Hij is getrouwd met Christiana de Segrave.
Zij zijn getrouwd
Kind(eren):
John de Mohun, Master of Dunster is your 20th great grandfather.
You‰
‰ ‰ ᆒ‰ Henry Welborn‰
your father‰ ᆒ‰ Emma Corine Bombard‰
his mother‰ ᆒ‰ Emma Elizabeth Bombard‰
her mother‰ ᆒ‰ Isabelle Bynum‰
her mother‰ ᆒ‰ Robert W Bynum‰
her fatherᆒ‰ Elizabeth Bynum‰
his mother‰ ᆒ‰ Lydia Mitchell‰
her mother‰ ᆒ‰ Jonathan Wheeler, I‰
her father‰ ᆒ‰ Martha Wheeler (Salisbury)‰
his mother‰ ᆒ‰ William Salisbury, Jr.‰
her father‰ ᆒWilliam Salisbury, of Denbigh & Swansea‰
his father‰ ᆒ‰ John Salisbury, of Denbigh‰
his father‰ ᆒ‰ Ursula Salusbury‰
his mother‰ ᆒ‰ Henry Stanley, 4th Earl of Derby‰
her fatherᆒ‰ Edward Stanley, 3rd Earl of Derby‰
his father‰ ᆒ‰ Thomas Stanley, 2nd Earl of Derby‰
his father‰ ᆒ‰ Lady Joan Le Strange, 10th Baroness of Knockin‰
his mother‰ ᆒJohn le Strange, 8th Lord Strange of Knokyn‰
her father‰ ᆒ‰ Baron Richard le Strange, VII‰
his father‰ ᆒ‰ Maud de Mohun, Baroness of Strange‰
his mother‰ ᆒJohn de Mohun, 2nd Baron Mohun‰
her father‰ ᆒ‰ John de Mohun, Master of Dunster‰
his father
https://www.geni.com/people/John-de-Mohun-Master-of-Dunster/6000000022514820186
John de Mohun, Master of Dunster
Gender:
Male
Birth:
circa 1300‰
Somerset, England, United Kingdom
Death:
August 25, 1330‰ (26-34)‰
Boroughbridge, North Yorkshire, England, United Kingdom (1330)
Place of Burial:
Dunster, Somerset, England
Immediate Family:
Son of‰ John de Mohun, 1st Baron Mohun of Dunster‰ and‰ Ada de Tibetot‰
Husband of‰ Christiana de Segrave‰
Father of‰ John de Mohun, 2nd Baron Mohun‰
Brother of‰ Thomas de Mohun;‰ Reginald de Mohun;‰ Joan Luttrell;‰ Margaret de Mohun;‰ Lawrence Mohun;‰ Eleanor de Willington;‰ William Mohun;‰ Sir Robert de Mohun, knightand‰ Payn de Mohun‰ « less‰
Primary Sources
1305 April 1 Westminster‰
Inspeximus and confirmation of a chirograph, dated Weymuster, Wednesday after the Annunciation, 33 Edward I. between‰ John de Segrave, lord of Segrave, and‰ John de Mohun, lord of Dunsterre, whereby‰ John de Mohun, eldest son of the latter, is to marry Christiana, daughter of the former, who is to dower his said daughter with land and rent to the value of 100 marks a year in the manors of Stretlee, Luytone and Sturministre, in the form contained in the charter of feoffment made to the said John and Christiana, to wit, so that Christiana cannot demand anything further for dower if her husband die in his father's lifetime. And after the said John and Christiana have been seized of the said lands for 40 days, they are to be given back to John de Mohun the father, for the maintenance of John and Christiana. John de Mohun the father, after his death, shall leave to his said son land and rent to the value of 600l. a year in the manors of Dunsterre, Moneheved, Kelvetone, Torre Mohun, Whicchesford, Cumptone Garynges, Luyton, Stretlee and Sturmenistre Mareschal, so that the said 600l. a year remain to his son clear after the payment of the father's debts. John de Segrave shall pay John de Mohun the father 400l. sterling, as appears in the recognisance made thereof in the Chancery, to wit, on Sunday after St. Philip and St. James, 1305, the day of the espousals, 100l., and the residue in payments of 60l, at succeeding Michaelmases and Easters, to be made in the priory of Chaucumbe, co. Northampton. Witnesses: Sirs Payn Tibetoft, John Boteturtee, Nicholas de Segrave, Baldwin de Maniers, William Martyn, Stephen de Segrave, Henry dSegrave, knights, and others. French.
Source: Calendar of the patent rolls preserved in the Public Record Office: Edward I 1272-1307, page 327
1333 Oct. 13. Waltham.‰
To the sheriff of Devon. Order to deliver the manor of Cleyhangre with the issues thereof to the prior and brethren of the Hospital of St. John of Jerusalem in England, or their attorney, as it was agreed in the parliament of the late king held three weeks after the Purification in the 17th year of his reign, that the lands etc. which belonged to the dissolved order of the Templars should not escheat to their chief lords, but that all the demesne lands, fees, advowsons and liberties which belonged to the Templars at the time of their cession should be assigned and delivered to the said prior and brethren, which statute was afterwards ratified by the king in parliament, and lately, at the prosecution of the said prior and brethren, showing that divers men of that county neglected to observe that statute, and occupied divers lands etc. of the said Templars, pretending that they had escheated to them, the king ordered that sheriff to take all the lands etc. in Cleyhangre and elsewhere which had been so occupied into the king's hand without delay, and to keep them safe until further orders, and to inform the king of the nature and yearly value of such lands and by whom they were occupied; and the sheriff informed the king that he had taken the said manor of Cleyhangre into his hand, together with the advowson of the church of that town, and that William Martyn had entered upon it after the said dissolution and held it until‰ John de Mohun‰ ejected him therefrom, and that the said John afterwards gave it to‰ Robert de Mohun, his brother, who gave it to‰ Payn de Mohun, his brother.
'Close Rolls, Edward III: October 1333', in Calendar of Close Rolls, Edward III: Volume 3, 1333-1337, ed. H C Maxwell Lyte (London, 1898), pp. 136-151. British History Online‰ http://www.british-history.ac.uk/cal-close-rolls/edw3/vol3/pp136-151‰ [accessed 12 October 2017].
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Christiana de Segrave |
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