Margery Egerton Calverley / Hurleton

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Margery Egerton Calverley / Hurleton (Mainwaring)

Also Known As: "Egerton;Hurleton", "Calveley"
Birthdate:
Birthplace: Ightfield, Shropshire, England
Death: Cheshire, England
Immediate Family:

Daughter of Sir William Manwaring and Margaret Mainwaring
Wife of Philip Egerton, Esq and Sir Hugh Calverley, Knt.
Ex-wife of Thomas Hurleton
Mother of Lady Anne Wilberham; Philip Egerton; Anne de Egerton; John Egerton; William Egerton and 5 others
Sister of Ellen Mainwaring; Agnes Mainwaring; Cecily Mainwaring; Joan Mainwaring; Mary Mainwaring and 3 others

Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:

About Margery Egerton Calverley / Hurleton

Accordgng to Ormerod Vol II P.768 Calveley of Lea Pedigree - Wife of Sir Hugh Calverly b.1421 not his son Hugh Calverly b 1435 - TPD 31/1/23

  • Margery Mainwaring1
  • F, #33120
  • Father William Mainwaring d. 1499
  • Mother Margaret Warren b. c 1425
  • Margery Mainwaring married Philip Egerton, Esq., son of Sir John Egerton and Margaret Fitton, circa 1454 at of Ightfield, Shropshire, England.2 Margery Mainwaring married Sir Randle Brereton after 1474.
  • Family Philip Egerton, Esq. b. c 1435, d. 1474
  • Children
    • William Egerton, Esq.2 b. c 1455, d. b 1474
    • Anne Egerton2 b. c 1457
    • Sir Ralph Egerton+ b. c 1459
    • Helena Egerton+ b. c 1461
    • John Egerton, Esq.+ b. c 1463, d. 1483
    • Catherine Egerton2 b. c 1465
    • Elizabeth Egerton+ b. c 1470
  • Citations
  • [S10246] Unknown author, Burke's Peerage, 1938, p. 913; Burke's Landed Gentry, 1936, p. 1507.
  • [S10297] Unknown author, History of the County Palatine and City of Chester, by George Omerod, 1819., p. 350.
  • From: http://our-royal-titled-noble-and-commoner-ancestors.com/p1103.htm#... ___________________
  • Margery Mainwaring1
  • F, #448706
  • Last Edited=21 Sep 2010
  • Margery Mainwaring is the daughter of William Mainwaring.1 She married Philip Egerton, son of Sir John Egerton and Margaret Fitton.1
  • Her married name became Egerton.1
  • Children of Margery Mainwaring and Philip Egerton
    • Sir Ralph Egerton+1
    • John Egerton+2 d. 1483
  • Citations
  • [S37] BP2003 volume 2, page 1672. See link for full details for this source. Hereinafter cited as. [S37]
  • [S37] BP2003. [S37]
  • From: http://www.thepeerage.com/p44871.htm#i448706 _____________
  • The history of the county palatine and city of Chester: .... Vol. II.
  • https://archive.org/details/historyofcountyp02orme
  • https://archive.org/stream/historyofcountyp02orme#page/350/mode/1up
    • EGERTON, OF EGERTON. Pg.350-351
  • PHILIP GOCH, second son of David de Malpas, surnamed Le Clerk, which David was lord of a moiety of the barony of Malpas. = CATHERINE, daughter of Jorveth, alias Yawrwrit de Hulton, of Hulton, in Lancashire. ; ch: David (m. Ceclilia le Roter) de Malpas alias de Egerton, Hova de Hampton
    • HOVA DE HAMPTON, second son, father of David de Wigland. Had issue.
    • DAVID DE MALPAS, alias DE EGERTON, son and heir, by deed s. d. = CECILIA, daughter of Randle le Roter, lord of Thornton, by deed s. d. ; ch: Philip (m. Margaret de Wrenbury) de Egerton
      • PHILIP DE EGERTON, son and heir, sheriff of Cheshire 23 and 24 Edw. I. = MARGARET, daughter of Richard de Wrenbury, by Catherine his wife, by deed s. d. ; ch: David (m. Isabella de Fulleshurst), Urian (m. Amelia de Caldecote), Sir Brian (a knight of Rhodes), Richard, Philip, John, . . . . (wife of David de Malpas of Hampton) de Egerton
