Oorzaak: Battle casualty
He is married to Elizabeth de Badlesmere.
They got married on June 27, 1316 at Earnwood in Kinlet, Shropshire, England, he was 11 years old.Sources 1, 4, 5, 6
Child(ren):
pg 33,72 & 168 "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 384, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke, published 1883
Edmund Mortimer, Lord Mortimer, b. 1305/6, d. shortly before 21 Jan 1331/2. [Magna Charta Sureties]-----------------BARONY OF MORTIMER (I) 1331 [Note: Edmund was the 3rd such Baron of Wigmore]EDMUND DE MORTIMER, son and heir [of Roger by Joan de Geneville], born probably in 1305 or 1306. From March 1322, presumably till the end of the reign, he was in the King's custody. In 1327 he was made deputy keeper of the peace in Salop, Hereford and Worcs by his father. He was knighted at the Coronation of Edward III, 1 February 1327/8. In July 1330 he was joint commissioner of array with his father in Glos., Hereford, Salop and Worcs. The magnates in Parliament, September 1331, interested themselves on Mortimer's behalf, but the King refused to act upon their advice; however, before 21 October, on his own initiative,he restored to Edmund the castle and manor of Wigmore, the land of Maelienydd, with the castles of Kenthles and Dynbaud, the land of Kedewayn with the castle of Dolforwyn, and the land of Comotoyder, these being the lands which had formed the subject of the representation of the magnates. On 20 November1331 he was summoned to Parliament by writs directed Edmundo de Mortuomari, whereby he is held to have become LORD MORTIMER.He married, 27 June 1316, at Earnwood, in Kinlet, Elizabeth (aged 25 in 1338), 3rd daughter of Bartholomew DE BADLESMERE [LORD BADLESMERE], and sister and coheir of Giles DE BADLESMERE [LORD BADLESMERE. He died 16 December 1331. His widow received dower in September 1332, and in 1334 obtained the castle of Bridgwater and various manors as her right by gift of Roger de Mortimer. She married, 2ndly [licence 1335), William (DE BOHUN), EARL OF NORTHAMPTON, who died in September 1360. She died June 1356. [Complete Peerage IX:284-5, XIV:489, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)]-----------------Sir Edmund Mortimer, although he did not succeed to the earldom, was summoned to parliament as Lord Mortimer, 20 November, 1331. His lordship m. Elizabeth, one of the daus. and at length co-heirs of Bartholomew (called the Rich), Lord Badlesmere, of Leeds Castle, in Kent, by whom (who m., after his decease, William de Bohun, Earl of Northampton) he had an only surviving son, his successor in 1331, Roger Mortimer. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage Ltd, London, England, 1883, p. 384, Mortimer, Barons Mortimer, of Wigmore, Earls of March]
Edmund Mortimer, Lord Mortimer, b. 1305/6, d. shortly before 21 Jan1331/2. [Magna Charta Sureties]
-----------------
BARONY OF MORTIMER (I) 1331 [Note: Edmund was the 3rd such Baron ofWigmore]
EDMUND DE MORTIMER, son and heir [of Roger by Joan de Geneville], born probably in 1305 or 1306. From March 1322, presumably till the end of the reign, he was in the King's custody. In 1327 he was made deputy keeper ofthe peace in Salop, Hereford and Worcs by his father. He was knighted atthe Coronation of Edward III, 1 February 1327/8. In July 1330 he was joint commissioner of array with his father in Glos., Hereford, Salop and Worcs. The magnates in Parliament, September 1331, interested themselves on Mortimer's behalf, but the King refused to act upon their advice; however, before 21 October, on his own initiative,
he restored to Edmund the castle and manor of Wigmore, the land of Maelienydd, with the castles of Kenthles and Dynbaud, the land of Kedewayn with the castle of Dolforwyn, and the land of Comotoyder, these being the lands which had formed the subject of the representation of the magnates. On 20 November1331 he was summoned to Parliament by writs directed Edmundo de Mortuomari, whereby he is held to have become LORDMORTIMER.
He married, 27 June 1316, at Earnwood, in Kinlet, Elizabeth (aged 25 in1338), 3rd daughter of Bartholomew DE BADLESMERE [LORD BADLESMERE], and sister and coheir of Giles DE BADLESMERE [LORD BADLESMERE. He died 16December 1331. His widow received dower in September 1332, and in 1334 obtained the castle of Bridgwater and various manors as her right by giftof Roger de Mortimer. She married, 2ndly [licence 1335), William (DEBOHUN), EARL OF NORTHAMPTON, who died in September 1360. She died June1356. [Complete Peerage IX:284-5, XIV:489, (transcribed by DaveUtzinger)]
-----------------
Sir Edmund Mortimer, although he did not succeed to the earldom, wassummoned to parliament as Lord Mortimer, 20 November, 1331. His lordshipm. Elizabeth, one of the daus. and at length co-heirs of Bartholomew(called the Rich), Lord Badlesmere, of Leeds Castle, in Kent, by whom(who m., after his decease, William de Bohun, Earl of Northampton) he hadan only surviving son, his successor in 1331, Roger Mortimer. [SirBernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages, Burke'sPeerage Ltd, London, England, 1883, p. 384, Mortimer, Barons Mortimer, ofWigmore, Earls of March]
Edmund 3rd 1st Baron de Mortimer | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1316 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Elizabeth de Badlesmere |