She was the only child of Sir John and Lady Margaret.
(1) Elle est mariée avec John de Mowbray.
Ils se sont mariés le 25 mars 1359, elle avait 20 ans.
Enfant(s):
(2) Elle avait une relation avec John de Mowbray.
Enfant(s):
"Tradition ...tells us that the Boleyns were a family of London merchants and again tradition leads us astray. Anne Boleyn was born a great lady. Her father, Thomas, was the eldest son of Sir William Boleyn of Blickling, and her mother, Elizabeth, was the dau. of Thomas Howard, earl of Surrey, one of the premier noblemen in England. There was mercantile wealth in the family, but to get to that we have to go back to Geoffrey Boleyn, the builder of Hever. He had left Norfolk in the 1420s, made his fortune as a mercer in London, served as an alderman and become Lord Mayor in 1457-58.
"Fifteenth-century England, however, was a society open to wealth and talent....Geoffrey Boleyn was able to secure as his second wife one of the daus. and joint heiresses of a nobleman, Thomas, Lord Hoo. William, the eldest surviving son of that marriage, made an equally good match with Margaret Butler, dau. and co-heiress of the wealthy Anglo-Irish earl of Ormonde, so that when their eldest son, Anne's father md. a dau. of the earl of Surrey he was continuing a tradition into a third generation. As a result -- and this should finally dispel all smell of the shop -- Anne's great-grand-parents were (apart from Geoffrey) a duke, an earl, the grand-dau. of an earl, the dau. of one baron, the dau. of another, and an esquire and his wife. Anne Boleyn came, in fact, from the same sort of background as the majority of the Tudor upper class. Indeed she was better born than Henry VIII's three other English wives."
~ Eric Ives, The Life and Death of Anne Boleyn
Elizabeth de Segrave | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
(1) 1359 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
John de Mowbray | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
(2) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
John de Mowbray |
Les données affichées n'ont aucune source.