Zij is getrouwd met Rev Sir Piers Legh.
Zij zijn getrouwd in het jaar 1467 te England.
Echtgeno(o)t(e): Ellen Legh (geboren Savage)
Kind(eren):
Ellen Savage, daughter of John Savage & Katherine Stanley, was born circa 1460 at of Clifton, Cheshire, England. hdale, & Clitheroe obtained a marriage license in 1467; Date of Dispensation. on 17 May 1491 at Bewganet, Sussex, England.1te 1370s, when the family acquired lands at Clifton by the marriage of John Savage (d. 1386) to Margaret Danyers.[1] Sir John Savage (d. 1597/8) was the seneschal of Halton Castle, and also served at various times as a member of parliament for Cheshire, mayor of Chester and High Sheriff of Cheshire.[1][2] Rocksavage was built for him on a hillside overlooking the River Weaver. Started in around 1565, the house was completed in 1568.[3][4][5][6] Rocksavage was one of the great Elizabethan "prodigy houses" of Cheshire.[7][8] Hearth-tax assessments of 1674 show that it was the second largest house in the county, its fifty hearths being surpassed only by Cholmondeley House.[9] An early 17th century description praised the mansion's "magnificent fabric".[10] The medieval family seat of Clifton Hall stood nearby, and was retained as farm and service buildings.[2][9]l War, John Savage, Earl Rivers, declared for the royalist side. Rocksavage was ransacked by parliamentarian forces, and the roof and part of the walls were destroyed.[8] The first Duke of Monmouth stayed at Rocksavage on 13 September 1682 as a guest of Thomas Savage, Earl Rivers, while touring Cheshire to assess support for a faction opposed to Charles II.[2][11] James Barry, Earl of Barrymore, in the early 18th century.[12] Further buildings were constructed higher up the hill by the Earl of Barrymore, possibly by the architect Henry Sephton.[4] Now known as Clifton Hall, these might have been intended as a replacement for Rocksavage or as service buildings for the main mansion.[3][4] A few years after these buildings were erected, Rocksavage was abandoned when the Barrymore heiress married into the Cholmondeley family and the principal seat of the joint estate became Cholmondeley House.[4][12][13] (The marquesses of Cholmondeley retain "Earl of Rocksavage" as a courtesy title for the heir.[14]) The empty house soon decayed and was already in ruins by 1782.[3][13]
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Rev Sir Piers Legh |
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