. The Victoria history of the county of Hertford. Natural history. A HISTORY OF HERTFORDSHIRE the other half was held by Hugh OddingseUes and his descendant; by knight service as parcel of the barony of ; Basilia and Hugh Odding- seUes, the immediate ten- ants of the manor, left two sons, William and Hugh,11 who divided the property and so formed two manors. William OddingseUes, who was lord of the manor of Soli- hull in Warwickshire, tooK that half which was afterwards known as the manor of PIR- * Hugh's moiety of the property became the manor of OddingseUes (). William
. The Victoria history of the county of Hertford. Natural history. A HISTORY OF HERTFORDSHIRE the other half was held by Hugh OddingseUes and his descendant; by knight service as parcel of the barony of ; Basilia and Hugh Odding- seUes, the immediate ten- ants of the manor, left two sons, William and Hugh,11 who divided the property and so formed two manors. William OddingseUes, who was lord of the manor of Soli- hull in Warwickshire, tooK that half which was afterwards known as the manor of PIR- * Hugh's moiety of the property became the manor of OddingseUes (). William OddingseUes died i hi. son Edmu ' " md,13 who probably died without issue,. as the manor was divided between two of Edmund*! sUters, Ida and ; Ha was wife of John de Clinton, first Lord Clinton, Alice was the wife of Thomas de ; Ida wai succeeded by her son and then by her grandson, both named John de ; Alice died in 1322 and was succeeded by her son ; David and Joan his wife settled the property on them-. selves and their heirs with remainder to William de Clinton Earl of Huntingdon, a younger son of John and Ida de ; David died before 1343 and Joan married as her second husband Laurence de ; They held the manor jointly until Joan died in 1354, leaving a daughter Elizabeth,1* who married a certain Maurice who is called son of John son of ; Elizabeth died without issue in 1 364,** and the manor passed by the settle- ment to John de Clinton (nephew and heir of William de Clinton Earl of Huntingdon),10 to whom William de Caunton, heir of Elizabeth, released all his right. He received an annual pension from the earl of £10 out of the manor for Thus both moieties of the manor were united in the hands of John de Clinton. Edward de Clinton son of John de Clinton died seised of the manor in and was suc- ceeded by his nephew William," who granted the manor to certain feoffe
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, booksubjectnatural, bookyear1902