Family tree Cromer/Russell/Buck/Pratt » Lady Eleanor Neville (1398-1472)

Persoonlijke gegevens Lady Eleanor Neville 

Bronnen 1, 2, 3
  • Zij is geboren in het jaar 1398 in of, Raby, Durham, England.Bron 4

    Waarschuwing Let op: Leeftijd bij trouwen (1 juni 1412) lag beneden de 16 jaar (14).

  • Zij is gedoopt in Castle Raby with Keverstone-Staindrop, Durham, England.
  • (Marriage) na 10 mei 1457 in chapel of Middleham Castle, Yorkshire, England: Spouse: Thomas Stanley, 1st Earl of Derby.Bron 5
  • Zij is overleden op 20 augustus 1472 in St Albans, Englamd, Hertfordshire, England, zij was toen 74 jaar oud.Bronnen 4, 6
  • Zij is begraven in Beverley Minster, Beverley East Riding of Yorkshire Unitary Authority, East Riding of Yorkshire, England.

Gezin van Lady Eleanor Neville

(1) Zij is getrouwd met Henry de Percy.

Zij zijn getrouwd vanaf 1 juni 1412 te of, zij was toen 14 jaar oud.


(2) Zij is getrouwd met Richard le Despencer.

Zij zijn getrouwd op 1 juni 1412, zij was toen 14 jaar oud.


Kind(eren):

