SOME NOTES ON MEDIEVAL ENGLISH GENEALOGY | ||||
HOME | GUIDE | SOURCES | FAMILIES | RESOURCES |
LINKS | CALENDAR |
Request updates WHAT'S NEW |
THIS SITE | SEARCH |
Index |
Volume 9, page 243:
ROBERT DE MORTIMER, the first of the family of whom there is
record in Norfolk, witnessed a charter of William de Warenne to
Castleacre Priory, probably in the time of Henry I.
Robert de Mortimer also appears towards the end of a long witness list for a charter of Henry de Beaumont, earl of Warwick, which can be dated between June 1115 and June 1119, suggesting that as a young man he served in a household connected with the earl [Ian Mortimer, The Medieval Mortimer Family: An outline lineage, citing C. R. Fonge, The Cartulary of St Mary's Collegiate Church, Warwick (2004), number 9].
[Item last updated: 22 June 2019.]
Volume 9, page 250:
The heirs general of Sir Robert Mortimer
[d. 1387]
were the three das. and coheirs of his son
Thomas ...
Cicely, who m. (i) Sir John Harling, who was dead by 1 July 1403,
and (ii), in 1411, Sir John Radcliff of Attleborough ...
Roskell et al., History of Parliament [The House of Commons 1386-1421, vol. 4, pp. 155-157], suggest that Sir John Radcliff's marriage to Cicely may have taken place around December 1405, when he and Cicely's half-brother Sir John Fastolf appeared as sureties for men from Attleborough [Calendar of Close Rolls, 1405-1409, p. 83]. The same authors state that Cicely died in 1423 at Bordeaux.
[Item last updated: 12 November 2003.]