Michael Matthew Groat PhD's Genealogical Database
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Peter de Montfort
- Preferred Name: Peter de Montfort[1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] [8]
- Gender: M
- Occupation: Lord of Beaudesert with note: stirnet.com
- FSID: LTDS-HCV
- Death: 4 AUG 1265 in Evesham, Worcestershire, England at LATI: N2.0924 LONG: E1.947
- Birth: 1205 in Beaudesert, Warwickshire, England at LATI: N2.2922 LONG: E1.7769
- Burial: 12 AUG 1265 in Evesham, Worcestershire, England at LATI: N2.0924 LONG: E1.947
- Notes:
=== Life Sketch ===
Peter de Montfort (or Piers de Montfort) (c. 1205 – 4 August 1265) of Beaudesert Castle was an English magnate, soldier and diplomat. He is the first person recorded as having presided over Parliament as a parlour or prolocutor, an office now known as Speaker of the House of Commons. He was one of those elected by the barons to represent them during the constitutional crisis with Henry III in 1258. He was later a leading supporter of Simon de Montfort, 6th Earl of Leicester, against the King. Both he and Simon de Montfort were slain at the Battle of Evesham on 4 August 1265.
Peter de Montfort was the son of Thurstan de Montfort (d.1216) by a daughter of William I de Cantilupe (d.1239) of Aston Cantilupe, Warwickshire, Steward of the Household to King John.
Montfort's principal estate was at Beaudesert Castle near Henley-in-Arden, Warwickshire, said to have been built by an earlier Thurstan de Montfort (died c.1170) on land granted by his great-uncle, Henry de Newburgh, Earl of Warwick; in 1141 Thurstan de Montfort had from the Empress Maud a charter for a market to be held at the castle every Sunday. It is thought to have been Peter de Montfort who walled the inner bailey in stone, work said to have been completed in January 1216.
After his father's death, Peter de Montfort's wardship was granted by King John to his grandfather, William I de Cantilupe (d.1239), and during that time Montfort developed a lasting friendship with his uncle, Walter de Cantilupe, Bishop of Worcester from 1238 to 1266. In 1236 he made a pilgrimage to Santiago de Compostella in the company of another of his uncles, William II de Cantilupe (d.1251). In 1242 he attended Henry III on an expedition to Poitou. At some earlier date, he took part in a prohibited tournament at Cambridge, as a result of which the King took his lands from him; they were restored in 1245.
Beaudesert was only nine miles from Kenilworth, which from 1244 on was the base of Simon de Montfort, 6th Earl of Leicester. According to Carpenter, it was likely this proximity which drew Montfort into the Earl's circle. He attested a number of the Earl's charters, and in the early autumn of 1248 was in his retinue while the Earl was Seneschal in Gascony. He had returned to England by 1251, when he was given custody of Horston Castle in Derbyshire, but by 1253 was back in Gascony.
Montfort accompanied the King's son, the future Edward I, to Spain when he married Eleanor of Castile in the summer of 1254, and on 19 September of that year acted as surety at Bordeaux for the King's debts. For the next two years he was sent on diplomatic missions by Henry III; however his foreign service appears to have ended in 1257, by which time he was a member of the royal council, had received an appointment in the Welsh Marches, and was serving as High Sheriff of Staffordshire and Shropshire.
In April 1258 he and Simon de Montfort were among the seven magnates who revolted against Henry III (the Second Barons' War). He and the Earl were also among the twelve magnates who drew up plans for reform (the Provisions of Oxford), and were on the council of fifteen members set up to govern England in the King's name. He presided over a Parliament at Oxford in 1258, dubbed the "Mad Parliament" by the King's supporters, and was thus the earliest recorded presiding officer of the Commons, an office later known as Speaker, but then referred to as 'parlour' or 'prolocutor'. In the autumn of 1259 he was with the King and Queen when they travelled to France to arrange a peace with Louis IX. In the same year he was named an executor of Simon de Montfort's will.
