Notes |
- May be the Henrico Sygrym listed in Worveleye (Worsley) in 1280 Lay Subsidy Roll.
CLYFTON. 1332-133
Item comperimus per sacramentum Willelmi le Baker, Henrici
Ingram, Johannis Myles, et Johannis Ate Welle, quod ecclesia
de Clyfton taxatur ad x marcas, unde nona garbarum vellerum
et agnorum valet vj marcas et dimidiam, et non plus, propter
causas praefatas.
PEACHLEY (Peceslcia, Petcheslee, Petchesleg) is said to have been bought by Alfstan, Prior of
Worcester, brother of Bishop Wulfstan, for the priory of Worcester. It does not appear that there
was ever a manor at Peachley, but an estate there was in the 13th century owned by the priory of
Worcester, to which portions of it were given at different times by Nicholas the son of David de
Peachley, John Murieweder, Henry de Dumbleton, Richard de Peachley and others. Margaret the
wife of David de Peachley and Alice the wife of William Hibernius or Ibernius appear to have
been daughters of a certain Ingram, from whom they had inherited property here in 1194. The heirs
of William Hibernius were holding land at Peachley in 1240. During the 13th and 14th centuries
the prior obtained licence to acquire land in Peachley on many occasions.
- (Research):1 This is in a handwriting possibly later end of the account of St. John's Arms and
than Habington's time, but is clearly his Monuments,
composition. The article continues to the
130 A SURVEY OF WORCESTERSHIRE.
of the house of Gower of Boulton, are sprung the Ingrams of this
parish, whose ancestor was John Ingram of Wolford, com. Warwick,
a gentleman of very good family. But to retire to theire lands, I
conjecture the Grove was once apperteyning to John Dabitote, whom
I shall mencion in Lawerne, and whose church and tithes, not far
from Mr. Ingram's habitacion, were charitably bestowed on Worster's
Priory. I could read no further in the exchequer of this Dabitot's
race, but till the seaventh of H. 6, from which stem Sir Ralph
Clare, of Kidderminster, deriveth himselfe in his Pedigree, and so
beareth the Arms of Sir Geoffrey Dabitote and this John Dabitote,
beeing Or, two lyons passant guardant the one gules the other
azure. The rest of the lands of Mr. Ingram seem to have bynn
belonging to the Knights Templars, and yet it is probable parte
thereof was holden of the Bishop as belonging to his Manor of
Wike Episcopi. In this township of Bedwardin did William de
Abington, from whom descended the Knights of that name in the
counties of Worcester, Gloucester, and Dorset, dwell, as appeareth
by a deed without date of lands in Wichenford sold to Stephen
Wyard of Wichenford. Here was alsoe borne (as 'tis sayd) Sir
Reignold Bray, first servant to the Renowned and virtuous Mar-
garet, Countess of Richmond and Derby, mother of King H. the
seaventhe, and so ancestres of all the Kings and Queenes which have
reigned in England, whoe was by his ladye's employment a greate
instrument in knitting the marriage betweene her sonne and Queen
Elizabeth, eldest daughter of King Edward 4th, and soe the un-
doubted heire of England, whereby the deadly warrs betweene the
mighty families of York and Lancaster quite ended.
Marteley Churche's Armes and Monuments 2 .
Theare lyethe in the Chauncell a littell stone with this in-
scription. Hie iacent Eduardus Washbourn et Johannes Qent
1 On this page is an account of the Nun- Areley, the former the rough draft of the
nery of Cokehyll, probably an early version account printed Vol. I. p. 343 an d the
of what is given in the third paragraph on latter fresh matter. From the former the
Vol. I. p. 312. But it continues with the following sentences are taken; and skipping
sentence here given, which like the former Areley for the present, I have gone on to
portion is extensively crossed out. two pages of a curious form of Habington s
2 From three pages in Habington's hand, writing, which occur later in the book,
containing accounts of Martley and Neather
A SURVEY OF WORCESTERSHIRE. 195
filii Letitiae filiae Edwardi Littleton Militis de Pileton, com. Staff.,
1629.
The greate and auncient manor of Hartley consystynge of ioyned
hamlets payinge theyre cheyfe rentes to the Lord of the soyle,
with svte and servyse to hys courtes lete and Baron, streangthened
with large pryveledges, a hundred freehoulders attend thys manor,
besydes copyhoulders and leasehoulders. The wydowes are by
custome to have half of the estates wheareof theyre husbandes
dyed seysed, controversyes arysinge betweene tenants in thys
manner are to be heard with counsell on bothe sydes in the Lord's
courte and theare concluded * * *.
Curia Willielmi Mucklowe Armigeri Manerii de Markley coram
Thoma Hill locum tenenti Eduaredi Crofte militis capitalis
senescalli secundum consuetudinem Manerii de tempore
quo, etc., 19 Hen. 8.
Jurati. Richardus Ingram, Johannes Horner, Thomas a Seuem,
Johannes Kinges, Thomas Polehouse, William Millward, Johannes
Howell, Thomas Doughtie, Johannes Poter, Stephanus Doughtie,
Thomas Kemsey, Edward Chapell, Johannes Browninge, Rogerus
Althurne.
- (Medical):R1a Haplotype #31 This is exact to our Ingram R1A.
Although the haplotype below has plenty of matches in Europe, none fall in Scandinavia.
The top European matches, in fact, fall in The Netherlands and the Rhineland. There is
also one each in London and Berlin. The other European matches fall in Eastern Europe.
The Asian matches fall largely in India, but with one in Turkey and one of the Indian
matches among Jat Sikhs - a group reputedly of Indo-Iranian origin.
This haplotype, as it is R1a and does have matches in India, fits the bill for a British R1a
haplotype of Norse Viking origin. On the other hand, certain peculiarities in its distribution
- in the vicinity of the Rhine, in Turkey and Hungary, and among Jats - suggest a possible
origin among the Indo-Iranians, such as the Alans and Sarmatians.
A third possibility, especially given the Dutch and the Northern Germanic matches, is that
this haplotype is Anglo-Danish in origin, rather than Norwegian.
19---389i---389ii---390---391---392---393---385a---385b
16----13-----31------25----10-----11----13-----11-----15
Geographical Locale
%
Friesland, Netherlands 2.27
Missouri, USA [European] 1.69
Strasbourg, France 1.01
Panjab, India [Jat Sikhs] .93
Southern India .82
Vilnius, Lithuania .64
Turkey .63
Singapore [Indian] .55
Budapest, Hungary .52
Warsaw, Poland .42
London, England .35
Berlin, Germany .18
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