Michael Matthew Groat PhD's Genealogical Database
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Eleanor de Ferrers - Countess of Winchester
- Preferred Name: Eleanor de Ferrers - Countess of Winchester[1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] [8] [9]
- Gender: F
- http://familysearch.org/v1/TitleOfNobility: Countess
- FSID: MNLN-9TL
- Death: 2 NOV 1274 in Elham, Kent, England at LATI: N1.1572 LONG: E0.1152
- Birth: 1236 in Derbyshire, England at LATI: N3.1105 LONG: E1.6205
- Burial: in Leeds Priory, Leeds, Kent, England at LATI: N1.2477 LONG: E0.6077 with note: Findagrave.com
- Notes:
=== Life Sketch ===
“Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families,” Douglas Richardson (2013):
“ROGER DE QUINCY, Knt., 2nd Earl of Winchester, of Ware, Hertfordshire, Eynesbury, Keyston and Southoe, Huntingdonshire, Belgrave, Burton Overy, Braunstone, Galby, King's Norton, and Laughton, Leicestershire, Shipton (in Shipton-on-Cherwell), Oxfordshire, Seckington, Warwickshire, etc., and Leuchars, Fife, Scotland, and, in right of his 1st wife, hereditary Constable of Scotland, 2nd but eldest surviving son. He married (1st) ELLEN OF GALLOWAY, 2nd but let surviving daughter and co-heiress of Alan Fitz Roland, Lord of Galloway, hereditary Constable of Scotland, by his 1st wife, ___, daughter of Roger de Lacy, Knt., of Pontefract, Yorkshire, hereditary Constable of Chester [see LACY 2.iii for her ancestry]. Her maritagium included the manor of Kippax, Yorkshire. They had three daughters, Margaret (or Margery), Elizabeth (or Isabel), and Ellen. He was excommunicated with his father by Pope Innocent III 16 Dec. 1215. He was presumably on Crusade at Damietta at the time of his father's death in 1219. His eldest brother, Robert, then being dead, Roger did homage and received livery of his father's lands 16 Feb. 1221. In 1222 he served as a captain in the king's army in Poitou. In 1230 his niece, Margaret de Quincy, wife of John de Lacy, released her claim to the main Quincy inheritance to him; in return he granted to John and Margaret and their issue her mother, Hawise's dower, including the manor of Grantchester, Cambridgeshire, to hold of him and his heirs. In 1233 a notification of Walter, Archbishop of York, stated that the priory of St. John of Pontefract had recovered the advowson of Kippax, Yorkshire against Roger de Quincy in an assize of darrein presentment. He succeeded to the earldom of Winchester in 1235 on his mother's death. In 1235 the Gallwegians, being opposed to the partition of Alan of Galloway's dominions among his three daughters (including Roger's wife, Ellen), petitioned King Alexander II to make Alan's illegitimate son, Thomas, their overlord. The king rejected the petition, and an insurrection took place, but was soon suppressed. He presented to a mediety of the church of Croxton, Leicestershire, 1235, and to the churches of Markfield, Leicestershire, 1254, 1257; Laughton, Leicestershire, 1248, 1254, 1258, 1269; and Wadenhoe, Northamptonshire, 1261. In 1237 he had license to import corn and victuals from Ireland through a merchant named Erskin of Kirkcudbright in Scotland. In 1239 he joined other nobles in writing a letter of remonstrance to Pope Gregory IX, complaining of the Pope's infringement of the rights of English patrons. Roger served with the king in Guienne in 1242. His wife, Ellen, was living 21 Nov. 1245. She was buried at BracIdey, Northamptonshire. In 1246 he again joined in a letter sent to the pope with reference to the grievances of England against the Roman see. On the death of his wife's sister, Christian, Countess of Aumale, in 1246, he obtained a further portion of Galloway in right of his wife. He ruled the chiefs there with great severity; they rose against him in 1247, and besieged him in one of his castles. Preferring a quick death by the sword to a lingering one