Person:Dame Everard (1)

Watchers
  1. Dame Johanna De EverardAbt 1570 - 1638
m. Abt 1588
  1. Margaret Hamilton - Aft 1629
m. 31 Aug 1604
  1. Sir William Semple, Knight, 'of Letterkenny'Bef 1591 - Bef 1618
  2. Levimus SempleAbt 1606 -
m. Abt 1611
m. 1615
Facts and Events
Name Dame Johanna De Everard
Gender Female
Birth? Abt 1570 Mechelen, Antwerpen, Belgium
Marriage Abt 1588 Contract Marriageto Sir John Hamilton, 'of Lincleif'
Marriage 31 Aug 1604 Contract Marriage
to Robert Semple, 4th Lord Sempill
Marriage Abt 1611 County Donegal, Republic of Irelandto Captain Patrick Crawford
Marriage 1615 to Sir George Marbury
Death? 14 Jun 1638 Letterkenny, Conwal, County Donegal, Republic of Ireland

Johanna Everard

  • The Scots Peerage by Paul, James
Page 551, 552, 553 - Robert, fourth Lord Sempill, son of Robert, Master of Sempill. He was the person to whom his grandfather granted a charter of his estates, subject to the granter’s life-rent, on 8 November 1572, and on 11 December in the same year his grandfather granted him the offices of Justiciar, Chamberlain, and Bailie of the Regality of Paisley. He was in minority on 26 November 1581, when James, Earl of Glencairn, acknowledged receipt of the sum of 10,000 merks from Robert Mure of Caldwell and Archibald Preston of Valleyfield, Chamberlain of Sempill, and undertook that ‘howsone it sall happin Robert now lord Symple to marie, tak to wife, spouse and compleit the bond of matrimony with Jane Cunynghame, Countess of Ergyle, our fader sister, and falzeing of her, with Susanna Cunynghame,’ the Earl’s own sister or either of them, he would refund the said sum, and provided that should Lord Sempill marry Jane Cunynghame, eldest daughter of the said Earl, he should not be obliged to repay same. He was, in 1583, stated to be a youth of sixteen years of age, his living not great, but of an ancient house. In 1592, however, he was stated to be twenty-nine. He was in Parliament in 1584 and 1596. He was still in minority 27 March 1587, and in that year was denounced for threatening his uncle Andrew and nephew William. He was appointed a Commissioner in 1589-90 for executing the laws against Jesuits. On 30 May 1590 he was retoured heir to his grandfather, Robert, third Lord Sempill. Having been charged to appear before the King and Council with a view to his keeping good order, and not having complied with this summons, he was on 3 November 1591 ordered to be put to the horn and denounced rebel. He was Ambassador to Spain in 1596. He was at the Convention of Estates 1 January 1596-97, and in the Privy Council in 1597. He was denounced rebel for violently seizing an English ship in 1597-98. In 1606 it was recommended that Lord Sempill should be ordered to reside in Irvine for the benefit of advice and instruction from the clergy, and in 1607 he was excommunicated by the Church as being ‘a confirmed and obstinate papist.’ He died 25 March 1611. He married first (contract dated 11 September 1583), Agnes Montgomery, second daughter of Hugh, third Earl of Eglintoun. In 1601 he desired a pass for a servant to go abroad concerning a marriage ‘his Lordship intendeth in France.’ In 1602, however, he is stated to be ‘unmarried.’ He married, secondly (contract 31 August 1604), about 13 September 1604, when he gave her sasine, as his future spouse, in the lands of Southannan, Joanna, daughter of Levimus Everard, and widow of Sir John Hamilton of Lincleif, brother of John, first Earl of Abercorn. (See that title.) She married, thirdly, Captain Patrick Craufurd of Tredonell, County Donegal, and, fourthly, Sir George Marbury, and dying 14 June 1638, at Letterkenny, was buried in Conwal Parish Church (Church of Ireland).
References
  1.   Patrick Hogue (Samples). The Samples / Semples Family.
  2.   Robert Crawford, M.A. The Crawfords of Donegal: How They Came There: A Contribution to Family History. (Dublin: Dublin: University Press, by Ponsonby and Weldrick, 1897).
  3.   Johanna Everard, in Lundy, Darryl. The Peerage: A genealogical survey of the peerage of Britain as well as the royal families of Europe.
  4.   Paul, James Balfour. The Scots peerage: founded on Wood's edition of Sir Robert Douglas's ‘Peerage of Scotland’ containing an historical and genealogical account of the nobility of that kingdom, with armorial illustrations. (Edinburgh: D. Douglas, 1904-1914)
    Vol. 7, Page 551, 552, 553.
  5.   Cracroft's Peerage.