Elizabeth de Willoughby, Baroness Latimer

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About Elizabeth de Willoughby, Baroness Latimer

  • Elizabeth Neville1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10
  • F, #15977, b. circa 1384
  • Father Sir John de Neville, 3rd Baron Neville, Ambassador to France, Admiral of the Fleet Northwards, Lt. of Aquitaine2,3,4,11,7,8,12 b. bt 1337 - 1340, d. 17 Oct 1388
  • Mother Elizabeth Latimer2,3,4,11,7,8,12 b. c 1357, d. 5 Nov 1395
  • Elizabeth Neville was born circa 1384 at of Guisborough, Yorkshire, England. She married Sir Thomas Willoughby, Sheriff of Lincolnshire, son of Sir Robert Willoughby, 4th Baron Willoughby de Eresby and Margery la Zouche, before 27 May 1396; His 2nd marriage. They had 1 son (Sir John).2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10
  • Family Sir Thomas Willoughby, Sheriff of Lincolnshire b. c 1372, d. c 20 Aug 1417
  • Child
    • Sir John Willoughby, 7th Baron Latimer+2,4,7,8 b. c 1400, d. 24 Feb 1437
  • Citations
  • [S4479] Unknown author, Burke's Peerage, 1938, p. 2588; Wallop Family, Vol. 4, line 1045.
  • [S5] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry, p. 130.
  • [S5] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry, p. 539-540.
  • [S16] Douglas Richardson, Magna Carta Ancestry, 2nd Edition, Vol. I, p. 333.
  • [S16] Douglas Richardson, Magna Carta Ancestry, 2nd Edition, Vol. III, p. 246.
  • [S16] Douglas Richardson, Magna Carta Ancestry, 2nd Edition, Vol. IV, p. 334.
  • [S6] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry: 2nd Edition, Vol. I, p. 324.
  • [S4] Douglas Richardson, Royal Ancestry, Vol. I, p. 573-574.
  • [S4] Douglas Richardson, Royal Ancestry, Vol. IV, p. 231.
  • [S4] Douglas Richardson, Royal Ancestry, Vol. V, p. 361.
  • [S16] Douglas Richardson, Magna Carta Ancestry, 2nd Edition, Vol. III, p. 244.
  • [S4] Douglas Richardson, Royal Ancestry, Vol. IV, p. 229-230.
  • From: http://our-royal-titled-noble-and-commoner-ancestors.com/p532.htm#i... _____________________
  • Elizabeth de Neville1
  • F, #14500
  • Last Edited=13 Sep 2013
  • Consanguinity Index=0.28%
  • Elizabeth de Neville was the daughter of John de Neville, 3rd Lord Neville and Elizabeth Latimer, Baroness Latimer (of Corby).1 She married Sir Thomas de Willoughby, son of Robert de Willoughby, 4th Lord Willoughby de Eresby and Alice Skipwith.1
  • Child of Elizabeth de Neville and Sir Thomas de Willoughby
    • John Willoughby+2 b. c 1400, d. 24 Feb 1436/37
  • Citations
  • [S8] BP1999 volume 1, page 14. See link for full details for this source. Hereinafter cited as. [S8]
  • [S37] BP2003 volume 2, page 2246. See link for full details for this source. Hereinafter cited as. [S37]
  • From: http://www.thepeerage.com/p1450.htm#i14500 _________________
  • Elizabeth NEVILLE
  • Born: ABT 1384, Guisborough, Yorkshire, England
  • Father: John NEVILLE (3° B. Neville of Raby)
  • Mother: Elizabeth LATIMER (B. Latimer of Corby)
  • Married: Thomas WILLOUGHBY
  • Children:
    • 1. John WILLOUGHBY
  • From: http://www.tudorplace.com.ar/NEVILLE1.htm#Elizabeth NEVILLE1 _______________
  • John Neville, 3rd Baron Neville de Raby, KG c.1337 – 17 October 1388) was an English peer and soldier.[a]
  • John Neville, born at Raby Castle, Durham, between 1337 and 1340, was the eldest son of Ralph Neville, 2nd Baron Neville de Raby, and Alice Audley. He had five brothers, including Alexander Neville, Archbishop of York, and four sisters.[1]
  • .... etc.