  1. John Percy  1418-< 1419
  2. Percy triplet  1424-????
  3. Joan Percy  1430-1483


Notities over Lady Eleanor Neville

*'''Eleanor Neville1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9ster Castle, Great Chamberlain of England, Joint Chamberlain of the Exchequer, Lord Chancellor2,3,10,5,6,11,8,9 b. c 1401, d. 31 Dec 14602 - 9 Dec 1462, Constable of England, Chief Justice of Chester & Flint was made on 17 December 1454; They had 7 sons''' (John; Sir George, Lord Strange; Richard; Sir Edward; 1st Lord Monteagle; James, Bishop of Ely; Thomas; & William) '''and 4 daughters''' (Anne; Alice; Katherine; & Agnes).2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9 '''Eleanor Neville died after 6 April 1464; Buried at St. James, Garlicklithe, London.3,5,8 Sir Thomas Stanley, 1st Earl Derby, 2nd Lord Stanley, Constable of England, Chief Justice of Chester & Flint b. c 1435, d. 29 Jul 1504range, Constable of Pontefract, Knaresborough, & Wicklow Castles+13,5,8 b. c 1460, d. 5 Dec 1503p of Ely, Deacon of Cheshire5,8 b. c 1466, d. 22 Mar 1515ald Paget, Vol. 2, p. 447; Plantagenet Ancestry of 17th Century Colonists, by David Faris, p. 108; Burke's Peerage, 1938, p. 785.uglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry, p. 680. p. 91-92.l. V, p. 28-29.estry, Vol. IV, p. 123-124.eland, Great Britain, and the United Kingdom, by George Edward Cokayne, Vol. IX, p. 115.'''Eleanor Neville1ury and Alice Montagu, Countess of Salisbury.1 '''She married Thomas Stanley, 1st Earl of Derby''', son of Sir Thomas Stanley, 1st Lord Stanley and Joan Goushill, '''after 10 May 1457.1 She died before November 1482.1okyn)+2 d. bt 4 Dec 1503 - 5 Dec 1503 for this source. Hereinafter cited as. [S8]age.com/p227.htm#i2261Richard NEVILLE (1° E. Salisbury)hn STANLEY (b. ABT 1460)1465)T 1477)glandEarl of Westmorland, and Joan Beaufort, Thomas Montagu and Eleanor de Holand.ate of the marriage settlement, and had seven sons and four daughters: (1406 - 1462)lings:1471)*n, City of London, Greater London, Englandis 5th Earl of Salisbury and 7th and 4th Baron Montacute, KG, PC (1400 – 31 December 1460) was a Yorkist leader during the early parts of the Wars of the Roses.[1] at Raby Castle in County Durham. Although he was the third son (and tenth child) of Ralph de Neville, 1st Earl of Westmorland, Richard Neville was the first son to be born to Ralph's second wife, Joan Beaufort, Countess of Westmoreland. The Neville lands were primarily in Durham and Yorkshire, but both Richard II and Henry IV found the family useful to counterbalance the strength of the Percys on the Scottish Borders – hence Earl Ralph's title, granted in 1397, and his appointment as Warden of the West March in 1403. Ralph's marriage to Joan Beaufort, at a time when the distinction between royalty and nobility was becoming more important, can be seen as another reward; as a granddaughter of Edward III, she was a member of the royal family.ade good marriages to local nobility, but his Beaufort children married into even greater families. Three of Richard's sisters married dukes (the youngest Cecily, marrying Richard, Duke of York), and Richard himself married Alice Montacute, daughter and heiress of Thomas Montacute, the Earl of Salisbury. 1421, when as a married couple they appeared at the coronation of Queen Catherine of Valois. At the time of the marriage, the Salisbury inheritance was not guaranteed, as not only was Earl Thomas still alive, but in 1424 he remarried (to Alice Chaucer, granddaughter of the poet Geoffrey Chaucer). However, this second marriage was without issue and when the Earl Thomas Montacute died in 1428, Richard Neville and Alice were confirmed as the Earl and Countess of Salisbury. From this point on, Richard Neville will be referred to as Salisbury.f Richard, Duke of York, who made him Lord Chancellor in 1455. When King Henry tried to assert his independence and dismiss Richard as Protector, Salisbury joined him in fighting at the First Battle of St Albans, claiming that he was acting in self-defence. After the Battle of Blore Heath, in which he was notably successful, Salisbury escaped to Calais, having been specifically excluded from a royal pardon. He was slain on 30 December 1460, the day of the Battle of Wakefield. his body to the family mausoleum at Bisham Priory and erected this effigy. It was brought to Burghfield after the Dissolution of the Monasteries. The effigy of a lady alongside him wears a headdress which is not thought to be of the right date to be his wife, but she may be one of the earlier Countesses of Salisbury buried at Bisham.le (1424–1450), who married Henry de Beauchamp, 1st Duke of Warwick, had one daughter, Anne Beauchamp, 15th Countess of Warwick. On her death, her title passed to her paternal aunt Lady Anne, wife of her maternal uncle, Richard Neville.[4] who married Henry FitzHugh, 5th Baron FitzHugh. Their daughter, Elizabeth, married William Parr, 1st Baron Parr of Kendal, thus making them great-grandparents of Catherine Parr, sixth wife of King Henry VIII.*Joan Neville (1434–1462), who married William FitzAlan, 16th Earl of Arundel, and had issue.William Hastings, 1st Baron Hastings, had issue.tanhope (30 August 1497, who married firstly Robert Willoughby, 6th Baron Willoughby de Eresby (d. 25 July 1452), and thirdly Sir Gervase Clifton, beheaded 6 May 1471 after the Battle of Tewkesbury.