*''''''Sir Arthur Pole1y 1541 00 at of Sussex, England.1 He married Jane Lewknor, daughter of Sir Roger Lewknor and Eleanor Touchet, circa 1526.2 Sir Arthur Pole died in 1536..[S11581] Burke's Dormant & Extinct Peerages, p. 438.___remarry, and so deprive the family of her great fortune. Lady Salisbury and her son, Lord Montague, bethought themselves of a good way out of the difficulty. They forced the widow to become a novice. The lady had no wish to proceed farther in the religious life, so she betook herself to William Barlow, the new Bishop of St. Asaph, who was residing in his priory of Bisham, where the Poles had one of their country houses. She said to Bishop Barlow, 'Can I leave the veil at pleasure?'; 'Yes, for all religious persons have a time of probation. You are only a novice and could leave your nun's weeds at your pleasure. I bind you no further...', he said. The lady took the bishop's advice, and married Sir William Barentyne. A few years later (1543), in fear of being prosecuted under the Act of the Six Articles, she and her husband were obliged to procure an Act of Parliament to declare their children legitimate.*''''''Married: Jane LEWKNOR (dau. of Sir Roger Lewknor of Dedisham and Bodiam and Eleanor Touchet) ABT 1526 (w.1 of Christopher Pickering - m.3 Sir William Barentyn)2. Mary POLEall G. Everinghamoi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=10&ved=0CE8Q6AEwCTge#v=onepage&q=Roger%20Lewknor%201543&f=false/ Plantagenet ancestry: a study in colonial and medieval families By Douglas Richardson, Kimball G. Everingham]hakendene, and Wheatley (in Cuddesdon), Oxfordshire, and Broadhurst, Horsted Keynes, and Iden, Sussex, son and heir, born 31 Dec. 1481 and baptized 1 Jan. 1481/2. He married (1st) MARY READE, daughter and co-heiress of Robert Reade, Knt., of Bore Place (in Chiddingstone), Kent, Chief Justice of Common Pleas, by Margaret, daughter and heiress of John Alphew. She died before 3 Dec. 1518 (date of her father's will). They had one son, Drew, and one daughter, Margaret. He married (2nd) before 1522 ANNE EATON, widow of Richard Gray, of London, ironmonger. They had one son, Francis, and oneistopher Pickering, Knt. (died 7 Sept. 1516) and Arthur Pole, Knt. (died 1535/6), and daughter and co-heiress of Roger Lewknor, Knt., of Dedisham and Bodiam, Sussex, by Eleanor, daughter of John Audley, 6th Lord Audley. She was born about 1503 (age 40 at her father's death in 1543).'''''' They had two sons, Drew and Charles. ''''''William and Jane's marriage was declared invalid on 15 Dec 1540, she having taken a vow of perpetual chastity following the death of her prior husband, Arthur Pole, Knt. By act of Parliament dated 34 and 35 Henry VIII (c.1543/4), William and Jane's issue was deemed to be legitimate.'''''' SIR WILLIAM BARANTYNE died testate (P.C.C. 5 Coode) 17 Nov. 1549, and was buried at Haseley, Oxfordshire. . . . . of the Manor of Broadhurst, Sussex. When Arthur died, his mother did not wish his widow to remarry, and so deprive the family of her great fortune. Lady Salisbury and her son, Lord Montague, bethought themselves of a good way out of the difficulty. They forced the widow to become a novice. The lady had no wish to proceed farther in the religious life, so she betook herself to William Barlow, the new Bishop of St. Asaph, who was residing in his priory of Bisham, where the Poles had one of their country houses. She said to Bishop Barlow, 'Can I leave the veil at pleasure?'; 'Yes, for all religious persons have a time of probation. You are only a novice and could leave your nun's weeds at your pleasure. I bind you no further...', he said. The lady took the bishop's advice, and married Sir William Barentyne. A few years later (1543), in fear of being prosecuted under the Act of the Six Articles, she and her husband were obliged to procure an Act of Parliament to declare their children legitimate.
Arthur Pole |
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