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Anne Markham (Neville)

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Raby, Durham, England
Death: 1527 (32-42)
Cobhane, Nottinghamshire, England
Immediate Family:

Daughter of Sir George Neville, Knight and Mary Neville, Countess Rivers
Wife of Sir John Markham, of Cotham, MP
Mother of Henry Markham and John Il Markham, of Cotham

Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:

About Anne Markham

  • Anne Neville1,2
  • F, #86628, b. circa 1490
  • Father Sir George Neville3,4 d. a 17 Sep 1517
  • Mother Mary FitzLewis3,4 b. c 1465, d. a 1492
  • Anne Neville was born circa 1490 at of Raby, Durham, England.1,3 She married Sir John Markham, Sheriff of Nottinghamshire, Lincolnshire, & Derbyshire, Burgess of Nottingham, Lt. of the Tower of London, son of Sir John Markham and Alice Skipwith, circa 1510; They had two sons (John; & Henry).1,5,2
  • Family Sir John Markham, Sheriff of Nottinghamshire, Lincolnshire, & Derbyshire, Burgess of Nottingham, Lt. of the Tower of London b. c 1490
  • Citations
  • 1.[S61] Unknown author, Family Group Sheets, Family History Archives, SLC.
  • 2.[S4] Douglas Richardson, Royal Ancestry, Vol. IV, p. 653-654.
  • 3.[S16] Douglas Richardson, Magna Carta Ancestry, 2nd Edition, Vol. IV, p. 48.
  • 4.[S4] Douglas Richardson, Royal Ancestry, Vol. IV, p. 652-653.
  • 5.[S16] Douglas Richardson, Magna Carta Ancestry, 2nd Edition, Vol. IV, p. 48-49.
  • From: http://our-royal-titled-noble-and-commoner-ancestors.com/p2883.htm#... _________________
  • A history of the Markham family (1854)
  • http://archive.org/details/ahistorymarkham00markgoog
  • http://archive.org/stream/ahistorymarkham00markgoog#page/n58/mode/1up
  • Pg.16
  • Sir Robert died about the year 1476, and was succeeded by his eldest son.
  • SIR JOHN MARKHAM is mentioned by Polydore Virgil as one of the leaders who were present at the battle of Stoke in 1488, on the side of Henry VII. He is described as a man of great prowess, and was much employed in public affairs. "But," says Dugdale, "he was an unrulie spirited man, and, striving with the people of Long Benington in Lincolnshire about the boundaries of their lordships, he killed some or other of them (some have it he hanged the priest), for which retiring, he lay hid at a place called Cressi Hall, which he had through his great-grandmother the daughter of Sir John Cressi of Hodsac. Here it was His good fortune to entertain the lady Margaret, mother of King Henry VII., who not only procured his pardon, but married her kinswoman Anne, the daughter and heir of Sir George Neville, to his son, like-wise called Sir John," by Alicia his wife, daughter "of Sir William Skipwith. At this period the Markham family were at the height of their fortunes, .... etc.
  • http://archive.org/stream/ahistorymarkham00markgoog#page/n64/mode/1up
  • Pg. 19
  • SIR JOHN MARKHAM married the daughter and heir of Sir George Neville, who on the female side was of royal descent. Her mother, the daughter of Sir Humphrey FitzLewes, was a grand-daughter and coheir of Edmund Beaufort, Marquess and Earl of Somerset (slain at the battle of St. Alban's), the grandson of John of Gaunt Duke of Lancaster (third son of King Edward III.) and Catherine Swynford, daughter of Sir Payn Roet, Guyenne King at Arms. Independent of the brilliancy of this alliance, considerable property also accrued to the family in consequence of it, for the lady herself was her father's heir, as was her mother of Sir Humphrey FitzLewes. ....
  • http://archive.org/stream/ahistorymarkham00markgoog#page/n66/mode/1up
  • Pg. 20
  • .... Besides the large possessions which devolved upon Sir John, on the demise of his father, who appears by his son's will to have died outlawed,t and those which came by his marriage with the heiress of Sir George Neville, who succeeded to the estates of Sir Humphrey Lewes, whose wife was daughter and coheiress of Edmund Beaufort Earl of Somerset ; he had grants of several others, among which is one bearing date 28 Hen, VIII, "The house and site of the Abbey of Rufforth, with large manorial possessions attached, were, under the great seal of the Court of Augmentations, demised to Sir John Markham, Knight, and his assigns for twenty-one years, for the yearly rent of twenty-two pounds eight shillings, which, with a vast deal of other property, was by reason of a certain act for dissolving certain religious houses." ....
