Anne, daughter of Sir Thomas Knevet, by whom no issue; secondly to Frances, daughter of William Saunders of Ewell in Surrey, Esq. Ewell in Surrey, by whom he had twin sons, and one daughter, viz. 1734, and he in 1723, leaving three sons and one daughter, married to Mr. Allen of Lyn, merchant. John their son being baptized at Narburgh in 1618; Elizabeth married Mr. Stephen Edgar of East Bilney in 1671, and had situation; Abigail, married Christopher Crowe of East Bilney, Esq. In Malaysia, this plant has a repute for being a robust male aphrodisiac. Sir John Spelman of Narburgh, Knt. 1581; he had two wives; Judith, daughter of Sir Clement Higham of Barrow in Suffolk, buried in 1570, by whom he had Clement and William; and Catherine, daughter of William Saunders, Esq. Sir John Spelman of Heydon in Norfolk, who died at Oxford in 1643, and married Anne, daughter of Sir John Townesend of Raynham. 2, Henry Spelman of Congham in Norfolk, Esq. That nice antiquary and most realized knight, Sir Henry Spelman, an honour to the college where he was educated, as also to the town and county he was born in: his Glossary; History of Sacrilege; Treatise De non Temerandis Ecclesijs, and other quite a few worthwhile works, will show posterity his nice studying; his Icenia or History of Norfolk, which he intended, was the first design of that kind in relation to this county, that I have met with, and great pity it is, that all his collections on that topic, except the fragment of that title, printed in his Posthumous Works, needs to be dissipated and lost; however to rescue his person from the same destiny, the author of this work hath here inserted his likeness, taken from an authentic picture painted in his personal time, in honour of him who was so useful a member to his country, and so great a promoter of the laudable examine of the final antiquities of the kingdom, and the actual ones, of this his native county; he was sheriff of Norfolk in 1605, and died at London in 1641, having married Eleanor, eldest daughter and coheir of John le Strange of Sedgeford in Norfolk, Esq.
John Spelman, Esq. of Narburgh, his brother, married Anne, daughter of Sir John Heveningham, by whom he had 4 sons and eight daughters, of which I discover, Ursula married John Potts, Esq. Viscount Purbeck, and Frances his spouse, daughter of the mentioned Sir Edward Cooke, by Elizabeth daughter of Thomas Earl of Excester, and widow of Sir William Newport, alias Hutton, Knt. Sir Clement, the eldest, was sheriff for the county in 1598-9; he married for his first wife, Alice, sole heir of Edmund Kervile of Wigenhale, Esq. 488; he was buried at Narburgh by Ela his spouse, and was recorder of Norwich in 1491, (See vol. See vol. i. p. The Holls or Holleys, for whom see vol. William Cobb of Sandringham, Esq.; 3d, Ela, to George Jernegan of Somerleyton in Suffolk, Esq.; 4th, Bridget, to Osbert Mundeford of Feltwell, Esq.; (vol. 484, 8. Christopher, the second son, married Elizabeth, daughter and heiress of Jeffry Ratcliff, as at vol. Ursula, daughter of Sir John Willougby of Rysley in Derbyshire, he had Clement and John, and dying in 1607 was buried right here, as his inscription shows. Justice of the King’s Bench, and before that, one of the crucial eminent barristers of his time; he married Elizabeth daughter and coheir of Sir Henry Frowick or Froyk of Gunnersbury in Middlesex, by whom he had 13 sons and 7 daughters; 1st, Elizabeth, married to William de Grey of Merton, Esq.
5th, Michael, born in 1521, he lived at Whinburgh, and married Margaret, daughter of George Duke, Esq. John Spelman, Esq. the eldest son, buried right here in 1545; he married Margaret, daughter of Sir Thomas Bleverhasset of Frense, who after his loss of life remarried to John Eyre, Esq of Lyn; she was buried right here in 1558, and he in 1561, as the inscription exhibits. Frances, the second, to whose share these manors fell, married Sir George Windham of Cromere, Knt. Sir Christ. Heydon Knt. 2d, Dorothy, to Thomas Heydon of Baconsthorp, Esq. Reynham. 2, Heydon of Baconsthorp. John Spelman of Narburgh and London, Esq. By his second spouse he had two sons; Thomas, the eldest son, lord of Ellingham-Magna, and Brecles-Parva, married Anne, daughter and coheir of John Conyers, Esq. Mundeford Spelman, Esq. his son and heir, who had three wives; 1st, Mrs. Rushworth of Suffolk, who had no subject; 2d, Anne, daughter of Edward Walpole of Houghton in Norfolk, knight of the Bath, who was buried here, and had a number of children that died young; 3d, Julian, daughter of Miles Branthwayt of Hethel in Norfolk, Esq.
Plaintiffs will purchase costly outfits for kids during litigation after which, once they assume the choose won’t be trying, it is Costco and Target for subsequent 12 months’s wardrobe. John-le-Gross Spelman, his eldest son and heir, besides different children. Clement, the eldest son, was recorder of Notingham, and in fee of oier and terminer for the midland circuit, and justice of the peace in Notingham and Norfolk, and died unmarried in 1679. He now stands right up, enclosed in a pillar in this chancel, in order that the inscription on the pillar, is immediately against his face. 5th, Martha, to Alexander Brockdish of Brockdish in Norfolk, Esq.; Sixth, Alice, to Francis Soame of Wantesden in Suffolk, Esq.; 7th, Anne, who died single. John, who died without challenge, and Henry, who was heir to his brother and father. William could only provide it by a wholesale confiscation of the estates of all the thegnhood who had adopted the home of Godwine. It broke up the Anglo-German alliance, and gave the conqueror undisturbed possession of all that he had gained from the Angevin house and his other enemies.