Family tree Cromer/Russell/Buck/Pratt » Sir John Fortescue of Eberington, MP (1394-1481)

Persoonlijke gegevens Sir John Fortescue of Eberington, MP 

Bron 1

Gezin van Sir John Fortescue of Eberington, MP

(1) Hij is getrouwd met Lady Isabella Jamys.

Zij zijn getrouwd rond 1439.

Zij zijn getrouwd rond 1442 te Wympton, Devon, England.


Kind(eren):

  1. Maud Fortesque  1438-????
  2. Elizabeth Fortescue  1442-????
  3. Sir John FORTESCUE  1459-1500


(2) Hij heeft/had een relatie met Elizabeth Brytte.


Kind(eren):

  1. Jane Fortescue  1438-1525 
  2. Johanna Fortescue  1440-1525
  3. John FORTESCUE  1440-1537
  4. Joan Fortescue  1444-1525
  5. Robert Fortescue  1445-1480
  6. William Fortesque  ± 1460-1520


Notities over Sir John Fortescue of Eberington, MP

Family and Education 2nd s. of Sir John Fortescue2 and yr. bro. of Henry*. m. (1) by 1423, Elizabeth (d. 26 Apr. 1426), da. and coh. of Robert Brytte of Doddiscombsleigh, Devon, s.p. (2) by 1436, Isabel, da. of John James of Norton St. Philip, Som., 1s. d.v.p. 2da. Kntd. by Oct. 1442.

Offices Held Gov. of L. Inn 1424-6, 1428-30.3

Commr. of inquiry, Devon Feb. 1429, July 1435, July 1439, Aug. 1455, Kent. Feb. 1443, Essex Sept. 1447, London May 1450, Dorset Dec. 1452; oyer and terminer, Som. June 1436, Mar. 1445, Devon Oct. 1439, July 1450, Norwich Feb. 1443, Kent Dec. 1445, Lincs. May 1448, Suff. Sept. 1448, London Mar., July 1450, Apr., Oct. 1451, Feb., Apr. 1455, Surr. Apr. 1450, Oxon. May 1450, Hants, Wilts. May 1451, Wilts. Mar., July 1452, Bristol July 1452, Midlands and south-east England Sept. 1452, Jan. 1453, Cornw. Dec. 1452, July 1455, July 1456, June 1459, Newcastle-upon-Tyne June 1454, Mdx. Nov. 1455, Devon, Som., Dorset Mar. 1456, Kent, Suss. June 1456 Glos., Herefs., Worcs. Mar. 1457, south-east England Sept. 1458, Staffs., Salop, Worcs., Glos., Herefs. Oct. 1459, Wales, the marches and the estates of the Yorkist magnates Mar. 1460, Kent Mar. 1460, Yorks. May 1460, south and west England June 1460; gaol delivery, Ilchester Feb. 1438, May 1440, Nov. 1441, Newgate Nov. 1445, Oct. 1451, Exeter July 1458; to raise royal loans, Bristol Mar. 1442, Som. May 1443; examine vessels for smuggled goods June 1444; hear appeals from the mayor’s ct. London June 1444, July 1455; of sewers, river Thames July 1448, Oct. 1455; to raise a force of archers, Mdx. Dec. 1457.

Controller of the stannaries, Cornw., Devon 5 May 1430-22 July 1432.

J.p. Som. 12 Feb. 1433-60, Bucks. Nov. 1439-Feb. 1444, Cambs. Nov. 1439-c.1442, Hunts. Nov. 1439-46, Suff. Nov. 1439-42, Norf. May 1441-2, Kent Apr. 1442-Nov. 1460, Essex May 1442-60, Suss. Oct. 1442-60, Herts. May 1443-6, Surr. May 1443-Dec. 1460, Beds. Nov. 1443-9, Mdx. Feb. 1445-50.

Justice of assize, eastern circuit Oct. 1439, home counties Jan. 1442, Aug. 1444.

C.j.KB 20 Jan. 1442-Mar. 1461.

Trier of petitions (English) in the Parliaments of 1444, 1447, 1449 (Feb.), 1449 (Nov.), 1450, 1453, 1455.4

‘Chancellor’ for Hen. VI and Margaret of Anjou in exile, c.1461-1471.