On 12 April 1261, shortly before his death, Pope Alexander IV issued a papal bull which absolved Henry III of the oath he had taken to keep the Provisions of Oxford; when the King made this known in June of that year, Peter de Montfort was one of three arbitrators elected by the barons to negotiate with the King on their behalf. According to Cokayne, Montfort 'was now beginning to associate himself definitely with the baronial party', and as a result, the Sheriff of Warwickshire was ordered to prevent him from fortifying Beaudesert Castle. He took part with other barons in attacking Worcester, which fell on 28 February 1263 after several assaults. A temporary peace between the King and the barons was arranged in July of that year, and Montfort was given charge of Corfe Castle and Shirburn Castle.
Simon de Montfort had left England after Henry III's return to power, but was back in the country in April 1263. In March 1264 civil war again broke out, and Peter de Montfort sided with Simon de Montfort against the King. On 2 April 1264 he had a safe conduct to Brackley to meet with Henry III's envoys; however on the following day he and his two sons, Peter and Robert, were at Northampton Castle when the Keeper surrendered it to Simon de Montfort the Younger. On 5 April the castle was retaken by the King, and Peter de Montfort and his sons were taken prisoner and transported to Windsor. They were released after Simon de Montfort's victory at the Battle of Lewes.
During the subsequent dominance of Simon de Montfort, Peter de Montfort became one of a nine-member council forced upon the King in June 1264. Thereafter he played a principal role in the government of the county. On 11 September he was appointed one of the envoys who negotiated the reformation of the English government in the presence of Louis IX of France and the Papal Legate. On 16 November he and his heirs were granted the manor of Garthorpe, Leicestershire. On 20 December he was granted custody of Whittington Castle and Hereford Castle. He accompanied Simon de Montfort when the latter journeyed into Wales, and was joint keeper of the royal seal during that time.
He was with Simon de Montfort in his final campaign, and was slain with him at the Battle of Evesham on 4 August 1265. His two sons, Peter and Robert, who also took part in the battle, were both wounded and taken prisoner.
His place of burial is unknown. He was survived by his wife, Alice. His heirs in the male line died out in 1367.
Peter de Montfort's arms were Bendy of eight, Or and azure, although a seal of Peter de Montfort shows only bendy of six.
Marriage and issue
Montfort married Alice Audley, daughter of Henry Audley, by whom he had two sons,
1. Peter and
2. Robert.
1. His eldest son, Peter de Montfort (d. before 4 March 1287), succeeded him. On 28 June 1267 he was pardoned by Henry III for 'all trespasses at the time of the disturbance in the kingdom', and eventually recovered part of his father's lands.
He married Maud de la Mare, daughter of Sir Henry de la Mare (d.1257), of Ashtead, Surrey, by whom he had a son, John, and two daughters, Elizabeth and Alice:
a. John de Montfort, Baron Montfort (d. before 11 May 1296). In 1280 his father granted his marriage to Edward I's wife, Eleanor of Castile. John de Montfort was summoned to Parliament on 24 June 1296 by writ directed Iohanni de Monte Forti, 'whereby he is held to have become Lord Montfort'. Before 28 March 1287 he married Alice de la Plaunche, the daughter of William de la Plaunche, by whom he had a son and heir, John de Montfort, 2nd Baron Montfort (1291 – 24 June 1314), who took part in the death of King Edward II's favourite, Piers Gaveston, for which he was eventually pardoned. He was slain at the Battle of Bannockburn, dying unmarried and without issue, and was succeeded by his younger brother, Peter de Montfort, 3rd Baron Montfort (d. before 24 January 1370), who also died without legitimate male issue, at which time any barony created by writ fell into abeyance among his two sisters.
b. Elizabeth de Montfort, who married William Montagu, 2nd Baron Montagu, by whom she was the mother of four sons and seven daughters, including William Montagu, 1st Earl of Salisbury; Simon Montagu, successively Bishop of Worcester and Bishop of Ely; Elizabeth Montagu, Prioress of Holywell Priory; and Maud and Isabel Montagu, successively Abbesses of Barking Abbey.
