Historical records matching Agnes Merbury
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About Agnes Merbury
- Agnes Crophulle is left money in the 1382 will of Sybille de la Bere, widow of Sir Richard de la Bere [who also died in 1382]
- 9 Richard II Proof of Age taken at Hereford, Saturday after St Matthew. Agnes, daughter of Thomas Crophull son of John Crophull. Writ to the escheator to take proof of age of the said Agnes, kinswoman and heir of the said John Crophull, whom Walter Deveros has taken to wife, warning Roger son of John Crophull son of John Crophull, in whose custody by the king’s commitment is one part of the lands of her inheritance, to be present and show just cause why the said lands should not be restored to her 12 September 9 Richard II. The said Roger was warned and was present at the proof, but had nothing to say against it. William Gerneston, William Pipe and William Smyth, aged 60 years and more, say the said Agnes was born at the manor of Chabbenore and baptised in the church at Dilwyn on the second day after the feast of the Annunciation 45 Edward III [27 March 1371]. This they remember because on the same day they were in the company of Henry Bailly when he told of the birth of Joan his daughter, so they know that Agnes is 14 years of age and more. Walter Disshewal, Thomas Monyton and Henry Bailly, aged 50 years and more, agree and say that onthe day of the birth of the said Agnes, Walter Disshewall started on a pilgrimage to Santiago. Roger Crompe, William Carsewall and John Upton, aged 48 year and more, agree and say that on the same day Roger Crompe took to wife Joan, daughter of William Carsewall. William Chabbenore, Henry de la Coumbe and John Bradeley, aged 40 years and more, agree and say that on the same day William Chabbenore sold to John Bradeley a bugage tenement with curtilage in Webbeley.
- Agnes Crophull1,2,3,4,5,6,7
- F, #21887, b. circa 1372, d. 3 February 1436
- Father Sir Thomas de Crophull2,3,4,5,6,7 b. c 1350, d. 18 Nov 1381
- Mother Sibilla de la Bere2,3,4,5,6,7 b. 19 May 1338, d. b 18 Nov 1381
- Agnes Crophull was born circa 1372 at the Manor of Chaddenore, Herefordshire, England; Age 9 in 1381 & age 12 in 1383.5,6,7 She married Sir Walter Devereux, Sheriff of Herefordshire, Constable of Builth Castle, son of Sir William Devereux, Seneschal of Limousin and Anne Barre, before 1 November 1382 at of Braunston, Cotesbach, Hemington in Lockington, & Newbold Verdun, Leicestershire, England; They had 4 son (Sir Walter, John, Richard, & Thomas) and 2 daughters (Elizabeth, wife of John Milborne, Esq; & Margaret).2,3,4,5,6,7 Agnes Crophull married Sir John Parr, son of Sir William Parr and Elizabeth Roos, between 20 June 1401 and 1405; They had 1 son (Sir Thomas).2,4,5,7 Agnes Crophull married John Merbury, Esq., Justice of South Wales, Sheriff & Escheater of Herefordshire, Steward of Brecon, son of Sir Thomas Merbery, before March 1417; No issue.2,3,4,5,6,7 Agnes Crophull died on 3 February 1436.2,3,4,5,6
- Family 1 Sir Walter Devereux, Sheriff of Herefordshire, Constable of Builth Castle b. c 1359, d. 20 Jun 1401
- Children
- Elizabeth Devereux8 b. c 1385, d. b 1397
- Walter Devereux, Esq.+2,4,7 b. c 1387, d. 1420
- Richard Devereux8 b. c 1389
- John Devereux8 b. c 1391, d. a 1433
- Margaret Devereux8 b. c 1395
- Elizabeth Devereux+2,9,4,10,11,7 b. c 1397, d. 1475
- Thomas Devereux8 b. c 1399
- Family 2 Sir John Parr b. c 1383, d. b 6 Oct 1407
- Child
- Sir Thomas Parr, Sheriff of Westmorland, Escheator of Cumberland & Westmorland+3,4,5,6,7 b. 7 Oct 1406, d. 24 Nov 1464
- Family 3 John Merbury, Esq., Justice of South Wales, Sheriff & Escheater of Herefordshire, Steward of Brecon b. c 1387, d. 29 Jan 1438
- Citations
- 1.[S6648] Unknown author, Ancestry of HRH Prince Charles by Gerald Paget, Vol. II, p. 425.
