

According to older sources, husband of Ada de Huntingdon. However, he seems to have married her daughter of the same name.
Heraldry
She (Ada de Huntingdon) is said, according to the pedigree of the Brereton family as given by Ormerod (the greatest authority on the Cheshire families of renown), to have afterwards married Sir Ranulphus, or Radulphus Brereton, of Brereton, who, according to family tradition, was one of the knights of the Crusades with King Richard I., and was the Sir Kenneth of the Leopard, in Sir Walter Scott's "Talisman."
See attached sources for marriage. The Brereton arms have always been impaled with the arms of Ada de Huntingdon. Welsh Medeival records also recognize their marriage. Their arms have been accepted by the College of Heralds since 1564, when the Visitation of the Breretons and their quarterings are registered (meaning accepted by the heralds). See attached source Harleian MSS 1174 item 250.
Heraldic visitations were tours of inspection undertaken by Kings of Arms (or more often by junior officers of arms, acting as the Kings' deputies) in England, Wales and Ireland. Their purpose was to regulate and register the coats of arms of nobility and gentry and boroughs, and to record pedigrees. They took place from 1530 to 1688, and their records provide important source material for genealogists.
If the officers of arms were not presented with sufficient proof of the right to use a coat of arms, they were also empowered to deface monuments which bore these arms and to force persons bearing such arms to sign a disclaimer that they would cease using them. The visitations were not always popular with members of the landed gentry, who were required to present proof of their gentility.
The Effigies in the Churchyard
From http://www.thornber.net/cheshire/htmlfiles/astbury.html
"There are old tombs said to be of the Brereton family in the churchyard. The one with a canopy shows the effigy of a knight with his lady. It is rare to see a monument of such age outside and these are badly weathered. Raymond Richards in his book on Cheshire Churches notes that it is the tomb of Sir Ralph Brereton but the brochure in the church mentions that it could be the tomb of a Brereton or a Venables. My photograph below, taken with flash and enhanced digitally allows one to pick out most of the following incripiton, but the beginning of the last word was provided from Ormerod's History of Cheshire, Volume 3 page 33. Note that the letter N is written back-to-front throughout. It translates as "Here lie Radulphus Brereton, knight, and lady Ada his wife one of the daughters of David Earl of Huntingdon. Ormerod gives a family tree of the Breretons of Brereton in which he states "Sir Ralph de Brereton, knight, said in some pedigrees to marry Ada, daughter of David Earl of Huntingdon, relict (widow) of Henry Hastings, and living in 1275"."
"However, it appears that this inscription is much later than the tomb itself. Moreover the claim that Ralph was married to Ada, daughter of David Earl of Huntingdon, while being picked up and repeated by various historians over the centuries, cannot be validated. Indeed detailed contemporary accounts in the Curia Regis Rolls, supplied to me by Douglas Richardson, show that Ada, the daughter of David Earl of Huntingdon married Henry de Hastings. However, she died before Trinity Term 1242 and in 1247 her widower Henry de Hastings was holding her lands. Consequently, she died before her husband and was not free to marry Ralph Brereton."
"Who erected the inscription and for what purpose remains a mystery."
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Text from Jim Weber's site:-
Sir Ralph Brereton of Brereton, Knight, through marriage to Ada de Hastings, gives the Breretons Royal Descent because she was descended of David, King of Scotland, and maternally the Earls of Chester were Royal Earls, who possessed jura regalis in the Palatinate of Chester. They also laid claim to royal descent from the Venables, who was a relation of Stephen of Blois and William the Conqueror. At first the descent of the Breretons from the royal blood of Scotland was mentioned as a mere claim,which was found in Collins' Peerage and in Dugdale's British Peers, but a copy of the patent or grant of creation to Sir William Brereton, of the Barony of Brereton, has since been procured and in that instrument such royal descent in Scotland is expressly recited and recognized in the following terms: "We, considering with mature deliberation the free and true services of Sir William Brereton, and that he is sprung from an ancient, noble and most renowned family, inasmuch as he is descended,through many illustrious ancestors, from Ada, sister of John, surnamed leScot, 7th Earl of Chester, and daughter of David, Earl of Huntingdon ,Lord of Galloway, within our kingdom of Scotland." (This quotation is found in Archaeologia, or Miscellaneous Tracts Relating to Antiquity,Vol. 33, p. 59.)
