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John (Haudlo) de Haudlo (abt. 1271 - abt. 1346)

Sir John de Haudlo formerly Haudlo aka de Hadlowe, de Handlo
Born about in Hadlow, Kent, Englandmap
Son of and [mother unknown]
[sibling(s) unknown]
Husband of — married 1309 [location unknown]
Husband of — married before 4 Dec 1315 [location unknown]
Descendants descendants
Died about at about age 75 in Acton Burnell, Shropshire, Englandmap
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Profile last modified | Created 28 Jan 2012
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European Aristocracy
Sir John Haudlo was a member of the aristocracy in England.

Contents

Biography

John Lovel, born about 1288. He married before 1315 Maud Burnell, daughter of Philip Burnell, by Maud, daughter of John FitzAlan. She was born about 1290-4. They had one son, John, [3rd Lord Lovel] and one daughter, Joan. She married (2nd) before 4 Dec 1315 (as his 2nd wife) John De Haudlo, son of Richard de Haudlo. They had two sons, Thomas [Burnell] and Nicholas [Burnell], and three daughters, Joan (wife of Amaury de Saint Amand), Margaret (wife of Walter de Norwich), and Elizabeth. His wife, Maud, died before 18 July, (date of her obit), before 1338. Sir John de Haudlo died testate 5 August. [1]

Timeline

Bef. 10/11/1283, John de Haudlo, father of John died, son John age 12.

11/1283, IPM at Kent of John de Halowe alias de Haudlo: The … including a messuage at Corundale and an aldermanry in the city of Canterbury … which Lady Cecily sometime the wife of Sir Nicholas de Haudlo now holds in dower, and with lands &c. which Sir Salomon de Roff[a] holds for life of the gift of the said John de Haudlo, by service of 2 knights’ fees, whereof James de Wylmynton holds one fee at Wylmynton. … Lady Cecily, the mother of the said John, holds 141½a. land in dower, and 47s. 2d. rent of assize, services &c. John his son, aged 12 at Easter last, is his next heir. (S) CIsPm, V2, 1906.

1294, John in service of Hugh le Despenser, the elder, in Wales.

Bef. 1299, John 1st married Joan FitzNeil, acquiring Boarstall and Oakley, Buckinghamshire.

11/1299, John valet to Hugh le Despenser, the elder.

6/1301, John served in Scotland when King Edward attacked and removed the Scot’s ancient coronation stone from Scone, installing it at Westminster.

10/6/1305, Protection for John de Handlo going overseas with Hugh le Despenser. (S) CPRs.

11/1305, John with Hugh le Despenser, the elder, sent by the king to Pope Clement V to secure Edward’s release from the oaths he had taken to observe the charters in 1297.

5/22/1306 at Westminister, John knighted with Prince Edward, Hugh le Despenser, the younger, Piers Gaveston, Roger de Mortimer and others [267 total] by King Edward I.

2/25/1308, Edward II crowned king of England.

3/1308, John appointed keeper of St. Briavels castle.

1308, John served overseas with the Earl of Surrey.

2/25/1309, Pardon to John de Handlo for acquiring in fee, without licence, the forestership of the forests of Shotovre and Stowode, co. Oxford … (S) CPRs.[Same date] Order to John de Haudlo, constable of the castle of St. Briavel’s, and keeper of the forest of Dene, to cause the trenches in the said forest to be freed from the underwood which has grown therein to the deterioration of the king's deer. (S) CFRs.

4/1309, John participated in the Dunstable tournament of 305 knights.

1309, John served overseas with Hugh le Despenser, the elder.

9/1312, Boarstall was authorized to be crenelated by John de Haudlo. [Buckinghamshire's only complete medieval fortified building.]

4/10/1313, Pardon to John de Handlo, constable of the castle of St. Briavels and keeper of the forest of Dene, on account of his good service, of all manor of accounts … which he owes to the king … (S) CPRs.

