Edmund le Boteler

Contents

Personal and Family Information

Edmund was born about 1309 in Shropshire, England, the son of William le Boteler and Ela Hereburgh.

Pedigree Chart (3 generations)


 

Edmund le Boteler
(c1309-?)

 

William le Boteler
(1274-<1334)

 

William le Boteler
(1245-1283)

  
 
 
   
 
 
  

Angarad Ferch Gruffydd
(1245-1308)

  
 
 
   
 
 
  

Ela Hereburgh
(c1282-1343)

 

Roger Hereburgh
(c1260-1284)

  
 
 
   
 
 
  

Ida Odengsells
(c1265-c1325)

  
 
 
   
 
 

Events

EventDateDetailsSourceMultimediaNotes
BirthABT 1309
Place: Shropshire, England

Notes

Note 1

!Source: Edmund [Boteler] le Boteler [abt. 1309] https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Boteler-465

Born about 1309 [uncertain] in Shropshire, England

Died [date unknown] [location unknown]

Edmund le Boteler formerly Boteler

Son of William le Boteler and Ela Boteler

Brother of Isabel Basset [half], William le Boteler [half], Thomas Boteler [half], Walter de Hopton [half], John de Hopton [half], William le Botiller, Alice Longford, Ankaret de Ferrers, Edward le Boteler, Ida Trussell and Denise Shareshull

[spouse unknown]

[children unknown]

Biography

Edmund le Boteler was a son of William le Boteler of Wem, Shropshire, and Ela de Herdeburgh.[1][2]

Edmund held one knight's fee of Weston Turville, Buckinghamshire, in 1346[3], and after his death it passed to his brother Edward.

Edmund was later noted in a Plea concerning Weston Turville in 8 Henry IV [1407].[4]

The manor of Willey, Warwickshire: "Willey was described as held by the heirs of Hugh de Herdeberewe. These were his grandchildren Ela and Isabel , the wives respectively of William le Boteler of Wem and John de Hulles. Alice, daughter of John and Isabel's surviving child Isabel, with her second husband John de Peyto the younger, came into possession of the whole of Willey, of which manor they made settlements in 1333 and 1339. The remainders in the settlements of 1333, in which the manor was divided into two halves, one lying 'towards the east', and of 1339, when a moiety only was dealt with, were to William son of William le Boteler and the right heirs of his mother Ela. John de Peyto was still alive in 1345, when he did fealty to Edmund le Boteler , a fine having been concluded in which Ela le Boteler granted the reversion of the manor to her second son. This transaction led to a lawsuit the following year between Ela, John and Alice, and William le Boteler, the latter maintaining that the original grant by Hugh to Nicholas de Herdebergh was in fee. The judgement, however, was that the grant had been in tail, thus legalizing the reversion of 1345".[5]

Sources

↑ 'Parishes: Weston Turville', in A History of the County of Buckingham: Volume 2, ed. William Page , pp. 365-372. British History Online http://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/bucks/vol2/pp365-372 [accessed 2 June 2020].

↑ Calendar of the Close Rolls, Preserved in the Public Record Office. Edward III. Vol. XIV. AD 1374-1377. HMSO, 1913, p 410 Internet Archive.

↑ Feudal Aids. 1284-1341. Vol I. HMSO. 1899, p124 Internet Archive.

↑ Wrottesley, G Pedigrees from the Plea Rolls Collected from the Pleadings in the Various Courts of Law, A.D. 1200 to 1500, from the Original Rolls in the Public Record Office. pp 250-251 Internet Archive.

↑ 'Parishes: Willey', in A History of the County of Warwick: Volume 6, Knightlow Hundred, ed. L F Salzman , pp. 259-261. British History Online http://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/warks/vol6/pp259-261 [accessed 5 June 2020].