Ancestors of Scott SCHEIBE

Notes


166871040. Randolph BARKER

Randall who "for killing of a man fled out of Shropshire, and took sancturry at the Abaey of Vale Royall, and served the Abbot who gave him land in Little Over, Chestershire,  A tempory of Henry VII."

Source: Harl, MS 2153, P. 88 Whose descendants long continued at Little Over and Vale Royal.


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166892544. John DE BLACKBURN

Name change went with the name.  Depending on what village they were living or born determined the name the family would take.


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166892672. Richard DE RADCLYFFE *

He was a gallant soldier of the Scottish wars and was given many honors by King Edward I.


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167052546. Sir John LE MARSHALL

Sources: Complete Peerage of England, scotland, Ireland, and Great Britan and the United Kingdom
by G.E.,Cokayne  Sutton Puglishing Ltd.

1215 named in MAGNA CHARTA, King John Advisor

According to Cokayne, (p 525), "John Marshal, the founder of this family, owed his political advancement to his near relationship to William Marshal, Earl of Pembroke, and his feudal positons to his marriage with Aline, eldest daughter and coheir, and afterwards sole heir, of Hubert IV de Rye, lord of the barony of Rye.  John Marshal first appears on the page of history in 1197, as one of the Knights under command of William Marshal, sent by Richard I to assist the Counts of Flanders and Boulogne against France.  In 1203 he was in Normandy with King John, and in the following year went to Ireland in the service of the Earl Marshal, while the Earl went to Normandy in the service of the King.  On 12 Nov. 1207 he was made Marshal of Ireland,  He accompanied King John on his Irish expedition, 1210.  From 1213 to the end of the reigh he was constantly occupied in the King's service in England; in 1215 he was with King John at Runnymede, and one of those by whose advice the King gave his assent to Magna Carta; later in the year he was one of the embassy to the court of Rome.  Returning, he accompanied the King on his march to the North, and attended him at his death at Newark,  19 Oct. 1216.  Nine days later he was present at the Coronation of Henry II at Gloucester, and was a member of the council of his uncle, guardian of the young King.  He was among the "barons" in the Earl Marshal's forces in the relief of Lincoln Castle,  From this time till his death he was continually occupied in the public service in England, Ireland, or abroad."

In the footnotes, Cokayne states that "William Marshal's elder brother John (whose heir he was) died in 1194, leaving a widow, daughter of Adam de Port.  John is described in a charter of King John as nepes Willelmi Marescalle Comitis de de Penbroc.  The very detailed biography of the Earl Marshal...makes no mention of a scecond brother John, and the Earl's nephew appears to have had no patrimony, it is therefore probable that he was an illegimate son of the Earl's elder brother".


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83526273. William LE MARSHALL *

Marshal of Ireland
Possibly illegitimate son of older brother of William Marshal
Served under William Marsahl in Flanders 1197
Served in Ireland under William Marshall 1204
1215 was Supporter of King John
1216 Went with Marshal's forces to  re;oeve :omcp; Cast;e
28 Oct 1216 attended Coronation of Henry III


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167052548. Richard DE TUITE (TUYT) *

The Ulster College of Arms chart as given by the Herald in his Visitation of Ireland 1607 reads as Follows"  "Sir Richard de Tury, Knight assisted King Henry II in his Invasion of Ireland about the Year of Christ 1172 AD, obtained large Possessions in Meath from Hugo De Lacy 1173 AD and built a strong Fort at Granard in 1199 against the Incursions of O'Reilly.  Anno 1210 he founded an Abby of Cistercians and being crushed to death the year following by the fall of a turret at Athlone was buried in the said Abby."


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167052552. William MARTIN *

WILLIAM SON OF MARTIN, son and heir, by 2nd wife, sometimes more fully described as William son of Robert son of Martin, occurs in the Pipe Rolls from 1176 till the time of John.  Between 1170 and 1183 he granted a messuage and land in the manor of Blagdon to the canons of St. Augustine's, Bristol.  He confirmed to the church of St. Michael on the Steep Holme a grant of land in Uphill which had belonged to Serlo de Burci at the time of the Domesday Survey.  In 1176 he was fined by the justices in Somerset.  He witnessed two undated charters of Henry II, and in 1187 was assessed for scutage in Somerset and Devon. In 1194 Richardr I confirmed to William son of Robert son of Martin the lands and liberties of Serlo de Burci, grandfather of Robert.  In 1198 William made an exchange of lands in Combe Martin, Devonshire, with Warin de Morcells, who had married his Sister Sibyl.  In 1207 he gave 20 marks that his bailiff might be liberated and his manor of Pidel' (Puddle Waterson, Dorset) be restored.

He married Ankaret, daughter of Rhys ap GRUFFYDD, prince of south Wales, but in 1191 Rhys, contrary to his oath, expelled William from the castle of Nevern, giving it to his own son Griffin; later another son, Maelgwn, held it under Lleweyly.  He died in 1208 or 1209, when William his son and heir owed 300 marks as relief.  His widow died in or shortly before August 1226.

Sources of information:  The Plantagenet Ancestry, by William Henry Turton, 1968  Page 120
                                 Compete Peerage of England, Scotland, Ireland, Great Britain and the United
                                 Kingdom, by E Cokayne,Sutton Publishing Ltd, 2000


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167052558. Ralph FITZWILLIAM *

RALPH FITZWILLIAM, of Brompton Ralph and Withycombe, which Isabel [his grandaughter]had the manor of Brown in Treborough, a third of the original manor of Withycombe, and other lands.

Sources: Complete Peerage of England, Scotland, Ireland, Great Britain and the United Kingdom, by E Cokayne, Sutton Publishing Ltd, 2000  page" VIII:534


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167052584. Eustrace DE MARTEYN *

It is recoded that in the time of Henry  III (1216-1272), some land was granted y Eustace de Morteyn to Richard de Stafford, and again by Richard to his son John, on condition that a lamp was kept burning before the altar of St Helen, in the Church of Eyam, Derbyshire, during Divine Service.

[Morteyn] Must have died before 20 February 1233, when the King gave the marriage of the heir of Eustace to Ralph Fitz Nicholas.  These lands which Eustace held in fee of the Bishop at Bonnesby and Braunston, appear to have been land descended from the marriage to the heiress of Richard Silvayn.


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167052592. Robert DE GREY *

Robert de Grey, 4th son of Henry de Grey, of Thurrock, obtained from his brother,Walter de Grey, archbishop of Youk, a gift of the major part of the lordship of Rotherfield, Oxfordshire.[Sir Bernard Burke, dormant, Abeyant, forfeited and Extinct Peeraages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., Lonndon, england, 1883, p. 23, Grey, barons Grey, of rotherfield, Oxfordshire,]


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