de Clifford, Roger 5th Lord Clifford 1a 2a 3a 4 5a 6a 7a 8a 9a

Birth Name de Clifford, Roger 5th Lord Clifford
Gender male
Age at Death 56 years, 3 days

Narrative

<b>Additional information from genea journey:</b>
Made proof of his age 10 Aug 1354, having had livery of his lands 3 months previously. He was summoned to Parliament from 15 Dec 1357 to 28 Jul 1388. Served in the wars with Scotland and France, Sheriff of Westmorland in 1360. Had livery of the Castle in Skipton in Craven 30 Aug 1362, after his mother's death. In 1377, he was sheriff of Cumberland and Gov. of Carlisle Castle, was a Knight Banneret and was sometime Warden of the East and West Marches. He died at age 56.
<b>http://www.geneajourney.com/clffrd.html#rob2

Events

Event Date Place Description Sources
Birth 1333-07-10 Cumberland, England    
Death 1389-07-13 Appleby, Westmorland, England   4

Age: 56y 0m 3d

Burial   Shap   1b
Occupation     Sheriff of Westmoreland  
Christening F5E9DCCEDD80B446A5B2D1B584CB76931434 31 MAR 2009    

Parents

Relation to main person Name Birth date Death date Relation within this family (if not by birth)
Father de Clifford, Robert1305-11-051345-11-07
Mother de Berkeley, Isabel13071362
         de Clifford, Roger 5th Lord Clifford 1333-07-10 1389-07-13
    Sister     de Clifford, Isabella 1336

Families

Family of de Clifford, Roger 5th Lord Clifford and de Beauchamp, Maud

Unknown Partner de Beauchamp, Maud ( * 1335 + 1402 )
  Children
Name Birth Date Death Date
Clifford, Katharine13581413
de Clifford, Lewis1359before 1404-12-14
de Clifford, Maud13621442-05-16
de Clifford, Thomas 6th Lord Clifford13631391-08-18
Clifford, Isabelabout 1363about 1437
de Clifford, Maryabout 13651455
de Clifford, James13661426-10-00
de Beauchamp, Margaret de Clifford13671442-05-16
de Clifford, Alice13701430-07-29
de Clifford, Philippa13711405-07-04
de Clifford, William13751418-03-25

Source References

  1. Online Database at: http://www3.dcs.hull.ac.uk/public/genealogy/royal/catalog.html Version: 7 Mar 2005 Copyright 1994 - 2005 Maintained by Brian Tompsett Department of Computer Science University of Hull Hull, UK, HU6 7RX B.C.Tompsett@dcs.hull.ac.uk Tompsett Royal Database
      • Page: http://www3.dcs.hull.ac.uk/cgi-bin/gedlkup/n=royal?royal29172
      • Citation:

        <b>COMPILER CITES:
        </b>
        CP: Vol III[290-292]; AR: Line 11[34], Line 26[31-32], Line 29A[28-29], Line 82[30-31], Line 255[28]; DEP[122]; SGM: Douglas Richardson.

      • Page: http://www3.dcs.hull.ac.uk/cgi-bin/gedlkup/n=royal?royal29172
  2. Wanda: http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=wandawhy9&id=I7714 Clark, Robinson, Nordheim from northern Kentucky
      • Source text:

        # ID: I7714
        # Name: William IV DE BOURGOGNE
        # Given Name: William IV
        # Surname: de Bourgogne
        # Suffix: Count d'Auxonne & Macon
        # Sex: M
        # _UID: FB6F407B6BD56A4B887B5072ED754870F9AC
        # Change Date: 20 MAR 2009
        # _COLOR: 1
        # Birth: 1097 in Vienne, France
        # _TMPLT:
        # FIELD:
        # Name: Page 1
        # _TMPLT:
        # FIELD:
        # Name: Page
        # VALUE: http://www.geneajourney.com/burgcast.html#beatrixburg 2
        # _TMPLT:
        # FIELD:
        # Name: Page
        # VALUE: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00027399&tree=LEO 3
        # Death: 27 SEP 1155
        # _TMPLT:
        # FIELD:
        # Name: Page
        # VALUE: http://www3.dcs.hull.ac.uk/cgi-bin/gedlkup/n=royal?royal12768 4
        # _TMPLT:
        # FIELD:
        # Name: Page
        # VALUE: http://www.geneajourney.com/burgcast.html#beatrixburg 5
        # _TMPLT:
        # FIELD:
        # Name: Page
        # VALUE: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00027399&tree=LEO 6

         

         

        Father: Etienne I DE BOURGOGNE b: 1062
        Mother: Beatrix (DE BOURGOGNE) b: 1072

        Marriage 1 Ponce DE TRAVES b: 1090 in Traves, Haute-Saone, France

        * Married: 1125 1 7 8

        Children

        1. Has Children Gerard I DE MACON b: 1132 in Vienne, France
        2. Has Children Etienne II DE BOURGOGNE b: 1138

         

        Sources:

        1.
        2. Page: http://www.geneajourney.com/burgcast.html#beatrixburg
        Note: <b>COMPILER CITES:
        </b>
        SOURCES:
        AR: Line 132[23-25], Line 113[24-28], Line 108[24], Line 144[22-23], Line 45[26], Line 101[24], Line 110[28], Line 114[25-28], Line 116[25-26], Line 133[26], SGM: Richard Borthwick [ref: Europaiche Stammtafeln, Vol II, 59-60, Vol VII, 6; Sword, Miter, and Cloister: Nobility and the Church of Burgundy 980-1198, Cornell Univ. Press, 1987].

