Upcott is an historic manor in the parish of Cheriton Fitzpaine, Devon, England. The manor house, known as Upcott Barton , is a mediaeval Grade II* listed [1] building which is notorious in the history of Devon as the site of the 1455 murder of the lawyer Nicholas Radford by a mob directed by the Earl of Devon during the Wars of the Roses. The house is about 1.5 miles (2.4 km) north of Cheriton Fitzpaine village and almost 1 mile east of Poughill.
Upcott is not listed as a manor in the Domesday Book of 1086, but is believed to have formed part of one of the two manors called Stochelie listed consecutively amongst the 79 Devonshire holdings of Robert, Count of Mortain (d.1091), uterine half-brother of William the Conqueror and the tenant-in-chief with the largest landholdings in England. Both were sub-infeudated to Alured Pincerna ("Alfred the Butler" or "Alfred the Cup-Bearer"), feudal baron of Chiselborough in Somerset, [2] whose main landholdings were in Cornwall and Somerset, a follower of the Count, and also held in Devon from the same overlord the manors of Pocheelle (Poughill, adjacent to today's Cheriton Fitzpaine) and also Little Torrington. However, before the Norman Conquest of 1066 one of the two manors called Stocheliehad been held by a Saxon named Ordgar, "Edmer Ator's man", with land for 10 ploughs, the other by Hademar, with land for 7 ploughs. [3] The correct identification to modern places of the numerous Domesday Book manors in Devon called Stochelie, Estocheleia, Estochelia,, etc., has presented modern scholars with difficulties. [4] However, in the opinion of the authoritative Devon historian Hoskins (1966) Upcott was situated in that Stochelie held by Alured in 1086 and held before the Norman Conquest by the Saxon Ordgar, which manor "may be identified beyond doubt as South Stockleigh alias Sutton Satchvill in Cheriton Fitzpaine". [5]
Robert, Count of Mortain, rebelled against King William Rufus, the younger son of William the Conqueror and successor to the English throne, and his lands escheated to the crown. [6] These lands subsequently were split off to form several separate feudal baronies.
Following the rebellion of Robert, Count of Mortain, Alfred Pincerna and his descendants retained possession of Stockleigh and its sub-member. The "surname" of the family appears not to have become fixed, but will be represented here by the Domesday Book epithet "Pincerna". The descent was as follows: [7]
In 1200 the Pincerna family surrendered Upcott to the great magnate William Brewer (died 1226). [4]
Upcott then descended to the de Mohun family, feudal barons of Dunster, seated at Dunster Castle in Somerset. [4]
In 1365 Sir John V de Mohun, 2nd Baron Mohun, KG, (c.1320–1375) granted Upcott to Hugh de Courtenay, 2nd Earl of Devon (1303-1377), of Tiverton Castle and Okehampton Castle, and his wife Margaret de Bohun (1311-1391). [4] It thus became one of the several dozen if not over one hundred, manors held by the Earls, and descended as the Earldom of Devon. The Courtenays subinfeudated Upcott with their own followers and tenants. In the 15th century one of these was the prominent lawyer Nicholas Radford (d.1455). The Courtenay Earls of Devon were extinguished in the wars of the Roses, and their lands escheated to the crown. Thus the Courtenay overlordship ended.
In the 15th century the prominent lawyer Nicholas Radford (d.1455) was the tenant of Upcott under the Courtenay earls of Devon. In the feudal era a tenant was obliged by the terms of his tenure to remain loyal to his overlord. Radford however found himself in the situation of acting as lawyer to William Bonville, 1st Baron Bonville, of Shute, the chief enemy of his overlord Thomas de Courtenay, 5th Earl of Devon, by whose orders he was murdered at home at Upcott, which crime was one of the most notorious in 15th century England and in the entire history of Devon. Following the murder the Bonville–Courtenay feud was finally ended at the Battle of Clyst Heath (1455) at which Bonville was defeated by Courtenay's private army.
