Jean de Lascaris de Vintimille
M, b. circa 1265
Guy de Beauchamp1
M, b. circa 1270, d. 12 August 1315
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
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Isolt de Mortimer1
F, b. circa 1270, d. 1328
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
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Robert de Beauchamp1
M, b. circa 1271
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
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John de Beauchamp1
M, b. circa 1273
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
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Anne de Beauchamp1
F, b. circa 1274, d. after 1296
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
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Joan De Fiennes1
F, b. circa 1276
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
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Jean De Fiennes1
M, b. 1277, d. 1331
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
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Margaret de Beauchamp1
F, b. circa 1278
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
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Alice de Toeni1
F, b. 1278, d. 1325
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
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Maud 'Matilda' de Beauchamp1
F, b. circa 1282, d. 1360
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
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Joan de Geneville1
F, b. between 2 February 1285 and 1286, d. 19 October 1356
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
- [S220] George Edward Cockayne, Peerage of England, Vol IX:441.
- [S220] George Edward Cockayne, Peerage of England, Vol IX:442.
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Matilda (Maud) de Mortimer1
F, b. circa 1286, d. 18 September 1312
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
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Roger de Mortimer1
M, b. 25 April 1287, d. 29 November 1330
| Note* | | Roger Mortimer, 2nd Baron of Mortimer, was summoned to Parliament1306-1326. This nobleman, notorious in our histories as the paramourof Isabel, Queen Consort of Edward II, was in his sixteenth year atthe death of his father. He married Jaone, daughter of Peter deGenville, Lord of Trim, in Ireland. In 34th of Edward I, about 1306,he received the honour of Knighthood. He aided in the Scottish wars,and in 3rd of Edward II, 1310, he was made Governor of the Castle ofBuelt, and later was Lord Lieutenant of Ireland. During the latterpart of Edward II's reign he attached himself to the Queen, and atlength fled with her and Prince Edward to France. He later returnedand was made Earl of March soon after the accession of Edward III. Hehereupon became proud beyond measure (so that his son Geoffrey calledhim the King of Folly) and assumed royal authority. His career was nothowever of long continuance, for King Edward III, becoming sensible ofhis folly and vices, had him seized in the Castle of Queen Isabel inNottingham and was convicted under various charges, the first wascomplicity in the murder of Edward II, and receiving sentence of deathwas hanged in 1330. He left by Joan de Geneville 4 sons and 7daughters. By marriage to Joanna de Geneville, a later Roger Mortimer (1287-1330)secured possession of Ludlow Castle. This became the family'sprincipal power base for the next six generations. Roger Mortimer was a very powerful and ambitious Marcher Lord. He wasthe first of several members of his family to attempt to seize thethrone of England. He fought the Scottish Wars and made attempts toremove the King's favorites, at first with some success. In 1323 hewas imprisoned in the Tower of London, but escaped to France, an eventhe later commemorated by building St Peter's chapel in the outerbailey of Ludlow Castle. In France, Mortimer formed an alliance with Queen Isabella, who haddeserted her effeminate husband, King Edward II of England. Theyraised an army, invaded England and forced Edward to abdicate in favorof his youngest son, the future Edward III. Mortimer entertainedIsabella at his castles on the Welsh borders and they became famouslovers. Meanwhile, Edward II was cruelly murdered at Berkeley Castlein 1327. Following Edward's death, Mortimer, acting as regent, was the virtualruler of England, but he over-reached himself and aroused the anger ofother barons. In October 1330 he was arrested at Nottingham andsentenced to death. He was executed at Tyburn in London. Later, the ambitions of the Mortimers became part of the greatdynastic struggles of the mid-15th century which became known as the'War of the Roses.' From Encyclopedia Britannica Online, article titled: 'March, RogerMortimer, 1st Earl of, 8th Baron Of Wigmore' 'lover of the English King Edward II's queen, Isabella of France, withwhom he contrived Edward's deposition and murder (1327). For threeyears thereafter he was virtual king of England during the minority ofEdward III. 