Andrew LUTTRELL, KNIGHT SIR

Birth:
Abt 1335
Dunster, S, England
Death:
1395
Somerset, England
Burial:
Abt 1395
Marriage:
1359
Father:
Blocked
Mother:
Blocked
Notes:
                   Source includes, but is not limited to:
Ancestral File and the IGI, International Genealogical Index,both
resource systems developed and solely owned by The Church of JesusChrist of
Latter Day Saints (JFN).
                  
Elizabeth COURTENAY, LADY
Birth:
Abt 1333
of Exeter, Devonshire, England
Death:
7 Aug 1395
Bermondsey, Somerset, England
Burial:
Abt Aug 1395
Benedictine Church of St. Nicholas at Exeter, Devonshire, England
Notes:
                   Source includes, but is not limited to:
Ancestral File and the IGI, International Genealogical Index,both
resource systems developed and solely owned by The Church of JesusChrist of
Latter Day Saints.
Individual:
Source: History of West Virginia and It's People, (Volume 2. Charleston, WV: Lewis Historical Publishing Co., 1913.).
Sir Andrew Luttrell, son of Sir John Luttrell, married Elizabeth, relict of Sir John de Vere, son of the Earl of Oxford. She was the second daughter of Hugh, Earl of Devon, one of the companions in arms of Edward the Third, and one of the original Knights of the Garter, he was also the head of the noble house of Courtenay. Her mother Margaret was the daughter of Humphrey de Bohun, Earl of Hereford and Essex, Constable of England, the flower of knighthood, and the most Christian knight of the knights of the world, by his wife Elizabeth, daughter of King Edward the Third. Her eldest brother, like her father, was one of the original Knights of the Garter, a second became Archbishop of Canterbury, a third Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, and a fourth Governor of Calais. It was through this Lady Luttrell that Dunster Castle came into the possession of the Luttrell family by a purchase from the widow of Lord Mohun. She was also for a time in the retinue of her cousins, Edward the Black Prince, and his wife, who had been known as the Fair Maid of Kent. This Sir Andrew Luttrell had by his wife Elizabeth a son, Sir Hugh.
ANDREW LUTTRELL, son of Sir John and Joan, established the fortunes of his family by his marriage with Elizabeth, relict of Sir John de Vere, son of the Earl of Oxford, a lady of the most illustrious lineage. Her father, Hugh, Earl of Devon, one of the companions in arms of Edward the Third, and one of the original Knights of the Garter, was head of the noble house of Courtenay. Her mother, Margaret, was daughter of Humphrey de Bohun, Earl of Hereford and Essex, Constable of England, the flower of knighthood and the most Christian knight of the knights of the world, by Elizabeth his wife, daughter of King Edward the First. Her eldest brother was, like her father, an original Knight of the Garter; a second brother became Archbishop of Canterbury; a third Lieutenant of Ireland, and a fourth Governor of Calais. Through her sisters, she was closely connected with the Lords Cobham and Harington.
Lady Elizabeth Vere was a widow in 1350. On the occasion of her marriage to Andrew Luttrell, in the summer of 1359, Edward the Third gave them an annuity of 200£ for their lives, in aid of the maintenance of their social position. In 1361, Sir Andrew Luttrell and his wife went on pilgrimage to the famous shrine of Santiago de Compostella, with a retinue. of twenty-four men and women and as many horses. The lady was for some time in the service of her cousins, Edward 'the Black Prince' and. :the 'Fair Maid of Kent,' his wife. The annuity of 200£ was confirmed by Richard the Second in 1378, and renewed in favour of Lady Luttrell in 1381, her husband having died in the interval. In the meanwhile, Lady Luttrell had, with part of her savings bought the reversion of the manors of Feltwell in Norfolk, and Moulton, Debenham and Waldingfield in Suffolk. A charter of free warren therein was issued in her favour 1373. She also acquired the right of appointing two of the canons of the priory of Flitcham.
The most important pecuniary transaction of this Lady Luttrell was, however, her purchase of the reversion of the castle of Dunster, the manors of Kilton, Minehead and Carhampton and the hundred of Carhampton, of five thousand marks. As she predeceased the vendor, she never obtained actual possession of this valuable property. Dying at Bermondsey on the 7th of August 1395, she was buried; by her own desire, in the Benedictine Church of St. Nicholas at Exeter. Edmund Stafford, Bishop of Exeter, in August of that year, ordered public prayers to be offered throughout his diocese for the souls of Margaret Cobham and Elizabeth Luttrell, sisters of the Archbishop of Canterbury, and, by way of encouragement, promised an indulgence of forty days to the faithful who should pray for them.
Burke, John., A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland Vol. 1. London: Henry Colburn, n.d., Call Number: R929.725 B95 v.1, Page 142.
SIR ANDREW LUTTRELL, of Chilton, who had married in the lifetime of his father, Lady Elizabeth Courtenay, second daughter of Hugh, EARL OF DEVON, and widow of Sir John Vere, knt. son of Aubrey de Vere, Earl of Oxford, an alliance which connected the Luttrells with the ROYAL HOUSE OF PLANTAGENET. The son of this marriage, SIR HUGH LUTTRELL, resided at Dunster Castle, which his mother, Lady Elizabeth, had purchased from the family of Mohun.
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Sources
Title: Encyclopedia of Virginia Biography
Publication: Volume 4, Richmond, Virginia, n.p. 1915.
Media: Book
Title: Web Page (Online)
Author: Unconfirmed Data:
Media: Electronic
Text: http://www.smokykin.com/ged/f004/f41/a0044115.htm; http://www.geocities.com/Heartland/Hills/6565/dat22.htm#11
Title: A History of Dunster, and of the families of Mohun & Luttrell
Author: Lyte, Sir Henry Churchill Maxwell
Publication: London : St. Catherine Press, Ltd., 1909
Call Number: 942.38/D1 H2L, DA690.D85 L8
Media: Book
Page: Page 77
Per Ralph Prowell Research, 1732 So. Standage Mesa Arizona, 85202
                  
