Sweet William

Surge, propera, amica mea, columba mea, formosa mea, et veni.

Saturday, July 3, 2021

de Scales & Alice de Rochester (or de Roffa/Rossa) & Newsells, Hertfordshire and Rivenhall [Ruenhala ] Manor, Cressing, Witham, Norfolk

 

The ancestors of the Baron Scales came into possession of the manors of Newsells, Hertfordshire and Rivenhall [Ruenhala ] Manor, Cressing, Witham, Norfolk in 1255 by the marriage of Sir Robert de Scales to Alice de Rochester (or de Roffa/Rossa), whose family had held the manors since 1210. Robert died in 1256.

Peter de Scales was Robert's[i] eldest son who inherited his father's lands but died shortly afterwards in 1258.

Robert [ii] de Scales is Peter's younger brother who inherited their father's lands upons Peter's death in 1258. Robert was involved in several expeditions to France and had summons to Parliament. He was listed at Dover Castle from 1261-2, as was a Sir Radulfus de Escales [de Scales].[1] Upon Robert's death in 1266 he was succeeded by his son Robert, who he had by his wife Muriel, and who was to become the first of the Baron Scales. Left a widow called Clemencia.

The Scales family's main residences were Middleton in Norfolk, Newsells in Hertfordshire and Rivenhall [aka Ruenhala, Rewenhale] [aka Rewenhale] in Cressing, Witham, Norfolk or Essex? but also held other lands including Ouresby and Torneton in Lincolnshire.

 

Also Alice de Roucestre [daughter of Ralph de Roucestre & wife of Robert de Scales] held manor of Hecelingfeld [Haslingfield in county of Cambridge – there in Heclingfield [ Haslingfield], Cambridgeshire] is a connection with John le Rus [pre-1279]- the large stone house of John le Rus outside Trumpington gate, where the Fitzwilliam Museum now stands, no trace survives [ref: Stokes, Outside Trumpington Gates (C.A.S. Publ. 1908), 40.].

Ref association with Rewenhal also: Calendar of Patent Rolls 1268: MEMBRANE 17d. : Grant by Nicholas de Audele son of Henry de Audele to Robert Burnel of an acre of land in Rewenhal which lies in the field called 'Peycecroft' with the advowson of the said town, which he had of the gift of the prior of Cruceroyes, who had it of the gift of William de Roffa; to hold to him, his heirs and assigns, doing to the said prior the service due and accustomed, as contained in the charter of feoffment which the said Nicholas has from the prior Robert; with warranty of the premises against all persons for ever; Witnesses, Sirs Hugh son of Otes, William Charles, Robert de Scaccario, Henry de Engayne, William de Wokendon, knights, John de Kirkeby, clerk, Master Ralph de Frenigham, William de Middilton, Master Hugh de Tornham and others.

 

Under the bio of Alice’s uncle: Parson Lord Piers Peter de Merck de Roucestre de Rovecestria de Rovencestria of Rewenhale aka: Rivenhall:

Peter was also rector of Rivenhall.

Citation: The Complete Peerage, by Cokayne, Vol. XI, p. 499 - Records Piers father as WILLIAM DE ROUCESTRE [no dates are recorded]

The said Peter 3 years before his death demised to the Master of the Knights of the Temple in England the manor of Rewenhale (co. Essex) for six years for 22 pounds yearly, whereof the said Master gave him 66 pounds in hand for 3 years.