  • Neville married, before 1362, firstly, Maud Percy (d. before 18 February 1379), daughter of Henry de Percy, 2nd Baron Percy of Alnwick, Northumberland, and Idoine de Clifford, daughter of Robert de Clifford, 1st Baron de Clifford, by whom he had two sons and five daughters:[6]
    • Ralph Neville, 1st Earl of Westmorland.
    • Sir Thomas Neville of Brancepeth, who married Maud Stanhope.
    • Alice Neville, who married William Deincourt, 3rd Baron Deincourt.
    • Maud Nevile.
    • Idoine Neville.
    • Eleanor Neville, who married Ralph de Lumley, 1st Baron Lumley.
    • Elizabeth Neville, who became a nun.
  • After his first wife Maud's death in 1379 Neville married secondly, before 9 October 1381, Elizabeth Latimer (d. 5 November 1395), daughter of William Latimer, 4th Baron Latimer, by whom he had a son and a daughter:[7]
    • John Neville, 6th Baron Latimer (c.1382 – 10 December 1430), who married firstly, Maud Clifford (c.26 August 1446), daughter of Thomas de Clifford, 6th Baron de Clifford, whom he divorced before 1413x17, and by whom he had no issue. She married secondly, Richard of Conisburgh, 3rd Earl of Cambridge.[8]
    • Elizabeth Neville, who married, before 27 May 1396, Sir Thomas Willoughby (died shortly before 20 August 1417) son of Robert Willoughby, 4th Baron Willoughby de Eresby (c.1348-50 – 9 August 1396), by whom she had one child, Sir John Willoughby (c.1400 – 24 February 1437).[9]
  • After Neville's death, his widow, Elizabeth, married, as his second wife, Robert Willoughby, 4th Baron Willoughby de Eresby (c.1348-50 – 9 August 1396), by whom she had a daughter, Margaret Willoughby.[10]
  • From: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Neville,_3rd_Baron_Neville_de_Raby _______________
  • WILLOUGHBY, Sir Thomas (d.1418), of Boston and Frampton, Lincs.
  • 3rd s. of Robert, 4th Lord Willoughby of Eresby (c.1349-1396), by his 2nd w. Margery (d.1396), da. of William, 2nd Lord Zouche of Harringworth (c.1321-1382). m. (1) Katherine, da. of Sir Thomas Friskney, div. Aug. 1381; (2) by July 1396, Elizabeth, da. of John, 3rd Lord Neville of Raby (d.1388) by his 2nd w. Elizabeth (c.1385-1395), da. of William, 4th Lord Latimer of Corby (1330-81), suo jure Baroness Latimer, 1s. Kntd. 11 Oct. 1399.1
  • Offices Held
    • Sheriff, Lincolnshire 5 Nov. 1403-22 Oct. 1404.
    • Alderman of the guild of St. George, Boston by 12 Feb. 1404-d., Corpus Christi, Boston c.1406-7.2
    • Commr. of oyer and terminer, Lincs. Mar. 1406 (disorder at Friston); sewers (Lindsey) Nov. 1410, (Holland) Feb. 1412, May, Dec. 1415; to reinstate the abbot of Kirkstead Nov. 1410.
    • J.p. Lincs. (Holland) 20 May 1406-Feb. 1407, 14 Feb. 1412-Dec. 1417.
