengy of fifteen pieces) [BURGH]; Reverse. A shield of arms as described in the obverse. Legend destroyed), 259 (another seal of Hubert de Burgh - Obverse. To the right. In armour: hauberk of mail, surcoat of arms: round cap, sword, shield of arms. Horse caparisoned. Arms as in the reverse. Legend wanting; Reverse. A kite-shaped shield of arms: masculy or lozengy of nine pieces, five, three, and one, vaire [BURGH]. Legend wanting). Moore Cartalarium Monasterii Sancti Johannis Baptiste de Colecestria 2 (1897): 472-473. List of Sheriffs for England & Wales (PRO Lists and Indexes 9) (1898): 6, 21, 59, 67, 78, 86, 122, 135, 150. Farrer Final Concords of Lancaster 1 (Lanc. & Cheshire Rec. Soc. 39) (1899): 94-96. Dem. Cat. of Ancient Deeds 3 (1900): 159-160. Wordsworth Ceremonies & Processions of the Cathedral Church of Salisbury (1901): 24-30, 235 (Obit Kalendar: "9 May - Obijt Hubertus de Burgo, justiciarius Anglie [A.D. 1242]."). Salzman Feet of Fines Rel. Sussex 1 (Sussex Rec. Soc. 2) (1902): 118. Eng. Hist. Rev. 19 (1904): 707-711 [citing Dunstable Annals (Ann. Mon. iii. 28): 'Super divortio vero tertiae uxoris suae, scilicet filiae regis Scotiae, conventus, super eo quod erat consanguinea secundae uxoris suae, scilicet comitissae Gloverniae,' etc. They further state precisely that when she was the widow of Geoffrey, Earl of Essex, Hubert married her (relictam Osius duxa) and that she ‘post paucos dies decessit.' (Ibid., p. 45)]; 50 (1935): 418-432 (mentions charter of Hubert de Burgh which names his ancestor, William de Boseville). Parker Cal. of Lancashire Assize Rolls 1 (Rec. Soc. of Lancashire & Cheshire 47) (1904): 124-125. English Hist. Rev. 19 (1904): 707-711; 50 (1935): 418-432. Scots Peerage 1 (1904): 5 (sub Kings of Scotland). Dunbar Scottish Kings (1906): 76-86. C.P. 1 (1910): 417 note b; 5 (1926): 689-692 (sub Gloucester); 7 (1929): 133-142 (sub Kent) (arms of Hubert de Burgh: Lozengy argent and vair). VCH Somerset 2 (1911): 115-118; 7 (1999): 84-93. Clay Extinct & Dormant Peerages (1913): 236-238 (sub Warenne). Phillimore Rotuli Hugonis de Welles, Episcopi Lincolniensis 1209-12352 (Lincoln Rec. Soc. 6) (1913): 83. VCH Worcester 3 (1913): 6-7. VCH Lancaster 8 (1914): 77, 85, 189, 192, 207, 231. Harben Dictionary of London (1918). G.H. Fowler 'Calendar of Inquisitions Post Mortem. No. I' in Pubs. Bedfordshire Hist. Rec. Soc. 5 (1920): 225-226. G.H. Fowler 'Roll of the Justices in Eyre, 1240' in Pubs. Bedfordshire Hist. Rec. Soc. 9 (1925): 87-88, 101, 134, 137. Stokes et al. Warwickshire Feet of Fines 1 (Dugdale Soc. 11) (1932): 86. VCH Sussex 7 (1940): 109-113. Clay Early Yorkshire Charters 8 (1949): chart opp. 1, 26-35. Painter Reign of King John (1949): 219. VCH Warwick 5 (1949): 52-58. Slade Great Roll of the POe for the TrveOh Year of the Reign of KingJohn, Michaelmas 1210 (Pipe Roll Soc. n.s. 26) (1951): 50. Ellis Hubert de Burgh: A Study in Constancy (1952). Stenton Great Roll of the Pipe for the Thirteenth Year of the Reign of King John, Michaelmas 1211 (Pipe Roll Soc. n.s. 28) (1953): 4, 21. Paget (1957) 106:1 (chart only). Barnes & Slade Medieval Miscellany for Doris Mary Stenton (Pipe Roll Soc. n.s. 36) (1962): 78, 80. Ellis Hubert de Burgh: A Study in Constancy (1952). Bedingfield Cartulary of Creake Abbey (Norfolk Rec. Soc. 35) (1966): 1-2 (Geoffrey de Burgh, Bishop of Ely [brother of Earl Hubert de Burgh], styled "kinsman" [nepos] by Alice Pouchard, wife of Robert de Nerford, Knt.). Viator 5 (1974): 235-252. Ancient Deeds - Series A (List and Index Soc. 151) (1978): 103-104. Jour. British Studies 19 (1980): 1-17. Schwennicke Europäische Stammtafeln 3(2) (1983): 354. Fryde Handbook of British Chron. (1986): 58. Meyer Culture of Christendom (1993): 142 ( Canterbury Obituary Lists: "14 October [2 Id. Oct.] Obierunt Ysabel comitissa Gouemie, soror et benefactrix nostra"). Brown Eye Priory Cartulary & Charters 2 (Suffolk Rec. Soc.) (1994): xii. Burke's Landed Gentry of Great Britain (2001): lxiii-lxv (sub Scottish Royal Lineage). VCH Cambridge 4 (2002): 206-219; 10 (2002): 500. Dryburgh Cal. of Fine Rolls of the Reign of Henry 1112 (2008): 289-290. Birmingham City Archives: Lyttleton of Hagley Hall, MS 3279/351062 (grant dated 1227/43 from Hubert de Burgh, Earl of Kent to Robert son of Robert de Gloverina of land which the latter held from Thomas de Burgh, brother of the said Hubert in Erleigh [Upper Arley], Staffordshire) (abstract of document available online at http://www.a2a.org.uk/search/index asp). McCray Catalogue, Aynho Deeds, Magdalene College, Oxford University, pg. 31 #36 (undated grant of Thomas de Crewelton, son of Robert de Niweman, of Frutewelle to the Hospital at Aynho, Northamptonshire"to hold upon condition of celebrating yearly on the day of St. Machute [15 November] the anniversary of Margaret Countess of Kent, deceased, on which day the brethren shall have from the said land a pittance of 12d.); citation courtesy of Andrew B.W. MacEwen. University of Toronto Deed Research Project, #00810076, 00810114, 00810140, 00810141, 00810142, 00810143, 00810144, 00810145, 00810146, 00810147, 00810150, 01400342 (charters of Isabel, Countess of Gloucester and Essex, dated variously 1214-1217) (available at http://res.deeds.utoronto.ca:49838/research).
      Child of Beatrice de Warenne, by Doun Bardolf:
      i. WILLIAM BARDOLF, Knt. [see next].
      Child of Beatrice de Warenne, by Hubert de Burgh, Knt.:
      i. JOHN DE BURGH, Knt., of Burgh, Cawston, and Newton, Norfolk, etc., married HAWISE DE LANVALLAY [see LA WARRE 9].
      Child of Hubert de Burgh, Knt., by Margaret of Scotland:
      i. MARGARET DE BURGH, married RICHARD DE CLARE, Knt., Earl of Gloucester and Hertford [see CLARE 7).”