         

        Text: <b>William III of Macon</b>, <i>Count of Macon and Auxonne</i>, b abt 1097
        3. Page: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00027399&tree=LEO
        Note: <b>LEO CITES:
        </b>
        Europäische Stammtafeln, Band II, Frank Baron Freytag von Loringhoven, 1975, Isenburg, W. K. Prinz von, Reference: Page 27
        The Plantagenet Ancestry, Baltimore, 1975 , Turton, Lt.Col. W. H., Reference: 80

         

        Text: Birth 1090/1095 Sex Male Lived In France
        4. Abbrev: Tompsett Royal Database
        Title: Online Database at:
        http://www3.dcs.hull.ac.uk/public/genealogy/royal/catalog.html
        Version: 7 Mar 2005
        Copyright 1994 - 2005
        Maintained by Brian Tompsett
        Department of Computer Science
        University of Hull
        Hull, UK, HU6 7RX
        B.C.Tompsett@dcs.hull.ac.uk
        Name: Footnote
        Page: http://www3.dcs.hull.ac.uk/cgi-bin/gedlkup/n=royal?royal12768
        Text: Died: 27 Sep 1155
        5. Page: http://www.geneajourney.com/burgcast.html#beatrixburg
        Note: <b>COMPILER CITES:
        </b>
        SOURCES:
        AR: Line 132[23-25], Line 113[24-28], Line 108[24], Line 144[22-23], Line 45[26], Line 101[24], Line 110[28], Line 114[25-28], Line 116[25-26], Line 133[26], SGM: Richard Borthwick [ref: Europaiche Stammtafeln, Vol II, 59-60, Vol VII, 6; Sword, Miter, and Cloister: Nobility and the Church of Burgundy 980-1198, Cornell Univ. Press, 1987].

         

        Text: d 27 Sep 1155
        6. Page: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00027399&tree=LEO
        Note: <b>LEO CITES:
        </b>
        Europäische Stammtafeln, Band II, Frank Baron Freytag von Loringhoven, 1975, Isenburg, W. K. Prinz von, Reference: Page 27
        The Plantagenet Ancestry, Baltimore, 1975 , Turton, Lt.Col. W. H., Reference: 80

         

        Text: Died 1155
        7. Page: http://www.geneajourney.com/burgcast.html#beatrixburg
        Note: <b>COMPILER CITES:
        </b>
        SOURCES:
        AR: Line 132[23-25], Line 113[24-28], Line 108[24], Line 144[22-23], Line 45[26], Line 101[24], Line 110[28], Line 114[25-28], Line 116[25-26], Line 133[26], SGM: Richard Borthwick [ref: Europaiche Stammtafeln, Vol II, 59-60, Vol VII, 6; Sword, Miter, and Cloister: Nobility and the Church of Burgundy 980-1198, Cornell Univ. Press, 1987].

         

        Text: He md <b>Ponce de Traves</b> abt 1125.
        8. Page: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00027399&tree=LEO
        Text: Family <u>Poncette de Traves </u>

         

      • Citation:

        e-mail: wandawhy9@msn.com

  3. Michael Neuman: http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=:2944943&id=I07783 Smith-Goodale-Chase
      • Source text:

        # ID: I07783
        # Name: Petronille Adelaide DE JOINY
        # Sex: F
        # Birth: ABT 1000 in Joinville, France

         

         

        Father: III FROMOND , Count of Joinville b: ABT 960 in Joinville, France
        Mother: Manfrede DE MONSTIER-RAMEY b: ABT 965 in Monstier-Ramey, France

        Marriage 1 IV ENGILBERT , Count de Brienne b: ABT 995 in Brienne, France

        Children

        1. Has Children Adelaide DE BRIENNE b: ABT 1015 in Brienne, France
        2. Has Children Walter GAUTHIER I, Count de Brienne b: ABT 1030 in Brienne, France

      • Citation:

        e-mail: michaelneuman@earthlink.net

  4. LYZJ-32W FamilySearch.org
  5. Roger de Clifford, 5th Baron de Clifford (1333-1389), Wikipedia
      • Source text:

        Roger de Clifford, 5th Baron de Clifford, ninth Lord Clifford, fifth Baron of Westmoreland (10 July 1333[1] - 13 July 1389), was the son of Robert de Clifford, 3rd Baron de Clifford (d. 20 May 1344), second son of Robert de Clifford, 1st Baron de Clifford (1273–1314), the founder of the northern branch of the family. His mother was Isabella (d. 25 July 1362), daughter of Maurice, 2nd Lord Berkeley. He succeeded his elder brother, Robert de Clifford, 4th Baron de Clifford in 1350, on which day he made proof of his age.[2]"

        Life : -- Military career:
        " Clifford entered on his military career when hardly more than twelve, being armed at the time of Jacob van Artevelde's death on 17 July 1345.[3]

        In August 1350 he was engaged in the seafight with the Spaniards near Winchelsea; and in 1355 he accompanied his father-in-law, Thomas de Beauchamp, 11th Earl of Warwick, on the expedition to Gascony.[4] He again served in Gascony in 1359, 1360, and in the French expedition of the Duke of Lancaster in 1373.

