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  1. Born in 1384 - Kexby Yorkshire; Deceased in 1418 - Scarborough Yorkshire,aged 34 years old Parents. William Ughtred Oughtred, born about 1350 - Scarborough, Yorkshire, England, deceased before September 19, 1398 - Scarborough, Yorkshire, England

  2. Died 28 May 1365 (73) Father: Thomas Ughtred 1st Baron Ughtred. Mother: Margaret Burden Baroness Ughtred. Thomas Ughtred 2nd Baron Ughtred. 2nd, Baron Ughtred. Born 1325. m Catherine Mauley Countess Suffolkx 3. Died 18 Nov 1401 (76) 6 x Great Grand Daughter of King Henry "Curtmantle" II of England.

  3. Sir Henry Ughtred, ( 1534– 1598), born in Mont Orgueil Castle, Jersey the son of Governor Sir Anthony Ughtred. He became a Member of Parliament, a shipowner and shipbuilder during the reign of Elizabeth I. One of his ships, the Leicester sailed with Sir Francis Drake against the Spanish Armada. A wealthy landowner, Sir Henry is known to have ...

  4. 4 George Ughtred (1501- ) 4 Eleanor Ughtred (1510- ) 4 Henry Ughtred (1506- ) 3 Anthony Ughtred (1478-1534) m (1522) Elizabeth Seymour (1505-1572) daughter of John (1474-1536) and Margaret Wentworth (1474-1550) 4 Henry Ughtred (1534- ) m Elizabeth Paulet ( -1576), daughter of John 4 Margery Ughtred (1535- ) m William Hungate Notes and references

  5. Sir Anthony Ughtred died in Jersey on 6 October 1534 and was buried in the chapel of St George, in the castle of Mont Orgueil. After her husband's death, his mother returned to Kexby, Yorkshire. The manor of Kexby had been granted for life to Sir Anthony Ughtred and his wife by Henry VIII in 1531 and it was here that Henry's sister Margery was probably born.

  6. 15 de feb. de 2023 · In 1537, Gregory married Elizabeth, Lady Ughtred, widow of Sir Anthony Ughtred, sister to Jane Seymour and therefore became brother-in-law to Henry VIII and uncle to Edward VI. Gregory survived the dramatic fall from royal favour and subsequent execution of his father in 1540, as well as the ousting of his brother-in-law and patron, Edward Seymour in 1549.

  7. The Ughtred family can be traced back to the early thirteenth century, however, it was Thomas Ughtred (1292 – 1365) who ensured their place as one of the most prominent families in Yorkshire. [1] Following an outstanding military career, Thomas Ughtred was summoned to Parliament as Baron Ughtred from 1343 to 1364 and made a Knight of the Garter between May 1358 and April 1360. [7]