. The Victoria history of the county of Hertford. Natural history. HITCHIN HUNDRED Jane Periam in So the manor must have come into the family at an earlier date than chat given by Chauncy. Thomas received a grant of free warren at Pirton in He died in 1620,33 leaving as heir his son Periam. On the death of Periam in 1641 it descended to his son Thomas,39 whose only child Martha BJa^Au married Sir Peter Warburton of Arley (co. Cries.). In 1726, after the death of Martha, Thomas Warburton, Sir George Warburton, ban., son of Sir Peter and Martha, and Periam Docwra joined in a conv
. The Victoria history of the county of Hertford. Natural history. HITCHIN HUNDRED Jane Periam in So the manor must have come into the family at an earlier date than chat given by Chauncy. Thomas received a grant of free warren at Pirton in He died in 1620,33 leaving as heir his son Periam. On the death of Periam in 1641 it descended to his son Thomas,39 whose only child Martha BJa^Au married Sir Peter Warburton of Arley (co. Cries.). In 1726, after the death of Martha, Thomas Warburton, Sir George Warburton, ban., son of Sir Peter and Martha, and Periam Docwra joined in a conveyance to Ralph It has since des- cended in the family of Radcliffe,41 and is now in the posse5sion of Mr. F. A. ' Delme-Radcliffe of the Priory, Hitchm (). The manor of ODDINGSELLES {Doddingseles, Odyngseles, xiv cent.), often called also ' half the manor of Pirton,' was that part of the manor of Pirton which on the death of Basilia Oddingselles fell to the share of Hugh her son. Hugh died seised of it in 1304-5, leaving as heir his son He and his wife Emma obtained licence in 1316 to grant the manor to Thomas de Wassyngeles for a settle- ment on them and their In 1337 John and Emma granted the manor to William Corbet for life, with reversion to their son After the death of John, Emma married William Corbet, who died in She survived until the next Her son John Oddingselles succeeded to the manor, and died abroad in 1352, leaving a son John, then aged It descended in 1380 to his son Sir John, and in 1404 to Edward son of ] John48 (during whose minority the property was entrusted to John Cokayn,49 hb father-in-law), to Edward's son Gerald, and finally to Edward son of In 1505 Gerald d'Oddingselles granted the manor to feoffees,"1 who released it to Richard He sold it shortly afterwards through trustees to Roger Lupton, clerk, Provost of St. Mary's College, Eton College held t
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, booksubjectnatural, bookyear1902