. The Victoria history of the county of Lancaster;. Natural history. AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED heirs were the representatives of his three sisters, Helewise, Alice and Sarot, married respectively to Peter de Brus, William de Lindsay and Alan de Multon ; but the last-mentioned sister having no children the Lancaster inheritance was divided between Brus and Lindsay. The Brus moiety of Nether Wyresdale or Gar- stang descended to Peter son of Peter and Helewise, and on his death without issue in or before 1274 his four sisters were found to be co-heirs, namely Margaret married to Robert de Ros, Lucy to
. The Victoria history of the county of Lancaster;. Natural history. AMOUNDERNESS HUNDRED heirs were the representatives of his three sisters, Helewise, Alice and Sarot, married respectively to Peter de Brus, William de Lindsay and Alan de Multon ; but the last-mentioned sister having no children the Lancaster inheritance was divided between Brus and Lindsay. The Brus moiety of Nether Wyresdale or Gar- stang descended to Peter son of Peter and Helewise, and on his death without issue in or before 1274 his four sisters were found to be co-heirs, namely Margaret married to Robert de Ros, Lucy to Marmaduke de Thweng, Agnes to Walter de Fauconberg, and Ladarena to John de Of these Margaret de Ros had Kendal and appears to have had little or nothing to do with Wyres- dale, 10; and the others, concerned chiefly in York- shire, granted their rights to John de Rigmaiden, who appears about 1290," and founded the family of Rigmaiden of Wedacre or Woodacre, seated for over three centuries in the adjacent township of Barnacre. The Thweng family, however, remained for about a century the nominal lords of part of ; Marmaduke de Thweng died in or before 1322 holding part of the Lancaster inheritance, but Wyres- dale is not expressly He left a son and heir William, thirty years of age, who soon afterwards began a long series of lawsuits concerning the lord- ship and various lands against John son of John de Rigmaiden and * It was in 1333 alleged for the defence that Marmaduke de Thweng had alienated the tenement in dispute to John de Rigmaiden and. GARSTANG Isolda his wife before William de Thweng died in 1340 or 1341 holding the fourth part of a knight's fee in Garstang, Ellel, Scotforth and Ashton of the Earl of Lancaster, but took no profit to his own use beyond the rent payable to the earl. His heir was his brother Robert, aged forty- Robert de Thweng died within three years, leaving another brother, Thomas, to succee
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