  • Although he was his father’s younger son, and had thus to make do with a comparatively modest income for most of his life, Thomas Willoughby was at least able to exploit the considerable reserves of influence which his family had exercised for over a century. He was one of the four sons of Lord Willoughby’s second marriage, his mother being the daughter of William, Lord Zouche of Harringworth, and his maternal grandmother a child of William, Lord Roos of Helmsley. On his father’s side he was descended from Cecily, the daughter of Robert Ufford, 1st earl of Suffolk; and so, even as a young man, he could boast an impressive range of connexions. At some point before 1381 he married Katherine Friskney, who belonged to a Lincolnshire family, but for a now unknown reason she (or her kinsmen) sued for divorce and the marriage was dissolved in the late summer of that year. By July 1396, when his father drew up his last testament at Eresby, Thomas had taken as his second wife Elizabeth, the daughter of John, Lord Neville of Raby, and Elizabeth, suo jure Baroness Latimer. They were already related by marriage, since on the death of Thomas’s mother in 1391, Lord Willoughby had decided to remarry, his choice falling upon the baroness, a widow of some three years’ standing. Long-term dynastic considerations made it advisable that their two children should marry each other, for although the baroness had a son to inherit her title, she was clearly anxious to secure the succession should he die without heirs. (This did, in fact, prove to be the case, and in 1430 Thomas’s son by Elizabeth became the 7th Lord Latimer.) Meanwhile, Lord Willoughby specified in his will that the young couple should receive a hostel and other property in Calais, although he did not then leave them any land in England, and an arrangement whereby they were promised the reversion of a sum of 250 marks to buy a suitable home never came into effect. Their joint legacy did, however, include a quantity of silver and gold plate and all the ornaments from Lord Willoughby’s portable chapel, as well as a newly painted chamber (la novelle sale stayne) which had belonged to the baroness. Elizabeth became the owner of a magnificent bed whose hangings bore the arms of her ancestors the Nevilles and the Latimers, together with other ornate household goods. She and Willoughby went to live at Frampton during this period, for in November 1396 Bishop Buckingham of Lincoln awarded them a licence for the private celebration of mass in their house there. The last years of the 15th century were, otherwise, an uneventful period in Thomas’s life, although in the spring of 1398 he and his younger brother, John, to whom he was very close, acted as co-feoffees of land in Skegness. At about the same time he and his wife obtained two papal indults, one permitting them to make use of a portable altar, and the other granting plenary remission of sins at the hour of death.3
  • The accession of Henry IV brought with it a dramatic improvement in Thomas Willoughby’s career prospects. He was one of the 46 knights created by Henry IV on the eve of his coronation; and two months later he and an associate named John Toup were granted the farm of the petty custom at Bishop’s Lynn an initial term of five years which was subsequently extended to Easter 1411. The two men agreed to pay £114 a year at the Exchequer for this privilege, although by the spring of 1404 they had fallen badly into arrears and Toup was committed to the Fleet prison until his debts were paid. Willoughby, who was then serving as sheriff of Lincolnshire, easily managed to avoid this fate, no doubt because of his influential social position. His eldest brother, William, 5th Lord Willoughby, had indeed gone surety on his behalf when he became sheriff, and may well have been instrumental in securing him a seat on the county bench. It is, even so, worth noting that despite his popularity with the new regime Willoughby did not escape harassment at the hands of duchy of Lancaster officials trying to raise money to pay for Henry IV’s expedition against King Richard in the summer of 1399. He complained to the authorities that ‘graundes et excessives sommes’ had been demanded of his tenants in and around Frampton, and asked that these should be repaid at once. We do not know exactly when or how he acquired his property in Lincolnshire, although some of it had probably been settled upon him by his father when he was a child. In December 1402, he arraigned the vicar of Frampton and others on an assize of novel disseisin at Lincoln, but his claim to land in the village was found to be fraudulent. In June of the following year he settled the manor of Bicker (in Lincolnshire) upon trustees including his