25 Gens. (AC: Rbt Fox, 1911)
26 Gens. (AC: Edmnd Suttn, 1421)
(1) Hij is getrouwd met Matilda.
Zij zijn getrouwd
Kind(eren):
(2) Hij is getrouwd met Eva.
Zij zijn getrouwd
William de Sutton, of Worksop, Notts; b 1217; married 1st Matilda (living 1242) and had issue; married 2nd Eva (married 2nd Robert Paynell and was living 1275/6), and died 1267. [Burke's Peerage]
The following from VCH-Essex:
In 1248 the manor and the advowson of the rectory were sub-infeudated for 100 marks to John de Lessington, to hold of Robert and Beatrice and the heirs of the latter, doing service of 2 knights' fees at the court of the Honor of Rayleigh. An inspeximus of the accompanying charter gives the consideration as 1,000 marks and the object to acquit Robert and Beatrice of what they owed to the king as executors of the will of Hubert de Burgh and of their debts to the Jews for themselves and for Walter de Evermue their ancestor. In 1250 John de Lessington had licence to keep inclosed, with a hedge and ditch, the close which he had made in the wood of his manor of Theydon, but so that the deer could have ingress and egress. He died in 1257 holding the manor, which contained 3 carucates of land, of Robert de Briwes for the service of 2 knights' fees. His heir was his brother, Henry de Lessington, Bishop of Lincoln. The bishop died in 1258, being succeeded by his two nephews William, son of Roland de Sutton, and Richard de Markham. They divided this inheritance (which lay in several counties) between them in 1259, Theydon Mount falling to Sutton's share.
William de Sutton was succeeded by his son Robert, who was a supporter of Simon de Montfort and forfeited his property to the king after the battle of Evesham....
The manor must, however, have been restored to Robert de Sutton, possibly as a result of the Ban of Kenilworth, for on his death in 1274 he was found to hold in Theydon Mount a messuage, 200 acres of arable, 21 acres of meadow, 51 acres of pasture, a windmill, foreign wood, and £4 5s. 6½d. rent of assize, &c., of the Honor of Rayleigh by service of suit at the court of the honor, a gilt spur or 6d. yearly, and scutage for 2 knights. His heir was his son Richard, aged 8.
Robert de Briwes, the former mesne lord, died in 1276, leaving his son John as his heir. No further references have been found to their lordship, the tenants in demesne thenceforth always holding immediately of the Honor of Rayleigh.
In 1282 a commission of oyer and terminer was issued touching the persons who felled and carried away trees in the wood of 'Theydon Lessington' late of Robert de Sutton the younger, while in the hands of Oliver de Sutton, Bishop of Lincoln, who had custody of the land and heir. In 1303 Richard de Sutton was returned as holding ½ fee of the king of the Honor of Rayleigh. In 1308 he had licence to grant the manor of Theydon Mount in fee to his son John de Sutton and Margaret his wife.
In 1322 John de Sutton leased the manor for twelve years to Henry de Malyns and in the following year released to him all his right in the property. Malyns must have died soon after, for in 1324 John de Sutton released his right in the manor to Edmund de Malyns, Henry's son and heir. In 1326 Edmund was pardoned for acquiring in fee this property which was held in chief of the Honor of Rayleigh and entering upon it without licence. In 1346 he held ½ knight's fee in Theydon Mount.
Sir John de Sutton of Dudley (Worc.), son of the above John and Margaret de Sutton, disputed de Malyns' title to the manor, claiming that it descended to him after the death of his parents. In 1348 and again in 1350 the matter was heard before the court of Common Pleas, but Malyns evidently won his case.
[From: 'Theydon Mount: Manors', A History of the County of Essex: Volume 4: Ongar Hundred (1956), pp. 276-81. URL: http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.asp?compid=15710&strquery=fitz%20wimarc. Date accessed: 28 August 2005]
Sir William Sutton
Sir William Sutton, born about 1215, died in 1268, seized of the manor of Worksop in Nottinghamshire. He married first Matilda, who was of record with her sister Alice in 1250. He married second Eva, who survived him and married second a Robert Paynell.
William de Sutton: Additional Information
(3) William de Sutton, son and heir, had two wives, Maude and Eve, their surnames [not given] , and died seized of the manor of Worksop, co. Nottingham, according to his inquest post mortem held in 1268.
Sources
MA & ME Families, Ancestry of Walter Goodwin Davis, Beaumont, Ancestry of Nicholas Davis, by W. G. Davis, reprinted 1996, GPC, Baltimore, pg 161
Adlard, George. The Sutton-Dudleys of England and the Dudleys of Massachusetts in New England (London, 1862) Page 17
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