Biography Fortescue’s family claims to have sprung from a follower of the Conqueror, but lived in comparative obscurity in south Devon between the 11th and 14th centuries. The judge’s father and namesake, himself a younger son, held lands said to be worth £20 a year in Combe, Efford and elsewhere in the parish of Holbeton, and made a name for himself as a soldier who fought at Agincourt and became captain of Meaux. He served two earls of Devon (Edward and Hugh Courtenay) as steward from about 1413 to 1422, was knighted by the duke of Bedford in about 1426, and died in or before 1435.5The lands acquired by the younger John Fortescue by his first marriage were lost in 1426 when his wife died before attaining her majority and without issue, but his second marriage brought him a permanent interest in holdings in Somerset and Wiltshire, including property at Norton St. Philip (held by grant of the prior and convent of Hinton); and in 1435-6 his elder brother, Henry, settled a portion of the family estates in Devon on him and his heirs (which he decided to pass on to his son, Martin, in 1455). In the 1450s, at the height of his career, Fortescue purchased the manor of ‘Geddinghalle’ in Suffolk, the reversion of the manor of Ebrington, Gloucestershire, and four manors in Hertfordshire; and before the fall of the Lancastrians he also acquired land in Wiltshire at Kingston Deverill, Trowbridge and Chippenham.6

Although Fortescue had started to build up a practice in the central courts at Westminster and was admitted to Lincoln’s Inn before 1420, by the time of his earliest elections to Parliament for Tavistock he can hardly have established much of a reputation as a lawyer. Yet before his fourth Parliament (1425) he had become a governor of the Inn, and his opinion was evidently being treated with respect. In 1424 during a dispute between his younger brother, Richard, and the trustees of the estates of Thomas Stonor* over the manor of Ermington, Stonor wrote to Sir John Fortescue instructing him to insist that Richard sealed the indentures ‘drafted be avyse and asent of yowre son Jon ... for yowre son Jonys honestie hanketh thereon’. Fortescue’s counsel was much in demand, and not only in his native shire. The city of Canterbury, for example, retained his services with a fee of £1 a year and a robe, from 1429 for at least ten years.7 In 1428 he was made a feoffee of the Devonshire estates of Philip Courtenay† of Powderham, esquire, and he became closely associated in the affairs of Courtenays father-in-law Sir Walter (now Lord) Hungerford*, who was then treasurer of the Exchequer. Fortescue’s services to Hungerford and his family as a trustee and executor (in which capacities he was engaged for more than 40 years),8 may well have assisted his rise and perhaps helped form his later political sympathies. Hungerford’s influence at the Exchequer may be seen in the concessions made to Fortescue between 1429 and 1432: grants of the custody of part of the Pomeroy estates, of lands in Cornwall, of the manor of Wantage (Berkshire) and of the marriages of two royal wards; and possibly also in his appointment in 1430 as controller of the stannaries in Devon and Cornwall. In 1436 Fortescue was one of those from whom loans were requested by the King’s Council for the army about to be sent to France, and his contribution was as much as £40. Since 1432 he had been retained by the duchy of Lancaster, first as an apprentice and then as a serjeant-at-law, and he became one of the ‘King’s serjeants’ before Easter term 1441.9 Then, without having previously been a puisne judge, he was advanced to chief justice in January 1442 on the premature death of (Sir) John Hody*. The office brought ample rewards: Fortescue’s salary was £120 a year with an allowance of £8 13s.6d. for his robes; from 1443 he enjoyed an annuity of 40 marks and from 1447 another of £40; and during his years as chief justice he received a special allowance of two tuns of wine a year. He also obtained custody of the estates of John Bonville, esquire, of Sir John (now Lord) Tiptoft’s* manor of Farrington Gurney (Somerset), of four Sussex manors, and, during the minority of Henry Holand, duke of Exeter, some of the latter’s properties as well, together with the right of presentation to the church of Lanteglos. His position enabled him to secure full exemption from the workings of the Act of Resumption of 1450, and to benefit from the fresh leases of resumed lands (although the similar Act passed in the Yorkist-controlled Parliament of 1455 was far less lenient to him, as to others).10 But if the rewards were considerable, so too were the burdens. Although prevented on one occasion from attending the assizes at East Grinstead on account of ‘a cyetica that hath letted hym a gret while to ride’, in addition to his ordinary judicial duties Fortescue continued to discharge numerous special commissions in many parts of the country, to act as an arbitrator in several extra-judicial disputes, to serve as a trier of petitions in, all told, seven Parliaments, and to advise the government in its financial troubles. One of his earlier concerns as head of the judiciary was the suppression of riots at Norwich in 1443: on 14 Mar. that year he sent to the Council his recommendations of ‘indifferent persones suche as may be maade justices of the pees and sherriefs’ in Norfolk, and he personally attended its meetings in March, April and May to discuss this and other matters.11 His judgements in the King’s bench in the 1440s and 1450s contributed materially to the growth and definition of the common law of England.