brother, John, and the merchant, John Bell*, who was a fellow member of the guild of Corpus Christi in Boston. His influence in the town must already have been quite strong, for by May 1404 he had been elected alderman of the rather less powerful guild of St. George. A dispute then arose between its members and those who belonged to the fraternity of St. Simon and St. Jude over the right to precedence at public assemblies and processions in Boston. The matter was submitted to three arbitrators, one of whom was Willoughby’s brother, the 5th Lord, while the other was his kinsman, William, Lord Roos. Needless to say, their decision went in his favour, and the guild of St. George was accorded priority. He appears still to have been in office when, in about 1406, he was made alderman of the Corpus Christi guild as well. Not all his affairs ran so smoothly at this time, however, as in May 1406 one of his former servants managed to avoid prosecution for failing to account satisfactorily for money received on his behalf.4
  • The Willoughbys were a close-knit family: on the death of the 5th Lord in 1409, Sir Thomas transferred his loyal attachment to his nephew, Robert, who then succeeded to the title. They served together on various local commissions and were frequently associated on the Lincolnshire bench. Our Member’s presence in the Parliament of 1411 also owed something to his brother, John, who was one of the electors named on the return. A few months after his second and last appearance in the appearance in the House of Commons, some three years later, he began preparations for Henry V’s expedition to France, during which he and John served under the command of their young nephew. In July 1415 he obtained royal letters of protection pending his departure overseas, but whereas his brother and three other kinsmen were struck down with dysentery at Harfleur, he appears to have emerged from the siege unscathed.5 Having already managed to secure a pardon for not appearing in court to answer a London draper for debt, Sir Thomas himself went to law after his return to England for the recovery of sums totalling £24. He was unsuccessful, because the delaying tactics which he had previously used to such advantage were now employed against him. He did, however, obtain a licence for the guild of St. George (of which he was still head) to hold in mortmain additional property for the support of a chantry; and it was also during this period that Sir Thomas Dymock engaged his services, together with those of Sir Thomas Hawley* and John Bell, as a trustee.6
  • Sir Thomas Willoughby died intestate shortly before 6 May 1418, when the sequestrator of Lindsey and Holland granted letters of administration to three local men, including the merchant, John Glaston. As already noted, he left at least one son, who eventually succeeded to the barony of Latimer, and whose descendants became the Lords Willoughby de Broke.7
  • From: http://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/volume/1386-1421/member/wi... _____________
  • Plantagenet Ancestry: A Study In Colonial And Medieval Families, 2nd Edition ...
  • https://books.google.com/books?id=kjme027UeagC&printsec=frontcover&...
  • Pg.324
    • BOSVILE
  • HENRY II, King of England, by a mistress, IDA DE TONY.
  • WILLIAM LONGESPEE, Knt., Earl of Salisbury, married ELA OF SALISBURY.
  • WILLIAM LONGESPEE, Knt., of Amesbury, Wiltshire, married IDOINE DE CAMVILLE.
  • ELA LONGESPEE, married JAMES DE AUDLEY, Knt., of Heleigh (in Audley), Staffordshire.
  • HUGH DE AUDLEY, Knt., Lord Audley, married ISEULT ____ .
  • ALICE DE AUDLEY, married RALPH DE NEVILLE, Knt., 2nd Lord Neville of Raby.
  • JOHN DE NEVILLE, K.G. 3rd Lord Neville of Raby, married ELIZABETH LATIMER (desc. King Henry II) [see NEVILLE 8].
  • 9. ELIZABETH NEVILLE, was a legatee in the 1386 will of her father. She married before 27 May 1396 (as his 2nd wife) THOMAS WILLOUGHBY, Knt., of Boston, Bicker, and Frampton, Lincolnshire, Sheriff of Lincolnshire, 1403-4, Knight of the Shire for Lincolnshire, Alderman of the Guilds of both St. George and Corpus Christi, Boston, 2nd son of Robert de Willoughby, Knt., 4th Lord Willoughby of Eresby, of Eresby, Lincolnshire, by his 1st wife, Margery, daughter of William la Zouche, Knt., 2nd Lord Zouche of Harringworth. They had one son, John, Knt. He married (1st) KATHERINE FRISKNEY, daughter of Thomas Friskney, Knt., from whom he was divorced in Aug. 1381. He was a legatee in the 1395 will of his father, Robert de Willoughby, 4th Lord Willoughby of Eresby. He was granted protection 5 July 1415, he being in the retinue of Robert, Lord Willoughby. SIR THOMAS WILLOUGHBY died shortly before 20 Aug. 1416 (date of adminstration on his estate).
  • .... etc.