  • .... He was thrice married ; first to Anne, daughter of Sir George Neville, by whom he had two sons, John and Henry. " This latter was in holy orders, and was installed Precentor of Lincoln Cathedral, March, 26, 1550. He died without issue.
  • JOHN MARKHAM, the eldest, was seated at Sireston in the
  • http://archive.org/stream/ahistorymarkham00markgoog#page/n68/mode/1up
  • Pg. 21
  • county of Nottingham, and died in his father's life time, leaving issue by Katharine his wife, daughter of Sir Anthony Babington, one son, Robert, who succeeded him, and two daughters: Sanchia, who married William de Hardwicke, and Anne, who died unmarried.*
  • Sir John's second wife was Margery, daughter of Sir Ralf Langford of Langford, who bore him many children.
  • His last wife was Anne, relict of Sir Richard Stanhope, daughter and coheir of Sir John Strelly, who was descended from Walter de Stradlegh in the time of Henry I. By her he had William Markham of Okely, who served as Member for the Borough of Nottingham in parliament held at Westminster, in the 1st and 2nd of Philip and Mary. Thomas was the second son of Sir John by his third wile, and founder of the Ollerton branch of Markhams, of whom hereafter. Frances, the eldest daughter, married Henry Babington, and was mother .....
  • Isabella Markham, the youngest, was maid of honour to Elizabeth, and one of the devoted ladies who, at the instigation of Bishop Gardiner, in Mary's reign, were seized and confined in the Tower. She seems to have been in high favour with ... etc. _________________________
  • Anne NEVILLE
  • Born: ABT 1500, Raby, Durham, England
  • Father: George NEVILLE
  • Mother: Mary FITZLEWIS
  • Married: John MARKHAM
  • Children:
    • 1. Isabella MARKHAM
  • From: http://www.tudorplace.com.ar/NEVILLE2.htm#Anne NEVILLE6 ________________
  • MARKHAM, Sir John (by 1486-1559), of Cotham, Notts.
  • b. by 1486, o.s. of Sir John Markham of Cotham by Alice, da. of Sir William Skipwith of Orrnsby, Lincs. m. (1) Anne, da. and h. of Sir George Neville, 2s.; (2) Margery, da. of Sir Ralph Longford, 1s. 3da.; (3) Anne (d. 12 Oct. 1554), da. and coh. of Sir John Strelley of Strelley, Notts., wid. of Richard Stanhope of Rampton, Notts., 2s. Thomas and William 3da. suc. fa. 22 Feb. 1508. Kntd. 25 Sept. 1513.2
  • Offices Held
    • Commr. musters, Notts. and Nottingham 1511, subsidy, Lincs. 1512, 1514, Notts. 1523, 1524, benevolence 1544/45, contribution 1546, chantries, Derbys., Notts., Derby and Nottingham 1546, relief, Notts. 1550; other commissions 1521-d.; sheriff, Notts. and Derbys. 1518-19, 1526-7, 1534-5, 1538-9, 1545-6, Lincs. 1532-3; j.p. Notts. 1521-d.; lt. Sherwood forest by 1523; dep. receiver, Southwell by 1533, jt. receiver 1550, sole by 1552, jt. keeper 1546; gen. receiver, possessions formerly of Jasper, Duke of Bedford in Derbys. and Notts. 1542; chamberlain and receiver, ct. gen. surveyors 1545; lt. Tower of London by Nov. 1549-31 Oct. 1551.3
  • The Markham family traced its descent from Claron, who had held the manor of West Markham at the time of the Norman Conquest, and whose successors adopted the name of their residence. From the 12th century they established themselves as one of the leading families in the shire, and in the 15th produced two lawyers who rose to be judges.4
  • John Markham’s father, ‘a man of great prowess’, had fought for Henry VII at Stoke and continued in his service: Dugdale’s story of his being involved in an affray with the villagers of Long Bennington, Lincolnshire, rests on the evidence of Thoroton and cannot be confirmed. His son John stated in his own will of 1559 that his father had died outlawed and that he had ‘paid and fined for the goods’ that he had. The younger Markham inherited, besides the manor of Cotham, several manors near Newark, one or two east of Southwell and a group near Tuxford in north Nottinghamshire, including Great Markham, together with Lincolnshire lands concentrated mainly in an area north of Spalding in Holland. At about this time Markham was in the service of Henry VII’s mother, with whom he could claim alliance through his marriage to Anne Neville. Archbishop Cranmer, when in 1537 he reminded Henry VIII of this claim that Markham had on his favour, went on to say that he had been ‘in all the wars which the King hath had ... except he had wars in divers places at one time, and then he was ever in one of them’. He first saw service against the French early in the reign, helping to mobilize troops and then accompanying the King to the capture of Tournai, where he was knighted on the day the city surrendered.5
