User Home Page Genealogy Report: Ancestors of Dr. Dan L. Anglin


Ancestors of Dr. Dan L. Anglin
280035456.// De Percy, Earl of Northumberland, born November 10, 1341 in O., England; died February 19, 1406/07 in Bramham Moor, b., England.He was the son of 560070912. [BARON PERCY] Henry De PERCY, Baron of Percy and 560070913. [BARONESS PERCY] Mary Plantagenet, Baroness of Percy.He married 280035457. Margaret De Neville, Baroness of Ros July 12, 1358.
280035457.Margaret De Neville, Baroness of Ros, born February 12, 1340/41 in Raby, D., England; died May 12, 1372.She was the daughter of 560070914. Ralph De Neville, Baron of Neville and 560070915. Alice De Audley, Baroness of Neville.
Child of // De Percy and Margaret De Neville is:
140017728 | i. | Sir Henry (Hotspur) De Percy, Baron of Percy, born May 20, 1364; died July 21, 1403; married Elizabeth De Mortimer December 10, 1379 in England. |
280035458.Edmund De Mortimer, 3rd Earl Of March4670, born February 01, 1351/52; died 13814671,4672.He was the son of 560070916. Roger De Mortimer, II Earl Of March.He married 280035459. Philippa Plantagenet WFT Est. 1371-13804672.
280035459.Philippa Plantagenet4672, born August 16, 1355; died 13814673,4674.She was the daughter of 560070918. Lionel Plantagenet, Duke of Clarence and 560070919. Elizabeth De Burgh.
Children of Edmund De Mortimer and Philippa Plantagenet are:
140017729 | i. | Elizabeth De Mortimer, born February 12, 1369/70; died April 20, 1417 in England; married (1) Thomas Lord of Camoys; married (2) Sir Henry (Hotspur) De Percy, Baron of Percy December 10, 1379 in England. | ||
140020006 | ii. | Roger De Mortimer, 4th Earl Of March, born 1374; died August 1398 in Kells; married [II] Eleanor (Alianore) De HOLAND WFT Est. 1387-1397. |
280035460.John De Neville, III Baron of Neville, born 1328 in Raby Castle, Raby, England; died October 17, 1388.He was the son of 560070914. Ralph De Neville, Baron of Neville and 560070915. Alice De Audley, Baroness of Neville.He married 280035461. Maud De Percy July 1357 in Of Alnwick, N., England.
280035461.Maud De Percy, born Abt. 1335 in Alnwick Castle, Alnwick, England (Ist Wife of John Neville); died February 18, 1377/78.She was the daughter of 560070922. Henry De Percy, XI Baron of Percy and 560070923. Imania (Idonea) De Clifford, Baroness of Percy.
Child of John De Neville and Maud De Percy is:
140017730 | i. | [EARL OF WESTMORLAND] Sir Ralph IV Baron De Neville, born 1364 in Castle Raby, England; died October 21, 1425 in Raby Castle, Raby, England; married (1) [COUNTESS OF WESTMORELAND Margaret De Stafford Abt. 1382 in Of, Stafford, Staffordshire, England; married (2) Joan Beaufort Plantagenet, Cntess of Westmorland November 29, 1425 in C., France. |
280035464.// Poynings, Baron of Poynings, born 1357.He married 280035465. Isabel Fitzpayn Baroness of Poynings.
280035465.Isabel Fitzpayn Baroness of Poynings, born 1357.
Child of // Poynings and Isabel Poynings is:
140017732 | i. | Sir Knight Robert Poynings, born December 03, 1382 in Okeford, F., England; died October 02, 1446 in Orleans, France; married Elizabeth (Elanor) De Grey Abt. 1409. |
280035466.R. Grey, Baron of Grey, born 1362.He married 280035467. M. Ros, Baroness of Grey.
280035467.M. Ros, Baroness of Grey, born Abt. 1361.
Child of R. Grey and M. Ros is:
140017733 | i. | Elizabeth (Elanor) De Grey, born Abt. 1393 in Okeford, d., England; married Sir Knight Robert Poynings Abt. 1409. |
280035468.De Berkeley, Baron of Berkeley, born 1293.He married 280035469. Katharine Clivedon.
