. A genealogical and heraldic history of the commoners of Great Britain and Ireland enjoying territorial possessions or high official rank, but uninvested with heritable honours. rangham. Arms—Arg. three garbs, two and one,ppr. on a chief azure, as many bezants,bearing Strangwayes on an escutcheon ofpretence. Crest — A dove volant, bearing in thebeak an olive branch, all —Hyeme exsuperatS,.Residence—Hunmanby and Chester. EDWARDES-TUCKER, OF SEALYHAM. I TUCKER-EDWARDES, WILLIAM, esq. of Sealyham, in the county of Pembroke, b. in 1784, m. in 1807, Anna, dau. of George Philipps,*esq. of


. A genealogical and heraldic history of the commoners of Great Britain and Ireland enjoying territorial possessions or high official rank, but uninvested with heritable honours. rangham. Arms—Arg. three garbs, two and one,ppr. on a chief azure, as many bezants,bearing Strangwayes on an escutcheon ofpretence. Crest — A dove volant, bearing in thebeak an olive branch, all —Hyeme exsuperatS,.Residence—Hunmanby and Chester. EDWARDES-TUCKER, OF SEALYHAM. I TUCKER-EDWARDES, WILLIAM, esq. of Sealyham, in the county of Pembroke, b. in 1784, m. in 1807, Anna, dau. of George Philipps,*esq. of Cwmgwilly, in Carmarthenshire, and hasissue. I. JoHN-OwEN, an officer in the 23rd regiment. II. William, of Trinity College, Oxford. III. Owen. IV. Francis. I. Catherine. II. Mary. III. Anna. IV. Emma. This gentleman, whose patronymic is Edwardes, as-sumed, upon inheriting the Tucker estates, the addi-tional surname and arms of that family, in compliancewith the testamentary injunction of Admiral Tucker. , who is a magistrate and deputy-lieute-nant for the county of Pembroke, served the olfice ofhigh sheriff for that shire in * The family of Philipps is of the most remote antiquity. Cadefor, lord of Dyvett, now Pembroke-shire, died in 1084, and was buried at the priory, near Carmarthen. He had married Eleanor, daugh-ter and sole heiress of the lord of Kilsaint, in the county of Carmarthen, and had a son and successor, Bledri, lord of Dyvett, who, after the revolution in Pembrokeshire, anno 1098, retired to Kilsaint,in Carmarthenshire. He wedded Ancreta, second daughter of Rhys, prince of South Wales, and sistertoGwinlean, wife of Ednifed Fichon, ancestor of Owen Tudor, grandfather to King Henry VII. Bythis lady he had two sons, Aaron, lord of Kilsaint, and a younger son, who founded the family atCmowilly, who for more than a century has represented the borough of Carmarthen in two sons of Bledri accompanying the Lio


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookpublisheretcetc, booksubjectheraldry, bookye