  • As a leading landowner in Nottinghamshire, where he was first appointed sheriff in 1518, and a man with court connexions, Markham may well have sat in Parliament before 1529. Even the evidence of his Membership on that occasion was in danger of being lost: the only contemporary list of Members is torn at the point where the names of the Nottinghamshire knights occur, but enough of his name is left to show that Markham was the first of them. The King had arranged for the writs for Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire to be delivered by the 3rd Duke of Norfolk, and the sheriff, Nicholas Strelley (who was perhaps already related by marriage to Markham), doubtless received them accompanied by nominations. Nothing is known of Markham’s part in the proceedings of the Commons but he was probably as ardent a supporter of royal policy there as he was to prove himself elsewhere. He was presumably returned again in 1536, in accordance with the King’s general request for the return of the previous Members. Three years later he could not return himself as sheriff but he found a seat as senior Member for Nottingham, which had its own sheriff: his son John had married a daughter of the former recorder Sir Anthony Babington and his fellow-Member George Pierrepont was also Babington’s son-in-law. Markham was to sit for the borough again in 1545 with his kinsman Nicholas Powtrell and may have done so in the intervening Parliament of 1542, when only the christian names of the Members are known: if he did, he must have contented himself with the junior seat, as ‘John’ stands second on the dorse of the writ. In that event, it was probably he who introduced the private bill passed during this Parliament for the partition of the lands of his father-in-law Sir John Strelley.6
  • Markham had attended the King at Calais in October 1532, between the fourth and fifth sessions of the Parliament, and in the following year he was a server at Anne Boleyn’s coronation; in 1540 he was present at Blackheath for the reception of Anne of Cleves, and at Henry VIII’s funeral in 1547 he bore the twelfth banner of Lancaster. Meanwhile he had shown himself a vigorous supporter of royal policy in religion. He was actively concerned in the dissolution of the monasteries, and was one of the commissioners who, when visiting the Charterhouse at Beauvale in 1535, tried to persuade the procurator Trafford in ‘an exhortation friendly ... that the Kings of England by good just title ought to be Supreme Head of the Church of the same’: he also took part in the suppression of Lenton priory and was present at the execution of the prior in April 1538. He frequently informed Cromwell of local religious feeling, especially among the clergy. That his zeal did not spring merely from loyalty is evident from Cranmer’s description of him to the King as one that ‘hath unfeignedly favoured the truth of God’s word’.7
  • With the outbreak of the Lincolnshire rebellion in October 1536 Markham was called upon to assist in the restoration of order. He was informed of the rebels’ movements and his timely warning to expect them at Newark enabled the 4th Earl of Shrewsbury to alter his plans and to be ready at Nottingham with all the force at his disposal. Markham afterwards served as one of the commissioners for the trial of the Louth rebels and was present at their executions. By March 1537 it was reported that ‘no shire is now in better quietness’, and Sir William Parr praised Markham’s work and asked Cromwell to obtain some reward for his services from the King. Although not a member of the jury which tried the Yorkshire rebels, Markham had evidently supported the King’s forces against them, being employed on one occasion by the 1st Earl of Rutland on a mission to Newark to discover the state of the fords and the problems involved in the defence of the Trent. The authority which he wielded in the Newark area by 1539 led John Marshall to describe to Cromwell how those parts ‘are much ruled by one Sir John Markham, the great ruffling is past and poor men may now live at peace by the great men’.8
  • Markham was to be associated with Rutland again in 1542. In that August, after numerous border disputes, the King planned to send Norfolk ‘with a main force’ against the Scots, and Markham was appointed to Rutland’s inner council, with (Sir) Robert Bowes, John Harington I and John Uvedale, when the earl went north as lord warden of the marches. Three years later Markham served in Scotland under the Earl of Hertford, to whom he was distantly related. His connexion with Hertford was to have an important bearing on his career under Edward VI. His return as knight of the shire for Nottinghamshire in 1547 must have been acceptable to Hertford, by then Duke of Somerset and Protector; it may even have owed something to him personally as Markham’s fellow-knight was Sir Michael Stanhope, brother-in-law to both Somerset and to Markham’s wife Anne Strelley. Both Members were also related to the sheriff, Sir Gervase Clifton.9