- 2.[S5] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry, p. 249.
- 3.[S5] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry, p. 565.
- 4.[S16] Douglas Richardson, Magna Carta Ancestry, 2nd Edition, Vol. II, p. 2.
- 5.[S16] Douglas Richardson, Magna Carta Ancestry, 2nd Edition, Vol. III, p. 297-298.
- 6.[S4] Douglas Richardson, Royal Ancestry, Vol. IV, p. 304.
- 7.[S4] Douglas Richardson, Royal Ancestry, Vol. V, p. 248.
- 8.[S61] Unknown author, Family Group Sheets, Family History Archives, SLC.
- 9.[S5] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry, p. 500.
- 10.[S16] Douglas Richardson, Magna Carta Ancestry, 2nd Edition, Vol. III, p. 146.
- 11.[S4] Douglas Richardson, Royal Ancestry, Vol. IV, p. 86.
- From: http://our-royal-titled-noble-and-commoner-ancestors.com/p729.htm#i... _________________
- Agnes Crophill1
- F, #3351, b. circa 1371, d. 3 February 1436
- Last Edited=17 Jul 2010
- Agnes Crophill was born circa 1371.1 She was the daughter of Thomas de Crophill and Sibyl de la Bere.1 She married, secondly, Sir John Parr.1 She married, firstly, Sir Walter Devereux, son of Sir Walter Devereux.2 She married, thirdly, John Merbury.2 She died on 3 February 1436.1
- Her married name became Devereux. Her married name became Merbury.2 She was also known as Agnes de Crophull.2 Her married name became Parr.1
- Children of Agnes Crophill and Sir Walter Devereux
- Richard Devereux2
- John Devereux2
- Stephen Devereux2
- Roger Devereux2
- Joan Devereux2
- Sir Walter Devereux+3 b. 1387, d. 1420
- Child of Agnes Crophill and Sir John Parr
- Sir Thomas Parr+ b. 1407, d. 24 Nov 1464
- Citations
- [S79] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry (Baltimore, Maryland, U.S.A.: Genealogical Publishing Company, 2004), page 249. Hereinafter cited as Plantagenet Ancestry.
- [S37] BP2003 volume 2, page 1875. See link for full details for this source. Hereinafter cited as. [S37]
- [S37] BP2003. [S37]
- From: http://www.thepeerage.com/p336.htm#i3351 _______________
- Lady Agnes de Crophull
- Birth: 1370 Salisbury, Wiltshire, England
- Death: Feb. 3, 1435 Kinnersley, Herefordshire, England
- Agnes was the daughter of Sir Thomas de Crophull and Sybil de la Bere. She married first Walter Devereux (d.1402), and married secondly Sir John Parr of Kendal (d.1409 - among their descendants was Katherine Parr, 6th and last wife of King Henry VIII.) Agnes then married third Sir John (also known as Nicholas?) Merbury (d.1438) keeper of the king's jewels to Henry VI.
- However her inherited lands passed to the Devereux family, and eventually, through the heirs of Robert Devereux (1591-1646), 3rd and last Earl of Essex, to the Thynne family of Longleat, later Marquesses of Bath, who eventually sold it in the 19th century.
- Family links:
- Spouses:
- Walter Devereux (1365 - 1402)
- John de Merbury (____ - 1438)*
- Burial: St Peter and St Paul Churchyard, Weobley, Herefordshire Unitary Authority, Herefordshire, England
- Plot: In the Chancel
- Find A Grave Memorial# 111729994
- From: http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=111729994 ________________
- Sir Walter Devereux of Bodenham and Weobley was a prominent knight in Herefordshire during the reigns of Richard II and Henry IV. He represented Hereford in Parliament, and gave rise to the Devereux Earls of Essex and Viscounts of Hereford.
- Walter Devereux[1][2] was born about 1361, the son of Sir Walter Devereux (died c. 1383) [1][2][3] of Bodenham and a woman named Maud. His father was the cousin of John Devereux, 1st Baron Devereux of Whitchurch Maund,[a] and they were close allies. Walter’s grandfather, William Devereux of Bodenham,[4] had made land concessions in Bodenham Parish (Hereford) to John Devereux about 1350, and throughout his life Baron Devereux appears to have promoted the career of his cousin’s son in the royal household.
