Genealogie Wylie » James Audley , of Heleigh, Sheriff of Salop [Wikibio+++] (± 1220-????)

Persoonlijke gegevens James Audley , of Heleigh, Sheriff of Salop [Wikibio+++] 

Bronnen 1, 2
  • Ook bekend als James de Aldithley.
  • Hij is geboren rond 1220 in Heleigh Castle, Audley, Staffordshire, England.Bronnen 1, 3
  • Hij is overleden op 11 januari 1271/1272 in Ireland.Bron 1
    Oorzaak: broken neck in Ireland
  • Alternatief: Hij is overleden op 11 juni 1276 in Broke his neck in Ireland.Bron 3
  • Een kind van Henry de Audley en Bertrade (Bertred) de Mainwaring
  • Deze gegevens zijn voor het laatst bijgewerkt op 25 augustus 2023.

Gezin van James Audley , of Heleigh, Sheriff of Salop [Wikibio+++]

Hij is getrouwd met Ela Longespée.

Zij zijn getrouwd in het jaar 1244.Bronnen 3, 4


Kind(eren):

  1. James de Audley  1250-< 1273
  2. Henry de Audley  1251-1276
  3. William de Audley  1253-< 1282
  4. Joan de Audley  ± 1256-???? 
  5. Nicholas de Audley  < 1258-1299 
  6. Hugh 1st Baron de Audley  ± 1267-< ???? 


Notities over James Audley , of Heleigh, Sheriff of Salop [Wikibio+++]

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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Audley_(died_1272)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

James Audley (died 1272)

Biography
References

James Audley (died 1272)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
For similarly named people, see James Audley (disambiguation).

This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
Find sources: "James Audley" died 1272 – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (January 2023) (Learn how and when to remove this template message)
Sir James de Audley [Knight], Justiciar of Ireland (1220-1272, sometimes known as Aldithel or Alditheley), was an English baron and magnate.[1][2]

Biography

This section needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
Find sources: "James Audley" died 1272 – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (December 2022) (Learn how and when to remove this template message)
James Audley (or de Audley) was born in 1220 to Henry Audley and Bertha de Mesnilwarin,[3] and was, like his father, a lord-marcher.

In 1257, he accompanied Richard, king of the Romans, to his coronation at Aachen (Matt. Paris), sailing on 29 April (Rymer) and returning to England in the autumn to take part in the Welsh campaign (1257-1260).

The following year (1258), he was one of the royalist members of the council of fifteen nominated by the Provisions of Oxford, and witnessed, as 'James of Aldithel,' their confirmation by the king (18 October). He also, with his brother-in-law, Peter de Montfort, was appointed commissioner to treat with Llewelyn (18 August), and two years later he acted as an itinerant justice. On Llewelyn of Wales attacking Mortimer, a royalist marcher, Audley joined Prince Edward at Hereford, 9 January 1263 to resist the invasion.

But the barons, coming to Llewelyn's assistance, dispersed the royalist forces, and seized on his castles and estates. He is wrongly said by Dugdale and Foss to have been made 'justice of Ireland' in this year, but in December he was one of the royalist sureties in the appeal to Louis of France.

At the time of the battle of Lewes (May 1264) he was in arms for the king on the Welsh marches (Matthew Paris), and he was one of the first to rise against the government of Simon de Montfort. On Gloucester embracing the royal cause, early in 1265, Audley joined him with the other marchers, and took part in the campaign of Evesham and the overthrow of the baronial party. He appears to have gone on a pilgrimage to Galicia in 1268, and also, it is stated, to Palestine in 1270; but although his name occurs among the 'Crucesignati' of 21 May 1270, it is clear that he never went, for he was appointed justiciary of Ireland a few months later, his name first occurring in connection with that office 5 September 1270. He also served as High Sheriff of Staffordshire and Shropshire in 1261 and 1270.[4]

During his tenure as Justiciar of Ireland he led several expeditions against 'the Irish rebels,' but died by 'breaking his neck' about 11 June 1272 (when he is last mentioned as justiciary), and was succeeded by his son James, who did homage 29 July 1272. His spouse was Ela Longespée, the daughter of William Longespée.