280035469.Katharine Clivedon, born Abt. 1310.
Child of De and Katharine Clivedon is:
140017734 | i. | Sir Knight John De Berkeley, born January 21, 1350/51 in Wotton, G., England; died 1428 in Beverstone, England; married Elizabeth Betteshorne |
280035470.John Betteshorne, born 1327.He married 280035471. Goda.
280035471.Goda, born 1329.
Child of John Betteshorne and Goda is:
140017735 | i. | Elizabeth Betteshorne, born Abt. 1353 in Beverstone, England; married Sir Knight John De Berkeley |
280035472.Guillem Ap Jenken, born Abt. 1327 in Wernddu, M., England; died Abt. 1377 in Perth, Hir., M., England.He was the son of 560070944. Jenken Ap Adam and 560070945. Gwenlian Verch Aron.He married 280035473. Gwenlian Verch Howel Abt. 1326 in Wernddu, M. England.
280035473.Gwenlian Verch Howel, born 1340 in England.
Child of Guillem Jenken and Gwenlian Howel is:
140017736 | i. | Thomas Ap Guillem Herbert, born Abt. 1372 in Wernddu, M., England; died July 04, 1438; married Maud Morley Abt. 1402 in Ragland, M., England. |
280035474.John Morley, born 1354.
Child of John Morley is:
140017737 | i. | Maud Morley, born Abt. 1380 in Ragland, M., England; married Thomas Ap Guillem Herbert Abt. 1402 in Ragland, M., England. |
280035476.Llywelyn Ap Hywel, born Abt. 1330.He married 280035477. Mawd Verch Leuan.
280035477.Mawd Verch Leuan, born Abt. 1330.
Child of Llywelyn Hywel and Mawd Leuan is:
140017738 | i. | Sir Knight Dafydd G. Llewelyn, born Abt. 1351 in Peutun, L., Wales; married Gwenllian Verch Gwilym |
280035480.Walter Devereux, born Abt. 1357.He married 280035481. Agnes Crophull.
280035481.Agnes Crophull, born Abt. 1366.
Child of Walter Devereux and Agnes Crophull is:
140017740 | i. | Walter Devereaux, born Bef. 1387 in Salisbury, W., England; died 1435; married Elizabeth (Maude) Bromwitch |
280035482.Thomas Bromwich, born Abt. 1361.
Child of Thomas Bromwich is:
140017741 | i. | Elizabeth (Maude) Bromwitch, born Bef. 1387 in Salisbury, W., England; married Walter Devereaux |
280035504.Edward III Plantegenet King Of England4674, born November 13, 1312 in Windsor Castle, England4675,4676; died June 21, 1377 in Shene Castle, Surrey, England4677,4678.He was the son of 560071008. Edward II Plantagenet King Of England and 560071009. [QUEEN OF ENGLAND] Isabella Princess Of FRANCE.He married 280035505. Philippa Of Hainaut Queen of England June 24, 1328 in York Minster, York, England4679.
280035505.Philippa Of Hainaut Queen of England4680, born June 24, 1312 in Mons, Belgium, Valenciennes4681,4682; died August 15, 1369 in Windsor Castle, England4683,4684.She was the daughter of 560071010. William G Avesnes III Count Hainaut & Holland and 560071011. Jeanne Of Valois Countess of Hainault.
Notes for Edward III Plantegenet King Of England:
[Brøderbund WFT Vol. 3, Ed. 1, Tree #2553, Date of Import: Oct 5, 1997]
Also had 2 sons who die young and 5 daughters.
Edward III (born 1312, ruled 1327-77) became king at the age of 15 when his father, Edward II, was overthrown. He proved himself a chivalrous knight rather than a great ruler. He loved warfare, like so many of his line, and tried to give it the glamour of the "good old days" by setting up a Round Table at Windsor Castle in imitation of King Arthur. He also organized the most famous of the English chivalric orders of knighthood, the Order of the Garter. He gained temporary glory but no lasting profit through prolonged fighting in Scotland and in France, where he began the Hundred Years' War (see Hundred Years' War).
During Edward's reign a terrible plague, called the Black Death, wiped out from one third to one half of the country's population and caused great social and economic changes (see Bubonic Plague).
