Family Tree Welborn » Joan de Stuteville heiress of Cottingham (± 1216-< 1276)

Persoonlijke gegevens Joan de Stuteville heiress of Cottingham 

  • Zij is geboren rond 1216 in Liddell, Cumberland, England.
  • Zij is overleden voor 6 april 1276 in Cottingham, Yorkshire, England.
  • Een kind van Nicholas II de Stuteville en Devorguilla I of Galloway
  • Deze gegevens zijn voor het laatst bijgewerkt op 16 november 2020.

Gezin van Joan de Stuteville heiress of Cottingham

Zij is getrouwd met Hugh Wake.

Zij zijn getrouwd.


Kind(eren):

  1. Hugh II Wake  ± 1240-1315 

  • Het echtpaar heeft gemeenschappelijke voorouders.

  • Notities over Joan de Stuteville heiress of Cottingham



    Joan de Stuteville, heiress of Cottingham is your 21st great grandmother.
    You
    ¬â€  ·Üí Henry Marvin Welborn
    your father ·Üí Henry Marvin Welborn, Sr.
    his father ·Üí Francis "Fannie" Pernerviane Welborn
    his mother ·Üí Primma M. Davis
    her mother ·Üí Sarah Autra Pridgen
    her mother ·Üí Sophia Lk-lo-ha-wah Pitchlynn, Iksa Hachotukni
    her mother ·Üí Ebenezer Folsom
    her father ·Üí Isreal Folsom, Sr. of Prince William Co, Va
    his father ·Üí Rachel (Berry) Folsom
    his mother ·Üí Elizabeth Berry
    her mother ·Üí Lt. James Philbrick
    her father ·Üí Thomas Philbrick, of Watertown & Hampton
    his father ·Üí Thomas Fylbrigg, I
    his father ·Üí Robert Fylbrigg
    his father ·Üí Nycholas Fyllebrigge
    his father ·Üí Roger Felbrigge
    his father ·Üí Sir Simon Felbrigge, Kt.
    his father ·Üí Simon Felbrigge
    his father ·Üí Margery Felbrigge
    his mother ·Üí Sir John Aspale, Kt
    her father ·Üí Mirabelle de Aspale (Wake)
    his mother ·Üí Sir Hugh Wake
    her father ·Üí Joan de Stuteville, heiress of Cottingham
    his mother

    https://www.geni.com/people/Joan-de-Stuteville-heiress-of-Cottingham/6000000003615836727

    Joan de Stuteville, heiress of Cottingham (incl. the honors of Liddel and Rosedale),
    Gender:
    Female
    Birth:
    1216
    Liddell, Cumberland, England (United Kingdom)
    Death:
    before April 06, 1276
    Cottingham, Yorkshire, England (United Kingdom)
    Place of Burial:
    England (UK)
    Immediate Family:
    Daughter of Nicholas II de Stuteville and Devorguilla of Galloway
    Wife of Hugh Wake, feudal lord of Bourne and Hugh Bigod, Chief Justice of England
    Mother of Nicholas Wake, Sir; Sir Hugh Wake; Isabella Wake; Sir Baldwin Wake, III, Lord of Bourne; Joan Burnet; Roger Bigod, 5th Earl of Norfolk; Joan Bigod and Sir John Bigod, Knight ¬´ less
    Sister of Margaret de Stuteville
    Half sister of William Abernethy, 1st of Saltoun; Patrick de Abernethy; Hugh de Abernathy and Nicholas III de Stuteville

    Hugh Wake; feudal Lord of Bourne; Sheriff of Yorks, Constable of Scarborough Castle 1239; married by 29 May 1229 Joan (married 2nd by 5 Feb 1243/4 Hugh Bigod, Chief Justiciar of England and died 1276, being by him mother of Roger Bigod, 5th and last Earl of Norfolk of the 1140-41 creation), eldest daughter and coheir of Nicholas de Stuteville by Devorguille, daughter of Roland, feudal Lord of Galloway and Constable of Scotland.

    Sir Hugh III le Bigod Chief Justice of England, was born 1214 in Thetford, Norfolk, England. He died Nov 1266 in Cottingham, East Riding, Yorkshire, England. Hugh married Joan de Stuteville on Feb 1243 in Thetford, Norfolk, England.

    Joan de Stuteville, was born 1216 in Liddell, Cumberland, England. She died Apr 1276 in Cottingham, East Riding, Yorkshire, England.
    Joan married Sir Hugh III le Bigod, Chief Justice (Justiciar) of England by 5 Feb 1243 in Thetford, Norfolk, England.

