Roy Family Genealogy
Genealogy of the Roy family, including Boudreau, Burnett, Myers, Ward, Whelpley, and Woodman
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Elizabeth de Segrave, Baroness Segrave

Female 1338 - 1368  (29 years)


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Elizabeth de Segrave, Baroness Segrave was born on 25 Oct 1338 in Croxton Abbey, Leicestershire, England (daughter of John de Segrave, Lord Segrave and Margaret de Botherton, Duchess of Norfolk); died before 1368 in England.

    Elizabeth married John de Mowbray, Lord Mowbray in 1353 in England. John (son of John de Mowbray, Baron Mowbray and Joan Plantagenet, of Lancaster) was born on 25 Jun 1340 in Epworth, Lincolnshire, England; died on 9 Oct 1368 in Thrace. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. John de Mowbray, Baron Mowbray, Earl of Northampton died in 1379 in England.
    2. daughter de Mowbray
    3. Eleanor de Mowbray was born about 25 Mar 1364 in England.
    4. Sir Thomas de Mowbray, KG, Duke of Norfolk was born on 22 Mar 1365; died on 22 Sep 1399 in Venice, Veneto, Italy.
    5. Anne de Mowbray, Abbess of Barking
    6. Jane de Mowbray

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  John de Segrave, Lord Segrave was born in 1315 (son of Stephen de Segrave, Lord Segrave and Alice Arundell); died on 20 Mar 1353.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • History: birth to death

    Notes:

    Death: Reed (2002) gives his death date as 1 April 1353.

    History:
    He was the fourth Baron Seagrave.

    John married Margaret de Botherton, Duchess of Norfolk in 1334. Margaret (daughter of Thomas of Brotherton, Earl of Norfolk, Marshall of England and Alice de Hales) was born about 1322; died on 24 Mar 1398/99; was buried in Christ Church Greyfriars, London, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Margaret de Botherton, Duchess of Norfolk was born about 1322 (daughter of Thomas of Brotherton, Earl of Norfolk, Marshall of England and Alice de Hales); died on 24 Mar 1398/99; was buried in Christ Church Greyfriars, London, England.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • History: birth to death
    • Title(s): 29 Sep 1397; She became the Duchess of Norfolk

    Notes:

    History:
    On 29 September 1397, she became the Duchess of Norfolk.

    Children:
    1. Anne de Segrave, Abbess of Barking died about 1377.
    2. 1. Elizabeth de Segrave, Baroness Segrave was born on 25 Oct 1338 in Croxton Abbey, Leicestershire, England; died before 1368 in England.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Stephen de Segrave, Lord Segrave (son of John de Segrave, Lord Segrave and Christian de Plessetis).

    Stephen married Alice Arundell. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Alice Arundell
    Children:
    1. 2. John de Segrave, Lord Segrave was born in 1315; died on 20 Mar 1353.

  3. 6.  Thomas of Brotherton, Earl of Norfolk, Marshall of England was born on 1 Jun 1300 in Brotherton, Yorkshire, England (son of Edward I "Longshanks", King of England and Marguerite of France); died on 23 Aug 1338 in Framlingham, Suffolk, England; was buried in Bury St Edmunds Abbey, Bury St. Edmunds, Suffolk, England.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Military: 1313
    • Offices Held: 10 Feb 1316
    • Offices Held: Spring 1319
    • Knighted: 15 Jul 1319
    • Travel: 1320
    • Miscellaneous: From 1321 to 1322
    • Legal: 3 Aug 1321
    • Land/House: Aug 1323
    • Offices Held: say 1325
    • Military: 1326
    • Miscellaneous: 3 Mar 1327
    • Military: 1328
    • Miscellaneous: Feb 1330
    • Military: 1333
    • Military: 1337
    • Miscellaneous: 1337
    • Offices Held: 25 May 1337
    • Offices Held: 1338
    • Will: 4 Aug 1338, Framlingham, Suffolk, England

    Notes:

    Birth:
    Edward I, his new young wife Margaret, who turned twenty-one that year and was pregnant with their first child, and the royal household, set out north from St Albans on 15 April 1300. The army had been summoned to Carlisle for mid-summer, for a new Scottish campaign. Queen Margaret parted company with the main household at Stamford on 5 May, and continued her own journey northward. Preparations had been made for her to use Cawood Castle, a residence of the Archbishop of York, for her confinement. She stopped in the village of Brotherton to hunt late that month, and went into labor, early and unexpectedly. Margaret had married Edward I on 10 September 1299 and, if conception occurred immediately, she was in her 38th week, but as she was apparently hunting and had not yet reached Cawood, she may have been a week or two earlier in her pregnancy. The labor was difficult, and Margaret reportedly called on St Thomas of Canterbury for assistance. The baby was delivered on 1 June, and named for the saint. Edward I rushed over to the village as soon as he was given the news, and stayed there until 9 June.

