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  1. 30 de jun. de 2024 · His daughter and sole heir Eleanor married Robert, Earl Grosvenor, afterwards Marquis of Westminster, and the Heaton estates went to her second son, Thomas, born in 1799, who by a special remainder succeeded his maternal grandfather in 1814 as second Earl of Wilton.

  2. 2 de jul. de 2024 · Three estates in the immediate neighbourhood of Wilton were held by the abbey at the time of Domesday, and were retained by the nuns until the Dissolution: they were Washern, Ugford, and part of Ditchampton.

  3. Hace 6 días · Apparently Puckering obtained a short lease, for after his death in 1596 the Archbishop wrote to Sir Thomas Egerton, then Lord Keeper, who had also asked for the use of the house, that "My Ladie Puckering hathe a state in it for one yere after her husbands death." Egerton took possession in 1596.

  4. 18 de jun. de 2024 · This township is bounded on the west by the river Roche, and comprises 1470 acres of land, wholly the property of the Earl of Wilton, whose grandfather, Thomas Egerton, the first earl, obtained the estate by marriage with one of the co-heiresses of Sir Ralph Assheton, of Middleton.

  5. 28 de jun. de 2024 · List of nobles and magnates of England in the 13th century. During the 13th century England was partially ruled by Archbishops, Bishops, Earls (Counts), Barons, marcher Lords, and knights. All of these except for the knights would always hold most of their fiefs as tenant in chief. Although the kings maintained control of huge tracts of lands ...

  6. 20 de jun. de 2024 · Sir William Booth was the son and heir apparent to Sir George Booth, 1st Baronet (1566–1652), of the ancient family settled at Dunham Massey in Cheshire, by his wife Vere Egerton, daughter and co-heir of Sir Thomas Egerton.

  7. reviews.history.ac.uk › review › 527Reviews in History

    Hace 2 días · McFarlane’s observations have since indeed prompted, amongst other crucial research, a number of detailed, skilful and informative studies of individual magnates, which have now begun to reach back into the thirteenth and even the twelfth century, and which include J. R. Maddicott’s Thomas of Lancaster (Oxford, 1970) and Simon de ...