Baroness Cicely de Bohun (Filliot)

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Baroness Cicely de Bohun (Filliol)

Birthdate:
Birthplace: United Kingdom
Death: circa 1381
Devon, England, United Kingdom
Immediate Family:

Daughter of Sir John Filliol, of Essex and Margery Filliol (Birth Surname Unknown)
Wife of Sir John de Bohun, 1st Lord Bohun & Baron of Midhurst
Mother of Sir John de Bohun, II, Lord of Midhurst

Managed by: dana Patrick mann
Last Updated:

About Baroness Cicely de Bohun (Filliot)

http://thepeerage.com/p13746.htm#i137453

Cicely Filliol was born before 1324.1 She was the daughter of Sir John Filliol and Margery Filliot (Birth Surname Unknown) .1 She married Sir John de Bohun, 1st Lord Bohun, son of James de Bohun and Joan de Brewes, before 6 November 1342.1 She died between 9 August 1381 and 13 August 1381.1

    From before 6 November 1342, her married name became de Bohun.1

Child of Cicely Filliol and Sir John de Bohun, 1st Lord Bohun

1.Sir John de Bohun+1 b. 6 Jan 1362/63, d. 25 Jan 1432/33

Citations

1.[S6] G.E. Cokayne; with Vicary Gibbs, H.A. Doubleday, Geoffrey H. White, Duncan Warrand and Lord Howard de Walden, editors, The Complete Peerage of England, Scotland, Ireland, Great Britain and the United Kingdom, Extant, Extinct or Dormant, new ed., 13 volumes in 14 (1910-1959; reprint in 6 volumes, Gloucester, U.K.: Alan Sutton Publishing, 2000), volume II, page 201. Hereinafter cited as The Complete Peerage.

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A genealogical history of the dormant, abeyant, forfeited, and extinct ... By Sir Bernard Burke Pg.58

http://books.google.com/books?id=1ysWkXKSrpIC&pg=PA58&lpg=PA58&dq=J...

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http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=62594

The part of Crawley afterwards called Filliols Manor was known as such from the Filliol family, of whom William Filliol was fined 5 marks in 1175–6 for breach of the forest law. (fn. 79) He was succeeded by Baldwin Filliol, who in 1198 acquired 17 acres in Crawley from William Anketill, (fn. 80) and alienated 9 acres in 1202 to Bernard son of Hugh. (fn. 81) Baldwin was still alive in 1212, (fn. 82) but his heir Richard Filliol, (fn. 83) probably his son, (fn. 84) was in possession by 1249, (fn. 85) and held (fn. 86) until his death about 1260. (fn. 87) His son John, (fn. 88) who was presented by the hundered in 1275 for building a house on the highway, (fn. 89) exercised the manorial rights (fn. 90) until his death about 1317, when they vested in his nephew and heir John Filliol the elder. (fn. 91) He was sued by the Prior of Tickford in 1323, (fn. 92) and in 1324–5 settled the manor on himself and his wife Margery. (fn. 93) In 1327 the Filliols came to an arrangement with Robert and Paulina Broughton concerning a tenement in Great Crawley. (fn. 94) At John Filliol's death circa 1333 Richard, his son and heir, aged twelve, inherited some of the family property in Essex, but John, aged seven, his son by Margery (who survived), received the rest of the estate. (fn. 95) John Filliol the younger died without issue, (fn. 96) and at Margery's death in 1346 Cecily, then aged twenty-two, wife of John Bohun of Midhurst, was described as her only child and heir by John Filliol the elder. (fn. 97) Philip Aylesbury was returned in this year as lord of the part of Crawley formerly held by John Filliol, but there is doubtless confusion between this and Broughtons Manor. (fn. 98) The following year the Bohuns made a settlement on themselves in tail, with remainder to the heirs of Cecily, to Ralph Filliol for life, to William son of John de Sutton, chivaler, and to William's brothers Richard and John in tail-male successively. (fn. 99) Sir John Bohun, who in 1351 obtained a grant of the Broughtons' estate in Crawley, died seised of the manor in 1367, (fn. 100) leaving a son John, to whom the manor descended at the death of Cecily in 1381. (fn. 101) Sir John Bohun, who about 1393 leased his manor to John Burton, clerk, (fn. 102) and from whom in 1427–8 John Broughton recovered Broughtons Manor, made a settlement of his manor of Great Crawley on 6 January 1432–3, (fn. 103) and died on the last day of the same month. (fn. 104) He was succeeded by his son Sir Humphrey Bohun, (fn. 105) who died in 1468. (fn. 106) By him, or by his son Sir John Bohun, (fn. 107) the manorial rights appear to have been alienated, the Bohuns retaining some lands and the advowson. Filliols Manor, then so-called for the first time, was certainly in the possession of John Broughton at his death in 1489, (fn. 108) and, as there is no further reference to it, it probably coalesced with the larger Broughtons Manor.

From: 'Parishes : North Crawley', A History of the County of Buckingham: Volume 4 (1927), pp. 327-338. URL: http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=62594 Date accessed: 06 June 2010.

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Baroness Cicely de Bohun (Filliot)'s Timeline

1324
1324
United Kingdom
1361
January 6, 1361
Bradninch, Devon, England
1381
1381
Age 57
Devon, England, United Kingdom