5/3/1313, Protection for John de Handlo going overseas with Hugh le Despenser. (S) CPRs.

6/2/1313, John with the king in Paris where three of the queen’s brothers were knighted, as well as 200 others by King Philip IV of France.

10/28/1313, Commitment for 100 marks to John de Haudlo of the wardship of Westminster, the lands late of Joan de Grey in Estcleydon, as above, until the full age of John, her kinsman and heir, now of the age of fifteen years. (S) CFRs.

By 1314, Joan died; John to hold her lands until his death.

1315, John taken prisoner by Edmund, Earl of Arundel at Clun, Shropshire. John was released when a fine of £4000 was raised and delivered.

1316, John served in Scotland.

9/1319, John served in Scotland with the Despensers at the unsuccessful siege of Berwick-upon-Tweed.

John Lovel & Maud

5/31/1304, Pardon, in consideration of his service in Scotland of John Lovel of Tichemersh [the father], to Joan his wife and John and William his sons, of all trespasses in forests, parks an chaces. (S) CPRs. [Pardon granted by Margaret, queen of England, the king’s consort.]

Bef. 10/1/1310, John’s father died, John age 22.

11/7/1310, IPM of John Lovel of Tychmersch. … the manor of Elecombe held of Alan la Zouche as a parcel of the earldom of Winchester; John Lovel, son of the said John Lovel is his next heir and is aged 21 and more. (S) Wiltshire Inquisitions, V37, 1908, P378.

6/16/1311, John Lovel of Titchmarsh, Northamptonshire, summoned to parliament.

Bef. 1314, John married Maud.

6/24/1314, John, 2nd Lord Lovel, slain at the Battle of Bannockburn in Scotland, a loss to Robert Bruce. It was the largest loss of English knights in a single day.

10/1314, John’s daughter Joan age 2 and more.

John de Haudlo & Maud

1315, Maud heir to her brother Edward Burnell, Lord Burnell; inheriting the barony of Castle Holgate, Shropshire.

Bef. 7/25/1315, Maud [Maud’s mother] had made agreements with John de Haudlo and Hugh le Despenser the elder in exchange for 4000 marks about her daughter’s marriage to John de Haudlo.

1/1315, Maud gave oath that she would not marry without the king’s license. (S) CCRs.

Bef. 12/4/1315, Pardoned by fine of 100£, without license, John married 2nd Maud Burnell, d/o Sir Philip Burnell & Maud Fitz Alan.

6/20/1316, Pardon to John de Handlo for acquiring in fee, without licence, a messuage and a carcuate of land in Hedyndon, co. Oxford, … (S) CPRs.

1316, Maud’s mother Maud had made agreements with John de Haudlo and Hugh le Despenser, the elder, in exchange for 4000 marks about her daughter’s marriage to John de Haudlo; and was being sued for non-compliance.

7/13/1316, Licence for John de Haudlo and Matilda (Maud) his wife to grant to whomsoever they will all the manors, land and tenements held by them in chief of her inheritance. (S) CPRs.

10/8/1316, Licence for John de Haudlo and Matilda (Maud) his wife to enfeoff Hugh le Despenser the elder … of the manors of … (S) CPRs.

1/24/1317, Licence for John de Haudlo and Matilda (Maud) his wife to enfeoff Hugh le Despenser the elder … of the manors of … (S) CPRs.

5/28/1317, John de Haudlo and Matilda (Maud) his wife to have seisin of the manor of Rolandrith. (S) CPRs, 4/20/1342.

2/1/1319, John going to Spain with Hugh le Despenser, the younger. (S) CPRs.

2/24/1320, Protection for John de Handlo going with Hugh le Despenser, the elder, going beyond seas with the king. (S) CPRs.

5/1321, John’s estates ravaged by barons in opposition to his kinsman Hugh le Despenser, the younger, in the “Despenser War.” [John’s Buckingham estates attacked by Roger Damory.]