Children
Marriage
1
Birth:
Abt 1364
Chilton, Devonshire, England
Death:
24 Mar 1427/28
Shaftsbury, Dorset, England or Dunster Castle, Somerset, England
Notes:
                   Individual:
Much of the information I have on the descendants of Sir Hugh Luttrell came from Juanita L. Berrian, e-mail jberriansac.verio.net. I did not research the data myself and certainly do not deserve the credit for this large amount of research.
Sir Hugh Luttrell served in France with Richard II and Henry IV, and held a spectrum of appointments. He was, in succession, Lieut. of Calain, Mayor of Bordeaux, Govenor of Marfluer, and Great Sentinal of Normandy. He was M.P. (Member of Parliament) for Somersetshire in the reign of Richard II, and subsequently for Devonshire. On the death of his cousin, John, he inherited East Quantoxhead, and when Old Lady de Mohun died in 1404, hastened to pursue his claim to Dunster. He began by dispatching the tenants and moving into the Castle in time to celebrate Christmas 1405. This stung the Mohuns into action and they followed a scramble for the deeds of title of the Castle, entrusted to the Prior of Christ Church, Canterbury. Sir Hugh took the Prior to court and eventually obtained the documents which prove his right to the Castle.
The Mohun coheirs, the Duke of York, the Countess of Salisbury and Lord Strange of Knockin-a formidable trio, still argued the validity of the transaction. Sir Hugh was not easily panicked; he won Parliament onto his side and so arranged arbitration by two peers and all the justices. When this failed, Parliament insisted the claim should be heard in the ordinary courts before an impartial jury. By this time, the Mohun's case was wearing thin and they resorted to arguing legal technicalities. It is nevertheless disappointing to find the the story lacks a climax; the case was adjourned in 1407 after the first hearing and was never recommenced. Henceforth, Sir Hugh's right to Dunster was unchallenged. He worked hard to make his new home habituale; and on his first note was to install windows in the neat hall and his private quarters. In 1420 work began on the gatehouse, a symbol of property of the newowner of the Castle. (Guidebooks of the Castle show the interiors, portraits, furniture, etx., which have been in the family since his time.)
He was afterwards ranger of Blackmore forest in Dorsetshire, a privy councilor to Henry V., and on of the commanders under that martial monarch at the reduction of Harfleur in Normandy in 1415, and at the memorable siege of Rouen.
------------------------
Children
1 Margaret Lutterell
2 < Elizabeth Lutterell
3 Anne Lutterell
4 Joan Lutterell
5 John Lutterell
6 William Lutterell
(Source: http://www.smokykin.com/ged/f004/f40/a0044022.htm)
Hugh LUTTERELL
BIRTH: 1364, Dunster,Somerset,England
DEATH: 24 Mar 1428
Family 1: Katherine BEAUMONT
MARRIAGE: Abt 1364 (which is incorrect as he was just born)
Margaret LUTTERELL
+Elizabeth LUTTERELL
Anne LUTTERELL
Joan LUTTERELL
John LUTTERELL
William LUTTERELL
Family 2: Elise Auguste LOEBNITZ
MARRIAGE: 29 Apr 1890, ,Elberfeld