of starvation, he suddenly caused the gates to be thrown open, and almost unattended, cut his way through the besiegers, and rode until he reached the court of the King of the Scots. King Alexander punished the rebels and re-established Roger in his possessions. About 1250 Roger quitclaimed to the church of St. Mary and St. Nicholas, Littlemore, Oxfordshire the suit of his court at Chinnor, Oxfordshire, required for the 18 acres in the fields of Svdenham, Oxfordshire, which the said nuns of Littlemore had of the gift of Saher de Quincy his father. He married (2nd) before 12 June 1250 MAUD DE BOHUN, widow of Anselm Marshal, 9th Earl of Pembroke, hereditary Master Marshal, hereditary Steward of Leinster (died at Chepstow 22, 23, or 24 Dec. 1245) [see MARSHAL 3.v], and daughter of Humphrey de Bohun, Knt., Earl of Hereford and Essex, hereditary Constable of England, by Maud, daughter of Raoul (or Ralph) d'Exoudun, 7th Count of Eu. They had no issue. About 1250 he witnessed a charter of Richard de Harcourt, Knt., of Stanton Harcourt, Oxfordshire in favor of his son, William de Harcourt [see BOHUN 6 for her ancestry]. His wife, Maud, died at Groby (in Ratby), Leicestershire 20 October 1252, and was buried at Brackley, Northamptonshire. In the period, 1252-7, he exchanged the manors of Kippax and Scholes and the advowson of the church of Kippax, Yorkshire with his great nephew, Edmund de Lacy, for the manor of Elmsall (in South Kirkby), Yorkshire. He married (3rd) shortly before 17 Jan. 1252/3 ELEANOR DE FERRERS, widow of William de Vaux, of Tharston and Houghton, Norfolk (died testate shortly before 5 Dec. 1252), and daughter of William de Ferrers, Knt., 5th Earl of Derby, by his lst wife, Sibyl, 3rd daughter of William Marshal, Knt., 4th Earl of Pembroke (or Striguil), hereditary Master Marshal [see FERRERS 7 for her ancestry]. They had no issue. Eleanor was co-heiress in 1245 to her uncle, Anselm Marshal, 9th Earl of Pembroke. In 1253 he granted the manor of Ware, Hertfordshire to his younger brother, Robert de Quincy, to hold of him and his heirs at the yearly rent of half a mark and by service of a knight's fee. In 1257 the king appointed him a joint commissioner for composing the disputes between King Alexander III of Scotland and certain of Alexander's nobles. He fought in Wales 1258, and the same year, was one of the twenty-four elected by the Barons for the observance of the Provisions of Oxford. About 1260 he granted a charter to the burgesses of Brackley, Northamptonshire, and made many gifts to the Hospital there, including that of a sarcophagus, 1240, to lie on the right side of the heart of his mother, Margaret de Quincy, and to be filled three times a year with winnowed corn for the use of the Hospital. About 1264 he granted Nicholas de Clacmanan, the king's brewer, the whole land of the constabulary of Clacmannan. At an unknown date, he granted to the monks of Lindores Abbey that they and their men should have a free road through the middle of his wood at Kinloch near Collessie and through the whole of his land as far as to the moor of Eden for heather and through the middle of the moor for peats. At an unknown date, he likewise confirmed the grant of his father to St. Andrews Priory of three silver marks annually from the mill of Leuchars, Fife. SIR ROGER DE QUINCY, 2nd Earl of Winchester, Constable of Scotland, died 25 April 1264, and was probably buried at Brackley, Northamptonshire. His widow, Eleanor, married (3rd) before 8 Sept. 1267 (as his 2nd wife) ROGER DE LEYBOURNE, Knt., of Elham, Kent, Steward of the King's Household, Warden of the Cinque Ports, Sheriff of Kent, Warden of the Forests beyond Trent, son of Roger de Leybourne, of Leybourne, Kent, by Eleanor, daughter and co-heiress of Stephen de Turnham. SIR ROGER DE LEYBOURNE died 5 Nov. 1271. Eleanor, Countess of Winchester, died 16 October 1274.