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Ralph's Profile: https://histfam.familysearch.org//getperson.php?personID=I93400&tre...
Ada de Warenne (or Adeline de Varenne) (c. 1120 – 1178) was NOT his wife.
◦Ralph Brereton: LIVING: Living Henry III (1275/1276).
Born of, Brereton cum Smethwick, Cheshire, England Find all individuals with events at this location Gender Male Name AKA Ralph de Brereton
Sir Suffix Knight Born of, Brereton cum Smethwick, Cheshire, England Find all individuals with events at this location Gender Male Name AKA Ralph de Brereton Name AKA Randolphus de Brereton [7] _UID 8DDECFB6010811DA9E6E0060089E376996BD Died Yes, date unknown Notes ◦LIVING: Living Henry III (1275/1276).
RESIDENCE: Brereton. (Lloyd, History of the Princes, the Lords Marcher and the Ancient Nobility of Powys Fadog, vol. 3 p. 93)
Ralph, his marriage and descendants:
http://books.google.com/books?id=jz0LAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA92&lpg=PA92&dq=A...
Re: St. Mary's Church, Astbury, Chesire There are old tombs of the Brereton family in the churchyard. The one with a canopy shows the effigy of a knight with his lady. It is rare to see a monument of such age outside and these are badly weathered. Raymond Richards notes that it is the tomb of Sir Ralph Brereton but the brochure in the church mentions that is could be the tomb of a Brereton or a Ventables. My photograph below, taken with flash and enhanced digitally allows one to pick out most of the following incripiton, but the beginning of the last work was provided from Ormerod's History of Cheshire, Volume 3 page 33. Note that the letter N is written back-to-front throughout. It translates as "Here lie Radulphus Brereton, knight, and lady Ada his wife one of the daughters of David Earl of Huntingdon." Ormerod gives a family tree of the Breretons of Brereton in which he states "Sir Ralph de Brereton, knight, said in some pedigrees to marry Ada, daughter of David Earl of Huntingdon, (relict of Henry Hastings,) and living in 1275".
Tomb inscription from Ralph De Brereton's tomb at St. Mary's Churchyard, Astbury, Cheshire:
HIC IACENT RADULPHUS BR ERETON MILES ET DOMINA ADA UXOR SUA UNA FI LIARUM DAVIDIS COMI TIS HUNTINGDONIS
REMARKS: It was in the suite of Princess Maude that Ralph de Brereton went to Scotland. (Lloyd, History of the Princes, the Lords Marcher and the Ancient Nobility of Powys Fadog, vol. 3 p. 92) ◦(Research):MARRIAGE: Investigate> Lloyd's 'History of the Princes, the Lords Marcher and the Ancient Nobility of Powys Fadog' volume 3 page 92 states he married secondly, Margred ferch Sir Rhydderch "Groes", Knight.
Person ID I93400 Wales. Welsh Medieval Database Primarily of Nobility and Gentry. Last Modified 26 Mar 2013
George Ormerod shows that Sir Ralph Brereton, husband of Ada of
Huntingdon, had two sons, William, and Gilbert. He further shows that
the son, William, was a ward of Sir R. Sondbach, which suggests that
William was a minor at his father's death. If so, it should be
relatively easy to find out when William was born and whether or not
he might have been a son of Ada of Huntingdon. http://archiver.rootsweb.ancestry.com/th/read/GEN-MEDIEVAL/2002-02/...
Father Sir William de Brereton, Knight, of, Brereton cum Smethwick, Cheshire, England Find all individuals with events at this location, d. Yes, date unknown Mother Margery [de Thornton], of, Middlewich, Cheshire, England Find all individuals with events at this location, d. Yes, date unknown Family ID F56184 Group Sheet
Family Ada of Huntingdon, of, , , England Find all individuals with events at this location, d. Aft 2 Nov 1241 Married ◦STATUS: Widow of Henry de Hastings.