        A document dated at Brougham 10 July 1369 shows him engaging the services of Richard le Fleming and his company for a year. In the same way he retained Sir Roger de Mowbray; and was himself retained, with his company of nearly eighty men, by Edmund Mortimer, 3rd Earl of March, on 25 September 1379.[5]

        On 15 March 1361 he was called upon to assist Lionel, duke of Clarence, in his great Irish expedition on pain of forfeiting his Irish estates. A similar summons to defend his lands in Ireland was issued on 28 July 1368.[6]

        His chief services, however, were rendered on the Scotch borders. In July 1370 he was appointed one of the wardens of the west marches; but according to Sir H. Nicolas he is found defending the northern borders fourteen years earlier.[7] Resigned the truce with Scotland on 24 August 1369, and was warden of both east and west marches on five occasions between 1380 and 1385.

        In August 1385 he accompanied Richard II's expedition against Scotland with sixty men-at-arms and forty archers. His last border sendee seems to have been in October 1388, when he was ordered to adopt measures of defence for the Scotch Marches.[8] In May 1388 he accompanied Richard FitzAlan, 11th Earl of Arundel, in his naval expedition to Brittany.[9]"

        Life : -- Political Offices:
        "He was hereditary High Sheriff of Westmorland from 1350? until his death in 1389. In 1377 he was made High Sheriff of Cumberland and governor of Carlisle, a city whose walls he appears to have inspected and found weak in the preceding year. To the last two offices he was reappointed on Richard II's accession.

        He was made a commissioner of array against the Scots (26 February 1372), and one of a body of commissioners to correct truce-breakers and decide border disputes 26 May 1373, having sat on a similar commission in September 1367."

        Life : -- Parliament:
        " Clifford was summoned to all parliaments from 15 December 1356 to 28 July 1388.[10] He was trier of petitions in many parliaments from November 1373 to September 1377. In August 1374 he was appointed one of the commissioners to settle the dispute between Henry de Percy and William, Earl of Douglas, relative to the possession of Jedworth Forest. In the parliament of November 1381 he was member of a committee to confer with the House of Commons. On 12 October 1386 he gave evidence in the great Scrope and Grosvenor case at St. Margaret's Church, Westminster."

        Death and Succession : --
        " Roger de Clifford died 13 July 1389, being then possessed of enormous estates, chiefly situated in Yorkshire, Northumberland, Cumberland, and Westmoreland, but spread over several other counties.[11] He was succeeded by his son Thomas de Clifford, 6th Baron de Clifford."

        Marriage and Issue : --
        " He married Maud (d. 1403), daughter of Thomas de Beauchamp, 11th Earl of Warwick.[12]

        Thomas de Clifford, 6th Baron de Clifford (d. 1391 ?)
        William Clifford, the Governor of Berwick (d. 1419)
        Margaret, married Sir John Melton, knight
        Katherine, married Ralph, lord Greystock
        Philippa, married William Ferrers, 5th Baron Ferrers of Groby (Lewis, Ancestral Roots, 8th ed. (2006), line 11, no. 34)

        Dugdale gives him a third son, the Lollard, Sir Lewis Clifford (d. 1404), whom, however, Sir H. Nicolas shows to have been probably his brother, but certainly not his son[13]

        Magna Carta Ancestry by Douglas Richardson lists three sons, including a Roger, no additional information."

        Genealogy : --
        "
        The genealogical table in Whitaker gives Clifford two brothers, John de Clifford and Thomas de Clifford, said to have been the ancestor of Richard de Clifford, Bishop of London, and three sisters.

         

        References : -- The citations themselves are listed above under "Where the Record(s) are Found (Citation):" and in addition: -
        " This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: "Clifford, Roger de (1333-1389)". Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900."

      • Citation:

        Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, 19 August 2016, 20:58 UTC, [accessed 19 August 2016]
        Citations {References} referring to sources included under 'Descibe the record' below are: - "
        [1]. (Scr. and Gros. Roll, text, i. 197)
        [2]. (Dugdale, i. 240; Whitaker, pp. 310-11; Hist. Peerage, 117; Hist. of Westmoreland, i. 279; Escheat Rolls, ii. 118, 248)
        [3]. (Scr. and Gros. Roll, i. 197)
        [4]. (Whitaker, 314- 315; Dugdale, i. 340)
        [5]. (Dugdale, i. 340; Whitaker, 317)
        [6]. (Rymer, vi. 319, 595)
        [7]. (Rymer, vi. 657; Dugdale, i. 340; Scrope Roll, ii. 469, &c.)
        [8]. (Rymer, vi. 570, 637, 714, vii. 9, 475; Nicolas, Scr. and Gros. Roll, ii. 469, &c.)
        [9]. (Scr. and Gros. Roll, i. 197, ii. 469, &c.; Rymer, vii. 45)
        [10]. (Dugdale, i. 340; Hist. Peerage, 117)
        [11]. (Dugdale, i. 341; Escheat Rolls, iii. 113)
        [12]. (cf. Escheat Rolls, iii. 286)
        [13]. (Dugdale, i. 340-2; Whitaker, 314-16; Nicolas, Scr. and Gros. Roll, ii. 427, &c.)