Bridges Hist. & Antiqs. of Northamptonshire 1 (1791): 526, 544-545; 2 (1791): 390. Nichols Hist. & Antiqs. of Leicester 2(1) (1795): Appendix: 97 (confirmation charter of Roger de Quincy), 116-117 (charters of Roger de Quincy, Earl of Winchester); 3(1) (1800): 121. Blomefield Essay towards a Top. Hist. of Norfolk 6 (1807): 134-135. Baker Hist. & Antiqs. of Northampton 1 (1822-30): 544-545 (Mandeville-Fitz Peter-Bohun ped.), 563 (Beaumont-Quincy ped.). Dugdale Monasticon Anglicanum 4 (1823): 493 (charter of Roger de Quincy, Earl of Winchester; charter witnessed by Robert de Quincy his brother). Clutterbuck Hist. & Antiqs. of Hertford 3 (1827): 287-288 (Beaumont-Quincy ped.). Burke Dict. of the Peerages... Extinct, Dormant & in Abeyance (1831): 63-65 (sub Bohun), 442-443 (sub Quincy). Liber Sancte Marie de Metros 1 (1837): 246. Liber Cartarum Sancte Crucis (1840): 49-50, 67-68 (charter of Roger de Quincy). Bruce Liber Cartarum Prioratus Sancti Andree in Scotia (1841): 232-236, 255-257 (charters of Roger de Quincy), 336-337 (charters of Roger de Quincy). Turnbull Chartularies of Balmenno & Lindores: Liber Sancte Marie de Balmorinach (1841): 29 (charter of Roger de Quincy), 60-61; Liber Sancte Marie de Lundoris (1841): 41-42. Extracta e Variis Cronicis Scocie (1842): 94-95. Lyon Hist. of St. Andrews 2 (1843): 286-287. Innes Liber S. Marie de Dryburgh (1847): 99-102 (charters of Roger de Quincy). Laing Desc. Cat. Impressions from Ancient Scottish Seals (1850): 113 (seal of Roger de Quinci, Earl of Winchester. An exceedingly beautiful seal. An armed knight on horseback at full speed; a drawn sword in his right hand, and his left protecting his body with a long pointed shield, much curved. Over a chain armour a surcoat very gracefully disposed. On the shield are five mascles, 2, 2 and 1, of which there are twelve on the housings of the horse. Beneath the horse is a wyvern. Legend: "SIGILL. ROGER[l DE QUINC1] COMITIS WINCESTRIE." Counter Seal. A knight on foot, habited precisely as in the former, in chain armour and surcoat, in combat with a lion, rearing on his hind-legs. On the top of the helmet is a wyvern; and in the lower part of the seal a rose of six leaves. Appended to a charter by Roger de Quinci granting to the Abbey of Holyrood permission to grind all corn required for the Abbey, at his mill at Tranent, free of multure. Legend: "SIGILL. ROGERI DE QUINCI CONSTABULARII SCOCIE." A.D. 1250. - Panmure Charters.). Giles Matthew Paris's English Hist. 2 (1853): 533 (sub AD. 1252: "At this time died, at Groby, a manor belonging to the earl of Winchester, not far from Leicester, the countess, wife of the said earl, and daughter of the earl of Hereford. Dying young, she left no offspring by the earl, as was also the case with his former wife, the daughter of Alan of Galway, who died previously, leav
=== Biography ===
“Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families,” Douglas Richardson (2013):
“ROGER DE QUINCY, Knt., 2nd Earl of Winchester, of Ware, Hertfordshire, Eynesbury, Keyston and Southoe, Huntingdonshire, Belgrave, Burton Overy, Braunstone, Galby, King's Norton, and Laughton, Leicestershire, Shipton (in Shipton-on-Cherwell), Oxfordshire, Seckington, Warwickshire, etc., and Leuchars, Fife, Scotland, and, in right of his 1st wife, hereditary Constable of Scotland, 2nd but eldest surviving son. He married (1st) ELLEN OF GALLOWAY, 2nd but let surviving daughter and co-heiress of Alan Fitz Roland, Lord of Galloway, hereditary Constable of Scotland, by his 1st wife, ___, daughter of Roger de Lacy, Knt., of Pontefract, Yorkshire, hereditary Constable of Chester [see LACY 2.iii for her ancestry]. Her maritagium included the manor of Kippax, Yorkshire. They had three daughters, Margaret (or Margery), Elizabeth (or Isabel), and Ellen. He was excommunicated with his father by Pope Innocent III 16 Dec. 1215. He was presumably on Crusade at Damietta at the time of his father's death in 1219. His eldest brother, Robert, then being dead, Roger did homage and received livery of his father's lands 16 Feb. 1221. In 1222 he served as a captain in the king's army in Poitou. In 1230 his niece, Margaret de Quincy, wife of John de Lacy, released her claim to the main Quincy inheritance to him; in return he granted to John and Margaret and their issue her mother, Hawise's dower, including the manor of Grantchester, Cambridgeshire, to hold of him and his heirs. In 1233 a notification of Walter, Archbishop of York, stated that the priory of St. John of Pontefract had recovered the advowson of Kippax, Yorkshire against Roger de Quincy in an assize of darrein presentment. He succeeded to the earldom of Winchester in 1235 on his mother's death. In 1235 the Gallwegians, being opposed to the partition of Alan of Galloway's dominions among his three daughters (including Roger's wife, Ellen), petitioned King Alexander II to make Alan's illegitimate son, Thomas, their overlord. The king rejected the petition, and an insurrection