File:MorganArms MappertonChurch Dorset.png
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Summary
[edit]DescriptionMorganArms MappertonChurch Dorset.png |
All Saints' Church, Mapperton, Dorset, 16th century (c.1540) stained glass showing arms of John Morgan (d.1535) of Mapperton House, who married Elyn Aston, a daughter of Sir John Aston (d.1523) of Tixhall Hall, Staffordshire, by his wife Joan Littleton, the daughter and heiress of Sir William Littleton/Lyttelton (1450–1507) of Tixhall Hall, eldest son and heir of Sir Thomas Littleton/, by his first wife, Ellen Walsh, a daughter of William Walsh of Wanlip. John Hutchins in his History of Dorset, 1774 [1] specifically states that this item was originally in "a chamber" of the house.
DescendantsJohn Morgan (d.1535) left issue by his wife Elyn Aston including:
14, 1579/80[7]) in for the murder in Jan 1579/80 of his brother-in-law Nicholas Turberville, recently Sheriff of Dorset, and a nephew of James Turberville, Bishop of Exeter. (source: Country Life[8]; JSTOR [9]) Anthony Munday's View of sundry Examples, Reporting many straunge murthers (1580), includes "An Example of John Morgan, who slew Maister Turbervile in Somersetshire, 1580, Likewise in Somersetshire, one John Morgan, by common report a lewd and wicked liver, and given to swearing, roysting, and all wickednes abounding in him, slew his brother in law, Maister Turbervile, a gentleman of godly life, very sober, wise, and discreet, whose wife lying in childebed, yet arose and went to have law and justice pronounced on that cruel malefactor. So, at Chard, before the Lord Chief Justice, hee was condemned and suffered death for his offence. 1580".
Will of Robert Morgan (d.1567)Transcript of will (source: transcribed by Teresa Goatham [10])
HeraldryBaron/Dexter: Quarterly of 4:
Impaling: Femme/Sinister: Quarterly of six:
[14]). Pedigree of Walsh of Wanlip, Leicester: The Walsh family married successively the heiresses of L'Abbe of Wanlip (or married the heiress of de Wanlip herself); Waldieve of Aspath-hall, near Mereden, which became known as Welsh Hall; Byron of Clayton Hall, Droylsden, Lancashire: "Sir Richard Byron by his marriage with Joan de Colwick increased the family estates. (fn. 40) He died in June 1397, holding the manor of Clayton, and lands in Royton, Butterworth, Woodhouses in Ashton, and others outside Lancashire; John Byron, the son and heir, was then only ten years of age, and his wardship was granted to Sir John Ashton. A settlement of lands in Droylsden was in 1415 made on the occasion of the marriage of Sir John Byron's daughter Elizabeth Byron with Thomas Ashton son of Sir John Ashton". ('Townships: Droylsden', in A History of the County of Lancaster: Volume 4, ed. William Farrer and J Brownbill (London, 1911), pp. 282-287 [15]). Another source (Topographical and Historical Description of the Parish of Tixall, 1817, quoted in (Dennis J. Walsh, Walshe and Welsh of Leicestershire [16]) states: "Sir Thomas Welsh, son of Richard and Eleanora, married Margery, daughter and coheir of Sir Richard Bryon (sic). Helen, the daughter of Sir Thomas, married Sir William Lyttleton, whose daughter Joan was wedded to Sir John Aston of Haywood, and brought Tixall and Wanlip in to the Aston family. Sir Thomas Welsh died in 1403".
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Date |
circa 1540 date QS:P,+1540-00-00T00:00:00Z/9,P1480,Q5727902 |
Source | https://www.flickr.com/photos/rmc1952/48712084042/in/photostream/ |
Author | Unknown glazier |
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https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/mark/1.0/PDMCreative Commons Public Domain Mark 1.0falsefalse
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current | 21:57, 1 July 2022 | 713 × 693 (846 KB) | Lobsterthermidor (talk | contribs) | {{Information |Description=All Saints' Church, Mapperton, Dorset, 15th century stained glass showing arms of Morgan of Mapperton House. |Source=https://www.flickr.com/photos/rmc1952/48712084042/in/photostream/ |Date=c.1540 |Author=Unknown glazier |Permission= |other_versions= }} Category:Mapperton Manor House Category:Morgan (of Mapperton) arms Category:Stained-glass windows in Dorset |
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