Hij is getrouwd met Maud Matilda la Zouche (Lovel).
Zij zijn getrouwd
Kind(eren):
Sir William la Zouche, 1st Lord of Harringworth
Gender:
Male
Birth:
December 18, 1276
Harringworth, Northamptonshire, England
Death:
circa March 11, 1352 (71-79)
Harringworth, Northamptonshire, England
Immediate Family:
Son of Eudo la Zouche, Lord of Cantelou and Milicent de Cantelou
Husband of Maud la Zouche (Lovel), Baroness Zouche
and Joan La Zouche (Leyborn)
Father of Eudo la Zouche; William la Zouche; Joan Moton (de la Zouche); John la Zouche; Roger la Zouche; Thomas la Zouche; Edmund la Zouche; Millicent Deincourt (la Zouche); Thomasina Mallory (La Zouche) and Isabel Lovel (La Zouche)
Brother of Eleanor la Zouche; Eva la Zouche, Baroness Berkeley and Elizabeth la Zouche
Half brother of Elizabeth la Zouche
https://www.geni.com/people/Sir-William-la-Zouche-1st-Lord-of-Harringworth/6000000000152491239
·Äî·Äî·Äî·Äî·Äî·Äî·ÄîMaternal·Äî·Äî·Äî·Äî·Äî·Äî·Äî·Äî·Äî·Äî
Sir William la Zouche, 1st Lord of Harringworth is your 18th great grandfather.
You
‰ ᆒ Geneva Allene Welborn (Smith)
your mother ·Üí Henry Loyd Smith Sr.
her father ·Üí Edith Lucinda Smith (Lee)
his mother ·Üí Malissa (Melissa Mariliza) Lee (Allen)
her mother ·Üí Matilda Caroline Norwood
her mother ·Üí Theophilus Norwood
her father ·Üí James Richard Norwood
his father ·Üí Theophilus Norwood
his father ·Üí Samuel Norwood, Jr.
his father ·Üí Samuel Norwood, Sr.
his father ·Üí Ann Norwood (Harington)
his mother ·Üí Sir James Harington, MP, 1st Baronet of Ridlington
her father ·Üí Sir James Harington
his father ·Üí Elizabeth Harington (Moton)
his mother ·Üí Robert Moton
her father ·Üí William Moton
his father ·Üí Sir Robert Moton, Kt.
his father ·Üí Sir Robert Moton, Kt., of Peckleton
his father ·Üí Joan Moton (de la Zouche)
his mother ·Üí Sir William la Zouche, 1st Lord of Harringworth
her father
Sir William la Zouche, 1st Baron (of Harringworth) is your 22nd great grandfather.
You‰ ᆒ Geneva Allene Welborn
your mother ·Üí Alice Elmyra Smith
her mother ·Üí Nellie Mary Henley
her mother ·Üí John Merrit Wooldridge
her father ·Üí Merritt Wooldridge
his father ·Üí Chesley Wooldridge
his father ·Üí Edward Wooldridge, Jr.
his father ·Üí Mary Wooldridge
his mother ·Üí Mary Martha Flournoy
her mother ·Üí Jane Gower
her mother ·Üí William Hatcher, of Varina Parish
her father ·Üí Catherine Hatcher
his mother ·Üí Thomas Reade
her father ·Üí Mary Read
his mother ·Üí Helen Brocket
her mother ·Üí Sir Rowland Lytton, Knight
her father ·Üí Lady Audrey de Lytton, Lady
his mother ·Üí Margaret Booth
her mother ·Üí Margaret Hopton
her mother ·Üí Baroness Margery Wentworth
her mother ·Üí Baroness Elizabeth Despencer (de Tiptoft)
her mother ·Üí Margaret Tibetot
her mother ·Üí Millicent la Zouche, Baroness
her mother ·Üí Sir William la Zouche, 1st Baron (of Harringworth)
her father
·Äî·Äî·Äî·Äî·Äî·Äî·Äî·ÄîPaternal·Äî·Äî·Äî·Äî·Äî·Äî·Äî·Äî·Äî·Äî·Äî·Äî·Äî·Äî
Sir William la Zouche, 1st Baron (of Harringworth) is your 22nd great grandfather.