took place, but was soon suppressed. He presented to a mediety of the church of Croxton, Leicestershire, 1235, and to the churches of Markfield, Leicestershire, 1254, 1257; Laughton, Leicestershire, 1248, 1254, 1258, 1269; and Wadenhoe, Northamptonshire, 1261. In 1237 he had license to import corn and victuals from Ireland through a merchant named Erskin of Kirkcudbright in Scotland. In 1239 he joined other nobles in writing a letter of remonstrance to Pope Gregory IX, complaining of the Pope's infringement of the rights of English patrons. Roger served with the king in Guienne in 1242. His wife, Ellen, was living 21 Nov. 1245. She was buried at BracIdey, Northamptonshire. In 1246 he again joined in a letter sent to the pope with reference to the grievances of England against the Roman see. On the death of his wife's sister, Christian, Countess of Aumale, in 1246, he obtained a further portion of Galloway in right of his wife. He ruled the chiefs there with great severity; they rose against him in 1247, and besieged him in one of his castles. Preferring a quick death by the sword to a lingering one of starvation, he suddenly caused the gates to be thrown open, and almost unattended, cut his way through the besiegers, and rode until he reached the court of the King of the Scots. King Alexander punished the rebels and re-established Roger in his possessions. About 1250 Roger quitclaimed to the church of St. Mary and St. Nicholas, Littlemore, Oxfordshire the suit of his court at Chinnor, Oxfordshire, required for the 18 acres in the fields of Svdenham, Oxfordshire, which the said nuns of Littlemore had of the gift of Saher de Quincy his father. He married (2nd) before 12 June 1250 MAUD DE BOHUN, widow of Anselm Marshal, 9th Earl of Pembroke, hereditary Master Marshal, hereditary Steward of Leinster (died at Chepstow 22, 23, or 24 Dec. 1245) [see MARSHAL 3.v], and daughter of Humphrey de Bohun, Knt., Earl of Hereford and Essex, hereditary Constable of England, by Maud, daughter of Raoul (or Ralph) d'Exoudun, 7th Count of Eu. They had no issue. About 1250 he witnessed a charter of Richard de Harcourt, Knt., of Stanton Harcourt, Oxfordshire in favor of his son, William de Harcourt [see BOHUN 6 for her ancestry]. His wife, Maud, died at Groby (in Ratby), Leicestershire 20 October 1252, and was buried at Brackley, Northamptonshire. In the period, 1252-7, he exchanged the manors of Kippax and Scholes and the advowson of the church of Kippax, Yorkshire with his great nephew, Edmund de Lacy, for the manor of Elmsall (in South Kirkby), Yorkshire. He married (3rd) shortly before 17 Jan. 1252/3 ELEANOR DE FERRERS, widow of William de Vaux, of Tharston and Houghton, Norfolk (died testate shortly before 5 Dec. 1252), and daughter of William de Ferrers, Knt., 5th Earl of Derby, by his lst wife, Sibyl, 3rd daughter of William Marshal, Knt., 4th Earl of Pembroke (or Striguil), hereditary Master Marshal [see FERRERS 7 for her ancestry]. They had no issue. Eleanor was co-heiress in 1245 to her uncle, Anselm Marshal, 9th Earl of Pembroke. In 1253 he granted the manor of Ware, Hertfordshire to his younger brother, Robert de Quincy, to hold of him and his heirs at the yearly rent of half a mark and by service of a knight's fee. In 1257 the king appointed him a joint commissioner for composing the disputes between King Alexander III of Scotland and certain of Alexander's nobles. He fought in Wales 1258, and the same year, was one of the twenty-four elected by the Barons for the observance of the Provisions of Oxford. About 1260 he granted a charter to the burgesses of Brackley, Northamptonshire, and made many gifts to the Hospital there, including that of a sarcophagus, 1240, to lie on the right side of the heart of his mother, Margaret de Quincy, and to be filled three times a year with winnowed corn for the use of the Hospital. About 1264 he granted Nicholas de Clacmanan, the king's brewer, the whole land of the constabulary of Clacmannan. At an unknown date, he granted to the monks of Lindores Abbey that they and their men should have a free road through the middle of his wood at Kinloch near Collessie and through the whole of his land as far as to the moor of Eden for heather and through the middle of the moor for peats. At an unknown date, he likewise confirmed the grant of his father to St. Andrews Priory of three silver marks annually from the mill of Leuchars, Fife. SIR ROGER DE QUINCY, 2nd Earl of Winchester, Constable of Scotland, died 25 April 1264, and was probably buried at Brackley, Northamptonshire. His widow, Eleanor, married (3rd) before 8 Sept. 1267 (as his 2nd wife) ROGER DE LEYBOURNE, Knt., of Elham, Kent, Steward of the King's Household, Warden of the Cinque Ports, Sheriff of Kent, Warden of the Forests beyond Trent, son of Roger de Leybourne, of Leybourne, Kent, by Eleanor, daughter and co-heiress of Stephen de Turnham. SIR ROGER DE LEYBOURNE died 5 Nov. 1271. Eleanor, Countess of Winchester, died 16 October 1274.