Fortescue was naturally consulted by the Lords in Parliament over such important matters as the impeachment of the marquessof Suffolk in 1450, and Speaker Thorpe’s case in 1454; and he was asked by several members of the Upper House to act as a trustee of their estates, or to settle disputes over inheritance. Accordingly, he appeared as an arbitrator in such debates as the disposition of the Fastolf and Berkeley estates, and he served as either a feoffee-to-uses or executor for the Lords Cromwell, Fanhope, Cobham and Bonville, Elizabeth, Lady Ferrers of Chartley, Thomas, earl of Devon, Archbishop Chichele, Cardinal Kemp and even Richard, duke of York.12 Despite this last connexion, Fortescue’s political sympathies lay always with the King. In 1450 he had been an object of popular displeasure, ‘endicted’ by the rebels at Rochester, and abused by Cade for not being an impartial judge. On 2 Jan. 1451 Sir John Fastolf’s servant, John Bocking, wrote ‘The chief yistice hath waited to ben assaulted all this sevenyght nyghtly in hes hous, but nothing come as yett, the more pite’. Fortescue’s brother, Richard, was killed fighting on the King’s side at St. Albans in 1455, and thereafter, as he himself confessed, he was a ‘partial man’. Friar Brackley maintained that the attainder of the Yorkists in the Coventry Parliament ‘was ymagined, contrivid and utterly concludid’ by the ‘most vengeable labour and ... most malicyows conspiracye’ of Fortescue and his friends, who confidently expected that they ‘schuld be made for evir’ if their plans succeeded. After the battle of Northampton in July 1460 the fortunes of Fortescue inevitably followed those those of the house of Lancaster, to which he remained constantly loyal. In October following he was consulted in Parliament as to the legality of the duke of York’s claim to the throne, a question on which he expressed his opinion more fully in The replication made agenste the title and clayme by the Duke of Yorke to the Crownes and Reaumes of England and France, composed shortly afterwards. It was early in February 1461 that, having hastily made provision for his wife, Fortescue joined forces with Queen Margaret, and probably even took part in the second battle of St. Albans. Certainly, he was present at the battle of Towton on 29 Mar. and the skirmishes at Ryton and Brancepeth (Durham) on 26 June; and accordingly he was attainted in Edward IV’s first Parliament six months later. His forfeited estates were for the most part granted to John, Lord Wenlock†.13

Fortescue spent the following two years in Scotland, acting as ‘chancellor’ and councillor to Henry VI, and it was probably there that he wrote De Natura Legis Naturae and other tracts on the question of the royal succession. In March (?) 1462 Henry gave him letters of credence to Louis XI of France, his mission being to ask support for the exiled Lancastrians. He crossed from Scotland to Sluys with Queen Margaret in July 1463, and they eventually settled at the castle of Koeur in St. Mighel, where they lived in extreme poverty. Fortescue spared no effort to procure assistance from the kings of France and Portugal in order to bring about Henry VI’s restoration and, calling himself ‘Chancellor of England’, he wrote several memoranda on the subject for Louis XI’s attention. During the years of exile he devoted himself to the education of Edward, prince of Wales, and composed De Laudibus Legurn Anglie and The Governance of England. He was a leading negotiator in the talks conducted at Angers in 1470 between King Louis and the earl of Warwick, thus promoting the momentous alliance between the earl and the queen; and on 14 Apr. 1471, after Henry VI’s readeption, he sailed for England with Queen Margaret and Prince Edward. Proclaimed a traitor by Edward IV a week later, he was captured at Tewkesbury on 4 May. Fortescue’s fidelity to the Lancastrian cause was unshaken so long as Henry VI and his son were alive, but after their deaths he sought a general pardon from Edward IV and even offered him his services as a councillor. Nevertheless, it was not until October 1473, after he had written a Declaracion upon certayn wrytinges, refuting his earlier arguments about the royal succession, that he was permitted to present a petition to Parliament for the reversal of his attainder and the restoration of his estates.14 Fortescue is last recorded in July 1477, when he was party with Bishop Waynflete to a grant of estates in Lincolnshire (which they held as executors of Ralph, Lord Cromwell), to Magdalen college, Oxford. Meanwhile, he had retired to live in Ebrington, where he died shortly before 18 Dec. 1479.15

