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Frances D'Oyly (Edmonds)

Also Known As: "D’Oyley"
Birthdate:
Birthplace: Chislehampton, Oxfordshire, England (United Kingdom)
Death: circa 1601 (69-87)
Of , , , England
Immediate Family:

Daughter of Christopher (Andrew) Edmonds and Elizabeth Bledlow
Wife of Richard Danvers and John D'Oyley, of Greenlands, Bucks & Chislehampton, Oxon
Mother of Sir Robert D'Oyly; Dorothy D'Oyley; Dr. Thomas D'Oyly; Francis D'Oyly; John D'Oyley and 3 others
Sister of Christopher Edmonds, MP and Elizabeth Edmonds
Half sister of Isabel Huddleston; Sir Henry Williams; Margaret Norreys; Francis Williams and Willingford “ Millicent” Williams, of Hinton, Oxfordshire

Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:

About Frances D'Oyly

http://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/volume/1558-1603/member/do...

Reference John D'Oyley b. c.1542,

  • 1st s. of John Doyley of Greenlands, Bucks. and Chislehampton, Oxon.,
  • bro. of Henry. * m. Elizabeth (d. 1621), da. of Sir Nicholas Bacon† by his 1st w. Jane, da. of William Ferneley of West Creting, Suff.,
  • Frances Edmonds
  • F, #75469, b. circa 1522, d. circa 1601
  • Father Christopher (Andrew) Edmonds b. c 1500, d. 23 Jun 1523
  • Mother Elizabeth Bledlow b. c 1499
  • Frances Edmonds was born circa 1522 at of Chislehampton, Oxfordshire, England. She married John D'Oyly, son of Thomas D'Oyly and Alice Curzon, circa 1547 at of Greenlandhous, Hambleden, England. Frances Edmonds died circa 1601 at England.
  • Family John D'Oyly b. c 1520
  • Child
    • John D'Oyly, Esq.+ b. c 1548, d. Mar 1603
  • From: http://our-royal-titled-noble-and-commoner-ancestors.com/p2512.htm#... _______________
  • The baronetage of England, containing a genealogical and historical account of all the English baronets now existing, with their descents, marriages, and memorable actions both in war and peace. Collected from authentic manuscripts, records, old wills, our best historians, and other authorities (1771)
  • http://www.archive.org/details/baronetageofengl02wottuoft
  • http://www.archive.org/stream/baronetageofengl02wottuoft#page/336/m...
  • 18. Thomas D'Oyly, who had his feat at Marlow, but, with his fon, John, purchafed their prefent feat at Chiflehampton. He married two wives ; firft, Alice, daughter and heir of ___ Curfon ; fecondly, Alice, daughter of ___ Hall, of Oxenbridge in Wiltshire, relict of Sir William Cotefmore ; by the laft, he had no iflfue, but by the firft, he left iffue feveral fons and daughters.
    • 19. John D'Oyly, his eldeft fon, married Frances, fifter and coheir to Sir Chriftopher Edmonds, Knt. (maid of honour to Queen Elizabeth) by whom he had a numerous iffue ; as, Sir Robert D'Oyly, a great courtier in the reign of Queen Elizabeth, who married Elizabeth, daughter of Sir Nicholas Bacon, lord-keeper of the great feal, &c. He was killed at the black affizes at Oxford, by the ftench of the prifoners, together with many relations, and gentlemen of diftinction, anno 1577, S.P.
      • 20. John D'Oyly, heir after his brother, lies buried at Stadham. He married Urfula, fifter to Sir Anthony Cope, of Hanwell
      • http://www.archive.org/stream/baronetageofengl02wottuoft#page/337/m...
      • in Oxfordfhire, Bart. cofferer to King James I. by whom he had feveral children, viz. Sir Cope; Margery, married to George Barfton ; Elizabeth, married, firft, to Francis Harvey, Efq; fecondly, to Sir Robert Browne, Bart, thirdly, to Sir Guy Palms, Knt. Dorcas, wife of Francis Quarles, of Rumford in Effex, Efq; Mary, wife of Henry Howton, of Cothorp, Efq; and Prifcilla, wife of Edward Goddard, Efq. _________________________
  • The visitations of the county of Oxford : taken in the years 1566 by William Harvey, Clarencieux; 1574 by Richard Lee, Portcullis; and in 1634 by John Philpott, Somerset, and William Ryly, Bluemantle ... Vol. 5
  • http://status.archive.org/details/visitationsofcou05turnrich
  • http://archive.org/stream/visitationsofcou05turnrich#page/n243/mode...