7/4/1321, Licence for John de Haudlo and Matilda (Maud) his wife to enfeoff Robert de Haudlo, clerk, of the manor of Rollyndryght, co. Oxford … (S) CPRs.

8/1321, Hugh le Despenser and his son were exiled by the urging of the “contrariants” led by Thomas, earl of Lancaster. John accompanied the Despensers to Bordeaux. [John’s brother Robert was the Despenser’s attorney in England.]

5/1322, The Despensers recalled by Edward II.

5/18/1322, Licence for John de Haudlo, whose horses, oxen and other animals, corn and other goods had been appropriated by the contrariants, some of whom are prepared to restore … (S) CPRs.

8/5/1322, Protection for John de Haudlo, going with Hugh le Despenser, Earl of Winchester, to Scotland on the king’s service. (S) CPRs.

12/17/1322, Protection with clause volumus until Easter for John de Haudlo going beyond the seas on the king’s service. (S) CPRs.

11/1326, After the overthrow of Edward II by Queen Isabella and Roger de Mortimer, both Hugh le Despenser the elder and younger were captured and executed.

2/1/1327 at Westminster, Edward III, age 14, crowned king of England.

10/3/1327, Simple protection, for two years, for John de Handlo and Matilda (Maud), his wife, going beyond seas on pilgrimage. (S) CPRs.

11/3/1329, Agreement between John de Haudlo, knight, lord of Boarstall, and John de St Amand, knight, lord of Woodhay, to settle lands of John de Haudlo on Richard, his son, and his wife Isabella, and lands of John de St Amand on Amauri, his son, and his wife Joan. Each family paid 1000 marks for the marriages. (S) The Boarstall Cartulary, Salter, 1930, No. 602. [Isabel and Amauri were grandchildren of Hugh le Despenser, the elder.]

3/10/1330, Protection with clause volumus for two years for John de Haudlo. (S) CPRs.

1/1331, John de Haudlo, Knt., settled the reversion of the manors of Coln St. Aldwyn, Hatherop, and Wike, Gloucestershire, Chadlington Shippenhull, and Leawe, Oxfordshire, and Hadlow, Ashendon, Crundale, Ore, Trentworth (in Crundale), and Vanne (in Crundale), Kent on his son Richard and his wife, Isabel.

2/10/1331, Licence for John de Handlo and Matilda (Maud) his wife to enfeoff Eustace de Eton, chaplain, … remainders to Joan, Elizabeth and Margaret, daughters of the said Matilda (Maud), for life, to John son of John Lovel, in tail male, and ultimately to the right heirs of Matilda (Maud). (S) CPRs.

2/16/1331, Commission of peace … John de Handlo } in the county of Buckingham. (S) CPRs.

10/14/1331, Commission of oyer and terminer to John de Handlo, Thomas de Louthe … co. Oxford … (S) CPRs.

10/1/1334, Association of John de Handlo, Robert de Morby … with Ralph Basset of Drayton, John de Cherleton, John de Stonore, William de Shareshull … lately appointed justices to enquire by the oath of good men of the counties of Berks and Oxford touching the persons who daily commit murders and robberies in the town of Oxford … (S) CPRs.

1336 John de Haudlo granted a house and 50 a. land in East Ham to Stratford Abbey. (S) A History of the County of Essex, V6, 1973.

5/3/1337, Appointment of Thomas de la More … to act with John de Handlo, … lately appointed … to arrest persons openly suspected in the counties of Oxford and Berks, and to hear and determine charges … (S) CPRs.

11/8/1337 at Colebrok, Hugh le Despenser, knight, [son of Hugh le Despenser, the younger] … released … the manors of Dachetter and Fulmere, co. Buckingham, and to him, John de Haudle, knights, … (S) CPRs, 11/2/1346.