'The descendant of Norman knights who had accompanied William theConqueror, he inherited wealthy family estates and fortunes,principally in Wales and Ireland, and in 1304 became 8th Baron ofWigmore on the death of his father, the 7th baron. He devoted theearly years of his majority to obtaining effective control of hisIrish lordships against his wife's kinsmen, the Lacys, who summoned totheir aid Edward Bruce, brother of King Robert I of Scotland, when hewas fighting to become king of Ireland. In 1316 Mortimer was defeatedat Kells and withdrew to England, but afterward, as King Edward II'slieutenant in Ireland (November 1316), he was largely instrumental inovercoming Bruce and in driving the Lacys from Meath. 'In 1317 he was associated with the Earl of Pembroke's 'middle party'in English politics; but distrust of the Despensers (see Despenser,Hugh Le and Hugh Le) drove him, in common with other marcher lords,into opposition and violent conflict with the Despensers in SouthWales in 1321. But, receiving no help from Edward II's other enemies,Roger and his uncle Roger Mortimer of Chirk made their submission inJanuary 1322. Imprisoned in the Tower of London, Roger escaped in 1323and fled to France, where in 1325 he was joined by Queen Isabella, whobecame his mistress. The exiles invaded England in September 1326;the fall of the Despensers was followed by the deposition of Edward IIand his subsequent murder (1327), in which Mortimer was deeplyimplicated. 'Thereafter, as the queen's paramour, Mortimer virtually ruledEngland. He used his position to further his own ends. Created Earl ofMarch in October 1328, he secured for himself the lordships ofDenbigh, Oswestry, and Clun, formerly belonging to the Earl ofArundel; the marcher lordships of the Mortimers of Chirk; andMontgomery, granted to him by the queen. His insatiable avarice, hisarrogance, and his unpopular policy toward Scotland aroused againstMortimer a general revulsion among his fellow barons, and in October1330 the young king Edward III, at the instigation of Henry ofLancaster, had him seized at Nottingham and conveyed to the Tower.Condemned for crimes declared to be notorious by his peers inParliament, he was hanged at Tyburn as a traitor, and his estates wereforfeited to the crown.'1 |
| Birth* | 25 April 1287 | Netherwood, Thornbury, Herefordshire, England, Some sources states that he was born on May 3, 1287.2,1 |
| Marriage* | before 6 October 1306 | Principal=Joan de Geneville3,1 |
| Burial* | 1330 | Church of Grey Friar, Shrewsbury, Shropshire, England1 |
| Christening | 1330 | Netherwood, Thornbury, Herefordshire, England1 |
| Death* | 29 November 1330 | Elms, Tyburn, Warwickshire, England1 |
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
- [S220] George Edward Cockayne, Peerage of England, Vol IX:433.
- [S220] George Edward Cockayne, Peerage of England, Vol IX:441.
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Hugh de Mortimer1
M, b. circa 1290
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
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Joan de Mortimer1
F, b. circa 1292
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
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Walter de Mortimer1
M, b. circa 1294
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
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Margaret de Mortimer1
F, b. 1296
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
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Edmund de Mortimer1
M, b. circa 1298
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
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John Cobb Esq.1
M, b. circa 1300
| Citations | - [S34] John E. Cobb, Cobb Chronicles, An Overview of the clan.
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John de Mortimer1
M, b. 1300, d. between 3 January 1317 and 1318
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
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Elizabeth de Mortimer1
F, b. circa 1302
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
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Isabel de Beauchamp1
F, b. circa 1303
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
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Elizabeth de Beauchamp1
F, b. circa 1305, d. 1359
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
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Edmund de Mortimer1
M, b. between 1305 and 1306, d. BEF 1 JAN 1331 32
| Death* | BEF 1 JAN 1331 32 | 1 |
| Note* | | Lord Mortimer of Wigmore.1 |
| Birth* | between 1305 and 1306 | 1 |
| Marriage* | 27 June 1316 | Kinlet, Shropshire, England2,1 |
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
- [S220] George Edward Cockayne, Peerage of England, Vol IX, p. 285.