Ref Volumes: 1386-1421 Author: L. S. Woodger Notes 1. All as John Fortescue ‘junior’. The most complete biographies of Fortescue are in De Laudibus Legum Anglie ed. Chrimes; The Governance of England ed. Plummer; T. Fortescue, Ld. Clermont, Sir John Fortescue, and in DNB (vii. 482-5). 2. According to the generally accepted pedigrees, Clarissa, to whom the father was married by 1408 (Cornw. Feet of Fines (Devon and Cornw. Rec. Soc. 1950), 884; Reg. Stafford ed. Hingeston-Randolph, 275) was prob. the MP’s stepmother. 3.LI Black Bk. 1-4, 6, 8, 15. 4.RP, v. 66, 129, 141, 171, 210, 227, 278. 5.CCR, 1422-9, p. 10; 1436-41, p. 418; CPR, 1422-9, p. 108; C219/11/1. It was probably the father who served as escheator of Devon in 1416-17 and as a j.p. from 1418 to 1422. 6.CFR, xv. 43, 111, 321; C139/43/6; CPR, 1441-6, p. 170; CP25(1)46/86/187, 90/276; C140/41/39; CCR, 1447-54, pp. 368-9; 1454-61, pp. 107, 172; VCH Herts. ii. 255-6; iii. 102, 105, 422; C145/323/1. 7.CFR, xv. 80, 154, 191; Stonor Letters (Cam. Soc. ser. 3, xxix), 36-39; Canterbury Cathedral RO, Canterbury city accts. FA1, f. 198. 8.CPR, 1422-9, p. 526; 1436-41, pp. 152, 300; 1461-7, pp. 363-6; CFR, xviii. 143; Huntington Lib. San Marino, Hastings mss, HAD183/2981, 209/3465; Tropenell Cart. ed. Davies, ii. 133, 268. 9.CFR, xv. 266; xvi. 9, 45, 84; PPC, iv. 328; Somerville, Duchy, i. 203, 451, 453. 10.CPR, 1441-6, pp. 37, 38, 194, 454; 1446-52, pp. 26, 75, 498; CFR, xvii. 242, 263, 292; xviii. 86, 88; xix. 157, 180; RP, v. 199, 317. 11.PPC, v. 243, 247, 256, 266, 268, 269; Paston Letters ed. Gairdner, i. 50. 12.RP, v. 176, 239; CAD, i. A637; CPR, 1441-6, pp. 137, 267; 1446-54, pp. 218, 279, 301, 314; 1452-61, pp. 200, 214-15, 232, 341; CCR, 1441-7, p. 60; 1454-61, pp. 79, 197-8, 228-9, 357-8. 13.Pol. Poems and Songs ed. Wright, ii. p. lvii; Paston Letters, i. 185, no. 364; RP, v. 376, 477; CCR, 1476-85, no. 685; CPR, 1461-7, pp. 183, 212, 440; 1467-77, p. 99. 14. Clermont, i. 23-25, 34; Bull. IHR, xxxii. 174, 178; CPR, 1467-77, p. 296; RP, vi. 69. 15.CPR, 1477-85, p. 48; HMC Hastings, i. 87; CFR, xxi. 515. His son, Martin, had pre-deceased him, in November 1471 (C140/41/39).