References
"(Sir) James DE AUDLEY Knight, Justiciar of Ireland". washington.ancestryregister.com. Archived from the original on 20 March 2015. Retrieved 20 March 2015.
Lloyd, Simon (2004). "Audley, James (d. 1272), magnate". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online) (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/894. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
p. 220, Walter Chetwynd's History of Pirehill Hundred], published in 'Collections for a History of Staffordshire', Vol. XXII New Series (1909): and by Bertha, the daughter of Ralph de Mesnilwarin (with whom he had in frank-marriage ye manors of Smalwood and Snelston, and half ye town of Pickmere, co. Cestr.), left issue James Ld. Audley
Collections for a history of Staffordshire. Staffordshire Record Society. 1912. p. 276.
Attribution
This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Round, John Horace (1885). "Audley, James de (d.1272)". In Stephen, Leslie (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 2. London: Smith, Elder & Co.

Political offices
Preceded by
Robert d'Ufford
Justiciar of Ireland
1270–1272Succeeded by
Maurice FitzGerald
Categories as live links at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Audley_(died_1272) :
1220 births
1272 deaths
13th-century English people
English knights
English feudal barons
High Sheriffs of Shropshire
High Sheriffs of Staffordshire
Justiciars of Ireland
Lords Lieutenant of Ireland
Norman warriors
Stanley family
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James of Aldithley, 1st or 2nd son and heir, b. about 1220. Keeper of the castle of Newcastle-under-Lyme 30 Oct 1250. He joined in a letter of the Barons to the Pope in 1258. Witnessed, as one of the King's sworn Council, the confirmation by Henry III of the Provisions of Oxford, 1258; Lord Marcher; Sheriff of Salop, and co. Staffs, 1261-2 and 1270-1; Justiciar of Ireland 1270-2. He took an active part on the King's side against the Barons, being in arms for the King on the Welsh Marches in 1264, and engaging in the Evesham campaign in 1265. He m. in 1244, Ela, daughter of William Longespee (who d. 1250), son and heir of Ela, suo jure Countess of Salisbury, by Idoine, daughter and heir of Richard de Camville. She brought him the manors of Stratton, afterwards called Stratton Audley, and Wretchwick, Oxon, in frank marriage. He d. about 11 June 1272, in Ireland, by "breaking his neck". Writ for his Inq.p.m. 16 July 1272. His widow d. apparently shortly bef. 22 Nov 1299. Inq.p.m. 1325-6. [Complete Peerage I:337-8 XIV:50]----------------------------------James de Alditheley was a great favourite of Richard, Earl of Cornwall, at whose coronation as king of Almaigne he assisted. This nobleman had livery of his lands in the 31st Henry III [1247], and was constituted in two years afterwards constable of Newcastle-under-Lyne. Being one of the lords-marchers he was actively employed for some years against the Welsh and was appointed governor of the castles of Salop and Bridgenorth and sheriff of the counties of Salop and Stafford. In the 47th of Henry III [1263] he was made justice of Ireland; and in the same year, upon the misunderstanding between the king and the barons regarding the provisions of Oxford, being referred to arbitration of the monarch of France, he was one of the noblemen who undertook for the king therein. The next year we find him with Roger de Mortimer and the other barons-marchers giving battle to Llewelyn, Prince of Wales, and afterwards joining the Earl of Gloucester at Evesham in rescuing the king, who had become captive to the Earl of Leicester at the battle of Lewes. In the 52nd of Henry III [1268], his lordship performed a pilgrimage to the shrine of St. James in Galicia, and the following year embarked in the Crusade. His death, occasioned by breaking his neck, occurred soon afterwards (1271). He had a dau. Joan, who m. John, son of Robert de Beauchamp, to whose child, prior to its birth, the said John then being deceased, his lordship was appointed guardian. He had also five sons, the youngest of whom, Hugh, is supposed to have been the Hugh Alditheley who had summons to parliament 15 May 1321, and whose son became Earl of Gloucester. His lordship was s. by his eldest son, James de Alditheley, who d. s. p. in 1272, and was s. by his brother, Henry, who d. without issue in 1275, and was s. by his brother, William, who d. without issue is 1275, was s. by his brother, Nicholas, who died in 1299. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, England, 1883, p. 15, Audley, Barons Audley, of Heleigh]NOTE: John Burke, History of the Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland, Vol. IV, R. Bentley, London, 1834, p. 757, Stansfeld, of Burley Park, names two additional sons, William, Lord of Blore and Grindon, co. Stafford, and Sir Adam, surnamed FitzWolfric.