    Military:
    Thomas received a summons for military service in Scotland, but it was shortly afterwards remitted by the king (Waugh, 2004) and the young earl of Norfolk appears to have missed completely the disastrous battle of Bannockburn in June 1314.

    Offices Held:
    He was made the Marshal of England.

    Offices Held:
    He served as keeper of the realm while the king was on a Scottish military campaign.

    Travel:
    He accompanied the king to France in June and July, travelling with a large retinue.

    Miscellaneous:
    Thomas remained strongly supportive of Edward II during the baronial rebellion of 1321-1322, but failed in the one task he assumed on his own, an attempt to arrange negotiations with the earl of Hereford in March 1321. His other roles during that time were ceremonial and undertaken with fellow peers.

    Legal:
    Rigaud de Asserio, bishop of Winchester, wrote to Roger de Martival, Bishop of Salisbury, authorizing the latter to absolve Thomas of Brotherton from a sentence of excommunication. Thomas had incurred this by violently assaulting a clerk of the bishop - one Deodatus de Pyno - within the diocese of Winchester. Unfortunately the date of the assault is not mentioned, so it is not known how long Thomas was under excommunication. The assault could have happened shortly before the date of the letter, or possibly as early as the spring of 1319, when Thomas was acting as keeper of the realm and working in close conjunction with John de Sandale, the prior bishop of Winchester who was also chancellor of England.

    Land/House:
    He negotiated with the earl of Norfolk to take control for life of the lordship of Chepstow for a rent of £200 a year,20 and the following year, purchased the lordship outright for only £800. Chepstow was worth far more, so Thomas came out much the worse in this transaction, and many historians surmise he was forced into it, another victim of the Despenser tyranny. Yet the rest of the victims of the Despensers were widows, minor heirs, and those lower down on the social order. The earl of Norfolk was a young man in his early twenties, a peer of the realm and the brother of the king. The fact that Despenser was able to take such advantage of him is another indication of the low regard in which he was held

    Offices Held:
    The king confiscated the one office he was holding, marshal of England, because Thomas had failed to have someone execute the office on his behalf in Lancashire, when royal justices arrived there to hold the king's pleas. Thomas offered a fine of £100 to recover the office, which Edward II pardoned, but not without a public verbal rebuke, threatening his younger brother with punishment should he again fail to perform the duties of marshal properly.

    Military:
    On 24 September 1326, Queen Isabella and her son Edmund, landed on the Suffolk Coast. Thomas immediately joined them. While the usurpation was successful, he received little reward.

    Miscellaneous:
    He was granted the wardship and marriage of John de Segrave, the 12-year-old heir to the barony of Segrave.

    Military:
    In the Summer of 1328, Thomas participated in Edward Ill's disastrous Weardale campaign against the Scots.

    Miscellaneous:
    Thomas of Brotherton and Edmund of Woodstock led Edward III's young wife Queen Philippa to her coronation dressed as simple grooms.

    Military:
    Thomas commanded a contingent of royal forces in the Scottish campaign culminating in the battle of Halidon Hill on 19 July 1333.

    Military:
    He joined the King in the Scottish campaign, and was named the keeper of Perth. Yet he was not given a leadership position (there are no payments to him as a captain on the pay roll) which had to be humbling for the former Marshal of England. At some point in December 1337, Thomas left the campaign and returned to England, apparently without first informing the king.

    Miscellaneous:
    In the spring of 1337, Edward III appointed Sir Constantine Mortimer, lord of Attleborough in Norfolk, to restore the Brotherton household to order.

    Offices Held:
    The office of Marshal was taken from Thomas.

    Offices Held:
    The office of Marshal of England was resorted to Thomas.

    Thomas married Alice de Hales in 1321 in Bungay Castle, Bungay, Suffolk, England. Alice (daughter of Sir Roger de Hales and Alice Skogan) was born in 1305; died before 12 Oct 1330 in England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 7.  Alice de Hales was born in 1305 (daughter of Sir Roger de Hales and Alice Skogan); died before 12 Oct 1330 in England.

    Notes:

    Married:
    "And the said Thomas Brodirton, Erle of Norfolke, cam dawn into Norfolke and ther he wedded a knyght's daughter fast by Bungey." So writes 19th-century Norfolk historian Francis Blomefield (1808), quoting an ancient manuscript from the Book of Pleas.

    Alice Hales brought nothing to her marriage save her beauty. She was not the heiress of the Hales manors, as she had a brother, and the Hales family would have supported of the young earl of Norfolk whether or not he married Alice, since he was their feudal overlord. On Thomas's end, there was no political or territorial advantage to the marriage - it was a love match, pure and simple.

    Children:
    1. 3. Margaret de Botherton, Duchess of Norfolk was born about 1322; died on 24 Mar 1398/99; was buried in Christ Church Greyfriars, London, England.
    2. Edward de Botherton was born about 1323; died in Aug 1334.
    3. Alice de Botherton, Lady of Bungay was born in 1324; died in 1352.


