Historical records matching Jordan de la Warre, 2nd Lord de la Warre
Immediate Family
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wife
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mother
About Jordan de la Warre, 2nd Lord de la Warre
Jordan la Warre (1) M, #244912, d. between 23 August 1231 and 6 September 1231
- Last Edited=17 Sep 2007 Jordan la Warre was the son of John la Warre. (1)
- He married Emma (?). (1)
- He died between 23 August 1231 and 6 September 1231. (1)
He was opposed to King John, but was re-admitted after paying a fine. (1)
- Child of Jordan la Warre and Emma (?)
- Sir John la Warre+
Citations (1).[S37] Charles Mosley, editor, Burke's Peerage, Baronetage & Knightage, 107th edition, 3 volumes (Wilmington, Delaware, U.S.A.: Burke's Peerage (Genealogical Books) Ltd, 2003), volume 1, page 1074. Hereinafter cited as Burke's Peerage and Baronetage, 107th edition.
Biography
http://homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~cousin/html/p390.htm#i19675
Jordan la Warre, Lord of Bristolton d. 1231
Father John la Warre, Lord of Bristolton1 d. 1212/13
Jordan la Warre, Lord of Bristolton was the son of John la Warre, Lord of Bristolton.1 Jordan la Warre, Lord of Bristolton married Emma (?). Jordan la Warre, Lord of Bristolton paid two hundred pounds for livery of his lands in 1212/13 at 14 John.1 He took up arms against King John, with the other barons, but on paying a fine, with two palfreys, was re-admitted into favour.1 He again took up arms, fighting under the Baronial standard (FIRST BARON'S WAR, 1215-1217), and again making his peace after the Battle of Evesham (sic) (HOWEVER, THE BATTLE ACTUALLY TOOK PLACE ON AUGUST 4, 1265, 34 YEARS AFTER HIS DEATH, DURING THE BARON'S SECOND WAR, 1264-1267. WHY THIS IS IN HERE IS BEYOND BELIEF!!!!!!!!!).1 He died in 1231.
Family
Emma (?)
Child
- John la Warre, Sheriff of Herefordshire+ d. c 1277
Jordan de la Warre became the next Lord of Bristolton. He would have been about 30 years of age during the signing of the Magna Charta in 1215. Documents show that he was paid two hundred pounds for livery of his lands. "Norman influence spread widely throughout the British Isles, and one of their contributions to the culture was the wider use of surnames - many of whom were reflective of estate titles. The surnames adopted by the nobility were mainly of this type, being used with the particles de, de la, or del (meaning 'of' or 'of the')." Consequently, if you said your name was Roger de la Warre - you were, in essence, saying that you were Roger of the house of Warre. "This surname of 'de la Warre' emerged as a notable English family name where they were recorded as a family of great antiquity seated as Lords of the Manor and estates in that shire." (DeGidio) Quoting John Burke in A Geneological and Heraldic History of the Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland, DiGedio also states that "the family of Ware claims descent from Roger de la Ware, Lord of Isefield, & Baron of Parliament in the reign of Edward I. The founder was Jordan de la Warre of Wick, Gloucestershire, England, whose descendants enjoyed extensive grants of land in the southern, middle and western counties of England, for bravery in various wars, particularly on the fields of Crecy and Poitiers." Burke continues, "many of that family under the name de Warr, de Warre, and le Warre were (in succeeding reigns) summoned to parliament as Lords thereof; which may be seen in numberless instances in the abridgment of the Tower Records collected by Sir Robert Cotton, and published by Mr. Prynne."
Jordan de la Warre, 2nd Lord de la Warre's Timeline
1185 |
1185
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Brislington Manor, Somerset, England
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1216 |
1216
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Beauderset Castle, Warwickshire, England
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1231 |
September 6, 1231
Age 46
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Brislington Manor, Somerset, England
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???? |
Brislington, City of Bristol, England, United Kingdom
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