Let op: Was 9 maanden voor de geboorte (??-??-1234) van kind (John DeBoketon) al overleden (??-??-1207).
Let op: Partner (Sybilla DeCantilupe) is 87 jaar jonger.
(1) Hij heeft/had een relatie met Euphemia DeCantilupe.
(2) Hij heeft/had een relatie met Ms DeGreene.
(3) Hij had een relatie met Alexander DeBoketon.
(4) Hij is getrouwd met Sybilla DeCantilupe.
Zij zijn getrouwd in het jaar 1205 te Broughton, Northamptonshire, England, hij was toen 24 jaar oud.Bron 1
Kind(eren):
(5) Hij is getrouwd met Mrs. DeGreene DeBoketon.
Zij zijn getrouwd in het jaar 1202, hij was toen 21 jaar oud.Bron 1
All that we really know of the first Lord de Greene may be summed up in this brief paragraph. Alexander, of the House of Arundel, a Knight of the King's court, was the great-great grandson of Alen de la Zouche, the uncle of William the Conqueror and Duke of Bretagne, and the great grandson of one of the Norman nobles who invaded England with William the Conqueror in 1066. King John bestowed the estate of Boughton in Northampton upon him in 1202. John was the ruler of both England and France and apparently awarded Boughton, or Boketon, to Lord Alexander in return for the latter's support during a rebellion that raged in England while the king was in France putting down a similar rebellion there. The exact extent of the estate is not known, but the least a great baron could own and hold his rank was fifty hides of land, i.e., six thousand acres. Halstead, in his Succinct Genealogies, a very rare work done in 1585, says that at one time the Greenes were the largest land owners in the kingdom. Lord Alexander assumed a surname after his chief estate de Greene de Boketon, i.e., the Lord of the Park of the Deer Enclosure. A green in the early day was a park. Boketon is an old, old word meaning the buck's ton, or paled-in enclosure. Centuries ago the terminal syllable, ton, had lost its original sense and meant a town. So that Boketon, still used in the original sense, shows that Lord Alexander came to an estate named long before and noted for its extensive parks and deer preserves. Boketon became Bucks, Buckston, and later Boughton, its present name. It lies in Northampton. For five generations the de Greenes spoke Norman-French. They were a family that delighted in athletic sports. They hunted, hawked, and attended tournaments, played games of tennis, cricket, and bowls. All of them in their generations were noted for their fine bowling alleys, two or three of which were the finest in England. Charles I was arrested at Althorpe, where he had gone to bowl, and this once belonged to the Greenes. Alexander had a passionate love of horticulture that has throughout these seven centuries dominated his entire line of descendants. There is probably no other English speaking family today that has so many members that delight in beautiful home grounds and in flowers and fruit and finely kept farms. In 1215, when the English Lords forced King John to sign the Magna Carta, there were only seven barons that adhered to John and Lord Alexander de Greene de Boketon was not one of them. Therefore, he must have been one of the two thousand nobles who put their united protests in the hands of twenty-five lords who presented the Magna Carta to the king and forced him to sign that document that guaranteed both the lives and the property of his subjects from arbitrary spoliation. One of the signers was Roger, Earl of Winchester, whose great-great granddaughter, Lucie de la Zouche, married Sir Alexander de Greene's great-great grandson, Lord Thomas(5).Greene's NortonAlexander was born Abt. 1181 in Northamptonshire, England, son of Geoffrey de la Zouche, Viscount de Porhoet, and wife Hawise de Fergant. His paternal grandparent were Alan De La Zouche born Abt. 1066 (Viscount de Porhoet) and wife Constance de Bretagne. His maternal grandparents were Alain IV Fergant duc de Bretagne (~1070-13 Oct 1119) and Ermangarde D'Anjou. He is a direct descendant of William I The Conqueror by his great grandmother Maud FitzRoy (daughter of King of England, Henry I Beauclerc and mistress Sibyl Corbet). Sir Alexander was born under the 'Hohenstaufen Dynasty' with first emperor Frederick I reigning at his birth (c1152-1190, crowned 1155), then emperor Henry VI (1190-1197, crowned 1191). SOURCE: Universal Standard Encylclopedia, Vol. 12, Pgs. 4370-4373 Alexander, a younger son of the de la Zouche family, was given an estate and title as a "Great Baron" by King John of England in 1202 AD. The estate was that of de Greene de Boketon. Walter de Boketon, was in the Seventh Crusade in 1244. Walter's son, John de Greene de Boketon, died in the next crusade in 1271 leaving a year old son, Thomas, who became Sir Thomas de Greene (married Alice Bottisham). Then came Thomas de Greene (b: c1288) who married Lady Lucy de la Zouche, his relative. Abt. 1202, Sir Alexander married Lady Isabelle De Cantilupe (~1186 Reading & Market, Ellesborough, Buckshire, England). She was the daughter of Sir William De Cantilupe and Lady Mecelina Marcelina De Braci. Sir Alexander and Lady Isabelle had at least two known children: Sir Walter, 2nd Lord of Boketon (~1202-~1275); and Alexander (~1235-???). It is commonly assumed that all their children were born at their estate in Boughton (fka Boketon), Northamptonshire, England. This area is now known as Greene's Norton. Sir Alexander was born under the 'Hohenstaufen Dynasty' with first emperor Frederick I reigning at his birth (c1152-1190, crowned 1155), then emperor Henry VI (1190-1197, crowned 1191). SOURCE: Universal Standard Encylclopedia, Vol. 12, Pgs. 4370-4373 Alexander, a younger son of the de la Zouche family, was given an estate and title as a "Great Baron" by King John of England in 1202 AD. The estate was that of de Greene de Boketon. Walter de Boketon, was in the Seventh Crusade in 1244. Walter's son, John de Greene de Boketon, died in the next crusade in 1271 leaving a year old son, Thomas, who became Sir Thomas de Greene (married Alice Bottisham). Then came Thomas de Greene (b: c1288) who married Lady Lucy de la Zouche, his relative. Abt. 1202, Sir Alexander