(1) Hij is getrouwd met Ellen Dent.
Zij zijn getrouwd te 1st wife.Bron 1
Kind(eren):
(2) Hij is getrouwd met Ellen de Corona.
Zij zijn getrouwd voor 1305 te 2nd wife.Bron 1
Kind(eren):
John Leigh (took mother's name), of Booths, Cheshire; married 1st Ellen,daughter of Richard Dent, of Cheshire, and had a son (John, ancestor ofthe Leighs of Booths); married 2nd Ellen, daughter of Thomas Corona, ofAdlington, and had [Robert]. [Burke's Peerage]
Note: Magna Charta Sureties has John as son of Ellen de Corona. Howeverthe way Burke's Peerage has it would explain why Ellen de Corona'sbrother Thomas left Adlington to John & Ellen de Corona for life and thento Robert, who was presumably the first son of John & Ellen de Corona.
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Following Copied from "Leigh and Legh of High Legh" website,www.users.totalise.co.uk:
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The Leigh Family of West Hall
D. & S. Lysons in Magna Britannia, give details of the relationship ofseveral branches of the Legh and Leigh families and the notes below shownindented are simplified from this source. The Leighs of West Hall arrivedin High Legh about 70 years after the Leghs of East Hall.
"Egerton Leigh of West Hall in High Legh and Twemlow, Esq. is descendedfrom Richard Lymme who in the late 13th century married Agnes thedaughter and sole heiress of Richard de Legh. Agnes had a second husband,William Venables, and they had a son, John, who (also) took the name ofLegh and settled at Booths. William Venables was descended from GilbertVenables the first baron of Kinderton who held land in Cheshire underHugh Lupus after the Norman Conquest.
John Legh was the common ancestor of the following branches of the Leghfamily of which the first seven were in Cheshire.
1. Legh of Sandbach, who became extinct after two generations.
2. Legh of Booths, of whom Willoughby Legh was the representative in 1810with the Leighs of West Hall also as descendants of this branch.
3. Leigh of Oughtrington, who are descended from John a younger son ofRichard Leigh of West Hall as a result of his marriage to an heiress inthe reign of Edward IV. Trafford, Esq. of Oughtrington was the linealdescendant of this branch but assumed the name Trafford in compliancewith the will of a maternal uncle.
4. Legh of Adlington, who became extinct by the death of Charles Legh in1781 were descended from Robert, a younger son of the first John Legh ofBooths.
5. Legh of Baguely were descended from Sir William Legh, a younger son ofthe second Sir John Legh of Booths but became extinct in 1688.
6. Legh of Lyme were descended from Piers, a younger son of Robert Leghof Adlington mentioned above, and became extinct by the death of ThomasPeter Legh of Lyme in 1797.
7. Legh of Ridge arise from John a younger son of Sir Peter Legh of Lyme,who married the heiress of Alcock of Ridge.
8. Leigh of Ifell in Cumberland, extinct from about 1600
9. Leigh of Middleton in Yorkshire.
10. Leigh of Egginton in Derbyshire, Rinshall in Staffordshire, Stoneleyin Warwickshire and Addlestrop in Gloucestershire all derive theirdescent from a younger son of the first Legh of Ridge."
John de Legh | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
(1) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Ellen Dent | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
(2) < 1305 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Ellen de Corona |