Bridges Hist. & Antiqs. of Northamptonshire 1 (1791): 526, 544-545; 2 (1791): 390. Nichols Hist. & Antiqs. of Leicester 2(1) (1795): Appendix: 97 (confirmation charter of Roger de Quincy), 116-117 (charters of Roger de Quincy, Earl of Winchester); 3(1) (1800): 121. Blomefield Essay towards a Top. Hist. of Norfolk 6 (1807): 134-135. Baker Hist. & Antiqs. of Northampton 1 (1822-30): 544-545 (Mandeville-Fitz Peter-Bohun ped.), 563 (Beaumont-Quincy ped.). Dugdale Monasticon Anglicanum 4 (1823): 493 (charter of Roger de Quincy, Earl of Winchester; charter witnessed by Robert de Quincy his brother). Clutterbuck Hist. & Antiqs. of Hertford 3 (1827): 287-288 (Beaumont-Quincy ped.). Burke Dict. of the Peerages... Extinct, Dormant & in Abeyance (1831): 63-65 (sub Bohun), 442-443 (sub Quincy). Liber Sancte Marie de Metros 1 (1837): 246. Liber Cartarum Sancte Crucis (1840): 49-50, 67-68 (charter of Roger de Quincy). Bruce Liber Cartarum Prioratus Sancti Andree in Scotia (1841): 232-236, 255-257 (charters of Roger de Quincy), 336-337 (charters of Roger de Quincy). Turnbull Chartularies of Balmenno & Lindores: Liber Sancte Marie de Balmorinach (1841): 29 (charter of Roger de Quincy), 60-61; Liber Sancte Marie de Lundoris (1841): 41-42. Extracta e Variis Cronicis Scocie (1842): 94-95. Lyon Hist. of St. Andrews 2 (1843): 286-287. Innes Liber S. Marie de Dryburgh (1847): 99-102 (charters of Roger de Quincy). Laing Desc. Cat. Impressions from Ancient Scottish Seals (1850): 113 (seal of Roger de Quinci, Earl of Winchester. An exceedingly beautiful seal. An armed knight on horseback at full speed; a drawn sword in his right hand, and his left protecting his body with a long pointed shield, much curved. Over a chain armour a surcoat very gracefully disposed. On the shield are five mascles, 2, 2 and 1, of which there are twelve on the housings of the horse. Beneath the horse is a wyvern. Legend: "SIGILL. ROGER[l DE QUINC1] COMITIS WINCESTRIE." Counter Seal. A knight on foot, habited precisely as in the former, in chain armour and surcoat, in combat with a lion, rearing on his hind-legs. On the top of the helmet is a wyvern; and in the lower part of the seal a rose of six leaves. Appended to a charter by Roger de Quinci granting to the Abbey of Holyrood permission to grind all corn required for the Abbey, at his mill at Tranent, free of multure. Legend: "SIGILL. ROGERI DE QUINCI CONSTABULARII SCOCIE." A.D. 1250. - Panmure Charters.). Giles Matthew Paris's English Hist. 2 (1853): 533 (sub AD. 1252: "At this time died, at Groby, a manor belonging to the earl of Winchester, not far from Leicester, the countess, wife of the said earl, and daughter of the earl of Hereford. Dying young, she left no offspring by the earl, as was also the case with his former wife, the daughter of Alan of Galway, who died previously, leav
Preferred Parents:
Father: William Ferrers 5th Earl of Derby, b. 1200 in Derby, Derbyshire, England d. 28 MAR 1254 in Evington, Leicestershire, England
Mother: Sibyl Marshal, b. 20 DEC 1201 in Castlemartin, Pembrokeshire, Wales d. 27 APR 1245 in Ashbourne, Derbyshire, England
Family 1: William de Vaux, b. ABT 1226 in Pentney, Norfolk, England d. 14 SEP 1252
Family 2: Roger Leybourne, b. 1215 in Leybourne, Kent, England, United Kingdom d. 5 NOV 1271 in Elham, Kent, England, United Kingdom
