help with de LOPHAM genealogies please

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help with de LOPHAM genealogies please

Legg inn av Gjest » 30 aug 2005 10:43:53

Thanks to these URLs posted on usenet
http://www.british-history.ac.uk
and
http://www.bu.edu/phpbin/lawyearbooks/search.php


Dionisius de Lopham AKA Denis Lapham
Bet. 1341 - 1352 -- Aft. 1414
has aroused my interest in these people from North Lopham, Norfolk

Descendants of Ivo de Lopham
a twelfth century North Lopham tenant of the second Bigod earl of
Norfolk

the dates are mostly fictional guesstimates until better evidence is
found


1 Ivo de Lopham 1150 -
......... 2 missing de Lopham
.................... 3 Robert de Lopham 1308 -
.............................. 4 Cecilia de Lopham 1339 - 1389
.................................. +Robert de Bumsted 1339 -


and by email today

Serpell, Michael Friend
History of the Lophams.
[ISBN 0850333717, Phillimore, 1980]

pp 31-2.

A Cecily de Lopham, "formerly wife of Rob. de Bumpstede" was buried
there
[St Andrew's N. Lopham] in 1389. [ref. 80] She may have been a member
of the
family descended from Ivo, a twelfth century North Lopham tenant of the
second Bigod earl of Norfolk. (Robert de Lopham, possibly her father,
was
associated while a bailiff of Norwich with Peter de Bumstede, a burgher
of
the same city, in 1303 and 1320. [ref. 80a] ) They took their
patronimic
from Lopham and Blomefield records among them: "Symon de Lopham, Clerk,
in
1334, and Dionise de Lopham his Son, who was a famous Notary Publick".
[ref.
81]

refs:
80. Francis Blomefield, An essay towards a topographical history of
the
county of Norfolk, vol. ii, (Norwich, 1745), 701.
80a. Calendar of Patent Rolls, (PRO), 1301-1307, pp. 190, 193; ibid.,
1317-1321, p. 98.
81. Ibid., p. 153 & note (h).

so my LAPHAM one-name study turns a corner

BTW how is North Lopham pronounce in the present day Norfolk dialect?

back in BRUM tomorrow evening SK2535 CPH > BHX 1815
http://www.bhx.co.uk/

thanks


Hugh W

--
Welsh Families HOMEPAGE
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com ... index.html
and a very helpful list and message board
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/monfh2/

and notes

============================

In 1404 William Rykhill, then a knight, granted the three shops to
William
Bryncheslee, William Makenade, and William Skrene. Rykhill died in 1407
and
then Robert Betoigne, citizen and goldsmith, claimed the shops by
virtue of
the will of Richard de Betoyne.

In 1407 Skrene, as the surviving grantee, quitclaimed in the shops to
Betoigne. The descent in the male line from Richard de Betoyne
according to
the terms of his will proved in 1341, was evidently still in force and
now
prevailed against the claim established by William Thame.

Robert Betoigne was the son and heir of Richard Betaigne, citizen and
goldsmith, (d. 1389) who was probably the son of John de Betoyne and
grandson of William de Betoyne. Richard Betaigne, who probably lived in
St.
Mary Colechurch parish, appears to have ended up as sole claimant to
the
property under his uncle's will by virtue of a quit claim from his
brother
John (described as John de Betoigne son of John de Betoigne, lately
citizen
and painter) to Bartholomew Dyne, clerk, Walter Kynton, John Bygmor,
and
Richard Betaigne, and another quitclaim from his cousin John (described
as
John de Betoigne son of Thomas de Betoigne, lately citizen and
goldsmith) to
the same.

In 1405 John Bygmor as the sole survivor granted and quitclaimed in the

estate to Robert Betoigne. Robert granted the properties to Richard
Aleyn,
chaplain, Ralph Clerk, citizen and grocer, and John Broughton, of whom
the
survivors, Aleyn and Clerk,

in 1408 granted them to Robert and his heirs and assigns.
This was a prelude to assigning the estate to a new body of feoffees
for in
June 1409 Robert granted the properties to
Mr. Denis Lapham, clerk,
Richard Aleyn, clerk,
Richard Clerk, grocer,
John Norman, goldsmith,
Richard Osbarn, and
John Bally.

Aleyn, Clerk, and Norman acquired a sole interest in the estate by
means of
quitclaims and in June 1409 granted it to William Staundon, Thomas
Knolles
and William Chichele, citizens and grocers, and William Rokesburgh.



From: 'St. Mary Colechurch 105/16',
Historical gazetteer of London before the Great Fire: Cheapside;
parishes of
All Hallows Honey Lane, St Martin Pomary, St Mary le Bow, St Mary
Colechurch
and St Pancras Soper Lane (1987), pp. 475-85. URL:
http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report ... ery=lapham.

Date accessed: 17 July 2005.