6/26/1339, … fee of Muntfichet, now of Sir John de Haudlo … fee of Couele … due to John de Haudlo, now the chief lord of that fee … (S) CPRs.

Matilda (Maud) died

5/17/1341, Licence for the aliencation in mortmain by John de Haudlo to the dean and chapter of the church of St. Mary, Salisbury, … to celebrate devine service … for his good estate in life, … for the souls of Matilda (Maud), his wife, Thomas Burnel their son, and all their ancestors, Edward II and Hugh le Despenser the elder, … (S) CPRs.

11/11/1342, Appointment of John de Haudlo, William de Shareshull, … to keep the peace … Bedford and Buckingham, to make inquisitions … (S) CPRs. Also in 1342, John was sued over the advowson of Great Rollright. [2]

8/5/1346, John, knt. of Hadlow, Ashden, … Kent, died; Nicholas his son and heir, who took the name Burnell.

(S) Magna Carta Ancestry, P523. (S) A Gen. and Heraldic Dic., Burke, P319. (S) A History of the County of Wiltshire, V10, 1975.


Children of John de Haudlo and Joan:

i. Richard de Haudlo, born ~1310 in England.

ii. Joan de Haudlo, born by 1312 in England.

Children of John de Haudlo and Matilda (Maud):

i. Joan de Haudlo, born aft. 1314 in England. Joan married Amaury, 3rd Lord de Saint Amand, s/o Lord John de Saint Amand & Margaret le Despenser.

ii. Elizabeth de Haudlo, born ~? in England. 5/1340, Hugh le Despenser acknowledged he owed Elizabeth, d/o John & Matilda (Maud), 640 marks.

iii. Margaret de Haudlo, born bef. 2/10/1331 in England.

iv. Thomas Burnell, born ? in England. 1337, Thomas married Joan, d/o Baron Thomas de Berkeley & Margaret de Mortimer. [Supposedly to end the historical conflict between the families.] By 1339, Thomas died, his wife Joan surviving.

iv. Nicholas Burnell, born ? in England. Nicholas married Mary ?. 1357, Nicholas, by surrender and reversion, acquired the manor of Great Cheverell from his sister-in-law Joan, now wife of lord Reynold de Cobham. 1363, Nicholas heir to his aunt Aline, widow of Maud’s brother Edward. 1/1383, Nicholas died; buried at Acton Burnell, Shropshire.

John de Handlo[3] alias de Haudlo or de Hadlowe[4]

John was first married about 1309 to Joan FitzNiel. He married (2nd) to Maud Burnel.[4] Maud had previously been married, so John had step-children:

  1. John Lovel, aged 32 before August in 20 Edward III[4] [1346];

John had children:

  1. Richard, died in his father's lifetime, married Isabella, who when widowed married Robert de Hildesle;[3] oldest son,[4] Richard and Isabella had children:
    1. Edmund, who was heir to his grandfather, and married to Alesia;[4]
  2. Nicholas;[4]

An Inquisition taken in Essex on 22 August, 20 Edward III (1346), in response to a writ dated 8 August, the same year, found that "John de Haudlo or de Hadlowe died on 5 August last", and Edmund, son of Richard de Haudlo son of the said John was his next heir in blood.[4] Wrottesley says John died in 19 Edward III[3] which was 25 January 1345-24 January 1346. Inquisitions were held in quite a few different counties and the juries found:

  • John Lovel, aged 32 and more, was the son and next heir of Maud Burnel, and he inherited the reversion of the properties his step-father had been holding of his mother's inheritance, by the courtesy of England, because of the children Maud and John de Haudlo had together.[4]
  • Edmund, John's grandson, son of Richard de Haudlo, aged 7 and more before August 20 Edward III, was his grandfather's heir, Edmund was married to Alesia; and properties which his grandfather held which were to have reverted to his father, Richard, because of his death reverted to Isabel, Richard's wife and Edmund's mother, included, among others, the manors of Tremworth, Haudlo and Crundale, Vanne, Ore and Assheden in co Kent, and some in cos Gloucester, Oxford;[4]
  • Nicholas, John's son, aged 23 years and more, inherited from his father, through fines levied in the king's court, the remainder in many properties his father had held including Borham, Walkefares, Hatfeld Peveral, Great Holand, Stanstede Mounfichet, Hamme (Esthamme and Westhamme), in co Essex, co Hertford, co Norfolk, co Kent, the manors of Holgate and Action Burnel in co Salop;[4]

