Family tree Cromer/Russell/Buck/Pratt » Humphrey Bourchier (1436-1471)

Persönliche Daten Humphrey Bourchier 

Quellen 1, 2

Familie von Humphrey Bourchier

Er ist verheiratet mit Lady Elizabeth Agnes Tilney.

Sie haben geheiratet am 11. April 1451, er war 15 Jahre alt.


Kind(er):

  1. John Bourchier  1467-1533 
  2. Lady Margaret Bryan  1468-1551
  3. Anne Bourchier  1470-1530 


Notizen bei Humphrey Bourchier

'''Sir Humphrey Bourchier''', son of Sir John Bourchier and Lady Margery Berners, was born about 1440 in Halstad, Essex, England. In Devenshire, England, about 1465, he married Lady Elizabeth Tilney (born about 1450 in Ashwellthrope, Norflok, England, died April 4, 1497), daughter of Frederick Tilney and Elizabeth Cheney . Frederick Tilney was born about 1416, the son of Philip Tilney (born about 1385) and Isabel Thorpe. Children of Sir Humphrey Bourchier and Lady Elizabeth Tilney were: 1497) 0, the Duke of Warwick drove King Edward IV out of England. In March, 1471, Edward IV returned with a fleet of ships and a small army, landing at Yorkshire. His army included 300 Flemmish mercenaries armed with muskets (“handguns”). They marched south, gathering forces along the way, and entered London unopposed. Edward continued south to meet the Duke of Warwick at Barnet. In the fog (“a great myste”) on Easter morning, April 14, 1471, King Edward attacked the Duke of Warwick’s forces. At first, troops led by the Earl of Oxford defeated some of Edward’s troops and pursued them from the field. Returning from the pursuit in the fog, they mistakenly attacked others of Warwick’s troops, so Edward achieved a complete victory. Among Edward’s troops who were killed was Sir Humphrey Bourchier. After Sir Humphrey’s death, Lady Elizabeth Tilney married Sir Thomas Howard, who became Earl of Surrey, and, later, Duke of Norfolk. com/vross/9438.html''M, #47710, b. circa 1444, d. 14 April 1471rners12,13,14,15 b. 30 Nov 1408, d. 18 Dec 1475zabeth Tilney was made on 11 April 1451; They had 1 son (Sir John, 2nd Lord Berners) and 2 daughters (Anne, wife of Sir Thomas Fiennes, 8th Lord Dacre; & Margaret, wife of John Sandys, of Sir Thomas Bryan, & of David Zouche).2,16,4,6,9,10,11 Sir Humphrey Bourchier died on 14 April 1471 at Battle of Barnet, Barnet, Middlesex, England; d.v.p. Buried in the chapel of St. Edmund & St. Thomas the Martyr at Westminster Abbey, London.1,2,4,9,10*Sir John Bourchier, Chancellor of the Exchequer, 2nd Lord Berners, Deputy of Calais+12,18,4,9 b. c 1467, d. 19 Mar 1533reat Britain, and the United Kingdom, by George Edward Cokayne, Vol. II, p. 153-154.d Edition, Vol. I, p. 194. Ancestry, Vol. I, p. 359.ncestry, Vol. V, p. 72.on, Plantagenet Ancestry, p. 140-141.5] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry, p. 236-237.10.hier1 daughter of Sir Frederick Tylney and Elizabeth Cheney.1 He died on 14 April 1471, killed in action.1Children of Sir Humphrey Bourchier and Elizabeth Tylney 1.[S6] G.E. Cokayne; with Vicary Gibbs, H.A. Doubleday, Geoffrey H. White, Duncan Warrand and Lord Howard de Walden, editors, The Complete Peerage of England, Scotland, Ireland, Great Britain and the United Kingdom, Extant, Extinct or Dormant, new ed., 13 volumes in 14 (1910-1959; reprint in 6 volumes, Gloucester, U.K.: Alan Sutton Publishing, 2000), volume II, page 153. Hereinafter cited as The Complete Peerage.444, Halstead, Essex, EnglandRNERS (B. Berners) Margaret BOURCHIER___________y.od as joint godmother to Princess Margaret Tudor at her baptism.eyn, and through another son, Edmund, the paternal grandmother of Catherine Howard, both queens consort of King Henry VIII. Elizabeth's great-granddaughter was Queen Elizabeth I of England.h was commemorated as the "Countess of Surrey" in John Skelton's poem, The Garlande of Laurell, following his visit to the Howard residence of Sheriff Hutton Castle.wellthorpe Hall sometime before 1445, the only child of Sir Frederick Tilney, of Ashwellthorpe, Norfolk, and Boston, Lincolnshire, and Elizabeth Cheney (1422–1473) of Fen Ditton, Cambridgeshire. Sir Frederick Tilney died before 1447, and before 1449 Elizabeth's mother married as her second husband Sir John Say of Broxbourne, Hertfordshire, Speaker of the House of Commons, by whom she had three sons, Sir William, Sir Thomas and Leonard, and four daughters, Anne (wife of Sir Henry Wentworth of Nettlestead, Suffolk), Elizabeth (wife of Thomas Sampson), Katherine (wife of Thomas Bassingbourne), and Mary (wife of Sir Philip Calthorpe).[1] A fifth daughter died as a young child. Henry VIII's third queen consort, Jane Seymour, was the granddaughter of Henry Wentworth and Anne Say,[2] and thus a second cousin to Henry VIII's second and fifth queens consort, Anne Boleyn and Katherine Howard.[3]dparents were Sir Laurence Cheney of Fen Ditton and Elizabeth Cockayne, widow of Sir Philip Butler. Elizabeth Cockayne was the daughter of Sir John Cockayne, Chief Baron of the Exchequer and Ida de Grey. Ida was a daughter of Welsh Marcher Lord Reginald Grey, 2nd Baron Grey de Ruthyn and Eleanor Le Strange of Blackmere.[4] Through her mother, Ida was a direct descendant of Welsh Prince Gruffydd II ap Madog, Lord of Dinas Bran and his wife Emma de Audley.ief Justice of the Common Pleas (d.1356).[5]6. The marriage produced a son, John Bourchier, 2nd Baron Berners and two daughters. Following her marriage, Elizabeth went to court where she served as lady-in-waiting to Queen Elizabeth Woodville, whose train she had carried at the latter's coronation in May 1465 at Westminster Abbey. Elizabeth accompanied the Queen and her children into sanctuary at Westminster Abbey when King Edward IV had been ousted from the throne, and was present at the birth of the future King Edward V. She remained with the Queen until Edward IV was restored to power.net on 14 April 1471 fighting on the Yorkist side'''.[6] On 30 April 1472 Elizabeth married Thomas Howard, Earl of Surrey,[7] a marriage arranged by the King.