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Godbout – Racicot / LeBeuf – LaHaye
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Abt 1290 - Abt 1322 (~ 32 years)
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Name |
Robert de Hilton [1] |
Born |
Abt 1290 |
England |
Gender |
Male |
Occupation |
1312 |
Placed on the commission of the peace in Durham |
Occupation |
1313 |
Mortuaries were to be paid to the church of Wearmouth |
Occupation |
1313 |
Obtained license that the lords of Hilton, their wives and children might be buried in the graveyard attached to the chapel Hilton |
Occupation |
11 Dec 1313 |
Bishop Kellaw allowed him two cygnets from the fishponds at Middleham |
Occupation |
1309-1315 |
Attested various Durham charters |
Occupation |
1315 |
His absence from Parliament was excused as he was stationed in the Marches of Scotland |
Occupation |
Bef 13 Feb 1315 |
Married Ellen, widow of Lord Walter de Huntercombe |
Occupation |
1314-1317 |
One of several claimants to the estates of William de Vesci the elder, decision which went in favor of Gilbert de Aton |
Occupation |
6 Jun 1319 |
Taken prisoner by the Scots at Berwick when Douglas defeated Sir Ralph Neville |
Occupation |
9 Dec 1321 |
Presented Thomas de Hilton at the Hilton chapel |
Died |
Abt 1322 |
England |
Buried |
Hilton Chapel, Wearmouth, England |
Person ID |
I13331 |
Godbout |
Last Modified |
18 Apr 2017 |
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Sources |
- [S7] The Complete Peerage of England, Scotland, Ireland, Great Britain and the United Kingdom, George Edward Cokayne; Vicary Gibbs, H. A. Doubleday, Geoffrey H. White, Duncan Warrand & Howard de Walden, editors, (Reprint in 6 volumes, Gloucester, U.K.: Alan Sutton Publishing, 2000), Volume VII, pp. 22-23.
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