_Artavadz MAMIKONIAN _+
| (0740 - 0778)
_Marinos MAMIKONIAN _|
| (0780 - 0815) |
| |______________________
|
|
|--Theodora BYZANTIUM
| (0815 - 0867)
| ______________________
| |
|_____________________|
|
|______________________
_Henry DE FERRIER ___+
| (1355 - ....)
_William DE FERRIER _|
| (1372 - 1445) |
| |_Joan _______________
|
|
|--Thomas DE FERRIER
|
| _____________________
| |
|_Margaret MONAYAQUE _|
|
|_____________________
__
|
_Walter FITZOTHER ___|
| (1050 - ....) |
| |__
|
|
|--Gerald Fitz Walter DE WINDSOR
| (1070 - 1136)
| __
| |
|_Beatrice ___________|
|
|__
[342] Consta
_Arthen ap SEISYLL __
| (0730 - ....)
_Dyfnwallon ap ARTHEN _|
| (0755 - ....) |
| |_____________________
|
|
|--Meurig ap DYFNWALLON
| (0780 - ....)
| _____________________
| |
|_______________________|
|
|_____________________
[703]
Matriculated from Broadgates Hall, Oxford in October 1601, aged 18. He
went on to serve as Sheriff of Glamorgan in 1625.
The Gwyns lived at Llansannor Court, near Cowbridge. Many elements of
the sixteenth and seventeenth century house survive in the more modern
house on the site.
see David J. Francis, ‘Llansannor and the Gwyns’, Glamorgan Historian,
10, 1974, 9-26 (which includes photographs of the house). A detailed
account of the (fascinating) house is given on pp.167-174 of An
Inventory of the Ancient Monuments in Glamorgan, Royal Commission on
Ancient and Historical Monuments in Wales, Vol. IV, Cardiff, 1981. 1723
Westmoreland Co. - William Veale William Veale was one of several
witnesses of a land purchase in Westmoreland Co.: Others were, Henry
Lee, Henry Netherton, Richard Coleman. Land leased from Frans: & John
Awbrey, his s
_John, MEADOWS ______+
| (1658 - 1721) m 1694
_Joshua Joel MEADOWS _|
| (1702 - 1777) m 1737 |
| |_Miss AUBREY ________+
| (1678 - 1721) m 1694
|
|--Joel MEADOWS
| (1738 - 1806)
| _____________________
| |
|_Judith GREEN ________|
(.... - 1768) m 1737 |
|_____________________
[738]
Prince Edward County Wills, WB#, p. 461, Joel Medders of Prince Edward
County.
_David MIZELL _______+
| m 1829
_David MIZELL _________|
| (1833 - 1870) |
| |_Mary C PEARCE ______+
| (1804 - 1893) m 1829
|
|--William David MIZELL
|
| _____________________
| |
|_Angeline Augusta MAY _|
|
|_____________________
_Henry PERCY ________+
| (1421 - 1461)
_Henry PERCY ________|
| (.... - 1489) |
| |_Eleanor POYNINGS ___
|
|
|--Henry PERCY
| (.... - 1527)
| _____________________
| |
|_Maude PEMBROKE _____|
|
|_____________________
[615]
Known as 'The Magnificent' on account of the splendour of his
establishment and his love of display, was eleven years of age when he
succeeded. In 1503 he escorted Queen Margaret of Scotland, daughter of
Henry VII, to Berwick, after her marriage to James IV. She stayed two
days at Alnwick Castle. It is recorded that on her way through Cawledge
Park, the Earl's Deer Park south of Alnwick, she killed a buck with her
bow.
In 1513 he took part in Henry VIII’s expedition to France and was
present at the sieges of Therouenne and Tournay and the Battle of the
Spurs. In this year hostilities with Scotland were resumed, and Alnwick
was the headquarters and place of assembly of the English forces. The
Earl of Surrey, in command of an army of 26,000 men, marched north and
halted at Alnwick on September 4th, where his son Thomas joined him
with reinforcements. From Woolerhaugh he sent a herald challenging the
Scottish King to join battle with him in five days' time and on 9th
September 1513 the English gained a decisive victory at Flodden. The
Earl of Northumberland was absent in France, but his two brothers,
William and Lionel, took part in the battle. In 1520 he was one of the
ten earls appointed to wait on Francis I, the King of France, on the
Field of the Cloth of Gold. He was a typical nobleman of the
Renaissance, extremely cultured for his time, and, unlike his
predecessors, preferred the life of the Court to that of Border
warfare. He declined the appointment of Warden of the Marches, but this
was probably on account of the expenses entailed by that office, which
his own extravagance had rendered him unable to meet. In 1523 Surrey
was Lord Warden, and Alnwick again formed the place of assembly for a
large army. The Earl joined Surrey at Alnwick with a force of 876 men,
but as the Scottish army, which threatened invasion did not advance,
the English forces were disband