Sir John Fortescue of Ebrington, Gloucestershire
M, b. 1395, d. circa 1485
Sir John Fortescue of Ebrington, Gloucestershire (1395-c1485)
Father Sir John Fortescue of Meaux b. 1380
Mother Eleanor Norreis of Norreis b. 1390
Last Edited 1 Mar 2008
Note* Was Lord Chief Justice of the King's Bench under Henry VI, and Lord Chancellor. This note from the National Portrait Gallery, http://www.npg.org.uk/live/index.asp, and the National Gallery, London.
Birth* Sir John Fortescue of Ebrington, Gloucestershire was born in 1395 in Norreis.
He was the son of Sir John Fortescue of Meaux and Eleanor Norreis of Norreis.
Alt-Birth An alternate birth date is in 1414 in Ebrington, Gloucestershire, England.
Education* Sir John Fortescue of Ebrington, Gloucestershire was educated; Sir John studied law at Lincoln's Inn, like his brother Henry. His branch led to the North Devon Fortescues of Filleigh and Castle Hill etc.
From Chamber's Encyclopaedia published 1969:
Sir John C.1394 - 1480 educated at Exeter College, Oxford, and called to the Bar at Lincoln's Inn was in 1441 made Sergeant-at-law, and in the following year Lord Chief Justice of the Court of the King's Bench. In the struggle between houses of York and Lancaster he steadily adhered to the latter and was attainted by the Parliament under Edward IV. He accompanied Margaret of Anjou and her young son, Prince Edward on their flight to Scotland and therefore is supposed to been appointed Lord Chancellor by Henry VI. In 1463 he embarked with the Queen and her son for Holland. During his exile he wrote his celebrated work, De Laudibus Legum Angliae, for the instruction of Prince Edward who was his pupil. But on the final defeat of the Lancastrian party at the battle of Tewkesbury, 1471, where he is have been taken prisoner, Fortescue submitted to Edward IV. The De Laudibus Legum Angliae was not printed till the reign of Henry VIII; another valuable work by Fortescue is the Governance of England; otherwise called the Difference between an Absolute and a Limited Monarchy.
Marriage* He married Isabella Jamys, daughter of John Jamys and Margery, in Church Chancel, Ebrington, Gloucestershire, England.
Death* Sir John Fortescue of Ebrington, Gloucestershire died circa 1485.
Burial* He was buried in Ebrington Chapel, Ebrington, Gloucestershire, England; This information from Visitations of the County of Devon, 1620, incorporating the earlier vistations of 1531 and 1564, by Lieut.-Col. J.L. Vivian. This taken from www.fortescue.org, source #26.
His monument in Ebrington church was refurbished by his descendant Colonel Robert Fortescue.
Family
Isabella Jamys b. circa 1416
Children
* Elizabeth Fortescue b. c 1436
* Maud Fortescue b. c 1438
* Sir Martin Fortescue of Filleigh+ b. c 1434, d. 12 Nov 1472
--------------------
John was Lord of Whympston, Devonshire.
_______________
Sir John Fortescue1
M, #205987, d. after 1472
Last Edited=16 Jun 2008
Sir John Fortescue was the son of Sir John Fortescu and Eleanor Norreis.2 He married Isabella Jamys, daughter of John Jamys.3 He died after 1472 at Ebrington, Gloucestershire, England, aged 90.3
Sir John Fortescue wrote the book De Laudibus Legum Anglice.3 He held the office of Lord Chief Justice on 25 January 1442.3 He held the office of Lord Chancellor after 1461, allegedly created by King Henry VI after his deposition.3
Child of Sir John Fortescue and Isabella Jamys
1.Martin Fortescue+1 d. 12 Nov 1472
Citations
1.[S21] L. G. Pine, The New Extinct Peerage 1884-1971: Containing Extinct, Abeyant, Dormant and Suspended Peerages With Genealogies and Arms (London, U.K.: Heraldry Today, 1972), page 53. Hereinafter cited as The New Extinct Peerage.
2.[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). Hereinafter cited as Burke's Peerage and Baronetage, 107th edition.
3.[S37] Charles Mosley, Burke's Peerage and Baronetage, 107th edition, volume 1, page 1473.
From: http://www.thepeerage.com/p20599.htm#i205987
__________________
Sir John Fortescue, Lord Chief Justice, Chancellor of England
M, b. circa 1414, d. circa 1504
Father John Fortescue d. a 1424
Mother Eleanor Norris b. c 1385
Sir John Fortescue, Lord Chief Justice, Chancellor of England was born circa 1414 at of Ebrington, Gloucestershire, England. He married Isabella Jamys, daughter of John Jamys and Margery, circa 1439. Sir John Fortescue, Lord Chief Justice, Chancellor of England died circa 1504 at of Ebrington, Gloucestershire, England; Age 90.
Family Isabella Jamys b. c 1418
Child
Martin Fortescue+ b. c 1440, d. 12 Nov 1472
From: http://our-royal-titled-noble-and-commoner-ancestors.com/p2436.htm#i73208
_____________________
John FORTESCUE (Sir Chief Justice)
Born: ABT 1394 / 1412, Wymston & Shepham, Devonshire, England
Died: ABT 1476 / AFT 1502, Ebrington, Gloucestershire, England
Notes: Educated at Exeter College, Oxford. During the reign of Henry VI he was three times appointed one of the governors of Lincoln's Inn. In 1441 he was made a King's sergeant at law, and in the following year Lord Chief Justice of the King's bench. As a judge Fortescue was recommended for his wisdom, gravity and uprightness; and he is said to have been favoured by the King.
He held his office during the remainder of the reign of Henry VI, to whom he was loyal; as a result, he was attainted of treason in the first parliament of Edward IV. When Henry subsequently fled into Scotland, he is supposed to have appointed Fortescue, who appears to have accompanied him in his flight, Lord Chancellor of England. In 1463 Fortescue accompanied Queen Margaret and her court in their exile on the Continent, and returned with them afterwards to England. During their wanderings abroad the chancellor wrote for the instruction of the young Prince Edward his celebrated work 'De laudibus legum Angliae'. On the defeat of the Lancastrian party he made his submission to Edward IV, from whom he received a general pardon dated Westminser, 13 Oct 1471. The exact date of his death is not known.
Fortescue's masterly vindication of the laws of England, though received with great favour by experts, did not appear in print until the reign of King Henry VIII, when it was published, but without a date.
Father: John FORTESCUE (Sir)
Mother: Eleanor NORREYS
Married: Isabella JAMYS
Children:
1. Martin FORTESCUE
2. Maud FORTESCUE
3. Elizabeth FORTESCUE
4. Robert FORTESCUE
From: http://www.tudorplace.com.ar/FORTESCUE2.htm#John FORTESCUE (Sir Chief Justice)1
____________________
The Living Age. Fifth Series Volume XVIII. From the Beginning, Vol. CXXXIII. By Eliakim Littell, Robert S. Littell, Making of America Project
http://books.google.com/books?id=IqxfAWEPYiQC&pg=PA720&lpg=PA720&dq=John+Raleigh+Anne+Fortescue&source=bl&ots=sLOH1xZGz5&sig=uMNN3TKCi1sQcrxSktL3XEHQLYs&hl=en&ei=PbFvTs2gII_ViAKI8PDRAQ&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=1&ved=0CCIQ6AEwADgK#v=onepage&q=fortescue&f=false
Pg.707
John Fortescue chief justice and chancellor
_________________
A History of the Family of Fortescue in all its branches by Thomas (Fortescue) Lord Clermont.
The works of Sir John Fortescue, Knight, Chief Justice of England and Lord Chancellor to King Henry the Sixth (1869) Vol. 2
https://archive.org/details/worksofsirjohnfo02fort

