Phillip (Sir Baron) " Le Large" de Egerton
b. 1296 in Egerton, Cheshire, England
d. 1363 in Egerton, Cheshire, England
Parents:
David Malpas Egerton 1277 – 1362
Isabella Fulleshurst 1278 – 1340
Spouse:
Ellen (Lady) De Saint Pierre 1300 – 1353
Son:
David De Egerton 1317-1347
Daughters:
Isabel and Ellena
Philip "le Longe" de Egerton, lord of Egerton and Wychehalgh
Nickname: le Longe
Born: Abt 1300
of, Egerton, Malpas, Cheshire, England
Christened: {House: Malpas}
Gender: Male
Name
AKA: Phillip de Egerton
AKA: Philip de Malpas
AKA: Philip Egerton
AKA: Philip le Longe [18]
AKA: Philip de Eggerton [18]
Died:
Abt 1362 [19]
Notes:
KINSHIP: Son and heir. (Ormerod, The History of the County Palatine and City of Chester, vol. 2 Edition 2 pt. 2 p. 598)
LIVING: 23-24 Edward III {1349-1350}. (Ormerod, The History of the County Palatine and City of Chester, vol. 2 Edition 2 pt. 2 p. 628)
RESIDENCE: Malpas. (Griffith, Pedigrees of Anglesey and Carnarvonshire Families, p. 45)
PROPERTY: Lord of Egerton and Wychehalgh. (Ormerod, The History of the County Palatine and City of Chester, vol. 2 Edition 2 pt. 2 p. 628)
PROPERTY: He obtained by fine, 12 Edward III {1338} lands in Egerton from John fitz William fitz Madog de Egerton. (Ormerod, The History of the County Palatine and City of Chester, vol. 2 Edition 2 pt. 2 p. 628)
INQUISTION POST MORTEM: 36 Edward III (1362). (Ormerod, The History of the County Palatine and City of Chester, vol. 2 Edition 2 pt. 2 p. 598)
Person ID: I94295
Wales. Welsh Medieval Database Primarily of Nobility and Gentry.
from ancestry.com
Egerton Country House
Notes on Philip "The Long" de Egerton
Philip de Egerton married Eilen or Ellena de St. Pierre. By one of those curious matrimonial contracts that were common to the age, we find David Egerton, father of this Philip, in a deed dated at Egerton, 9th of Edward II, 1315/6, entering into an agreement with John de St. Pierre, that his son and heir, Philip de Egerton, shall marry Ellen St. Pierre, daughter of the said John, the portion of 80 marks she was to receive to be returned, as the deed prudently provided, in the event of her dying before the marriage was consummated. Happily that contingency did not arise, for she was living at the time of the Battle of Crescy was fought in 1346, 30 years after the agreement was entered into, and had borne her husband a son, David, and two daughters, Ellen and Isabel. After her death Phil Egerton married a second wife, Maud, daughter of Richard Vernon. Philip Egerton, like his predecessors, was an accumulator of lands. Some time after his 1st marriage he purchased from Hugh de Wardhull certain lands in Wardle and also certain other tenements in Egerton. On account of his stature he was surnamed "the Long." He died 1362. His only son, David, did not long survive his father and died without issue, and the line of descent terminated in his two sisters, Isabel and Ellena.
from ancestry.com
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