        • URIAN DE EGERTON, 2d son, lord of Caldecote in right of his wife, ancestor of the Egertons of Betley, and also of those of Wrinehill, whose representative, Edw. Egerton, conveyed his estates to sir John Egerton, of Egerton, knt. = AMELIA, dau. and heiress of David de Coldecote. ; ch:
        • DAVID DE EGERTON, eldest son and heir, sheriff of Cheshire 7 Edw. III. = ISABELLA, daughter of Richard de Fulleshurst, lord of Crewe. ; ch: Philip (m. Ellena de St. Pierre & Matilda . . . ), Urian (m. Amelia Warburton), David (2d son), Margaret (unmarried 29 Edw. III.) de Egerton
          • DAVID EGERTON, 2d son, living 29 Edw. III. o. s. p. ante 19 Ric. II.
          • PHILIP DE EGERTON, son and heir, Inq. p.m. 36 Edw. III. = ELLENA, dau. of John de St. Pierre, marriage covenant dated 9 Edw. II. ; ch: David (m. Isabella Venables), Elllena (m. Sir William Brereton), Isabella (m. Robert de Bulkeley & John Venables & Sir John Delves) de Egerton ; = MATILDA, dau. of . . . . , Edw. III.
            • DAVID DE EGERTON, son and heir, married before 20 Edw. III. Isabella, dau. of sir Hugh Venables, of Kinderton, knight; o. s. p.
            • ELLENA, sister, and finally sole heiress, wife of sir William Brereton, of Brereton, knt. claimed a moiety of a fourth of the barony of Malpas against John Sutton in 1368, and nother moiety of a fourth against sir Walter Cokesay, in 1379. = ; ch: Sir William Brereton
            • ISABELLA, sister and coheiress, wife of Robert de Bulkeley; 2dly, of John Venables; and 2dly, of sir John Delves, knight; recovered a moiety of a fourth of the barony of Malpas from John de Brunham, trestee of the Cokesays, in 1363; and another moiety of a fourth from John, son of sir John de Sutton, in 1368; o. s. p. 19 Ric. II.
          • URIAN DE EGERTON, 3d son; living 29 Edw. III. died before 19 Ric. II. = AMELIA, daughter of John Warburton, esq. ; ch: Philip (m. Matilda de Malpas), John, David, Ellen de Egerton
            • PHILIP DE EGERTON, son and heir, succeeded to a portion of the estates of Isabella Delves, 19 Ric. II. Inq. p.m. 24 Hen. VI. = MATILDA, dau. of David de Malpas, of Hampton and coheiress of her niece Ellen, wife of Urian de Brereton, marr. by dispensation, dated 1 Sept. 1403. ; ch: Sir John (m. Margaret Fitton), Jane (m. sir Richard Scarfe) Egerton
              • JANE, wife of sir Richard Scarfe, alias Moore.
              • Sir JOHN EGERTON of Egerton, knight, slain at the battle of Blore Heath. Inq. p.m. 38 Hen. VI. = MARGARET, dau. of sir John Fitton, knight. ; ch: Philip (m. Margery Mainwaring), William (of Hampton, 2d son), Ralph, Hugh, Peter Egerton
                • PHILIP EGERTON, of Egerton, esq. son and heir. Inq. p.m. 13 Edw. IV. = MARGERY, daughter of William Mainwaring, of Ightfield, co. Salop. Inq. p.m. 1 Hen. VIII. ; ch: Anne, Catherine, Ellen, Elizabeth, William (m. Margaret Egerton), John (m. Elizabeth Done) Sir Ralph (m. Margaret Basset) Egerton
                  • WILLIAM EGERTON, esq. eldest son and heir apparent, married Margaret daughter of sir Ralph Egerton, of Wrinehill, knt.; o.s.p. ante patrem.
                  • Sir RALPH EGERTON, of Ridley, in the co. of Chester, knight, by gift of King henry the Eighth, chief ranger of Delamere forest, and standard bearer of England. = MARGARET, dau. and heiress of Ralph Basset, of Blore. ; ch:
