There is some uncertainty as to who this profile is intended to represent. Please see the research notes below.
Research Notes
Further research is required to determine who this profile is intended to represent.
There is an unsourced Find A Grave memorial that matches the details on this Wikitree profile.[1] The memorial claims that John Angell was chaplain to Queen Mary. If this is true, then as a Catholic priest he would not have been married with children.
There is a Dictionary of National Biography entry for the John Angell who was Queen Mary's chaplain, but it seems little is known of him.[2]
Queen Mary's chaplain is also mentioned in a recent book, which contains citations to original documents.[3]
According to the CofE Clergy database, he died in 1568 (not 1572 as this profile currently states).[4]
Sources
↑Find A Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com : accessed 08 December 2019), memorial page for Rev John J. Angell, Sr (1501–1572), Find A Grave: Memorial #188046727, citing St. Dunstan-in-the-West Churchyard, Fleet Street, City of London, Greater London, England ; Maintained by John Wilhite (contributor 48140210) .
↑ Sir Leslie Stephen (ed.) Dictionary of National Biography, (London: Smith, Elder & Co., 1885), volume 1 (Abbadie - Anne), p. 413, entry for John Angel (fl. 1555); images, Internet Archive (https://archive.org/details/dictionarynatio43stepgoog/page/n426 : accessed 8 December 2019).
↑ Schutte, Valerie. Mary I and the Art of Book Dedications: Royal Women, Power, and Persuasion (Springer, 2016), pp. 76-7; preview images, Google Books (books.google.com : accessed 8 December 2019).
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