Sources

  1. Douglas Richardson. Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 5 vols, ed. Kimball G. Everingham (Salt Lake City: the author, 2013), volume III, page 627 LOVEL 11.
  2. “Trinity, 16 E. III. [1342] Oxon. John de Handlo, Chivaler, was sued by Ralph de Stafford in a plea that he should permit him to present a fit person to the Church of Great Rolondright, which was vacant, and he stated that one Robert de Stafford was seised of the advowson, temp. H. III, and presented to the Church one William de Stafford, clerk, who was admitted and instituted, and from the said Robert, the right descended to one Nicholas, as son and heir, who was under age, and in ward to the King, and the said King presented to the Church, in right of his ward one Bertram le White, who was admitted and instituted, and from Nicholas, the right descended to one Edmund, as son and heir, who was in ward to King Edward, the King’s grandfather, and who presented to the Church, in right of Edmund, one Roger de Ashrugge, who was admitted and instituted, and on his resignation presented one Roger de Solers, who was admitted and instituted temp. E.I., and from the said Edmund the right descended to the plaintiff, as son and heir. John appeared by attorney and denied that the said William de Stafford had been presented by the said Robert de Stafford, and he stated that one Adam de Despencer, Knight, was seised of the manor of Rolondright in the time of King Henry III, and had presented the said Bertram, who was admitted and instituted on his presentation, and the said Adam granted the manor to Robert, then Bishop of Bath and Wells, and to Philip Burnel, the nephew of the said Bishop, to be held by the Bishop and the said Philip and their heirs for ever, and Philip survived the Bishop, and was sesed of the manor and advowson, and after his death, the right descended to Edward, his son and heir, who was under age, and in ward to the King, and the King (Edward I) had presented the said Roger de Ashrugge to the Church in right of the said Edward Burnel, and likewise the said Roger de Solers, and from the said Edward the right descended to one Matilda as sister and heir, and the said Matilda had been married to him, and afterwards on the Quindene of Easter, 18 E.I., a fine was levied between the said John and Matilda, by which the said manor and advowson had been settled on the said John and Matilda and their male issue, and failing such, to the right heirs of Matilda, and the said Matilda had died, and he now held the manor of virtue of the said fine, and it pertained to him to make the next presentation. Ralph denied that the advowson necessarily pertained to the manor, and stated that the said William de Stafford was admitted and instituted on the presentation of the said Ralph (sic), and appealed to a jury on this issue, and John likewise. The Sheriff of Oxfordshire was therefore ordered to summon a jury for the Quindene of St John the Baptist. m. 240.” Extracts from the Plea Rolls, Collections for a History of Staffordshire, Volume 12, p. 12
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 Wrottesley 1905, p. 95
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 4.5 4.6 4.7 4.8 4.9 The Deputy Keeper of the Records, Calendar of Inquisitions Post Mortem and other Analogous Documents preserved in the Public Record Office, archive.org, Vol VIII Edward III, (London: His Majesty's Principal Secretary of State for the Home Department, 1913), accessed 13 November 2014, https://archive.org/stream/cu31924011387861#page/n555/mode/2up pp.488-496. Abstract No 667 John de Haudlo or de Hadlowe.
  • Magna Carta Ancestry, p. 523.
  • A Gen. and Heraldic Dic., Burke, p. 319.
  • A History of the County of Wiltshire, V10, 1975.
  • G.E. Cokayne; with Vicary Gibbs, H.A. Doubleday, Geoffrey H. White, Duncan Warrand and Lord Howard de Walden, editors, The Complete Peerage of England, Scotland, Ireland, Great Britain and the United Kingdom, Extant, Extinct or Dormant, new ed., 13 volumes in 14 (1910-1959; reprint in 6 volumes, Gloucester, U.K.: Alan Sutton Publishing, 2000), volume II, page 235. Hereinafter cited as The Complete Peerage.
  • Cokayne, and others, The Complete Peerage, volume II, page 435.
  • Peter W. Hammond, editor, The Complete Peerage or a History of the House of Lords and All its Members From the Earliest Times, Volume XIV: Addenda & Corrigenda (Stroud, Gloucestershire, U.K.: Sutton Publishing, 1998), page 125. Hereinafter cited as The Complete Peerage, Volume XIV.
  • Peter W. Hammond, The Complete Peerage, Volume XIV, page 126.
  • https://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/bucks/vol4/pp9-14
  • https://wc.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=jweber&id=I14992

