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Facts and Events
Isabel (or possibly Elizabeth), daughter of Sir John Haryngton, of Hornby Castle, Lancs. [Burke's Peerage]
He [John de Stanley] is said to have married Isabel, daughter of Sir John and sister of Sir William DE HARYNGTON (c). [10]
(c) Dugdale's authority is the family pedigree. It may be noted that in 1503 Richard Beaumont obtained a license to marry, as his 2nd wife, Elizabeth Stanley, who is said to have been daughter and coheir of Sir John Harrington of Hornby Castle, and relict of Sir John Stanley.
Isabel Harington [daughter of Sir Robert Harington, KB, Lord Harington of Gleaston Castle, & (2) Isabel Loring], of Hornby, co. Lancaster; m. Sir John Stanley, d. 1437. [2]
Sir John de Stanley, Knight; said to have m. Isabel Harington, daughter of Sir Nicholas Harington of Hornby Castle. [4]
Note AR has Isabel as a daughter of Robert Harington, and MCS has her daughter of Nicholas, while BP & CP have her as daughter of John. I assume AR has newer information, since they refer to the CP citation and supercede it. (I don't know about MCS--they may have even newer information,) MCS, AR, & BP have her of Hornby Castle. AR does not explain how she came to be in Hornby. There is an Isabel Harington of Hornby Castle, b. c 1404, daughter of William Harington, who received Hornby in marriage from Margaret Neville. They, as far as I know are the first Haringtons at Hornby, too late to be connected to this Isabel. William's father Nicholas (who may be the one referred to by MCS) was of Farleton (unless he moved in with his son).
Sources
- ↑ Richardson, Douglas. Plantagenet ancestry : a study in colonial and medieval families. (Baltimore, Maryland: Genealogical Publishing Co Inc, c2004)
p.678. - ↑ 2.0 2.1 Weis, Frederick Lewis; Walter Lee Sheppard; and David Faris. Ancestral roots of certain American colonists, who came to America before 1700: the lineage of Alfred the Great, Charlemagne, Malcolm of Scotland, Robert the Strong, and some of their descendants. (Baltimore, Maryland: Genealogical Pub. Co., 7th Edition c1992)
40-35.
- ↑ Cokayne, George Edward, and Vicary Gibbs; et al. The complete peerage of England, Scotland, Ireland, Great Britain and the United Kingdom, extant, extinct, or dormant [2nd ed.]. (London: St. Catherine Press, 1910-59)
XII/1:250.
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 Weis, Frederick Lewis; William R. Beall; and Walter Lee Sheppard. The Magna Charta Sureties, 1215: the barons named in the Magna Charta, 1215, and some of their descendants who settled in America during the early colonial years. (Baltimore [Maryland]: Genealogical Pub. Co., c1999)
103-9.
- ↑ Burke's peerage and baronetage
815.
- Isabel Harington, in Lundy, Darryl. The Peerage: A genealogical survey of the peerage of Britain as well as the royal families of Europe.
- ↑ Harrington Pedigree Chart, in Whitaker, Thomas Dunham. An history of Richmondshire, in the North riding of the county of York: together with those parts of the Everwicschire of Domesday which from the wapentakes of Lonsdale, Ewecross, and Amunderness, in the counties of York, Lancaster, and Westmorland. (London: Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Browne, 1823).
- Brydges, Egerton. Collins's peerage of England, genealogical, biographical, and historical, greatly augmented, and continued to the present time. (London: [T. Bensley], 1812)
3:54-55.
- ↑ Baines, Edward, and James Croston. The History of the County Palatine and Duchy of Lancaster (revised). (Manchester, England: John Heywood, 1888-1893)
5:74.
- ↑ Complete Peerage XII 1:249-50, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)
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