William Atte Wode
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William Atte Wode (abt. 1265 - abt. 1345)

William Atte Wode aka Wood Wode
Born about in Hooley House, Coulsdon, Surrey, Englandmap [uncertain]
Ancestors ancestors
[sibling(s) unknown]
Husband of — married [date unknown] [location unknown]
Descendants descendants
Died about at about age 80 in Woods Place, Surrey, Englandmap [uncertain]
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Profile last modified | Created 3 Apr 2011
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Contents

Biography

William was born about 1270. William Woods ... He passed away about 1345. William is the son of Peter Atte Wode and Alice Unknown.

Sir William Atte Wode (bef. 1300 – c. 1346) was Captain of the King's Guard at the Palace of Westminster under King Edward III of England. [1]

He was probably born sometime before 1300 in Coulsdon, Surrey, England. He was the son of Peter Atte Wode and Alice, who owned both Hooley House and Wood Place in Surrey. Sir William married a woman named Juliana, and they had at least three children: Geoffrey Atte Wode, Richard Atte Wode, and William Atte Wode.

While we do not know when he was knighted, it was at least by 1341, because by that time he is referred to as Sir William and is Captain of the King's Guard at the Palace of Westminster, the King's royal residence in London; members of parliament also met at Westminster Palace at this time. As a Sergeant at Arms, Sir William was part of the royal body guard that was composed of about thirty men at that time. It is not known what events occurred to bring William to King Edward III's attention for this position, but he must have had some connection through either friendship or family relations to the royal family.

An interesting anecdote about Sir William's life is recorded in John Heneage Jesse's Memorials of London (1341): "In the 14th year of the reign of Edward III, John de Stratford, Archbishop of Canterbury, with a great number of London bishops, clergy, soldiers, came to the gate of Westminster Palace and demanded admittance to the chamber where Parliament was assembled. He was forbidden to enter in the King's name by Sir William Atwood, Captain of the King's Guard. The Archbishop was stopped because the followers were not members. The Archbishop was a member, but the King commended Sir William."

The Atte Wode lineage can be traced back to about 1204 when Peter de Wyckhurst (an older form of the name Atte Wode) purchased 'Hooley House' from the Bertan Marten, the Abbot of Chertsey Abbey. Over the next hundred years, the family added to its land holdings in Surrey and his father, Peter Atte Wode, purchased the 220-acre (0.89 km2) estate known as 'Wood Place' in 1279. The Atte Wode's emerged as one of the new influential class of yeomen who were becoming substantial land owners in England. In 1318 Sir William and Juliana added to the family's fortune by purchasing another estate known as 'Beckenham' in Kent.

Two of Sir William's sons, Geoffrey and Richard, also became Sergeants at Arms to the King. Richard is mentioned in the London Letter Books for his role in moving the fleet being assembled at London down the Thames to invade France during the 1346 campaign in the Hundred Years' War.

E. F. Atwood asserts that Sir William and both of his sons accompanied the army on their invasion of France, however, his source for this information is not given. It does seem likely, however, given their positions as body guards to King Edward. Based on subsequent land transactions in England, it appears possible that both Sir William and his son Geoffrey were killed in the French campaign in 1346, (possibly at the Battle of Crecy), however, this is not certain.

Sir William's grandson, Peter Atte Wode, continued to expand both the family’s land holdings and its influence by being appointed a Justice in Eyre; Peter's association with William of Wykeham who became the Bishop of Winchester and the Chancellor of England undoubtedly also helped to increase the family's influence.

The Atte Wode family name underwent a number of changes through the centuries with numerous variations in spelling: in the earliest records they are known as de Wyckhurst, by about 1300 they were commonly known as Atte Wode, a name that evolved into the modern version, Atwood, and finally, some (though not all) family members adopted the surname Wood in the 1500s.

Note

Note: Captain of Kings Guard

Name

Name: Sir WILLIAM Atte Woode

Birth

Birth: 1270, Hooley House, Coulsdon, England

Death

Death: possibly 26 Aug 1345, Woods Place, Surrey, England
or possibly 1346, France, killed in battle

Note

Tudor Rose

Sources

  1. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Atte_Wode
  • Crondal Hundred, Hampshire Records, Ancestry.com, Publication: Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: The Generations Network, Inc., 2004. Original data - Baigent, Francis Joseph. A Collection of Records and Documents Relating to the Hundred and Manor of Crondal in the County of Southampton. London, England: Simpkin, 189.
  • The Records of the Cranston family, Author: Ancestry.com, Publication: Online publication - Provo, UT: The Generations Network, Inc., 2004. Original data - The Records of the Cranston family. unknown: unknown, 1974. Portions of this work were excerpted from articles written by William Jones for the New England historic genealogic review.
  • Wood genealogy and other family sketches : genealogical memoranda of a branch of the Wood family in England and America, Author: Ancestry.com, Publication: Online publication - Provo, UT: The Generations Network, Inc., 2005. Original data - Wood, Leland N.,. Wood genealogy and other family sketches : genealogical memoranda of a branch of the Wood family in England and America : also sketches of related families
  • Ye Atte Wode annals, October 1929 : giving English history, descendants of Harman, Henry, John, Philip, Stephen, Thomas of Ipswich, Republished by Ancestry.com. Publication: Online publication - Provo, UT: The Generations Network, Inc., 2005. Original data - Atwood, Elijah Francis,. Ye Atte Wode annals, October 1929 : giving English history, descendants of Harman, Henry, John, Philip, Stephen, Thomas of Ipswich and Thomas of We
  • Millennium File, Author: Heritage Consulting, Publication: Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2003. Original data - Heritage Consulting. The Millennium File. Salt Lake City, UT, USA
  • Ancestry Family Trees, Publication: Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com. Original data: Family Tree files submitted by Ancestry members.




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Atte Wode-5 and Wode-6 appear to represent the same person because: same family, alternate last name, dates are unsupported on Wode-6
posted by Robin Lee
William Atte Wode:

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia: [[1]]

posted by Bob Hall

Featured German connections: William is 24 degrees from Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, 29 degrees from Dietrich Bonhoeffer, 28 degrees from Lucas Cranach, 26 degrees from Stefanie Graf, 27 degrees from Wilhelm Grimm, 29 degrees from Fanny Hensel, 31 degrees from Theodor Heuss, 24 degrees from Alexander Mack, 39 degrees from Carl Miele, 21 degrees from Nathan Rothschild, 24 degrees from Hermann Friedrich Albert von Ihering and 24 degrees from Ferdinand von Zeppelin on our single family tree. Login to see how you relate to 33 million family members.

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