- His arms were: Argent a fesse gules, in chief three torteaux.
- .... etc.
- Ultimately the struggle with the Welsh led to the Battle of Pilleth on 22 June 1402.[b] During the battle, Walter Devereux was mortally wounded, and died 3 days later.[14]
- Walter Devereux is believed to have been buried in Weobley Church. Provided is an excerpt from the Journal of the British Archeological Association on this subject: The two monuments on the north and south sides of the chancel are described by Silas Taylor in 1665. Speaking of the one on the north side, he says, “near him, on the wall, hangs a wooden shield with the arms of Devereux. Over against it on the south side, another shield hangs up with a cross engrailed between four spear-heads. I could not discern the colours… A little lower, near the remains of the quire are the effigies of a man in close armour, and a woman”… I am disposed to think that the single figure represents Sir W. Devereux, who died in 1402, and the two figures represent John Marbury and Agnes his wife. I think so partly because Silas Taylor says the Devereux shield hung on the north side and the Marbury shield on the south. [c][15][16]
- He married Agnes Crophull[1] (1371/3 to 03 Feb. 1436) before November 1382.[17][18] She was the daughter of Thomas Crophull,[19] and granddaughter and heiress of John Crophull[20] and her cousin.
- Upon their marriage, Agnes’ grandfather gave them Newbold Vernon in Leicester.[21][22] On his death in June 1383, they inherited interests in Braunston, and Cotesbach in Leicester. Thomas’ widow held the remaining Crophull properties as part of her dower. After the widow’s death and Agnes coming of age in September 1385, Walter Devereux seized the remaining estates based on his marriage right in 1386.[23] These included Weobley manor (Herefordshire); Sutton Bonnington manor and lands at Arnold (Nottinghamshire); the manors of Cotesbach, Braunston, and Hemington (Leicestershire); and an estate at Market Rasen (Lincolnshire). Weobley would become his principal residence.
- They had children:[d] Sir Walter Devereux his heir (1387).,[1][e][24] Sir Richard Devereux (c. 1389) ),[1][24][25][26] Sir John Devereux (c. 1391),[1][24][26][27][28] Thomas (c. 1393), Margaret (c. 1396), and Elizabeth (c. 1401).[29][30][f]
- Agnes survived her husband and was the godmother Humphrey, earl of Stafford in August 1402.[31]She married a second time to John Parr of Kendall about 1403. John Parr died about September 1407, and his heir was a son Thomas (aged 2).[g] By their son, Thomas, John Parr and Agnes were ancestors of the sixth queen consort of King Henry VIII, Catherine Parr.
- Agnes Crophull married a 3rd time to John Merbury (died 03 Feb 1438) in 1416.[32] By 1428 John Merbury is indicated as holding one share of Lyonshall previously held by Lord Fitzwalter.
- When Agnes Crophull died on 9 Feb 1436, her heir was Walter Devereux, grandson of her first husband through their son, Walter Devereux (died 1420). Lyonshall passed to this grandson from her, and also by right of his wife, Elizabeth Merbury, who was the daughter of Agnes Crophull’s third husband, John Merbury, by a previous marriage. Agnes was buried at Weobley as described above.
- From: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Walter_Devereux_(died_1402) _______________
- DEVEREUX, Sir Walter (d.1402), of Weobley, Herefs.
- s. and h. of Sir Walter Devereux† of Bodenham, Herefs. by his w. Maud. m. by Nov. 1382, Agnes (1371-3 Feb. 1436), da. and h. of Thomas Crophill of Weobley, 1s. 1da. Kntd. by 1391.1
- Offices Held
- Constable of Builth castle, Rad. 8 Feb. 1382-c.1394.
- Commr. of arrest, Herefs. Feb. 1382, Salop Feb. 1382, Herefs. Apr. 1401; inquiry Feb. 1385 (murder), Feb. 1391 (alienation of Eaton Tregoes), Aug. 1401 (murder); array Apr. 1385, Mar. 1392, Dec. 1399; to resist the Welsh rebels and relieve Abergavenny May 1401; make proclamation of Henry IV’s intention to govern well, Herefs. May 1402.
