Elizabeth Hody

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Elizabeth Hody (le Jewe)

Also Known As: "Elizabeth Jewel", "Elizabeth Jewett"
Birthdate:
Birthplace: Whitfield, Devon, England (United Kingdom)
Death: August 03, 1473 (69-78)
Whitfieldd, Devon, England (United Kingdom)
Place of Burial: Pilsdon, Somerset, England, UK
Immediate Family:

Daughter of John le Jewe, of Whitefield, Gent. and Margery
Wife of Robert Cappes, Esq. and Sir John Hody, Sr., Lord Chief Justice
Mother of James Cappes; John Hody, II; Margaret Hody; Thomas Hody; Alexander Hody and 5 others

Managed by: Chad William Ward
Last Updated:

About Elizabeth Hody

  • Dictionary of National Biography
  • http://www.archive.org/stream/dictionarynatio25stepgoog#page/n90/mo...
  • Pg.78
  • HODY, Sir John (d. 1441), chief justice of the king's bench, of an old Devonshire family, was son of Thomas Hody, lord of the manor of Kingston Magna, near Shaftesbury, Dorset, and king's escheator there under Henry V, by Margaret, daughter of John Cole of Nitheway, Torbay. From 1425 his name often occurs in the year-books, and he must have become a serjeant-at-law before 1436, for in that year he contributed as a serjeant to the equipment of the army sent into France. He represented Shaftesbury in parliament in 1423, 1425, 1428, and 1438, and the county of Somerset in 1434 and 1440. On 13 April 1440 he succeeded Sir John Juyn as chief justice of the king's bench, died in December 1441, and was buried at Woolavington, Somersetshire. Prince says of him that he won golden opinions, and Coke (Institutes, pref.) says he was one of the 'famous and expert sages of the law' who assisted Lyttelton. He had estates at Stowell in Somerset and Pillesden in Dorset, the Latter acquired through his wife Elizabeth, daughter and heiress of John Jewe, by whom he had five sons, including William Hody [q.v.], who became chief baron in 1486, and several daughters.
  • [Foss's Lives of the Judges; Prince's Worthies; Hutchins's Dorset, i. 317; Risdon's Devon, xvi. 60; Collect. Topogr. vii, 22; Register Chichele Lambeth, 481 b.; Engl. Chron. (Camd. Soc.), p. 60; Rot. Parl. iv.285, v. 477; Pat. 18 Hen. Vi. p.3, m.5.]
  • -----------------------
  • Sir John Hody was an English judge and Chief Justice of the King’s Bench
  • Hody was descended from a family of considerable antiquity, though of no great note, in Devon. Jordan de Hode held lands in Hode in the thirteenth century; Richard de Hody was the king's escheator of that county in 1353/4 and 1357/8; and the same office was filled by William Hody in 1400/1. The father of the chief justice was Thomas Hody, who was lord of the manor of Kington Magna, near Shaftesbury, in the adjoining county of Dorset, in 1419/20, and in the same year was king's escheator there. He married Margaret, daughter and heiress of John Cole, of Nitheway, near Torbay, in Devon, which thus became the birthplace of his children. Their elder son Alexander was a devoted partisan of the Lancastrian cause, and was attainted in the first year of Edward IV. for his adherence to Henry VI.
  • John, the younger son, was educated as a lawyer, and is frequently mentioned in the Year Books from 1424/5. There is no record of his summons to take the degree of the coif; but from his name appearing in the legal part of the list of those who were called upon to contribute towards the equipment of the army against France in 1435/6, there is very little doubt that he was then a Serjeant; and if not then, he had certainly attained that rank before July 1439. He was returned to parliament as representative of the borough of Shaftesbury in 1419/20., and again in 1422/3, 1424/5, 1427/8 and 1436/7; and the estimation in which he stood on the latter occasion may be conceived by his being sent to the Lords with a message from the other house announcing the election of a speaker in the place of John Tyrell incapacitated by infirmity. In 1433/4 and 1439/40 he was chosen a knight of the shire for the county of Somerset; and on the death of Sir John Juyn in the latter year he was raised to the office of chief justice of the King's Bench, his patent being dated 13 April 1440. He held it not quite two years; his successor, Sir John Fortescue, being appointed on 25 January 1442. His judicial career was probably terminated by his death; for his will is dated 17 December 1441, though the precise time of its probate is not recorded.
  • Notwithstanding the short period during which he presided in the court, he is stated by Prince to have won golden opinions by his integrity and firmness in the administration of justice. Sir Edward Coke mentions him amongst the " famous and expert sages of the law" from whom Lyttelton had "great furtherance in composing his Institutes of the Laws of England."
  • The judge had an estate at Stowell, in Somerset, as early as 1427/8; but he was for some time seated at Pillesden, in Dorset, which came to him, together with the manor of Whitfield in the parish of Wivilscombe, in Somerset, and other property in both counties, by his marriage with Elizabeth, daughter and heiress of John Jewe, son and heir of John Jewe, by Alice, daughter of John de Pillesden. After his death his widow married Robert Cappes, Esq., who was sheriff of Dorset and Somerset in 1445/6. She died in 1473, having had issue by her first husband five sons and several daughters'.
  • John, the eldest son, was seated at Stowell and Nitheway, and his posterity continued there for many generations. William, the second son was chief baron of the Exchequer in the reign of Henry VII. From him sprang a branch which resided at Pillesden, and became extinct in the 18th century.
  • The will of the chief justice, by which it appears that his father survived him, directs his body to be buried in the church of Wolavington, in Somerset, near the body "Magistri Johannis Hody," his uncle. By the large amount of silver plate and other articles which he gives in legacies, some idea may be formed of the domestic economy of a chief justice of England in the middle of the fifteenth century.
  • This article incorporates text from Foss's Judges of England, a publication now in the public domain.
  • From: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Hody
  • HODY, John (d.1441), of Stowell, Som. and Pilsdon, Dorset.
  • s. of Thomas Hody, esquire (d.1442), of Kington Magna, Dorset; er. bro. of Alexander†. m. by 1430, Elizabeth (d. 3 Aug. 1473), da. and h. of John Jewe (d.1415/16), of Whitfield in Wiveliscombe, Som. and Pilsdon,2 5s. inc. Sir William†, 3da. Kntd. bef. June 1440.
  • From: http://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/volume/1386-1421/member/ho...

www.findagrave.com

Lady Elizabeth Jewe Cappes
BIRTH unknown
DEATH 3 Aug 1473
BURIAL
St Mary Churchyard
Pilsdon, West Dorset District, Dorset, England
MEMORIAL ID 149903039

Family Members
Parents
John Jewe
unknown–1416

Spouses
John Hody
unknown–1441
Robert Cappes
unknown–1475

Children
Margaret Hody Baynham
William Hody
1441–1524

view all 15

Elizabeth Hody's Timeline

1399
1399
Whitfield, Devon, England (United Kingdom)
1420
1420
Stowell, Somersetshire, England
1424
1424
Stowell, Somerset, , England
1426
1426
Stowell, Somersetshire, England
1428
1428
Stowell, Somersetshire, England
1430
1430
Stawell, Somerset, England (United Kingdom)
1430
Somerset, England, United Kingdom
1434
1434
Stowell, Somersetshire, England
1441
1441