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{geni:about_me} The Askes originated in Richmondshire as early as the 12th century. In the mid-14th century,
Richard Aske (d. 1369), a younger brother of that line, served in the
French wars of Edward III, became a king's yeoman and seneschal of
Howdenshire (a wapentake in the East Riding) and acquired various
lands there, chiefly the manor of Owsthorpe (3.5 miles ENE. of Howden,
in the parish of Eastrington). He was childless, so his younger
brother John Aske (d. 1395) succeeded to his office of seneschal of
Howdenshire and to Owsthorpe and the rest. One Sir John Shelvestrode
of Shelvestrode and other manors in Sussex, owed a substantial amount
of money (around 2,000 marks) to Richard Aske. Perhaps in lieu of
payment, Shelvestrode gave one of his daughters and co-heirs in
marriage to John Aske, which is how the family acquired Shelvestrode
and three other Sussex manors.
http://newsgroups.derkeiler.com/Archive/Soc/soc.genealogy.medieval/2007-04/msg00797.html
http://familytreemaker.genealogy.com/users/b/r/u/Elmer-Gene-Bruner/ODT5-0177.html
http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=REG&db=jweber&id=I36421
In the mid-14th century,
Richard Aske (d. 1369), a younger brother of that line, served in the
French wars of Edward III, became a king's yeoman and seneschal of
Howdenshire (a''' wapentake''' in the East Riding) and acquired various
lands there, chiefly the manor of Owsthorpe (3.5 miles ENE. of Howden,
in the parish of Eastrington). He was childless, so his younger
brother John Aske (d. 1395) succeeded to his office of seneschal of
Howdenshire and to Owsthorpe and the rest.
_P_CCINFO 1-20792
Roger de Aske | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Elizabeth Pert |
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