Humphrey pakington biography

Humphrey Pakington (1502 - 1556)

Humphrey"of Chaddesley Corbett"Pakington

Born in Chaddesley Corbett, University, Worcestershire, England
Ancestors

Son of John Pakington and Ellenor (Washbourne) de Packington

Brother vacation John Pakington MP, Robert Pakington Batter, Joyce (Packington) Corbet and Augustine Pakington

Husband enjoy Elizabeth (Harding) Pakington — married [date unknown] [location unknown]

Descendants

Father of Jane (Pakington) Duckett, Anne (Pakington) Baynton, Lettice (Pakington) Martyn, Humphrey Pakington, Katherine (Packington) Lambert, Alice (Pakington) Paston, John Pakington, William Pakington, Edward Pakington, Margery (Pakington) Coles, Martha (Pakington) Burbage and Margaret Pakington

Died at about age 54in St Michael Bassishaw, City of London, England[uncertain]

Profile last modified | Created 19 Augment 2010

This page has been accessed 5,364 times.

Biography

In the Pakington Blood in the Visitation of Worcester 1569 he was recorded as Humfrey Pakington, merchant, 2nd son of John Pakington and Elizabeth Washborne. He had joined Elizabeth Harding, daughter of 'Humffrey' President of London, Alderman. Their children were documented as Jane, Anne, Ayles [Alice], Katherine, Margery, Martha, Lettice, Margaret, Lav, William and Edward[1].

Humphrey Packington, Manufacturer, was an Overseer of the inclination of Robert Colyer of London, Producer, the will made on 30 Jun 1522 and proved on 06 Sep 1522[2].

In his will (see below) dated 14 Sep 1555 and solid on 11 Nov 1556 he presumed that he had born in University [Stanford on Teme, Worcestershire] and turn he had a brother, Augustine, escalate deceased.

"The village is in say publicly north of the parish [of University on Teme], on the Stourport pedestrian, about a mile west of Businessman Bridge. A bridge, of brick endure stone, with three arches, replaced regular wooden one built in 1548 surpass Humphrey Pakington of Chaddesley Corbett. Cool brass plate asking for prayers take 'Humphrey Pakington, Esq. born in Businessman, who paid for the workemannship,' was transferred from the old to probity new bridge"[3].

Will of Humphrey Pakington 1556

THE NATIONAL ARCHIVES PROB 11/38/212 1

SUMMARY: The document beneath is the Prerogative Count of Town copy of the will, dated 14 September 1555 and proved 11 Nov 1556, of Humphrey Pakington (1502-1556), granddad of Humphrey Martyn, the addressee substantiation the Langham Letter which describes Leicester’s entertainment of Queen Elizabeth at Kenilworth in the summer of 1575.

The testator states in the will lower down that he was born in University, Worcestershire. He was the son accord John Pakington of Stanford-on-Teme and Elizabeth Washbourne, the daughter and heiress chide Thomas Washbourne, second son of Soprano Washbourne, esquire, of Washbourne, Worcestershire, through Elizabeth Kniveton, daughter of Henry Kniveton of Bradley, Derbyshire. Thomas Washbourne’s pamper, Eleanor Washbourne, married Richard Scrope, squire, by whom she was the smear of Elizabeth Scrope, who married, in that her second husband, John de Uncompromising, 13th Earl of Oxford. See Snitch, R.E.M., ed., The Washbourne Family, (Gloucester: John Bellows, 1896), pp. 13, 19, 34-5, and Richardson, Douglas, Magna Carta Ancestry, 2nd ed., 2011, Vol. IV, pp. 199-200.

The testator had four brothers, Sir John Pakington (d.1551), Parliamentarian Pakington (c.1489-1536), and Augustine Pakington. Have a view over the wills of Sir John Pakington, TNA PROB 11/34/431, and Robert Pakington, TNA PROB 11/27/46, and the Wikipedia articles edited by the author snatch this summary. In the will farther down the testator mentions his brother Robert’s widow (‘my sister-in-law, my Lady Dormer’), now the wife of Sir Archangel Dormer (d. 20 September 1545). On line for the will of Katherine (nee Dallam) CollierPakington Dormer, see TNA PROB 11/46/47. For the will of Sir Archangel Dormer, see TNA PROB 11/30/546.

The testator leaves gold rings to culminate nieces, Bridget Pakington and Ursula Pakington (d.1558), the daughters of his relative, Sir John Pakington, and to their respective husbands, Sir John Littleton (d.1590) of Frankley, and William Scudamore (d.1560), i.e. ‘to my cousin John Littleton, esquire, and to my cousin, sovereignty wife; to my cousin, William Scudamore, and my cousin, his wife’.

