Deen, Fordice, Hallett, Hodges and Van Horn Families - Person Sheet
Deen, Fordice, Hallett, Hodges and Van Horn Families - Person Sheet
NameSir William de Ferrers
Birth28 Feb 1332, Newbold-Verdon, Hinckley and Bosworth Borough, Leicestershire, England
Death8 Jan 1371, Stebbing, Uttlesford District, Essex, England
Occupation3rd Baron Ferrers Of Groby, Lord Of Groby
FatherHenry de Ferrers (~1303-1343)
MotherIsabel de Verdun (1317-1349)
Spouses
Birthabt 1330, Eresby, Spilsby, Licolnshire, England
Death25 May 1368, Groby, Hinckley and Bosworth Borough, Leicestershire, England
FatherRobert d’Ufford (1298-1369)
MotherMargaret de Norwich (1300-1368)
Marriagebef 25 Apr 1344
ChildrenHenry de (1355-1387)
Notes for Sir William de Ferrers
22

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Ferrers,_3rd_Baron_Ferrers_of_Groby

Sir Knight

William became 3rd Baron of Groby at the age of 9, but quickly gained seizin of his holdings, with an annuity of £50 at age 12 and licence of the moiety of his manors by age 17. Two years later he was knighted, paid his knights fee and his homage to the King, and received livery of all his parents former lands in England and Ireland. Military prowess was the measure of such advancement, and he joined Prince Edward's command in time for the 1355 campaign in Gascony. The following year he was in the Earl of Suffolk's command at the Battle of Poitiers.

His father had been a stalwart of Edward II, and William showed conspicuous ambition, undertaking to join the King for several years of campaigning in France, and was exepmted from Royal levies on his holdings in compensation-- a sure sign of high favor in times where Edward II was so beset by rivalries and outright threats to his rule, that he had episodes of paranoia.

Unlike many of his descendants, who had to cover all contingencies during the chaos after Edward III's reign, William had no appetite for conspiracy, and busied himself in further military service-- but he chafed for action during the brief intervals of peace, showing at least one element of the complex and fractious temperment that was to thrive in coming generations when nuance was the norm, and loyalties were sworn with undisclosed contingencies in mind.

He rose in station, marrying the daughter of his patron the Earl of Essex, Margaret de Ufford, and his son Henry grew up in the "family business" of that Lord, which was the practiced study and vigorous prosecution of war-- and did justice to the advantages of his breeding and training, during the long and expansionist reign of Edward III.
Last Modified 3 Dec 2018Created 28 Sep 2020 Anthony Deen