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Excerpted from Compton's Interactive Encyclopedia
Copyright c 1993, 1994 Compton's NewMedia, Inc.
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Edward III (1312-77), king of England (1327-77), who initiated the long, drawn-out struggle with France called the Hundred Years' War.
Edward was born at Windsor on November 13, 1312, the elder son of King Edward II, of the house of Plantagenet. Involved by his mother, Isabella of France (1292-1358), in her intrigues against his father, he was proclaimed king after the latter was forced to abdicate in 1327. During Edward's minority, England was nominally ruled by a council of regency, but the actual power was in the hands of Isabella and her paramour, Roger de Mortimer (1287?-1330). In 1330, however, the young king staged a palace coup and took the power into his own hands. He had Mortimer hanged and confined his mother to her home.
Edward began a series of wars almost directly after he had control of England. Taking advantage of civil war in Scotland in 1333, he invaded the country, defeated the Scots at Halidon Hill, England, and restored Edward de Baliol to the throne of Scotland. Baliol, however, was soon deposed, and later attempts by Edward to establish him permanently as king of Scotland were unsuccessful. In 1337 France came to the aid of Scotland. This action was the culminating point in a series of disagreements between France and England, and Edward declared war on Philip VI of France. In 1340 the English fleet destroyed a larger French fleet off Sluis, the Netherlands. The action resulted in a truce that, although occasionally disturbed, lasted for six years.
War broke out again in 1346. Edward, accompanied by his eldest son, Edward the Black Prince, invaded Normandy and won a great victory over France in the Battle of Crécy. He captured Calais in 1347, and a truce was reestablished. Edward returned to England, where he maintained one of the most magnificent courts in Europe. The war with France was renewed in 1355, and again the English armies were successful. The Peace of Calais, in 1360, gave England all of Aquitaine, and Edward in return renounced his claim, first made in 1328, to the French throne.
Edward continued to assert his will both domestically and abroad. In 1363 he concluded an agreement with his brother-in-law, David II of Scotland, uniting the two kingdoms in the event of David's death without male issue. Three years later Edward repudiated the papacy's feudal supremacy over England, held in fief since 1213. He renewed his war with France, disavowing the Peace of Calais. This time, however, the English armies were unsuccessful. After the truce of 1375, Edward retained few of his previously vast possessions in France.
The king had, by this time, become senile. He was completely in the power of an avaricious mistress, Alice Perrers (flourished 1366-1400), who, along with his fourth son, John of Gaunt, dominated England. Perrers was banished by Parliament in 1376, and Edward himself died at Sheen (now Richmond) on June 21, 1377. He was succeeded by his grandson, Richard II.
"Edward III," Microsoft (R) Encarta. Copyright (c) 1993 Microsoft Corporation. Copyright (c) 1993 Funk & Wagnall's Corporation
World Book Encyclopedia
Edward III (1312-1377) became king of England in 1327.He succeeded his father, Edward II, and belonged to the Plantagenet family of English rulers.During the 1330's, Edward invaded Scotland.He won victories there, but he could not crush the Scottish spirit of independence.
Edward's forces won the Battle of Crecy in what is now the Normandy region of France.This conflict was the first major battle between France and England in the Hundred Years' War (1337-1453).Edward claimed to be the rightful king of France, and he conquered much of that country.He paid for the war by introducing an efficient system of taxing imports.In the last few years of his reign, Edward failed to provide vigorous leadership.The French recovered some of their land, and Edward's popularity declined.Even so, he was long remembered as an ideal king and a fine soldier.Edward was born in Windsor, near London.
Contributor: John Gillingham, Senior Lecturer, London School of Economics and Political Science, Univ. of London.
See also EDWARD (the Black Prince); HUNDRED YEARS' WAR; SALIC LAW.