You‰ ᆒ Henry Marvin Welborn
your father ·Üí Henry Marvin Welborn, Sr.
his father ·Üí Calhoun H Welborn
his father ·Üí Younger Welborn
his father ·Üí William "Billy" Welborn
his father ·Üí Aaron Welborne
his father ·Üí James Welborn
his father ·Üí Ann B. Wellborn
his mother ·Üí Jane Ann Crabtree
her mother ·Üí Grace Halstead
her mother ·Üí John Courtenay of Molland, III
her father ·Üí Margaret Courtenay
his mother ·Üí Sir John Wyndham
her father ·Üí Sir John Wyndham
his father ·Üí Sir John Wyndham, of Orchard Wyndham
his father ·Üí Eleanor Wyndham
his mother ·Üí Eleanor Scrope
her mother ·Üí Elizabeth Washburn
her mother ·Üí Elizabeth Bagot
her mother ·Üí Sir John Bagot, Kt., MP
her father ·Üí Sir Ralph Bagot, of Blithfield
his father ·Üí Eglina Bagot
his mother ·Üí Thomasina La Zouche, Lady
her mother ·Üí Sir William la Zouche, 1st Baron (of Harringworth)
her father
https://www.geni.com/people/Sir-William-la-Zouche-1st-Baron-of-Harringworth/6000000000152491239
Primary Sources
Inquisitions Post Mortem for William la Zouche, of Haryngworth, Writ, 13 March, 26 Edward III [1352].
He died on 10, 11 or 12 March [1352]. William la Zouche, son of Eudo la Zouche, aged 30 years and more at Christmas last, is his heir.
Notes
William La Zouche, 1st Lord Zouche of Harringworth, Northants married, before 15 Feb. 1295/6, Maud, daughter of John (Lovel), 1st Lord Lovel (of Titchmarsh), being only child by his 1st wife, Isabel sister and (in her issue) heir of William de Bois (died shortly before 6 March 1312/3), of Thorpe-Arnold, co. Leicester, Weston-in-Arden afsd., & c., daughter of Arnold de Bois, of the same. She, who was said to be aged 30 and more in 1310 and by whom he had at least 10 children, died before 1346."
My research indicates that Maud Lovel, wife of William la Zouche, was living in 1313, when William and Maud had a grant of free warren in their lands of Bramcote, Bulkington, Foleshill, Rycote, Weston, and Wolvershill, Warwickshire.
Maud Lovel evidently died before c.1324, when her husband, Sir William la Zouche, petitioned the king requesting grace as Edmund, Earl of Leicester [afterwards Earl of Lancaster] formerly granted to Arnold de Bois two stags and two does in certain seasons annually from the chase of Leicester, and the heirs of the said Arnold enfeoffed him with these and he was seised of them until the chase was forfeited to the king with the other lands of Thomas, Earl of Lancaster. According to the abstract of this petition copied below, the petition was written when Maud, wife of William la Zouche, was deceased.
Thus, it would appear that Maud Lovel died sometime between 1313 and c. 1324, long before 1346.
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William La Zouche, 1st Lord Zouche of Harringworth, Northants married, before 15 Feb. 1295/6, Maud, daughter of John (Lovel), 1st Lord Lovel (of Titchmarsh), being only child by his 1st wife, Isabel sister and (in her issue) heir of William de Bois (died shortly before 6 March 1312/3), of Thorpe-Arnold, co. Leicester, Weston-in-Arden afsd., & c., daughter of Arnold de Bois, of the same. She, who was said to be aged 30 and more in 1310 and by whom he had at least 10 children, died before 1346."
My research indicates that Maud Lovel, wife of William la Zouche, was living in 1313, when William and Maud had a grant of free warren in their lands of Bramcote, Bulkington, Foleshill, Rycote, Weston, and Wolvershill, Warwickshire. Maud Lovel evidently died before c.1324, when her husband, Sir William la Zouche, petitioned the king requesting grace as Edmund, Earl of Leicester [afterwards Earl of Lancaster] formerly granted to Arnold de Bois two stags and two does in certain seasons annually from the chase of Leicester, and the heirs of the said Arnold enfeoffed him with these and he was seised of them until the chase was forfeited to the king with the other lands of Thomas, Earl of Lancaster. According to the abstract of this petition copied below, the petition was written when Maud, wife of William la Zouche, was deceased.
