Deen, Fordice, Hallett, Hodges and Van Horn Families - Person Sheet
Deen, Fordice, Hallett, Hodges and Van Horn Families - Person Sheet
NameSir Hugh de Venables I
Birthabt 1258, Kinderton-cum-Hulme, Cheshire, England
Death1311, Kinderton-cum-Hulme, Cheshire, England
Occupation8th Baron Kinderton
Spouses
Birthabt 1280, Shipbrook, Cheshire, England
DeathKinderton-cum-Hulme, Cheshire, England
ChildrenHugh de Venables (~1298-1368)
Notes for Sir Hugh de Venables I
Sir Hugh de Venables, baron of Kinderton, died 4 Edw II . Married Agatha, dau of Ralph Vernon, baron of Shipbrook, 23 Edw 1. In addition to their two eldest sons William and Hugh the younger, this couple also had Reginald, Roger, John, and daughters Ellen, wife of John son of Sir John Arderne, 1307; Isabel, wife of David Egerton; Elizabeth wife of Richard Done of Utkinton.

Ormerod volume 3 page 198

=====================
Sir Hugh de VENABLES, 8th Baron Venables of Kinderton, was born 1246 in Kinderton, Cheshire, England. He died 1311 in Kinderton, Cheshire, England.

Parents: William De Venables, 5º B. Venables of Kinderton, and Margaret De Dutton
Married

in 1293 in Kinderton, Cheshire, England to Agatha De VERNON. Born: ABT 1280. She was the daughter of Ralph De VERNON & Mary DACRE
Children include

Alice de VENABLES was born 1296 and died 1327.
Sir Hugh de VENABLES, 7th Baron Venables of Kinderton, born 1298 and died 1368. He married Catherine De Houghton.
notes

Sir Hugh de Venables, Knight, Baron of Kinderton, son and heir of William, died 4 Edward III, married Agatha, daughter of Sir Ralph de Vernon, baron of Shipbrook, 23 Edward I.

Ormerod: The History of the County Palatine and City of Chester Vol III pp. 47, 51, 133



Sources:

Weis, Frederick Lewis, Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America before 1700 , pp. 230-32.
Brown, Henrietta Margaret Brady, Some Venables of England and America
Ormerod, George, The History of the County Palatine and City of Chester , 3:252, Family History Library, 942.71 H2or.
Weis, Frederick Lewis, The Magna Charta Sureties, 1215 , pp. 130-7, Los Angeles Public Library, 929.273 W426 1999.
Ormerod, G., History of the County Palatine of Chester, 2:85, 3:199.
Richards, W. S. G., The History of the De Traffords of Trafford, circa A.D., 1000-1893 , p. 28, Family History Library.
Boyer, Carl, Medieval English Ancestors of Robert Abell , p. 5, Los Angeles Public Library, 929.2 A141-2.
medieval Cheshire

An important natural resource of Cheshire was salt: Below the surface of the county lie large deposits of saline rock, the presence of which may well have been known to the Romans. . . In the Middle Ages, the salt producing towns were called, collectively, the Wiches, — Nantwich, Middlewich, Northwich. Medieval Cheshire, Large areas of salt lands were owned by abbeys and clerics, but Lay owners of salt houses, where salt pans filled with salt water were boiled, were even more numerous and diverse in status. . . . Among the proprietors of salt houses, land, or messuages in the Wiches were Venables ... [and many other Cheshire families].

Links

http://www.multiwords.de/genealogy/Ve20%20Joan%20Venables.html
http://www.tudorplace.com.ar/VERNON.htm
http://www.wallace-venable.name/Venable_Genealogy/...land_and_America.pdf
http://cybergata.com/roots/5224.htm
http://www.ukbmd.org.uk/genuki/chs/kindertoncumhulme.html
Kinderton cum Hulme was a township in Middlewich ancient parish, Northwich hundred, which became a civil parish in 1866. The civil parish was abolished in 1894 to become parts of Middlewich and Kinderton.
Last Modified 9 Jun 2018Created 28 Sep 2020 Anthony Deen