[5]om: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Neville,_5th_Earl_of_Salisburyn''' and stepfather to King Henry VII of England. He was the eldest son of Thomas Stanley, 1st Baron Stanley and Joan Goushill. Through his mother he was a lineal descendant of King Edward I by Elizabeth of Rhuddlan, Countess of Hereford and by the FitzAlan family, Stanley was a descendant of King Henry III.s authority went almost unchallenged, even by the Crown, Stanley managed to remain in favour with successive kings throughout the Wars of the Roses until his death in 1504. His estates included what is now Tatton Park in Cheshire, Lathom House in Lancashire, and Derby House in the City of London, now the site of the College of Arms.as head of the House of Lancaster, '''Stanley’s marriage to Eleanor, daughter''' of Richard Neville, 5th Earl of Salisbury (a descendant of Edward III) and sister of Richard Neville, Earl of Warwick (‘Warwick the Kingmaker’) '''in the late 1450s constituted a powerful alliance with the House of York'''. This did him no harm, however, even after Warwick was toppled from power, and in 1472, with the House of York now occupying the English throne, he married his second wife Lady Margaret Beaufort, whose son, Henry Tudor, was the leading Lancastrian claimant. He was the last to use the style ‘King of Mann’, his successors opting for the safer ‘Lord of Mann’. Stanley was “a man of considerable acumen, and probably the most successful power-broker of his age”.[1]*Stanley died at Lathom on 29 July 1504 and was buried in the family chapel in Burscough Priory, near Ormskirk in Lancashire, surrounded by the tombs of his parents and others of his ancestors. He had been predeceased by his '''eldest son and heir''', George Stanley, Lord Strange by a matter of months and was succeeded as Earl by his '''grandson''', Thomas Stanley, 2nd Earl of Derby. “In his will of 28 July 1504 he ordained '''masses for the souls of himself, his wives''', parents, ancestors, children, siblings, and, ever the good lord, ‘them that have died in the service of my lord my father or of me’”.[1][9]the remaining three themselves attained positions of great status and authority:–1503) – his heir apparent and father of his eventual heir Thomas Stanley, 2nd Earl of Derby.1462–1524)ickhythe in London'''. His second marriage to Lady Margaret Beaufort, had no issue. He is also said to have had an illegitimate son, John, who became the Parker of Shotwick in Cheshire in 1476, but was unrecognised in official pedigrees. He seems to have died in 1477.[10] 1885-1900, Volume 40is second wife Joan Beaufort, daughter of John of Gaunt. His brothers, Edward, first baron Bergavenny [q. v.], and William, lord Fauconberg [q. v.], are separately noticed. Richard, duke of York, was his brother-in-law, having married his sister Cecilia. In 1420, or earlier, he succeeded his eldest half-brother, John Neville, as warden of the west march of Scotland, an office which frequently devolved upon the Nevilles, they being, with the exception of the Percies, who had a sort of claim upon the wardenship of the east march, the greatest magnates of the north country (Fœdera, ix. 913; Ord. Privy Council, iii. 139). Richard Neville figured at the coronation feast of Henry V's queen, Catherine of France .... etc.l of Salisbury [q. v.], Salisbury had ten children, four sons and six daughters: (1) Richard, earl of Warwick and Salisbury, ‘the King-maker’ [q. v.] (2) Thomas, married in August 1453 to Maud, widow of Robert, sixth lord Willoughby de Eresby (d. 1452), a niece of Lord Cromwell; Thomas was killed in the battle of Wakefield in 1460, and left no children. (3) John [q. v.], created Baron Montagu (1461), Marquis of Montagu (1470), and Earl of Northumberland (1464–70); killed at Barnet in 1471. (4) George [q. v.], bishop of Exeter, archbishop of York, and lord-chancellor (d. 1476). (5) Joan, married William Fitzalan, earl of Arundel (1417–1487). (6) Cicely, married, first, in 1434, Henry Beauchamp, duke of Warwick [q. v.]; secondly, John Tiptoft, earl of Worcester, whom she predeceased, dying on 28 July 1450 (Leland, Itin. vi. 81). (7) Alice, married Henry, lord Fitz-Hugh of Ravensworth Castle, near Richmond (1429–72), head of a powerful local family between Tees and Swale. (8) '''Eleanor, married Thomas Stanley, first lord Stanley, and afterwards (1485) first earl of Derby'''. (9) Catherine, betrothed before 10 May 1459 to the son and heir of William Bonvile, lord Harington, who, if he had outlived his father, would have been Lord Bonvile as well; Lord Harington was killed at Wakefield, and his son either predeceased him or at all events died before 17 Feb. 1461 (Complete Peerage, by G. E. C[okayne]; Historic Peerage, ed. Courthope; Ramsay, ii. 238); Catherine Neville was subsequently married to William, lord Hastings (executed 1483). (10) Margaret, married, after 1459, John de Vere III (1443–1513), thirteenth earl of Oxford, who predeceased her.e's ‘Official Baronage.’ He is represented without beard or moustache, and wearing a cap and hood.wick.]James Taitof Hoveringham, Nottinghamshire, by Elizabeth Fitzalan, dowager duchess of Norfolk (d. 1425). came of a younger branch of a famous Staffordshire house, the Audleys of Healey, near Newcastle-under-Lyme; the cadet line took its name from the manor of Stanlegh, close to Cheddleton, but settled in Cheshire under Edward II on acquiring, by marriage, the manor of Storeton and the hereditary forestership of Wirral. The nephew of Sir John (who was a younger son) removed the chief seat of the elder line of Stanley to Hooton in Wirral by marriage with its heiress (Dugdale ii. 247; Ormerod ii. 411). A still more fortunate alliance (before October 1385) with Isabel, daughter of Sir Thomas Latham, made Sir John Stanley himself lord of great part of the hundred of West Derby in south-west Lancashire, including Knowsley and Lathom (Rot. Parl. iii. 205; cf. Wylie, ii. 290). .... etc.t, '''Thomas''', who succeeded as second Baron Stanley, was born about 1435, and in 1454 had been one of Henry VI's esquires (Ord. Privy Council, vi. 223). His political attitude was from the