=======================================By 1402 Rikhill and Seymour had released their right to Shadworth, and
their
other co-feoffees had died. John Shadworth, citizen and mercer, then
granted
the tenement and domicilia to Sir Walter Malet, Master Denis Lopham,
Sir
John Bury, clerks, and Simon Chevene, mercer. In 1403 the prior of St.
Mary
Spital complained of intrusion by More, Shadworth, and Seymour, and
again in
1407 against More alone. (Footnote 3)
Walter Malet, rector of St. Mary le Bow, died in 1404; in 1408 Simon
Chevene
quitclaimed to Lopham and Bury, and they in 1409 granted the tenement
and
domicilia to Alice, widow of John More late citizen and mercer, Robert
Neuton, clerk, and James Surynden, citizen and mercer. Later in 1409
Alice,
Robert Neuton, and James Surynden granted to Walter Cotton, mercer,
John
atte Lee, Alan Everard, mercer, citizens, John Walden, esquire, John
Hertilpol, clerk, and William Waldern, citizen and mercer, both the
tenement
and domicilia late of John Hiltoft, which his executors granted to
Helmyng
Leget, Robert Crulle, and Thomas Hervy, and also the lands and
tenements the
present grantors had in the parish of St. Mary le Bow by the grant of
Lopham
and Bury. (Footnote 4) It was probably at about this time that 9, not
recorded after 1369, was incorporated with 11. (Footnote 5)



From: 'St. Mary le Bow 104/11',
Historical gazetteer of London before the Great Fire: Cheapside;
parishes
of All Hallows Honey Lane, St Martin Pomary, St Mary le Bow, St Mary
Colechurch and St Pancras Soper Lane (1987), pp. 244-51. URL:
http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report ... ery=lopham.

Date accessed: 17 July 2005.


4) HR 136(22, 75), 137(29)

5) see 9)
PRO: SC11/977-80; SC6/Hen 8/2378, 2395-2401; SC11/452; SC6/Edw 6/291,
293-7;
SC6/P & M/181 et seqq.; SC6/Eliz/1370 et seqq.; SC6/Jas 1/622 et seqq.;

E308/3/20; E307/D/1/10; SC11/957.

=====================
PLACES

Archdeacons - Essex
...ith Robert de Canterbury for ch. of Lopham, Norf. (ibid. p. 298).
M. ...

Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae 1300-1541: volume 5 - St Paul's, London
Joyce M. Horn (1963)

2 Index of places ...18, 59;
Wykhambrok's chantry, 64 Lopham, Norf., 10 Lydda, Palestine, 42 ...

Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae 1300-1541: volume 5 - St Paul's, London
Joyce M. Horn (1963)

http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=lo ... +genealogy

What we know about the Lapham Family

English: apparently a habitational name from a lost or unidentified
place,
possibly in Somerset or Wiltshire, where the surname is clustered, but
perhaps a variant of Lopham, a habitational name from a place in
Norfolk, so
named from an Old English personal name Loppa + ham 'homestead'.

We found 47135 matches for Lapham in our records: ...
http://www.ancestry.com/search/SurnameP ... code=13304

http://www.ancestry.co.uk/search/Surnam ... code=13304

http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report ... HAM#LOPHAM

Lopham, Mr. Denis (fl. 1396, d. 1414), clerk, notary.
81/C; St. Mary le Bow 11;
St. Mary Colechurch 16;
St. Pancras Soper Lane 29, 36, 37?



From: 'Index of Persons - L', Historical gazetteer of London before the

Great Fire:
Cheapside; parishes of All Hallows Honey Lane,
St Martin Pomary,
St Mary le Bow,
St Mary Colechurch and St Pancras Soper Lane (1987). URL:
http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report ... ery=LOPHAM.

Date accessed: 26 August 2005.

From the abbot of Waltham for the tenement of Denys Lopham 13s 4d.



From: 'Ecclesiastical Property in the City of London, 1392: Bread
Street
Ward', The church in London 1375-1392 (1977), pp. 64-8. URL:
http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report ... ery=LOPHAM.

Date accessed: 26 August 2005.

Med de x marc' tradit' Jul' Vynour que Petrus Whappelode legavit Alic'
fil'
dicte Jul'.
21 Jan., 1 Richard II. [A.D. 1377-8], came Juliana Vynour and demanded
from
the executors of Peter Whappelode, draper, the sum of 10 marks
bequeathed by
him to her daughter Alice. Thereupon came William Dentone and John
Norfolk,
tailors, executors of the said Peter, and
Dionisius Lopham, surveyor of his testament,
and delivered up the money in the presence of Nicholas Brembre, Mayor,

William "Cheynee," the Recorder, and William Eynsham, the Chamberlain
Mention made of a bequest of 40 marks to Peter, son of the above Peter
Whappelode.



From: 'Folios lxxi - lxxx: July 1377 -',
Calendar of letter-books of the city of London: H: 1375-1399 (1907),
pp.
71-86.

URL:
http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report ... ery=LOPHAM.

Date accessed: 26 August 2005.

4 May 1386
Reciprocal quitclaims between Margery, widow of John Ittelcote, draper,
on
the one part, and Thomas de Baketon, archdeacon of London, and Denis de

Lopham, clerk, attorneys of Master Richard de Drayton, on the other.

From: 'Roll A 27: (ii) 1385-86',

Calendar of the plea and memoranda rolls of the city of London:
volume 3: 1381-1412 (1932), pp. 84-125.

URL:
http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report ... ery=LOPHAM.

Date accessed: 26 August 2005.

TNA via PROCAT
Item details: C 1/69/402
Denis de Lopham and William Erl, chaplain, executors of Cecile, late
the
wife of John Ragunhull, late citizen and fishmonger of London. v. John
Michell and Elizabeth, late the wife of Robert Weston, and John Thorp,
his
executors.: Bond forged by the saidRobert purporting to be a bond of
John
Ragunhull.: London
Dionisius de Lopham

Diplomatarium Danicum - 4. række, bind 8, nr. 392
dd.dsl.dk/diplomer/02-080.html

Diplomatarium Danicum - 4. række, bind 8, nr. 380

dd.dsl.dk/diplomer/02-070.html

Et ego Dionisius de Lopham clericus] Norwycensis diocesis public[us]
apostolica et imperiali .

a clerk can also be a clergyman

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