Family Tree Welborn » Joan de Burghersh Dame de Mohun (± 1319-1404)

Persönliche Daten Joan de Burghersh Dame de Mohun 


Familie von Joan de Burghersh Dame de Mohun

Sie ist verheiratet mit John de Mohun.

Sie haben geheiratet


Kind(er):

  1. Maud de Mohun  ± 1357-1400 


Notizen bei Joan de Burghersh Dame de Mohun


Joan de Burghersh, Dame de Mohun is your 19th great grandmother.
You¬â€ 
¬â€ ¬â€ ·Üí¬â€ Henry Welborn¬â€ 
your father¬â€ ·Üí¬â€ Emma Corine Bombard¬â€ 
his mother¬â€ ·Üí¬â€ Emma Elizabeth Bombard¬â€ 
her mother¬â€ ·Üí¬â€ Isabelle Bynum¬â€ 
her mother¬â€ ·Üí¬â€ Robert W Bynum¬â€ 
her father·Üí¬â€ Elizabeth Bynum¬â€ 
his mother¬â€ ·Üí¬â€ Lydia Mitchell¬â€ 
her mother¬â€ ·Üí¬â€ Jonathan Wheeler, I¬â€ 
her father¬â€ ·Üí¬â€ Martha Wheeler (Salisbury)¬â€ 
his mother¬â€ ·Üí¬â€ William Salisbury, Jr.¬â€ 
her father¬â€ ·ÜíWilliam Salisbury, of Denbigh & Swansea¬â€ 
his father¬â€ ·Üí¬â€ John Salisbury, of Denbigh¬â€ 
his father¬â€ ·Üí¬â€ Ursula Salusbury¬â€ 
his mother¬â€ ·Üí¬â€ Henry Stanley, 4th Earl of Derby¬â€ 
her father·Üí¬â€ Edward Stanley, 3rd Earl of Derby¬â€ 
his father¬â€ ·Üí¬â€ Thomas Stanley, 2nd Earl of Derby¬â€ 
his father¬â€ ·Üí¬â€ Lady Joan Le Strange, 10th Baroness of Knockin¬â€ 
his mother¬â€ ·ÜíJohn le Strange, 8th Lord Strange of Knokyn¬â€ 
her father¬â€ ·Üí¬â€ Baron Richard le Strange, VII¬â€ 
his father¬â€ ·Üí¬â€ Maud de Mohun, Baroness of Strange¬â€ 
his mother¬â€ ·ÜíJoan de Burghersh, Dame de Mohun¬â€ 
her mother

https://www.geni.com/people/Joan-de-Burghersh-Dame-de-Mohun/6000000006444050262

Joan de Burghersh, Dame de Mohun
Gender:
Female
Birth:
circa 1319¬â€ 
Burwash, Sussex, England
Death:
October 04, 1404¬â€ (81-89)¬â€ 
guest-house of Christ Church, Canterbury, Kent, England¬â€ 
Place of Burial:
Canterbury Cathedral, Canterbury, Kent, England, United Kingdom
Immediate Family:
Daughter of¬â€ Bartholomew the Elder de Burghersh, 1st Baron of Burghersh¬â€ and¬â€ Elizabeth de Verdun¬â€ 
Wife of¬â€ John de Mohun, 2nd Baron Mohun¬â€ 
Mother of¬â€ Elizabeth de Mohun, Countess of Salisbury;¬â€ Philippa de Mohun, Lady of the Isle of Wight¬â€ and¬â€ Maud de Mohun, Baroness of Strange¬â€ 
Sister of¬â€ Henry de Burghersh;¬â€ Maud de Burghersh;¬â€ Sir John de Burghersh¬â€ and¬â€ Bartholomew de Burghersh, the Younger, 2nd Baron Burghersh¬â€ 

Primary Sources
Inquisitions Post Mortem¬â€ for Joan widow of John Mohun, knight. Writ 6 Oct. 1404. She died on 4 Oct. [1404]. Elizabeth countess of Salisbury, one daughter of John de Mohun and Joan, aged 30 years and more, Philippa wife of Edward duke of York, a second daughter, aged 26 years and more, and Richard Straunge, son of Maud widow of John Straunge, knight, the third daughter, were next heirs. Maud died in the lifetime of Joan. Richard was aged 22 years and more.