first ambiguous. When Richard Neville, earl of Salisbury [q. v.], who was perhaps already his father-in-law, encountered the royal forces at Blore Heath in August 1459, Stanley, though not more than six miles away, kept the two thousand men he had raised at the queen's call out of the fight. His brother William fought openly on the Yorkist side, and was attainted in the subsequent parliament. Stanley himself, though he came in and took the oath of allegiance, was impeached as a traitor by the commons, who alleged that he had given Salisbury a conditional promise of support. The queen, however, thought it better to overlook his suspicious conduct (Rot. Parl. v. 348, 369). He was with Henry at the battle of Northampton in the following summer, but the triumphant Yorkists made him (January 1461) chief justice of Chester and Flint (Doyle). Edward IV's accession was the signal for the reassertion of the Scrope claim to the lordship of Man, which William le Scrope, earl of Wiltshire [q. v.], had held under Richard II, and Stanley's title was still disputed in 1475. When his brother-in-law, Warwick, fleeing before Edward IV in 1470, made his way to Manchester in the hope of support from him, Stanley cautiously held aloof, but on the king-maker's succeeding in restoring Henry VI, he turned to the rising sun, and in March 1471 we find him besieging Hornby Castle on behalf of the Lancastrian government (Paston Letters, ii. 396; Fœdera, xi. 699). Nevertheless, after Warwick's defeat and death, Edward made Stanley lord steward of his household and privy councillor. He took part in the king's French expedition of 1475, when he characteristically seized a private opportunity of recommending himself to the favour of Louis XI (Comines, i. 340, 347), and held a high command in Gloucester's invasion of Scotland seven years later. His services there were specially brought to the attention of parliament (Rot. Parl. vi. 197). Polydore Vergil credits him, perhaps rather partially, with the capture of Berwick. Not long after he married Margaret Beaufort, countess of Richmond, whose second husband, Henry Stafford, younger son of the second Duke of Buckingham, died in the same year.c.hows a long thin face, with a full beard. she died between 1464 and 1473 (Rot. Parl. v. 545, vi. 46). By her he had six sons, several of whom died young, and four daughters'''. George, the '''eldest surviving son''', married Joan, only child of Lord Strange (d. 1477) of Knockin in the march of Wales, and in her right was summoned to the House of Lords under that title from 1482; Henry VII made him a knight of the Garter (1487) and a privy councillor. He died on 5 Dec. 1497 (‘at an ungodly banquet, alas! he was poisoned,’ Seacome, p. 36) at Derby House, St. Paul's Wharf, London, whose site is now occupied by the Heralds' College, and was '''buried with his mother at St. James's, Garlickhithe'''. His widow died on 20 March 1514. Thomas, eldest of four sons, became second earl of Derby [see under Stanley, Edward, third Earl of Derby]. Two younger sons of Derby—Edward, lord Monteagle [q. v.], and James, bishop of Ely [q. v.] —are separately noticed.nd [q. v.], then widow of Sir Henry Stafford (d. 1481).his ancestors up to his great-grandfather in the arches of the chancel (Dugdale, ii. 249).phrey Brereton, a retainer of the first Earl of Derby, and the metrical family chronicle said to have been written about 1562 by Thomas Stanley, bishop of Sodor and Man [see under Stanley, Edward, (1460?–1523)]. The metrical history supplied Seacome (Memoirs of the House of Stanley, 1741; 7th ed. 1840) with the romantic details in the early life of the first Sir John Stanley which passed into the short histories of the family by Ross (1848), Draper (1864), and others. See also Rotuli Parliamentorum; Ordinances of the Privy Council, ed. Nicolas; Rymer's Fœdera, orig. edit.; Polydore Vergil's Anglica Historia; More's Richard III, ed. Lumby; Fabyan and Hall's Chronicles, ed. Ellis; Continuation of the Croyland Chronicle, ed. Gale, 1691; Paston Letters, ed. Gairdner; Comines's Memoirs, ed. Dupont; Dugdale's Baronage; G. E. C[okayne]'s Complete Peerage; Ormerod's History of Cheshire, ed. Helsby; Baines's History of Lancashire; Gregson's Portfolio of Fragments relating to the History of Lancashire, 1817; Leland's Collectanea, ed. Hearne; Bentley's Excerpta Historica, 1831; Gairdner's Richard III; Ramsay's Lancaster and York; Wylie's History of Henry IV; Palatine Note Book, iii. 161; Stanley Papers (Chetham Soc.); Hutton's Bosworth Field, 1813.]h.org/getperson.php?personID=I11332&tree=EuropeRoyalNobleHousor Neville1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9reat Chamberlain of England, Joint Chamberlain of the Exchequer, Lord Chancellor2,3,10,5,6,11,8,9 b. c 1401, d. 31 Dec 1460Chief Justice of Chester & Flint was made on 17 December 1454; They had 7 sons (John; Sir George, Lord Strange; Richard; Sir Edward; 1st Lord Monteagle; James, Bishop of Ely; Thomas; & William) and 4 daughters (Anne; Alice; Katherine; & Agnes).2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9 Eleanor Neville died after 6 April 1464; Buried at St. James, Garlicklithe, London.3,5,8d Stanley, Constable of England, Chief Justice of Chester & Flint b. c 1435, d. 29 Jul 1504icklow Castles+13,5,8 b. c 1460, d. 5 Dec 1503515Century Colonists, by David Faris, p. 108; Burke's Peerage, 1938, p. 785.glas Richardson, Magna Carta Ancestry, 2nd Edition, Vol. III, p. 163.2nd Edition, Vol. IV, p. 348-349.V, p. 374-375.erages, p. 503.e, Vol. IX, p. 115.an 2011by, son of Sir Thomas Stanley, 1st Lord Stanley and Joan Goushill, after 10 May 1457.1 She died before November 1482.1eville and Thomas Stanley, 1st Earl of Derbys Stanley3. Hereinafter cited as. [S37]BEF 1482:

*'''Eleanor Neville1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9ster Castle, Great Chamberlain of England, Joint Chamberlain of the Exchequer, Lord Chancellor2,3,10,5,6,11,8,9 b. c 1401, d. 31 Dec 14602 - 9 Dec 1462, Constable of England, Chief Justice of Chester & Flint was made on 17 December 1454; They had 7 sons''' (John; Sir George, Lord Strange; Richard; Sir Edward; 1st Lord Monteagle; James, Bishop of Ely; Thomas; & William) '''and 4 daughters''' (Anne; Alice; Katherine; & Agnes).2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9 '''Eleanor Neville died after 6 April 1464; Buried at St. James, Garlicklithe, London.3,5,8 Sir Thomas Stanley, 1st Earl Derby, 2nd Lord Stanley, Constable of England, Chief Justice of Chester & Flint b. c 1435, d. 29 Jul 1504range, Constable of Pontefract, Knaresborough, & Wicklow Castles+13,5,8 b. c 1460, d. 5 Dec 1503p of Ely, Deacon of Cheshire5,8 b. c 1466, d. 22 Mar 1515ald Paget, Vol. 2, p. 447; Plantagenet Ancestry of 17th Century Colonists, by David Faris, p. 108; Burke's Peerage, 1938, p. 785.uglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry, p. 680. p. 91-92.l. V, p. 28-29.estry, Vol. IV, p. 123-124.eland, Great Britain, and the United Kingdom, by George Edward Cokayne, Vol. IX, p. 115.'''Eleanor Neville1ury and Alice Montagu, Countess of Salisbury.1 '''She married Thomas Stanley, 1st Earl of Derby''', son of Sir Thomas Stanley, 1st Lord Stanley and Joan Goushill, '''after 10 May 1457.1 She died before November 1482.1okyn)+2 d. bt 4 Dec 1503 - 5 Dec 1503 for this source. Hereinafter cited as. [S8]age.com/p227.htm#i2261Richard NEVILLE (1° E. Salisbury)hn STANLEY (b. ABT 1460)1465)T 1477)glandEarl of Westmorland, and Joan Beaufort, Thomas Montagu and Eleanor de Holand.ate of the marriage settlement, and had seven sons and four daughters: (1406 - 1462)lings:1471)*n, City of London, Greater London, Englandis 5th Earl of Salisbury and 7th and 4th Baron Montacute, KG, PC (1400 – 31 December 1460) was a Yorkist leader during the early parts of the Wars of the Roses.[1] at Raby Castle in County Durham. Although he was the third son (and tenth child) of Ralph de Neville, 1st Earl of Westmorland, Richard Neville was the first son to be born to Ralph's second wife, Joan Beaufort, Countess of Westmoreland. The Neville lands were primarily in Durham and Yorkshire, but both Richard II and Henry IV found the family useful to counterbalance the strength of the Percys on the Scottish Borders – hence Earl Ralph's title, granted in 1397, and his appointment as Warden of the West March in 1403. Ralph's marriage to Joan Beaufort, at a time when the distinction between royalty and nobility was becoming more important, can be seen as another reward; as a granddaughter of Edward III, she was a member of the royal family.ade good marriages to local nobility, but his Beaufort children married into even greater families. Three of Richard's sisters married dukes (the youngest Cecily, marrying Richard, Duke of York), and Richard himself married Alice Montacute, daughter and heiress of Thomas Montacute, the Earl of Salisbury. 1421, when as a married couple they appeared at the coronation of Queen Catherine of Valois. At the time of the marriage, the Salisbury inheritance was not guaranteed, as not only was Earl Thomas still alive, but in 1424 he remarried (to Alice Chaucer, granddaughter of the poet Geoffrey Chaucer). However, this second marriage was without issue and when the Earl Thomas Montacute died in 1428, Richard Neville and Alice were confirmed as the Earl and Countess of Salisbury. From this point on, Richard Neville will be referred to as Salisbury.f Richard, Duke of York, who made him Lord Chancellor in 1455. When King Henry tried to assert his independence and dismiss Richard as Protector, Salisbury joined him in fighting at the First Battle of St Albans, claiming that he was acting in self-defence. After the Battle of Blore Heath, in which he was notably successful, Salisbury escaped to Calais, having been specifically excluded from a royal pardon. He was slain on 30 December 1460, the day of the Battle of Wakefield. his body to the family mausoleum at Bisham Priory and erected this effigy. It was brought to Burghfield after the Dissolution of the Monasteries. The effigy of a lady alongside him wears a headdress which is not thought to be of the right date to be his wife, but she may be one of the earlier Countesses of Salisbury buried at Bisham.le (1424–1450), who married Henry de Beauchamp, 1st Duke of Warwick, had one daughter, Anne Beauchamp, 15th Countess of Warwick. On her death, her title passed to her paternal aunt Lady Anne, wife of her maternal uncle, Richard Neville.