Children
1. Sir William de Brereton, Knight, of, Brereton cum Smethwick, Cheshire, England Find all individuals with events at this location, d. Yes, date unknown
2. Gilbert de Brereton, of, Brereton cum Smethwick, Cheshire, England Find all individuals with events at this location, d. Yes, date unknown
Last Modified 13 Feb 2005 Family ID F56186 Group Sheet
Sources
1.[S116] Peerages Extinct (Burke), Burke, John , 1787-1848, (London: Henry Colburn and Richard Bentley, 1831), FHL 942 D22bg 1831., p. 74;.
2.[S1506] #560 [1882] The History of the County Palatine and City of Chester (1882), Ormerod, George, (2nd edition. 3 volumes. London: G. Routledge, 1882), FHL microfilms 496,910, 547,521 and 824,313-824,31., vol. 3 p. 47, 52;.
3.[S1800] #771 The History of the Princes, the Lords Marcher and the Ancient Nobility of Powys Fodog and the Ancient Lords of Arwystli, Cedewen and Meirionydd (1881-1887), Lloyd, Jacob Youde William, (6 volumes. London: T. Richards, 1881-1887), FHL book 942.9 D2L; FHL microfilms 990,213-990,214., vol. 3 p. 92; vol. 5 p. 413.
4.[S1096] #798 The Wallop Family and Their Ancestry (1928), Watney, Vernon James, (4 volumes. Oxford: John Johnson, 1928), FHL book Q 929.242 W159w; FHL microfilm 1,696,491 ., p. 136;.
5.[S2619] #11050 The English Ancestry of Peter Bulkeley, Grace Chetwood, and Sarah Chauncy (1988), Ayers, Frank Wayne, (Walnut Creek, California: F.W. Ayers, 1988), 88;.
6.[S1137] #772 Archaeologia Cambrensis: a Record of the Antiquities of Wales and its Marches, and the Journal of the Cambrian Archaeological Association (1846-), Cambrian Archaeological Association (London), (London: W. Pickering, 1846-), FHL book 942.9 B2c., H.J.F. Vaughan, "Tribe of Ednowain Bendew", 4th series (1878) vol. 9 p. 40.
7.[S1800] #771 The History of the Princes, the Lords Marcher and the Ancient Nobility of Powys Fodog and the Ancient Lords of Arwystli, Cedewen and Meirionydd (1881-1887), Lloyd, Jacob Youde William, (6 volumes. London: T. Richards, 1881-1887), FHL book 942.9 D2L; FHL microfilms 990,213-990,214., vol. 3 p. 92.
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LIVING: witness to a charter by Gilbert de Venables.(died ca 1154-1189). AKA Gislebert Venatour.
I93378 Wales. Welsh Medieval Database Primarily of Nobility and Gentry.
Brereton Lineage: http://www.thornber.net/cheshire/htmlfiles/brereton.html
http://www.thornber.net/cheshire/htmlfiles/venables.html
1st Baron Venables of Kinderton, Cheshire was Gilbert: First, by the way of introduction, we will quote below two articles entire: one, from Vol. IV, Publications of the Huguenot Society of America, pp. 64-65; the other from the William and Mary College Quarterly, Vol. XV, pp. 21-24:
I. VENABLES, a baronial name from Venables, near Evreux, Normandy. The family does not appear under this name in Normandy, its proper name being le Venour, or Venator. Arnulph, Gislebert, Gaufridus, Hugh, Richard Venator, Normandy, 1180-95 (M. R. S.). Richard Venator, 1198 (ibid). Gislebert Venator, or De Venables, held the barony of Kinderton, Cheshire, 1086, from whom descended the Venables, Barons of Kinderton, and many other families.