[8] In 1475, Elizabeth inherited her father's property of Ashwellthorpe Manor.[9] Her second husband was a close friend and companion of Richard, Duke of Gloucester who was crowned king in 1483. Elizabeth was one of Queen Anne Neville's attendants at Richard's coronation, while her husband bore the Sword of State.[10] On 22 August 1485 Thomas's father John Howard, 1st Duke of Norfolk was killed at the Battle of Bosworth while fighting for Richard III; like his son, John was also one of King Richard's dearest friends.[11] Thomas Howard was wounded at Bosworth and imprisoned in the Tower for several years, and the dukedom of Norfolk was forfeited. Elizabeth was fortunate that Thomas' attainder stipulated that she would not lose her own inheritance. On 3 October 1485, she wrote to John Paston, who was married to her cousin. The letter, which she had written from the Isle of Sheppey, mentioned how she had wished to send her children to Thorpe, pointing out that Paston had pledged to send her horses as a means of transporting them there. She continued to complain that Lord FitzWalter, an adherent of the new king Henry VII, had dismissed all of her servants; however, because of the stipulations in her husband's attainder, FitzWalter was unable to appropriate her manor of Askwell.[12] In December 1485 she was living in London, near St Katharine's by the Tower, which placed her in the vicinity of her incarcerated husband.[13] consort Elizabeth of York, who appointed Elizabeth a Lady of the Bedchamber. Elizabeth was further honoured by being asked to stand as joint godmother to the Princess Margaret Tudor at her baptism in late 1489. Howard.itechapel and Hackney.[15] By licence dated 8 November 1497 Thomas Howard married as his second wife her cousin, Agnes Tilney, by whom he had six more children.[16]ed not only Queen Katherine Howard and Queen Anne Boleyn, but also three of Henry VIII's mistresses, Elizabeth Carew, Mary Boleyn and, allegedly, Mary Howard, Duchess of Richmond.[17] During the reign of Henry VIII the Howards, led by Elizabeth's eldest son, Thomas Howard, 3rd Duke of Norfolk, became the premier family of England.commemorated in John Skelton's The Garlande of Laurell, written by the poet laureate while he was a guest of the Howards in 1495 at Sheriff Hutton Castle. Three of Elizabeth's daughters, Anne, Elizabeth and Muriel are also addressed in the poem, which celebrates the occasion when Elizabeth, her daughters, and gentlewomen of her household placed a garland of laurel worked in silks, gold and pearls upon Skelton's head as a sign of homage to the poet.[18]t, Duchess of Norfolk, and both figures are surmounted by the Mowbray family's coat of arms.n in Splendour which depicts Elizabeth, known as "Bess", at the court of King Edward IV.(d. 12 March 1536), the daughter of John Howard, 1st Duke of Norfolk, by whom he had a son, Thomas, and three daughters, Joan, Margaret and Mary; by a mistress allegedly named Elizabeth Bacon he had three illegitimate sons, Sir James, Humphrey and George, and one daughter, Ursula (wife of Sir William Sherington)[19] Elizabeth; married firstly, by agreement dated 11 November 1478, John Sandys, son and heir apparent of William Sandys of the Vyne, by whom she had no issue; secondly, Sir Thomas Bryan, by whom she had three children, including Sir Francis Bryan.[20]ke of Norfolk:nry Howard[26]f Queen Anne Boleyn, and grandmother of Queen Elizabeth[30]ung)[32]ard de Berners was found to be her heir. Margery while still a child was married to John Fereby, who held his first court at West Horsley in 1420. He died in 1441, and she then became the wife of Sir John Bourchier. In 1442 certain trustees released the manor to Sir John Bourchier, called Berners, summoned to Parliament in 1455 as Baron Berners, and to Margery his wife, which was probably a form of marriage settlement. By her second husband Margery had issue '''Humphrey''', who, however, died before his mother, being killed at Barnet in 1471, so that at her death in 1475 the manor passed to her grandson John Bourchier, Baron Berners, then a child of eight. John, known as the translator of Froissart, was also a distinguished soldier and courtier in the expensive court of Henry VIII, and in 1518 he mortgaged the manor to Thomas Unton and others. He died in 1522.lume 3''. Originally published by Victoria County History, London, 1911.ttle in the Wars of the Roses between Edward VI and the Earl of Warwick (called the king maker). The Wars of the Roses was a series of civil wars fought between two aristocratic families, the House of York and the House of Lancaster. King Edward IV and Richard Neville, Earl of Warwick, had been allies during the wars and their success had led to the overthrow of Henry VI (of Lancaster) and the crowning of Edward (of York) as king. Warwick expected that his friends and favourites would be rewarded in the new court with prestigious positions. But Edward decided to favour the friends and relatives of his wife, Queen Elizabeth, instead. After much conflict Warwick drove Edward into exile, and placed Henry VI back on the throne. Edward, who returned in March 1471 with an army of Burgundianmercenaries, marched on London and took Henry prisoner. name has long ceased to be used. Many believe that the battle was in and around Hadley. Early in the morning of the battle there was a thick fog. The armies engaged and one of Warwick's commanders succeeded in routing one of the flanks of Edward's army, and pursued them back to Barnet. But while they were away, the push of battle swung the armies around, and on returning they mistook the badge of another of Warwick’s commanders (a star with streams of light) for the badge of their enemy Edward (a sun with rays). They attacked their own side, which panicked and fled. Warwick lost the battle and was killed.1st_Baron_Bernersr____________________

