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F > FitzOdo | D > de Trussell > Agnes (FitzOdo) de Trussell
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Agnes was the second of the three daughters who were coheirs of their father to the manor of Loxley, Warwickshire. The Pipe Roll of 1182 records that the three sisters were already married. Basilia, the eldest, to Peter or Ralph de Mora, Agnes to William Trussel and Margery to William Bagot.
[Pipe Rolls 28HII, page 96] 1182. Warwickshire. Radulfus de La Mora redd. comp. de .v. m. pro recto de .xxvj. m. versus Willelmum Trussel et Willelmum Bagot. In thesauro.iiij. m. Et debet .j. m. Ralph de la Mora gives account of 5 marks of 16 marks in case against William Trussel and William Bagot. Paid into treasury 4 marks. And debit 1 mark. [Translated by C.J. McD.]
'Parishes: Loxley', in A History of the County of Warwick: Volume 3, Barlichway Hundred, ed. Philip Styles (London, 1945), pp. 129-134. British History Online http://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/warks/vol3/pp129-134
By the reign of Henry II the manor had come into the possession of Robert FitzOdo of Loxley Robert FitzOdo was dead by 1196 and left as his heirs three daughters—Basilia, married to Peter de Mora, Agnes, married to William Trussell of Billesley, and Margery, married to William Bagot. Basilia's grandson, Peter de Mora, granted the manor-house and all his possessions belonging to it to Kenilworth Priory in 1253. THE TRUSSELL ESTATE APPEARS TO HAVE DESCENDED TO AGNES’S SON AND HEIR RICHARD, BUT AFTERWARDS TO A YOUNGER BRANCH OF THE BILLESLEY LINE, represented in the reign of Edward III by William Trussell of Floore (Northants.) and Nuthurst, Admiral of the King's fleet in the west and escheator south of the Trent.
'Parishes: Morton Bagot', in A History of the County of Warwick: Volume 3, ---- ed. Philip Styles (London, 1945), pp. 134-138. British History Online http://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/warks/vol3/pp134-138
In 1086 MORTON, which had formerly been held by Grimulf, was held as 2 hides by Hugh from Robert de Stafford. The overlordship continued in the hands of the Staffords until at least 1403; --------. Although direct evidence is lacking, the manor seems to have come to Robert son of Odo of Loxley in the 12th century. His co-heirs were three daughters, who married respectively Peter de Mora, William Trussell, and William Bagot. Peter's grandson and namesake gave the advowson of Morton church, with land here, to Kenilworth Priory, and the descendants of Trussell and Bagot each held a manor, distinguished from about 1300 as MORTON BAGOT. Robert Bagot occurs in 1220 as buying 5 acres in Morton, and was holding half a knight's fee here jointly with William Trussell from Robert de Stafford in 1242. We have seen that in 1242 William Trussell held part of this half-fee, and that in 1316 and 1327 other members of the family held lands here. In 1383 Sir Fulk de Pennebrugge and Margaret his wife, the daughter of William Trussell, conveyed to Sir Alfred Trussell in tail male the manor of MORTON BAGOT.
edited by [Living O'Brien]