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  John de Segrave, Lord Segrave was born about 1256 (son of Nicholas de Segrave, Lord Segrave); died in 1325.

    John married Christian de Plessetis in 1269. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 9.  Christian de Plessetis (daughter of Sir Hugh de Plessetis).
    Children:
    1. 4. Stephen de Segrave, Lord Segrave
    2. Ellen de Segrave

  3. 12.  Edward I "Longshanks", King of England Edward I "Longshanks", King of England was born on 17 Jun 1239 in Palace of Westminster, Westminster, London, England (son of Henry III, King of England and Eleanor of Provence); died on 7 Jul 1307 in Burgh-by-Sands, Cumberland, England; was buried after 7 Jul 1307 in Westminster Abbey, London, England.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Title(s): 1272
    • Crowned: 19 Aug 1272, Westminster Abbey, London, England
    • Reign: From 1274 to 1307; King of England
    • Military: 1277
    • Miscellaneous: 1290
    • Military: 1296

    Notes:

    Name:


    He was also the Duke of Aquitaine.

    Title(s):
    He became the Duke of Aquitaine.

    Crowned:
    He was crowned the King of England by Robert Kilwardby, Archbishop of Canterbury in Westminster Abbey.

    Military:
    In 1277, he began a campaign to subdue Wales and defeat Llywelyn ap Gruffydd. The campaign lasted until Llywelyn's death in 1282. Wales was divided into shires and English law was established.

    Miscellaneous:
    In 1290, when Alexander III, King of Scotland died without heirs, Edward intervened as feudal lord. Margaret Maid of Norway and heir to the throne of Scotland, then a child, was betrothed to the future Edward II, and sailed from Norway to England. She died in 1290 before reaching England leaving the throne empty. Edward chose John Baliol from among thirteen candidates as King of the Scots. While John Balioli did homage to Edward the Scots resisted English domination.

    Military:
    Edward invaded Scotland and soundly defeated the Scots under Baliol. Edward forced Balliol to abdicate The Scottish barons did homage to Edward as their king. William Wallace incited a rebellion in 1297, defeated the English army at Stirling, and harassed England's northern counties. The next year, Edward defeated Wallace at the Battle of Falkirk but encountered continued resistance until Wallace's capture and execution in 1304. Robert the Bruce revolted in 1306 against England ultimately defeating Edward II at Bannockburn.

    Edward married Marguerite of France on 10 Sep 1299 in Canterbury, Kent, England. Marguerite (daughter of Philip III "the Bold", King of France and Marie of Brabant) was born in 1279 in France; died on 14 Feb 1318 in Marlborough Castle, Marlborough, Wiltshire, England; was buried in Basilica of Saint-Denis, St. Denis, Île-de-France, France. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 13.  Marguerite of FranceMarguerite of France was born in 1279 in France (daughter of Philip III "the Bold", King of France and Marie of Brabant); died on 14 Feb 1318 in Marlborough Castle, Marlborough, Wiltshire, England; was buried in Basilica of Saint-Denis, St. Denis, Île-de-France, France.

    Notes:

    Married:
    The marriage was negotiated by Pope Boniface VIII in June 1298 in order to bring an end to the Gascon war between Edward I and Philip IV, King of France, Margaret's elder half-brother. King Edward was aged sixty, and Margaret forty years his junior.

    Children:
    1. 6. Thomas of Brotherton, Earl of Norfolk, Marshall of England was born on 1 Jun 1300 in Brotherton, Yorkshire, England; died on 23 Aug 1338 in Framlingham, Suffolk, England; was buried in Bury St Edmunds Abbey, Bury St. Edmunds, Suffolk, England.
    2. Edumnd of Woodstock, Earl of Kent was born on 5 Aug 1301 in Woodstock Palace, Woodstock, Oxfordshire, England; died on 19 Mar 1329/30 in Winchester Castle, Winchester, Hampshire, England; was buried in Westminster Abbey, London, England.
    3. Eleanor of Winchester was born on 4 May 1306 in Winchester, Hampshire, England; died in 1310 in Amesbury Abbey, Amesbury, Wiltshire, England; was buried in Beaulieu Abbey, Hampshire, England.

  5. 14.  Sir Roger de Hales was born about 1274 in Lodden, Norfolk, England (son of Ranulph de Halys and Demeta le Clauer); died in 1313.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • History: birth to death

    Notes:

    History:
    From 1303 to 1313, he was the Coroner of Norfolk.

    In 1303, he witnessed a charter of the earl of Norfolk in March, sold land to Sir John Jermy, and undertook a fine
    regarding Loddon.

    Roger married Alice Skogan. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  6. 15.  Alice Skogan
    Children:
    1. Joan de Hales
    2. Matilda de Hales
    3. 7. Alice de Hales was born in 1305; died before 12 Oct 1330 in England.
    4. Sir John de Hales was born on 1306 to 1308 in Hales Hall, Loddon, Norfolk, England; died about 1349.
    5. Edmund de Hales