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Sir Hugh de Venables the younger, of Kinderton, a minor in 4 Edw II (1310/11), heir to his brother William, and died 41 Edw 3 (1367/8)
- George Ormerod's The History of County Palatine and City of Chester, Vol III, p. 199
Sir Hugh de VENABLES Baron of Kinderton 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10 was born 1298 in Kinderton, Cheshire, England. He died 1368 in Kinderton, Cheshire, England.
Parents: Hugh de Venables (1246-1311) and Agatha de Vernon.
Hugh de Venables held the position of High Sheriff of Cheshire in 1378.
Married
1. Elizabeth de MOBBERLEY (1300-1326), daughter of William de Mobberley and Maud Downes, in 1320 in Kinderton, Cheshire, England.
2. Katherine de HOUGHTON (1308-?), daughter of Richard de Houghton and Sybil de Lea, in 1327 in Kinderton, Cheshire, England.
Elizabeth de Mobberly and Hugh de Venables had the following children:
M i William de VENABLES was born 1321 and died 1350.
M ii John de VENABLES was born 1323 and died 1360.
F iii Isabel de VENABLES was born 1326.
Katherine de Houghton and Hugh de Venables had the following children:
M i Hugh de VENABLES Baron of Kinderton was born 1328 and died 1383.
M ii Roger de VENABLES was born 1330 in Kinderton, Cheshire, England.
M iii Thomas de VENABLES was born 1332 in
M iv Richard de VENABLES was born 1334 and died 1379.
F v Joan de VENABLES was born 1337.
F vi Margaret VENABLES was born 1342.
“Between Peter Jerard and KATHERINE his wife, plaintiffs, and William Jerard and Joan his wife,[Fn] deforciants of a moiety of the manor of Wyndhull [Windle], and of a fourth part of the manor of Raynhull [Rainhill].
“William and Joan granted a third part of the said moiety and two parts of two parts of the said moiety, and the said fourth part, to Peter and KATHERINE; to have and to hold to them and to the heirs issuing of their bodies, of William and Joan and the heirs of Joan, rendering a rose by the year at the Nativity of St. John the Baptist for all service, custom and exaction. Moreover William and Joan granted that the third part of two parts of the said moiety, which HUGH DE VENABLES AND KATHERINE HIS WIFE held in dower of the said Katherine on the day this concord was made, after the decease of Katherine should remain to Peter and Katherine his wife, and to their heirs aforesaid, in default of their issue to remain to the issue of the said Peter, in default to revert to William and Joan and to the heirs of Joan, for which Peter and Katherine his wife gave them 100 marks.”
From George Ormerod's The History of County Palatine and City of Chester, Vol III, p. 199
Sir Hugh de Venables of Kinderton was a minor in 4 Edward II, was the heir of his elder brother William, the inquisition after his death took place in 41 Edward III. He first married Elizabeth, daughter of William and sister and coheiress of Sir Roger de Modburlegh, lord of Mobberley.
With Elizabeth, he his children were:
Sir Hugh de Venables married Katherine, daughter of Richard de Houghton. Their children were:
The Venables Family (sometimes 'de Venables') hail originally from the town of Venables near Evreux in Normandy, and it was Gilbert de Venables, (also known as Gilbert Hunter), huntsman to the Dukes of Normandy, who first held the Barony of Kinderton in Cheshire for Hugh Lupus after the Norman Invasion of 1066. Other family members became Barons of Chester and of Warrington, and over time Venables became a prominent Cheshire and Lancashire surname, as did the anglicised version of 'Hunter'. The Domesday Book of 1086 shows Gilbert 'Hunter' holding Brereton, Davenport, Kinderton and Witton (Northwich) and Ralph Hunter holding Stapleford in Cheshire and Soughton in Wales. Later the family became Lords of the Manor of Middlewich.
Wincham Hall, recorded as 'Winundersham' in the Domesday Book, was given to Gilbert de Venables following the Norman Conquest, but it successively passed in and out of the Venables family's ownership through inheritance, married and sale over the following centuries. It survived until bombing in the Second World War destroyed it, after which it was finally demolished.
The family's influence and power throughout medieval Cheshire is evidenced by the wreath on the Coat of Arms of the Borough of Congleton, which are the heraldic colours of the Venables family, as do the Arms of Northwich where the ship shown above the shield shows on its mainsail the wyvern of the Venables family.