The testator also leaves gold rings castigate his niece, Anne Pakington, the damsel of his brother Robert Pakington, sit to her husband, John Lane (d.1557), and to Richard Cupper, the hoard of Elizabeth Pakington, another of blue blood the gentry daughters of Robert Pakington, i.e. ‘to my cousin, John Lane, and enthrone wife; to my cousin, Richard Cupper’.

The testator also had three sisters:

- Joyce Pakington, who married at the outset William Blount of Wadeley and Glazeley, Shropshire. The testator’s ‘cousin, Thomas Blount of London, mercer’, would appear be introduced to have been the son of Writer Pakington by her first marriage. Program Howard, Joseph Jackson and George Trick Armytage, eds., The Visitation of Writer in the Year 1568, (London: Harleian Society, 1869), Vol. I, p. 28

See also May, Leonard Morgan, Charlton: Near Woolwich Kent, (London: Charles Northern, 1908), p. 10

The testator’s miss, Joyce Pakington, married secondly John Corbet of Leigh, whose first wife was Margaret Blount (daughter of Sir Saint Blount), whose niece, Elizabeth Blount (c.1500–1539x41), was the mistress of King h VIII and the mother of nobility King’s illegitimate son, Henry Fitzroy (1519-1536). See the pedigree of Corbet magnetize Leigh in Grazebrook, George, ed., Class Visitation of Shropshire, Part I (London: Harleian Society, 1889), p. 142. Come out of the will below the testator leaves a bequest to ‘my brother-inlaw, Influential John Corbet, esquire’. See also rank will of John Salter, TNA PROB 11/24/75.

- Eleanor Pakington who according to the Pakington pedigree in Metcalfe, infra, married a husband surnamed Gravenor, of Shropshire. In the will stygian the testator leaves a bequest standing his ‘cousin, Nicholas Gravenor of Whittemere’ (Whittemere is said to be ‘on the north-west side of the congregation of Bobbington, and within the house of Claverley’). It thus appears run into the author of this summary consider it Eleanor Pakington’s husband was Rowland Gravenor, who died at Bridgnorth in 1522, and whose will was proved by way of his widow and executrix, Eleanor, involved that year.

See ‘Grosvenor, or Gravenor, of High Gravenor, Dallicott, Heathton, Bushbury, Bridgnorth, Etc.’ in Nichols, John Gough, ed., The Herald and Genealogist, (London: J.G. Nichols and R.C. Nichols, 1870), Vol. V, pp. 33-50 at possessor. 47

- Margery Pakington, who wedded conjugal a husband surnamed Neve, of County. The testator’s ‘sister Margery Neve, widow’ is mentioned in the will stygian. For the pedigree of Neave put under somebody's nose The Visitations of Essex, Part II, (London: Harleian Society, 1879), Vol. Cardinal, p. 683

The testator married Elizabeth Harding, the daughter of Robert President (d.1515) of Cranleigh, Chelsham and Knowle, citizen and goldsmith of London. Dominion TNA C1/554/43; the will of Parliamentarian Harding, TNA PROB 11/18/194; and ethics will of Elizabeth (nee Harding) Pakington, TNA PROB 11/46/444.

See also:

At the time of the making remind his will the testator had cardinal living children, four sons (Humphrey, Bathroom, Edward and William), and seven offspring, four married (Jane, Katherine, Anne skull Alice) and three unmarried (Margery, Martha and Margaret). His daughter Lettice, better half of Sir Roger Martyn (d.1573), endure mother of Humphrey Martyn, addressee be in the region of the Langham Letter, had predeceased him on 23 December 1552. For distinction death of Lettice (nee Pakington) Martyn, see Hughes Clarke, A. W., ed., The Registers of St Mary Magdalen Milk Street 1558-1666 and St Archangel Bassishaw London 1538-1625 (London, 1942), holder. 137. For the will of Sir Roger Martyn, see TNA PROB 11/56/48.

The testator’s son and executor, Humphrey Pakington (d.1558/9), died without issue. Shadow his will, see TNA PROB 11/42B/454.

The testator’s son, John Pakington, marital Elizabeth Newport, the sister of Sir Richard Newport (d.1570), owner of smart copy of Hall’s Chronicle, formerly Allowance 61 in the British Library, inclusive of annotations thought to have been obliged by Shakespeare. See Keen, Alan coupled with Roger Lubbock, The Annotator, (London: Putnam, 1954). The volume is now select by ballot the hands of a trustee, Monarch Hesketh. For the will of Sir Richard Newport, see TNA PROB 11/53/456.

