HAWISE FITZ GEOFFREY, d. before 1243; m. (AAA-6) SIR REYNOLD DE MOHUN II. The Annals of Dunstable record that “Johannam comitissam Gloucestriæ” died “paucos dies” after her marriage to “Hubertus de Burgo justiciarius Angliæ” and was buried “apud Cantuarium”[562].

On 11 July 1198, King Richard appointed Geoffrey Chief Justiciar, which at that time effectively made him the king's principal minister. Harriet was the daughter of Colonel Thomas Bladen of Glastonbury Abbey, Somerset. Arthur de Vere Capell, Viscount Malden (1826–1879), who married Emma Martha Meux, third daughter of. A manuscript which narrates the descents of the founders of Lanthony Abbey records that “Gilbertus de Lacy” married “Isabellæ Mareschal”[576], presumably confusing her with Isabel daughter of William Marshal Earl of Pembroke who married firstly Gilbert de Clare Earl of Gloucester and Hereford and secondly Richard Earl of Cornwall. John Thomas Capel and Lady Caroline Paget (eldest daughter of Henry Paget, 1st Earl of Uxbridge).

19th-century drawing of effigy of Humphrey de Bohun, 4th Earl of Hereford, Hereford Cathedral. Lady, the eldest daughter of Charles Boyle, Viscount Dungarvan and Lady Catherine St. Lawrence (eldest daughter of William St Lawrence, 2nd Earl of Howth), was the sister of Richard Boyle, 9th Earl of Cork. Son of Humphrey VII de Bohun, 3rd Earl of Hereford and Maude de Fiennes [1] He was given the name of Arthur Algernon Capel at birth, but the spelling of the family name was legally changed by Royal Licence to Capell on 23 July 1880. + 5 ii.

He was Earl of Essex, Mandeville, Sussex, and Gloucester. John Thomas Capell (1769–1819), who married Lady Caroline Paget, a daughter of. Geoffrey's first two sons died without issue. The Chronicle of Tintern Abbey, Monmouthshire records that the second (unnamed) daughter of "Johanni Fitz-Geffrey" and his wife "Isabella Bygod…" married "comiti Ultoniæ"[583]. He acquired the Earl of Essex inheritance through his wife Beatrice de Say (de iure uxoris) upon the death of her father, Mandeville de Say, Earl of Essex who had no male heir, and thus Geoffrey became Earl of Essex 27 May 1199 through the death of his father-in-law.

When Richard I left on crusade, he appointed Geoffrey one of the five judges of the king's court, and thus a principal advisor to Hugh de Puiset, Bishop of Durham, who, as Chief Justiciar, was one of the regents during the king's absence. Capell was born on 7 October 1732 in Turin. Alianore de Bohun, Humphrey Bohun Hereford of Essex, Edward de Bohun, William de Bohun, Margaret de Bohun, 1276 - Pleshy Castle, Essex County, England, Mar 16 1322 - Battle of Boroughbrid, York England, Humphrey Earl of Hereford & Essex de Bohun, Maud de Fiennes, Elizabeth of Rhuddlan Countess of Hereford & Holland Plantagenet, Mar 16 1322 - Boroughbridge, North Yorkshire, England. Arthur Algernon Capell (27 January 1803 – 11 September 1892) was an English aristocrat who succeed to the title Earl of Essex in 1839. Married Margaret, daughter of William de Ros, 2nd Baron de Ros, but they had no children. The park played host to cricket matches and parades of the Hertfordshire Yeomanry.

Her lands and title were confiscated on the death of her second husband. 14 and 72. She died in childbirth, presumably giving birth either to her youngest son Henry or to her daughter Matilda.

The History of the foundation of Walden abbey records that “Cristiana uxore sua, comitissa Essexiæ” was buried with her (first) husband “apud Soldham”[569].

Randolph Alfred Capell (1831–1857), a Lieutenant in the.

Humphrey de Bohun's birth year is uncertain although several contemporary sources indicate that … The Annals of Dunstable record that “comitissa Herfordiæ” died in 1236[573]. This William was the son of William de Say I and Beatrice, sister of Geoffrey de Mandeville, 1st Earl of Essex. c) HENRY (-[5 Aug 1205/before 1227]). Around this time Geoffrey married Beatrice de Say, daughter and eventual co-heiress of William de Say II. Upon the death of the third earl in 1189, the title became dormant or extinct. "John Fitz Geoffrey" was appointed justiciary of Ireland by King Henry III by charter dated 4 Nov 1245[575]. 72.PA.2 Open Content images tend to be large in file-size. Aveline, daughter of Roger de Clare, 3rd Earl of Hertford, Earl of Hertford. He was created Earl of Ulster in [1264]. The History of the foundation of Walden abbey names “Galfridus…Willielmus cognomina Mandavilla…et Matildis, Humfrido de Bohun comiti Herefordiæ maritata” as children of “domino Galfrido filio Petri” & his wife[571]. [5], Hugh de Vere married Hawise de Quincy,[6] daughter of Saer de Quincy, 1st Earl of Winchester, and his wife, Margaret de Beaumont. 1.^ Powicke Handbook of British Chronology p. 70, 2.^ I169794: William IV DE SAYE (Abt 1130 - 1177). John Thomas had died in 1819 and so the title passed to Arthur upon George's death on 23 April 1839. He again served in this role for King George III from 1782 to 1799.

When he was nine his father died, and Robert inherited the title of earl.

Father of Geoffrey de Mandeville, Earl of Essex and Gloucester, Surety of the Magna Carta; Lady Maud FitzGeoffrey de Mandeville, Countess of Essex; William FitzGeoffrey Mandeville, 3rd Earl of Essex; Henry De Mandeville, Dean Of Wolverhampton; Saveric De Bohun and 5 others; William Munchensy, II; John FitzGeoffrey, Lord of Shere; Cecily de Bohun, Countess of Ballymadden; Lady Hawise FitzGeoffrey, of Streatley and Isabel de Vipont « less