Let op: Was jonger dan 16 jaar (14) toen kind (Joan de Cobham) werd geboren (??-??-1319).
Zij had een relatie met Sir John de Cobham.
Kind(eren):
Aboutedit | history
http://www.thepeerage.com/p1982.htm#i19817
wife of JohnCobham of Kent and Roger Selkeld dau of John Beauchamp, 1st Lord of Somerset and Joan Chenuit
Children: John COBHAM b: ABT 1324 in Cobham, Kent, England Joan Margaret COBHAM b: 1319 in Nettlestead, Gloucester, England
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Source:
History of Parliament: British Political, Social & Local History
http://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/volume/1386-1421/member/crackenthorpe-john-1436
John Crackenthorpe, Knight
Biography
John’s ancestors acquired the manor of Newbiggin in the 13th century, although they probably came originally from the nearby village of Crackenthorpe, where they also owned property. They occupied other farmland and tenements in Brougham, Kirkby Thore, Knock and Maulds Meaburn in Westmorland, together with less extensive holdings in Culgaith and Blencarn, Cumberland, so it is hardly surprising that they achieved prominence in the local community. John’s father, William, served briefly as coroner of Westmorland and may well have been a lawyer. We cannot now tell what sort of legal training John himself received, but it seems unlikely that the Cliffords, who were feudal overlords of Newbiggin, would have employed him so regularly had he not been well-qualified in the law. He was evidently still very young at the time of his marriage to Alice, the second daughter and coheir of Roger Salkeld, whose estates lay exclusively in Cumberland. On Salkeld’s death, in December 1378, the customary third of his property was assigned as dower to his widow Joan, while Alice and her sister, Margaret, divided the rest equally. John took immediate possession of his wife’s inheritance in Ousby, Great Salkeld, Penrith and Skirwith; and since Margaret left no children, her share eventually passed into his hands as well. It was not, however, until Joan’s death, in 1415, that the Crackenthorpes gained control of all Roger Salkeld’s estates, which were duly entailed upon their eldest son, William II.
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Joan de Beauchamp | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Sir John de Cobham |
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