(1) Hij is getrouwd met Sybil de Morwick.
Zij zijn getrouwd na 1279.Bronnen 2, 3
Kind(eren):
[Jim Weber.FTW]
Sir LAURENCE DE SAINT MAUR, son and heir, was one of the boys at Windsor with the royal children in 1254, when his father was overseas with the King. In 1266 he was in possession of Road (i). In May 1270 he had protection as a Crusader. He was preparing to go to St. Iago in January 1275/6, and in August following to accompany Edmund, then Earl of Lancaster, whose steward he was, to Navarre. He was summoned for, and served in, the expedition of 1282, under the Earl and Roger de Mortimer, in which Llewelyn was taken, and his head sent to London. Keeper of Jedburgh castle, 1291. In 1292 he is said to have been going with the Earl to Wales. He was exempted from the general summons for service in Gascony, 1294, but was there under the Earl.
He married, 1stly, Emma ----, who died in or before Hilary term 1275/6; and, 2ndly, Sibyl, elder daughter and coheir of Hugh DE MORWICK, widow of Sir Roger DE LUMLEY. He died February 1296/7; his widow died 26 July 1298.
[Complete Peerage XI:357-8, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)]
(i) When he presented to Road, which property may have been settled upon him, on his marriage, by his father. In that year he acquired land in cos. Northants and Warwick.
Note: Douglas Richardson (confirmed by the BH article below) identified Emma as niece of Warin de Bassingbourne and grandaughter of the elder Warin de Bassingbourne.
---
Seymours Manor, Bassingbourn, Cambridgeshire:
Before 1066 1½ hide at Bassingbourn had belonged to the bishopric of Winchester. It was held in 1086 by Bishop Walkelin, (fn. 148) whose successor Henry of Blois probably ceded it to his brother King Stephen. Two manors at Bassingbourn, SEYMOURS and ROWSES, were later held of Stephen's honor of Boulogne. The Bassingbourns originally held the former, under that honor, of the Caieux and their successors as lords of Cheyneys manor in Steeple Morden, whose possessor successfully claimed in 1235 wardship of the hide held of him by Warin of Bassingbourn. In the 1270s Warin's son Edmund assigned that manor to Lawrence de Seymour, who had married Warin's niece Emma (d. by 1276), in place of a Northamptonshire manor given as her marriage portion. Lawrence transferred Seymours, before his death in 1297, to his eldest son Nicholas, later Lord Seymour, who died in 1316, holding 260 a. at Bassingbourn as ½ knight's fee for a nominal service, of Edmund's son Warin. Nicholas's eldest son, Sir Thomas de Seymour, came of age in 1325 and held Seymours in 1346, but not when he died without issue in 1358.
['Parishes: Bassingbourn', A History of the County of Cambridge and the Isle of Ely: Volume 8 (1982), pp. 12-30. URL: http://www.british-history.ac.uk]
NOTE: When Thomas, the eldest son, d.s.p. in 1358, the 3rd son Nicholas inherited the barony, but the manor of Seymours was no longer in the Seymour family.
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Laurence de St. Maur | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Sybil de Morwick | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Onbekend |
Date of Import: 26 Feb 2015