Venator (huntsman), of the Dukes of Normandy, borne by this family. Walter de Veneur was eminently distinguished, 960, at the battle of the Fords, between Lothaire, King of France, and the Normans, where he was rescued by Duke Richard I., and remounted by him on his best horse (Palgrave, Hist. Normandy, ii., 738). The name occurs about the same time in the Charters of the Gallia Christiana. The ancient seat of the Le Venours appears to have been Venables, near Evreux, and they bore, or, or argent, a bend azure (La Roque, Hist. Harcourt, ii., 1181), which was also borne by several of their English descendants, especially by the family under consideration. '''Three brothers of this family came to England with Hugh Lupus: I. Gislebert Venator, or De Venables, ancestor of the Barons of Kinderton, of whom Gislebert Venables of Cheshire is mentioned in Normandy, 1180, as "Gislebert Venator" (M. R. S.). The French line of Le Venour, descended from him, bore argent, a bend azure, fretty or, for difference (Anseleme, viii., 256). From another brother probably derived the Butlers (Botteliers) of Chester, Barons of Warrington, who also bore, or, a bend azure, differenced by the wheat sheaves of Chester. Radulph, or Ranulph.
Gislebertus de Venables, the ancestor of the Venables of England and of Virginia, accompanied William the Conqueror to England. His name (derived, by the way, from "Venabulum" a hunting spear or more properly boor spear, reflects his origin, "Hereditary Huntsmen" or Veneurs of the Norman Dukes) is found on the Roll of Battle Abbey. His family in Normandy does not appear under this name, the proper name being Le Venour (Veneur) or Venator, the latter evidently the Latin form of the name. As if there should be no doubt of this, Gislebertus de Venables, on the division of the spoils, received part of his share under the name of Venator, and many other English references to him are under this name.
Gilbert Venables, using the English form, received extensive estates, and was one of the English Barons attached to the Earldom of Cheshire, under Hugh Lupus, with the title Baron of Kinderton. (The ancient Castle of Kinderton stood near the banks of the Dane, two fields' breadth from the old Roman works of Condate-a part of the moat is all that is left of it. The Castle has been taken down as well as the later "Hall" which succeeded it. A brick mansion called "Kinderton Lodge" lies in another part of the Manor.) He is referred to as the younger brother of Stephen, Earl of Blois, the father of Stephen, King of England, which would make him a descendant of Charlemagne; and he is also referred to as cousin-german to the Conqueror.
The title and much of the estates, remained in the Venables family for nearly 700 years, or until the death of the last Baron, Sir Peter, when, by virtue of a will, the Venables title and arms were assumed by George Vernon, making the hyphenated Venables-Vernon, or Lord Vernon of the present day.
http://www.lincolnshire-wolds.org/all-lincolnshire/2/51573.htm
Rafe de Brereton is found mentioned in old deeds as witness to two grants of lands in Marston, which were made by the grandson of the second mentioned Venables :(I) to his sister Amabilia, in 1156; (2) to his brother Hugh, Rector of Astbury, in 1188. This Hugh was also Rector of Eccleston, near Chester, which, in the sixteenth century, belonged to Randle Brereton, son of Sir Randle de Brereton H., of Ipstone, also Rector of Rostherne, Cheshire. Rafe de Brereton was probably esquire to the Baron of Kinderton, and the younger brother of Sir William, de Brereton L, of Brereton, with whom the pedigree of the family commences about 1175.
Venables became a prominent Cheshire and Lancashire surname, but Hunter had already achieved a large foothold in Cheshire with Gilbert Hunter holding Brereton, Davenport, Kinderton and Witton (Northwich) and Ralph Hunter holding Stapleford in Cheshire and Soughton in Wales. "
Descendants: ID: I61808 •Name: Ralph de Brereton •Sex: M •Name: Ralph De Brereton •Birth: ABT 1224 •Death: 1280 •Event: 1 Source See Stirnet Genealogy at http://www.stirnet.com/HTML/genie/british/bb4fz/brereton01.htm Their Main sources: BE1883 (Brereton) •Note: This may be the same person showm here as his grandson, different sources show this differently.
Ralph de Brereton http://smithanddunbar.familytreeguide.com/getperson.php?personID=I5...
