Dear Newsgroup ~
Complete Peerage, 10 (1945): 314–315 (sub Pateshulle), and 12(2) (1959): 98–100 (sub Tye), includes a history of Isabel (or Elizabeth) de Stonegrave, wife successively of Simon de Pateshulle (died 1295) and Sir Walter de Teye, Lord Tey. I've copied below my current file account of Isabel and her two husbands.
With regard to an question posed offlist to me, there appears to have been at least five John de Pateshulle's. John de Pateshulle I (died 1290) was the husband of Agnes, who was the original subject of this thread. John I and his wife, Agnes, appear to have had at least two sons, Simon de Patehulle (died 1295) and John de Pateshille, who I will call John de Pateshulle II, as well as one daughter, Margery [Marion] (wife of Robert Bryan). Evidence of John de Pateshulle II's parentage is proven by a Common Pleas lawsuit dated 1296, in which Isabel, widow of Simon de Pateshulle, sued John son of John de Pateshulle in the Court of Common Pleas regarding the third part of the manor of Little Crawley, Buckinghamshire, which she claimed in right of dower; the said John came and said that the said Simon by his charter had granted the manor to him for the term of his life.
As for the history of John de Pateshulle II, I find that in 1305 Robert Frere sued him in the Court of Common Pleas in a Buckinghamshire plea regarding a debt of 111s. 2d. In 1305, 1307, and 1308 Roger de Beauchamp sued him in the Court of Common Pleas in a Buckinghamshire plea regarding a debt of 12 marks. He was granted free warren in his demesne lands in Little Crawley (in North Crawley), Buckinghamshire in 1306.
As for the third John de Pateshulle, he was the son and heir of Simon de Pateshulle (died 1290), by his wife, Isabel de Stonegrave. He married Mabel de Grandison. He and his wife Mabel appear to have had a younger son, John de Pateshulle, Esq., of Broybury (in Little Cainhoe), Bedfordshire, King’s esquire, who was living in 1340. I will call this individual John de Pateshulle IV.
And, presumably it was John de Pateshulle II who died in 1330, leaving a 5 year old son, John, who I will called John de Pateshulle V.
Do you descend from the Pateshulle family? If so, I'd very much appreciate seeing your line of descent from the Pateshulle family posted here on the newsgroup.
Best always, Douglas Richardson, Historian and Genealogist
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10. ISABEL (or ELIZABETH) DE STONEGRAVE, daughter and heiress, born about 1271–3 (aged 22, 23, or 24 at her father’s IPM in 1295; aged 24 in 1295 at IPM of Isabel de Beauchamp, widow of her great-uncle, Simon de Beauchamp). She married (1st) after January 1286/7 SIMON DE PATESHULLE (or PATSHULL), of Pattishall, Grimscote (in Cold Higham), Milton and Collingtree (in Milton Malzor), and Rothersthorpe, and Stoke Bruerne, Northamptonshire, Bletsoe, Bedfordshire, Little Crawley (in North Crawley), Buckinghamshire, Elstronwick (in Humbleton), Yorkshire, etc., and, in right of his wife, of Nunnington and Stonegrave, Yorkshire, son and heir of John de Pateshulle (or Pateshull, Patishull), Knt. (died 1290), of Pattishall, Bugbrooke, Grimscote (in Cold Higham), Milton and Collingtree (in Milton Malzor), and Rothersthorpe, Northamptonshire, Little Crawley (in North Crawley), Buckinghamshire, etc., Knight of the Shire for Bedfordshire, 1290, by his wife, Agnes (living 1295). They had two sons, John, Knt., and Richard, and probably one daughter, Agnes (wife of John de Pabenham). In 1290 he did homage to the Prior of Dunstable for the lands which he held of the priory. SIMON DE PATESHULLE died shortly before 2 Dec. 1295. After his death, a summons was issued to him 16 Dec. 1295, to be at Newcastle in March 1296 to proceed against the Scots. In 1296 Isabel, widow of Simon de Pateshulle, sued John son of John de Pateshulle in the Court of Common Pleas regarding the third part of the manor of Little Crawley, Buckinghamshire, which she claimed in right of dower; the said John came and said that the said Simon by his charter had granted the manor to him for the term of his life. About 1296–7 Isabel de Stainegreve, widow of Simon de Patesill, owed Rayner [?Sperry], Citizen and merchant of York, a debt of ? 