On Saturday before the Ascension [40th day of Easter, Ascension in 1255 was celebrated 4 April], 39 Hen. III [8 May 1255] came Brother William d'Estre, preceptor of Kersing and Wyham, and other brethren by the will of the Master and returned the said [Rewenhale] manor to the said Peter de Roucestre, who gave them about 100a. land in the said manor in frank almoign; and the same day he granted by charter to Robert de Scales (his nephew-in-law, since Robert was married to Alice de Roucestre?) the manor of Rewenhale [Essex, aka: Rivenhall], and to his sister, Avice, the manor of Newesel (county of Hertford, Wylton co. Norfolk); and on the Sunday following [15th May] Peter took their homage after making them swear to find a chaplain forever to celebrate for his soul, and that if he should recover the said Robert de Scales would give Peter de Roucestre his [Robert’s] manor of Hoo [Manor of Hoo, ST. WARBURGH]  [is this a connection to Alice Hawise de Hoo? Is Alice de Hoo also Alice de Roucestre?] in county of Norfolk for life, and the said Alice would give him the manor of Hecelingfeld [Haslingfield] in county of Cambridge for life; and he commanded his servants, who on Monday [17 May] following put the said Robert in seisin of Rewenhal Manor, and on Tuesday [18 May 1255] the said Alice of Newsell manor; and so she remained until Friday [27 May 1255] in Whitsun week when the escheators ejected her. The said Peter was of good memory always until his death, and a little before his death assumed the dress of the Knight Templars.

 

Archives ref: https://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/details/r/C9745172 -: Peter De Rossa, Parson of Rewenhale. Essex: Rivenhall manor, Cressing, Witham. Norfolk: Hockwold(?). Cambridgeshire: Haslingfield. Hertfordshire: Newsells.

History of the Manor of Hoo:

BEFORE the conquest, the Manor of Hoo, ST. WARBURGH, with the court of the hundred, was in the possession of Godwin Earl of Kent, from whom it descended to king Harold, and after the conquest was given by the Conqueror to his half-brother Odo, bishop of Baieux, under the general title of whose lands it is thus entered in the general survey of Domesday.

 

The bishop of Baieux himself holds Hou in demesne. It was taxed at 50 sulings, and now at 33. The arable land is 50 carucates. In demesne there are 4 and 100 villeins, wanting three, with 61 cottagers, having 43 carucates. There are 6 churches, and 12 servants, and 32 acres of meadow. Wood for the pannage of 30 hogs. The whole manor, in the time of king Edward the Confessor, was worth 60 pounds, when the bishop received it the like, and now as much, and yet he who holds it pays 100 and 13 pounds. To this manor there belonged nine houses in the city of Rochester, and they paid six shillings, now they are taken away. This manor earl Godwin held. Of this manor Richard de Tonebridge held half a suling, and wood for the pannage of 20 hogs. In the time of king Edward and afterwards it was, and now is worth 40 shillings. Adam, son of Hubert, holds of the same manor one suling, and one yoke of the bishop, and one of his tenants has there in demesne half a carucate, and four villeins with half a carucate and one cottager. It is and was worth 30 shillings. Anschitil de Ros held of this same manor of Hoo for three sulings, and he has there in demesne one carucate and five villeins, with 12 cottagers, having one carucate and a half. There are five servants, and one mill of ten shillings, and 12 acres of meadow, and two fisheries of five shillings. In the time of king Edward, and afterwards, it was worth six pounds, now six pounds and five shillings.

 

On the disgrace of the Bishop Odo of Baieux [Bayeux], about four years afterwards, his estates were confiscated to the crown, and among them this of Hoo.

King Richard I. exchanged the manor and hundred with Hugh Bardolf, for the honour of Bampton, in Devonshire, which had been forfeited to the crown by Fulk Paganel, or Painel, as he was usually called, to whom it had been given by king Henry II. (fn. 2) He was a younger son of William Bardolf, of Stoke Bardolf, and bore for his arms, Azure, three cinquefoils pierced or, as they remain on the roof of the cloisters of Christ church, Canterbury. He died without issue, (fn. 3) on which this estate of Hoo became vested in the crown, whence it was granted, anno 17 king John, to Hubert de Burgh, (fn. 4) then chief justice of England, and afterwards earl of Kent, on whose disgrace it seems to have become vested in Henry Grey and Hugh Poinz, in right of their wives, two of the five nieces and co. heirs of Robert Bardolph above mentioned, in separate moieties.