c. Alice de Montfort, who married firstly Warin de Lisle (d. before 7 December 1296), by whom she was the mother of Robert de Lisle, 1st Baron Lisle (d. 4 January 1343), and secondly Robert FitzWalter, 1st Baron FitzWalter.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter_de_Montfort
Sir Peter de Montfort
Supporter of Simon de Montfort.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
PIERS DE MONTFORT, s. and h., was a minor at his father's death; his wardship and marri
=== He was one of the fully armored Lords d ===
He was one of the fully armored Lords demanding reforms of Henry III at Westminster on 30 Apr 1258. He Went to Amiens in Simon de Montfort's stead (who broke his leg & couldn't go). on 8 Jan 1264. He Went there to hear Louis' verdict on the barons vs. Henry on 8 Jan 1264. He was commanded the defense against Prince Edward on 5 Apr 1264 Battle of Northampton. He lost due to the treachery of the Prior of St. Andrew's on 5 Apr 1264. He was captured at Northampton & held at Windsor Castle between 5 Apr 1264 and 14 May 1264. He was released after Simon de Montfort's victory at Lewes after 14 May 1264.
=== ! Stemmata Robertson et ourdin (A 15 A 3 ===
! Stemmata Robertson et ourdin (A 15 A 30) table 99, Banks Baronies in fee. vol ! 1, p. 337, Eng. Pub. AC vol. 12 p.55, Warw 6, p. 44-48. ! Refs. on verse of Thurstan de Montfort.
=== From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 J ===
From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996.
=== !Visitations of Warwick ===
!Visitations of Warwick
=== !INFORMATION: on the MONTAGUE Family was ===
!INFORMATION: on the MONTAGUE Family was obtained from www.Ancestry.com for William MONTAGUE on 8 Nov 1999. The following is a sample of the File of the submitter of the information found on www.Ancestry.com: FILE NAME: 23705 (11,061,890 Bytes); SUBMITTER: primeprint@msn.com; DOWNLOAD FOR PCs: Self Extracting Archive (.exe file) (2,094,994 Bytes); DOWNLOAD FOR MACS or PCs: Zip Archive (.zip file)(2,079,224 Bytes); INDIVIUALS IN FILE; 49667. !INFORMATION: obtained from http//www.familysearch.org on 14 Jul 1999.
=== Peter de Montfort was in his minority w ===
Peter de Montfort was in his minority when he succeeded his Father. This feudal lord, for several years in the reign of Henry III, took an active part in the wars of that monarch but at length, on the breaking out of the barons' insurrection, he became one of the most zealous amongst those turbulent lords, and after the Battle of Lewes was one of the nine nominated to rule the kingdom, in which station he enjoyed and exercised more than regal power, but of short duration, for he fell Aug. 4, 1265, at the subsequent Battle of Evesham, so disastrous to the baronial cause. He married Alice, daughter of Henry de Aldithley, a great Staffordshire baron, and his wife Bertred Manwaring; daughter of Ralph Manwaring and his wife Amicia; daughter of Hugh de Keviliock, Earl of Chester. They had Peter, his successor, William and Robert, who had lands in County Rutland.
