Historical records matching Catherine Seymour
Immediate Family
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stepdaughter
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About Catherine Seymour
From http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catherine_Fillol
Catherine Fillol (or Filliol) (c. 1507 - c.1535) was the daughter and co-heiress of Sir William Fillol (1453 - 9 July 1527), of Woodlands, Horton, Dorset, and of Fillol's Hall, Essex.
As Katherine Seymour, she was made executor of her father William Filliol's will written in 1619. He also referred to her eldest son John Seymour, so she must have married Edward Seymour by 1618. By 1628 when William wrote another will it seems that Katherine was estranged from her husband and her father.
She became the first wife of Sir Edward Seymour, who went on to become the first Duke of Somerset of a new creation, Lord Protector of England and the uncle of King Edward VI, after his sister Jane married King Henry VIII. A 17th-century marginal note to copy of Vincent's Baronage at College of Heralds alleged that she had had an affair with her father-in-law, Sir John Seymour.[1] However, there is no contemporary evidence to support this. Catherine Fillol may have gone to a local convent, as this seems to be implied by a remark in her father's will. The will was challenged by Sir Edward Seymour in 1531, on the basis that his father-in-law was not of sound mind. In 1535, Sir Edward Seymour married his second wife Anne Stanhope, indicating that Catherine Fillol had probably died no later than early 1535.[2]
Catherine Fillol had two sons, John Seymour (buried 19 December 1552), who died unmarried and without issue,[3] and Edward Seymour.
Edward Seymour had ten more children by his second wife, including his eventual heir Edward Seymour, 1st Earl of Hertford. When he was later created Duke of Somerset, his children by his first marriage were still considered legitimate, but the patent of nobility provides that the dukedom is to descend first to his heirs by Anne, and only in the event of the failure of that line to his heirs by Catherine.[4] With the death of Algernon, the seventh duke of Somerset in 1750, the Seymour Baronets of Berry Pomeroy Castle, inherited the title of Duke of Somerset. Consequently, the present Duke of Somerset is descended from Catherine Filliol.
Comments
Katherine Seymour was the executor of her father William Filliol's first will written in 1519. She was by then married to Edward Seymour and had at least 1 son, John Seymour, also named in the will. She must have been born earlier that 1507 as it is unlikely that a twelve year old would be married with a son or to be considered old enough to be the executor of her fath's will - & is often estimated to have been born about 1501.
She also could not have died at Berry Pomeroy, Devon in 1535 as that was not granted to Sir Edward Seymour until 1553. According to her father's later will written in 1527 Katherine was living in a convent [and mostly disinherited by him], but her actual place of death remains unclear. She was still alive in 1532 as her husband Edward Seymour named her in petitions attempting to restore her inheritance.
References
- "repudiata, quia pater ejus post nuptias eam congovit"
- David Loades, Jane Seymour: Henry VIII's Favourite Wife, Amberley, 2013, p. 28
- The Complete Peerage, vol.XII pI, p.65, note c, & p. 84
- Alexander Burgess, Memoir of the life of the Right Reverend George Burgess, D. D., p. 243
Catherine Seymour's Timeline
1501 |
1501
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Fillol's Hall, Essex, England
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1520 |
1520
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England
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1527 |
1527
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Gloucestershire, England
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1532 |
1532
Age 31
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