de Chaworth, Patrick IV

Male 1218 - 1258  (40 years)


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  • Name de Chaworth, Patrick 
    Suffix IV 
    Birth 1218  Stoke Bruerne, Northamptonshire, England Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Gender Male 
    FSID GVV3-B37  [1
    Death 4 Sep 1258  Cilgerran, Pembrokeshire, Wales Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Cause: Killed in Battle 
    Person ID I35583  The Thoma Family
    Last Modified 20 Sep 2023 

    Father de Chaworth, Knight Payne II,   b. 1183, Kempsford, Gloucestershire, England Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 11 May 1237, Gloucester, Gloucestershire, England Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 54 years) 
    Relationship natural 
    Mother de la Ferte, Gundred,   b. 1190, Kempsford, Gloucestershire, England Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 1237, Marden, Wiltshire, England Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 47 years) 
    Relationship natural 
    Marriage 1217  Kempsford, Gloucestershire, England Find all individuals with events at this location  [1, 2, 3, 4
    Family ID F14169  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

    Family de London, Hawise,   b. 1223, Wales Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 23 Sep 1274, Kidwelly, Carmarthenshire, Wales Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 51 years) 
    Marriage Bef 19 Dec 1243 
    Children 
     1. de Chaworth, Patrick V,   b. 1 Apr 1250, Kempsford, Gloucestershire, England Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 7 Jul 1283, Kidwelly Castle, Kidwelly, Carmarthenshire, Wales Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 33 years)  [natural]
    Family ID F14161  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart
    Last Modified 20 Sep 2023 

  • Event Map
    Link to Google MapsBirth - 1218 - Stoke Bruerne, Northamptonshire, England Link to Google Earth
    Link to Google MapsDeath - Cause: Killed in Battle - 4 Sep 1258 - Cilgerran, Pembrokeshire, Wales Link to Google Earth
     = Link to Google Earth 

  • Photos
    de CHAWORTH, Patrick III
    de CHAWORTH, Patrick III
    de CHAWORTH
    de CHAWORTH

  • Notes 
    • Biography
      Father Pain de Chaworth, Lord de la Ferte2,5,10 b. c 1183, d. c 2 Jun 1237

      Mother Gundred de la Ferté2,5,10 b. c 1200, d. bt 9 Mar 1233 - 4 Feb 1237

      Sir Patrick de Chaworth was born circa 1216 at of Kempsford, Gloucestershire, England.6 He married Hawyse de London, daughter of Sir Thomas de London, Lord Kidwilly and Eve FitzWarin, before 19 December 1243; They had 3 sons (Sir Pain; Sir Patrick; & Sir Hervey) and 3 daughters (Emme; Eve, wife of Sir Robert de Tibetot; & Agnes).2,3,5,6,8 Sir Patrick de Chaworth died circa 23 September 1258 at of North Standen in Hungerford, Berkshire, England.2,5,6

      Family

      Hawyse de London b. c 1200, d. b 23 Sep 1274

      Children

      Eve Chaworth+11,4,12,7,9,13

      Sir Payn de Chaworth12 d. c 1279

      Sir Patrick de Chaworth, Lord Kedwelly+3,12,8 b. c 1254, d. c 7 Jul 1283

      The Chaworth arms, azure, two chevronels or, were adopted from the family of Alfreton; the senior branch of the Chaworths had borne barry of ten argent and gules, an orle of martlets sable.

      Patrick added the Welsh marcher lordship of Kidwelly by his marriage to Hawise (d. 1274), daughter and heir of Thomas de Londres (d. c.1216). This senior male line of the family ended in the granddaughter of this marriage, Maud (1278–c.1322), who, as a ward of Edmund, earl of Lancaster, was married to Edmund's second son, Henry, later earl of Lancaster (c.1280-1345), in the 1290s.

      Death
      He was killed in battle against the Welsh. There was an Inquisition of Patrick de Chaworces alias de Chaors, de Chauurces, de Chawrces, de Chawerches, etc. Writ to the sheriff of Gloucester, 23 Sept. 42 Hen. III

      Wilts. Extent, Sunday the eve of St. Martin.