8s. 9d. On 4 March 1297 the king ordered the escheators not to intermeddle with the lands of the late Simon de Pateshull, as the king learned by inquisition that Simon at his death held nothing of the king in chief. His widow, Isabel, married (2nd) before 3 June 1297 (by the king’s command) WALTER DE TEYE, Knt., Lord Teye, of Milton-under-Wychwood, Oxfordshire, West Firsby, Lincolnshire, etc., King’s yeoman, Joint Governor of the City of York, 1317–18, and, in right of his wife, of Stonegrave, Muscoates, Nunnington, Riccal, and West Ness, Yorkshire, Bromham and Keysoe, Bedfordshire, Linslade, Buckinghamshire, etc., King’s yeoman, Keeper of Berwick-on-Tweed. They had no surviving issue. In 1290 he came before the king and sought to replevy his land in Middleton [Milton], Oxfordshire, which was taken into the king’s hands for his default in the king’s court against Nicholas de Gardino. In 1293 Nicholas del Gardin sued him in the Court of Common Pleas regarding 30 acres of land and 12 acres of meadow in Middleton by Bruern [Milton-under-Wychwood], Oxfordshire. In 1297 Walter and Isabel his wife made a settlement of Nunniungton, Yorkshire on themselves and the heirs of Isabel. He was summoned for military service in Flanders in 1297, and for military service against the Scots in 1298, 1299, 1300, 1303. He fought at the Battle of Falkirk 22 July 1298. He was summoned to Parliament from 6 February 1298/9 to 26 August 1307. Isabel, Lady Teye, died shortly before 20 Feb. 1300/1. He signed the Barons’ letter to Pope Boniface VIII in 1301 as “Dominus de Standgreve.” In 1303 Sir Walter de Tey, Sir Ralph Paynel, and Sir Richard le Rous presented to a moiety of the church of Houghton Conquest, Bedfordshire in right of their wives. In 1304 Nicholas de Luda arraigned an assize of novel disseisin against him regarding tenements in West Ness (in Stonegrave), Yorkshire. The same year Ingelram Folenfaunt arraigned a similar assize against him regarding a tenement in West Nunnington, Yorkshire. The same year he sued Richard le Rus and Elizabeth his wife in the Court of Common Pleas regarding the presentation to a moiety of the church of Houghton Conquest, Bedfordshire. In 1306 Sir Richard le Rous and Elizabeth his wife presented to the church of Houghton Conquest, Bedfordshire; Sir Ralph Painel presented another candidate, but the king certified that the said Ralph and Walter de Teye had previously granted the advowson of the said church to Sir Richard le Rous. He was summoned to attend the Coronation of King Edward II 25 Feb. 1308. In 1311 he was requested to proceed with as many followers as he can against the Scots, who were preparing to ravage the north. In 1324 he was summoned to attend the Great Council at Westminster. SIR WALTER DE TEYE, Lord Teye, died shortly before 15 June 1324.
References:
Archaeologia 21 (1827): 218–219. Palgrave, Parliamentary Writs & Writs of Military Summons 1 (1827): i (Cal. of Writs & Returns), 772, 860. Baker, Hist. & Antiqs. of Northampton 2 (1836–41): 295–297 (Pateshull arms: Argent, a fess sable between three crescents, gules). Banks, Baronies in Fee 2 (1843): 136–137 (sub Steyngreve). Luard, Annales Monastici 3 (Rolls Ser. 36) (1866): 365 (Dunstable Annals sub 1290 — “Eodem anno obiit Johannes de Patushulle; et Simon filius ejus invadiavit relevium priori, scilicet quadraginta-sex solidos; et fecit homagium for terris in Grimuscote et Patushulle.”), 401 (Dunstable Annals sub 1295 — “Item obiit Symon de Pateshulle junior, nondum miles. Et dominus rex habuit wardam haeredis sui, et terrarum, ratione octodecim