William Bodrugan (d. 1362) was an English politician who was MP for an unknown constituency. He was the uncle of William Bodrugan. [1]
A commission of array was a commission given by English sovereigns to officers or gentry in a given territory to muster and array the inhabitants and to see them in a condition for war, or to put soldiers of a country in a condition for military service. The term arrayers is used in some ancient English statutes, for an officer who had a commission of array.
Patrick Ryecart is an English actor.
St Goran is a coastal civil parish in Cornwall, England, UK, six miles (10 km) south-southwest of St Austell. The largest settlement in the parish is the coastal village of Gorran Haven, a mile to the east with a further cluster of homes at Trevarrick. The population at the 2011 census was 1,411.
Glasney College was founded in 1265 at Penryn, Cornwall, England, by Bishop Bronescombe and was a centre of ecclesiastical power in medieval Cornwall and probably the best known and most important of Cornwall's religious institutions.
Nicholas Adams,, of the Middle Temple, London and Townstal, near Dartmouth in Devon, was an English Member of Parliament.
Bodrugan is a Cornish surname and placename. It may refer to:
William Bodrugan may refer to:
Sir William Bodrugan was an English politician.
William Bodrugan was an English politician and grandson of politician Otto I Bodrugan. He was a son of Otto Bodrugan.
William Bodrugan was an English politician from Cornwall, the nephew of politician William Bodrugan.
Tregrehan is a country house near St. Blazey, Cornwall, designed by George Wightwick. It is described by Nikolaus Pevsner as "Late Georgian ... granite ... Ionic colonnade", [also] "a pretty little lodge".
Sir Henry de Bodrugan (c.1263–1308) was a Cornish landowner, knight and politician.
William de Bodrugan, sometimes referred to as a knight, was a Cornish priest and landowner, who became firstly Provost of Glasney College, and secondly Archdeacon of Cornwall.
Philip Beaumont (1432–1473), lord of the manors of Shirwell in North Devon and of Gittisham in East Devon, was a member of parliament for a constituency in Devon and was Sheriff of Devon in 1469. He was the rightful heir of his elder brother William Beaumont (1427–1453), a substantial landholder, but faced claims to his inheritance from his bastard nephew, John Bodrugan, "The Beaumont Bastard", the illegitimate son of Joan Courtenay, William's wife.
William Beaumont (1427–1453) was lord of the manor of Shirwell in North Devon and a substantial landholder in Devon.
John Deviock or Devyok was a Cornish gentleman and pirate from Ethy in the parish of St Winnow in Cornwall. In 1473 he was issued a Commission of array for the lieges of Cornwall to capture St Michael's Mount, which had been taken by the John de Vere, 13th Earl of Oxford and William Beaumont, 2nd Viscount Beaumont during a siege of twenty-three weeks against 6,000 of Edward IV's troops.
Sir Robert I Hill, sometimes written Hull, was an English politician and judge from the West Country.
Sir Otto I Bodrugan (1290–1331), his name often written at the time as Otes, was an English landowner, soldier and politician from St Goran in Cornwall.
Sir Robert Chalons was an English courtier, soldier, administrator and politician from Devon.
Otto Bodrugan, of Bodrugan, Cornwall, was an English politician who was MP for Cornwall in the Parliament of April 1384. He was the son of Otto Bodrugan, and his illegitimate son was William Bodrugan.
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