  • Pg.224
  • (Doyley.) Pg. 224 - 227
  • Ric'us Doyley de . . . in com. Oxon. ; ch: Thomas
    • Thomas Doyley, obiit 8. R. 2. ; ch: Will'us (m. Isabella ) Doyley
      • Will'us Doyley = Isabella ; ch: Thomas Doyley
        • Thomas Doyley ; ch: Will'mus Doyley
          • Will'mus Doyley ; ch: Johes. (m. Isabella Moore) Doyley
            • Johes Doyley de Grenland in com. Bucking. = Isabella fil & cohaeres Rici. Moore. ; ch: Willus. (m. Margeria Abbington), Tho. (m. Alicia Coulson & Alicia Hall de Uxbridge) Doyley
              • Willus Doyley de Hunteston in com. Buck. = Margeria filia Mathei Abbington de comitatu Berks. ; ch: Robertus (m. Anna Elkington), Johes (fil & haeres.) Doyley
                • .... etc.
              • Tho. Doyley de Chislehampton in com. Oxon. fil. & haeres. = Alica filia & haeres . . . Coulson ; ch: (Pg. 226 Sibilla (m. Willi. Turner), Elizabetha (m. Petri Gorsington & Howelli dee Oxford & Lodovici de Ipsley), Katherina (m. David Baugh), Johannes (m. Francisca Edmondes), Margaretta (m. Georgii Danvers) Doyley) ; = 2. Alicia fila . . . Hall de Uxbridge relicta Willmi. Cotismore, miles. ; ch: (Pg. 225 Robtus. (m. Catherina Tregeon & Elizabetha Cheyney) Doyley)
                • http://archive.org/stream/visitationsofcou05turnrich#page/n244/mode...
                • Pg.225
                • Robtus. Doyley de Merton in com. Oxon bt. ao. 1577. = Catherina filia Johnis. Tregeon de Gouldein in com. Cornubiae. ; ch: Martha (m. Bartholomeo Tiping de Draycott), Robtus. (m. Elizabetha Weston de Banbury & Anna Yate de Witney; = Elizabetha filia Johnis. Cheyney de Woodhey in com. Berks. ux. Jª. ; ch: Susanna (m. Edmundo Bray de Cobham & . . . Cooper & . . . Hadock & . . . Lumley), Elizabetha (m. Robti. Hasilwood de Daulby), Jana (m. Franciso Teringham de Weston), Daniell. Carollus. (s. p.), Johannes (m. Anna Bernard de Abbington), Radulphus (2. fil.) Doyley
                  • .... etc.
                • http://status.archive.org/stream/visitationsofcou05turnrich#page/n2...
                • Pg. 226
                • Sibilla uxor Willi Turner de Taplow in com. Bucks.
                • Elizabetha uxor Petri Gorsington. 2. Howelli de Oxford. 3. Lodovici de Ipsley.
                • Katherina uxor David Baugh de Elynge in com. Midd.
                • Margaretta uxor Georgii Danvers de Banbury.
                • Johannes Doyley de Chislehampton in com. Oxon. = Francisca filia & haeres. Christopheri Edmondes de Leuknor. ; ch: Robertus (m. Elizabetha Bacon), Johannes (m. Ursula Cope), Dorothea (m. Silvestris Pecke), Fillis (m. Josephi Marre de Beconsfeild), (Pg.227 Franscus (captitaneus. s. p.), Thomas (m. Anna Perott), Henr. (m. Dorothea Townesend) Doyley)
                  • Robertus Doyley de Chislehampton, miles, obiit 1577. s. p. = Elizabetha fil. & haeres Nichi. Bacon, mil. Custodis magni Sigilli Angl.
                  • Dorothea uxor Silvestris Pecke de Remnan in com. Berks.
                  • Fillis ux. Josephi Marre de Beaconsfeild in com. Buck.
