[Ancestral Link: Harold William Miller, son of Edward Emerson Miller, son of Anna Hull (Miller), daughter of William Hull, son of Anna Hyde (Hull), daughter of Uriah Hyde, son of Elizabeth Leffingwell (Hyde), daughter of Sarah Abell (Leffingwell), daughter of Joshua Abell, son of Robert Abell, son of Frances Cotton (Abell), daughter of Mary Mainwaring (Cotton), daughter of Margaret Mainwaring (Mainwaring), daughter of Randle Mainwaring, son of Katherine Honford (Mainwaring), daughter of Margaret Savage (Honford), daughter of John Savage, son of John Savage, son of John Savage, son of Margaret Danyers (Savage), daughter of Isabel Baggalegh (Danyers).]
[Ancestral Link: Harold William Miller, son of Edward Emerson Miller, son of Anna Hull (Miller), daughter of William Hull, son of Anna Hyde (Hull), daughter of Uriah Hyde, son of Ezra Hyde, son of William Hyde, son of Samuel Hyde, son of William Hyde, son of Robert Hyde, son of Jane Davenport (Hyde), daughter of Blanch Warburton (Davenport), daughter of John Warburton, son of Ellen Savage (Warburton), daughter of John Savage, son of John Savage, son of Margaret Danyers(Savage), daughter of Isabel Baggalegh).]
Isabel Baggalegh
Birth 1325, Cheadle, Cheshire, England
Marriage 1347, age: 22, to Thomas Danyers, Cheadle, Cheshire, England
Death 1364, age: 39, Cheadle, Cheshire, England
Parents
William de Bagulegh 1305 – 1321
Clemence de Cheadle 1308 –
Spouse and Children
Thomas Danyers 1325 – 1349
Margaret Danyers 1347 – 1428
from ancestry.com
Isabel de Baggiley~Ormerod's History of the County Palatine and City of Chester, vol. Vol. I, p. 712, daughter of William de Baggiley and Clemence de Chedle and wife of Thomas Daniells (Danyers or Daniers)(1325 - ____), and mother of Margeret Daniers(1347 - 1427) who married John Savage who she married Edward II The manor of Chedle belonged to a family of that name in the 12th century. A grandson of the possessor, Sir Roger, left two daughters, one who was named Clemence. Clemence married William de Bagaly, and they had a daughter named Isabel. Isabel married Thomas Danyers. Their daughter married, about 49 Edward III, John Savage as her second husband. Clemence, on of the co-heiresses of Sir Roger de Chedle, had Slifton and divers lands in Chedle by inheritance, which descended to his grand daughter Margaret and John Savage in the right of his wife, he became Lord of Chedle.
~The Ancient and Noble Family of Savage, pg. 16
from ancestry.com
Isabel Baggalegh Birth 1325 in Cheadle,,Cheshire,England
http://histfam.familysearch.org/getperson.php?personID=I231548&tree=Welsh
Isabel [de Baggylegh]
Birth about 1330 of, Cheshire, England
Gender Female
Name AKA Isabel de Baggiley
Name AKA Isabel de Bagylegh.
Died date unknown
Person ID I231548
Wales. Welsh Medieval Database Primarily of Nobility and Gentry.
Father William de Baggylegh, born about 1300, of, Cheshire, England, died date unknown
Mother Clemence [de Cheadle], born about 1300, Cheadle, Cheshire, England, died after 1327
Family Sir Thomas Danyers, Knight, born about 1330, Bradley, Appleton, England, died 1352
Children 1. Margaret Danyers, born about 1350, of, Bradley, Appleton, England, died 24 June 1428
Notes:
PROPRETY: Heir of her mother's estates in Chedill {Cheadle}. (Ormerod, The History of the County Palatine and City of Chester, vol. 1 pt. 2 p. 712)
PROPERTY: Her estates, Clifton, a moiety of Cheadle, and Gropenhall, etc., descended to her daughter Margaret. (Ormerod, The History of the County Palatine and City of Chester, vol. 3 pt. 2 p. 671)
Sources:
[S1505] #560 [1819] The History of the County Palatine and City of Chester (1819), Ormerod, George, (3 volumes. London: Lackington, Hughes, Mavor and Jones, 1819), FHL microfilms 924,226-924,227., vol. 1 pt. 2 p. 473, 712; vol. 3 pt. 2 p. 671, 676.
[ S1505] #560 [1819] The History of the County Palatine and City of Chester (1819), Ormerod, George, (3 volumes. London: Lackington, Hughes, Mavor and Jones, 1819), FHL microfilms 924,226-924,227., vol. 1 pt. 2 p. 473, 711.
[ S1505] #560 [1819] The History of the County Palatine and City of Chester (1819), Ormerod, George, (3 volumes. London: Lackington, Hughes, Mavor and Jones, 1819), FHL microfilms 924,226-924,227., vol. 3 pt. 2 p. 676.
from ancestry.com
Isabel de Bagulegh
The only daughter of Clemence and William de Bagulegh, Isabel de Bagulegh, succeeded her parents as owner of the Cheadle manor, and married Sir Thomas Danyers. Danyers was rewarded for his efforts in the crusades through an annual payment from the King of 40 marks, as well as the gift of Lyme Hall. His daughter Margaret continued to receive payments after his death.
from ancestry.com
The Surname of BAGULEY
The surname of BAGULEY was a locational name 'of Baguley' a township near Northenden, County Chester.
Almost every city, town or village extant in the Middle Ages has served to name one or more families. While a man lived in a town or village he would not be known by its name, as that would be no means of identification - all in the village would be so named. But when a man left his birthplace or village where he had been known and went elsewhere, people would likely refer to him by the name of his former residence or by the name of the land which he owned. Some had the name of a manor or village because they were lords of that place and owned it, but the majority descend from vassals of freeman who once had lived there.
Early records of the name mention Peter de Baggeley, 1260 Chester. Also mentioned, at the time of Henry III-Edward I was Henry de Bageleg' of Counties Salop and Staffordshire.
Johnn Baguley, was recorded in the year 1327 in County Nottingham. Johanna de Bagley of Yorkshire was listed in the Yorkshire Poll Tax of 1379.
William de Baggiley was recorded as mayor of Stockport in the year 1382.
In the year 1589-0 Thomas Baguley and Katherine Aufen received their marriage licence in London. William Denby married Joanne Baggalea, in London in the year of 1597.
The name is also spelt Baggley and Bageley. Many factors contributed to the establishment of a surname system. For generations after the Norman Conquest of 1066 a very few dynasts and magnates passed on hereditary surnames, but the main of the population, with a wide choice of first-names out of Celtic, Old English, Norman and Latin, avoided ambiguity without the need for a second name. As society became more stabilized, there was property to leave in wills, the towns and villages grew and the labels that had served to distinguish a handful of folk in a friendly village were not adequate for a teeming slum where perhaps most of the householders were engaged in the same monotonous trade, so not even their occupations could distinguish them, and some first names were gaining a tiresome popularity, especially Thomas after 1170. The hereditary principle in surnames gained currency first in the South, and the poorer folk were slower to apply it. By the 14th century however, most of the population had acquired a second name.
from ancestry.com
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