She is married to Phillip Courtenay.
They got married about 1425 at Powderham, Devonshire, ENGLAND.
MAR: Bk, Medieval Knight by Stephen Turnbull.
Child(ren):
Primary Sources
1424. 5 Kal. Jan. SS. Apostoli, Rome. (f. 155d.)
To Philip Courtenay, donsel, and Elizabeth Hungereford, damsel, of the diocese of Bath and Wells. Confirmation of the dispensation granted to them by Henry, bishop of Winchester (to whom the pope lately granted, inter alia, faculty to dispense thirty persons of both sexes in the realm or other dominions of the king of England, to marry persons related to them in the third or more remote degree of kindred), to marry, notwithstanding that they were related in the third and fourth degree of kindred, in virtue of which dispensation they have been md. Sincere deuocionis affectus.
Source: 'Lateran Regesta 250: 1419-1425', in Calendar of Papal Registers Relating To Great Britain and Ireland: Vol: 7, 1417-1431, ed. J A Twemlow (London, 1906), pp. 377-384. British History Online http://www.british-history.ac.uk/cal-papal-registers/brit-ie/vol7/pp377-384
[accessed 23 Sep 2017].
Elizabeth HUNGERFORD
Born: ABT 1400, Hungerford, Somersetshire, England
Died: 14 Dec 1476
Buried: Powderham, Devonshire, England
Father: Walter HUNGERFORD (1º B. Hungerford of Farleigh)
Mother: Catherine PEVERELL
md.: Phillip COURTENAY of Powderham and Molland (Sir) ABT 1425
Children:
1. Anne COURTENAY
2. Elizabeth COURTENAY
3. Phillippa COURTENAY
4. Catherine COURTENAY
5. William COURTENAY of Powderham (Sir)
6. Peter COURTENAY (Bishop of Exeter and Winchester)
7. Phillip COURTENAY of Molland (Sir)
8. Walter COURTENAY (Sir)
9. Humphrey COURTENAY
10. Edmund COURTENAY of Deviock
11. John COURTENAY (Sir)
Elizabeth Hungerford was the dau. of Sir Walter Hungerford, 1st Lord Hungerford.[1]
She md. Sir Philip Courtenay, son of Sir John Courtenay.[1] Her md. name became Courtenay.[1]
Children of Elizabeth Hungerford and Sir Philip Courtenay
1. Sir Philip Courtenay+[1]
2. Piers Courtenay [1] d. 1492
3. Sir Edmund Courtenay [2]
4. Sir Walter Courtenay [2]
5. Sir John Courtenay [2]
6. Humphrey Courtenay+[2]
7. Sir William Courtenay+[1] b. c 1400, d. 1485
Citations
1. [S37] Charles Mosley, editor, Burke's Peerage, Baronetage & Knightage, 107th edition, 3 volumes (Wilmington, Delaware, U.S.A.: Burke's Peerage (Genealogical Books) Ltd, 2003), volume 1, page 1123. Hereinafter cited as Burke's Peerage and Baronetage, 107th edition.
2. [S37] Charles Mosley, Burke's Peerage and Baronetage, 107th edition, volume 1, page 1124.
Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America Before 1700
Page 59. 35. Sir Philip Courtnay, of Powderham, d. 16 Dec. 1463; m. Elizabeth Hungerford, d 14 Dec. 1476, dau. of Sir Walter Hungerford, K.G., 1st Lord Hungerford, Lord Treasurer of England, and wife Catherine Peverell, dau. of Sir Thomas Peverell and Margaret de Courtenay (51A-33). (CP IV: 335)
Elizabeth's father was: Sir Walter Hungerford, Lord Treasurer of England, Knight of the Garter, b abt 22 Jun 1378, of Farleigh, Somerset, England, d 8 Aug 1449. He md [1] Catherine Peverell bef 18 Sep 1402, dau. of Sir Thomas Peverell and Margaret Courtenay, and [2] Eleanor Berkeley bef 8 May 1439.
Identified children of Walter Hungerford and Catherine Peverell were:
1. Robert Hungerford b abt 1404.
2. Elizabeth Hungerford
b abt 1408, of Somerset, England, d 14 Dec 1476. She md. Sir Philip Courtenay
abt 1426, son of Sir John Courtenay and Joan Champernoun.
Born about 1403, Elizabeth was likely the eldest child of Sir Walter Hungerford, later Baron Hungerford,[1] and his first wife Katherine (Catherine) Peverell. She was dau. and coheir of Thomas PEVERELL, MP, of Parke and Hamatethy in Cornwall, by Margaret, dau. of Sir Thomas COURTENAY. [2]
She md. Sir Philip Courtenay, (1404–1463) of Powderham, Devon. On her marriage she took to her husband as her marriage portion the manor of Molland in North Devon, which was then inherited by her second son Sir Philip I Courtenay of Molland (who died in 1488), who founded a junior branch of the Courtenay family. A fragment of an ancient chest tomb in Molland Church displays two interlaced Hungerford sickles (the ancient symbol of the Hungerford family) and a dolphin of Courtenay of Powderham. Her third son was Peter Courtenay (c.1432-1492) Bishop of Exeter and Bishop of Winchester, whose splendid surviving mantlepiece in the Bishop's Palace, Exeter displays much heraldry including Hungerford sickles and Peverell garbs.[3]
The marriage likely occurring ca. 1425, they had 7 sons (Sir William; Sir Philip; Peter, Bishop of Exeter & Winchester; Sir Walter; Edmund; Humphrey; & Sir John) & 4 dau. (Anne, wife of Sir Thomas Grenville; Elizabeth, wife of Sir James Luttrell, of Sir Humphrey Audley, & of Thomas Malet, Esq; Philippe, wife of Sir Thomas Fulford; & Katherine, wife of Sir St. Clere Pomeroy, of Thomas Rogers, & of Sir William Huddesfield).[4]
Elizabeth Hungerford died on 14 Dec 1476.[5]
Douglas Richardson, Royal Ancestry, Vol. V, p. 197
Douglas Richardson, Royal Ancestry, Vol. II, pp. 401-402 Douglas Richardson, Magna Charta Ancestry, 2nd Edition, Vol. II, p. 327.
Douglas Richardson, Magna Charta Ancestry, 2nd Edition, Vol. II, p. 30.
Our Noble & Gentle Families of Royal Descent Together with Their Paternal Ancestry by Joseph Foster p. 827 1886 Edition:
The name of the town is Farley Hungerford.
Elizabeth Hungerford | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Phillip Courtenay |
The data shown has no sources.