  • 10. JOHN WILLOUGHBY, Knt., of Kirton in Holland, Lincolnshire, son and heir by his father's 2nd marriage, born about 1400 (aged 30 in 1430). He married JANE WELBY. They had two sons, John, Knt., and probably Robert, Esq., and one daughter, Joan (wife of John Kyme, Esq.). He was heir in 1430 to his uncle, John Neville, 6th Lord Latimer, who before his death settled the greater part of his estates on his half-brother Ralph Neville, K.G., Earl of Westmorland. he was employed on various commissions in Lincolnshire from 1430 to 1436. In 1430 Thomas Stevenson of Boston, Lincolnshire, Gentleman, granted him 4 acres of pasture in Boston. He was not smmoned to Parliament. SIR JOHN WILLOUGHBY, de jure 7th Lord Latimer, died 24 Feb. 1436/7.
  • .... etc. ____________________________
  • Magna Carta Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 2nd Edition ...
  • https://books.google.com/books?id=8JcbV309c5UC&pg=RA2-PA243&lpg=RA2...
  • Pg.242
  • RALPH DE NEVILLE, Knt., 2nd Lord Neville of Raby, of Raby, Durham, Middleham, Sheriff Hutton, Snape, Sutton in the Forest, Well, etc., Yorkshire, Barford, Norfolk, Blythburgh, Suffolk, etc., Warden of the Scottish Marches, Justice of the Forest North of the Trent, 2nd but 1st surviving son, born about 1291 (aged 40 in 1331). He married by license dated 14 Jan. 1326/7 ALICE DE AUDLEY, widow of Ralph de Greystoke, Knt. (died 14 July 1323, 1st Lord Greystoke, of Greystoke, Cumberland, and daughter of Hugh de Audley, Knt., Lord Audley, by his wife, Iseult. They had six sons, John, K.G. [3rd Lord Neville of Raby], Robert, Knt., Alexander [Archbishop of York], Thomas [Canon of York and Howden], William, Knt., and Ralph, Knt., and four daughters, Margaret, Katherine (wife of William de Dacre, 2nd Lord Dacre), Eleanor (wife of Geoffrey le Scrope, later Abbess of the Minories in London), and Euphame (wife of Robert de Clifford, Reynold de Lucy, and Walter de Heslarton, Knt.). he fought in Scotland in 1311, 1319, 1334, and 1335. he supported the Kings against Thomas, Earl of Lancaster, and was ordered to joind the King with his forces at Coventry 14 Feb. 1322. They received a papal indult for plenary remission in 1333. In 1333 Ralph and his wife, Alice, received a papal indult to choose a confesser to give them plenary remission at the hour of death. In 1340 he was granted a weekly market and yearly fair at Blythburgh, Suffolk. He commanded the English Army against the Scots at Nevill's Cross 17 Oct. 1346 fought on the outskirts of Durham. For the next twenty years he was constantly employed in Scottish affairs, either as Commissioner to treat for, or preserve peace, or as Warden of the Marches. He presented to the church of Barford, Norfolk in 1355, and to the church of Houghton-on-the-Hill, Norfolk in 1361. SIR RALPH DE NEVILLE, 2nd Lord Neville of Raby, died 5 Aug. 1367. Alice, Lady Neville, died 12 Jan. 1373/4. They were buried at Durham Cathedral, their tomb being utterly defaced in 1651 by Scots prisoners imprisoned in the Cathedral.
  • .... etc.
  • Pg.243.
  • Children of Ralph de Neville, Knt., by Alice de Audley:
    • i. JOHN DE NEVILLE, K.G., 3rd Lord Neville of Raby [see next].
    • ii. ALEXANDER DE NEVILLE, King's clerk, younger son, born about 1332 (aged 15 in 1347). In 1248 he was granted a license for one year for the celebration of mass in an oratory in the hostel in which he and his brother Thomas, were residing at Oxford. he obtained a M.A. degree before 1357. He was appointed Rector of Aysgarth, Yorkshire before 1351; Rector of Kirkby Misperton, Yorkshire, 1357; Master of the Hospital of St. Thomas the Martyr, Bolter-in-Allendale, Northumberland before 1361; Archdeacon of Cornwall, 1361; Canon of York and Prebendary of Bole, 1361; Canon and Prebendary of Darlington, Durham, 1362; Canon of Howden, Yorkshire and Prebendary of Skelton, 1362; Archdeacon of Durham, before Jan. 1371. He was made Archbishop of York in 1374. In 1386 he was included as a member of the commission appointed to regulate the affairs of the kingdom and the royal household. he became the most bitter oponent of Thomas, Duke of Gloucester, and his party. In 1387 he was appealed of high treason in Parliament, found guilty, and his property forfeited. he took refuge in Brabant, where he ministered as a parish priest in Louvain until his death. ALEXANDER DE NEVILLE, late Archbishop of York, died 16 May 1392, and was buried in the church of the Carmelites in Louvain. .... etc.
