Hij is getrouwd met Elizabeth de Montfort.
Zij zijn getrouwd rond 1292 te Cassington, Oxfordshire, England.Bron 1
Kind(eren):
BARONY OF MONTAGUs in Oxon and Berks he was summoned for military service in 1301, and in March 1302/3, as "King's yeoman," he was under orders for Scotland, being appointed to supervise the shipping for the war. In May 1304 he was with the King at the siege of Stirling. He and his uncle Amauri de St. Amand, governor of Oxford Castle, and others were in this year imprisoned in the Tower for an alleged offence at Oxford, his father Simon being one of William's sureties; but he was soon acquitted. He was ceremoniously knighted, with many others, at the knighting of Prince Edward, 22 May 1306. In Feb. 1306/7 he was with his father on service in Scotland. In 1309 he had a charter of free warren at Aston Clinton, Bucks, which was perhaps settled on him on his marriage; and took part in the tournament at Stepney. In 1311 he was commissioned to survey Hastings and other castles and their defences, and to provide custodians for them, and on 29 September was given charge of Berkhamstead Castle. In 1312 he gave the advowson of Donyat to Medmenham Abbey, and in 1314 had licence to alienate land, to Godstowe nunnery. In May 1313 he accompanied the King and Queen overseas to attend the Coronation of Louis X. He was on service in Scotland again this year and the next, and had very varied duties as captain of the knights of the King's household. Early in 1315 he was abroad again for the King, and in Feb. 1315/6 was a commander in Wales against Llewelyn Bren, and on the submission of the Welsh was one of the commissioners to take fines from Llewelyn's followers. In July 1316 he was in Bristol, on a mission to settle the disputes between Sir Bartholomew de Badlesmere and the burgesses. In recognition of his good services he was granted, in August 1316, the marriage of Joan, daughter and heir of Theobald de Verdun [Lord Verdun], and on 15 January 1316/7, as steward of the King's household, he was awarded 200 marks per annum until the King should provide him with lands or rents of that value. This was done in June, when the manors of Gravesend, Kent, and Kingsbury, Somerset, &c., were granted to him, as the King's bachelor, for life; and on 26 September he had a grant of free warren in Saxlingham, Norfolk, and other of his manors, and licence to crenellate his house at Cassington, Oxon. He was summoned to Parliament 20 November 1317 and later, and was one of the majores barones of the King's party. In August 1318 he was made keeper of Abingdon Abbey, which was voluntarily under the King's protection on account of its debts, and on 20 November was appointed Seneschal of Gascony, where he died in the following year.d 18 October 1319, in Gascony. In May 1320 his widow renounced her dower in certain lands. She married, 8 June 1322, Sir Thomas DE FURNIVALLE, of Sheffield, Worksop, &c. (LORD FURNIVALLE], who died shortly before 18 April 1332. She died in August 1354, and was buried in the Prior of St. Frideswide (now Christ Church), Oxford, where her tomb is still to be seen in the Latin Chapel. See FURNIVALLE. [Complete Peerage IX:80-2, XIV:482, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)]t, 1318. This nobleman had distinguished himself in the Scottish wars, in the lifetime of his father, and was made a knight of the Bath. In the 11th Edward II [1318], being then a steward of the king's household, his lordship was constituted seneschal of the Duchy of Aquitaine, and had license to make a castle of his house at Kersyngton, in Oxfordshire. He subsequently obtained other extensive grants from the crown. He m. Elizabeth, dau. of Sir Peter de Montfort, of Beaudesert, by whom (who m. 2ndly, Thomas, Lord Furnival), he had surviving issue, William, his successor; Simon, in hold orders, bishop of Worcester, translated to the see of Ely, in 1336; Edward (Sir), summoned to parliament as a Baron, temp. Edward III; Katherine, m. to Sir William Carrington, Knt.; Alice, m. to --- Auberie; Mary, m. to Sir -- Cogan; Elizabeth, prioress of Haliwell; Hawise, m. to Sir -- Bavent; Maud, abbess of Berking; Isabel, a nun at Berking. His lordship d. in Gascony, 1319, but was buried at St. Frideswide, now Christ Church, Oxford. He was s. by his eldest surviving son, William de Montacute, 3rd baron Montacute. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 371, Montacute, Barons Montacute, Earls of Salisbury]
KB William III 2nd Baron de Montagu | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
± 1292 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Elizabeth de Montfort |
1319