On Saturday, 7 November 2015 at 00:09:48 UTC, Patricia A. Junkin via wrote:
The inquisitions postmortem of 1346 which mention those who died in Normandy and Calais included Thomas de Wyntreshull (Wintershill) of Co. Surrey (of the family of who held manors in that county including Bramley.[Calais Roll][1]. By 1409, Thomas de
Wyntreshulle by his custos sued George Brewes for a carucate of land in Bromlegh, which Philippa de Neville had given to William de Wyntershulle and Beatrice, his wife, and heirs of their bodies in the reign of Henry III[2] In 1435, Robert Wuntershull,
Thomas Slyfield [Bruce Jun1] and Thomas Elyot sued Thomas Waller and Johanna of Guildford and Stoke[3]) In 1470: Edmund Shaa, John Asheton kt., Henry Belknap esq., John Norbury esq., Nicholas Gaynesford esquire, Geoffrey Dowenys (?), Henry Merland, and
John Shaa sued Thomas Slyfied and Anna in Pollesden, Great Bookham, Dorking, Chertsey, Lethered, and Stoke d’Abernon.[4] The manor of Bookham also was antiently held by the Dabernons when John Dabernon, kt., was holding land in Bookham in 1273[5] John
Dabernon was born in 1260 and by an unknown wife had John who married Maud Gifford.[6]
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