    They had the following children:
    M i Roger IV le Bigod, 5th Earl of Norfolk was born 1245 and died 7 Dec 1306.
    F ii Joan le Bigod was born 1247.
    M iii John le Bigod was born 1249.
    Sources:
    1. [http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=gonefishin&id=I136014]
    [Hardly a trustworthy primary source! The Burnet connection is unsupported ]
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liddel_Strength
    excerpt
    Liddel Strength is an ancient monument near Carwinley, Cumbria, in northwest England. It consists of the earthwork remains of an Anglo-Norman border fortification, the seat of the barony of Liddel, destroyed by the Scots in 1346 (a wooden motte and bailey castle at the time of its destruction; possibly earlier a ringwork) and fragmentary remains of a pele tower subsequently built upon the site. It has been suggested that 'Strength' translates the Latin fortalitium more usually rendered as fortalice, meaning a small, or second-rate, fort.
    It has also been known as Liddel Moat, and has given its name to Moat Quarter in which it lies, and the castle is referred to in mediaeval documents as the Peel of Liddell or the castle of Liddel. However, it is not the same as - although sometimes understandably confused with - Liddel Castle -also known as Liddel Motte.*
    Barony of Liddel:
    The barony of Liddel had an extent roughly that of the modern parishes of Arthuret, Kirkandrews-on-Esk and Nicholforest.
    It is thought to have been created by Ranulf le Meschin, 3rd Earl of Chester in or before the first decade of the 12th century and given by him to Turgis Brandos, descending by his son William Brandos, probably also known as William of Rosedale) to Turgis/Turgot de Rossedale (Rosedale in Yorkshire).
    However 'Benedict of Peterborough' reports that in 1174, whilst besieging Carlisle William the Lion ...went in person with the remaining part of his army through Northumbria, wasting the lands of the king and of his barons ; and took with his arms the castle of Liddell, which belonged to Nicholas de Estuteville ...
    It is not clear how Nicholas de Stuteville had supplanted the de Rosedales, but he was well connected; the second son of a High Sheriff of Yorkshire, and his grandfather had been one of the Yorkshire magnates present at the Battle of the Standard. Henry II seems to have favoured the family; two of the other castles taken by William were the responsibility of Stutevilles; a Stuteville was in the party of knights that captured William at Alnwick later in 1174, and Henry installed Stutevilles as castellans in two of the castles William surrendered to Henry.
    Although Nicholas's branch of the Stutevilles were Barons of Liddell, Liddel was never their principal seat; that lay at Cottingham in the East Riding of Yorkshire where in 1200 they entertained King John, and were granted a licence to fortify and moat their manor house in 1201.
    The Stuteville estates passed by marriage into the le Wake family, whose principal seat was at Bourne, Lincolnshire, and in 1346 the castle belonged to the noble baron Sir Thomas Wake, lord of Liddel as he was described by the Lanercost Chronicle in its account of an English incursion into Scotland, intended to be major, but restricted to a 12-day raid by bad weather. he led in 1337.
    Wake was one of 'the Disinherited', those who had lost thir Scottish holdings as a result of the battle of Bannockburn, and fought at Dupplin Moor. Wake and his sister Margaret had both married Plantagenets; he was the son-in-law of Henry, 3rd Earl of Lancaster; she, having first married a son of the Comyn slain by Robert the Bruce, only to be widowed when he was killed at Bannockburn, had married - and was now the widow of - Edmund of Woodstock, 1st Earl of Kent.
    "Liddel Castle (67934)". 'Canmore' (Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Scotland). Retrieved 11 March 2013.
    _____________________
    from Early Yorkshire Charters - Joan married Hugh Wake before 29 May 1229 - Hugh was pardoned for having married her without the kings license - on 5 July 1234 the sheriff was ordered to give Hugh Wake and William Mastic seisinof Nicholas II de Stuteville lands not belonging to the manor of Cottingham. - in 1241 after the death of Eustace, Cottingham with the honors of Liddel and Rosedale, Joan de Stuteville became sole heirs of these lands, first by the death of her sister in 1235 and then the death of Eustace's in 1241 - Hugh Wake died of=n crusade in 1241, and on 2 January 1242 the king granted to Joan his widow the custody of his lands to hold until the lawful age of his heirs... - before Michaelmas 1244 she married secondly, Hugh Bigod, Chief Justice of England, brother of Roger bigod, earl of Norfolk, and by whom she was the mother of Roger Bigod who succeeded as earl of Norfolk in 1270 - she died shortly before 6 April 1276, her heir being Baldwin Wake whom she had enfeoffed of the manor of Kirkby Moorside two years previous. -Sir Baldwin Wake died shortly before 10 February 1281. His son John was summoned as baron; and the Stuteville inheritance passed eventually to the letters granddaughter Joan, sister and heir of John earl of Kent, who she married first Sir Thomas de Holand and secondly Edward prince Wales, by whom she was the mother of king Richard II, her heir was her son Thomas Holand earl of Kent and lord Wake.

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Over de familienaam De Stuteville


Wilt u bij het overnemen van gegevens uit deze stamboom alstublieft een verwijzing naar de herkomst opnemen:
Marvin Loyd Welborn, "Family Tree Welborn", database, Genealogie Online (https://www.genealogieonline.nl/family-tree-welborn/I50049.php : benaderd 4 mei 2024), "Joan de Stuteville heiress of Cottingham (± 1216-< 1276)".