        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roger_Clifford,_5th_Baron_Clifford

  6. Roger de Clifford, 5th Lord Clifford (1333-1389), The Peerage
      • Source text:

        Roger de Clifford, 5th Lord Clifford was born on 10 July 1333.1 He was the son of Robert de Clifford, 3rd Lord Clifford and Isabel de Berkeley.2 He was baptised on 20 July 1333 at Brougham, Westmorland, EnglandG.3 He married Maud de Beauchamp, daughter of Thomas de Beauchamp, 11th Earl of Warwick and Katherine Mortimer, before 1363.2,4 He died on 13 July 1389 at age 56.2
        He succeeded as the 5th Lord Clifford [E., 1299] in 1345.2 He held the office of Sheriff of Westmorland in 1360.2 He fought in the Wars in France.2 He fought in the Scottish Wars.2 He was appointed Knight Banneret.2 He held the office of Governor of Carlisle Castle in 1377.2 He held the office of Sheriff of Cumberland in 1377.2 He has an extensive biographical entry in the Dictionary of National Biography.5

        Children of Roger de Clifford, 5th Lord Clifford and Maud de Beauchamp
        Katherine de Clifford+1 d. 23 Apr 1413
        Philippe de Clifford+4
        unknown daughter de Clifford4
        unknown daughter de Clifford4
        Thomas de Clifford, 6th Lord Clifford+2 b. c 1363, d. 18 Aug 1391
        Sir William de Clifford4 b. a 1364, d. c 1419

      • Citation:

        https://www.thepeerage.com/p17626.htm#i176255
        Citations: [S15] George Edward Cokayne, editor, The Complete Baronetage, 5 volumes (no date (c. 1900); reprint, Gloucester, U.K.: Alan Sutton Publishing, 1983), volume III, page 292. Hereinafter cited as The Complete Baronetage.
        [S6] G.E. Cokayne; with Vicary Gibbs, H.A. Doubleday, Geoffrey H. White, Duncan Warrand and Lord Howard de Walden, editors, The Complete Peerage of England, Scotland, Ireland, Great Britain and the United Kingdom, Extant, Extinct or Dormant, new ed., 13 volumes in 14 (1910-1959; reprint in 6 volumes, Gloucester, U.K.: Alan Sutton Publishing, 2000), volume III, page 292. Hereinafter cited as The Complete Peerage.
        [S2] Peter W. Hammond, editor, The Complete Peerage or a History of the House of Lords and All its Members From the Earliest Times, Volume XIV: Addenda & Corrigenda (Stroud, Gloucestershire, U.K.: Sutton Publishing, 1998), page 188. Hereinafter cited as The Complete Peerage, Volume XIV.

  7. Sir Roger de Clifford, 5th Lord Clifford (1333-1389), "Our Royal, Titled, Noble, and Commoner Ancestors"
      • Source text:

        Sir Roger de Clifford, 5th Lord Clifford, Sheriff of Westmorland & Cumberland, Governor of Carlisle Castle
        M, #15388, b. 10 July 1333, d. 13 July 1389
        Father Sir Robert de Clifford, 3rd Lord Clifford, Sheriff of Westmorland16,17 b. 5 Nov 1305, d. 20 May 1344
        Mother Isabel de Berkeley16,17 d. 25 Jul 1362
        Sir Roger de Clifford, 5th Lord Clifford, Sheriff of Westmorland & Cumberland, Governor of Carlisle Castle was born on 10 July 1333 at of Clifford, Hay, Herefordshire, England.2,9 He married Maud de Beauchamp, daughter of Sir Thomas de Beauchamp, 11th Earl of Warwick, Sheriff of Worcestershire, Warwickshire, & Leicestershire, Marshal of England and Katherine de Mortimer, before 20 March 1357; They had 3 sons (Sir Thomas, 6th Lord Clifford; Roger; & Sir William) and 3 daughter (Philippe, wife of Sir William Ferrers, 5th Lord Ferrers; Katherine, wife of Sir Ralph Greystoke, 3rd Lord Greystoke; & Margaret, wife of Sir John Melton).2,3,4,8,9,10,11,12 Sir Roger de Clifford, 5th Lord Clifford, Sheriff of Westmorland & Cumberland, Governor of Carlisle Castle died on 13 July 1389 at age 56.2,9
        Family: Maud de Beauchamp b. c 1347, d. Jan 1403 or Feb 1403
        Children:
        Philippe Clifford+18,4,7,9,11,15 d. bt 4 Jul 1405 - 9 Aug 1416
        Margaret Clifford+5,9,12,13
        Maud Clifford+19 d. b 16 May 1442
        Sir William Clifford2 d. 25 Mar 1418
        Sir Thomas Clifford, 6th Lord Clifford, Sheriff of Westmorland, Governor of Carlisle Castle+20,9 b. c 1363, d. 18 Aug 1391
        Katherine Clifford+21,22,6,9,10,14 b. c 1369, d. 23 Apr 1413

      • Citation:

        https://our-royal-titled-noble-and-commoner-ancestors.com/p512.htm#i15388
        Citations: 1. [S4138] Unknown author, The Complete Peerage, by Cokayne, Vol. III, p. 292, Vol. VI, p. 196; Ancestral Roots of 60 Colonists, p. 31; Burke's Peerage, 1938, p. 759.
        2. [S5] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry, p. 215.
        3. [S16] Douglas Richardson, Magna Carta Ancestry, 2nd Edition, Vol. I, p. 144. see URL for 22 sources