(Source: http://www.cros.net/mbrodie/d0002/g0000018.html#I2601)
Burke, John., A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland Vol. 1. London: Henry Colburn, n.d., Call Number: R929.725 B95 v.1, Page 142.
SIR HUGH LUTTRELL, resided at Dunster Castle, which his mother, Lady Elizabeth, had purchased from the family of Mohun; he was member of parliament for Somersetshire in the reign of RICHARD II. and successively for that county and Devon. In the 8th HENRY IV. Sir Hugh gained a suit at law against Edward Plantagenet, Duke of York, and the other heirs of John Lord Mohun, of Dunster,(*) by which he obtained possession of the honours and Castle of Dunster, lordship of Carhampton, &c. in the county of Somerset. He was afterwards ranger of Blackmore Forest, in Dorsetshire, a privy-councillor to King HENRY V., and one of the commanders under that martial monarch, at the reduction of Harfleur, in Normandy, anno 1415, and at the memorable siege of Rouen. In 1418, being Lieutenant of Harfleur, he took from the French the town and fortress of Monstreville. Sir Hugh m. Catherine, daughter of Sir John Beaumont, knt. and was s. in 1431, by his eldest son,(*) SIR JOHN LUTTRELL.
(*) From a younger son of this Sir Hugh and Catherine Beaumont, ROBERT LUTTRELL, who died in the 15th HENRY VI. seized of the castle and lands of Luttrellstown, in the county of Dublin, descended the well known Irish family of Luttrell, of which were the extinct EARLS OF CARHAMPTON.
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Sources
Much of the information I have on the descendants of Sir Hugh Luttrell came from Juanita L. Berrian, e-mail jberriansac.verio.net
Title: Encyclopedia of Virginia Biography
Publication: Volume 4, Richmond, Virginia, n.p. 1915.
Media: Book
http://www.smokykin.com/ged/f004/f41/a0044114.htm
Per Martha Wilson, 20211 SW 85th Ct, Tualatin, OR 97062 USA E-Mail: moka_joka@yahoo.com
Title: Web Page (Online)
Author: Unconfirmed Data:
Media: Electronic
Text: http://www.sisna.com/users/ryoung/perry/f80.htm#f3328: http://www.cros.net/mbrodie/d0002/g0000018.html#I2601: http://hometown.aol.com/dwidad/luttrell.html
Title: A History of Dunster, and of the families of Mohun & Luttrell
Author: Lyte, Sir Henry Churchill Maxwell
Publication: London : St. Catherine Press, Ltd., 1909
Call Number: 942.38/D1 H2L, DA690.D85 L8
Media: Book
Page: Page 102
Text: Sir Hugh Luttrell died on the 24th of March 1428, aged about sixty-four.
http://www.smokykin.com/ged/f004/f40/a0044022.htm
                  
FamilyCentral Network
Andrew Luttrell, Knight Sir - Elizabeth Courtenay, Lady

Andrew Luttrell, Knight Sir was born at Dunster, S, England Abt 1335.

He married Elizabeth Courtenay, Lady 1359 . Elizabeth Courtenay, Lady was born at of Exeter, Devonshire, England Abt 1333 daughter of Hugh III Courtenay, Earl of Devon Sir and Margaret Debohun, Countess of DevonLADY .

They were the parents of 1 child:
Hugh Luttrell born Abt 1364.

Andrew Luttrell, Knight Sir died 1395 at Somerset, England .

Elizabeth Courtenay, Lady died 7 Aug 1395 at Bermondsey, Somerset, England .