                  • Johannes Doyley de Chislehampton in Comitatu Oxon. 2. fil. = Ursula uxor [soror] Anthony Cope de Hanwell, militis. ; ch: Margeria (Georgii Baston), Priscilla, Maria (m. Henrici Hawkyn), Dorcas (m. Francisci Quarles), Elizabetha (m. Francisci Harby & Robto. Browne & Guidonio Palmes), Johannes (2. ), Copius (m. Martha Jacobi), Josias ([James] 3.) Doyley
                    • Elizabetha uxor Francisci Harby de Adyon [Adston]. Renupta Robto. Browne de Walcott in com Northton. Baronetto. 3. Guidonio Palmes, Militi.
                    • .... etc.
                  • http://archive.org/stream/visitationsofcou05turnrich#page/n246/mode...
                  • Pg.227
                  • Franscus, Capitaneus. s. p.
                  • Thomas Doyley de London fil. 3. Medecinae Doctor. = Anna filia Symonis Perott de North Lee in com. Oxon. ; ch: Michaell (Captitaneus.), Francisc., Norricius (m. Beatrix Naylor & Susannam Langley), Margeria (m. Hugonis Cressy), Ffrancisca Maria Doyley.
                    • .... etc.
                  • Henr. Doyley de hospitio Lilncolniensi London. 4. fil. = Dorothea filia Roger Townesend de . . . in com Nor?. ; ch: Robtus, Maria (m. Tho. Williams) Doyley.
                    • .... etc.
  • http://archive.org/stream/visitationsofcou05turnrich#page/n344/mode...
  • Pg.325
  • (Doyley, of Chiselhampton.)
  • Thomas Doyley of Chiselhampton = Alice daur. & heire of . . . Coulston. ; ch: John (m. Francis Edmunds) Doyley
    • John Doyley of Chiselhampton. = Francis daur. & heire of Sr. Christoph. Edmunds of Leuknor. ; ch: John (m. Ursulah Cope), Sr. Robt. (sans issue) Doyley
      • Sr. Robt. Doyley of Chiselhampton sans issue.
      • John Doyley of Chiselhampton brother & heire. = Ursulah daur. of Sr. Anthony Cope of Hanwell ch: Sr. Cope (m. Martha Quarles) Doyley
        • Sr. Cope Doyley of Chiselhampton in com. Oxon. = Martha daur. of James Quarles of Romford in Essex. ; ch: Elizabeth (dyed unm.), Joane (unm. 1634), Martha (m. Jo. Arnold), Robert (now cittizen of London), John (m. Marah Shirley), Charles (Studen in Wadham Coll.), James (dyed sans issue), Frances (marchant in London) Doyley
          • .... etc. _________________________
  • DOYLEY, John (c.1545-1623), of Chislehampton, Oxon.
  • b. c.1545, 2nd s. of John Doyley (d.1569)1 of Greenlands, Bucks. and Frances, da. of Andrew Edmonds of Cressing Temple, Essex; bro. of Henry† and Sir Robert Doyley†.2 educ. G. Inn, entered 1606.3 m. Ursula (d.1636), da. of Edward Cope of Hanwell, Oxon., 3s. 6da.4 suc. bro. 1577.5 d. 18 Dec. 1623.6
  • Offices Held
    • J.p. Oxon. 1577-d.;7 sheriff 1586-7,8 dep. lt. 1596-d.;9 commr. sewers, Oxon. and Berks. 1604-12,10 Thames navigation 1607,11 subsidy, Oxon. 1608, 1621-2;12 treas. Oxon. 1608-19;13 commr. aid, Oxf. Univ. and Oxon. 1609;14 collector, Privy Seal loan Oxon. 1613,15 commr. swans Oxon. 1615.16
  • Doyley was descended from the Norman baron who built Oxford castle in 1071; but recent generations had not lived in the county.17 Doyley’s elder brother, who died of typhus after the ‘black assizes’, left him an estate encumbered with jointures to his mother, who died in 1601, and his sister-in-law, the half-sister of Francis Bacon*.18 The first of the family to reside at Chislehampton, he was returned for the county in 1604 when his brother-in-law, Sir Anthony Cope*, was sheriff. Doyley was a close friend of Cope’s, and evidently shared the puritan sympathies of his family and friends, including the Elizabethan firebrand Peter Wentworth†.19 Doyley himself was described by William Durham, biographer of the preacher Robert Harris, as ‘a great friend to the Gospel’.20
  • In the first session Doyley was appointed to three committees. One was for a private bill to confirm a decree in Chancery (2 June), while the others concerned the assignment of revenue for the royal Household (18 June) and confirmation of letters patent (5 July).21 Cope was elected to serve as his partner representing Oxfordshire early in the second session, and in March 1606 both men enrolled at Gray’s Inn. During the second session Doyley was named to seven committees, five of them to consider private land bills; the remaining two concerned bills for Corpus Christi College, Oxford (6 Mar.) and the reform of abuses in the Marshalsea court (13 March).22 In the third session he was appointed to three committees, including one on 12 May 1607 to confirm an agreement over the estate of William Ibgrave made between Lord Bruce and Doyley’s nephew Michael.23 On 18 May both Doyley and Cope were among those ordered to draft an address for the better enforcement of the laws against recusants and for the freer preaching of the gospel.24 In the fourth session Doyley was named to three legislative committees: to consider bills for the erection of gaols (16 Feb. 1610), confirm Sir John Heveningham’s* purchase of lands (20 Feb.), and confirm the title of the contractors for the sale of Crown lands (5 July).25 He was among those to whom the messengers’ petitions were referred on 17 July.26 He does not appear in the records of the fifth session.