auccarum, quas dominus rex percipere solet nomine sergantiæ, de quodam tenemento quod ipse Symon et sui prædecessores tenuerunt. Prior autem de Dunstaple disrationavit et habuit redditum suum quem idem Symon ei debuit pro Grymeskote et Pateshulle. Tandem mater dicti Symonis manerium de Pateshulle cum pertinentiis et onere habuit nomine dotis.”). Harvey, Hist. & Antiqs. of the Hundred of Willey (1872–8): opp. 4 (Beauchamp ped.). Gough, Scotland in 1298 (1888): 30, 86, 150–151. Yorkshire Arch. & Topog. Jour. 11 (1891): 446. Birch, Cat. Seals in the British Museum 2 (1892): 400 (seal of Isabel de Pateshulle, daughter of John de Stonegrave, dated temp. Henry III. — Oval. In tightly-fitting dress, fur cloak, flat head-dress. Standing on a carved corbel between two wavy sprigs of foliage). Genealogist n.s. 10 (1893): 215; n.s. 16 (1899): 38. D.N.B. 44 (1901): 30 (biog. of Sir Simon de Pateshull). Howard de Walden, Some Feudal Lords & Their Seals (1903): 102–103 (biog. of Walter de Teye) (seal of Walter de Teye dated 1301 — On a fess between two chevronels three pierced mullets. The shield decorated on either side by a wingless wyvern, with florcated tail. Legend: S’ WALTERI : DE : TEYE : DNI : DE : STEYNGREVE :). Ancestor 8 (1904): 103–104. C.C.R. 1288–1296 (1904): 147. Wrottesley, Peds. from the Plea Rolls (1905): 74, 267–268. Barron, Northamptonshire Fams. (1906): 317. C.C.R. 1296–1302 (1906): 18. Cal. IPM 3 (1912): 174–183, 188–189; 5 (1908): 209, 245; 6 (1910): 341–347. Cal. Various Chancery Rolls 1277–1326 (1912): 73–74. VCH Bedford 3 (1912): 9–15, 40–43, 45, 235. VCH Yorkshire N.R. 1 (1914): 544–548. Farrer, Honors & Knights’ Fees 1 (1923): 92–94. VCH Buckingham 3 (1925): 387–391; 4 (1927): 327–338. VCH Northampton 4 (1937): 271–276 (Pateshull arms: Argent a fesse sable between three crescents gules), 285–288; 5 (2002): 374–413. Early Yorkshire Charters 6 (1939): 122 (chart). C.P. 10 (1945): 314–315 (sub Pateshulle); 12(2) (1959): 98–100 (sub Tye). Paget, Baronage of England (1957) 37: 1–8 (sub Beauchamp). Cal. of Memoranda Rolls (Exchequer) Preserved in the Public Rec. Office: Michaelmas 1326–Michaelmas 1327 (1968): 161, 163. Sanders, English Baronies (1960): 10–12. Ormrod, Fourteenth Cent. England VII (2012): 50, footnote 20. Court of Common Pleas, CP40/100, image 54f [In Easter term 1293 Agnes, widow of John de Pateshull, claimed 22s. 8d. rent in Middleton Milton and Collingtree (in Milton Malzor), Northamptonshire] (available at
http://aalt.law.uh.edu/E1/CP40no100/aCP40%20no100fronts/IMG_0054.htm). Court of Common Pleas, CP40/100, image 69f [In Easter term 1293 Agnes, widow of John de Pateshulle, sued Philip de Montgomery in the Court of Common Pleas regarding one messuage and lands in Great Gowele [North Crawley], Buckinghamshire, which she claimed as her right] (available athttp://
aalt.law.uh.edu/E1/CP40no100/aCP40%20no100fronts/IMG_0069.htm). Court of Common Pleas, CP40/100, image 230f (available at
http://aalt.law.uh.edu/E1/CP40no100/aCP40%20no100fronts/IMG_0230.htm). Court of Common Pleas, CP40/100, image 367d (available at
http://aalt.law.uh.edu/E1/CP40no100/bCP40no100dorses/IMG_0367.htm). Court of Common Pleas, CP40/102, image 54f (available at
http://aalt.law.uh.edu/E1/CP40no102/aCP40no102fronts/IMG_0054.htm). Court of Common Pleas, CP40/115, image 96f (available at
http://aalt.law.uh.edu/E1/CP40no115/aCP40no115fronts/IMG_0096.htm). Court of Common Pleas, CP40/149, image 194f (available at
http://aalt.law.uh.edu/E1/CP40no149/aCP40no149fronts/IMG_0194.htm). Court of Common Pleas, CP40/149, image 1062d (available at
http://aalt.law.uh.edu/E1/CP40no149/bCP40no149dorses/IMG_1062.htm). National Archives, C 143/102/12; C 241/31/36; SC 8/325/E686 (available at
http://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk). National Archives, CP 25/1/175/57, #309 [see abstract of fine at
http://www.medievalgenealogy.org.uk/index.html].