Sie war verwandt mit Walter Roberts.
Kind(er):
Alice was the daughter of Richard Naylor and Elizabeth (unknown). (Burke's A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Extinct and Dormant Baronetcies... gets this one wrong, sorry to say.)ssett, then John Stokker, and lastly George Neville.)----------------------ce Naylor widow of the baron of Abergavenny,” and this has led to much confusion. Burke’s Extinct Baronetcies, 1838 ed., attempts to identify her as “Alice, daughter of Richard Naylor, esq. and widow of Lord Abergavenny,” but the widow of George Nevill, 4th Lord Bergavenny (d. 1492) was named Elizabeth, and at this late date the names Alice and Elizabeth were really not interchangeable, a discrepancy pointed out by Leadam in his reply to Gairdner’s article cited above, p. 168 (though he misattributes the statement to Hasted, and confuses the chronology). Nevertheless, Vicary Gibbs, in a signed note in the Complete Peerage, 2nd ed., 1:31 n. (c), suggests that she was identical with Elizabeth (____) (Naylor) (Bassett) (Stokker) Nevill, widow, successively, of Richard Naylor, of London (will proved 1483), of Sir Robert Bassett, Lord Mayor of London in 1475-6 (d. 1484), of John Stokker, of St. George’s, Eastcheap (d. 1485), and of George Nevill, 4th Lord Bergavenny (d. 1492), whose second wife she had been. (The revisions to this article given in the volume of Addenda & Corrigenda published in 1998 correct the order of her marriages but do not directly address the question of whether Elizabeth could have had Walter Roberts as a fifth husband. In the 1st ed. of the Complete Peerage, 1:12-27, at p. 18, the names of her husbands were given in the order stated in her will, discussed below, which is incorrect.) d scarcely two months later on 19 June following, the dowager baroness Abergavenny styles herself “Dame Elizabeth Nevile Lady of Bergavenne of the parishe of Chartham in the countie of Kent widowe,” an impossible designation and unlikely place of residence if she were then married to the still-living Walter Roberts. She does however name her children — all by her second husband, Richard Nayler — as “John Naylor, my son…, Hugh Naylor and Robert Naylor, brothers to the said John, and … Thomazine, Alice, and Joan, sisters to the said Hugh and Robert.” Thus, it is clear that the correct identification of Walter Roberts’s third wife is actually “Alice Nayler daughter of the Lady Burgaueny,” as stated in the Kent visitation of 1574. Her father, then, was Richard Nayler, Alderman and Tailor of London, whose will, dated 18 July 1483 and proved 22 Aug. following (P.C.C. 7 Logge, modern reference P.R.O. Prob. 11/7), makes a bequest “to Alice my doughter when she is married.” As the same phraseology is used for all three daughters it presumably does not imply an impending marriage; and indeed the children may all have been fairly young as none of his five sons had yet “come to lawfull age” and his wife had a “child in the womb.” Interestingly, the name of her father is given correctly in various old accounts, for example Jasper Sprange, The Tunbridge Wells Guide (Tunbridge Wells, 1782), p. 20. The Kent visitations of 1574 and 1619-21, and the Sussex visitation of 1530, all make Alice mother of some of her husband’s children.ttp://library.uwinnipeg.ca/people/dobson/genealogy/ff/Exherst.cfm
Alice Naylor | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Walter Roberts |
Added via a Record Match