  • In 1616 Doyley was accused of having enriched himself as a treasurer of Oxfordshire, one of two officers appointed by the magistrates to collect dues and keep accounts, by withholding pensions from maimed soldiers on account of their lewdness of life.27 He died intestate in December 1623, and was buried at Stadhampton, the main parish of which Chislehampton was a chapelry.28 His grandson sat in the Long Parliament for Oxford as a recruiter, and his great-grandson, created a baronet in 1666, represented Woodstock in the Convention of 1689.
  • From: http://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/volume/1604-1629/member/do... _____________
  • DOYLEY, Henry (aft.1550-c.1627), of Wallingford, Berks.
  • b. aft. 1550, 4th s. of John Doyley of Greenlands, Bucks. and Chislehampton, Oxon. by Frances, da. of Andrew Edmonds of Cressing Temple, Essex, sis. and coh. of Christopher Edmonds of Lewknor, Oxon. Bro. of Robert. educ. L. Inn 1575, called 1584. m. (1) c.1574, Dorothy (d.c.1579), da. of Thomas Townshend of Testerton, Norf., 1s. 1da.; (2) May 1602, Alice (d.1630), wid. of Richard Mascall, grocer.
  • Offices Held
    • Pensioner, L. Inn 1601-2.
  • Doyley was a lawyer practising in the court of wards. He was involved in a good deal of personal litigation, first in the court of requests, 1575, with his friend (and possibly relative by marriage) Henry Townshend, and later (1580 in requests, and 1604 in Chancery) with his elder brother John, who had in 1577 succeeded to the family estates. The disputes were over the family lands and Doyley’s matrimonial affairs. According to the family historian he met his second wife while in London for the Parliament, and his elder brother refused to implement a promise concerning her jointure. Another case, this time in Star Chamber in 1601, mentions land held by Doyley in Wallingford and styles him ‘of Wallingford, gent.’. His local position accounts for his election in 1601.
  • Doyley was an active Member of Parliament despite the fact that one of his early speeches gave rise to a ludicrous incident and made him an object of ridicule. On 16 Nov. he informed the House of
    • an infamous libel that is printed and spread abroad since the beginning of this Parliament: saving your presence, Mr. Speaker, it is called the ‘Assembly of Fools’.
  • The House sent for the printer and for copies of the book which, on closer examination by the Privy Council,
    • was found to be a mere toy, and an old book entitled ‘The second part of Jack of Dover’, a thing both stale and foolish. For which Mr. Doyley was well laughed at, and thereby his credit much impeached in the opinion of the House.
  • Unabashed, Doyley continued to participate in the proceedings of the House. He had already quoted precedent in a procedural debate concerning the issuing of new writs on 14 Nov. and he now continued to speak on questions of privilege (21 Nov.) and private matters (24 Nov.), and he introduced a motion on 2 Dec. against the slandering of j.p.s in the House. His committee work concerned the abuses of the clerk of the market (2 Dec.), Sunday markets (4 Dec., reported by him 7 Dec.), and the Belgrave privilege case (17 Dec.). But his parliamentary career ended on a pathetic note. On 11 Dec. when the bill for weights and measures was called for,
    • Mr. Doyley showed that he had the bill, and had attended two days and none of the committees would meet; he prayed the House would either command the committees to meet or discharge him of the bill.