married Lady Isabelle De Cantilupe (~1186 Reading & Market, Ellesborough, Buckshire, England). She was the daughter of Sir William De Cantilupe and Lady Mecelina Marcelina De Braci. Sir Alexander and Lady Isabelle had at least two known children: Sir Walter, 2nd Lord of Boketon (~1202-~1275); and Alexander (~1235-???). It is commonly assumed that all their children were born at their estate in Boughton (fka Boketon), Northamptonshire, England. This area is now known as Greene's Norton. All that we really know of the first Lord de Greene may be summed up in this brief paragraph. Alexander, of the House of Arundel, a Knight of the King's court, was the great-great grandson of Alen de la Zouche, the uncle of William the Conqueror and Duke of Bretagne, and the great grandson of one of the Norman nobles who invaded England with William the Conqueror in 1066. King John bestowed the estate of Boughton in Northampton upon him in 1202. John was the ruler of both England and France and apparently awarded Boughton, or Boketon, to Lord Alexander in return for the latter's support during a rebellion that raged in England while the king was in France putting down a similar rebellion there. The exact extent of the estate is not known, but the least a great baron could own and hold his rank was fifty hides of land, i.e., six thousand acres. Halstead, in his Succinct Genealogies, a very rare work done in 1585, says that at one time the Greenes were the largest land owners in the kingdom. Lord Alexander assumed a surname after his chief estate de Greene de Boketon, i.e., the Lord of the Park of the Deer Enclosure. A green in the early day was a park. Boketon is an old, old word meaning the buck's ton, or paled-in enclosure. Centuries ago the terminal syllable, ton, had lost its original sense and meant a town. So that Boketon, still used in the original sense, shows that Lord Alexander came to an estate named long before and noted for its extensive parks and deer preserves. Boketon became Bucks, Buckston, and later Boughton, its present name. It lies in Northampton. For five generations the de Greenes spoke Norman-French. They were a family that delighted in athletic sports. They hunted, hawked, and attended tournaments, played games of tennis, cricket, and bowls. All of them in their generations were noted for their fine bowling alleys, two or three of which were the finest in England. Charles I was arrested at Althorpe, where he had gone to bowl, and this once belonged to the Greenes. Alexander had a passionate love of horticulture that has throughout these seven centuries dominated his entire line of descendants. There is probably no other English speaking family today that has so many members that delight in beautiful home grounds and in flowers and fruit and finely kept farms. In 1215, when the English Lords forced King John to sign the Magna Carta, there were only seven barons that adhered to John and Lord Alexander de Greene de Boketon was not one of them. Therefore, he must have been one of the two thousand nobles who put their united protests in the hands of twenty-five lords who presented the Magna Carta to the king and forced him to sign that document that guaranteed both the lives and the property of his subjects from arbitrary spoliation. One of the signers was Roger, Earl of Winchester, whose great-great granddaughter, Lucie de la Zouche, married Sir Alexander de Greene's great-great grandson, Lord Thomas(5). My first known "Greene" ancestor is Sir Alexander De Boketon, born Alexander de la Zouche, son of Sir Geoffrey de la Zouche. Alexander was a Knight and the 1st Lord of Boketon. He was born Abt. 1181 in County Northampton, England, which was then part of the new 'Holy Roman Empire*', and died Abt. 1236 in Boughton (aka Boketon), County Northampton, England but what is now Greene's Norton, County Northampton, England. His spouse is presumed to be a Lady Isabelle De Cantilupe, daughter of Sir William De Cantilupe. Sir Alexander De Boketon and Lady Isabelle are my 22nd maternal great grandparents. One of their son's was named Walter De Boketon. This Walter De Boketon is said to have been born Abt. 1200 in County of Northampton, England, and died Abt. 1275 probably also in England. To-date, Walter De Boketon's spouse is unknown. In the year 1202, the english King John (of Plantagenet line ~1199-1216) bestowed the estate of Boketon (now Boughton) on Sir Alexander De Boketon, a knight in his court. The following year (1203), "Alexander de Boketon recovered the advowson of the Church of St. John the Baptist at Boketon (a seigniorial right of the Lords of Boketon) against Simon de Hecter and Simon de Boketon. http://o.mfcreative.com/f1/file10/objects/d/7/f/ad7f35d2-a794-4719-9480-ae810aa4ff25-3.jpg http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=image&guid=5405d4fc-41a7-4b5d-8ecb-15530384a1c3&tid=49148314&pid=892 http://o.mfcreative.com/f1/file08/objects/2/6/f/826f9438-e22d-4654-a739-3ed97ebb5085-3.jpg http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=image&guid=3507b24d-1650-4e81-bebe-158001b0f482&tid=49148314&pid=892 http://o.mfcreative.com/f1/file14/objects/d/9/a/ed9a5e2c-5364-4dbe-a34c-49856dbfb2c2-4.jpg http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=image&guid=037af5f5-0f67-4244-8cf4-e16321f7d893&tid=49148314&pid=892
grootouders
ouders
broers/zussen
kinderen
Lord Alexander deGrene deBoketon | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
(1) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Euphemia DeCantilupe | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
(2) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Ms DeGreene | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
(3) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Alexander DeBoketon | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
(4) 1205 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Sybilla DeCantilupe | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
(5) 1202 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Mrs. DeGreene DeBoketon | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||