Hij heeft/had een relatie met Joan de Braci.
Kind(eren):
-1- Thomas Lygon first appears in the records in 1414 and 1416, when he was commissioner for the king for Worcester (Patent Rolls, p. 265 and 267). In 1415, he is mentioned as having received seisen of a tenement in Worcester. In 1422, Thomas Lygon and others seized the manor of Humphrey Stafford, the King's Knight, the manor of Cheylemush, co. Salop, for the use of the Earl of March. This was probably in a private quarrel of the Staffords and Mortimers in which Thomas Lygon was on the side on the Mortimers. The Peerage (Collins, Vol IX, p. 507-9), seems to have confused his record with that of his son of the same name for it says, "Thomas Lygon mentioned in the 10th year of Henry IV. (1409) was a Member of Parliament in the 16th year of Edward IV (1477)," which is hardly probable. The four Lygon deeds, which are the only ones of earlier date than Thomas Lygon's marriage, throw little light on the history of the family beyond the fact that they held land at Pensax and La Lowe. In the 7th year of Henry VI (1428) Thomas Lygon was certified in the exchequer to hold lands in Warnedon which John Braci (Bracy) sometimes had; for in the 7th year of Henry V (1419). He married in 1419 or 1424, Joan Braci (de Bracy), only daughter and heir of William Bracy, who died before 1450, and his wife Isabel. There were a few possible references to Thomas Lygon elsewhere. He may be the Thomas Lygon who was employed on a commission of Inquiry as to the lands of Thomas Shelley in Kent; if so, it is likely that he was a lawyer, since the family had no connection with that county. He is no doubt the Thomas Lygon who is mentioned incidentally in connection with Shropshire in 1422. Thomas Lygon's feoffees in 1448 made an enfeoffment to his son, William, of the manors and lands dealt with in the deed of 1424.
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Joan de Braci |
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