  8. Roger de Clifford (1333-1389), Find A Grave Memorial Page (update)
      • Source text:

        Sir Roger de Clifford
        BIRTH 10 Jul 1333 Brough, Eden District, Cumbria, England
        DEATH 13 Jul 1389 (aged 56) Brough, Eden District, Cumbria, England
        BURIAL Shap Abbey
        Shap, Eden District, Cumbria, England
        MEMORIAL ID 51965543

        ---

        Knight, 5th Lord of Clifford, of Appleby, Borough, Brougham, King's Meaburn, Westmorland. Hereditary Sheriff of Westmorland, Warden of the East and West Marches of Scotland, Sheriff of Cumberland, Governor of Carlisle Castle

        Younger son of Robert de Clifford and Isabel de Berkeley. Heir to his brother, Robert de Clifford, 4th Lord Clifford.

        Husband of Maud de Beauchamp, daughter of Sir Thomas de Beauchamp and Katherine de Mortimer. They were married before 20 March 1357, and had three sons and three daughters:
        * Sir Thomas, 6th Lord Clifford married Elizabeth Roos, their son was Sir John de Clifford
        * Roger
        * Sir William
        * Phillipa, wife of William Ferrers
        * Margaret, wife of John Melton
        * Katherine, wife of Ralph Greystoke

        1350 - present at sea fight in the Spaniards at Winchelsea
        1354 - had livery of his lands
        1355 - on the expedition to Gascony
        1356 - employed in defenses of Marches of Scotland
        1357 - married Maud de Beauchamp, daughter of Thomas and Katherine de Mortimer
        1357 - summoned to Parliament (to 1388)
        1362 - received livery of the Castle of Skipton in Craven after mother's death
        1363 - Trier of Petitions in Parliament (1373, 1376-1377)
        1386 - gave evidence in the Scrope Grosvenor trial
        1388 - accompanied Richard Arundel into Brittany

      • Citation:

        https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/51965543/roger-de-clifford

      • Source text:

