(1) Er ist verheiratet mit Margery de Willoughby.
Sie haben geheiratet am 14. November 1406 in Ravensworth, Yorkshire, England.Quellen 1, 2, 3
Kind(er):
BARONY OF FITZHUGH (IV, 5)
WILLIAM (FITZHUGH), LORD FITZHUGH, 3rd but 1st surviving son and heir,aged 26 and more at his father's death. He accompanied the King to Francein 1415, 1417, and 1421, being then a knight. On 9 August 1425 he hadlivery of the manor of Kingston, and the manor of Carlton, his lands incos. York and Northumberland, and his tenements in the city of London,were liberated to him, 8 and 9 August, the escheators in cos. Notts andYork being ordered to take his fealty for the manor of Kingston and themoiety of the advowson of Burnsall, respectively. After his mother'sdeath, he was obliged to bring actions to obtain the lands which heinherited from her, as the King, owing to some mistake, had granted thecustody of them to various persons. He was appointed a commissioner totreat with the Scots, 14 August 1433. In 1438/9 he made an unsuccessfulattempt to regain Masham and the other manors which John Lescrope hadrecovered in 1425; alleging, in his petition, that judgment had beenobtained by representations which were false, and that the manors hadreally been held in fee simple. On 1 February 1446/7 he had licence tosucceed to L'Aigle and the other lands in Normandy which his father hadheld, and which had hitherto been unjustly detained from him. He wassummoned to Parliament from 12 July 1429 to 5 September 1450, by writsdirected Willelmo fitz Hugh' chivaler.
He married, at Ravensworth, before 18 November 1406, Margery, daughter ofSir William DE WILLOUGHBY, of Eresby, co. Lincoln [LORD WILLOUGHBY], byhis 1st wife, Lucy, daughter of Sir Roger LESTRAUNGE, of Knockin, Salop[LORD LESTRAUNGE]. He died 22 October 1452. His wife predeceased him.[Complete Peerage V:426-7, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)]
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Sir William Fitz-Hugh, 4th baron, b. 1398, summoned to parliament from 12July, 1429, to 5 September, 1450. This nobleman attained distinction inthe lifetime of his father in the French wars, and after his accession tothe title, he was in commission (11th Henry VI) [1433] to treat with thecommissioners of King James I, of Scotland, regarding compensation forinjuries inflicted by the Scots upon the English. In two years afterwardshis lordship was joined with the Earls of Northumberland andWestmoreland, and the great northern Lords Dacre, Clifford, Greystoke,and Latimer, to repeal an irruption of the Scots. Lord Fitz-Hugh m.Margery, dau. of William, Lord Willoughby de Eresby, and had issue,Henry, his successor; Margery, m. to Sir John Melton, Knt., of Aston;Joane, m. to John, Lord Scrope, of Bolton; Eleanor, m. to Thomas, LordDacre; Maud, m. to William Bowes; Lora, m. 1st, to John Musgrave, and2ndly, to John Constable, of Halsham; Lucy, a nun at Depford; andElizabeth, m. Ralph, Lord Greystock. His lordship d. in 1452, and was s.by his son, Henry Fitz-Hugh, 5th baron. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant,Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London,England, 1883, p. 207, FitzHugh, Barons FitzHugh]
William 4th Baron FitzHugh | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Margery de Willoughby |