His heirs to Poughill and also to Upcott were Roger Prouz (alias Prouse) of Prouz, Devon, [10] and also his relative John Radford. [11] According to Pole [11] his sister Thomasine Radford (called Jone by Risdon) had married Roger Prouse, by whom she had a son Nicholas Prouse of Prouse. The inheritance of Upcott was contested between John Radford and the Prouse family, and according to Pole [11] the Prouses eventually released their right to John Radford. However, by a marriage settlement dated 1509, Mary Prowse brought to her husband, John Gye, lands called "Upcott" in Cheriton Fitzpaine near Poughill. In 1516 she and her husband claimed the lands of Thomas Prowse (apparently her father) in Poughill, Dodderidge, Elsington and elsewhere. [12] [13] The Courtenay Earls of Devon were extinguished in the wars of the Roses, and their lands escheated to the crown. Thus the Courtenay overlordship ended.
During the reign of King Henry VIII [14] (1509-1547) Upcott was the seat of James I Courtenay, a younger son of Sir William II Courtenay (1451–1512) of Powderham, [15] and brother of Sir William III Courtenay (1477–1535) "The Great", [16] which family during the Wars of the Roses and at the Battle of Clyst Heath (1455) were members of the Bonville faction and were thus enemies of their distant cousins the Courtenay Earls of Devon of Tiverton Castle. James I Courtenay married Anne Basset, a daughter of Sir John Basset (1462–1528), KB, of Tehidy in Cornwall and Umberleigh in Devon, Sheriff of Cornwall in 1497, 1517 and 1522 and Sheriff of Devon in 1524, by his first wife Elizabeth [17] (or Ann [18] ) Denys, daughter of John Denys of Orleigh, near Bideford, by his wife Eleanor Giffard (daughter and co-heiress of Stephen Giffard of Thuborough [19] ). Anne Basset as a child had been sent by her father, together with her sister Thomasine, to live in the household of Giles Daubeney, 1st Baron Daubeney (1451–1508), under a special agreement entered into in 1504, referred to by the family as the "Great Indenture". [20] This specified that Daubeney would pay about £2,000 for the recoveries of Basset's Beaumont inheritance on condition that one of the Basset daughters and co-heiresses would marry Daubeney's son Henry Daubeney (1493–1548), on whom the lands were entailed. The marriage never took place and in 1511 she married James Courtenay (born 1459) of Upcott, a younger son of Sir William I Courtenay (d.1485) of Powderham by his wife Margaret Bonville [21] a daughter of William Bonville, 1st Baron Bonville (d. 1461).
Two stone sculpted angels holding heraldic escutcheons survive above the capitals of the arcade separating the Upcott Chapel from the chancel of St Matthew's Church. One shows Courtenay (Or, three torteaux) impaling: a lion rampant coward (with tail between its legs) and the other Courtenay (Or, three torteaux) impaling per fess in chief: A lion passant coward (with tail between its legs) and in base: three birds.
James II Courtenay (d.1592), "The Younger", son of James I inherited Upcott from his father. He married twice:
The ledger stone (across the middle of which now stands the 1926 wooden chancel screen) of James Courtenay (d.1592) "The Younger" survives in the Upcott Chapel, St Matthew's Church, the most ancient stone in the church, [26] inscribed in Gothic script as follows:
John I Moore (1582-1641) [27] of Moore "near Tavistock", [14] in Devon (possibly More-Malherbe in the parish of Broadwoodwidger, [28] 10 miles north-west of Tavistock, where many of the Moore family were buried [29] ), married Gertrude Courtenay (1592-1666), [30] daughter and heiress of the last James Courtenay of Upcott. [31] Gertrude Courtenay was buried in the Upcott Chapel forming the east end of the north aisle of St Matthew's Church, Cheriton Fitzpaine, where her ledger stone survives, today on the floor of the vestry which together with the organ has occupied part of the former chapel. It displays the canting arms of Moore (Argent, a chevron between three moorcocks sable) [32] quartering Courtenay, and is inscribed as follows:
John II Moore (1636-1700), son and heir, who laid down two similar ledger stones in St Matthew's Church, Cheriton Fitzpaine, one to his mother Gertrude Courtenay (1592-1666) and another to his first wife who died 5 years later in 1671. He married twice:
The mural monument survives in the Upcott Chapel in St Matthew's Church, of Sara Moore (d.1691) inscribed on an oval panel as follows:
Underneath on a rectangular tablet is inscribed:
Upcott later passed to the Basset family [39] of Umberleigh, North Devon.
