Roger De Mortimer Earl Of March
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Lord Roger De Mortimer
(1221-1282)
Maud De Braose
(Abt 1222-Bef 1301)
William II De Fiennes Lord Of Wendover
(1245-1302)
Blanche De Brienne Lady Of Loupeland
(1245-1302)
Lord Edmund De Mortimer
(1252-1304)
Margaret De Fiennes
(Abt 1262-1333)
Roger De Mortimer Earl Of March
(1287-1330)

 

Family Links

Spouses/Children:
1. Joan De Geneville Countess Of March

2. Isabelle Princess Of France [Queen Of England]

Roger De Mortimer Earl Of March 2 3 4 5

  • Born: 3 May 1287, Netherwood, Thornbury, Herefordshire, England 1
  • Wifr (1): Joan De Geneville Countess Of March before 6 Oct 1306 in Shropshire, England 1
  • Wifr (2): Isabelle Princess Of France [Queen Of England] before 1327
  • Died: 29 Nov 1330, Elms, Tyburn, , Warwickshire, England at age 43 1
  • Buried: 1330, Shrewsbury, , Shropshire, England

bullet   Cause of his death was Execution at Tyburn in London.

bullet   Ancestral File Number: 9QF9-FM.

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bullet  General Notes:

Sir Roger de Mortimer, b. 25 Apr or 3 May 1287, d. 29 Nov 1330, Earl of March. [Magna Charta Sureties]

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Roger Mortimer, 2nd Baron Mortimer, of Wigmore, summoned to parliament from 22 February, 1306, to 3 December, 1326 (from the accession of Edward II in 1307, with the addition of "De Wigmore"). This nobleman, so notorious in our histories as the paramour of Isabel, queen consort of the unfortunate Edward II, was in his sixteenth year at the time of his father's decease and was placed by the king (Edward I) in ward with Piers Gaveston, so that, to redeem himself and for permission to marry whom he please, he was obliged to pay Gaveston 2500 marks, and thereupon m. Joane, dau. of Peter de Genevill, son of Geffrey de Genevill, Lord of Trim, in Ireland. In the 34th Edward I [1306], he received the honour of knighthood and in the same year attended the king into Scotland, where we find him again in the 3rd Edward II [1310], and the same year he was constituted governor of the castle of Buelt, in Brecknockshire. In the 7th, 8th, and 10th years, he was likewise in Scotland and was then appointed lord-lieutenant of Ireland. During the remainder of the unhappy Edward's reign he attached himself to the interests of the queen and, at length, fled with her and Prince Edward into France. Returning, however, and his party triumphing, he was advanced to the dignity of Earl of March soon after the accession of King Edward III and he held a round table the same year at Bedford. But hereupon becoming proud beyond measure (so that his own son, Geffrey, called him the King of Folly), he kept a round table of knights in Wales in imitation of King Arthur. "Other particulars," says Dugdale, "of his haughtiness and insolence were these, viz., that with Queen Isabel, he caused a parliament to be held at Northampton, where an unworthy agreement was made with the Scots and Ragman's Roll of Homage of Scotland was traitorously delivered as also the black cross which King Edward I brought into England out of the abbey of Scone and then accounted a precious relique. That (with the queen) he caused the young king to ride twenty-four miles in one night, toward Bedford, to destroy the Earl of Lancaster and his adherents, saying that they imagined the king's death. That he followed Queen Isabel to Nottingham and lodged in one house with her. That he commanded the treasure of the realm and assumed the authority which, by common consent in parliament, was conferred upon Henry, Earl of Lancaster, at the king's coronation." His career was not, however, of long continuance for, the king becoming sensible of his folly and vices, had him suddenly seized in the castle of Nottingham and conveyed prisoner to London, where, being impeached before parliament, he was convicted under various charges, the first of which was privity to the murder of King Edward II in Berkeley Castle, and receiving sentence of death, was hanged in 1330 at the common gallows, celled Elmes, near Smithfield, where his body was permitted to hang two days and two nights naked before it was interred in the Grey Friars; whence in some years afterwards it was removed to Wigmore.

The Earl of March left issue four sons and seven daus., viz., Edmund (Sir); Roger (Sir), who m., 1321, Lady Joane Butler; Geffrey (Sir), Lord of Towyth; John, slain in a tournament at Shrewsbury; Katherine, m. to Thomas de Beauchamp, Earl of Warwick; Joane, m. to James, Lord Audley; Agnes, m. to Laurence, Earl of Pembroke; Margaret, m. 1st, to Robert, 8th Earl of Oxford, and 2ndly, to Thomas (son and heir of Maurice), Lord Berkeley; Maud, m. to John de Cherlton, son and heir of John, Lord Powis; Blanch, m. to Peter de Grandison; Beatrix, m. 1st to Edward, son and heir of Thomas of Brotherton, Earl Marshal of England, and 2ndly, to Sir Thomas de Braose.

Upon the execution and attainder of the earl, all of his honours became forfeited. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage Ltd, London, England, 1883, p. 384, Mortimer, Barons Mortimer, of Wigmore, Earls of March]

bullet  Medical Notes:

In october 1330, arrested in Nottingham and sentenced to death.

bullet  Burial Notes:

Church Of Grey Friar, Shrewsbury.

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bullet  Noted events in his life were:

• He owned Wigmore Castle from 1304 to 1330 in Wigmore Castle, Wigmore, Herefordshire, England. Inherited the castle from his father Edmund.

• Imprisoned: 1323-1324, Tower Of London, London, Middlesex, England. Imprisoned in 1323 and escaped to France in 1324.

• Other: Orders the Murder of Edward II, King of England., 1327, England, United Kingdom.

• He worked as a Regent of England from 1327 to 1330 in England, United Kingdom. As Regent he appoints himself as the first Earl of March. Rebuilds Wigmore Castle.


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Roger married Joan De Geneville Countess Of March, daughter of Sir Piers De Geneville Knight and Joan De Lusignan, before 6 Oct 1306 in Shropshire, England.1 (Joan De Geneville Countess Of March was born on 2 Feb 1285-1286 in Ludlow, , Shropshire, England 1 and died on 19 Oct 1356 1.)


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Roger next married Isabelle Princess Of France [Queen Of England], daughter of Unknown and Jeanne Princess Of Navarre, before 1327. (Isabelle Princess Of France [Queen Of England] was born in 1292 in Paris, , , France,6 died on 22 Aug 1358 in Hertford Castle, Hertford, Hertfordshire, England 6 and was buried on 27 Nov 1358 in Grey Friars, Newgate, Middlesex, England.)


bullet  Marriage Notes:

No Marriage

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Sources


1 Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999, 12-6.

2 Other Researchers.

3 Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999, 12-6, 17-6, 28B-8, 30-7, 80-6, 147-5.

4 Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition, by Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., 1999, 29-32.

5 Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, by G. E Cokayne, Sutton Publishing Ltd, 2000, III:353, XI:477.

6 Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition, by Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., 1999, 101-31.


Brian Yap (葉文意)
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