Roger de Davenport

Events


Date of Birth: unknown.

Place of Birth: unknown.


Living: 1288, 1291.

The dates are given by This relationship is given by Ormerod (3:68).


Date of Death: unknown.

Place of Death: unknown.


Relationships


Father: Vivian de Davenport.

This relationship is given by Ormerod (3:68).

Mother: Beatrix, daughter of Bertrand de Hulme.

This relationship is given by Ormerod (3:68).


Spouse: Mary, daughter of Robert de Salemon.

This relationship is given by Ormerod (3:68; 3:720).


Children:

(Complete source citations for facts about the children on this page are currently outside of the scope of this project. Most information below comes from Ormerod 3:68.)


Peter de Davenport.


Sir Thomas de Davenport married Agnes, daughter of Thomas de Macclesfield.


John de Davenport married Matilda, daughter of William de Rode.


Henry Davenport.


Ellen married William de Bulkeley.


Evidence


from ACOCC [p. 63]:

fine (1303-04)

Thomas, son of Roger de Dauenport (40d.), Mary who was the wife of Roger de Dauenport (12d. nichil habet), Richard Stukel (2s. nichil habet), Thomas Burdon (12d.), John d Ruylegh (12.d.), and Thomas Margellen (12d.), for disseisin, &c… 6s. 4d.


From the Appendix to The Twenty-Sixth Report of the Deputy Keeper of the Public Records (Chester Plea Rolls):


(p. 47):

26 Edw. 1. Davenport, Maria, who was the wife of Roger de, against Thomas de Neuton and Roger de Turnok. Dower. [25, 26, Edw. 1. m. 1.]


References


Accounts of the Chamberlains and other Officers of the County of Chester. 1301-1360. (Ronald Stewart-Brown, ed.) (The Record Society for the Publication of Original Documents Relating to Lancashire and Cheshire, Vol. LIX: 1910).


Ormerod, George; Peter Leycester; William Smith; William Webb; and Thomas Helsby. The history of the county palatine and city of Chester: compiled from original evidences in public offices, the Harleian and Cottonian mss., parochial registers, private muniments, unpublished ms. collections of successive Cheshire antiquaries, and a personal survey of every township in the county, incorporated with a republication of King's Vale royal and Leycester's Cheshire antiquities. (London: G. Routledge, 1882).


The Twenty-Sixth Report of the Deputy Keeper of the Public Records (London, 1862).