Margaret de Vernon

How are you related to Margaret de Vernon?

Connect to the World Family Tree to find out

Share your family tree and photos with the people you know and love

  • Build your family tree online
  • Share photos and videos
  • Smart Matching™ technology
  • Free!

Margaret de Vernon (de Stokeport)

Also Known As: "Margery de Stockeport", "de Stokeport"
Birthdate:
Birthplace: Stockport, Cheshire, England
Death: 1294 (89-98)
England
Immediate Family:

Daughter of Sir Robert de Stokeport, Baron of Stockport and Matilda de Banastre
Wife of William of Hadden de Vernon
Sister of Robert Il de Stokeport, Knt.

Managed by: Amber Jane Bidgood
Last Updated:

About Margaret de Vernon

Locale Note

Cheshire was the county in which Stockport was situated for centuries. On 1 April 1974, Manchester county was established, and Cheshire became a Historic County.

Sources

  • Burke, John Bernard, Esq. (1848) in The Roll of Battle Abbey, Annotated. London: Edward Churton, p. 104. Available at: Google Books.
  • Burke, J. B. (ed.) (1848) “The Roll of Battle Abbey,” in The Patrician. London: Edward Churton, p. 156. Available at: Google Books.
  • Carrington, W. A. (1900) “On the Family and Record History of Haddon,” in Journal of the British Archaeological Association. London: Bedford Press, pp. 146–147. Available at: Google Books.
  • Carrington, W. A. (1900) “Haddon: The Hall, the Manor, and Its Lords,” in Kerry, C. (ed.) Journal of the Derbyshire Archaeological and Natural History Society. London: Bemrose & Sons for Derbyshire Archaeological Society, pp. 6–7. Available at: Google Books.
  • Chalone, R. G. W. F. (1882) in Rylands, J. P. (ed.) The Visitation of Cheshire in the Year 1580 with Numerous Additions and Continuations, Including those from the Visitation of Cheshire Made in the Year 1566 and a Fragment of the Visitation of the City of Chester in the Year 1591. Oxford, UK: The Harleian Society, p. 240. Available at: Google Books.
  • Cheetham, F. H. (1904) “History of the Building,” in Haddon Hall: An Illustrated Account of the Fabric and Its History. London: Sherratt and Hughes, pp. 18–20. Available at: Google Books,
  • Cokayne, A. E. (1893) “Dorothy Vernon,” in Kerry, C. (ed.) Journal of the Derbyshire Archaeological and Natural History Society. London: Bemrose & Sons and Derbyshire Archaeological Society, p. 180. Available at: Google Books.
  • Collins, A. (1773) “Vernon, Lord Vernon,” in The Peerage of England; Containing a Genealogical and Historical Account of All the Peers of that Kingdom, Now Existing, Either by Tenure, Summons, or Creation: Their Descents and Collateral Lines; Their Births, Marriages, and Issues; Famous Actions both in War and Peace; Religious and Charitable Donations; Deaths, Places of Burial, Monuments, Epitaphs; And Many Valuable Memoirs Never before Printed. 4th ed. London: H. Woodfall, p. 616. Available at: Google Books.
  • Collins, A. and Brydges, E. (1812) “Vernon, Lord Vernon,” in Collin’s Peerage of England: Genealogical, Biographical, and Historical; Greatly Augmented and Continued to the Present Time. London: F. C. and J. Rivington, Otridge & Son, p. 399. Available at: Google Books.
  • Earwaker, J. P. (1877) “The Barons of Stockport,” in East Cheshire, Past and Present; Or A History of the Hundred of Macclesfield in the County Palatine of Chester from Original Records. London: John Parsons Earwaker, pp. 333–343. Available at: Google Books.
  • George Farnham, A. H. (1919) “The Manors of Allexton, Appleby, and Ashby Folville,” in Transactions of the Leicestershire Archaeological Society. Leicester. Leicester, UK: Satchell & Son, p. 428. Available at: Google Books.
  • Great Britain Exchequer. Farrer, W. (ed.) (1902) “Roll of 10 John 1207-1208,” in Farrer, W. (tran.) The Lancashire Pipe Rolls of 31 Henry I., A. D. 1130, and of the Reigns of Henry II., A. D. 1155-1189; Richard I., A. D. 1189-1199; and King John, A. D. 1199-1216: The Latin Text Extended and Notes Added. Also Early Lancashire Charters of the Period from the Reign of William Rufus to that of King John. Lancashire, England: Henry Young & Sons, pp. 226–227. Available at: [The_Lancashire_Pipe_Rolls_of_31_Henry_I Google Books].
  • Manning, J. A. (1851) “Sir Richard Vernon, Knt,” in The Lives of the Speakers of the House of Commons, from the Time of King Edward III to Queen Victoria; Comprising the Biographies of Upwards of One Hundred Distinguished Persons and Copious Details of the Parliamentary History of England, from the Most Authentic Documents. Covent Garden, London, UK: George Willis and Myers & Co., p. 75. Available at: Google Books.
  • “Section 7” (1894) in Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of London. London: The Society of Antiquaries of London, p. 310. Available at: Books.
  • Sharpe, J., Andrews, J. and John Hatchard & Son, Simpking & Marshall, Nathan Hailes (1830) “Baron Vernon: Descent,” in Williams, S. (ed.) Sharpe’s Peerage of the British Empire; Establishing the Present States, and Deducing the Existing Descents from the Ancient Nobility of England, Scotland, and Ireland. London: John Sharpe & the Chiswick Press. Available at: Google Books.
  • Smith, G. le Blanc. (1906) “The Family of Vernon up to 1376,” in Haddon: The Manor, The Hall, Its Lords and Traditions. London: Elliot Stock, pp. 4, 9, 13. Available at: Google Books.
  • Tait, J. (1904) “The Three Charters: Burgesses’ Rights in the Lord’s Woods and Pastures, etc,” in Mediæval Manchester and the Beginnings of Lancashire. Manchester, UK: Llanerch & Manchester University Press, p. 109. Available at: Google Books.
view all

Margaret de Vernon's Timeline

1200
1200
Stockport, Cheshire, England
1294
1294
Age 94
England