=== !INFORMATION: on the MONTAGUE Family was ===
!INFORMATION: on the MONTAGUE Family was obtained from www.Ancestry.com for William MONTAGUE on 8 Nov 1999. The following is a sample of the File of the submitter of the information found on www.Ancestry.com: FILE NAME: 23705 (11,061,890 Bytes); SUBMITTER: primeprint@msn.com; DOWNLOAD FOR PCs: Self Extracting Archive (.exe file) (2,094,994 Bytes); DOWNLOAD FOR MACS or PCs: Zip Archive (.zip file)(2,079,224 Bytes); INDIVIUALS IN FILE; 49667. !INFORMATION: obtained from http//www.familysearch.org on 14 Jul 1999. INFORMATION: was obtained from Stemmata Robertson et Curdin (A15 A30) table 99, Bank's Baronies in fee, vol 1, page 337, England Pub. AC vol 12 page 55, Warw 6, page 44 - 48, Refs on verse of Thurstan de MOMTFORT. Information was also obtained from Grace H. LLOYD, 637 E. 2nd Ave, Mesa, AZ. !INFORMATION: obtained from http//www.familysearch.org on 14 Jul 1999. !INFORMATION: obtained from A15 A30 Table 99, Warws. 6 page 44, Warws. vol 4 page 45 - 49, see references om verse of Henry de MONTFORD, abt. 1155.
=== Commanded defense (& lost) against Princ ===
Commanded defense (& lost) against Prince Edward.
=== M E Sorley: The Sorley Pedigrees P. 41 ===
M E Sorley: The Sorley Pedigrees P. 41
=== !SOURCES: 1. Stemmata Robertson et Curdi ===
!SOURCES: 1. Stemmata Robertson et Curdin (A15 A30) table 99, Bank's Baronies in fee.vol 1, p. 337, Eng. Pub. AC vol. 12 p. 55, Warw 6, p. 44-48, Refs. on verse of Thurstan de Montfort
=== Alt Death: 12 Aug 1265 Worcester, Englan ===
Alt Death: 12 Aug 1265 Worcester, England !GENERAL:Pedigree Resource File CD 4, Pedigree Resource File CD 4, (Salt Lake City, UT: Intellectual Reserve, Inc., 1999) !GENERAL:Ancestral File (TM), Ancestral File (TM), The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, June 1998 (c), data as of 5 JAN 1998 Repository: Family History Library 35 N West Temple Street, Salt Lake City, UT 84150 USA
=== IERS DE MONTFORT, son and heir, was a mi ===
IERS DE MONTFORT, son and heir, was a minor at his father's death, his wardship and marriage were granted by King John to William de Cauntelo. During his minority he had grants of markets at Henley
and Beaudesert. He was still underage in October 1231. In 1236 he went on a pilgrimage to Santiago with William de Cauntelo the younger, his lord. He was with the King in the unsuccessful expedition to Poitou in 1242. In 1245 his lands, which had been taken into the King's hand because he attended a prohibited tournament at Cambridge, were restored to him. On 29 August 1245, at Preston, as Piers de Montfort, son of Thurstan de Montfort, he confirmed to St. Neots all the grants in Wing which his ancestors had made, saving the services due to the King and the Earls of Warwick. In May 1248 he had licence to enclose land at Remenham in the forest of Windsor, and on 20 August a grant in connection with a marriage covenant between him and William de Beauchamp of Worcester. In the early autumn of 1248 he went overseas with Simon de Montfort, who had just been appointed Seneschal of Gascony, and later supported him against the complaints of the Gascons. He presumably returned to England in 1250 or early in 1251, for he had custody of the castle of Harestan (Horston, in Horsley, co. Derby) from 4 March 1250/1 to 29 November 1252. For the next two years he was serving in Gascony, and on 22 April 1254 was appointed one of the guardians of the truce in France. He appears to have accompanied Prince Edward in the summer on his journey to Spain for his marriage with Eleanor of Castile, and on 19 September was one of the sureties for the King's debts in Bordeaux. On 20 January 1255/6 he was sent on an embassy to the French King to arrange articles about breaches of the truce. This appears to have been the end of his foreign service, for in September 1257 he was appointed, during pleasure, to gmacrd the March of Wales in Montgomery, and to keep the counties of Salop and Staffs, with the castles of Shrewsbury and Bridgnorth. In February 1258 he was joint commissioner to arrange a truce with Llewelyn, and later to prorogue it; in June he conducted the latter's envoys to the Parliament at Oxford, and from June to November was one of the