Home Search Individual Pedigree Descendancy Relationship Timeline Login Birth Abt 1224 Sex Male Died 1280 Person ID I518 Default Tree Last Modified 15 Dec 2005
Family 1 Ada Huntington, b. Abt 1225, Huntington, Engl. Married Bef 1250 Notes Married:
Several sources interpose an additional generation to the line I've chosen, showing Ralph de Brereton married to a "Miss Hastings", who they show in turn to be the daughter of Ada de Huntington and a "Henry de Hastings" (b. abt. 1198):
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Miss Hastings, b. abt. 1234 in Ashill, Swaffham, Norfolk, England
Father: Henry De Hastings b: Abt 1198 in Fillongley, Meridon, Warwickshire, England Mother: Ada De Huntingdon b: Abt 1198 in Huntingdon, Huntingdonshire, England.
Marriage 1: Ralph De Brereton b: Abt 1224 in Barton, Preston, Lancashire, Engl. Children: 1. Richard Brereton b: Abt 1260 2. Sybil De Brereton b: 1263 in Brereton, Cheshire, England 3. William De Brereton b: Abt 1250 in Brereton, Cheshire, England
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However, there appears to be official contradiction of this "additional generation" in the following note found in Archaeologia, or Miscellaneous Tracts Relating to Antiquity, stating (apparently) that Ada de Huntington was married to Ralph de Brereton:
"Sir Ralph Brereton of Brereton, Knight, through marriage to Ada de Huntington, gives the Breretons Royal Descent because she was decended of David, King of Scotland, and maternally the Earls of Chester were Royal Earls, who possessed jura regalis in the Palatinate of Chester. They also laid claim to royal descent from the Venables, who was a relation of Stephen of Blois and William, the Conqueror. At first the descent of the Breretons from the royal blood of Scotland was mentioned as a mere claim, which was found in Collins' Peerage and in Dugdale's British Peers, but a copy of the patent or grant of creation to Sir William Brereton, of the Barony of Brereton, has since been procured and in that instrument such royal descent in Scotland is expressly recited and recognized in the following terms: "We, considering with mature deliberation the free and true services of Sir William Brereton, and that he is sprung from an ancient, noble and most renowned family, inasmuch as he is descended, through many illustrious ancestors, from Ada, sister of John, surnamed le Scot, 7th Earl of Chester, and daughter of David, Earl of Huntingdon, Lord of Galloway, within our kingdom of Scotland." (This quotation is found in Archaeologia, or Miscellaneous Tracts Relating to Antiquity, Vol. 33, p. 59.)
Father: William De Brereton b: Abt 1180 in Barton, Preston, Lancashire, England Mother: Margery Roter De Thornton b: Abt 1190 in Thornton, Cheshire, England
Marriage 1 Miss Hastings b: Abt 1234 in Ashill, Swaffham, Norfolk, England Children: 1. Richard Brereton b: Abt 1260 2. Sybil De Brereton b: 1263 in Brereton, Cheshire, England 3. William De Brereton b: Abt 1250 in Brereton, Cheshire, England"
Either way, the line appears intact through to Henry I and William the Congueror.
Children 1. William Brereton, b. Abt 1250
http://smithanddunbar.familytreeguide.com/getperson.php?personID=I5...
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Father: William de Brereton b: ABT 1180 Mother: Margery Roter De Thornton
Marriage 1 Ana (Ada?) de Huntington b: ABT 1225 in Ashill, Swaffham, Norfolk, EnglandChildren1.Has Children William (Sir) Brereton , of Brereton 2.Has Children Margery de Brereton 3.Has No Children Richard Brereton 4.Has No Children Sybil De Brereton b: 1263 in Brereton, Cheshire, England
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1200 |
1200
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Barton, Preston, Lancashire, England
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1224 |
1224
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Brereton, Cheshire, England
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1236 |
1236
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Brereton, Cheshire, England
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1253 |
1253
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Brereton cum Smethwick, Cheshire , England
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1280 |
1280
Age 80
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Brereton, Cheshire, England
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???? |
St Mary's Church, Congleton, Cheshire East, United Kingdom
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