  • Markham’s official career culminated in his appointment as lieutenant of the Tower in 1549. He had evidently satisfied the Council as to his reliability, for his appointment coincided with the period of Somerset’s first imprisonment: other prisoners under his charge included the Duke of Norfolk and Bishop Gardiner. In October 1551 they were rejoined by Somerset and Sir Michael Stanhope, this time to Markham’s disadvantage. During Somerset’s second confinement, noted Edward VI in his journal, the lieutenant allowed him to walk in the grounds and to receive and despatch letters without informing the Council of these privileges, and for this indiscretion Markham was dismissed and replaced by one of his assistants, Sir Arthur Darcy. His show of sympathy for the doomed Protector was also probably enough to keep Markham out of the Parliament called by Somerset’s victorious rival, the Duke of Northumberland, in March 1553, but he was soon afterwards appointed one of the King’s visitors to the clergy and laity of the deanery of Doncaster. He was present at the funeral of Edward VI, but nothing is known of his behaviour during the succession crisis which followed.10
  • Markham’s Protestant sympathies did not preclude his employment under Mary. Early in 1557 he was requested to lead a levy of 300 men from Nottinghamshire to Berwick, and in July of the following year, ‘being a man of good experience’, he was appointed with Sir John Forster to attend upon the 5th Earl of Westmorland ‘at his commandment at all such times as his lordship shall require their counsel and advice’. He was also knight of the shire for at least the third time in the last Parliament of the reign, when his name was marked with a circle on a copy of the Crown Office list, and he had presumably had a hand in the earlier return of his distant kinsman Ellis Markham for the shire and of his own sons Thomas and William for the borough of Nottingham. If Markham had himself been passed over for the earlier Parliaments of the reign, his reinstatement may have owed something to the patronage of the 2nd Earl of Rutland, with whom he had maintained his connexion after the death of the 1st Earl in 1543: although Rutland was likewise a Protestant and had at one time been imprisoned for his support of Lady Jane Grey, he had come to terms with the Marian regime.11
  • Markham appears to have been on friendly terms with his prominent neighbours, such as the Willoughbys of Wollaton, but this did not save him from being involved in legal disputes, mainly over property. The controversy with Anthony Foster† and the Bishop of Lincoln over rights of pasture, claimed by the inhabitants of Newark and upheld by Markham and Sir William Mering, led to a suit before Chancellor Audley in 1535: when Cranmer interceded with Cromwell for both men, he described Markham, whom he had known for over 30 years, as ‘a gentleman of very good qualities’. Markham augmented his large inheritance by various leases and grants, particularly of monastic property; his most important acquisition was the house and site of Rufford abbey in October 1537, but he later obtained leases of the Augustinian friary in Newark and of the site of Newbo abbey, Lincolnshire, which in 1543 he transferred to a kinsman.12
  • Markham was in his seventies when he was returned to the first Parliament of Elizabeth’s reign and he may not have lived to see it through. He made his will, on 1 Apr. 1559, when it had several weeks to run, and his death may have taken place at any time before the following 28 Oct. when the will was proved. His eldest son John had predeceased him and his heir was his grandson Robert Markham†, whom, however, he clearly disliked, limiting his inheritance as far as he could. Markham’s son-in-law John Harrington II commemorated him in a short poem.13
  • From: http://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/volume/1509-1558/member/ma... ________________
  • MARKHAM, Sir John (by 1486-1559), of Cotham, Notts.
  • b. by 1486, s. of Sir John Markham of Cotham by Alice, da. of Sir William Skipwith of Ormsby, Lincs. m. (1) Anne, da. and h. of Sir George Neville, 2s.; (2) Margery, da. of Sir Ralph Longford, 1s. 3da.; (3) Anne (d. 12 Oct. 1554), da. and coh. of Sir John Strelley of Strelley, wid. of Richard Stanhope of Rampton, 2s. Thomas and William 3da. suc. fa. 1508. Kntd. 25 Sept. 1513.
  • Offices Held
    • Sheriff, Notts. and Derbys. 1518-19, 1526-7, 1534-5, 1538-9, 1545-6, Lincs. 1532-3; j.p. Notts. 1521, q. 1559.