commissioners to examine and make amends for breaches of the truce. Meanwhile in May he had a grant of Ellesmere Castle for 18 years. He was one of the 12 magnates elected by the Barons to represent them on the Council of 24 which was forced on the King in the "Mad" Parliament at Oxford in June 1258, and was sworn of the King's Council, being also one of the 24 persons appointed to treat about an aid for the King. He also joined in the letter of the magnates to the Pope against the Poitevins. In 1259 he obtained a grant of murage for Abergavenny, while the town was in his keeping, and in June of that year was one of the commissioners sent to the ford of Montgomery to treat with Llewelyn on breaches of the peace, a truce being made in July. In August he had an allowance of 200 marks for the defence of the Welsh borders (d). On 28 October he had protection upon crossing with the King and Queen to France on 14 November on a visit to Louis IX, when peace was arranged. In 1261 the King renewed his struggle with the Barons; in June, when he had made public the absolution he had obtained from the Pope respecting his oath to keep the Provisions of Oxford, Montfort was elected by the Barons one of the three arbitrators to negotiate with the King on this and other public business. He was now beginning to associate himself definitely with the Baronial party; and in April 1262 the sheriff of Warwickshire had orders to prevent the fortification of his castle of Beaudesert. In 1263 Piers took part in the Barons' activities in the West of England, and is recorded by name as one of the magnates who besieged and took Worcester, 28 February 1262/3, after several assaults (h). It is thought to have been in the following month that he reported to the Council his repulse of a raid by the Welsh into Gwent, and again urged the need of adequate forces being sent, for single-handed he could not hold the position. After peace was made, temporarily, in July 1263, among a number of castles to whom new keepers were appointed, Corfe and Shirburn were committed to Piers de Montfort; in September he accompanied the King on his brief visit to France to see Louis. War was renewed, and on 2 April 1264 he had a safe conduct for coming with his household and goods to Brackley to meet the King's envoys, but the next day he and his two sons were with Simon de Montfort the younger, when the Keeper of Northampton Castle surrendered it to the latter. Two days later the King forced his way into the town, and took the castle, Piers and his sons Piers and Robert being among the prisoners taken. They were removed to Windsor Castle, but released after the battle of Lewes, on an order to the constable dated 17 May. During the dominance of Earl Simon, Piers received many commissions and grants; on 4 June he was commissioner of oyer and terminer in Yorks; in July the King desired that Piers should bring him the terms proposed by the Barons, as their plenipotentiary; and on 11 September he was one of the envoys appointed to treat concerning the reformation of the state of England in the presence of King Louis and the Papal Legate. On 16 November he had a grant to him and his heirs of the manor of Garthorp, on 20 December another of the custody of Whittingdon Castle and of Hereford Castle, with the Hundred of Irchenfield, and on 20 January 1264/5 of twenty oaks in the forest of Rutland for the repair of his houses in Preston, which had been burnt. He accompanied Simon de Montfort through Monmouthshire into Wales, and during this time was joint keeper of the royal seal. He was slain at the battle of Evesham, 4 August, his sons Piers and Robert being wounded and taken prisoners. He married, in or before 1228, Alice, daughter of Henry DE AUDLEY. He died as stated above, 4 August 1265. Alice survived him. [Complete Peerage IX:123-6, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)]
(d) ; possibly in consquence of his report on the state of the March, and the urgent need of further support if the English boundary was to be maintained.
(h) The monkish Chronicler says they plundered all they could find outside the church, with the whole of the Jewish quarter; some of the Jews they imprisoned, and others they killed.
