Roger Harewell

Male 1445 - 1501  (56 years)


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Roger Harewell was born 1445, Besford, Worcestershire, England (son of William Harewell and Elizabeth Dickleston); died 1501, England.

    Notes:

    The Story of Besford Court by the Right Rev. Monsignor Newsome (Administrator), Birmingham: The Herald Press: 1927.

    ...by the marriage of Dickleston's daughter Elizabeth to William Harewell, became the property of the Harewells.

    Roger Harewell, their son, does not appear to have lived at Bedsford, as he married the co-heiress of Corbett of Cowleigh, in which place he dwelt as a man of much account. In the reign of Henry VI, he was a Commissioner, jointly with the Abbot of Eversham, for raising by levy 149 archers in the county.

    Roger married Eleanor Corbet 1475, Worcester, Worcestershire, England. Eleanor was born 1448, Worcester, Worcestershire, England. [Group Sheet]

    Children:
    1. Edmund Harewell was born 1475, Besford, Worcestershire, England; died 1532, Besford, Worcestershire, England.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  William Harewell was born 1395, Wooten Wawen, Worcestershire, England (son of John Harewell and Margaret Beaupine); died , Besford, Worcestershire, England.

    William married Elizabeth Dickleston 1422, Besford, Worcestershire, England. Elizabeth (daughter of John Dickleston) was born 1408, Gloucesterhire, England; died , Besford, Worcestershire, England. [Group Sheet]


  2. 3.  Elizabeth Dickleston was born 1408, Gloucesterhire, England (daughter of John Dickleston); died , Besford, Worcestershire, England.

    Notes:

    Pedigree charts found in "The Visitation of Worcestershire, 1569"

    Daughter of John Dickleston, or Dickson, of Glouscester.

    The Story of Besford Court by the Right Rev. Monsignor Newsome (Administrator), Birmingham: The Herald Press: 1927.

    ...by the marriage of Dickleston's daughter Elizabeth to William Harewell, became the property of the Harewells.

    Name:
    or it could be Dickson

    Children:
    1. 1. Roger Harewell was born 1445, Besford, Worcestershire, England; died 1501, England.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  John Harewell was born 1347, Wootton, Warwickshire, England (son of Roger de Harewell and Maud de Stanford); died 1428, Wootton, Warwickshire, England.

    John married Margaret Beaupine 1371, Worcester, Worcestershire, England. Margaret was born 1353, Besford, Worcestershire, England; died , England. [Group Sheet]


  2. 5.  Margaret Beaupine was born 1353, Besford, Worcestershire, England; died , England.
    Children:
    1. 2. William Harewell was born 1395, Wooten Wawen, Worcestershire, England; died , Besford, Worcestershire, England.

  3. 6.  John Dickleston was born , Gloucesterhire, England.
    Children:
    1. 3. Elizabeth Dickleston was born 1408, Gloucesterhire, England; died , Besford, Worcestershire, England.


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  Roger de Harewell was born 1321, Harewell, Worcestershire, England; died 1390, Wootton Wawen, , Warwickshire, England .

    Notes:

    Source: Harwell: Village For A Thousand Years, 1985 print
    web: http://www.harwellparish.co.uk/village4a1000years/book/book-introduction.html

    In medieval times, the trade or following of an individual came to be used as a surname and many of these are still in common use, e.g. Smith, Baker, Taylor, etc. In other cases such as a member of a profession or a freehold landowner the place of origin was added after the name, particularly if the individual travelled or was known away from his locality. Thus in the thirteenth century some few villagers would have been known as, for example, ... de Harwell or more correctly de Harewell as the present spelling did not come into general use until the seventeenth century.

    John de Harewell (1320 -1386) was born in the village, the son of a freeholder, and having studied at Oxford University he became a priest. In the service of the Black Prince he rose to become Governor of Aquitaine in southwest France during the Hundred Years War and finally Bishop of Bath and Wells. A stone effigy lies on his table tomb in Wells Cathedral.

    John de Harewell following the priesthood, of course had no issue. It is to his brother Roger who married an heiress from Wootton Wawen in Warwickshire, that the direct lineage has been uncovered. Several branches of the family were known in the early seventeenth century in Coventry, Wolverhampton, Worcester, Evesham and Suffolk.

    A Thomas Foulk Harewell abandoned the impoverished family home at Besford, near Worcester, and sailed with his brother in 1636 as colonists to Virginia, from where the family eventually spread across the southern states of America.

    Roger married Maud de Stanford 1350, Besford, Worcestershire, England. Maud was born 1326, Wooten Wawen, Worcestershire, England; died 1419. [Group Sheet]


  2. 9.  Maud de Stanford was born 1326, Wooten Wawen, Worcestershire, England; died 1419.
    Children:
    1. 4. John Harewell was born 1347, Wootton, Warwickshire, England; died 1428, Wootton, Warwickshire, England.