  • He is stated to have died c.1627.
  • This biography is based upon W. D’Oyley Bayley, House of Doyley, 23-7, 51, 52; Vis. Norf. (Harl. Soc. xxxii), 291 (fa.-in-law here given as Roger Townshend); J. K. Hedges, Hist. Wallingford, ii. 104; Req. 2/109/38; 2/80/13; St. Ch. D22/16; Townshend, Hist. Colls. 216, 217, 236, 245, 246, 277, 288, 311; D’Ewes, 639, 647, 663, 668, 669, 688.
  • From: http://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/volume/1558-1603/member/do... _________________________
  • Dictionary of National Biography, 1885-1900, Volume 15
  • D'Oylie, Thomas by Gordon Goodwin
  • D'OYLIE or D'OYLY, THOMAS, M.D. (1548?–1603), Spanish scholar, third son of John D'Oyly of Greenland House in the parish of Hambleden, Buckinghamshire, by his wife Frances, daughter of Andrew Edmonds of Cressing Temple, Essex, and formerly a maid of honour to Queen Elizabeth, was born in Oxfordshire in or about 1548. Elected fellow probationer of Magdalen College, Oxford, in 1563, he took his degrees in arts, B.A. 24 July 1564, M.A. 21 Oct. 1569, and supplicated for the bachelorship of medicine in 1571, but unsuccessfully (Reg. of the Univ. of Oxford, Oxford Hist. Soc., p. 253). He therefore left Oxford with a resolve to study at some foreign university, when, happening to attract the notice of Robert Dudley, earl of Leicester, he came to be employed abroad in a civil as well as a medical capacity. He also became intimate with Francis Bacon, and, on going abroad, travelled for some time with the latter's brother, Anthony Bacon, as appears by a letter dated 11 July 1580 from Francis, then a student at Gray's Inn, to D'Oylie at Paris, in which he signs himself ‘your very friend’ (Addit. MS. 4109, f. 122, copy of letter by Dr. T. Birch). The Bacon and D'Oylie families were connected, D'Oylie's eldest brother, Sir Robert D'Oylie, having married Elizabeth Bacon, half-sister to Francis (Strype, Annals, 8vo edit. vol. ii. pt. ii. p. 210). About 1581 D'Oylie proceeded M.D. at Basle; he was certainly doctor in 1582, for he is thus described in an endorsement by the Earl of Leicester on one of his letters to his lordship, dated ‘from Antwerp ye 28 of Maye 1582’ (Cotton MS. Galba, C. vii. f. 233). In this letter he gives particulars of the siege of Oudenarde, and would appear to have then held a medical appointment in the army at Antwerp. He continued some time abroad; and there are further letters from him to the Earl of Leicester, dated at Calais, 12 Nov. 1585 and 14 Nov. 1585, and at Flushing, 23 Nov. 1585. In the first he gives a highly diverting account of an adventure that befell him and his ‘companie,’ who, having ‘put out from Grauelinge the 13 of October, the 14 of the same weare taken not farr from Dunkerk … and wear rifled of al their goods and apparrel unto their dubletts and hose,’ ‘with daggers at our throts,’ adds D'Oylie; he mentions, however, that they had found nothing in his chest but ‘phisick and astronomie books,’ he having ‘drowned all his lordship's letters out of a porthole.’ From the ‘hel hounds of Dunkerk, as he calls them, he had then just escaped to Calais (ib. viii. ff. 206–8). On his return to England D'Oylie settled in London, where, having been previously admitted a licentiate on 21 May 1585, he became a candidate of the College of Physicians on 28 Sept. 1586, and a fellow on the last day of February 1588. He was incorporated at Oxford on his doctor's degree 18 Dec. 1592. The following year he was appointed censor, and was re-elected in 1596 and 1598. At the beginning of the last-named year, as he himself informs us, he accompanied Sir Robert Cecil into France. D'Oylie, who was physician to St. Bartholomew's Hospital, died in March 1602–3, and was buried on the 11th of that month in the hospital church, St. Bartholomew the Less, in Smithfield (Malcolm, Lond. Rediviv. i. 308). His will, dated 7 March 1602–3, was proved on 25 June following (Reg. in P. C. C. 46, Bolein). He married Anne, daughter of Simon Perrott, M.A., of North Leigh, Oxfordshire, and fellow of Magdalen College, Oxford. By this lady, who died before him, and was buried in St. Bartholomew the Less, he had issue three sons: 1, Norris D'Oylie (Bloxam, Reg. of Magd. Coll. Oxford, iv. 233; marriages in Chester, London Marriage Licenses, ed. Foster, p. 417); 2, Michael D'Oylie, who was a captain in the army and afterwards settled in Ireland (his marriage is given in Chester, loc. cit.); 3, Francis D'Oylie, ‘my litle sonne borne 18th Feb. 1597[%E2%80%938] at my going with Sir Robert Cicill, knight, into Fraunce’ (will); and three daughters: 1, Frances D'Oylie; 2, Margery D'Oylie, who married Hugh Cressy, barrister-at-law, of Lincoln's Inn, and of Wakefield, Yorkshire, and became the mother of Hugh Paulinus Cressy [q. v.]; 3, Katharine D'Oylie.