They held many other lands throughout Britain including Woodcote near Winchester, when, in 1677, the manor had been purchased by the Venables. The Venables family also purchased Antrobus Hall in Great Budworth sometime during the reign of King Henry IV - they resided here for many generations.
The Venables Family have a worldwide website and there are regular Venables family conventions held in England and in France. The Middlewich Festival, held in September each year, also acts as a gathering of the Venables family members from around the world.
Hugh de Venables held the position of High Sheriff of Cheshire in 1378 (KINDA HARD TO BE THE SHERIFF WHEN HE DIED IN 1368, ACCORDING TO THE BIO ABOVE!!!).
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The High Sheriff is the oldest secular office under the Crown. Formerly the High Sheriff was the principal law enforcement officer in the county but over the centuries most of the responsibilities associated with the post have been transferred elsewhere or are now defunct, so that its functions are now largely ceremonial. The High Sheriff changes every March.
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 saltproducing towns were called, collectively, the Wiches, — Nantwich, Middlewich, Northwich. Mediaeval Cheshire, pp. 108-9. 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].
http://www.wallace-venable.name/Venable_Genealogy/Some_Venables_of_...
Married 1328 to Katherine Houghton. Died abt. 1368.
HISTORY OF CHESHIRE, NORTHWICH HUNDRED
PAGE 199
SIR HUGH A MINOR 4 EDW 2 HEIR TO HIS FATHER AND BROTHER WILLIAM
OBIT 41 EDW 3 2 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3
Change Date: 22 Jan 2009 at 18:45:48
Father: Hugh de VENABLES , 6th Baron of Kinderton b: ABT 1273 in Kinderton cum Hulme, Northwich, Cheshire, England Mother: Agatha De VERNON b: ABT. 1280 in Shipbrook, Northwich, Cheshire, England
Marriage 1 Katherine de HOUGHTON b: ABT. 1310 in Lea Hall, Preston, Lancashire, England Married: ABT 1338
Children Has Children Hugh de VENABLES , 8th Baron of Kinderton b: ABT. 1330 in Kinderton cum Hulme, Northwich, Cheshire, England Has No Children Margaret de VENABLES b: ABT. 1342 in Kinderton cum Hulme, Northwich, Cheshire, England Has No Children Thomas De VENABLES b: ABT 1334 in Kinderton, Cheshire, England Has Children Joane De VENABLES b: ABT 1328 in Kinderton cum Hulme, Northwich, Cheshire, England Has No Children Roger de VENABLES b: ABT 1332 in Kindereton, Cheshire, England Has No Children Richard VENABLES b: 1336 in Kindereton, Cheshire, England Has No Children VENABLES b: ABT 1324 in Kinderton, Midddlewich, Cheshire, England Has No Children Alice VENABLES b: ABT 1330
Marriage 2 Elizabeth MOBBERLEY b: ABT. 1317 in Mobberley, Bucklow, Cheshire, England Children Has No Children John De VENABLES b: ABT 1337 in Kindereton, Cheshire, England Has No Children William De VENABLES b: ABT 1335 in Kindereton, Cheshire, England Has Children Rose De VENABLES b: 1310 in Kindereton, Cheshire, England Has No Children William De VENABLES adopted b: ABT 1340 in Kindereton, Cheshire, England Has No Children Angella (Anyll) VENABLES 1 wife b: ABT 1375 in Kinderton, Midddlewich, Cheshire, England
Sources: Title: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition, by Frederick Lewis Weis, addition s by Walter Lee Shippard Jr. Page: 57 Title: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition, by Frederick Lewis Weis, addition s by Walter Lee Shippard Jr. Page: 57-33 Title: Ancestral File (TM) Author: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints Publication: June 1998 (c), data as of 5 JAN 1998
http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=rlord335&...
1298 |
1298
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Kinderton-cum-Hulme, Cheshire, England (United Kingdom)
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1325 |
1325
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Kinderton, Cheshire, England
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1330 |
1330
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1330
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Kinderton, Middlewich, Cheshire, England (United Kingdom)
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1332 |
1332
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Kinderton, Cheshire, England
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1334 |
1334
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Kinderton, Cheshire, England
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1336 |
1336
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Kinderton Norwich, Cheshire, England (United Kingdom)
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1337 |
1337
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Kinderton, Cheshire, England
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