--------------------------
For several years in the reign of King Henry III, this feudal lord took an active part in the wars of that monarch, but at length, on the breaking out of the barons' insurrection, he became one of the most zealous amongst those turbulent lords and, after the battle of Lewes, was of the nine nominated to rule the kingdom, in which station he enjoyed and exercised more than regal power, but of short duration, for he fell at the subsequent conflict of Evesham, so disastrous to the baronial cause. Peter de Montfort m. Alice, dau. of Henry de Aldithley, a great Staffordshire baron, and had issue, Peter, his successor; William, who by gift of his father had the manor of Uppingham, co. Rutland; Robert, who had lands also in the co. Rutland. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage Ltd, London, England, 1883, p. 377, Montfort, Barons Montfort]
=== !Name,Bpla,parents,Spouse,children-Visit ===
!Name,Bpla,parents,Spouse,children-Visitation of Warwick Bk 942B4h V12 pg 55 Name,parents,Spouse,Bap,End-TIB SP-Done personally by Rhonda Bawden SS-IGI Bd also listed as <1220;Md as <1249<1239
=== he (or his son) was first speaker of the house ===
He (or his son) was the first ever Speaker of the House of Parliament. "From the date given by Hakewil,25 Peter de Montfort may have acted as presiding officer of the so-called "Mad Parliament" of 1258, when he was one of the twelve nominees of the Baronial, as opposed to the Court, party, entrusted with the duty of carrying out the great work of reform known to our forefathers as the "Provisions of Oxford. One would naturally like to connect the name of the first Parliamentary spokesman with that of the great Simon de Montfort , the originator of the principle of the House of Commons, if not its actual inventor ; and some writers have gone so far as to assert that Peter de Montfort was his son, and that, like his better-known father, he was killed at the battle of Evesham. But, unfortunately for the holders of this theory, it does not anywhere appear that Simon had a son called Peter. He was, in greater likelihood. Baron of Beaudesert, and of Henley in Arden, in the county of Warwick, and of a family not known to have been nearly related to the great Earl of Leicester. One of the same name, a possible relative of Simon, fought and fell at Evesham, but if, as seems certain, the earliest Parliamentary spokesman on record came of the Warwickshire stock, his death did not take place till twenty years later."
=== !SOURCES: 1. Stemmata Robertson et Curd ===
!SOURCES: 1. Stemmata Robertson et Curdin (A15 A30) table 99, Bank's Baronies in fee. vol 1, p. 337, Eng. Pub. AC vol. 12 p. 55, Warw 6, p. 44-48, Refs. on verse of Thurstan de Montfort
=== SORLEY'S PEDIGREES (GS NUMBER Q929.242 S ===
SORLEY'S PEDIGREES (GS NUMBER Q929.242 SO68) P.29, 41; ANCESTRAL FILE, LDS GENEALOGICAL SOCIETY;
=== !Brown book 5, chart 56A. ===
!Brown book 5, chart 56A.
=== !INFORMATION: on the MONTAGUE Family was ===
!INFORMATION: on the MONTAGUE Family was obtained from www.Ancestry.com for William MONTAGUE on 8 Nov 1999. The following is a sample of the File of the submitter of the information found on www.Ancestry.com: FILE NAME: 23705 (11,061,890 Bytes); SUBMITTER: primeprint@msn.com; DOWNLOAD FOR PCs: Self Extracting Archive (.exe file) (2,094,994 Bytes); DOWNLOAD FOR MACS or PCs: Zip Archive (.zip file)(2,079,224 Bytes); INDIVIUALS IN FILE; 49667.
=== The Battle of Evesham
August 4, 1265
E ===
The Battle of Evesham
August 4, 1265
Evesham, Herefordshire & Worcestershire
an alliance of rebellious barons under Simon de Montfort vs. royal forces under Prince Edward (later Edward I).
Montfort and his allies rebelled against what they saw as poor government and excessive spending on foriegn wars by Henry III. Initial success at the Battle of Lewes gave Montfort practical control of the government, and he instituted reforms which eventually led to the English Parliamentary system of government by representation.
However, Montfort was undone by his bickering allies, and Prince Edward escaped from captivity to raise the royal standard on the Welsh Marches. Montfort, carting along the King, marched north, intending to join forces with his son at Kenilworth, near Warwick. Edward got there first, routed the younger Montfort, and surprised Simon at Evesham.