Heeft u aanvullingen, correcties of vragen met betrekking tot Sir John Fortescue of Eberington, MP?
De auteur van deze publicatie hoort het graag van u!


Tijdbalk Sir John Fortescue of Eberington, MP

  Deze functionaliteit is alleen beschikbaar voor browsers met Javascript ondersteuning.
Klik op de namen voor meer informatie. Gebruikte symbolen: grootouders grootouders   ouders ouders   broers-zussen broers/zussen   kinderen kinderen

Voorouders (en nakomelingen) van Sir John Fortescue of Eberington, MP


Via Snelzoeken kunt u zoeken op naam, voornaam gevolgd door een achternaam. U typt enkele letters in (minimaal 3) en direct verschijnt er een lijst met persoonsnamen binnen deze publicatie. Hoe meer letters u intypt hoe specifieker de resultaten. Klik op een persoonsnaam om naar de pagina van die persoon te gaan.

  • Of u kleine letters of hoofdletters intypt maak niet uit.
  • Wanneer u niet zeker bent over de voornaam of exacte schrijfwijze dan kunt u een sterretje (*) gebruiken. Voorbeeld: "*ornelis de b*r" vindt zowel "cornelis de boer" als "kornelis de buur".
  • Het is niet mogelijk om tekens anders dan het alfabet in te voeren (dus ook geen diacritische tekens als ö en é).



Visualiseer een andere verwantschap

Bronnen

  1. Ancestry Family Trees, Ancestry Family Tree
    http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=110860350&pid=19100
  2. Millennium File, Heritage Consulting
  3. Web: International, Find A Grave Index, Ancestry.com
  4. Web: Netherlands, GenealogieOnline Trees Index, 1000-2015, Ancestry.com
  5. UK and Ireland, Find A Grave Index, 1300s-Current, Ancestry.com
  6. Devon, England, Extracted Church of England Parish Records, Ancestry.com

Over de familienaam Fortescue of Eberington, MP


Wilt u bij het overnemen van gegevens uit deze stamboom alstublieft een verwijzing naar de herkomst opnemen:
Elizabeth Cromer, "Family tree Cromer/Russell/Buck/Pratt", database, Genealogie Online (https://www.genealogieonline.nl/family-tree-cromer-russell-buck-pratt/P28064.php : benaderd 4 mei 2024), "Sir John Fortescue of Eberington, MP (1394-1481)".