Thus, it would appear that Maud Lovel died sometime between 1313 and c. 1324, long before 1346.
http://www.tudorplace.com.ar/ZOUCHE.htm#William La ZOUCHE (1¬â« B. Zouche of Harryngworth)
http://www.tudorplace.com.ar/ZOUCHE.htm#William%20La%20ZOUCHE%20%281%C2%BA%20B.%20Zouche%20of%20Harryngworth%29
http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=irisheyes&id=I13911
From 1268 to 1369, the Beauchamps received several inheritances and gifts of land which gave them a number of isolated properties in areas where they had no other interests, and also into counties in which they had not been represented before. The Fitz-Geoffrey inheritance saw them gain Cherhill in Hertfordshire, Potterspury in Northamptonshire, and the reversion of the Buckinghamshire manor of Quarrendon. The latter two were quite near to Hanslope. Potterspury and Cherhill are two of the manors for which we have receipts from September 1327 to February 1328. Potterspury was considerably less important, for that time only yielding a profit of £7 4s 8d, with its true value probably in the region of £39 p.a., although, with over £10 having to be shared amongst the other Fitz-Geoffrey heirs, the true value to the Beauchamp estates was probably in the region of £20 pa. The receipt for Cherhill for the five months in question shows it to have yielded a staggering £47 16s 5d; three pounds more than Hanslope. However this appears to be an anomalous total, for over £20 of the revenue was from the sale of 64 acres of land to WILLIAM DE LA ZOUCHE; again the 1298 estimate of annual income of £48 13s 7d would appear a more accurate figure, although, after the death of Earl Guy, the crown estimated its worth at less than £19 p.a.. Quarrendon was the original caput of the Fitz-Geoffrey family, just as Hanslope had been for the Mauduits and Elmley Castle for the Beauchamps, with a park constructed for the lord of the manor in 1276. In 1332, on the death of Robert Montalt, the manor passed into the hands of Thomas Beauchamp.
Like the lands of the Fitz-Geoffrey inheritance, the Tony inheritance was concentrated in the south of England, but it brought in greater profits which were much more scattered. Flamstead, in Hertfordshire, was not too remote from Hanslope or Potterspury; it appears to have been the home of Alice, Earl Guy's widow, with her third husband WILLIAM DE LA ZOUCHE, and was one of the manors which Earl Thomas jointly entailed upon himself and his wife in 1344. Abberley, with its park, was easily absorbed into the earl's Worcestershire estates. Newton Tony and Stratford Tony, although in Wiltshire, were considerably removed from Cherhill, being to the south of Salisbury Plain. These two villages were too insignificant and too remote to be held in demesne, and when the manors had passed to Thomas Beauchamp in 1337, he, in turn, passed them to his brother, John. On John's death in 1360, the manors were given by Earl Thomas to one of his younger sons. The proximity of Walthamstow, Essex, to London appears to have made the manor worthy of investment; in 1361, Earl Thomas acquired the reversion of Walthamstow Bedyk to the south-west of the parish. The pattern for members of the higher nobility at this time was to have a residence in London, and a country retreat within easy commuting distance from the capital, and Walthamstow appears to have provided this. As an agricultural centre it does not appear to have been as valuable. ... The general pattern for Beauchamp accumulation of manors seems to be that they concentrated on purchasing whole manors in Worcestershire or Warwickshire; sometimes outside these counties, small-scale land and property were bought, but only on very rare occasions would this be a whole manor. We have already established the financial importance of the property held outside the midlands, but what is interesting is that its accumulation came as a result of inheritance, and not an active policy of purchase; this is surely an area where the Beauchamps owed their fortune to good luck and good marriages. They merely had to wait for these inheritances to fall into their laps, although in some cases the wait could be a considerable period of time. In the case of the Fitz-Geoffrey fortune, Earl William and Countess Maud had to lobby for their full share; they ဘoften came to the chancery and sued instantly their pourparties of the inheritanceမ due to complaints of the size of their portion by their co-inheritors. The matter was not settled until 1299, after it had been prolonged for two years, and during which time Earl William had died. Quarrendon, whose reversion had been assigned to the earl as part of the Fitz-Geoffrey inheritance, did not come into Beauchamp hands until 1332. The Tony inheritance proved even more problematic: the inheritance was only at the disposal of the Beauchamps from between 1310, when Alice de Tony had married Earl Guy, to 1315 when Guy died and the estates remained with Alice, who subsequently married WILLIAM DE LA ZOUCHE of Ashby. Although Alice died in 1324, the estates remained with Zouche until his death in March 1337, and so most of the Tony inheritance did not finally pass into the Beauchamp estates until twenty-seven years after Guy and Alice's marriage. These lands alone have been calculated as being worth in excess of £500 per annum. As mentioned above, it was not until the 1340s when the Norfolk and west country manors became available, that the full Tony estates had become assimilated into the Warwick estates. SOURCE: Exerpt from "The Beauchamp Earls of Warwick, 1298-1369; Chapter 2: Land and Wealth", A thesis by Sebastian Barfield, BA (Hons), MPhil, URL http://users.powernet.co.uk/barfield/chap2.htm
This is not the Archbishop of York.
William la Zouche | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Maud Matilda la Zouche (Lovel) |
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