![]() ![]() In 1396 she was holding North Reston, Lincolnshire and Denford, Northamptonshire in dower for life (CIPM, 20: no. Hervey's Chamberlain Pedigree and the Oxfordshire Visitations give his 3rd wife as Jane Reynes, daughter of Sir John Reynes of Clifton Reynes. ![]() See also (Here for Petsoe) and see (Here, for Denford) and (Here, for Cotes. In default of such heirs, remainder to the right heirs of the aforesaid Richard Chaumberlayn. And after the decease of John the manor shall remain to Richard, son of John le Chaumberlayn, and Margaret, his wife, and the heirs of their bodies, to hold of the chief lords for ever. To John, to hold of the chief lords for the life of John. ![]() The manor of 'Ruston' was granted to Richard, after whose death the manor would remain ' Richard Chaumberlayn and John, his son, querents, and Robert Chaumberlayn, deforciant, On 6 October 1324, in an agreement between Richard and Margaret received seizen of this manor on 15 August 1327 on the death of Robert de Baldok. This was likely a marriage gift as the same manor was settled on his father on his marriage to Joan Morteyn. His father settled the manor of Stanbridge on Master Robert de Baldok, archdeacon of Middlesex, Richard and Margaret his wife in 1324 with a remainder to Richard and Margaret his wife. Became (before 1391), a nun at Chickesond (Chicksands) Gilbertine Priory). Named in the 1566 Visitations of Oxfordshire. Married: 3rd - Jane or Joan Reyns, daughter of Sir John Reyns Katherine also died before having any children. She was born about 1310/11 and aged 36 in 1346. Married: 2nd - Katherine de la Dale, daughter of Sir Thomas de Berkeley by his wife Margery, of Wolaston, Northamptonshire, by when they occur in the IPM of her father. Richard was knighted before 1346, when he Marriages and Family Married: 1st - Margaret Unknown by 1324 when his father settled the manor of Stanbridge on Richard and Margaret his wife. ![]() The Tancarville arms, attached to William Harvey's Chamberlaine Pedigree, can be seen in Miscellanea Genealogica Et Heraldica, here. The visitation of 1566, carried out by William Harvey, Clarencieux, would also connect the Chamberlaines of Shirburn to the Tancarvilles. 1543) had adopted the ancient arms of Tancarville, gules an escutcheon argent in orle of spur rowles or.the Tancarvilles were long extinguished by 1400.(by which time) the Chamberlaines had not yet adopted their arms. This bogus connection must have been made by an earlier herald, because already by the 1520s, Sir Edward Chamberlaine of Shirburn (d. In the 1574 visitation of Oxfordshire Richard Lee, Portcullis Pursuivant, attached their descendants to the family of Tancarville, hereditary chamberlains of Normandy. Fox, (2020) Great Cloister: A Lost Canterbury Tale: A History of the Canterbury Cloister, Constructed 1408-14, with Some Account of the Donors and their Coats of Arms,Ī good example of heraldic calumny. He is called Richard Chamberlain 'of Cotes' after the manor of 'Chamberleyn Cotes' in the ancient parish of Raundes, in the Hundred of Higham Ferrers, Northamptonshire. b 1324, and was born between 13, a date which can be ascertained by the fact that he was aged 60 and more in the aforesaid Sir John Morteyn's IPM. a 1324 and Margaret (Jane) née Morteyn b. He was the son of Sir John Chamberlain b. That he was a knight is recorded in his will and in his cousin Sir John Morteyn's IPM. 1342 to 1352) was endeavouring to broker a peace treaty between England and France. Sir Richard Chamberlain of Cotes and Deneford was a 6th cousin twice removed of King Edward III, and served as the king's envoy to the Papal Court in Avignon in 1343, at a time when the new Pope Clement VI (r. ![]()
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