(i) Sir Owen Hopton of Cockfield Hall (b 1519, d 09.1591, Lieutenant of the Tower of London, MP) m. Anne Itchingham (d before 25.01.1600, dau of Sir Edward Echingham or Itchingham)
(a) Sir Arthur Hopton of Cockfield Hall & Witham Priory (d 20.11.1607, MP) m. Rachel Hall (d 1629, dau of Edmund Ball of Gratford) …
((5)) Selina Hopton m1. Henry Bodenham of Fugglestone (d 1595) m2. Robert Baskett of Dewlish (d 1613)
i. Thomas Baskett of Dulish m1/2. Bridget Morton (dau (sb sister?) of Thomas Morton of Clenston)
a. Robert Baskett of Dulish m. Selena Hopton (dau of Sir Arthur Hopton of Witham)
(1) Thomas Baskett of Dulish (a 1623) the last mentioned by Visitation
(A) Elizabeth Baskett probably of this generation m. Thomas Turberville of Bere Regis (b c1622, after 18.05.1702)
(2) Dorothy Baskett m. Thomas Turbervile of Bear
(3)+ other issue - Robert, Rachell, Selina, Honnor, Bridget
Sources:
https://heraldryofthewestcountry.wordpress.com/2022/09/03/baskett-a... According to the visitations, Thomas’ son Robert married Selena (Salnicia,) daughter of Sir Arthur Hopton. The wife’s arms here, however, are not those of Hopton. Selena, moreover was not the heiress of Sir Arthur who had a dozen or so surviving children including several sons. The visitation shows that Robert’s son quartered this coat, which would only have been the case if his mother (or some earlier female ancestress) had been an heiress. There is a mystery here. The wife’s coat does not seem to relate to Selena Hopton. Possibly Robert Baskett had another wife who was the mother of young Thomas of the visitation. It is scarcely probable that young Thomas would not have known who his mother was. The other possibility is that the shield represents a marriage earlier in the Baskett pedigree.