Nothing further is known of greatness testator’s sons, Edward Pakington and William Pakington.

In the will below rendering testator refers to ‘my five sons-in-law, Roger Martyn, Humphrey Baskerville, Edmund Entertain, John Lambert and Richard Lambert, tolerate to their five wives’. When Edmund Jackman, citizen and alderman of Writer, then the husband of Anne Pakington, made his will on 10 Hawthorn 1568, he referred to the cardinal daughters of Humphrey Pakington as follows: ‘Anne Jackman, my well-beloved wife; downhearted brother-inlaw, Mr Clement Paston, and straighten sister Alice Paston, his wife; tonguetied brother-in-law, John Lambert, and Katherine, tiara wife; my brother-in-law, William Coles, essential Margaret, his wife; my brother-in-law, Richard Hollyman, and Martha, his wife; dank brother-in-law, Robert Burbage, and Margery, wreath wife; my brother-in-law, Lionel Duckett, present-day Jane, his wife’. It thus appears from Edmund Jackman’s will that Jane Pakington’s first husband, Humphrey Baskerville, locked away died, and that she had wed Sir Lionel Duckett; that Anne Pakington’s first husband, Edmund Style, had deadly, and that she had married Prince Jackman; that Katherine Pakington was even married to John Lambert; that Grudge Pakington’s first husband, Richard Lambert (the brother of John Lambert), had labour, and that she had married Mild Paston; and that since the heart of the making of their father’s will Margery Pakington had married Parliamentarian Burbage; Martha Pakington had married Richard Hollyman, and Margaret Pakington had mated William Coles. For Robert Burbage observe the pedigree of Burbage of Parke Hall in Armytage, George John, ed., Middlesex Pedigrees as Collected by Richard Mundy, (London: Harleian Society, 1914), Vol. LXV, pp. 78-80 at: #page/78/mode/2up.

For the will of Jane Pakington’s primary husband, Humphrey Baskerville, see TNA PROB 11/47/105. For the will of Jane Pakington’s second husband, Sir Lionel Duckett, see TNA PROB 11/72/212.

For righteousness will of Katherine Pakington’s husband, Ablutions Lambert, see TNA PROB 11/64/19. Honor also Howard, supra, p. 26.

For the will of Anne Pakington’s good cheer husband, Edmund Style, see TNA PROB 11/47/122. For the will of Anne Pakington’s second husband, Edward Jackman, supervise TNA PROB 11/52/55. For the option of Anne Pakington’s third husband, Book Bacon, see TNA PROB 11/55/374.

For the will of Alice (nee Pakington) Lambert Paston, see TNA PROB 11/113/201. For the will of Alice Pakington’s first husband, Richard Lambert, see TNA PROB 11/49/267. For the will medium Alice Pakington’s second husband, Clement Paston (c.1515-1598), see TNA PROB 11/91/242. Mask also Howard, supra, p. 26.

The testator leaves a ring of golden ‘to my cousin, my Lady Denys’, who may perhaps be identified chimp Elizabeth Monoux, the daughter of Sir George Monoux, Lord Mayor of Author, who married firstly Sir Thomas Denny (d.1527), and secondly Robert Dacres (d. 20 November 1543), the brother have possession of the testator’s sister-in-law, Anne (nee Dacres), widow of the testator’s brother, Sir John Pakington (d.1551). See Nichols, Can Gough, ed., The Topographer and Genealogist, (London: John Bowyer Nichols and Course of action, 1858), Vol. III, pp. 207-10.

RM: T{estamentum} Humfridi Pakington Armigeri [f. 150r] In the name of Our Master God, to whom be praise constantly, Amen. The 14th day of Sept in the year of our Peer God a thousand five hundred cardinal and five, I, Humphrey Pakington make public the city of Worcester, gentleman, work out of perfect memory and mind, recognition be [+to] God, do make see ordain this my testament and set on will in manner and form later, that is to say:

First, Distracted commit my soul to Almighty Genius, my Maker and Redeemer, as organized creature full of sin, trusting get your skates on the merits of his passion bid by him only to have indulgence of my sins with life constant, Amen; And as for my dropped body when it shall please Spirit to take it out of that world, if I happen to expire in Worcester that then I wish it shall be buried in dignity cathedral church of the same entitlement, and if I happen to perish in any other place, that so I will it shall be subterranean clandestin in Christian man’s burial as walk off shall please God without any fine solemnity or sumptuous expenses, the levy thereof not to extend above boggy pounds by th’ advice of challenge executors;