                  • JOHN EGERTON, of Egerton, esq. eldest son and heir by survivorship. Inq. p.m. 1 Ric. III. = ELIZABETH, daughter and heiress of Hugh Done, of Oulton (the third son of John Done, of Utkinton, esq.) and of his wife, Anne, daughter of James Touchet lord Audley. ; ch: Philip (m. Joanna Smith, wid. of Richard Winnington), Susan (m. Randle Egerton) Egerton
                    • .... etc. ________________________
  • Monumental brasses in Shropshire by Stephenson, Mill, 1857-1937
  • https://archive.org/details/brassesinshropsh00step
  • https://archive.org/stream/brassesinshropsh00step#page/68/mode/1up
  • DAME MARGERY CALVELEY, WIDOW OF PHILIP EGERTON, DEC. 1509, BUT BRASS ENGRAVED, C. 1495.
  • Large full length effigy under good triple canopy with marginal inscription. The figure turned slightly to the right, is represented wearing the kennel-shaped head-dress with long ornamented lappets, a plain close fitting gown, cut square at the neck and having large fur cuffs at the wrists. Round the hips is an ornamented girdle clasped by three rosettes from which hang a long chain terminating in a bell-shaped ornament. On the right, at the feet of the figure, are the small effigies of four sons in civil dress. On the left are four daughters in kennel-shaped head-dresses and close fitting gowns. From the mouth of the figure of Dame Margery proceeds a scroll inscribed : —
  • .... etc.
  • A marginal inscription in black letter encloses the whole : —
  • Here lyeth dame Margery Calveley dowghter To William Maynwaryng late of Ightfeld Sutyme wyf unto Philipp Egerton late of Egerton Squyer by the which Philipp she had thise Children the which Decessyd the ___ day of ___ the yere of owre lord MCCCC ___ on whos soule ihu have mcy ame.
  • .... etc.
  • Dame Margery, a daughter of William Maynwaryng, of Ightfield, was thrice married; firstly to Philip Egerton, Esq., of Egerton, who was aged 26 years in 38 Hen. VI., and died 13 Edw. IV. (Inquis. post mort). Of their children, John, the eldest son was 15 years of age at the time of his father's death, and died 1 Ric. III. [Inquis. p. m.). The second son, Sir Ralph, was chief ranger of Dela-mere forest and standard bearer of England. The other two may have died young. The daughters were Anne, Katherine, Ellen, and Elizabeth, all subsequently married. Dame Margery's second husband was Thomas Hurleton, of whom no details are known ; her third, Sir Hugh Calveley, Knt., of Lee, who was aged 12 years in 11 Hen. VI. and died 10 Hen. VII. (Inquis. p. m.). Dame Margery died 1 Hen. VIII. (Inquis. p. m ).
  • The brass was laid down in her lifetime and after her third marriage, but the date of death has never been filled in. ________________________
  • Burke's genealogical and heraldic history of the peerage and baronetage, the privy ...
  • https://books.google.com/books?id=Pf8cAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA700#v=onepage&q...
  • Pg.700
    • GREY-EGERTON.
  • .... etc.
  • PHILIP EGERTON, of Egerton, who m. Margery, dau. of William Mainwaring, and dying 13 EDWARD IV., left two sons,
    • 1. JOHN, his successor.
    • 2. Ralph (Sir), whose son, Sir Ralph, left a natural son, THOMAS EGERTON, who becoming lord chancellor of England, was created Viscount Brackley, and from him descended the noble houses of BRIDGEWATER, EGERTON OF TATTON, &c.
  • Mr. Egerton was s. by his elder son,
  • JOHN EGERTON, of Egerton, who m. Elizabeth, dau. and heir of Hugh Done, of Oulton, co. Chester, and granddau., maternally, of James Touchet, Lord Audley; and dying in the 1st year of RICHARD III., was s by his only son,
  • .... etc. ______________________