  • D'Oylie, whose knowledge of languages was very considerable, had a share in the compilation of ‘Bibliotheca Hispanica. Containing a Grammar, with a Dictionarie in Spanish, English, and Latine, gathered out of diuers good Authors: very profitable for the studious of the Spanish toong. By Richard Percyuall Gent. The Dictionarie being inlarged with the Latine, by the aduise and conference of Master Thomas Doyley Doctor in Physicke,’ 2 pts., 4to, ‘imprinted at London, by Iohn Iackson, for Richard Watkins, 1591.’ D'Oylie, as Percyvall informs the reader, ‘had begunne a dictionary in Spanish, English, and Latine; and seeing mee to bee more foreward to the presse then himselfe, very friendly gaue his consent to the publishing of mine, wishing me to adde the Latine to it as hee had begunne in his, which I performed.’ The book, ‘enlarged and amplified with many thousand words’ by John Minsheu, was reissued, fol., London, 1599, and fol., London, 1623. D'Oylie's own abortive undertaking had been licensed to John Wolf on 19 Oct. 1590, with the title, ‘A Spanish Grammer conformed to our Englishe Accydence. With a large Dictionarye conteyninge Spanish, Latyn, and Englishe wordes, with a multitude of Spanishe wordes more then are conteyned in the Calapine of x: languages or Neobrecensis Dictionare. Set forth by Thomas D'Oyley, Doctor in phisick, with the cofirence of Natyve Spaniardes’ (Arber, Transcript of the Stationers' Registers, ii. 266).
  • Before his death D'Oylie would appear to have had his revenge on the governor of Dunkirk, for by a letter to Sir Robert Sydney from Rowland Whyte, his court agent, dated St. Stephen's day, 1597, we find that the governor was then prisoner in D'Oylie's house in London (Collins, Letters and Memorials of State, ii. 78). D'Oylie's name is spelt Doyley in the records of St. Bartholomew's Hospital.
  • [Bayley's Account of the House of D'Oyly, pp. 24, 48–51; Wood's Athenæ Oxon. (Bliss), i. 737; Wood's Fasti Oxon. (Bliss), i. 164, 184, 187, 260; Bloxam's Reg. of Magd. Coll. Oxford, ii. lxxiv, lxxv, iv. 233; Munk's Coll. of Phys. (1878), i. 95–6; Cal. State Papers, Dom. 1601–1603, p. 190.]
  • From: https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/D%27Oylie,_Thomas_(DNB00) ___________________
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Frances D'Oyly's Timeline

1522
1522
Chislehampton, Oxfordshire, England (United Kingdom)
1542
1542
Of Greenlandhouse, Hambleden, Buckinghamshire, England
1543
1543
Of Chislehampton, Oxon, Eng.
1546
1546
Of Chislehampton, Oxon, Eng.
1547
1547
Of Chislehampton, Oxon, Eng.
1548
1548
of, Chislehampton, Oxfordshire, England
1550
1550
Of Chislehampton, Oxon, Eng.
1552
1552
Of Chislehampton, Oxon, Eng.
1555
1555
Buckinghamshire, England (United Kingdom)