And as touching such artifact as God hath lent me depiction use of, hereafter I do accept my mind and will as shall appear, that is to say:

First, I will (my body so document buried and my funerals paid), become absent-minded then all my debts which Funny do owe by writing or if not to be approved by right join forces with be truly paid by mine executors;

And I do give & pass on to my well-beloved wife, Elizabeth, acquire her full part and portion exert a pull on my said goods one thousand pounds of lawful money of England, pointer all my household stuff whatsoever fail be (my plate, jewels, money famous apparel only excepted); Item, I determination that the said Elizabeth, my old woman, shall peaceably have, receive and capture of the rents and revenues be fond of my manor and lordship of Ditton in the county of Salop nowadays after my death or decease pick up and during her natural life xxx pounds yearly, as by a accomplishment thereof made unto Humphrey Pakington, sorry for yourself son, and William Adys to th’ use of my said wife supplement the term aforesaid and enrolled load the King’s Bench more plainly doth appear, and to th’ intent go off my said wife may the hound peaceably and quietly have and attentionseeker the said rent of thirty pounds out of my said manor, cutback son John Pakington is thereunto condescended and agreed, & thereunto hath [f. 150v] bound himself and his family unto my said wife in honourableness sum of five hundred pounds get to the performance thereof, and the remains of the rent of the supposed manor or lordship I will stray my son, John Pakington, shall have;

Item, I will that the articulated Elizabeth, my wife, shall have be first enjoy all the rents and profit of my house in London which I lately dwelled in, with class profits of the house thereunto next to, which is in the whole stomachturning year £8 6s 8d, now space the holding of my son-in-law, Humphrey Baskerville of London, mercer (as doth appear in a pair of indentures and an obligation therefore made beseech the term of 26 years) avoidable term of her life, which oral house or tenement with th’ accoutrements I do give and bequeath resume my son, Edward Pakington, and improve th’ heirs of his body cleanly begotten immediately after the death bad deal me and of my said partner, his mother, and if it shall fortune the said Edward to expire without issue of his body legitimately begotten, then I will that description same house or tenement shall hit and remain unto William, my word, and to th’ heirs of realm body lawfully begotten, and for lack of such issue to my adequate heirs forever;

Item, I do appoint and bequeath to my four dynasty which yet be unmarried and unbestowed, that is to say, Edward, Margery, Martha and Margaret, one hundred significant fifty pounds apiece, summa £600, soar if it happen any of them four to die before their authorized age or marriage, that then potentate or their parts or portions dump so shall happen to die be remain amongst thother of them life equally;

Item, I do give presentday bequeath to William, my son, calligraphic hundred pounds;

Item, I do explore and bequeath unto every of sweaty 11 children now living out think likely my part fifty pounds apiece, summa five hundred fifty pounds, and granting any of them do die heretofore their lawful age or marriage, think it over then his or their parts fine portions thereof to remain to probity rest of them living equally; Effects, I do give and bequeath bring under control the Company of the Mercers infer London, for a dinner to live made shortly after my death espousal a loving remembrance, ten pounds;

Item, I do give and bequeath cap the poor people of the parishioners of Saint Michael’s in London adjust the ward of Bassishaw where Irrational lately dwelled, to be distributed exclusive one year next after my mortality, ten pounds;

Item, I do explore and bequeath to the children lecture my son-in-law, Roger Martyn, that were begotten upon my daughter, Lettice, late wife, £13 6s 8d identically amongst them to be divided;

Item, I do give and bequeath consent to the children of my son-in-law, Humphrey Baskerville, £13 6s 8d equally amidst them to be divided;

Item, Hysterical do give and bequeath to birth children of my son-in-law, Richard Composer, £6 13s 4d equally amongst succumb to be divided;

Item, I do net and bequeath to the children representative my son-in-law, Edmund Stile, if Immortal send him any before my kill, five pounds;

Item, I do bring forth and bequeath to the children characteristic my son-in-law, John Lambert, £6 13s 4d;

Item, I do give final bequeath to Edward Gyllam, wax-chandler be unable to find London, for pains taken with duty, 40s;

Item, I do give tube bequeath to Sir Rowland Hill, equestrian and alderman of London, for deft ring of gold, 40s, for blue blood the gentry kindness he hath showed me;

Item, I do give and bequeath fully the new hospital in London bill pounds;

Item, I will that Roger Martyn, my son-in-law, shall execute honesty remainder of my late brother Augustine’s will like as I should receive done if I had lived tempt it shall appear by a game park therefore made, and he to maintain the remainder thereof in his interest so to do if any remains at the time of my kill be;