James of Aldithley, 1st or 2nd son and heir, b. about 1220. Keeper ofthe castle of Newcastle-under-Lyme 30 Oct 1250. He joined in a letter ofthe Barons to the Pope in 1258. Witnessed, as one of the King's swornCouncil, the confirmation by Henry III of the Provisions of Oxford, 1258;Lord Marcher; Sheriff of Salop, and co. Staffs, 1261-2 and 1270-1;Justiciar of Ireland 1270-2. He took an active part on the King's sideagainst the Barons, being in arms for the King on the Welsh Marches in1264, and engaging in the Evesham campaign in 1265. He m. in 1244, Ela,daughter of William Longespee (who d. 1250), son and heir of Ela, suojure Countess of Salisbury, by Idoine, daughter and heir of Richard deCamville. She brought him the manors of Stratton, afterwards calledStratton Audley, and Wretchwick, Oxon, in frank marriage. He d. about 11June 1272, in Ireland, by "breaking his neck". Writ for his Inq.p.m. 16July 1272. His widow d. apparently shortly bef. 22 Nov 1299. Inq.p.m.1325-6. [Complete Peerage I:337-8 XIV:50]

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James de Alditheley was a great favourite of Richard, Earl of Cornwall, at whose coronation as king of Almaigne he assisted. This nobleman had livery of his lands in the 31st Henry III [1247], and was constituted in two years afterwards constable of Newcastle-under-Lyne. Being one of the lords-marchers he was actively employed for some years against the Welsh and was appointed governor of the castles of Salop and Bridgenorth and sheriff of the counties of Salop and Stafford. In the 47th of Henry III[1263] he was made justice of Ireland; and in the same year, upon themisunderstanding between the king and the barons regarding the provisions of Oxford, being referred to arbitration of the monarch of France, he was one of the noblemen who undertook for the king therein. The next year we find him with Roger de Mortimer and the other barons-marchers giving battle to Llewelyn, Prince of Wales, and afterwards joining the Earl ofGloucester at Evesham in rescuing the king, who had become captive to theEarl of Leicester at the battle of Lewes. In the 52nd of Henry III[1268], his lordship performed a pilgrimage to the shrine of St. James inGalicia, and the following year embarked in the Crusade. His death,occasioned by breaking his neck, occurred soon afterwards (1271). He had a dau. Joan, who m. John, son of Robert de Beauchamp, to whose child, prior to its birth, the said John then being deceased, his lordship was appointed guardian. He had also five sons, the youngest of whom, Hugh, is supposed to have been the Hugh Alditheley who had summons to parliament 15 May 1321, and whose son became Earl of Gloucester. His lordship was s. by his eldest son, James de Alditheley, who d. s. p. in 1272, and was s. by his brother, Henry, who d. without issue in 1275, and was s. by his brother, William, who d. without issue is 1275, was s. by his brother,Nicholas, who died in 1299. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, England,1883, p. 15, Audley, Barons Audley, of Heleigh]

NOTE: John Burke, History of the Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland,Vol. IV, R. Bentley, London, 1834, p. 757, Stansfeld, of Burley Park,names two additional sons, William, Lord of Blore and Grindon, co.Stafford, and Sir Adam, surnamed FitzWolfric.

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Voorouders (en nakomelingen) van James Audley

Adam de Audley
± 1147-> 1203
Emma FitzOrm
± 1150-????
Henry de Audley
± 1175-< 1246

James Audley
± 1220-????

1244

Ela Longespée
± 1228-< 1299

James de Audley
1250-< 1273
Joan de Audley
± 1256-????

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Bronnen

  1. Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, by G. E Cokayne, Sutton Publishing Lt, I:337-8
  2. Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999, 143-3, 150-5
  3. Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999, 143-3
  4. Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, by G. E Cokayne, Sutton Publishing Lt, I:338

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