. The Victoria history of the county of Hertford. Natural history. A HISTORY OF HERTFORDSHIRE. Baud. GuUi three cheverons argent. descended to his son William, a ; He died between 1274 and 1278, and was succeeded by his son Walter Baud,™ whose holding in Little Hadham was assessed at half a fee in ; He was Sheriff of Hertfordshire and Essex in I 307 ^^ and was still living in 1313.^^ William Band, apparently his son, for- feited under Edward II as an adherent of Thomas Earl of Lancaster, but his manor of Little Hadham was restored to him in '' In 133 i he joined with


. The Victoria history of the county of Hertford. Natural history. A HISTORY OF HERTFORDSHIRE. Baud. GuUi three cheverons argent. descended to his son William, a ; He died between 1274 and 1278, and was succeeded by his son Walter Baud,™ whose holding in Little Hadham was assessed at half a fee in ; He was Sheriff of Hertfordshire and Essex in I 307 ^^ and was still living in 1313.^^ William Band, apparently his son, for- feited under Edward II as an adherent of Thomas Earl of Lancaster, but his manor of Little Hadham was restored to him in '' In 133 i he joined with his wife Joan in settling the manor on his son John,-* who inherited it at his father's death about 1343.^' In 1346 John Baud died in Gascony^' and was succeeded by his son William Baud, let., who with his wife Alice made a settlement of the manor in 1371.^' William Baud is said to have been the first of this family to reside at Little Hadham,^' and the family was certainly living there in 1404, when William's grandson \\ illiam Baud was born there.'" William Baud the elder was sheriff for Hertfordshire and Essex in I 371 and for the county in ; He died before 1388.'^ He appears to have been succeeded by his eldest son Walter Baud, who died at Little Hadham in 1420,'' leaving no issue. The manor then probably passed to his brother John, and on his death in 1422 ^* to John's son William, who made proof of age in 1425.'' William died the following year without issue,'^ and the manor of Little Hadham apparently reverted to his uncle Thomas , third son of William Baud. In 1427 Thomas Baud settled lands in Stortford called ' Plantyngs' on his son Thomas in trust to maintain a chantry priest for three and a half years after his death, to pray for the souls of William Baud and Alice his wife and Thomas Baud the elder and Mary his wife. These prayers were to be said in the church of Little Hadham every Friday and Sunday and on other days in the chapel of the


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, booksubjectnatural, bookyear1902