    • Chamberlain and receiver of court of general surveyors 1545; lt. of Tower of London 1549-Oct. 1551.1
  • Markham was the descendant of a family long established in Nottinghamshire. His father had fought beside Henry VII at the battle of Stoke and afterwards was much at court, while Markham himself served Henry VIII both as soldier and courtier, continuing a member of the royal household until the Duke of Somerset’s fall, when he appears to have retired from court. As early as 1537 his old friend Archbishop Cranmer wrote, ‘Sir John of long season hath unfeignedly favoured the truth of God’s word’, and later he was described by Edward Underhill as ‘both wise and zealous in the Lord’. His daughter Isabella and his son Thomas entered the Princess Elizabeth’s household at Hatfield during Mary’s reign.2
  • Markham’s local standing had already earned him election as knight of the shire before the accession of Elizabeth. It was to be expected that such a man, prominent in his own locality, a protestant and a friend of the protestant 2nd Earl of Rutland, would be elected to the crucial first Parliament of the new reign; and while Sir John sat for the county, his son sat for the city of Nottingham.3
  • Markham made his will in April 1559. Only the necessary minimum was left to his heir, Robert, the son of his deceased eldest son John. A disposition was made of his movable property to the prejudice of Robert. The executors of the will were Markham’s sons, Thomas and William, his friend Henry Needham, and his servant Nicholas Blouston. They were to hold lands in East Markham and Tuxford for 20 years for the payment of debts and legacies. Among these was a bequest of £100 to Thomas Cranmer, son of the archbishop, ‘for a due debt that 1 am bound in my conscience’. Markham appointed as supervisors (Sir) Gervase Cliftont and his cousin Ellis Markhamt. The will was proved in October 1559.4
  • From: http://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/volume/1558-1603/member/ma... ____________________________
  • Encyclopedia of Massachusetts, biographical--genealogical Vol. 10
  • http://archive.org/details/encyclopediaofma10_00amer
  • http://archive.org/stream/encyclopediaofma10_00amer#page/185/mode/1up
  • The line through which Albert Gallatin Markham's descent is traced goes back to Claron, of West Markham, a Saxon chief who, for services rendered at the time of the Norman Conquest, was granted lands which had already been held by his father and grandfather before him. From his son Roger, of East Markham, the line is traced through Fulc, of East Markham; his son Sir Alexander, known as Knight of Castellane, of Nottingham Castle, Nottinghamshire ; his son Sir William, of Markham and Tuxford ; his son Sir Richard ; his son Richard (2) ; his son John, Lord of East Markham, who married John Bottomsell ; their son Sir Robert, a lawyer and King's sergeant, who married Isabell Caunton ; their son Sir John, barrister and judge, who committed Henry, Prince of Wales (son of Henry IV) to the Fleet Prison in London ; his son Sir Robert, who married Elizabeth Burdon ; their son Sir Robert, Knight, who married Sarah Joan Daubeney ; their son Sir John, who married Alicia Skipworth; their son Sir John (3) who was a lieutenant of the famous "Tower of London" and whose daughter was maid of honor to Queen Elizabeth, married (first) Ann Neville, whose mother was a granddaughter of the Earl of
  • http://archive.org/stream/encyclopediaofma10_00amer#page/186/mode/1up
  • Somerset, son of Duke of Lancaster, son of Henry III, married (second) Margery Langford, (third) Ann Strelly Stanhope; his son John (4), who married Catherine Babbington; their son Robert, who married (first) Maria Leeke, (second) Jane Burnell ; their son Sir Robert, of Cotham, married Ann Warburton ; their third son Daniel, who was engaged in commercial pursuits and died in Plumstead (now Pirney), Norfolk County, in 1690. after having regained in mercantile pursuits the fortune squandered by his father. Among his children was Daniel Markham, of whom further. .... etc. ___________________________________
  • Familiae minorum gentium; v39 (1894)
  • http://archive.org/details/FamiliaeMinorumGentiumV39
  • http://archive.org/stream/FamiliaeMinorumGentiumV39/Familiae_Minoru...
  • Pg. 964
    • Markham. MS.412 - Chart Pg.964-968
  • Sir Alexander de Markham, Castellane of Notthingham circ. 1270. = ; ch: William (m. Isabel or Cecily de Lexington) de Markham.
    • William = Isabel or Cecily, dau. of John de Lexington; niece & coh. of Henry, Bishop of Lincoln. ; ch: Richard de Markham.