    • iii. THOMAS DE NEVILLE, clerk, born about 1332 (aged 19 in 1351). He was appointed Canon of York and Prebendary of Bole in York Minster, 1350; Rector of Brantingham, Yorkshire before 1351; Canon of howden, Yorkshire and Prebendary of Barnby, 1351; Rector of Patrick Brompton, Yorkshire in 1357; Rector of 2nd portion of Goodmanham, Yorkshire, 1359; Canon and Prebendary of Darlington, Durham. he died at Villeneuve near Avignon before Aug. 1361. .... etc.
    • iv. RALPH DE NEVILLE, Knt., of Thornton Bridge (in Brafferton), Yorkshire, married ELIZABETH DE LEEDS [see THORNTON BRIDGE 7].
    • v. MARGARET DE NEVILLE, married (1st) WILLIAM DE ROOS, Knt., 3rd Lord Roos of Helmsley [see ROOS 5.i]; (2nd) HENRY DE PERCY, K.G., 4th Lord Percy ]see PERCY 9].
  • Pg.244
  • 7. JOHN DE NEVILLE, K.G., 3rd Lord Neville of Raby, of Raby, Brancepeth, and Staindrop, Durham, Middleham, Yorkshire, etc., joint Ambassador to France, Joint Warden of the East marches, Admiral of the Fleet Northwards, Lieutenant of Aquitaine, Joint Warden of the marches, and, in right of his 2nd wife, Sutton, Bedfordshire, Isenhampstead (in Chesham), Buckinghamshire and Great Carbrooke, Norfolk, son and heir, born about 1337-40 (aged 30 in 1367, aged 30-32 in 1368, aged 30 in 1374). He was a captain under his father at the Battle of Neville's Cross in 1346. He was knighted in 1360 when he attended Sir Walter de Mauny in a skirmish at the barriers of Paris. he married (1st) before 1362 MAUD DE PERCY, daughter of Henry de Percy, K.G., 2nd Lord Percy, of Alnwick, Northumberland, Topcliffe, Yorkshire, etc., by Idoine, daughter of Robert de Clifford, Knt., 1st Lord Clifford [see PERCY 7 for her ancestry]. They had two sons, Ralph, K.G. [1st Earl of Westmorland, 4th Lord Neville of Raby], and Thomas, Knt. [Lord Furnival], and five daughters, Alice (wife of William Deincourt, 3rd Lord Deincourt), Maud, Idoine, Eleanor, and Elizabeth (Minoress nun). He fought in France in 1366 and 1373-4. He was repeatedly appointed commissioner to treat with the Scots. His wife, Maud, was a legatee in the 1368 will of her brother, Thomas Percy, Bishop of Norwich. He presented to the church of Houghton-on-the-Hill, Norfolk in 1370. In 1371 he conveyed the manor of Blythburgh, Suffolk to Roger Swillington, Knt. for 40 marks. He was heir in 1374 to his younger brother, Robert Neville, Duke of Brittany. His wife, Maud died before 18 Feb. 1378/9. He married (2nd) before 9 Oct. 1381 ELIZABETH LE LATIMER, daughter and heiress of William le Latimer, K.G., 4th Lord Latimer, by Elizabeth, daughter of Edmund de Arundel, Knt., 9th Earl of Arundel [see FITZ ALAN 5.viii for her ancestry]. They had one son, John, Knt. [6th Lord Latimer], and one daughter, Elizabeth. SIR JOHN DE NEVILLE, 3rd Lord Neville of Raby, died testate at Newcastle-upon-Tyne 17 Oct. 1388. He left a will dated 31 Aug. 1386, requesting burial