In about 1790 [4] Upcott was purchased from the Basset family by the Fursdon family of Fursdon, [40] [4] in the parish of Cadbury, which latter manor they had held since the reign of King Henry III (1216-1272). [41] The Courtenay family of Powderham were lords of the manor of Cadbury in the 17th century, [42] until some time before 1810, when the Fursdon family acquired that lordship. [43] The Fursdon family retained Upcott until about the 1930s. [4]
Tamerton Foliot is a village and former civil parish situated in the north of Plymouth, in the Plymouth district, in the ceremonial county of Devon, England. It also lends its name to the ecclesiastical parish of the same name.
Halsbury is a historic manor in the parish of Parkham in North Devon, England. It is situated 2 miles north-east of the village of Parkham and 4 miles south-west of the town of Bideford. Halsbury was long a seat of the ancient Giffard family, a distant descendant of which was the celebrated lawyer Hardinge Stanley Giffard, 1st Earl of Halsbury (1823–1921), who adopted the name Halsbury for his earldom and was the author of the essential legal reference books Halsbury's Statutes. Halsbury Barton, now a farmhouse, retains 16th- and 17th-century elements of the former manor house of the Giffard family. It was described in a record of 1560 as a "new dwelling house".
Sir John Basset, of Tehidy in Cornwall and of Umberleigh in Devon was Sheriff of Cornwall in 1497, 1517 and 1522 and Sheriff of Devon in 1524. Although himself an important figure in the West Country gentry, he is chiefly remembered for his connection with the life of his second wife and widow Honor Grenville, who moved into the highest society when she remarried to Arthur Plantagenet, 1st Viscount Lisle KG, an illegitimate son of King Edward IV, and an important figure at the court of King Henry VIII, his nephew.
Sir Philip Courtenay of Powderham, Devon, was the senior member of a junior branch of the powerful Courtenay family, Earls of Devon.
Sir William Courtenay (1451–1512) of Powderham in Devon, was a Lancastrian loyal to Henry Tudor, the future King Henry VII.
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The landed gentry and nobility of Devonshire, like the rest of the English and European gentry, bore heraldic arms from the start of the age of heraldry circa 1200–1215. The fashion for the display of heraldry ceased about the end of the Victorian era (1901) by which time most of the ancient arms-bearing families of Devonshire had died out, moved away or parted with their landed estates.
The Manor of Molland was a medieval manor in North Devon, England. It was largely co-terminous with the existing parish of Molland, in which is situated the village of Molland. More accurately it consisted from the earliest times of two separate manors, held from separate overlords, later known as Molland-Bottreaux and Molland-Champson.
John Basset was an English gentleman from Devon, a member of the old Basset family, and heir to a substantial inheritance. His short life is well documented in the Lisle Papers. He studied law at Lincoln's Inn and at the age of 20, at the start of a promising career, entered the household of Thomas Cromwell, Lord Privy Seal, but died suddenly aged only 23, albeit having married and produced a son and heir, born posthumously. His stepfather and father-in-law was Arthur Plantagenet, 1st Viscount Lisle, Lord Deputy of Calais (1533–1540), a bastard son of King Edward IV and thus uncle of King Henry VIII, whose arrest with that of his mother in 1540 at Calais for heresy and treason, was a major, potentially catastrophic, event in his life. He died a year after the arrests, from an unknown illness, but his siblings all went on to have successful careers, especially his younger brother James, mostly as royal courtiers, apparently unaffected by the crisis.
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Nicholas Radford of Upcott in the parish of Cheriton Fitzpaine, and of Poughill, Devon, was a prominent lawyer in the Westcountry who served as Member of Parliament for Lyme Regis, Dorset and Devon (1435). During the anarchic times of the Wars of the Roses he was caught up in the dynastic Westcountry rivalry between Thomas de Courtenay, 5th Earl of Devon, of Tiverton Castle, for whom during his minority he had acted as steward, and William Bonville, 1st Baron Bonville, of Shute. His murder in 1455 by the Earl's faction "ranks among the most notorious crimes of the century", and was the precursor of the Battle of Clyst Heath (1455) fought shortly thereafter near Exeter by the private armies of the two magnates. He served as a Justice of the Peace for Devon (1424-1455), as Escheator for Devon and Cornwall (1435-6), Recorder of Exeter (1442-1455) and as Tax Collector for Devon in 1450 and as Apprentice-at-law for the Duchy of Lancaster (1439-1455).
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