- J.p. Herefs. 9 Nov. 1385-99, 16 May 1401-d.
- Sheriff, Herefs. 16 May-8 Nov. 1401.
- Walter’s father and namesake was a retainer of the de Bohuns and sometime sheriff of Somerset and Dorset and of Herefordshire, as well as being an MP and j.p. for the latter county. They were closely related to John, Lord Devereux, a friend of the Black Prince and member of Richard II’s council of regency, who may, indeed, have been our Walter’s uncle.2 It was perhaps due to the latter’s influence that Walter began his career in the royal household, and he was a King’s esquire by the time of his first mention in the records on 8 Feb. 1382. On that day he and his father (who was then attending Parliament) were appointed to a royal commission, and at the same time he alone was granted the keeping of Builth castle during the minority of its owner, Roger Mortimer, earl of March. By that autumn Devereux had made a valuable marriage, namely to Agnes (then aged 11), grand daughter and heir of Sir John Crophill, who enfeoffed the couple of the manor of Newbold Verdon, Leicestershire. In June 1383 Crophill died, and two months later Walter received custody of his estates (except those held by the widow in dower) during Agnes’s minority. Agnes came of age in September 1385 when (the widow being now dead) Devereux took full possession of the lands jure uxoris. They included the manor of Sutton Bonnington and lands at Arnold, Nottinghamshire, the manors of Cotesbach, Braunston and Hemington, Leicestershire, an estate at Market Rasen, Lincolnshire, and the manor of Weobley, Herefordshire, which last became his principal residence. In March 1383 he was a surety when John Burley and others took out a royal lease on certain Mortimer lands in Herefordshire and Brecon.3
- As a King’s esquire, Walter served on Richard II’s expedition to Scotland in the summer of 1385. However, despite his membership of the royal household, he apparently did not side with the King during the political crisis of 1387-8. At any rate, he was appointed in March 1388 to administer to the notables of Herefordshire the oath of loyalty to the Lords Appellant. He may well have been following the lead of his presumed uncle, John, Lord Devereux, a prominent supporter of the opposition party and a member of their commission of government. Whether Walter remained at Court after this is unknown, but (having been knighted by 1391) he certainly accompanied Richard II to Ireland in September 1394, when he nominated Roger Wigmore* and Thomas Oldcastle* as his attorneys.4
- Apart from his commissions, comparatively little is known of Sir Walter’s later life. His single return to Parliament occurred in 1401, and it was only later that year, in May, that he was appointed as sheriff. By this time, the Welsh revolt under Glendower had broken out, and that same month Devereux was among those ordered to help raise the siege of Abergavenny. In the following year he joined Sir Edmund Mortimer’s expedition into Radnorshire, which culminated in a disastrous English defeat at the battle of Pilleth on 22 June. There Sir Walter was mortally wounded, and he died three days later.5 His heir was his son, another Walter (c.1387-1420), through whom he was the grandfather of Sir Walter Devereux† (1411-59) and great-grandfather of Walter Devereux†, Lord Ferrers of Chartley (1432-85). His widow Agnes remarried, her second husband being John Parr and her third John Merbury*, whose daughter by a former marriage married her grandson.6
- From: http://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/volume/1386-1421/member/de... ________________
- Walter DEVEREUX
- Born: ABT 1357, Hereford, Herefordshire, England
- Died: ABT 1403
- Father: William DEVEREUX (Sir)
- Mother: Anne (Margaret) BARRE
- Married: Agnes CROPHULL (m. 2 John Parr of Kendall) ABT 1383/4, Herefordshire, England
- Children:
- 1. Walter DEVEREUX
- 2. John DEVEREAUX
- 3. Richard DEVEREAUX
- 4. Thomas DEVEREAUX
- 5. Margaret DEVEREAUX
- From: http://www.tudorplace.com.ar/DEVEREUX.htm#Walter DEVEREUX1 _________________________
- John PARR of Kendal
- Born: ABT 1383
- Died: 1409
- Father: William PARR (Sir Knight)
- Mother: Elizabeth ROS
- Married: Agnes CROPHULL (dau. and heir of Sir Thomas Crophull and relict of Walter Devereux)
- Children:
- 1. Thomas PARR of Kendal (Sir Knight)
- From: http://www.tudorplace.com.ar/PARR1.htm#John PARR of Kendal1 ___________________
- MERBURY, John (d.1438), of Lyonshall and Weobley, Herefs.
