She is married to John Stanley.
They got married before 1385.Sources 1, 2
Child(ren):
Vol 3, pg 24 & 577, "The History of the County Palatine and City of Chester" by Geortge Ormerod
pg 67, "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists etc" by Frederick Lewis Weiss, 6th Edition
pg 774, Burke's "Extant Peerage and Baronetcies etc" 1970 edition
pg 503, " A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" by Sir Bernard Burke, published 1883
Guy Stanley ((XXXXX@XXXX.XXX))
Please send ANY errors, or extensions by E-mail, as I can't trace anything by Post-em. If the name you want is not in this data base, I don't have it. Sorry
Isabel, 3rd cousin of John de Stanley, daughter of Sir Thomas Lathom, ofLathom and Knowsley, Lancs (descended from Robert Fitz Henry, whose sonRobert, took the name Lathom from the place where he lived). [Burke'sPeerage]
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He married, in or before 1385, Isabel, daughter and heir of Thomas DELATHOM, of Lathom and Knowsley, Lancs (k). He died before 28 January1413/4. [Complete Peerage XII/1:248-9, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)]
(k) In 1385 the Duke of Lancaster successfully proceeded against him inParliament for unlawful entry on the manor of Knowsley, which he claimedas remaining to his wife Isabel in tail. The manor was evidentlyadjusted, since the manor remained in the Stanley family. On 24 Dec 1398he obtained a dispensation for the marriage, where it seems to besuggested that his relationship was that of third cousin once removedthrough the Mascys.
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The following information was provided by Curt Hofemann, curt_hofemann ATyahoo.com, in a post-em:
FWIW:
Isabel, now Lady Stanley, widow, did, on the death of Sir John herhusband, return with her children from Ireland to Liverpool, and lived inthe house erected there by Sir John, called the tower, the site whereofwas given to him by her father, and contains about 650 square yards, or3200 feet; together with several other bargage houses and lands in thattown, sometime after her marriage ; which was not agreeable to herfather; who was, in all respects qualified to recommend her, by a fortuneequal to any adresses made her, of which she had many superior in worldlyfortune, to Sir John.
But fortune herself largely shared her favours to him, with a liberalhand, in the gifts of riches, honour, and dignities, which at this timehad their proper influence with her father Sir Thomas; who, by all theaccounts I have seen of this affair, intended a plentiful provision forher, but not the gross of his large possessions... [Ref: Seacombe,History of House of Stanleyhttp://www.isle-of-man.com/manxnotebook/fulltext/hs173x/p1s01.htm]
Regards,
Curt
Copyright © 2001-2005, Tim Dowling
email: (XXXXX@XXXX.XXX)
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John Stanley |