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Quellen

  1. WikiTree, via https://www.myheritage.com/research/reco..., 21. Januar 2019
    Added via a Record Match
  2. Geni World Family Tree, via https://www.myheritage.com/research/reco..., 7. Dezember 2018
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Historische Ereignisse

  • Graaf Filips I de Goede (Beiers Huis) war von 1433 bis 1467 Fürst der Niederlande (auch Graafschap Holland genannt)
  • Im Jahr 1451: Quelle: Wikipedia
    • 27. Januar » Im Sächsischen Bruderkrieg schließen Kurfürst Friedrich II. und Herzog Wilhelm III. Frieden. Die Altenburger Teilung der wettinischen Gesamtlande ist nunmehr von beiden akzeptiert.
    • 3. Februar » Nach dem Tod seines Vaters MuradII. wird MehmedII. zum zweiten Mal Sultan des Osmanischen Reiches.
    • 31. Juli » Jacques Cœur, der Finanzier des französischen Königs Karl VII., wird am Hofe festgenommen, sein Vermögen beschlagnahmt. Der Kaufmann wird beschuldigt, die königliche Mätresse Agnès Sorel mit Gift getötet zu haben, was sich später als Intrige erweist.
    • 14. Oktober » Unter der Führung von Ulrich von Eyczing wird auf Schloss Mailberg von einer Ständeversammlung aus Ober- und Niederösterreich der Mailberger Bund gegen König FriedrichIV., den späteren Kaiser FriedrichIII. geschlossen.
  • Graaf Karel I de Stoute (Bourgondisch Huis) war von 1467 bis 1477 Fürst der Niederlande (auch Graafschap Holland genannt)
  • Im Jahr 1471: Quelle: Wikipedia
    • 14. April » In den Rosenkriegen gelingt es König EduardIV. von England, den auf die Seite des Hauses Lancaster gewechselten Richard Neville, 16. Earl of Warwick zu stellen, bevor diesem die Vereinigung mit den Truppen von Margarete von Anjou gelingt, und besiegt ihn in der Schlacht von Barnet. „Warwick der Königsmacher“ kommt bei der Niederlage ums Leben.
    • 21. Mai » Im Londoner Tower wird der abgesetzte König HeinrichVI., der letzte aus dem Haus Lancaster, auf Befehl des neuen Königs EduardIV. getötet.
    • 9. August » Francesco della Rovere wird unter dem Namen Sixtus IV. Papst.
    • 19. September » Die Truppen des Osmanischen Reiches erobern die Festung Počitelj im Neretva-Tal und erkämpfen sich so den Zugang nach Zentralbosnien.
    • 10. Oktober » In der Schlacht am Brunkeberg besiegt der schwedische Reichsverweser Sten Sture der Ältere den dänischen König Christian I. und entscheidet den Dänisch-Schwedischen Krieg mit einem Schritt in Richtung Beendigung der Kalmarer Union.
    • 21. Dezember » Der portugiesische Seefahrer João de Santarém entdeckt die nahe am Äquator gelegene Insel São Tomé im Golf von Guinea und nimmt die Insel für Portugal in Besitz.


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