      • Richard. = ; ch: Robert (m. Sarah de Snitterton), Richard (2 son) Markham.
        • Robert, 1 son, inq. p.m. 16 E. 1, seised of the m'rs of Tuxford, Lexington. = Sarah, dau. & h of Jordan de Snitterton, co. Derb., 42 II. 3. ; ch: Cecily, aet. 30, 16 E. I. (m. John Bray), Bertha, aet. 19, 16 E. 1. (m. William Longvillers), Agnes, (m. William de Sancta Cruce.)
        • Richard Markham, 2 son, Lord of Markham by entail after his brother's death. = ; ch: John (m. Joan Bothumsal) Markham.
          • John, of West Markham temp. E. 3. = Joan, dau. of Sir Nicholas Bothumsal. ; ch: Sir Robert (m. . . . . Caunton) Markham.
            • Sir Robert = . . . . dau. of Sir John Caunton. ; ch: (Pg.965 Sir John (m. Margaret Cressie & Milicent Bickering) Markham).
              • http://archive.org/stream/FamiliaeMinorumGentiumV39/Familiae_Minoru...
              • Pg.965
              • Sir John Markham, Ch. Just. of the Common Pleas, ob. 30 Dec. 1409; drew the Instrument for the deposition of Richard II.; Mon. at Markham; d. on day of St. Silvester. = Margaret, 1 w., dau. & d. of Sir Henry Cressie of Cressie, co. Linc.; niece & h'rs of Sir Hugh. ; ch: Sir Robert (m. Eliz. Burden), Adela (m. Sir Ric. Stanhope). Markham. ; = Milicent, 2 w., dau. of Sir John Bickering; wid. of Nic. Burden. ; ch: John (Ch. Just. of the King's Bench) Markham.
                • John Markham,(1) Ch. Just. of the King's Bench, from whom Markham of Sedgebrook.
                • Sir Robert, Sher. Notts 12 H. 6. Had a tomb in Markham Church. = Eliz., dau. & h. of Sir Nicholas Burden. ; ch: Sir Robert (m. Jane Daubeny) Markham.
                  • Sir Robert, of Cotham, Sher. Notts 7 E. 4. = Jane, dau. & h. of Sir Giles Daubeny, bro. of Lord Daubeny, by . . . . dau. & h. of Sir S. Leake of Cotham. ; ch: Sir John (m. Alice Skipwith), Robert, Elizabeth (m. Thomas Molyneux), Margaret (m. Sir H. Willoughby), Catherine (m. Sir H. Bosom) Markham.
                    • Robert, 2 son, from whom M. of Southwell; father of Robert; father of Wil. a Cap'n in the Low Countries; father of John M. of Southwell, now living.
                    • Sir John Markham of Cotham, Commander at Stokefield 1488, Mon. at Cotham. "A very beautiful & free-hearted gentleman, valiant & exceeding full of boldness." = Alice, dau. of Sir Wil. Skipwith. ; ch: Sir John (m. Anne Nevile & Margery Langford & Ann Strelley), Robert (m. . . . . Sapperton) Markham.
                      • Robert, 2nd son, mar. h. of . . . . Sapperton; s.p.
                      • Sir John Markham, knighted at Tournay; L't of the Tower; d. 1558, aged nr 100. = Ann, 1 w., dau. & h. of Sir George Nevile; wid. of Earl Rivers; bur. at Croydon. ; ch: Sir John (m. Cath'e Babington Dethick) Markham ; = Margery, 2 w., dau. of Sir John Langford. ; ch: Robert & 13 other sons, (ob. s.p.), Alice (m. John Morton of Bawtry) Markham ; = Ann, 3 w., dau. & c. of John Strelley; wid. of Richard Stanhope. ; ch: (Pg.966 William (m. Elizab. Montacute), Thomas (m. Mary Griffin), Isabel (m. Sir John Harrington.(1)), Frances (m. Sir Henry Babington) Markham.)
                        • Sir John M. of Sierston, ob. v.p. = Cath'e, dau. of Sir Anth. Babington Dethick. ; ch: Robert (m. Mary Leke) Markham.
                          • .... etc. _______________________________________
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Anne Markham's Timeline

1490
1490
Raby, Durham, England
1500
1500
Cotham, Nottinghamshire, England
1522
1522
Lincoln, Lincolnshire, England
1527
1527
Age 37
Cobhane, Nottinghamshire, England