[4] who married Henry FitzHugh, 5th Baron FitzHugh. Their daughter, Elizabeth, married William Parr, 1st Baron Parr of Kendal, thus making them great-grandparents of Catherine Parr, sixth wife of King Henry VIII.*Joan Neville (1434–1462), who married William FitzAlan, 16th Earl of Arundel, and had issue.William Hastings, 1st Baron Hastings, had issue.tanhope (30 August 1497, who married firstly Robert Willoughby, 6th Baron Willoughby de Eresby (d. 25 July 1452), and thirdly Sir Gervase Clifton, beheaded 6 May 1471 after the Battle of Tewkesbury.[5]om: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Neville,_5th_Earl_of_Salisburyn''' and stepfather to King Henry VII of England. He was the eldest son of Thomas Stanley, 1st Baron Stanley and Joan Goushill. Through his mother he was a lineal descendant of King Edward I by Elizabeth of Rhuddlan, Countess of Hereford and by the FitzAlan family, Stanley was a descendant of King Henry III.s authority went almost unchallenged, even by the Crown, Stanley managed to remain in favour with successive kings throughout the Wars of the Roses until his death in 1504. His estates included what is now Tatton Park in Cheshire, Lathom House in Lancashire, and Derby House in the City of London, now the site of the College of Arms.as head of the House of Lancaster, '''Stanley’s marriage to Eleanor, daughter''' of Richard Neville, 5th Earl of Salisbury (a descendant of Edward III) and sister of Richard Neville, Earl of Warwick (‘Warwick the Kingmaker’) '''in the late 1450s constituted a powerful alliance with the House of York'''. This did him no harm, however, even after Warwick was toppled from power, and in 1472, with the House of York now occupying the English throne, he married his second wife Lady Margaret Beaufort, whose son, Henry Tudor, was the leading Lancastrian claimant. He was the last to use the style ‘King of Mann’, his successors opting for the safer ‘Lord of Mann’. Stanley was “a man of considerable acumen, and probably the most successful power-broker of his age”.[1]*Stanley died at Lathom on 29 July 1504 and was buried in the family chapel in Burscough Priory, near Ormskirk in Lancashire, surrounded by the tombs of his parents and others of his ancestors. He had been predeceased by his '''eldest son and heir''', George Stanley, Lord Strange by a matter of months and was succeeded as Earl by his '''grandson''', Thomas Stanley, 2nd Earl of Derby. “In his will of 28 July 1504 he ordained '''masses for the souls of himself, his wives''', parents, ancestors, children, siblings, and, ever the good lord, ‘them that have died in the service of my lord my father or of me’”.[1][9]the remaining three themselves attained positions of great status and authority:–1503) – his heir apparent and father of his eventual heir Thomas Stanley, 2nd Earl of Derby.1462–1524)ickhythe in London'''. His second marriage to Lady Margaret Beaufort, had no issue. He is also said to have had an illegitimate son, John, who became the Parker of Shotwick in Cheshire in 1476, but was unrecognised in official pedigrees. He seems to have died in 1477.[10] 1885-1900, Volume 40is second wife Joan Beaufort, daughter of John of Gaunt. His brothers, Edward, first baron Bergavenny [q. v.], and William, lord Fauconberg [q. v.], are separately noticed. Richard, duke of York, was his brother-in-law, having married his sister Cecilia. In 1420, or earlier, he succeeded his eldest half-brother, John Neville, as warden of the west march of Scotland, an office which frequently devolved upon the Nevilles, they being, with the exception of the Percies, who had a sort of claim upon the wardenship of the east march, the greatest magnates of the north country (Fœdera, ix. 913; Ord. Privy Council, iii. 139). Richard Neville figured at the coronation feast of Henry V's queen, Catherine of France .... etc.l of Salisbury [q. v.], Salisbury had ten children, four sons and six daughters: (1) Richard, earl of Warwick and Salisbury, ‘the King-maker’ [q. v.] (2) Thomas, married in August 1453 to Maud, widow of Robert, sixth lord Willoughby de Eresby (d. 1452), a niece of Lord Cromwell; Thomas was killed in the battle of Wakefield in 1460, and left no children. (3) John [q. v.], created Baron Montagu (1461), Marquis of Montagu (1470), and Earl of Northumberland (1464–70); killed at Barnet in 1471. (4) George [q. v.], bishop of Exeter, archbishop of York, and lord-chancellor (d. 1476). (5) Joan, married William Fitzalan, earl of Arundel (1417–1487). (6) Cicely, married, first, in 1434, Henry Beauchamp, duke of Warwick [q. v.]; secondly, John Tiptoft, earl of Worcester, whom she predeceased, dying on 28 July 1450 (Leland, Itin. vi. 81). (7) Alice, married Henry, lord Fitz-Hugh of Ravensworth Castle, near Richmond (1429–72), head of a powerful local family between Tees and Swale. (8) '''Eleanor, married Thomas Stanley, first lord Stanley, and afterwards (1485) first earl of Derby'''. (9) Catherine, betrothed before 10 May 1459 to the son and heir of William Bonvile, lord Harington, who, if he had outlived his father, would have been Lord Bonvile as well; Lord Harington was killed at Wakefield, and his son either predeceased him or at all events died before 17 Feb. 1461 (Complete Peerage, by G. E. C[okayne]; Historic Peerage, ed. Courthope; Ramsay, ii. 238); Catherine Neville was subsequently married to William, lord Hastings (executed 1483). (10) Margaret, married, after 1459, John de Vere III (1443–1513), thirteenth earl of Oxford, who predeceased her.e's ‘Official Baronage.’ He is represented without beard or moustache, and wearing a cap and hood.wick.]James Taitof Hoveringham, Nottinghamshire, by Elizabeth Fitzalan, dowager duchess of Norfolk (d. 1425). came of a younger branch of a famous Staffordshire house, the Audleys of Healey, near Newcastle-under-Lyme; the cadet line took its name from the manor of Stanlegh, close to Cheddleton, but settled in Cheshire under Edward II on acquiring, by marriage, the manor of Storeton and the hereditary forestership of Wirral. The nephew of Sir John (who was a younger son) removed the chief seat of the elder line of Stanley to Hooton in Wirral by marriage with its heiress (Dugdale ii. 247; Ormerod ii. 411). A still more fortunate alliance (before October 1385) with Isabel, daughter of Sir Thomas Latham, made Sir John Stanley himself lord of great part of the hundred of West Derby in south-west Lancashire, including Knowsley and Lathom (Rot. Parl. iii. 205; cf. Wylie, ii. 290). .... etc.t, '''Thomas''', who succeeded as second Baron Stanley, was born about 1435, and in 1454 had been one of Henry VI's esquires (Ord. Privy Council, vi. 223). His political attitude was from the first ambiguous. When Richard Neville, earl of Salisbury [q. v.], who was perhaps already his father-in-law, encountered the royal forces at Blore Heath in August 1459, Stanley, though not more than six miles away, kept the two thousand men he had raised at the queen's call out of the fight. His brother William fought openly on the Yorkist side, and was attainted in the subsequent parliament. Stanley himself, though he came in and took the oath of allegiance, was impeached as a traitor by the commons, who alleged that he had given Salisbury a conditional promise of support. The queen, however, thought it better to overlook his suspicious conduct (Rot. Parl. v. 348, 369). He was with Henry at the battle of Northampton in the following summer, but the triumphant Yorkists made him (January 1461) chief justice of Chester and Flint (Doyle). Edward IV's accession was the signal for the reassertion of the Scrope claim to the lordship of Man, which William le Scrope, earl of Wiltshire [q. v.], had held under Richard II, and Stanley's title was still disputed in 1475. When his brother-in-law, Warwick, fleeing before Edward IV in 1470, made his way to Manchester in the hope of support from him, Stanley cautiously held aloof, but on the king-maker's succeeding in restoring Henry VI, he turned to the rising sun, and in March 1471 we find him besieging Hornby Castle on behalf of the Lancastrian government (Paston Letters, ii. 396; Fœdera, xi. 699). Nevertheless, after Warwick's defeat and death, Edward made Stanley lord steward of his household and privy councillor. He took part in the king's French expedition of 1475, when he characteristically seized a private opportunity of recommending himself to the favour of Louis XI (Comines, i. 340, 347), and held a high command in Gloucester's invasion of Scotland seven years later. His services there were specially brought to the attention of parliament (Rot. Parl. vi. 197). Polydore Vergil credits him, perhaps rather partially, with the capture of Berwick. Not long after he married Margaret Beaufort, countess of Richmond, whose second husband, Henry Stafford, younger son of the second Duke of Buckingham, died in the same