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History and genealogy of Peter Montague, of Nansemond and ...

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2 INTRODUCTION.<br />

behalf. Upon a conclusion <strong>of</strong> a truce with France they were<br />

exchanged for the Earl <strong>of</strong> Murray <strong>and</strong> ^"3000 in addition.<br />

The Earl <strong>of</strong> Salisbury, immediately after his release, went with<br />

many other English Knights into Spain <strong>and</strong> joined the army <strong>of</strong><br />

Alphonsus against the Saracens.<br />

In 1 341 he was again in Fl<strong>and</strong>ers, <strong>and</strong> in 1342 in France. In 1343<br />

he served upon the borders <strong>of</strong> Scotl<strong>and</strong> with the Earl <strong>of</strong> Ulster. And<br />

about this time he conquered the isle <strong>of</strong> Man, when King Edward<br />

(having before given him the inheritance there<strong>of</strong>) crowned him<br />

King <strong>of</strong> Man.<br />

In conjunction with Robert <strong>of</strong> Artois, he had the comm<strong>and</strong> <strong>of</strong> the<br />

forces sent to France in aid <strong>of</strong> the Countess <strong>of</strong> Mountfort, by sea <strong>and</strong><br />

l<strong>and</strong> ; where, after defeating the French fleet, they took Vannes, but<br />

a truce having been concluded for three years the Earl returned to<br />

Engl<strong>and</strong>, where he exercised himself so immoderately, in justs <strong>and</strong><br />

tournaments, that he fell into a fever <strong>of</strong> which he died in the forty-<br />

third year <strong>of</strong> his age, January 30, ^44, <strong>and</strong> was buried at the White<br />

Friars in London^ (Vol. 1, p. 51, Edmondson's Heraldry). He was<br />

possessed at his death <strong>of</strong> a vast estate <strong>and</strong> bore the titles <strong>of</strong> Earl <strong>of</strong><br />

Salisbury, King <strong>of</strong> Man, <strong>and</strong> lord <strong>of</strong> Denbigh.<br />

Vol. 1, p. 51, Glover's ordinary <strong>of</strong> Arms, Edmondson's Heraldry,<br />

says, this earl owned Fulmere in Buckinghamshire. Lipscombe's<br />

Hist, <strong>of</strong> Bucks says, he sold it, in or before 1335. This was a hamlet<br />

<strong>and</strong> Chapelry <strong>of</strong> Datchet in Stoke Hund. Bucks, near Stoke Poges<br />

<strong>and</strong> not far from Boveney.<br />

This great man, who died so young <strong>and</strong> who also accomplished so<br />

much in his busy career, also found time to establish at Bisham in<br />

Berkshire, on the banks <strong>of</strong> the Thames 4 miles from Maidenhead, a<br />

Monastery, <strong>and</strong> he also founded a priory (in 1338) for Canons <strong>of</strong><br />

the order <strong>of</strong> St. Augustine, in the words <strong>of</strong> his charter, " dedicated<br />

to Our Lord <strong>and</strong> the Virgin." This priory was re-founded by Henry<br />

VIII. for an abbot <strong>and</strong> 13 Benedictine Monks. Here Henry VIII.<br />

* Some authors state, that this great man was buried at Bisham priory which he had<br />

founded. This error probably was caused by the fact that his son built a magnificent monument<br />

to his memory, in that Abbey, which was however demolished by Henry VIII. at the<br />

dissolution. Not only Edmondson's Heraldry but Glover's Ordinary <strong>of</strong> Arms, <strong>and</strong> also the<br />

very high authority <strong>of</strong> Dugdalc, assert that he was buried at White Friars, London. Edmondson's<br />

Heraldry, Vol. i, 51, states that he became 21 years old in the 19th <strong>of</strong> Edward II.,<br />

which would place his birth A. D. 1304; the same authority also states, that he owned the<br />

Manor <strong>of</strong> Cookham in Berkshire. Lipscombe's Bucks states that the hamlet <strong>of</strong> Boveney<br />

anciently belonged to Cookham in Berkshire, <strong>and</strong> the inference is that this Earl <strong>of</strong> Salisbury<br />

may have been possessed <strong>of</strong> Boveney also.

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