        827. Roger de Clifford, knight
        Writ, 20 July, 13 Richard II
        OXFORD. Inq. taken at Tettesworth, 18 August, 13 Richard II.
        He held no lands &c. in the county, but he was seised in fee of the under-mentioned fees.
        Shiteford. One knight’s fee, held by John de Clynton, knight, and Elizabeth his wife, and their parceners.
        Prestcote. A moiety of a knight’s fee, to wit, the manor of Prestcote, held by Thomas de Cottesford, knight.
        Date of death not known. Thomas de Clifford, knight, his son, aged 24 years and more, is his heir.
        828.
        Writ, 20 July, 13 Richard II
        HEREFORD. Inq. (indented) taken at Webley, Saturday before St. Laurence, 13 Richard II.
        Twelve years before his death he gave the under-mentioned manor to Thomas de Clyfford, his son, and Elizabeth, the latter’s wife, and the heirs of their bodies, saving the reversion to himself and his heirs. Thomas and Elizabeth were seised of the manor accordingly, and have continued their estate thereof until now. So Roger died seised of the reversion.
        Brugge Soleres alias Brugge up Wye. The manor, held of the bishop of Hereford, as of his bishopric, by service of a fourth part of a knight’s fee.
        He died on 13 July in the year aforesaid. The said Thomas his son, aged 26 years and more, is his heir.
        829.
        Writ, 18 July, 13 Richard II
        WORCESTER. Inq. (indented) taken at Worcester, 2 August, 13 Richard II.
        He died seised in his demesne as of fee of the reversion of the under-mentioned manor, which Euphemia de Heslarton holds for life of his inheritance.
        Severnestok. The manor, held of the heirs of Sir Edward le Despenser by service of a fourth part of a knight’s fee.
        Date of death and heir as last above.
        830.
        Writ 18 July, 13 Richard II
        LONDON. Inq. taken in the Guildhall, 28 August, 13 Richard II.
        He held the under-mentioned messuage in joint feoffment with Maud his wife, who is still living, by gift of Thomas de Broghton, parson of the church of Newton, and Robert Pay, parson of the church of Thoresby, by a charter enrolled in the husting of London, to hold to them and his heirs.
        Parish of St. Dunstan West. A messuage, held of the king in free burgage, as is the whole city of London, by service of 1d. to be paid yearly at the Exchequer at Michaelmas by the hands of the sheriff of London.
        Date of death as above. Heir as above, aged 24 years and more.
        831.
        Writ, 19 July, 13 Richard II
        NOTTINGHAM. Inq. taken at Byngham in le Vale, 15 August, 13 Richard II.
        He held no lands &c. in the county, but he was seised of the under-mentioned fees.
        Stanford on Sure. One knight’s fee, held by Robert de Swylyngton, knight.
        Torleston. One knight’s fee, held by Robert Barry, knight.
        Shelton in le Vale. A moiety of a knight’s fee, held by Thomas de Staunton, knight.
        Peverelthorp. A moiety of a knight’s fee, held by the lord le Spenser.
        Date of death and heir as first above.
        832.
        Writ, 18 July, 13 Richard II
        NORTHAMPTON. Inq. taken at Towecestre, 17 August, 13 Richard II.
        He held no lands &c. in the county, but he died seised of the under-mentioned fee.
        Auescotes and Pateshull. One knight’s fee, held by Thomas son and heir of Richard de Maundevill, knight.
        Date of death and heir as first above.
        833.
        Writ, 18 July, 13 Richard II
        YORK. Inq. taken at Skypton in Craven, 14 August, 13 Richard II.
        He held the under-mentioned castle and manor of Skypton in fee tail, to him and the heirs of his body, by reason of a charter whereby Edward II granted the same, with all knight’s fees and advowsons pertaining thereto, to Robert de Clifford, whose heir he was, and the heirs of the body of the said Robert, with reversion to Edward II and his heirs.
        He held in his demesne as of fee the under-mentioned 4 messuages &c. within the lordship of Skypton, which were acquired by him and his ancestors after the acquisition of the castle and manor aforesaid.
        He was also seised of the reversion of the under-mentioned manor of Maltby, which is held for life by Euphemia de Heslarton of his inheritance.
        He was also seised of the reversion of the under-mentioned priory of Bolton as appurtenant to the aforesaid manor and castle; and the lord of the castle and manor presents to the office of porter of the priory when it falls vacant.
        Skypton in Craven. The castle and manor (extent given), held of the king in chief by service of a fifteenth part of an earldom, to wit, the earldom of Aumale. The extent includes a market every Saturday and fairs on the feasts of St. Martin in the Winter and St. James, with a court of burgesses and other profits, 2 parks stocked with deer called ‘le …’ and ‘le Neweparke’, 57s. 7 1/2d. of a certain free rent called ‘wapentakefynes’ from divers knight’s fees, and a court of foreign tenants; and the appurtenances comprise the following (down to and including Stretton).
        Bradleygh, Paytbrig and Streton, Lobbewyth, Skybeden, Hertlyngton, Appletrewyk, Doxhull, Sutton, Caldenewton and Ayrton. 42s. 10d. free rent from divers free tenants.
        Le Holme. A manor so called.
        Elyshowe. 2 tenements for vaccaries in a foreign wood so called.
        Crokerys. A park so called, with a lodge in it.
        Berdenforest. A chase so called, wherein are 14 tenements for vaccaries, a watermill, and agistments worth 13s. 4d. yearly.
        Holden. A chase so called, with 2 tenements for vaccaries, and agistments worth …
        Sylesden. A town so called with Swarthowe and Brontweyte hamlets thereof (extent given).
        Skybeden. 24 bovates of land in the hands of divers bond tenants, arrented from of old at 6l. yearly.
        Thorleby. 24 bovates of land in the hands of divers tenants at farm for 4l. yearly; and 8 bovates of land occupied at farm by the clerk of the chapel of the castle aforesaid for 20s. yearly.
        Stretton. A toft and 2 bovates of land called ‘Cheteland’, let at farm for 6s. yearly; and 4 cottages and waste tofts, let at farm for 4s. yearly.
        Skypton. 4 messuages and 60 a. land within the lordship, held of the king by fealty only.
        Maltby. The reversion of the manor, held of the castle of Tikhull by knight’s service.
        Bolton in Craven. The advowson of the priory, which pertains to the aforesaid manor and castle because the lord thereof presents to the office of porter of the priory whenever it falls vacant.
        He died on 13 July last. Thomas de Clifford, knight, his son, aged 24 years and more, is his heir.
        834.
        Writ, 18 July, 13 Richard II
        NORTHUMBERLAND. Inq. taken at Hert, Monday the eve of St. Laurence, 13 Richard II.
        He held the under-mentioned manor &c. jointly with Maud his wife, who is still living, the reversion belonging to his heirs.
        Hert. The manor, with Hertilpole (extent given), held of the king in chief by homage and fealty. The town of Hertilpole is let for this year to divers tenants at 10l. The following are free tenants who hold of the manor:—
        Ralph lord de Neville, who holds the town of Elwyk by homage and fealty only.
        Ralph de Lumley, knight, who holds the town of Stranton by homage and fealty only.
        Marmaduke de Lumley, who holds a manor in Stranton by homage and fealty, and by a pair of gilt spurs or 12d., 1 lb. pepper and 1d. yearly.
        Matthew de Redmane, knight, who holds the town of Brerton in right of his wife by homage and fealty and 15d. yearly.
        Thomas de Merkynfeld, knight, who holds 4 husbandlands in the town of Morleston by homage and fealty and 12d. yearly, and 3 husbandlands in Nethirthorston by fealty and a rent of 1d. yearly.
        Gerard Heron, knight, who holds a carucate of land in Northhert by homage and fealty only.
        Richard de Nelleston, who holds the town of Nelleston by homage and fealty only.
        Alan Lambard, who holds 6 burgage tenements in the town of Hertilpole by homage and service of a pair of gilt spurs yearly.
        Date of death and heir (aged 25 years and more) as above.
        835.
        CUMBERLAND. Inq. taken at Penreth, Tuesday after St. Peter’s Chains, 13 Richard II.
        He held the under-mentioned third part in fee tail, to him and the heirs of his body.
        Skelton. A third part of the manor, held of the king in chief by homage and fealty and service of rendering at the Exchequer of the castle of Carlisle by the hands of the sheriff 7s. 6d. yearly at the Assumption for cornage. The extent includes messuages and lands which are worth nothing this year because of the destruction of the countryside by the king’s enemies of Scotland, a messuage with 6 a. land in ‘le lathes’ which is worth nothing for the same cause, lands &c. in Alanby, Lammanby and Hunthank which are held at rent by tenants at will, and a free tenant, Nicholas de Orton, who holds a messuage and 20 a. land and renders 6d. yearly at the Assumption for all services.
        Date of death and heir as last above.
        836.
        WESTMORLAND. Inq. taken at Appelby, Monday after St. Peter’s Chains, 13 Richard II. (fn. 1)
        He died seised jointly with Maud his wife, who is still living, to them and his heirs, of the under-mentioned castle and manor of Burgham.
        He died seised in fee tail, to him and the heirs male of his body, of the other under-mentioned manors, lands etc.
        Appelby. The castle and manor (extent given, including lands in Merton and Kirkebythore).
        Langeton. The manor (extent given, including an enclosed wood called Flakebryge).
        Burgh. The castle and manor (extent given). The extent includes a pasture called Sourebymour, a toll of fairs, a farm called ‘rekesilver’, 25 tofts in Nethirburgh, 12s. yearly rent from Cabergh and Hebbele pertaining to the constable of the castle, 29 cowpastures on Stanesmore and closes called …, ‘le Alde Parke’ and ‘le Redgateclose’. The following tenants are named:— Thomas de Derby, John de Oxenhawth, John Diconson, Joan Bowet, John Spenser, Henry de Mallerstange, William Smyth, Robert Douglas, Thomas Culverdouff. A rent of 12 quarters of oats is granted to Adam de Terry, constable of the castle.
        Much of the above manors is destroyed by the Scots.
        Wynton. The manor (extent given, including a tenement called ‘Rokebystarth’).

