Father Sir Thomas Pabenham, Sheriff of Northampton d. 18 Sep 1344
Mother Alice Offard d. a 1346
Sir Laurence Pabenham was born circa 1334 at of Fen Drayton, Cambridgeshire, England; Age 11 in 1345.[1]
He married Elizabeth d' Engaine, daughter of Sir John d' Engaine, 2nd Lord Engaine and Joan Peverel, before 1372; They had 1 son (Laurence) & 1 daughter (Katherine, wife of Sir William Cheyne, & of Sir Thomas Aylesbury).[2]
Sir Laurence Pabenham married Joan Daubeney, daughter of Sir Giles Daubeney, Sheriff of Bedford & Buckingham and Alianore de Wylyngton, before 1390; They had 1 son (John) & 1 daughter (Eleanor, wife of John Tyringham).[3]
Sir Laurence Pabenham died on 10 June 1399 at of Pavenham, Bedfordshire, England; Buried in the church of Offard Darcy, Huntingdonshire.
Family 1
Elizabeth d' Engaine b. c 1341, d. 23 Sep 1377
Children
Laurence
Katherine, wife of Sir William Cheyne, & of Sir Thomas Aylesbury
Family 2
Joan Daubeney b. c 1368
Children
John
Eleanor, wife of John Tyringham
Property
Pytchley Manor
"Pytchley then followed the descent of Weldon (q.v.) (fn. 28) until 1408, when, on the death of Richard Basset, the property was divided between his cousins, Weldon passing to John Knyvet and Pytchley to Sir Thomas Aylesbury, who died in 1418 seised of a manor of Pytchley, composed of the manor of Pytchley called Engaynes (q.v.) and of this manor, then called BASSETS and later on known as STAFFORDS. (fn. 29) Bassets, held by him of the abbey of Peterborough, had been granted by him in 1416–17 to Sir Thomas Chaworth, the husband of his daughter Isabel, (fn. 30) but was assigned for life to his widow Katharine. (fn. 31) Katharine, who had inherited the Engayne manor as the daughter of Lawrence de Pabenham, died on 17 July 1436, leaving as her heir her son Laurence Cheyne, aged 40. (fn. 32)"[4]
Sources
↑ Douglas Richardson, Royal Ancestry, Vol. II, p. 507
↑ Douglas Richardson, Magna Carta Ancestry, 2nd Edition, Vol. I, p. 116-117.
↑ Douglas Richardson, Royal Ancestry, Vol. IV, p. 29.
↑ 'Parishes: Pytchley,' in A History of the County of Northampton: Volume 4, ed. L F Salzman (London: Victoria County History, 1937), 208-213, accessed March 12, 2016, [1]