- m. 1240 in Kent, England
- m. 1247 in Leybourne, Kent, England, United Kingdom
- William de Leybourne, b. 1242 in Leybourne, Kent, England d. 12 MAR 1310 in West Malling, Kent, England
Family 3: Roger de Quincy 2nd Earl Of Winchester Constable Of Scotland, b. 1195 in Winchester, Hampshire, England d. 25 APR 1264 in Brackley, Northamptonshire, England
Sources:
- Title: Roger de Quincy, Earl of Winchester, in the Battle Abbey Roll, Vol. 3, pg. 48-49 [See document in the Memories section]
Author: Battle Abbey Roll, Vol. 3, pg. 48-49
Note: Roger de Quincy, Earl of Winchester, in the Battle Abbey Roll, Vol. 3, pg. 48-49 [See document in the Memories section]
Page: Roger de Quincy, Earl of Winchester, in the Battle Abbey Roll, Vol. 3, pg. 48-49 [See document in the Memories section]
- Title: Baddesley Clinton, Its Manor Church & Hall
Author: Family History Library archive record (family group sheet)
Note: Source: Baddesley Clinton, Its Manor Church & Hall p. 105, 106 (GS #929.242 F414n); The Battle Abbey Roll Vol. 1 p. 26, 27 vol. 3, p. 49 (GS #942 D2bb) Doomsday Bk. p. 7, 8 (GS #Q942.51 R2je); Roll of the Battle Abbey p. 52, 53 (GS #942 M23b); Complete Peerage vol. 2 pt. 199, vol. 12 pt. 2, p. 937 (GS #942 D24c); Burke's Peerage; 1883 p. 33, 197, 358 (GS #942 D22bug); TIB
Submitter: Wells F. Collett
Page: Migrated from user-supplied source citation: urn:familysearch:source:3244547632
- Title: Wikipedia: William de Ferrers, 5th Earl of Derby
Publication: Name: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_de_Ferrers,_5th_Earl_of_Derby;
- Title: Eleanor (Ferrers) de Leybourne on WikiTree
Author: WikiTree contributors, "Eleanor (Ferrers) de Leybourne", WikiTree, http://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Ferrers-113 (accessed 3 June 2022)
Publication: Name: http://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Ferrers-113;
- Title: Geni: Eleanor de Leybourne
Author: Geni
Publication: Name: https://www.geni.com/people/Eleanor-de-Leybourne/6000000006906799107;
Note: Information for Eleanor de Leybourne
- Title: Eleanor de Ferrieres, "Find A Grave Index"
Author: "Find A Grave Index," database, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:QV2Y-YQDX : 11 June 2020), Eleanor de Ferrieres, 1274; Burial, , ; citing record ID , Find a Grave, http://www.findagrave.com.
Publication: Name: https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:QV2Y-YQDX;
- Title: Roger de Quincy, Earl of Winchester, in Cokayne's Complete Peerage, Vol. 8, pg. 169 [See document in the Memories section]
Author: Cokayne's Complete Peerage, Vol. 8, pg. 169
Note: Roger de Quincy, Earl of Winchester, in Cokayne's Complete Peerage, Vol. 8, pg. 169 [See document in the Memories section]
Page: Roger de Quincy, Earl of Winchester, in Cokayne's Complete Peerage, Vol. 8, pg. 169 [See document in the Memories section]
- Title: Find a Grave
Publication: Name: https://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GSln=DE&GSpartial=1&GSbyrel=all&GScntry=5&GSsr=441&GRid=86384416&;
- Title: The Medieval Lands Project, "ELEANOR (-before 25 Oct 1274, bur Leeds Priory)"
Author: Online.
Publication: Name: http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/ENGLISH%20NOBILITY%20MEDIEVAL1.htm#EleanorFerrersdied1274;
Note: Cites primary records.
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