      Berewik manor (full extent given with names of tenants), including pastures called Kyggesmers and la Sterte. 60s. rent are held by exchange for life by Mabel de Cantelo alias de Cantilupe, and ought, with the advowson of the church, to revert to the manor after her death. [Reference: Calendar of Inquisitions Post Mortem, vol. 1 (1904): 113-115].

      The above record merely states that the manor and advowson of Berwick, Wiltshire was held by Mabel de Cantelowe for life "by exchange" and that on the death of Mabel, the property was to revert to Patrick de Chaworth's heirs. There is no indication in the inquisition if or how Patrick de Chaworth is related to Mabel de Cantelowe.

      The Welsh rising of 1257 involved the destruction of the settlement at Kidwelly, but the invaders failed to capture the castle. Patrick was slain during the campaign of the following year, and the wardship of his lands was granted to Hawise during the minority of their son Payn.

      "Early in September [1258] David ap Gruffydd, Maredudd ab Owain, and Rhys Fychan were together in Emlyn, where a conference was proposed between them and Maredudd ap Rhys, who, with Patrick of Chaworth, was at Cardigan with a large force, assembled from all the marcher lordships of West Wales. The meeting was to have come off at Cilgerran, but Patrick, unhappily for himself, was persuaded to deal treacherously with his foes, and on the evening of 4th September attacked them with all his host. Notwithstanding the surprise and their inferior numbers, the Welsh successfully met the onslaught, and in the rout which followed the lord of Kidwelly was slain." Source: J.E.Lloyd, A History of Wales, vol II, 1912, p.725.
      B.A.Malaws, RCAHMW, 30 October 2006.

      The Battle Abbey Roll. Vol. I.
      by
      The Duchess of Cleveland.

      Prepared by Michael A. Linton
      -------*--------
      Return to Index

      Chaworth : the Anglicized form of Chaurtes, Chaurcis, or Cadurcis; a name "derived," says Camden, "from the Cadurci in France," and dating from the Conquest in this country. Patric de Cadurcis, of Little Brittany, who was seated in Gloucestershire, and a benefactor of Gloucester Abbey in the latter years of the Conqueror's reign, founded a powerful family of Lords Marcher, that bore rule on the Welsh frontier up to the close of the fourteenth century. Pain, called by Dugdale Patric's grandson (though, as he was living in 1217, a hundred and thirty years after the death of the Conqueror, he must have been a far more remote descendant), held 125 knight's fees in Montgomery, and acquired Bridgewater Castle in Somersetshire, with other estates, through his wife Gundred de la Ferte, whose mother had been the sister and co-heir of the last William de Briwere. His son and successor, Patric, made a still greater alliance, for he married Hawise, the only daughter of Thomas de Londres, who brought, "with his fair Inheritance, the title of Lord of Ogmor and Kydweli. The heirs of Maurice de Londres were oblig'd by their tenure, in case the King or his chief justice should lead an army into these parts, to conduct the said army, with their banners, through the county of Neath to Lochor."—Camden. This great lordship was confirmed to him, by Henry III., "providing he could win and keep it for himself;" a condition rendered onerous by the distracted state of the country. In 1244 he had received the King's precept to "use all his power and diligence in annoying the Welsh, then in hostility;" and the Welsh naturally retaliated; for in 1258 Llewellyn and the princes of South Wales encamped at Kidwelly, and fired all the houses, except the castle. While thus engaged, "they were surprised by Meredith ap Res and the Lord Patric, who suddenly came down upon them with a body of Englishmen from Carmarthen. A vigorous battle took place, in which the Welshmen were eventually victorious." (Bridgeman's Princes of South Wales.) Then followed a year's truce, during which Prince Edward sent Patric, the King's Seneschal at Carmarthen, to treat with the Welsh at Emlyn. According to Matthew Paris, Llewellyn "meaning good faith, sent his brother David, with some others, to entreat with them of peace; but Patric, meaning to entrap them, laid an ambushment of armed men by the way, and as they should have met, these men fell upon the Welshmen, and slew a great number of them." Those that escaped from this base act of treachery raised the country, and collecting a considerable force, marched to meet the English, who had "mustered at Cardigan in all their pride." They encountered near the town of Kilgarran, "and a fierce engagement took place, in which the English were routed and fled, leaving their slain, with many caparisoned horses, behind them. In that battle the Lord Patric de Chaworth, Walter Malenfant, a stout and valiant knight from Pembroke, and other knights who had lately arrived from England, were slain."—Ibid.