      • Citation:

        M. C. B. Dawes, M. R. Devine, H. E. Jones and M. J. Post, 'Inquisitions Post Mortem, Richard II, File 59', in Calendar of Inquisitions Post Mortem: Volume 16, Richard II (London, 1974), pp. 320-328. British History Online http://www.british-history.ac.uk/inquis-post-mortem/vol16/pp320-328 [accessed 29 June 2020].

        https://www.british-history.ac.uk/inquis-post-mortem/vol16/pp320-328

  9. BIO: from http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/ENGLISHNOBILITYMEDIEVAL3.htm#RogerClifforddied1389
      • Source text:

        ROGER [V] de Clifford, son of ROBERT [II] de Clifford Lord Clifford & his wife Isabel de Berkeley (10 Jul 1333-13 Jul 1389). Lord Clifford.

        m MATILDA de Beauchamp, daughter of THOMAS de Beauchamp Earl of Warwick & his wife Katherine de Mortimer (-[Jan/Feb] 1403). Her parentage and marriage are shown in the Complete Peerage, but without citing any sources[2687]. The will of "Katherine Countess of Warwick", dated 4 Aug 1369, bequeathed property to “the Earl my husband...Thomas my son...William my other son...Maud de Clifford my daughter...Philippa de Stafford my daughter...my daughter Alice...Margaret Montfort my daughter...Isabel my daughter...Elizabeth the daughter of my son Guy...”[2688]. The will of "Thomas Beauchamp Earl of Warwick", dated 1 Apr 1400, bequeathed property to “Richard my son and heir...my daughter Beauchamp...my brother of Bergavenny...my sisters of Suffolk and Clifford and...my niece Katherine Beauchamp the nun at Shouldham”[2689].

        Roger [V] & his wife had children:
        1. THOMAS de Clifford ([1362/63]-18 Aug 1391). Lord Clifford. m ELIZABETH de Ros, daughter of THOMAS de Ros Lord Ros & his wife Beatrice de Stafford of the Earls of Stafford (-Mar 1424).

        ** from Complete Peerage, v 3 p 292

        Clifford. Roger (de Clifford), Lord Clifford, Sheriff of Westmorland, brother and heir, born 10 July 1333, made proof of his hage, 10 Aug. 1354, having had livery of his lands 3 months before, 14 May 1354. He was summoned to Parliament from 15 Dec. 1357 to 28 July 1388. He was one of the most distinguished of his rce, serving in the wars with Scotland and France. Sheriff of Westmorland in 1360. He had livery of the Castle of Skipton in Craven 30 Aug. 1362, after his mother's death. In 1377 he was Sheriff of Cumberland, and Governor of Carlisle Castle, was a Knight Banneret, and was sometime Warden of the East and West Marches. On 12 Oct. he gave evidence in the famous Scrope and Grosvenor controversy.

        He married Maud, daughter of Thomas (de Beauchamp), Earl of Warwick, by Catherine, daughter of Roger (de Mortimer), 1st Earl of March. He died 13 July 1389, aged 56. His widow died Jan. or Feb. 1402/3.