- yr. bro. of Nicholas Merbury*. m. (1) by 1400, Alice (d.c. Apr. 1415), da. and h. of Sir John Pembridge of Pembridge, Herefs., wid. of Edmund de la Bere and Thomas Oldcastle*, 1 da.; (2) by 1417, Agnes (1371-3 Feb. 1436), da. and h. of Thomas Crophill, wid. of Sir Walter Devereux* of Weobley and John Parr of Kirkby Kendal, Westmld.,1 1da.
- Offices Held
- Chamberlain and receiver, S. Wales 18 Mar. 1400-10 June 1421.2
- Commr. of array, Carm. June 1403, Herefs. Apr. 1418, Mar. 1419; inquiry Jan. 1414 (lollards), Feb. 1414 (armed raid on Eardisley), Dec. 1417 (the forfeited lands of Sir John Oldcastle*), Pemb. Oct. 1421 (theft of a cargo), Herefs. July 1426 (treasons and felonies), w. Midlands July 1427 (concealments), Herefs. July 1429 (rights of Henry Oldcastle† at Almeley), July 1434 (concealments); to raise royal loans Nov. 1419, Mar. 1422, July 1426, May 1428, Mar. 1430, May 1431, Feb. 1434, Feb. 1436; seize ships and bring them to Bristol May 1420; of arrest May 1423.
- Tax collector, Herefs. Mar. 1404.
- J.p. Herefs. 27 Apr. 1404-d.
- Sheriff, Herefs. 22 Nov. 1405-5 Nov. 1406, 10 Nov. 1414-1 Dec. 1415, 23 Nov. 1419-7 Jan. 1421, 1 May 1422-14 Feb. 1423, 15 Jan.-12 Dec. 1426, 10 Feb.-5 Nov. 1430, 3 Nov. 1434-7 Nov. 1435.
- Dep. justiciar S. Wales Mich. 1411-13; justiciar 10 June 1421-17 Nov. 1423.3
- Steward of Brecon Feb. 1414-20, Kidwelly 15 Feb. 1417-June 1423.4
- Escheator, Herefs. and adjacent march 8 Dec. 1416-30 Nov. 1417.
- Forester of Cantrefselyf bef. July 1426.
- John Merbury was a trusted Lancastrian retainer who, by means of long service to the Crown (mainly in South Wales) and two advantageous marriages, became one of the richest and most influential Herefordshire gentlemen of his day. Little is known of his parentage, but his arms indicate that he was related to the Marbury family of Marbury (on the Cheshire border with Shropshire) who also owned the castle and manor of Lyonshall, near Kington, Herefordshire, which eventually came into his possession. Two of his brothers made equally impressive careers for themselves, Sir Laurence Merbury as successively treasurer (in 1400) and chancellor (from 1406) of Ireland, and Nicholas Merbury as chief butler and master of the ordnance to Henry V. Marbury was a fief of the Talbots, by whom Sir Laurence was retained, but John himself apparently began his career as an archer serving from 1389 in the force recruited by Sir John Stanley. He then enlisted with John of Gaunt, who at Bordeaux in October 1395 granted him an annuity of ten marks from the issues of the lordship of Halton, Cheshire, thereby retaining him for life.5
- Merbury’s early services to the house of Lancaster are unrecorded, but he was plainly a valued retainer, for at the beginning of Henry IV’s reign he became a ‘King’s esquire’ and was granted two annuities in quick succession. On 19 Jan. 1400 he shared one of £40 from the issues of Hereford with Roland Lenthall, and ten days later Prince Henry of Monmouth gave him another of 40 marks from Isleworth, Middlesex. In March following, moreover, he was appointed chamberlain and receiver in South Wales, the chief financial officer of that region of the principality: his fee was £20 p.a., and he was destined to hold office for the next 21 years. He clearly gave satisfaction, for on 17 Mar. 1402 he obtained, for life, a grant of the Cardiganshire lands of a rebel, worth £46 p.a., and the following day he had yet another annuity of ten marks at the Exchequer, again given him for life, bringing his annual income from royal grants and fees up to the very large sum of £126. By 1400, furthermore, he had increased his standing and landed interest in Herefordshire by his marriage to Alice, daughter of Sir John Pembridge (his neighbour at Lyonshall) and widow of Thomas Oldcastle; and during her lifetime he held her castle and manor of Boughrood, near Builth, Radnorshire, the manor of Eyton by Leominster, and an estate at Burghill, Herefordshire.6
- Merbury’s office of chamberlain in South Wales naturally involved him in the resistance to Glendower’s rebellion. In September 1402, with John ap Harry*, he was ordered to take the muster of the forces of Richard, Lord Grey of Codnor, the King’s lieutenant in the region, and in June 1403, when the rebels were threatening Carmarthenshire, he served on a commission of array there. In 1403-4 he was nominal captain of Huntington castle, in the marches. During the period from 1404 until 1407, when much of South Wales was in rebel hands, he may have spent his time in Herefordshire, where he was appointed a j.p. in 1404 and served as sheriff a year later. By 1409, however, he was again accounting as chamberlain, and in that year he received a reward of £56 3s.4d. ‘for good service’. In 1411 (when he was appointed to the additional office of deputy justiciar in South Wales) he was engaged in collecting a royal ‘benevolence’ in Carmarthenshire and Cardiganshire. In May 1412 Prince Henry rewarded him with yet another permanent annuity, one of 100 marks assigned on the fee farm of Builth.7