year.c.hows a long thin face, with a full beard. she died between 1464 and 1473 (Rot. Parl. v. 545, vi. 46). By her he had six sons, several of whom died young, and four daughters'''. George, the '''eldest surviving son''', married Joan, only child of Lord Strange (d. 1477) of Knockin in the march of Wales, and in her right was summoned to the House of Lords under that title from 1482; Henry VII made him a knight of the Garter (1487) and a privy councillor. He died on 5 Dec. 1497 (‘at an ungodly banquet, alas! he was poisoned,’ Seacome, p. 36) at Derby House, St. Paul's Wharf, London, whose site is now occupied by the Heralds' College, and was '''buried with his mother at St. James's, Garlickhithe'''. His widow died on 20 March 1514. Thomas, eldest of four sons, became second earl of Derby [see under Stanley, Edward, third Earl of Derby]. Two younger sons of Derby—Edward, lord Monteagle [q. v.], and James, bishop of Ely [q. v.] —are separately noticed.nd [q. v.], then widow of Sir Henry Stafford (d. 1481).his ancestors up to his great-grandfather in the arches of the chancel (Dugdale, ii. 249).phrey Brereton, a retainer of the first Earl of Derby, and the metrical family chronicle said to have been written about 1562 by Thomas Stanley, bishop of Sodor and Man [see under Stanley, Edward, (1460?–1523)]. The metrical history supplied Seacome (Memoirs of the House of Stanley, 1741; 7th ed. 1840) with the romantic details in the early life of the first Sir John Stanley which passed into the short histories of the family by Ross (1848), Draper (1864), and others. See also Rotuli Parliamentorum; Ordinances of the Privy Council, ed. Nicolas; Rymer's Fœdera, orig. edit.; Polydore Vergil's Anglica Historia; More's Richard III, ed. Lumby; Fabyan and Hall's Chronicles, ed. Ellis; Continuation of the Croyland Chronicle, ed. Gale, 1691; Paston Letters, ed. Gairdner; Comines's Memoirs, ed. Dupont; Dugdale's Baronage; G. E. C[okayne]'s Complete Peerage; Ormerod's History of Cheshire, ed. Helsby; Baines's History of Lancashire; Gregson's Portfolio of Fragments relating to the History of Lancashire, 1817; Leland's Collectanea, ed. Hearne; Bentley's Excerpta Historica, 1831; Gairdner's Richard III; Ramsay's Lancaster and York; Wylie's History of Henry IV; Palatine Note Book, iii. 161; Stanley Papers (Chetham Soc.); Hutton's Bosworth Field, 1813.]h.org/getperson.php?personID=I11332&tree=EuropeRoyalNobleHousor Neville1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9reat Chamberlain of England, Joint Chamberlain of the Exchequer, Lord Chancellor2,3,10,5,6,11,8,9 b. c 1401, d. 31 Dec 1460Chief Justice of Chester & Flint was made on 17 December 1454; They had 7 sons (John; Sir George, Lord Strange; Richard; Sir Edward; 1st Lord Monteagle; James, Bishop of Ely; Thomas; & William) and 4 daughters (Anne; Alice; Katherine; & Agnes).2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9 Eleanor Neville died after 6 April 1464; Buried at St. James, Garlicklithe, London.3,5,8d Stanley, Constable of England, Chief Justice of Chester & Flint b. c 1435, d. 29 Jul 1504icklow Castles+13,5,8 b. c 1460, d. 5 Dec 1503515Century Colonists, by David Faris, p. 108; Burke's Peerage, 1938, p. 785.glas Richardson, Magna Carta Ancestry, 2nd Edition, Vol. III, p. 163.2nd Edition, Vol. IV, p. 348-349.V, p. 374-375.erages, p. 503.e, Vol. IX, p. 115.an 2011by, son of Sir Thomas Stanley, 1st Lord Stanley and Joan Goushill, after 10 May 1457.1 She died before November 1482.1eville and Thomas Stanley, 1st Earl of Derbys Stanley3. Hereinafter cited as. [S37]BEF 1482:

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Voorouders (en nakomelingen) van Lady Eleanor Neville

Lady Eleanor Neville
1398-1472

(1) 1412

Henry de Percy
± 1365-1413

(2) 1412
John Percy
1418-< 1419
Percy triplet
1424-????
Joan Percy
1430-1483

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  1. FamilySearch Family Tree, via https://www.myheritage.com/research/reco..., 14 december 2018
    Lady Eleanor NevilleGender: FemaleBirth: Between Jan 9 1396 and Jan 8 1399 - Raby, Durham, EnglandDeath: Aug 20 1472 - Alnwick Castle, Northumberland, England
  2. Ancestry Family Trees, Ancestry Family Tree
    http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=110860350&pid=21586
  3. Geni World Family Tree, via https://www.myheritage.com/research/reco..., 14 december 2018
    Added via a Record Match
  4. Web: Netherlands, GenealogieOnline Trees Index, 1000-2015, Ancestry.com

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