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About Lady Isabella Pembridge
Not the wife of Alexander De Greene De Boketon
Isabel (Cantelou) (de) Cantilupe
In 1242, Isabel Devereux held in Magene Album (Whitchurch maund in the parish of Bodenham) of the Honor of Weobley 2 hides from Roger Pichard by knight's service in the Hundred of Brokesesse in Hereford.[24] On 21 February 1244 his widow, gave to the Hospital of St. Ethelbert for the souls of herself and her two husbands "unam ladum bladi" at the Feast of St. Andrew during her life to be received at her house in Frome. This Deed has a seal of white wax with the arms of Devereux and around it "Sigillum Isabell +" and was witnessed by Hugh de Kilpeck, John de Ebroicis, and Richard de Chandos. The arms of Devereux was described as "a fess and in chief three torteauxes."[63]
Origins
Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families, Douglas Richardson (2013):
WALTER DE CANTELOWE, of Brimpton, Berkshire, Adber and Leigh, Dorset, Fontley and Oakley, Hampshire, and Barwick, Camel, and Chilton Cantelo, Somerset. Living in 1205.
He married AMICE ___. They had three sons, William, Knt., Robert Barat (or Cantelowe), and Roger Orget, and three daughters, Nichole, Sibyl, and probably Isabel.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_de_Cantilupe_(died_1239)_
He married Mazilia (or Marcelin/Mascelin) de Braci, daughter and heiress of Adulf de Braci of Mentmore in Buckinghamshire,[15] who brought him that manor and others in Kent, and by whom he had issue including:
Isabel de Cantilupe, who married Stephen Devereux.
References
- 24. Brendan Smith. The de Pitchford Family in Thirteenth-Century Ireland. Studia Hibernica. (Studia Hibernica, Editorial board,1993). Volume 27, p 40
- 25. Lyte, HC Maxwell, ed. (1902). "Close Rolls, March 1228: membrane 11". Calendar of Close Rolls, Henry III (1227–1231). 1. British History Online. Link
- Notes: [http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=28696621&pid...] Link Gone Bad
- Reference: GenealogieOnline Family Tree Index - SmartCopy: Aug 3 2021, 21:29:07 UTC
- < Stirnet - 'Devereux1' > a. Stephen Devereux of Frome & Lyonshall (a 1222) the first given by BE1883 Collins identifies Stephen's wife as Isabel. Various web sites name her ... m. Isabel de Cantelou (dau of William Cantelou or Cantilupe by Mecelin, dau of Adulph de Braci)
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stephen_Devereux Marriage. About 1208 William Marshal directed his attention to arranging marriage alliances for his children.[20] He did the same for his foster son in 1209, when he arranged Stephen Devereux’s marriage to Isabel de Cantilupe,[54] daughter of William de Catilupe Sheriff of Herefordshire and his wife, Mazilia Braci. She was also the aunt of Thomas de Cantilupe, Bishop of Hereford. They would go on to have children … Following Stephen Devereux's death Isabel Cantilupe married a second time to Richard Penebruge, and survived him as well.[1]
- https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Cantilupe-4
- 1. Douglas Richardson. Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 5 vols, ed. Kimball G. Everingham (Salt Lake City: the author, 2013), volume II, page 74 CANTELOWE 2vi. With Footnote 3
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Devereux_(1219–1265) William Devereux (1219 to 1265), was an important Marcher Lord, and held Lyonshall Castle controlling a strategically vital approach to the border of Wales. The castle's significance was heightened by the rebellion of Llywelyn ap Gruffudd, Prince of Wales. With strong family ties to the politically powerful families of Cantilupe and Giffard, his support was strongly sought after by Henry III and Simon de Montfort throughout the Second Barons' War. William Devereux was born in 1219,[1] the son of Stephen Devereux and Isabel de Cantilupe.[2] She was the daughter of William de Cantilupe (died 1239) and Mazilia Braci.[3][4] His father had risen to be a powerful member of the inner circle of William Marshal, 1st Earl of Pembroke, which led to a prominent role during the regency of Henry III. The Devereux family had been prominent along the Welsh Marches since the conquest, and William was a descendant of the Domesday land holder, William Devereux. The coat of arms for Devereux portrayed on his mother's grant in 1242 was 'a fess and in chief three torteauxes.'[5] His coat of arms was described as "argent, fess and three roundels in chief gules" or "gules od un fesse d'argent ove turteaus d'argent en le chief."[6] At his father's death, William was only 8 years old,[7] and came under the sway of his maternal relatives including William de Cantelupe (died 1254), Lord of Abergavenny; Walter de Cantilupe, Bishop of Worcester; and Thomas de Cantilupe, Bishop of Hereford.
- a. Isabel de Cantelupe’s dower included Oxenhall, Trumpington, Frome Halmond and Whitchurch maund
- Redmond, Gabriel O'Connell; The Irish builder (1891). An account of the Anglo-Norman family of Devereux, of Balmagir, county Wexford. Page 5. < Archive.Org > Another of the daughters, Dionisia, married William de Cantilupe, probably brother of Isabella, who married Sir Stephen Devereux, and this connection may account for the grant of land in Waterford to Juhit Devereux. I am inclined to think that this John Devereux left no issue …
- https://myfamilysearch.net/getperson.php?personID=I6550&tree=2005217a
Lady Isabella Pembridge's Timeline
1219 |
1219
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Hereford, Herefordshire, England, United Kingdom
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1242 |
1242
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Beaudesert Castle, Henley-in-Arden, Warwickshire, England
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1993 |
July 27, 1993
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November 5, 1993
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Chilton Cantelo, Somerset , England
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