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John de Beauchamp1
M, b. circa 1307, d. 2 December 1360
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
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Margaret de Mortimer1
F, b. circa 1308, d. 5 May 1337
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
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Maud de Beauchamp1
F, b. circa 1309, d. 25 July 1369
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
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Marie de Haverserke dame de Straten1
F, b. circa 1310
| Citations | - [S55] SGCF, Memoires de la Societe Genealogique Canadienne Francaise, 48(3): pp190-216.
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Jean IV s. de Ghistelles1
M, b. circa 1310, d. 26 August 1346
| Citations | - [S55] SGCF, Memoires de la Societe Genealogique Canadienne Francaise, 48(3): pp190-216.
- [S245] Leo van de Pas, online http://www.genealogics.org.
- [S166] Unknown author, ES, Reference: VII 96.
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Guillaume Pierre II de Lascaris de Vintimille1
M, b. circa 1310
| Birth* | circa 1310 | Europe1 |
| Occupation* | | comte de Vintimille et de Tende |
| Citations | - [S149] Lascaris de Vintimille Royal Gateway, online fp-www.wwnet.net/~dulongj/baillon/lascaris.htm.
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Katharine Mortimer1
F, b. circa 1310, d. between 4 August 1368 and 1369
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
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Emma de Beauchamp1
F, b. circa 1311
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
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Thomas de Beauchamp1
M, b. between 14 February 1313 and 1314, d. 13 November 1369
| Note* | | He was the Earl of Warwick, England.1 |
| Birth* | between 14 February 1313 and 1314 | Warwick Castle, Warwickshire, England1 |
| Marriage* | circa 1334 | Warwick Castle, Warwickshire, England, Principal=Katharine Mortimer1 |
| Burial | 1369 | St. Mary's, Warwick, Warwickshire, England1 |
| Death* | 13 November 1369 | Calais, Pas-De-Calais, France1 |
| Burial* | after 13 November 1369 | St. Mary's Church, Warwick, Warwickshire, England1 |
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
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Lucia or Jane de Beauchamp1
F, b. circa 1315
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
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Pierre de Baillon1
M, b. circa 1330, d. 19 September 1356
| Citations | - [S207] Raymond Ouimet & Nicole Mauger, Catherine de Baillon, p.88.
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Philippe de Beauchamp1
M, b. circa 1334
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
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Richard Cobb Esq.1,2
M, b. circa 1335
| Citations | - [S59] George Ernest Bowman, Bowman Files.
- [S34] John E. Cobb, Cobb Chronicles, An Overview of the clan.
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Maud de Beauchamp1
F, b. circa 1335, d. between 1402 and 1403
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
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Guy de Beauchamp1
M, b. circa 1337
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
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John de Beauchamp1
M, b. circa 1339
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
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Marguerite dame de Dudzeele1
F, b. circa 1340
| Citations | - [S55] SGCF, Memoires de la Societe Genealogique Canadienne Francaise, 48(3): pp190-216.
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Roger de Ghistelles s. de Dudzeele et de Straten1
M, b. circa 1340
| Citations | - [S55] SGCF, Memoires de la Societe Genealogique Canadienne Francaise, 48(3): pp190-216.
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Roger de Beauchamp1
M, b. circa 1341
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
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Hurom 'Jerome' de Beauchamp1
M, b. circa 1343
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
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Reynburn de Beauchamp1
M, b. before 24 April 1344
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
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Alice de Beauchamp1
F, b. circa 1345
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
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Elizabeth de Beauchamp1
F, b. circa 1345
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
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Richard de Beauchamp1
M, b. circa 1347
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
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Agnes de Beauchamp1
F, b. circa 1348
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
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