Sir Giles Howland (I42326)
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Personal Facts and Details
| Birth | 20 September 1549 33 34 Newport Pond, Essex Co, England |
| Death of mother | about 1587 (Age 38) Agnes (Anne) Greenway (I42490) (Age 72) - [Relationship Chart] |
| Death of father | 1599 (Age 50) John Howland (I42493) (Age 83) - [Relationship Chart] |
| Universal Identifier | 954B123AE9CB7E4D8C3773E3BEDE7912EB81 |
| Last Change | 28 July 2006 - 19:28:43 |
Notes
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Manor of Tooting Bec From: 'Streatham', The Environs of London: volume 1: County of Surrey (1792), pp. 478-91. URL: http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.asp?compid=45391. Date accessed: 29 July 2006. In Doomsday-book several manors or estates are recorded as lying within the parish of Streatham; they were held in the Confessor's time by Ulward, Edwin, Harold, the canons of Waltham, Erding, and Estarcher. Ulward's manor was of one carucate, valued at 20s.; and was held at the time of the survey by Haimo the sheriff. Edwin's manor, which was of the same extent, but valued at 25s. was given by the Conqueror to the Bishop of Baieux, and was held under him by Ansgot. Earl Morton became proprietor of the land which had been divided between Earl Harold and the canons of Waltham. It contained two carucates, and at three several periods had been valued at 30s. 15s. and 43s. Richard de Tonebridge obtained of the Conqueror the two other manors; one of which, being valued at 100s. he gave to the monastery of Bec; the other, valued in the Confessor's time at 50s. and at the time of the survey at 60s. was held of him by the same convent. The former of these included the hamlet of Tooting, which, as well as the manor, was called afterwards Tooting Bec. The lands here are sometimes described as the property of the abbey of Bec, and sometimes of the priory of Okebourn, which was the principal cell to that monastery in England (fn. 2) . Tanner speaks of a priory of Black Monks settled at Tooting; in support of which authority, a record of the reign of Edward IV. mentions the manor or priory of Tooting (fn. 3) . After the suppression of alien priories, the manor of Tooting Bec was granted to John Duke of Bedford, constable of France (fn. 4) ; and was afterwards leased by the crown to John Arderne, Esq. for a rent of 19 l. per annum, which formed part of the endowment of Eton college (fn. 5) . The manor was granted by Edward IV. to Lawrence Booth, Bishop of Durham, for life (fn. 6) ; and was afterwards, by the same king, settled upon John Tiptoft Earl of Worcester, master, and Sir John Scott and others, wardens, of St. Mary's Guild, in the church of Allhallows-Barking (fn. 7) . Upon the suppression of the guild, John Dudley Earl of Warwick bought the manor of Tooting Bec of the crown, at 22 years purchase (fn. 8) . It afterwards became the property of the Pakenhams, and was aliened in the year 1600, by Henry Pakenham to Sir Giles Howland (fn. 9) . By the intermarriage of Wriothesley Duke of Bedford, with Elizabeth, daughter and sole heir of John Howland, Esq. it came into the Bedford family, and is now the property of the present Duke, who bears the title of Baron Howland of Streatham. From: 'Streatham', The Environs of London: volume 1: County of Surrey (1792), pp. 478-91. URL: http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.asp?compid=45391. |
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