Bacheler Family Tree » Henry de Hede (± 1325-1374)

Personal data Henry de Hede 

Sources 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9
  • Alternative names: Henry DE HAWTE, Henry /De Hawte
  • He was born about 1325 in Northumberland, England.
  • He died on March 31, 1374England.
  • This information was last updated on October 19, 2020.

Household of Henry de Hede

He is married to Annabel Atte Halle.

They got married in the year 1331 at Bef. 1329.


Child(ren):

  1. Edmund Hawte  1330-1370 


Notes about Henry de Hede

{geni:about_me} Henry de Hede
* Birth:1325 - Northumberland, England
* Death:Mar 31 1374 - Cumberland, England
* Parents:William de Hede, Margery DeMarynes
Northumberland is a county in North East England. The northernmost county of England, it borders Cumbria to the west, County Durham and Tyne and Wear to the south and the Scottish Borders to the north. To the east is the North Sea coastline with a 64 miles path

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The Harrisons are said to have come into England with the Norse Viking Sea Kings, who finally under Canute (1016-1035) conquered and possessed the whole of the country. They were among the "free Danes" and were the last to withstand William the Conquerer, himself of Norse Viking origin. Thus they were in England a generation or more before the time of the Battle of Hastings, Oct 14, 1066, and the period of the Doomesday Book (1085-1086), from which many old English families date their origin.

Northumberland, the Danish section of England, is said to be filled with Harrisons now, and the name there is variously spelled, sometimes without an H. The name being of Danish patronymic origin. Arysen, Aertzen, which is common to this day in Denmark, Sweden, and Norway. (Richmond, Virginia Standard, No. 41, June 12, 1880).

That Daniel and Robert were favorite early given names among the Harrisons of Northumberland is shown by a record of the baptism of Daniell, son of Robert Harrison in the parish of Berwick-on-Tweed, under date of December 26, 1610.

Northumberland, is the northernmost shire of England. To the east it borders on the North Sea, and to the north on the River Tweed, which separates it from Scotland. Berwick, Northumberland is the farthest north of any city of England. From the old kingdom of the north, the Harrisons drifted south among the various other shires and some moved into Scotland.

Directly South of Northumberland, and bordering also on the North Sea, lies the county of Durham. The county was one of the Counties Palatine; the other two being Lancashire and Cheshire. The city of Durham is the seat of the catherdral of St. Cuthbert, begun in 1095, the view of which from the river is said be surpassed by no other English cathedral. The town grew up from the early church.

The parish registers of St. Margaret's, Durham, begin with early Harrisons in 1559.

Wm Herrison et Margrett Farles', Nov 9, 1559

Thom Herrison et Isabel Whitfield' June 16, 1560

Xpofor Herrisn et Ann Walton' Nov 12, 1593

Thomm Herrison et Elizabeth Gryndve' Nov 7, 1598

Rollands Harysen et Jensta Thompson' June 29, 1600

Johannes Herrison et Bettram Wrangham, Jiduam' July 4, 1602. (Publications of the Harleian Society, Registers of St. Margaret's, Durham, pp. 1, 6, 7.)

South of Durham and skirting the North Sea to the Humber, lies Yorkshire, and to the west borders Cumberland, and Westmoreland. In each of these counties were found Harrison families in 1575, when records, as collected by the College of Arms, dated back to the days of the old Chronicles.

The College of Arms, London, the famous depository of English pedigrees was incorporated in 1483. The Visitations of the Nobility and Gentry began in 1528. The last commission under the great seal for registering descents, was issued in 1686. Some pedigrees were registered as late as 1704, but since then it has been left to the individual to continue or not, their pedigrees with the College.

The oldest Harrison pedigree of record is that styled simply "Harrison", tracing the descent of a London family of Tower Ward, 1633, from the year 1374.

Granted in 1613, the Arms are - Harrison of London - descended from Durham: -

Arms: "Or, on a fesse sable, three eagles displayed of the field, a crescent for difference."

Crest: "On a chapeau Sable turned up and indented Azure an eagle's head Or charged with a crescent."

(Originally may have been three eagles turned loose - however, pedigree of equal, or earlier, age is found represented by only one eagle. Burke's General Armoury - 1851)

The colors being "Azure" or blue, for the shield, "Or" (Aurum) or gold, for the figure and "Argent" or silver, for the decoration, show that the chief motif of the Arms is a golden eagle. The bird is depicted on the shield with its wings expanded as specified by the word "displayed" and is emblished by a ducal coronet encircling its neck. The shield is surrounded with a border decoration similiar to a wreath, the same being joined together at the top by a small figure in place of the usual knot, resembling a cap, as follows:

Arms: "Azure an eagle displayed Or ducally gorged Ar."

Crest: "On a Chapeau Azure turned up and indented ermine a bird with wings endorsed Sable."

Ten generations are embraced in these arms and are the same as displayed by DANIEL HARRISON, son of Isaiah Harrison and Robert Harrison, grandson of Isaiah, in Rockingham County, Virginia, in the 1700's. The golden eagle displayed was the heraldic emblem of Isaiah Harrison's family. [S67] [S223] [S224] [S224]

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https://www.familysearch.org/tree/person/details/G9X1-KPK
Harrisons are said to have come into England with the Norse Viking Sea Kings
http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=document&guid=25e434bb-393f-4993-bdb7-dfd06c2173a0&tid=6812061&pid=-910459760

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Ancestors (and descendant) of Henry de Hede

Henry de Hede
± 1325-1374

1331

Annabel Atte Halle
± 1300-1399

Edmund Hawte
1330-1370

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About the surname De Hede

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When copying data from this family tree, please include a reference to the origin:
Steven Adrian Bacheler, "Bacheler Family Tree", database, Genealogy Online (https://www.genealogieonline.nl/bacheler-family-tree/I6000000002928651507.php : accessed May 9, 2024), "Henry de Hede (± 1325-1374)".