- Merbury did not, however, neglect Herefordshire during the later years of Henry IV’s reign. On the contrary, in June 1409 Bishop Mascall of Hereford made him steward of the episcopal lands and temporalities in that county and Gloucestershire. In December of the same year, together with John Russell III*, he stood surety when his brother, Nicholas, procured a royal lease of the Radnorshire lands of Thomas Dounton, a minor. Shortly afterwards, on 14 Jan. 1410, Merbury attended the Herefordshire elections to Parliament, and on 20 Mar. two of the MPs then sitting, Thomas Holgot (returned for the shire) and Edmund Morris (representing Leominster) acted as mainpernors when John and Nicholas Merbury were granted custody of the same ward’s manor of Clapham, Sussex. During that year John was offered the honour of knighthood, but declined it, paying the resultant fine.8
- All Merbury’s grants (now totalling nearly £200 a year) were confirmed to him soon after the beginning of Henry V’s reign, and by February 1414 he was occupying an additional office, that of steward of the duchy of Lancaster lordship of Brecon. In August 1415 he was also appointed steward of the episcopal lands of the bishop of St. David’s. As chamberlain of South Wales he was much concerned with preparations for the King’s first invasion of France, including the mustering during June 1415 of a large contingent for the expedition (20 men-at-arms and 500 archers) at Carmarthen and Brecon. He himself did not go to France, but instead assumed joint command of a force of up to 60 men-at-arms and 120 archers for the defence of South Wales against any act of rebellion during the King’s absence; his fellow captains were Thomas Strange*, Richard Oldcastle (his stepson) and Sir Robert Whitney II* (husband of his stepdaughter, Wintelan Oldcastle). His contributions to the war-effort continued in January 1416, when he sent 200 oxen by sea from Haverford for the victualling of Harfleur, and in March 1417, along with John Russell, he was in Monmouthshire negotiating a donation towards the cost of the King’s second French expedition. In the previous month, his influence in South Wales was still further consolidated by the grant of yet another office, that of steward of the duchy lordship of Kidwelly. During this period Merbury was equally busy in Herefordshire, where he witnessed the county elections to the Parliaments of May 1413 and 1417, acting in the meantime for a second term as sheriff.9
- Merbury’s first wife had died in 1415, but by March 1417 he had made a still more advantageous marriage, namely, to the twice-widowed Agnes Crophill. The lands she brought him consisted not only of her dower from John Parr (including the manor of Kirkby Kendal), but also of the very considerable estates of her grandfather, Sir John Crophill. These last included the manors of Market Rasen (Lincolnshire), Cotesbach, Newbold Verdon, Hemmington and Braunston (Leicestershire), Tiercewell and Arnold (Nottinghamshire), Hyde (Hertfordshire), lands in Shropshire and Bedfordshire, and the castle and manor of Weobley.10
- Weobley immediately became Merbury’s home, and during 1417 several messengers were paid for taking to him there letters from the King. Some of these may have concerned the fugitive lollard, Sir John Oldcastle. Certainly, on 27 Aug. one of the latter’s tenants came to Weobley with the news that Oldcastle was hiding at his nearby manor of Almeley, but despite an offer of £100 from Merbury, the man could not or would not reveal his exact whereabouts. This offer of reward would seem to repudiate any suggestion that Merbury’s failure to capture his first wife’s cousin was deliberate, although it is remarkable that Oldcastle was able to stay untroubled at Almeley until October, when he was taken on his way to North Wales. However this may be, Merbury clearly remained in favour with Henry V, and his prestige, and also wealth from government grants, continued to grow. In May 1418 he shared a royal lease of the temporalities of the diocese of St. David’s with his deputy chamberlain, Thomas Walter, and in the following December he and John Brugge* (a Talbot retainer) were appointed custodians of all the lands of the late Gilbert, Lord Talbot, during the minority of his heir. In 1419 he had charge, by order of the royal council, of the manor of Longford, Herefordshire, pending the settlement of a dispute over it between (Sir) John Skydemore* and the executors of Thomas Walwyn II*; and in 1422 he took custody, under similar circumstances, of certain lands disputed between Skydemore and Robert Brut.11