        ** from Wikipedia listing for Roger Clifford, 5th Baron Clifford as of 7/6/2020

        Roger de Clifford, 5th Baron de Clifford, ninth Lord Clifford, fifth Baron of Westmoreland (10 July 1333[1] – 13 July 1389), was the son of Robert de Clifford, 3rd Baron de Clifford (d. 20 May 1344), second son of Robert de Clifford, 1st Baron de Clifford (1273–1314), the founder of the northern branch of the family. His mother was Isabella (d. 25 July 1362), daughter of Maurice, 2nd Lord Berkeley. He succeeded his elder brother, Robert de Clifford, 4th Baron de Clifford in 1350, on which day he made proof of his age.[2]

        Life
        Military career
        Clifford entered on his military career when hardly more than twelve, being armed at the time of Jacob van Artevelde's death on 17 July 1345.[3]

        In August 1350 he was engaged in the seafight with the Spaniards near Winchelsea; and in 1355 he accompanied his father-in-law, Thomas de Beauchamp, 11th Earl of Warwick, on the expedition to Gascony.[4] He again served in Gascony in 1359, 1360, and in the French expedition of the Duke of Lancaster in 1373.

        A document dated at Brougham of 10 July 1369 shows him engaging the services of Richard le Fleming and his company for a year. In the same way he retained Sir Roger de Mowbray; and was himself retained, with his company of nearly eighty men, by Edmund Mortimer, 3rd Earl of March, on 25 September 1379.[5]

        On 15 March 1361 he was called upon to assist Lionel, duke of Clarence, in his great Irish expedition on pain of forfeiting his Irish estates. A similar summons to defend his lands in Ireland was issued on 28 July 1368.[6]

        His chief services, however, were rendered on the Scottish borders. In July 1370 he was appointed one of the wardens of the west marches; but according to Sir H. Nicolas he is found defending the northern borders fourteen years earlier.[7] Resigned the truce with Scotland on 24 August 1369, and was warden of both east and west marches on five occasions between 1380 and 1385.

        In August 1385 he accompanied Richard II's expedition against Scotland with sixty men-at-arms and forty archers. His last border sendee seems to have been in October 1388, when he was ordered to adopt measures of defence for the Scotch Marches.[8] In May 1388 he accompanied Richard FitzAlan, 11th Earl of Arundel, in his naval expedition to Brittany.[9]

        Political Offices
        He was hereditary High Sheriff of Westmorland from 1350? until his death in 1389. In 1377 he was made High Sheriff of Cumberland and governor of Carlisle, a city whose walls he appears to have inspected and found weak in the preceding year. To the last two offices he was reappointed on Richard II's accession.

        He was made a commissioner of array against the Scots (26 February 1372), and one of a body of commissioners to correct truce-breakers and decide border disputes 26 May 1373, having sat on a similar commission in September 1367.

        Parliament
        Clifford was summoned to all parliaments from 15 December 1356 to 28 July 1388.[10] He was trier of petitions in many parliaments from November 1373 to September 1377. In August 1374 he was appointed one of the commissioners to settle the dispute between Henry de Percy and William, Earl of Douglas, relative to the possession of Jedworth Forest. In the parliament of November 1381 he was member of a committee to confer with the House of Commons. On 12 October 1386 he gave evidence in the great Scrope and Grosvenor case at St. Margaret's Church, Westminster.

        Death and Succession
        Roger de Clifford died 13 July 1389, being then possessed of enormous estates, chiefly situated in Yorkshire, Northumberland, Cumberland, and Westmoreland, but spread over several other counties.[11] He was succeeded by his son Thomas de Clifford, 6th Baron de Clifford.

        Marriage and Issue
        He married Maud (d. 1403), daughter of Thomas de Beauchamp, 11th Earl of Warwick.[12]

        Thomas de Clifford, 6th Baron de Clifford (d. 1391 ?)
        William Clifford, the Governor of Berwick (d. 1419)
        Margaret, married Sir John Melton, knight
        Katherine, married Ralph, lord Greystock
        Philippa, married William Ferrers, 5th Baron Ferrers of Groby (Lewis, Ancestral Roots, 8th ed. (2006), line 11, no. 34)
        Dugdale gives him a third son, the Lollard, Sir Lewis Clifford (d. 1404), whom, however, Sir H. Nicolas shows to have been probably his brother, but certainly not his son[13]

        Magna Carta Ancestry by Douglas Richardson lists three sons, including a Roger, no additional information.

        Genealogy
        The genealogical table in Whitaker gives Clifford two brothers, John de Clifford and Thomas de Clifford, said to have been the ancestor of Richard de Clifford, Bishop of London, and three sisters.

        References
        (Scr. and Gros. Roll, text, i. 197)
        (Dugdale, i. 240; Whitaker, pp. 310–11; Hist. Peerage, 117; Hist. of Westmoreland, i. 279; Escheat Rolls, ii. 118, 248)
        (Scr. and Gros. Roll, i. 197)
        (Whitaker, 314- 315; Dugdale, i. 340)
        (Dugdale, i. 340; Whitaker, 317)
        (Rymer, vi. 319, 595)
        (Rymer, vi. 657; Dugdale, i. 340; Scrope Roll, ii. 469, &c.)
        (Rymer, vi. 570, 637, 714, vii. 9, 475; Nicolas, Scr. and Gros. Roll, ii. 469, &c.)
        (Scr. and Gros. Roll, i. 197, ii. 469, &c.; Rymer, vii. 45)
        (Dugdale, i. 340; Hist. Peerage, 117)
        (Dugdale, i. 341; Escheat Rolls, iii. 113)
        (cf. Escheat Rolls, iii. 286)
        (Dugdale, i. 340-2; Whitaker, 314-16; Nicolas, Scr. and Gros. Roll, ii. 427, &c.)
        This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: "Clifford, Roger de (1333-1389)". Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.