Joan of BURGHERSH
Birth: 1317/1330
Death: 4 Oct 1404
Father: Bartholemew, 3rd Lord BURGHERSH
Mother: Elizabeth of VERDUN
family
Partnership with: John, 2nd Lord MOHUN OF DUNSTER Marriage: BEF Sep 1342
Child: Maud de MOHUN Birth: 1337/1368
Child: Elizabeth of MOHUN Birth: 1343
Child: Philippa of MOHUN Birth: 1350/1377

biography
From¬â€ Find A Grave Memorial# 105827157
Daughter of Sir Bartholomew de Burghersh, 3rd Lord Berghersh and Elizabeth de Verdun. Granddaughter of Sir Robert de Berghersh and Maud Badlesmere, Sir Thebaud de Verdun and Maud de Mortimer.
Wife of Sir John de Mohun, son of Sir John Mohun of Dunster and Christian Segrave, daughter of John, Lord Segrave. They were married about 1341 and had four daughters including:
Elizabeth, wife of Sir William de Montagu
Minoress nun
Phillipe, wife of Sir Walter FitzWalter
Maud
In 1374, Joan sold Dunster, Kilton and Minehead to Lady Elizabeth Luttrell. John died 15 1375, and King Richard II granted Joan an annuity of 100 for life for their services to the King and Queen. She was also vested as a Lady of the Garter in 1384. Joan then removed herself from court in Jan of 1388. she was granted the castle and manor of Leeds, Kent, for life by Queen Anne of Bohemia, the grant was confirmed by King Richard II in 1399. Joan died testate and was buried at Canterbury Cathedral; "In the undercroft of our Ladies Chapell is an ancient monument thus inscribed; "Ione de Borwaschs dame de Moun."

notes
From¬â€ page 77¬â€ of The Archaeological Journal, Volume 37 "Dunster and its Lords"
On the establishment of the Order of the Garter in 1350, Sir John de Mohun was nominated one of the twenty-five original knights, and a brass plate setting forth his title and his arms is still to be seen in St. George's Chapel, at Windsor. In 1349, we find the Black Prince giving him a horse called Grisel Gris.7
Before he was twenty-two years of age Sir John de Mohun married Joan, the daughter of his former guardian, Sir Bartholomew de Burghersh, a lady who plays a vety important part in the history of Dunster. One story indeed that is told of her, and that reminds one partly of Dido and partly of Lady Godiva, rests solely on tradition. Camden and Fuller relate that she obtained from her husband as much common land for the poor of Dunster as she could walk round in one day barefooted.* No charter corresponding to any such grant is to be found.
At different dates after his marriage, Sir John de Mohun executed a series of entails and conveyances of his landed property, generally for the purpose of securing a larger income to his wife; sometimes, apparently, for the purpose of raising money.4 His expenses at the court and in the camp of Edward III. must have been considerable; and his will, only a few lines long, contains an ominous reference to creditors in London.6 He eventually, in 1369, conveyed his chief estates to feoffees on condition that they should dispose of them according to the instructions of his wife.6 He died on the 14th of September, 1376, without leaving any male issue, and was buried according to his own desire in the Priory Church of Bruton.7 No sooner was he dead than his widow obtained from the feoffees a reconveyance of the estates to herself for life, with remainder to the Lady Elizabeth Luttrell in fee.8¬â€ Thus on the only occasion since the Norman Conquest, on which Dunster Castle has passed by sale, it was sold by one widow and bought by another.
.... the original receipt of Lady Joan de Mohun for this sum is one of the most interesting documents in the possession of Mr. Luttrell. In one way at least Lady Joan de Mohun had the best of the bargain for she lived nearly thirty years after the payment of the purchase-money. She had the less scruple in selling Dunster and the manors dependent on it, inasmuch as all her three daughters had made brilliant marriages. Elizabeth, the eldest, was the wife of William de Montacute, Earl of Salisbury. Philippa, the second, was the wife of Sir Walter Fitz-Walter, and Matilda, the youngest, was the wife of Sir John Strange, Lord of Knockyn. Each of these three ladies inherited from their father some portion of the Mohun property. Lady Joan de Mohun afterwards surrendered to her two elder daughters for forty marks a year her own life interest in the more valuable estates which she had alienated to Lady Elizabeth Luttrell.1 Having thus practically severed her connection with Dunster, she seems to have gone to live in London, where she and her daughter, the Countess of Salisbury, used to figure at court arrayed in the robes of the Order of the Garter.* In 1386 she obtained from the king a grant for life of the manor and hundred of Macclesfield, which about three years later she exchanged with Anne, the Queen-Consort, for an annuity of 100 sterling.3 She built for herself a sumptuous chantry near the altar of St. Mary in the crypt or "undercroft" of the Cathedral Church of Canterbury, and in 1395 she gave to the prior and convent the sum of 350 marks, a high red hearse worth 20, a set of vestments also worth 20, and a missal and chalice.4 ....
"Joan de Moune Lady of Dunster" made her will on the second of October, 1404, in the guest-house called "Mayster onerys," within the precincts of Christ Church, Canterbury. By it she gave to her daughter Elizabeth, Countess of Salisbury, the cross which she had promised to give to the daughter whom she loved best, and a copy of the Legenda Sanctorum. Matilda, the third daughter, had predeceased her mother, and Philippa, the second, received only the maternal blessing and some choice red wine. This lady had been married three times, firstly to Sir Walter Fitz-Walter, secondly to Sir John Golafre, and thirdly to Edward Plantagenet, Duke of York. Her third husband was alive in 1404, and received, under his mother-in-law's will, a copy of the Legenda Sanctorum and an illuminated book. Lady Joan de Mohun also left to "her singular Lord" Archbishop Arundel, a Psalter, bound in white; to her cousin, Lady le Despencer the elder, a green bed; to the Prior of Canterbury, some old green tapestry embroidered with Hons and some "ystayned" tapestry; to her confessor, Friar John, of the Franciscan order, ten marks; and various other legacies to other persons, not forgetting Philip Caxton, her clerk, and her six damsels and attendants.1 She died two days after the date of her will, and was duly buried in the undercroft at Canterbury.1 The effigy on her tomb shows her habited in the close-fitting tunic known as a cote hardie, but both the arms have been broken off.' The inscription round it was :√ɬ¢âˆšÇ·Ç¨âˆšÇ·Äù" $out Ijitu pritj pot I'amt 3oJjant IButtoaarijt qt fmt Bamc lie ffioljun.'"
Philippa, Duchess of York, the last surviving daughter of the last Lord Mohun of Dunster, died in 1481, and was buried in Westminster Abbey, where her monument may still be seen in the Chapel of St. Nicholas.4