- Surprisingly, so far as is known, it was not until 1419 that Merbury was first elected to Parliament, for Herefordshire, of which county he was appointed sheriff for the third time ten days after the end of the session. He was returned again in May 1421, and not long afterwards, on 10 June, his labours in South Wales were crowned with his promotion from chamberlain to justiciar, an office previously held by the late duke of York. He was now the principal royal official in the region, with an annual fee of £40 and a reward of as much as £100 a year. A month after his appointment he and the new chamberlain, William Botiller, were given charge for two years of Bronllys castle and other Brecon estates, which were then in dispute between the King and Anne, countess of Stafford, and in 1423 the grant was extended for a further three years. Meanwhile, in December 1421, he had again been elected to Parliament, the last of Henry V’s reign.12
- Merbury’s private transactions during the preceding period were manifold, and need only summarizing here. By 1415 he had been made a trustee of the late Richard Ruyhale’s* manors of Birtsmorton, Ryhall and Queenhill (Worcestershire) and Dymock (Gloucestershire), and he continued to act when these estates passed to Ruyhale’s widow, Elizabeth, and her new husband, Richard Oldcastle, the son of Merbury’s first wife. After this couple’s death the estates reverted to Merbury, who sold them. He was also a feoffee for Sir William ap Thomas, Sir John Chandos* and Elizabeth Devereux (his second wife’s daughter). In many of the transactions involved he was linked with John Brugge, who seems to have been a close associate, and with whom he several times acted as surety: Merbury’s services in this particular regard were much in demand during Henry V’s reign, especially where matters relating to Wales and the marches were concerned. Further afield, he received a legacy of 20 marks by the will of Robert Hallum, bishop of Salisbury, who died at the General Council of Constance in 1417; and in May 1421 he acted as supervisor of the testament of John Botiller, of which his brother Nicholas was an executor. (Botiller, an usher of the chamber to Henry V, was also an old Cheshire neighbour of the Merburys).13
- At the beginning of Henry VI’s reign all Merbury’s annuities were confirmed (with the exception of the 40 marks from Isleworth, which manor had been granted by Henry V to his own monastic foundation at Sheen). Also, he was re-appointed as justiciar. In the previous year, 1421, his brother Nicholas had died, and by the terms of his will his manor and castle of Braybrooke, Northamptonshire, passed (just for one year after his death) to his trustees, who included Merbury and two senior duchy of Lancaster officials, John Wodehouse* and William Troutbeck. It was in 1423 that, with his removal from the justiciar’s office, Merbury’s long period of public employment in South Wales virtually came to an end. His service had not been entirely above reproach, for in 1424 the English tenants of Llanstephan and Penrhyn complained that he had wrongfully amerced them, employing for the purpose Welsh jurors who dared not contradict him.14
- Merbury remained, however, both active and influential in Herefordshire, serving on three further occasions as sheriff, heading royal loan commissions and witnessing the indentures of return at the county elections in 1429 and 1431. He was himself returned to Parliament again in 1425 and 1427, and it was during the latter session that the Commons supported his petition for the restoration of his lost annuity, and its re-assignment as a charge upon the issues of Gloucestershire. It is also clear that he maintained contacts with some of the most influential in the land. In 1427 he witnessed the confirmation by Humphrey, earl of Stafford, of the Newport borough charter, and he was possibly one of the earl’s councillors. In July 1429 he put his family manor of Lyonshall into the hands of trustees headed by Humphrey, duke of Gloucester, and including John Russell and Lewis John*; and by 1434 he was himself a feoffee of Thomas Chaucer* (a cousin of Cardinal Beaufort), for the manor of Grovebury, Bedfordshire. In 1435 he shared a royal lease of the lordship of Abergavenny with Sir John (now Lord) Tiptoft*; and in the following year he was made a trustee of all the extensive estates which Richard, duke of York, had inherited from the Mortimers.15
