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Abt 1200 - Aft 1250 (~ 51 years)
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Name |
William de Toketon [1] |
Born |
Abt 1200 |
Ulhale, Kent, England [1] |
Gender |
Male |
Died |
Aft 1250 |
Upchurch, Kent, England [1] |
Notes |
- Sir William de TOKETON - b. about 1200, Ulhale, Kent; d. after 1250 Upchurch, Kent.
Son of Osmere de TOKETON. Sir William was knighted and lived in the Lathe of Scray in Kent at the latter end of the reign of Henry III (1216-1272), either at Sileham or at Tufton in Rainham, Kent. William is mentioned in an old ledger book in the abbey of St. Augustine, Canterbury, and in a deed by John de Madetune, who ..."grants and confirms to William de Toketon, and John his son, half a mark in money, a tearly rent of ten pence and a hen, which Geofry de Meredale used to pay out of a tenement with the appurtenances, near a lane leading to Sileham on the east; also an acre and three roods of land lying in a field called Hamme, and other lands thereabouts; paying yearly a pound of cummin, or a penny..." William was with Lucie his wife "possessed of all the lands and tenements which Sir Edmund Spirurnel, knt. of the county of Essex, possessed in the hundred of Middleton, alias Milton, which had been in the occupation of Henry de Albany, in consideration of eight marks," and also, about 1298 (26th of Edward I 1272-1307), they bought "an acre and a half of land, and 13 days work in Rainham" for 4 marks sterling by grant of Nicholas de Makeland.
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Person ID |
I663 |
Wm L Gann Ancestors |
Last Modified |
26 Jun 2011 |
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