lineage
Ancestors of Joan of BURGHERSH
/-Robert BURGHERSH
/-Bartholemew, 3rd Lord BURGHERSH
| | /- BADLESMERE
| \-Matilda (Maud) of BADLESMERE
Joan of BURGHERSH
| /-Theobald, Baron VERDUN
| /-Theobald, 2nd Baron VERDUN
| | \-Margery de BOHUN
\-Elizabeth of VERDUN
| /-Edmund, 7th Baron MORTIMER , of Wigmore
\-Maud MORTIMER
\-Margaret of FIENNES
Descendants of Joan of BURGHERSH
1 Joan of BURGHERSH
=John, 2nd Lord MOHUN OF DUNSTER Marriage: BEF Sep 1342
2 Maud de MOHUN
=John, 6th Lord STRANGE of Knockyn
3 Richard, 7th Lord STRANGE of Knockyn
=Elizabeth COBHAM Marriage: 1438/1439
2 Elizabeth of MOHUN
=William Montagu , 2nd Earl of SALISBURY
3 William of MONTAGU
=Elizabeth of Arundel , Duchess of NORFOLK Marriage: BEF Dec 1378
2 Philippa of MOHUN
=Edward, 2nd Duke of YORK Marriage: 1396

page 301¬â€ of Plantagenet Ancestry: A Study In Colonial And Medieval Families, 2nd Edition ...
page 366¬â€ of Magna Carta Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 2nd Edition ...
113¬â€ of Women of the English Nobility and Gentry, 1066-1500 edited by Jennifer C. Ward
page 311¬â€ of Motherhood, Religion, and Society in Medieval Europe, 400 - 1400: Essays ... By Lesley Smith
http://www.cracroftspeerage.co.uk/online/content/burghersh1329.htm

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Historische Ereignisse

  • Graaf Albrecht (Beiers Huis) war von 1389 bis 1404 Fürst der Niederlande (auch Graafschap Holland genannt)
  • Graaf Willem VI (Beiers Huis) war von 1404 bis 1417 Fürst der Niederlande (auch Graafschap Holland genannt)
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