Space:Pedigrees_from_the_Plea_Rolls_1200_to_1500

Acknowledgements

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Comments: 6

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under timeline we have "Bef. 10/11/1283, John de Haudlo, father of John died, son John age 12."

Should the first John have been Richard? sources cited say his father was named Richard.

posted by Monica Edmunds
Haudlo-5 and Haudlo-2 appear to represent the same person because: clear duplicates. Per Richardson, Richard is the father.
Source: Douglas Richardson. Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 5 vols, ed. Kimball G. Everingham (Salt Lake City: the author, 2013), volume III, page 627 LOVEL 11.

John Lovel, born about 1288. He married before 1315 Maud Burnell, daughter of Philip Burnell, by Maud, daughter of John FitzAlan. She was born about 1290-4. They had one son, John, [3rd Lord Lovel] and one daughter, Joan. She married (2nd) before 4 Dec 1315 (as his 2nd wife) John De Haudlo, son of Richard de Haudlo. They had two sons, Thomas [Burnell] and Nicholas [Burnell], and three daughters, Joan (wife of Amaury de Saint Amand), Margaret (wife of Walter de Norwich), and Elizabeth. His wife, Maud, died before 18 July, (date of her obit), before 1338. Sir John de Haudlo died testate 5 August.

Thank you!

Source: Douglas Richardson. Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 5 vols, ed. Kimball G. Everingham (Salt Lake City: the author, 2013), volume III, page 627 LOVEL 11.

John Lovel, born about 1288. He married before 1315 Maud Burnell, daughter of Philip Burnell, by Maud, daughter of John FitzAlan. She was born about 1290-4. They had one son, John, [3rd Lord Lovel] and one daughter, Joan. She married (2nd) before 4 Dec 1315 (as his 2nd wife) John De Haudlo, son of Richard de Haudlo. They had two sons, Thomas [Burnell] and Nicholas [Burnell], and three daughters, Joan (wife of Amaury de Saint Amand), Margaret (wife of Walter de Norwich), and Elizabeth. His wife, Maud, died before 18 July, (date of her obit), before 1338. Sir John de Haudlo died testate 5 August.

Thank you!

Darrell, more research needs to be done before deciding to merge. Some show John de Haudlo as son & heir of Richard, while this profile shows him as son & heir of John (and is named in the IPM). So we might be dealing with two different Johns, one of whom is shown with an incorrect date of death. Note that the John son of Richard shows a DOB a generation behind the John son of John (1290 vs. 1271).
Haudlo-5 and Haudlo-2 appear to represent the same person because: same name, location, spouse, death
posted by Darrell Parker

H  >  Haudlo  |  D  >  de Haudlo  >  John (Haudlo) de Haudlo

Categories: Acton Burnell, Shropshire | Holdgate, Shropshire