In a story which is likely apochryphal, Montfort, realising that his army was trapped in a loop of the Severn River by a superior force, said to his aides, "Let us commend our souls to God, because our bodies are theirs". He was right.
The Battle
Montfort's already slim chances of breaking through the royal lines was made even more remote when his Welsh allies deserted before battle was joined. This left him facing an enemy with perhaps four times the number of his own troops.
Montfort's men charged uphill against the royal lines, but they never stood a chance. Edward's wings pivoted and converged on Montfort's flanks, and the fight quickly became a massacre.
Even the fleeing Welsh were cut down or drowned in the river. No quarter was given to the rebels, and the carnage was terrible. Montfort's body was badly mutilated and dispersed to different parts of the kingdom. His torso, at least, was sent to Evesham Abbey, where his tomb became a popular pilgrimage centre.
The Results
Evesham marked the end of the so-called Baron's War. A few futile skirmishes followed, but the result was a forgone conclusion. Henry III was restored to power and the remaining sons of Montfort eventually fled the country. Prince Edward also proved himself an able and talented military leader, a fact which his later career in Wales and Scotland certainly bears out.
=== Died in battle of Worcestershire. Died i ===
Died in battle of Worcestershire. Died in battle of Worcestershire. Died in battle of Worcestershire.
Preferred Parents:
Father: Thurstan de Montfort, b. 1124 d. 1216
Mother: Juliane Murdac, b. ABT 1126 in Cumberland, England d. 1171
Family 1: Alice Audley, b. ABT 1222 in Heleigh Castle, Staffordshire, England d. 4 AUG 1265 in Beaudesert, Warwickshire, England
- m. ABT 1238 in Beaudesert, Warwickshire, England
- Peter de Montfort II, b. BEF 1239 in Beaudesert, Warwickshire, England d. 23 APR 1287 in Beaudesert, Warwickshire, England
- Rose de Montfort, d. BET 11 JAN 1302 AND 1303 in England, United Kingdom
Sources:
- Title: Peter de Montfort, Wikipedia
Publication: Name: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter_de_Montfort;
Note: Peter de Montfort (or Piers de Montfort) (c. 1205 – 4 August 1265)... Peter de Montfort was the son of Thurstan de Montfort (d.1216)[3] by a daughter of William I de Cantilupe (d.1239)... was slain with him at the Battle of Evesham on 4 August 1265. His two sons, Peter and Robert... Montfort married Alice Audley, daughter of Henry Audley,
- Title: Ancestry Family Trees
Author: Ancestry Family Tree
- Title: Millennium File
Publication: Name: http://search.ancestry.com/collections/7249/records/10647475;
- Title: Legacy NFS Source: Peter de Montfort -
Author: Source 5 (please edit title)
Page: Migrated from user-supplied source citation: urn:familysearch:source:2644080679
- Title: Legacy NFS Source: Peter de Montfort -
Author: Ancestral File (TM), The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, June 1998 (c), data as of 5 JAN 1998
Page: Migrated from user-supplied source citation: urn:familysearch:source:2737222797
- Title: Peter Lord Montfort van Beldesert in the Web: Netherlands, GenealogieOnline Trees Index, 1000-2015
Publication: Name: http://search.ancestry.com/collections/9289/records/6735820;
Note: Name: Peter Lord Montfort van Beldesert
Gender: m (Male)
Birth Date: 1210
Birth Place: Beaudesert, Warwickshire
Death Date: 4 Aug 1265
Death Place: Worcestershire
Death Age: 55
Father: Thurston Lord Montfort van Beldesert
Spouse: Alice Audley
Children: Peter Lord Montfort van Beldesert
- Title: Legacy NFS Source: Peter de Montfort -
Author: Ancestral File (TM), The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, July 1996 (c), data as of 2 January 1996
Page: Migrated from user-supplied source citation: urn:familysearch:source:2737222795
- Title: Ancestry Family Trees
Author: Ancestry Family Tree
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