 

Henry Grey left a son, Sir Richard Grey, whose principal seat was at Codnor, in Derbyshire, whose descendants were the barons Grey of Codnor. One of these, John lord Grey, of Codnor, paid respective aid for it in the 20th year of king Edward III. as half a fee, which Henry de Grey before held in the parish of Wereburghe in Hoo of the king. He lived to a good old age, and dying about the 15th year of king Richard II. was succeeded by Richard, his grandson, (son of Henry, who died in his life time) who in the reign of king Henry IV. purchased the other moiety of this manor, and so became entitled to the whole fee of it.

 

But to return to this other moiety, which came into the possession of Hugh Poinz. His great grandson, Nicholas Poinz, died possessed of it in the 1st year of king Edward I. holding it in capite, by the service of half a knight's fee. (fn. 5) He left Hugh Poinz, his son and heir, who had summons among the barons of this realm, in the 23d year of king Edward I. as had Nicholas, his son, in the next reign of king Edward II. whose descendant, Nicholas lord Poinz, having married Alianore, the daughter of Sir John Erleigh, died about the middle of king Edward III.'s reign, leaving two daughters his coheirs, Amicia, wife of John Barry, and Margaret, wife of John Newborough. (fn. 6) They joined in the sale of this moiety to Judd, from which name it passed in the reign of king Henry IV. by sale, to Richard lord Grey, of Codnor, as before mentioned, who then became possessed of the entire fee of the manor of Hoo.

 

¶Richard lord Grey was much in favour with king Henry IV. who conferred many great offices on him, and employed him much, as well in war as in civil negociations. He died in the 5th year of Henry V. it then descended down to Henry lord Grey, who died possessed of it in the 11th year of king Henry VII. without lawful issue, and was buried at Aylesford, (fn. 7) under which parish a further account of this family may be seen. Upon which, although the manor and castle of Codnor came to Elizabeth, his aunt and heir, wife of Sir John Zouche, a younger son of William lord Zouch, of Haringworth, who bore for their arms, Gules, ten bezantes; which arms, with a canton, remain on the roof of the cloisters at Canterbury; yet this manor of Hoo continued in the possession of the lady Catherine Grey (afterwards remarried to Sir William de la Pole) for the term of her life, and she died possessed of it, as appears by the Escheat Rolls, anno 1521; after which it devolved to Sir John Zouche above mentioned, who likewise died possessed of it in 1529. He was succeeded in it by Thomas Cornewall, who was possessed of it at his death, in the 30th year of that reign, as appears by the inquisition then taken. Sir Thomas Wyatt, of Allington-castle, was the next proprietor of this manor; and he, in the 34th year of king Henry VIII. conveyed the hundred and lordship of Hoo, and the manor of Little Hoo, late belonging to Boxley abbey, (fn. 8) among other premises, to that king.

 

 