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Notes for Philippa Of Hainaut Queen of England: [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 3, Ed. 1, Tree #2553, Date of Import: Oct 5, 1997] Also had 2 sons who dies young and 5 daughters. |
Children of Edward England and Philippa England are:
i. | Edward Prince of Wales Black Prince Of England4684, born June 15, 1330 in Woodstock in Oxfordshire4685,4686; died June 08, 1376 in Westminster4687,4688; married Lady Joan Plantagenet Of Kent England WFT Est. 1346-13744689; born WFT Est. 1324-13474689; died WFT Est. 1369-14354689. |
Notes for Edward Prince of Wales Black Prince Of England: [Brøderbund WFT Vol. 3, Ed. 1, Tree #2553, Date of Import: Oct 5, 1997] Was Earl of Chester, Duke of Cornwall, Prince of Wales, Prince of Aquitaine.Buried at Canterbury. -------------------------- Edward, called the Black Prince (1330-76), prince of Wales, who distinguished himself as a military leader during the Hundred Years' War. Edward was born at Woodstock in Oxfordshire on June 15, 1330, the son of King Edward III of England. During his lifetime, he was called Edward of Woodstock; the name Black Prince was given him because of the black armor he wore. In 1346 Edward accompanied his father on the English campaign in Normandy, and during the Battle of Crecy, when he was only 16, the prince won high acclaim for his command of the right wing of the English army. In 1355 Edward was appointed his father's lieutenant in Gascony. He led the English army in a series of raids across southern France and in 1356 defeated a French army at Poitiers, took King John II of France prisoner, and returned in triumph to England with his captive. In 1361 he married his cousin Joan, countess of Kent (1328-85) known as the fair maid of Kent. A year later his father created him prince of Aquitaine and Gascony, and he went to his domains in southern France. As lord of those lands, Edward became, under feudal law, a vassal of the French king. During his rule the prince estranged the Gascon nobles, who believed that he was curtailing their feudal rights. After almost six years of peace, Edward, in 1367, led an expedition to Spain in order to restore Peter the Cruel, the deposed king of Castile, to his throne. During the successful Spanish campaign, Edward contracted an illness from which he never recovered; Peter furthermore refused to repay Edward the vast sums that had been expended on his behalf. On his return to Aquitaine, the prince levied taxes to pay for the expedition, but the disgruntled nobles protested to Edward's feudal lord, King Charles V of France. The prince refused to answer to the charges against him, and Charles renewed the war against England. A revolt against Edward spread through Aquitaine and Gascony, and despite his illness the prince led his troops against the city of Limoges, capturing it in 1370 and massacring its defenders. A year later he returned to England and resigned his principality. During the last years of his life, Edward was a leader of the political faction that rebelled against the misrule of his younger brother, John of Gaunt, duke of Lancaster. Edward finally succumbed to his illness and died at Westminster on June 8, 1376. He was buried in Canterbury Cathedral, in which parts of his armor still hang. "Edward," Microsoft (R) Encarta. Copyright (c) 1993 Microsoft Corporation. Copyright (c) 1993 Funk & Wagnall's Corporation |
ii. | Lionel Plantagenet, Duke of Clarence4690, born November 29, 13384690; died 13684691,4692; married (1) Elizabeth De Burgh WFT Est. 1350-13624693,4694; born 13324695,4696; died 13634697,4698; married (2) Violante Visconti WFT Est. 1354-13674699; born WFT Est. 1334-13514700; died 13824700. | |||
140017752 | iii. | John of Gaunt Duke Of Lancaster K.G. of England, born March 1339/40 in Abbey of St. Bavon, Ghent (Gaunt), Flanders (now in Belgium); died February 03, 1398/99 in Leicester Castel, Leicester, Leicestershire, England (b. St., Paul's Cathedral); married (1) Blanch Of Lancaster; married (2) Constance Of Castile WFT Est. 1366-1389; married (3) Catherine Swynford De Roet, Duchess of Lancaster January 13, 1396/97. | ||
140020004 | iv. | Edmund "Langley" Plantegenet Prince of England, born June 05, 1341 in Hertford Castle; died August 01, 1402 in Langley; married (1) Isabel Perez Princess Of Leon & Castile 1371 in England; married (2) Joan De Holland WFT Est. 1395-1401. | ||
v. | Thomas Plantagenet of England, Duke of Glouceste4701, born 1355 in Woodstock Palace, W., England4702,4703; died 1397 in Calais, Pas-De-Calais, France4704,4705; married Lady Eleanor De Bohun, Duchess of Gloucester August 24, 1376 in Woodstock Palace, W., England; born 1366 in Hereford Castle, Hereford, England; died October 03, 1399 in England. |