in Durham Cathedral by his 1st wife, Maud. His widow, Elizabeth, married (2nd) (as his 2nd wife) ROBERT WILLOUGHBY, Knt., 4th Lord Willoughby of Eresby [see WILLOUGHBY 7], son and heir of John Willoughby, Knt., 3rd Lord Willoughby of Eresby, by Cecily, daughter of Robert de Ufford, K.G., 1st Earl of Suffolk, Lord Ufford. He was born about 1348-50 (aged 22 or 24 in 1372). They had one daughter, Margaret. He served in France and Spain with John of Gaunt, Duke of Lancaster. he was summoned to Parliament from 20 Jan. 1375/6, by writs directed Roberto de Wilughby. He was co-heir in 1382 to his uncle, William de Ufford, K.G., 2nd Earl of Suffolk, Lord Ufford [see BLACKMERE7.i: BEAUCHAMP 6.viii]. In 1383-4 he and his cousin, Roger de Scales, Knt., granted the reversion of 2/3rd of the manor of Dalham, Suffolk, together with the advowson, to John Marlere, clerk, William Bateman, and others, which property was then held in dower by Margaret de Haudlo, widow of their cousin, Walter de Norwich, Knt. His wife, Elizabeth, died 5 Nov. 1395. She left a will dated 18 Oct. 1395, proved 10 Nov. 1395, requesting burial at Spilsby, Lincolnshire. SIR ROBERT DE WILLOUGHBY, 4th Lord Willoughby of Eresby, died 9 Aug. 1396, and was buried at Spilsby, Lincolnshire. He left a will dated 5 June 1395.
  • .... etc.
  • Pg.333
    • BROOK
  • ROBERT DE ROOS, of Helmsley, Yorkshire, married ISABEL OF SCOTLAND.
  • WILLIAM DE ROOS, Knt., of Helmsley, Yorkshire, married LUCY FITZ PETER.
  • ROBERT DE ROOS, Knt., of Helmsley, Yorkshire, married ISABEL D'AUBENEY.
  • WILLIAM DE ROOS, Knt., 1st Lord Roos of Helmsley, married MAUD DE VAUX.
  • WILLIAM DE ROOS, Knt., 2nd Lord Roos of Helmsley, married MARGERY DE BADLESMERE.
  • ELIZABETH DE ROOS, married WILLIAM LA ZOUCHE, Knt., 2nd Lord Zouche of Harringworth
  • MARGERY LA ZOUCHE, married ROBERT DE WILLOUGHBY, Knt., 4th Lord Willoughby of Eresby [see WILLOUGHBY 7].
  • 8. THOMAS WILLOUGHBY, Knt., of Boston, Bicker, and Frampson, Lincolnshire, Sheriff of Lincolnshire, 1403-4, Knight of the Shire for Lincolnshire, Alderman of the Guilds of both St. George and Corpus Christi, Boston, younger son by his father's 1st marriage. He married (1st) KATHERINE FRISKNEY, daughter of Thomas Friskney, Knt. They were divorced in Aug. 1381. He was a legatee in the 1395 will of his father, Robert de Willoughby, 4th Lord Willoughby of Eresby. He married (2nd) before 27 May 1396 ELIZABETH NEVILLE, daughter of John de Neville, K.G., 3rd Lord Neville of Raby, by his 2nd wife, Elizabeth Latimer, suo jure Lady Latimer, daughter and heiress of William le Latimer, K.G., 4th Lord Latimer [see NEVILLE 7 for her ancestry]. They had one son, John, Knt. He was granted protection 5 July 1415, he being in the retinue of Robert, Lord Willoughby, SIR THOMAS WILLOUGHBY died shortly before 20 Aug. 1417 (date of administration on his estate).
  • .... etc.