They continued in the crown till king Edward VI. in his 5th year, granted to Sir George Brooke, lord Cobham, &c. the hundred of Hoo, and the manors of Great and Little Hoo, to hold in capite by knights service; but his unfortunate grandson, Henry lord Cobham, being convicted of high treason in the 1st year of king James I. though he had pardon of his life, yet he forfeited all his estates to the crown, and among them these at Hoo, all which were confirmed to the crown by an act passed in the 3d year of that reign. Soon after which these manors were granted to Sir Robert Cecil, earl of Salisbury (son of William lord Burleigh) who was afterwards lord treasurer of England, &c. and had married Elizabeth, sister of Henry lord Cobham above mentioned. He died possessed of them in 1612, and was succeeded in them by his only son and heir, William earl of Salisbury, who, in the 4th year of king Charles I. alienated them to Sir Edward Hales, bart. who possessed them at his death, in 1654; whose grandson, Sir Edward Hales, bart. became his heir, and entitled as such to these manors; but he possessed only the court baron of them; for the view of frank pledge belonging to the hundred, appears by the court rolls to have continued, from the lord Cobham's death, in the crown, and to have been in possession of the keepers of the liberties of England, as they were styled, from the death of king Charles I. in 1648, to the Restoration; three years after which, in 1663, he seems to have had, by the style of them, the full possession of both. Having risqued his fortune in the service of king Charles I. and contracted debts to a large amount, he was obliged to abandon his country, to which he never returned; and this estate being vested by him in Sir John Tufton, bart. and Edward Hales, esq. of Boughton Malherb, as trustees, was conveyed by them, by the name of the manor and hundred of Hoo, to Edward Villiers, esq. the 4th son of Sir Edward, second son of George Villiers, of Brokesby, in Leicestershire, by his first wife, Audrey, daughter and heir of William Sanders, esq. (fn. 9) upon which Edward his eldest son and heir, succeeded him in the manor and hundred of Hoo, and being much in favour with king William, was, in the 3d year of his reign, created viscount Villiers of Dartford, and baron of Hoo. He was afterwards, in 1697, created earl of Jersey, and died in 1711, leaving by Barbara his wife, daughter of Wm. Chiffinch, esq. two sons; of whom William, the eldest, succeeded his father in titles and this estate; whose descendant, George Bussy Villiers, earl of Jersey, viscount Villiers of Dartford. and baron of Hoo, is the present possessor of this manor and hundred. (fn. 10)

 

The manor of Great Hoo extends over part of the parish of West Pechham, in this county.

 

¶At the court of this manor, the following constables and borsholders are appointed—one constable for the Upper half hundred, and another for the Lower half hundred of Hoo; and borsholders for the boroughs of Hardlefield, Boxley, Deangate, Dalham, Fincent, Church-street, and Oxenheath. The court is held yearly on Whit Monday.

 

 

The Scales barony was created in 1299 by writ for Robert de Scales.

The last known holders were Elizabeth de Scales and her husband Anthony Woodville, 2nd Earl Rivers. After Elisabeth's death in 1473, Anthony was summoned in her right. Anthony was beheaded by Richard III at Pontefract on 24 Jun 1483 and the peerage fell into abeyance. However, after the death of Anthony, his younger brother Edward Woodville, a supporter of Henry Tudor, styled himself Lord Scales, having been bequeathed Elizabeth's land by his brother.

Several people have subsequently tried to claim the title but none have been successful. The most recent was made by Sir Charles Robert Tempest who claimed to be a co-heir in 1857.

In the 22d of King Edward Robert de Scales had summons to be at Portsmouth, on September 1st to attend the King into Gascoign; and in the 25th of that King it appears that he held 10 knights fees, viz. two and an half in Berkway and Newcells [Manorial Estate: Newsells Manor, Barkway, Royston, Hertfordshire] in Hertfordshire, half a fee in Laufare in Essex, half a fee in Eneswell in Suffolk, one fee and an half in Rewenhale in Essex, three fees and an half in Middleton, Islington, How, and Rainham in Norfolk, and one in Wetherden in Suffolk, held in capite, and half a fee in Haselingfeld in Cambridgeshire

 

Barons Scales (1299)

Robert de Scales,            1st Baron Scales (d. 1304)

Robert de Scales,            2nd Baron Scales (d. 1324)

Robert de Scales,            3rd Baron Scales (d. 1369)

Roger de Scales,              4th Baron Scales (d. 1386)

Robert de Scales,            5th Baron Scales (d. 1402)

Robert de Scales,            6th Baron Scales (d. 1418)

Thomas de Scales,           7th Baron Scales (d. 1460)

Elizabeth de Scales Woodville, Baroness Scales (d. 2 September 1473) - Elizabeth de Scales married Anthony Woodville the brother of Elizabeth Woodville and brother-in-law to her husband King Edward IV.


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