SOME NOTES ON MEDIEVAL ENGLISH GENEALOGY | ||||
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Volume 8, page 441:
He
[Roger de Mortimer, Earl of March (d. 1330)]
was bur. in the Church
of the Grey Friars at Shrewsbury.(g)
Note g:
According to the usual account
(Murimuth, p. 62, &c.), he was bur. at
the Grey Friars, London, and transferred to Wigmore
Abbey. But the annalist of
Wigmore (Mon., vol. vi, p. 352) states that "ad
fratres minores Salopie in honore
tumulatum," and mentions no transfer to Wigmore.
The Chron. of the Grey Friars
of London (p. 4) says nothing about his burial.
An undated petition to the king by Roger's widow [P.R.O., SC 8/61, no 3027], seeking the reburial of his body at Wigmore, states that it was then in the keeping of the Grey Friars of Coventry ("ffreres menours de Couentre"), and a subscription indicates that the body was to remain in peace. This suggests the body was buried at Coventry, not Shrewsbury or London, and remained there.
[This evidence was presented by Carenza Lewis in a BBC TV programme, "House Detectives", broadcast in March 2002. I am grateful to Elizabeth Semper O'Keefe, of Herefordshire Record Office, for providing the reference for the petition.]