  • JOHN WILLOUGHBY, Knt., of Kirton in Holland, Lincolnshire, son and heir by his father's 2nd marriage, born about 1400 (aged 30 in 1430). He married JANE WELBY. They had two sons, John, Knt., and probably Robert, Esq., and one daughter, Joan (wife of John Kyme, Esq.). He was heir in 1430 to his uncle John Neville, Knt., 6th Lord Latimer, who before his death settled the greater part of his estates on his half-brother, Ralph Neville, K.G., Earl of Westmorland. He was
  • Pg.334
  • employed on various commissions in Lincolnshire from 1430 to 1436. In 1430 Thomas Stevenson of Boston, Lincolnshire, Gent., granted him 4 acres of pasture in Boston. He was not summoned to Parliament. SIR JOHN WILLOUGHBY, de jure 7th Lord Latimer, died 24 Feb. 1436/7.
  • .... etc. ________________
  • Sir John de Neville
  • Birth: 1328 Staindrop, County Durham, England
  • Death: Oct. 17, 1388 Northumberland, England
  • John de Neville, 3rd Baron Neville de Raby
  • John was the eldest son of six sons and four daughters of Ralph Neville, 2nd Baron Neville de Raby and Alice de Audley, the grandson of Ranulph de Neville and Eupheme FitzRobert, Hugh I de Audley and Isolte de Mortimer. John was born at Raby Castle between 1337 and 1340.
  • He married Maud Percy, daughter of Henry de Percy, 2nd Baron Percy and Idoine de Clifford, in July 1357 at Alnwick Castle Northumberland. They had seven children:
    • Ralph Neville, 1st Earl of Westmorland
    • Thomas Neville, 5th Baron Furnivall
    • Idione Neville
    • Alice Neville, wife of William Deincourt, 3rd Baron Deincourt
    • Maud Neville
    • Elizabeth de Neville, wife of Ralph de Lumley, 1st Baron Lumley
    • Eleanor Neville, a nun
  • After Maud died in 1379 John married a second time to Elizabeth Latimer, daughter of William Latimer, 4th Baron Latimer Their two children were:
    • John Neville, 6th Baron Latimer
    • Elizabeth Neville, wife of Thomas Willoughby
  • John received his father's title and lands in England and Scotland at his father's death in August of 1367. He fought in the Battle of Neville's Cross on 17 October 1346 as a Captain in his father's division. He was knighted in 1360 and after his father's death in 1367 he succeeded to the title of 3rd Baron Neville of Raby. In 1368 he served as the English ambassador to France. He was Admiral of the King's fleet and served in the wars against the Scots and French. He was made a Knight of the Garter in 1369, and served as Steward of the Household in 1372, serving in the Scottish borders for several years. In 1378 he received licence to fortify Raby Castle, was appointed Keeper of Fronsac Castle and became the Seneschal of Gascony.
  • Sir John died in 1388 at Newcastle Upon Tyne and is entombed at Durham Cathedral with his first wife.
  • After his death, his widow, Elizabeth Latimer, would marry her daughter's father-in-law, Sir Robert Willoughby, the 4th Baron Willoughby of Eresby, as his second wife. Sir John was succeeded by his eldest son, Sir Ralph de Neville.
  • Family links:
  • Parents:
  • Ralph de Neville (1291 - 1367)
  • Alice De Audley Neville (____ - 1374)
  • Spouses:
  • Maud de Percy Neville (1335 - 1379)
  • Elizabeth Latimer Neville (1357 - 1395)
  • Children:
    • Thomas De Neville (1362 - 1406)*
    • Ralph de Neville (1364 - 1425)*
    • John Neville (1382 - 1430)*
  • Siblings:
  • William Fitzralph Greystoke (1321 - 1359)**
  • John de Neville (1328 - 1388)
  • Alexander de Neville (1332 - 1392)*
  • Eleanor Neville Scrope (1340 - 1398)*
  • Margaret de Neville Percy (1341 - 1372)*
  • *Calculated relationship
  • **Half-sibling
  • Burial: Durham Cathedral, Durham, Durham Unitary Authority, County Durham, England
  • Find A Grave Memorial# 83998196
  • From: http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=83998196 ______________
  • Links
  • https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Neville,_John_de_(DNB00)

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Elizabeth de Willoughby, Baroness Latimer's Timeline

1384
1384
Guisborough, Yorkshire, England
1400
1400
Guisborough, Yorkshire, England
1400
Age 16
Y, Somme, Picardie, France