      Patric left three young sons—the eldest then only thirteen—who proved the last heirs of his house. All of them, Pain, Hervey, and Patric', were signed with the cross in 1269, and attended Prince Edward to the Holy Land; but of Hervey there is no further mention. Pain commanded Edward I.'s army in West Wales in 1277, when Llewellyn was forced to conclude a treaty of peace; and "being thus victorious, was made governor of the Castles of Dumevor, Karekenyl and Landevery." He died in the following year, and his brother Patric, who succeeded him, only survived till 1282, leaving by Isabel de Beauchamp his wife, an only child, Maud, Lady of Kilwelly, married to Henry Plantagenet, Earl of Lancaster, the nephew of Edward I.

      A far longer-lived branch of the family had been very early established in Nottinghamshire, through the marriage of Robert de Chaworth with the heiress of Marnham, Alice de Walichville. He was, without doubt, a relative or descendant of the first Patric, but he cannot possibly have been, as Dugdale asserts, his brother, as he lived in the ensuing century, and appears in the Liber Niger as holding a fee of William de Albini in Leicester. His grandson, William, acquired Alfreton, "in ancient times esteemed a barony of honour," through Alice, daughter and co-heir of its last lord, whose arms "were," says Thoroton, "almost ever used by Chaworth." The next heir, Thomas, was a baron by writ in 1296, but none of his posterity were ever honoured by a second summons, though their domain in Nottingham expanded apace through successive additions. Fourth in descent from Thomas was Sir William, whose wife was the heiress of Wyverton, as one of the representatives of the last Lord Basset of Drayton; and their son Sir Thomas married Isabel, daughter of Sir Thomas Ailesbury. "By this Match, he was entitled to the Inheritance of the honourable Families of Aylesbury, Pakenham, Engaine, Basset of Weldon, and Kaines, and better enabled to make the Park at Wiverton, which he had the King's License to do 24 Hen. VI.: who likewise granted him Free Warren in that Place, whereby it is very probable that he was the chief Builder of that strong House, which from thenceforward was the principal Mansion of his worthy Successors, and in our Times made a Garrison for the King, which occasioned its Ruin; since when, most of it is pulled down and removed, except the old uncovered Gatehouse, which yet remains a Monument of the Magnificence of this Family."—Thoroton's Notts. A third heiress brought Annesley to the next heir, George; but the line expired after three more generations, ending in 1589 with Sir George Chaworth. His daughter and sole heir, Elizabeth, married Sir John Cope.

      But she did not succeed either to Wyverton or Annesley, for there yet remained descendants of Sir George's uncle, whose grandson, another Sir George, was created in 1672 Viscount Chaworth of Armagh in the peerage of Ireland. This title was borne for little more than seventy years, as the third Viscount, again, left no heir but a daughter, Juliana Countess of Meath, the ancestress of the present Earl. The first Lord Chaworth had, however, younger brothers, whose posterity carried on the line at Annesley until the first years of the present century, when the last heir male, William Chaworth, died, and the estates devolved on his only child, Mary Anne,

      "The solitary scion left
      Of a time honour'd race."

      This was the fair lady immortalized by Lord Byron's early idolatry—the heroine of his 'Dream.' They were close neighbours in the country (Annesley Hall is scarcely three miles from Newstead) and distant relations by blood; for the sister of the last Viscount had married the ancestor of Lord Byron. But the families had been sundered by a deadly feud, caused by the fatal duel fought in 1765 between the poet's great uncle, the fifth Lord Byron, and Mr. Chaworth of Annesley. "The following," writes Horace Walpole, "is the account nearest the truth that I can learn of the fatal duel last night. A club of Nottinghamshire gentlemen had dined at the Star and Garter, and there had been a dispute between the combatants whether Lord Byron, who took no care of his game, or Mr. Chaworth, who was active in the association, had most game on their manor. The company, however, had apprehended no consequences, and parted at eight o'clock: but Lord Byron, stepping into an empty chamber, and sending the drawer for Mr. Chaworth, or calling him thither himself, took the candle from the waiter, and bidding Mr. Chaworth defend himself, drew his sword. Mr. Chaworth, who was an excellent fencer, ran Lord Byron through the sleeve of his coat, and then received a wound fourteen inches deep into his body. He was carried to his house in Berkeley Street, made his will with the greatest composure, and dictated a paper which, they say, allows it was a fair duel, and died at nine this morning." Lord Byron surrendered to take his trial in Westminster Hall, and was, almost unanimously, found guilty, but discharged on claiming his privilege of peerage under Edward VI.'s statute.

