Er ist verheiratet mit Cecilia Beauchamp.
Sie haben geheiratet rund 1350 in Even-Swindon, Wiltshire, ENGLAND.
Kind(er):
The second son of Roger de St. Mauro and Joan his wife, was also called Roger; who, by his marriage with Cecilia one of the daus. and heirs of John de Beauchamp, Baron of Hacche, &c. in com. Somerset, considerably added to the fortunes as well as the dignity of his family, and was the cause of their removal into Somersetshire, to their very great advantage. On this occasion
"I chuse to represent", in the learned Camden's own words, the great accession that accrued to the honor of the family, by this noble alliance.
Source: Brydges, Egerton, K. J., Sir, Collin's Peerage of England; Genealogical, Biographical, and Historical, T. Bensley (London, 1812), Vol 1, p. 146.
Of Roger de St. Maur but little is known, except that he lived in the year 1314, and md. Joan, dau. of Damarel, of Devonshire, by whom he had two sons, Sir John St. Maur and Sir Roger St. Maur, the former of whom died abt. 1358, leaving a son, Roger, born in 1340, who in turn left an only dau. who md. into the family of Bowlays, near Penhow, and apparently brought her
inheritance of Penhow Castle into that family.
Sir Roger St. Maur, or Seymour as we may now call him, became Lord of the Manor of Woundy in succession to his father. He does not, however, appear to have spent much of his time there, preferring to reside at
Evinswinden, in Wilts. He md. Cecilia, dau. of John de Beauchamp, Baron of Hache, in Somerset.
Camden says: "From William de St. Maur, knight, who first settled at Woundy, descended Roger de St. Maur, knight, who md. one of the heiresses of the illustrious John Beauchamp (this John Beauchamp of Hache md. Cecilia, dau. of Beauchamp, Earl of Warwick, as may be seen in Sir William Dugdale's Antiquities of Warwickshire), the noble Baron de Hache, who was descended from Sybill, one of the coheiresses of that most puissant William Marshall (so called from his office), Earl of Pembroke; and from William Ferrers, Earl of Derby; Hugh de Vivon; and William Malet, men of eminent worth in their times. The nobility of all which, as also of several others, have (as may be made evident), concentrated in the Right Honorable Edward de St. Maur or Seymour, now Earl of Hertford, a singular encourager of virtue and learning; for which qualification he is deservedly famous."
Source: St. Maur, H., Annals of the Seymours (London: Kegan Paul, Trench, Trubner & Co., Ltd, 1903), p. 13.
Roger III de St Maur Seymour | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
± 1350 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Cecilia Beauchamp |
Die angezeigten Daten haben keine Quellen.