http://www.accessgenealogy.com/baronets/egerton.htm

The family of Egerton, one of the most ancient Had distinguished in the county of Chester, derives its origin from William le Belward, who was baron of Malpas under the Norman earls Palatine of that county. David de Malpas (surnamed the Clerk) eldest son of William le Belward, was grandfather of David, who assumed the surname of Egerton from the lordship of Egerton which mss his inheritance; and Robert, 2d son of William le Belward assumed the name of Cholmondeley, and was ancestor of the marquess Cholmondeley and lord Delamere (,see those titles in Debrett's Peerage). Sixth in descent from David de Egerton was

    Philip Egerton, of Egerton, m. Margery, da. of William Mainwaring, of Ightfield, co. Salop, and d. 13 Ed. IV., having had issue,

1. William, who d. without issue in his father's life-time.
2. John, ancestor of the present bart.
3. Sir Ralph, who left a son, sir Richard, whom natural son, Thomas, was the celebrated lord chancellor Egerton, created viscount Brackley, 1616, ancestor of the present earl of Bridgewater.
JOHN Egerton, 2d son of Philip, m. Elizabeth, da. and h. of Hugh Done, of Oulton, co. Chester (by Anne, da. of James Tuchet, lord Audley), and d. 1 Rich. III., leaving a da., Susan, m. Randle Egerton, of Dynham, co. Norfolk, esq., and a son,
____________________

County families of Lancashire and Cheshire

"Philip Egerton the younger, who succeeded to the patrimonial

132 County Families of

lands by virtue of Ihe mandate issued to the escheator, May 16, 38 Henry VL, had been united in marriage in his father's lifetime with Margery, daughter of William Mainwaring, of Ightfield. When he entered upon his inheritance the times were full of trouble. In the year which followed the disaster at Bloreheath the Lancastrians suffered another defeat at Northampton. In the month of November, 1460, as we learn from one of the Paston letters, the Duke of York landed at Chester, but before the year had closed the tide of success had turned, for when the opposing forces met at Wakefield Green, on the last day of December, the army of the White Rose was completely routed, and the Duke of York and his son, the Earl of Rutland, fell together — butchered, it is said, in cold blood upon the field by the Black-faced Clifford. If that day was fatal to the House of York, it was scarcely less fatal to the victors, for hardly had the spring opened ere

There was many a fair pennon waiting on the White Rose. The cruelties perpetrated by the Black Clifford at Wakefield were repaid with tenfold vengeance at Towton, wliere 33,000 English-men were left dead upon the field of battle, and Edward of York was borne to the throne on the shoulders of the people. It was long, however, before tranquillity was restored. On the ist of March, 1464, we find John Paston writing to his father (Paston Letters^ letter ccxxx.), " The commons in Lancashire and Cheshire were up to the number of 10,000 or more; but now they be down again; and one or two of them was headed in Chester as on Saturday last past." In that same year the battle of Hexham was fought, when the Lancastrians again suffered a defeat, and in the one which followed a subsidy was granted to the King, when we find Philip Egerton commissioned, with John de Manley and others, to collect the quota from the Broxton Hundred. In 1468 he entered into a recognisance to the King in £^20^ and in the month of March following his name again occurs with that of Sir John Bromley, Knt., in another recognisance in ;£^20 as surety to the King for his appearance. He appears to have inherited some of the quarrel-

Lancashire and Cheshire, 133

some propensities of his father, for a feud that broke out between him and Sir John Bromley, and the Cholmondeleys and Grosvenors, was one of no ordinary character, both parties being again and again bound over in heavy recognisances to keep the peace. The quarrel was not easily settled, for other Egertons and other Cholmondeleys entered the field and maintained the strife for many long years, as the Rec<^nisance Rolls testify, Iheir names constantly occurring side by side. It is difficult at this date to determine the cause of these divisions, but they were doubtless occasioned for the most part by the lively sympathies of these houses for the rival Roses of York and Lancaster, on whose account, as we have seen, Cheshire suffered so severely durii^ that " convulsive and bleeding agony of the feudal power." In the midst of these disputations Philip Egerton was called to his rest, his death occurring 13 Edward IV.

134 County Families of

(1473-4). His widow survived him many years, and re-married (1) Thomas Hurleton, and (2) Sir Hugh Calveley, of Lea. By her he had, in addition to a son, John Egerton, who succeeded as his heir, a second son, Ralph Egerton, who married Margaret, daughter and heiress of Ralph or Richard Basset, of Blore, who attained to considerable distinction in the reign of Henry VHI., and as the founder of the House of Ridley, and the father of Sir Richard Egerton, from whom Lord Chancellor Egerton, the Dukes of Bridgewater, and the Earls of Ellesmere have descended, is deserving of some notice here."

____________________________

view all 27

Margery Egerton Calverley / Hurleton's Timeline

1434
1434
Ightfield, Shropshire, England
1456
1456
1456
Egerton, Cheshire East, United Kingdom
1458
1458
Egerton, Cheshire, England (United Kingdom)
1458
Egerton, , Cheshire, England
1464
1464
Egerton, , Cheshire, England
1474
1474
Edgerton, Cheshire, England (United Kingdom)