- Merbury’s wife, Agnes, died in 1436, having appointed him her sole executor and left him a life interest in all her (Crophill) family lands. The extent of his wealth by this time is demonstrated by his assessed contribution of £100 towards a royal loan for the equipment of York’s expedition to France, this being by far the largest sum paid by anyone in Herefordshire, not excluding the bishop. His own life was, however, now drawing to a close: he made his will at Weobley on 23 Aug. 1437, and on 29 Jan. following he died. His heir was Elizabeth (b.1412), his elder daughter by his first wife, who had married Walter Devereux† (1411-59), his second wife’s grandson and heir. The combined Devereux, Merbury and Crophill lands therefore passed to them, and eventually to their son, Walter Devereux†, Lord Ferrers of Chartley (1432-85), a leading Yorkist. Merbury’s testament requested burial with his second wife at Weobley, where their fine alabaster tomb remains, and to which church he left plate, vestments and hangings. Monetary bequests, totalling more than £367, including 100 marks for requiem masses and a similar sum for the poor, while his Cheshire origins were recalled by a gift of £20 to the abbot of Vale Royal. His grand daughter, Anne Devereux, was to have £100, and his younger daughter, Marion, £20, for their marriages. All his furnishings, including the decoration of the ‘Kynges Chaumber’ (perhaps an echo of a royal visit to Weobley), went to Walter and Elizabeth Devereux, of whom the former was an executor.16
- From: http://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/volume/1386-1421/member/me... ____________
Agnes was an heiress She was heiress to her grandfather, John de Crophill, succeeding to the Castle and manor of Weobley (afterwards the principal seat of the Devereux family), and the manors of Hyde, Hertfordshire, Cotesbach, Braunston and Hemington (in Lockington), Leicestershire, Market Rasen, Lincolnshire, and Sutton Bonnington, Arnold, and Tiercewell, Nottinghamshire.
Her first husband, Sir Walter Devereux, was wounded in battle and died three days later. She later remarried to John Parr, who was also a British Knight.
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marriages http://todmar.net/ancestry/devereux_main.htm
The following history on the Devereux family is from various sources including
"Medieval English Ancestors of Robert Abell"
Agnes Crophull, married in 1383/4 Sir Walter Devereux.
She married second John Parr of Kendal. Agnes Crophull was, by her second husband John Parr, the great-great-grandmother of Katherine Parr, the last wife of King Henry VIII.
She married third John Merbury, as his third wife.
She was sole heiress of Weobley, and received Lyonshall late in life. She died 3 Feb. 1436.
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- Links
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Walter_Devereux_(1387-1420)
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Parr_(d.1461)
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Agnes Merbury's Timeline
1371 |
February 1371
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Chabbenor, Dilwyn, Herefordshire, England (United Kingdom)
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March 27, 1371
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St. Mary the Virgin Church, Dilwyn, Herefordshire, England (United Kingdom)
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1387 |
1387
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Salisbury, Wiltshire, England (United Kingdom)
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1389 |
1389
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Of, Salisbury, Wiltshire, England
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1391 |
1391
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Of, Salisbury, Wiltshire, England
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1393 |
1393
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Of, Salisbury, Wiltshire, England
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1395 |
1395
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Probably Salisbury, Wiltshire, England
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1395
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Of, Salisbury, Wiltshire, England
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1399 |
1399
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Of, Salisbury, Wiltshire, England
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