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  1. Sir William Courtenay ( c. 1529 – 29 September 1557) was a landowner in Devon and de jure 2nd Earl of Devon. He was the son of George Courtenay (d. 1533) and Catherine, daughter of Sir George St Ledger of Annery.

  2. Thomas de Courtenay, 5th/13th Earl of Devon (3 May 1414 – 3 February 1458) was a nobleman from South West England. His seat was at Colcombe Castle near Colyton, and later at the principal historic family seat of Tiverton Castle, after his mother's death. The Courtenay family had historically been an important one in the region, and the ...

  3. Today in 1511 William Courtenay, 1st Earl of Devon, died at Greenwich. He died of pleurisy and was buried at Blackfriars, London, with the honours due to him an earl, even though he hadn’t been officially invested as an earl.

  4. William Courtenay, 1st Earl of Devon (1475 – 9 June 1511), feudal baron of Okehampton and feudal baron of Plympton, was a member of the leading noble family of Devon.

  5. Edward Courtenay, 1st and last Earl of Devon was the son of Sir Hugh Courtenay and Margaret Carminow. 1 He married Elizabeth Courtenay, daughter of Sir Philip Courtenay and unknown daughter Hingeston. 1 He died on 28 May 1509. 1

  6. They had one son, [1] William Courtenay, 1st Earl of Devon (died 1511), attainted 1504, imprisoned during the reign of Henry VII and released by his son Henry VIII but died before being formally restored to the earldom. His son Henry Courtenay, 1st Marquess of Exeter was restored in blood and honours and created a marquess in 1525, but beheaded ...

  7. Hugh Rupert Courtenay, 18th Earl of Devon, DL (5 May 1942 – 18 August 2015), styled as Lord Courtenay until 1998, of Powderham Castle in Devon, was a British peer, landowner, and surveyor.