Collections for a history of Staffordshire . .. (2)returned by Sir WilliamChetwynd of Ingestre,sheriff. Stafford : John Neuton .. .. .. (3) Nicholas .. .. (4) Newcastle : William Thikenes .. .. (5) John Kene .. .. .. (6) returned by John Colclough,Mayor. (1) Sir John Ipstones of Blymhill and Ipstones, 1388, c. 1345 ; son and heir of Sir John I. of the same(d. 1358/64), by Elizabeth (de Beek). He married, by 1372,Elizabeth, daughter of Thomas Corbet,1 who survived served in France in the retinue of Hugh, Earl of Stafford,in 1373 ;2 was knighted by 1377 >3 w
Collections for a history of Staffordshire . .. (2)returned by Sir WilliamChetwynd of Ingestre,sheriff. Stafford : John Neuton .. .. .. (3) Nicholas .. .. (4) Newcastle : William Thikenes .. .. (5) John Kene .. .. .. (6) returned by John Colclough,Mayor. (1) Sir John Ipstones of Blymhill and Ipstones, 1388, c. 1345 ; son and heir of Sir John I. of the same(d. 1358/64), by Elizabeth (de Beek). He married, by 1372,Elizabeth, daughter of Thomas Corbet,1 who survived served in France in the retinue of Hugh, Earl of Stafford,in 1373 ;2 was knighted by 1377 >3 went again to France inthe retinue of Hugh de Calveley, 1380-1 ; and on his returnattacked, with other Cheshire knights, his former patron,the He went with John of Gaunt on his Spanishexpedition of 1385-6 ;5 was pardoned for the murder ofRichard Thornbury, November 1387 ; and signalised his returnto the merciless Parliament of 1388 by carrying off from 1 II. XIII. XIV. 244. 8 VIII. XIII. RICHARD II. 145 the house of Jane, widow of Sir Richard Peshale at Chetwynd,Maud (Swynnerton), widow of Humphrey de Heforced her to marry his son, December He wassufficiently powerful to prevent the appointment of a Com-mission to enquire into this until 1390, and in that year aPapal dispensation was obtained for the marriage, not on theground of violence, but for marrying within the was on the Commission appointed to enquire into theforfeited estates of the Earl of Oxford in 1389 ;4 and he wasstill to the fore in 1392, when he was again a when the Lords Appellant were no longer all-powerful,while he was going to attend the Parliament of 1394, RogerSwynnerton met and slew him at Clerkenwell, 23 He probably bore : Silver, a chevron between threecrescents gules, the Arms of a long dead Sir Thomas Wytherof Ipstones ; but they do not appear on the Roll of c. 1380. (2) Roger de Longrug
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