      The hereditary ill-will between the two families had been suffered to die out in the time of the orphaned heiress of Annesley, and during the summer of 1803 she and Lord Byron were constantly together. The young poet, then only in his sixteenth year, fell passionately in love with the beautiful girl of seventeen, and spent rapturous hours by her side, listening spell-bound to her singing, or roaming over the old terraced garden of Annesley. To him, in truth, it was enchanted ground:

      "He had no breath, no being, but in hers;
      She was his voice: he did not speak to her,
      But trembled on her words; she was his sight,
      For his eye follow'd hers, and saw with hers,
      Which colour'd all his objects:—he had ceas'd
      To live within himself; she was his life,
      The ocean to the river of his thoughts,
      Which terminated all."

      Miss Chaworth by no means shared these ecstatic feelings. A maiden "on the eve of womanhood" seldom if ever smiles upon a stripling younger than herself: and he had the mortification of hearing her say to her maid: "Do you think I could care anything for that lame boy?"—"This speech, as he himself described it, was like a shot through his heart."—Moore.
      The brief love-dream had ended with the summer holidays. He only saw Miss Chaworth once again in the following year, when she was engaged to be married to Mr. Musters of Colwick Hall. He bravely wished her joy and bade her farewell; then,

      "Mounting on his steed, he went his way,
      And never cross'd that hoary threshold more."

      His childish passion had been no evanescent fancy, but a heart-wound that left an abiding scar. Years afterwards, in one of his memorandum books, he accidentally mentions Miss Chaworth as "My M. A. C. Alas!" he presently adds, "Why do I say my? Our union would have healed feuds in which blood had been shed by our fathers; it would have joined lands broad and rich; it would have joined at least one heart, and two persons not ill-matched in years; and—and—and—what has been the result!"

      The close of Mrs. Musters' life was in mournful contrast to the golden promise of its opening years. Her married life was unhappy; though surrounded by blooming children, she fell a prey to secret and devouring melancholy, gradually became insane, and died a tragical death. During the Nottingham riots of 1831, Colwick Hall was assailed by a brutal mob, plundered, and set on fire;[1] and its unhappy mistress, driven from her house in the middle of the night, had to seek refuge in a neighbouring plantation. The terror of this midnight flight stamped itself on her sick brain: she never recovered from the shock she had received, and did not long survive it.

      ↑ "The master of the house was absent; his lady, in delicate health, was forced from her couch to a precipitate flight; led by her young daughter—another Antigone—to a distant part of the grounds; they both remained for hours on the damp earth, the daughter supporting her mother's head on her bosom, and both concealing themselves under a laurel tree. So profound was the terror of these unhappy ladies, that for hours after the wretches had quitted the grounds, the servants sought for their mistress and her daughter in vain. And at last when they found them in the situation I have so feebly endeavoured to describe, half dead with cold and terror, there was no apartment, no couch, no bed of that so lately splendid residence fit to receive them, and they were carried inanimate to the only place which had escaped the incendiaries—a groom's bed, over one of the stables."—J. IV. Croker.

  • Sources 
    1. [S789] WORLD: Family Search, Family Tree.
      https://www.familysearch.org/search/tree/name

    2. [S597] WORLD: Ancestry.com, Freepages Rootsweb.

    3. [S844] WORLD: Foundation for Medieval Genealogy.
      http://fmg.ac/

    4. [S869] WORLD: Stirnet.
      http://www.stirnet.com