Nicholas ‘the elder’ de Criol

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Nicholas ‘the elder’ de Criol

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Croxton Kerrial, Leicestershire, England, United Kingdom
Death: 1272 (51-52)
Cherry Hinton, Cambridgeshire, England, United Kingdom
Immediate Family:

Son of Bertram ‘Great Lord of Kent’ de Criol and Emma de Kennett
Husband of Joan d'Auberville
Father of Nicholas ‘the younger’ de Criol and Juliana De Criol
Brother of John de Criol

Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:

About Nicholas ‘the elder’ de Criol


Parent conflict in sources. Most have him as son of Bertram.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nicholas_de_Crioll

The relationship of Nicholas de Crioll (fl. 1240–1272) to Bertram ‘Great Lord of Kent’ de Criol is not specified. He is not mentioned in the 1243 scutage payment, where he would be expected. By 1246 Nicholas held the manor of Croxton Kerrial in Leicestershire granted to Bertram and his heirs by King Henry in 1242. Nicholas also became Constable of Dover Castle and Keeper of the Coast. He married Joan de Auberville, daughter of William de Auberville the younger, whose grandfather William the elder was married to Matilda (Maud), one of the three daughters of Ranulf de Glanville. Nicholas witnessed the De Clare and Puntdelarche charters in company with Simon de Criol,[163] and obtained from the king a remission of £12 owing on the estate of John de Criol when John's son Bertram inherited it in 1264.[164] He remarried to Margery, believed to have been daughter of Simon de Cray, who survived until 1319 and remarried into the Clifford family.[165] His son by Joan,

  1. Nicholas de Crioll, married Margaret, daughter of Galfred Pecche.[166][167]

Edward Hasted, The History and Topographical Survey of the County of Kent: Volume 8 (Canterbury, 1799), British History Online http://www.british-history.ac.uk/survey-kent/vol8 [accessed 8 July 2023].

Manorial Estate: Ostenhanger Manor, Stanford, Ashford, Kent, TN25, GB. 2 WESTENHANGER is an eminent manor here, which was once a parish of itself, though now united to Stanford: Its antient and more proper name, as appears by the register of the monastery of St. Angustine, was Le Hangre, yet I find it called likewise in records as high as the reign of Richard I. by the names both of Ostenhanger and Westenhanger, which certainly arose from its having been divided, and in the hands of separate owners, being possessed by the two eminent families of Criol and Auberville. Bertram de Criol, who was constable of Dover castle, lord warden of the five ports, and sheriff of Kent, for several years in the reign of king Henry III. who from his great possessions in this country, was usually stiled the great lord of Kent, is written in the pipe-rolls of the 27th year of that reign, of Ostenhanger, where it is said he rebuilt great part of the then antient mansion. He left two sons, Nicholas and John, the former of whom marrying with Joane, daughter and heir of Sir William de Aubervilse, inherited in her right the other part of this manor, called Westenhanger, as will be further mentioned hereafter. John, the younger son, seems to have inherited his father's share of this manor, called Ostenhanger, of which he died possessed in the 48th year of king Henry III. as did his son Bertram de Criol in the 23d year of Edward I.


Pedigree

https://www.stirnet.com/genie/data/british/cc4rz/criol1.php Draft

  • Robert de Criol m. ?? (dau of Osbern, son of Letard de Popeshall)
    • 1. Nicholas or Bertram de Criol ( sources conflict)
      • A. Simon or Bertram de Criol
        • i. John de Criol or Kyrriel (d 1229) m. Margery de Spelmoden (dau/heir of John de Spelmoden)
          • a. Sir Bertram de Criol of Croxton Castle (Leicesterhire), Sheriff of Kent (also of Essex & Hertfordshire) (a 1231, 1238, Keeper of Dover & Rochester Castles) m. Emma de Kennet (dau/heir of Nicholas de Kennet)
            • (1) Sir Nicholas de Criol of Croxton & Cherry Hinton (Cambridgeshire), Sheriff of Kent (d before 02.07.1273, Warden of the Cinque Ports, Governor of Rochester Castle) m. Joan Auberville, heiress of Westenhanger (dau/heir of Sir William Auberville of Eynsford, etc., m2. Henry de Sandwich)
              • (A) Sir Nicholas de Criol or Kyrriel of Eynsford, Stockbury, Westenhanger, etc. (Kent) & Croxton Kerrial (Leicestershire), Lord (d 12.10.1303) m. (before 10.02.1271/2) Margery Peche (a 1319, dau of Sir Gilbert Peche of Westcliff (son of Hamon) by Joan de Creye)
                • (i) Nicholas de Criol or Kryell (a 1325, Admiral) m. Roesia
            • (2) John de Criol (d 1253-4 or 1264) m. Matilda de Eastwelle (d 1267, dau of Margeria)
            • (3) Sir Simon de Criol (d 1267) The following is supported by 'Archaeologia Cantiana' (Kent Archaeological Society, 'Inquisitiones Post Mortem', p303-4). m. Matilda de Esseteford (dau/heir of William de Esseteford)

References

  • https://www.stirnet.com/genie/data/british/cc4rz/criol1.php Draft cites
    • Main source(s): 'The History and Antiquities of the County of Leicester' (John Nichols, vol 2 part 1 (1795 - or 1971, ISBN 0.85409.688.4), 'Pedigree of Criol', p147), 'A Corner of Kent' (J.R. Planché, 1864, p291+), Visitation (Huntingdonshire, 1619, 'Kryell') with a little input/support from 'The Dormant and Extinct Baronage of England' (T.C. Banks, vol 1, 1807, 'Criol', p278+), referred to above as 'Baronage', and further input (shown in italics) from various web sites
  • The Battle Abbey Roll (page 12) < Archive.org >
  • https://buist-keatch.org/buist/goring/5396.html cites
    • 1 Victoria County History, editor, A History of the County of Cambridge and the Isle of Ely, 10 (London: Victoria County History, 1948), 10: 106-109.
    • 2 Edward Hasted, The History and Topographical Survey of the County of Kent, 12 (Canterbury: W Bristow, 1799), 8: 63-78.
    • 3 Edward Hasted, The History and Topographical Survey of the County of Kent, 12 (Canterbury: W Bristow, 1799), 8: 282-303.
  • https://www.1066.co.nz/Mosaic%20DVD/text/people/Estriels.html
  • https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Criol-12 cites
    • Wikipedia:Bertram_de_Criol.
    • William Smith Ellis esq (1883) Early Kentish Armory. Archaeologia Cantiana Vol 15, 1883.
  • “Criol/Kyryel lawsuit dated 1279” (Jan 3, 2019) https://groups.google.com/g/soc.genealogy.medieval/c/x4Kkpq6FaEU/m/... Below is a list of the 17th Century New World immigrants that descend from Joan d'Auberville and her 2nd husband, Nicholas de Criol the elder (died c.1272): William Bladen, Francis Dade, Gabriel, Roger & Sarah Ludlow, John Oxenbridge.
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Nicholas ‘the elder’ de Criol's Timeline

1220
1220
Croxton Kerrial, Leicestershire, England, United Kingdom
1250
1250
Eynsford, Dartford, Kent, England
1272
1272
Age 52
Cherry Hinton, Cambridgeshire, England, United Kingdom
????