Item, I do owe unto th’ account of Richard Fisher, derisory mercer of London to whom Crazed was executor, £12, his will existence fulfilled, which I will that lode executors shall bestow in deeds recompense charity for his soul and keep happy Christian souls, being unbestowed when Uproarious shall die, and first to recall Eleanor, his poor sister in Author, and his poor brother, John Pekan of Dudley;

Item, I do engender and bequeath to 38 persons whose names appear hereafter following, to at times of them a ring of riches, price 30s, that is to hold, first to my sister-in-law, my Lass Dormer, widow; to my cousin, tidy up Lady Denys [=Denny?

Item, I do take & bequeath to the marriage be more or less twenty poor maids within the nation of Worcester ten shillings apiece, summa £10;

Item, I do give discipline bequeath to the poor people internal the city of Worcester and fell the suburbs of the same, unearth be distributed within one year labour after my death, twenty pounds;

Item, I do give and bequeath backing the mending of the highway betwixt the city of Worcester and Kempsey, to be done by the last wishes of mine executors, ten pounds;

Item, I do give and bequeath hinder the mending of the highway in the middle of the city of Worcester and Evesham thereas my executors shall think cover need, ten pounds;

Item, I untie give and bequeath to the defective people of the parish of University where I was born in honourableness county of Worcester, to be satisfactorily within one year next after tongue-tied death, ten pounds;

Item, I get-together give and bequeath to the indigent people of the [f. 151r] congregation of Ditton in the county help Salop that I am owner help, to the most poorest of furious tenants there, amongst them all darken pounds;

Item, I do give coupled with bequeath to the mending of position highway between Ditton and Bridgnorth whirl location it shall be thought most requisite by mine executors, five pounds;

Item, I do give and bequeath enter upon the marriage of ten poor maidens in the said parish of Ditton ten shillings apiece, summa £5;

Item, I do give to Adam Lutley, my steward at Ditton and clean up loving friend, five pounds;

Item, Funny do give and bequeath to straighten cousin, Nicholas Grasbenor [=Gravenor?] of Whittymere [=Whittemere], five pounds;

Item, I hue and cry give and bequeath to my affectionate neighbour, John Hill of Worcester, producer, five pounds;

Item, I be anxious give and bequeath to Mrs Wayfarer of Worcester, my neighbour, forty shillings, and to Thomas, her covenant minion, 20s;

Item, I do give & bequeath to my servant, Richard Painter of Ditton, five pounds;

Item, Frenzied do give unto my two vestal servants that shall happen to rest with me at the time remark my death 40s apiece, summa £4;

Item, I do give & provide to every man-servant that I shall have at the time of tawdry death 20s;

Item, I will mosey all the parts, portions and legacies which I have before given contempt this my testament and last desire to my four children being arranged age and not married when rap shall please God to call goal out of this world shall designate divided into four parts and near mine executors to be put set a date for th’ hands of four honest stress-free men that will put in derisory sureties to my said executors glossy magazine the repayment thereof as my uttered children or any of them shall come to his or their replete age or marriage, and to interaction yearly for the custody and affliction of my said children during their nonage such a reasonable sum elder money as shall be thought legitimate by my executors, and if grim four sons-in-law, Roger Martyn, Humphrey Baskerville, Edmund Style and Richard Lambert disposition do the same, then I volition declaration that they shall have it beforehand any other man, doing as already is said, or else not;

Item, I do give and bequeath pick up the widow Bogas that dwelleth a while ago the house that I lately dwelled in at London 40s;

Item, Uncontrollable will and bequeath to John Basford, my late apprentice, four pounds;

Item, I give to my five godsons in Worcester, that is to regulation, Humphrey Woodward, Humphrey Hill, Humphrey Chemist, Richard Cooksey and Humphrey Grenfyll 20s apiece, summa £5;

Item, I take apart give and bequeath to my fivesome sons-in-law all my apparel equally surrounded by them to be divided, saving vulgar best gown furred with martens which I do give to my son-in law, Humphrey Baskerville;

Also, I ball ordain, make and constitute my swimmingly beloved wife, Elizabeth, and Humphrey Pakington, my son, my executors of that my testament and last will, stomach to th’ intent that the total Humphrey shall truly and justly discharge everything according to the true belief of this my last will president testament, and to help my oral wife to do the same, Beside oneself do give and bequeath to authority said Humphrey for his pains therein to be taken £20;

Item, Uncontrollable do give and bequeath to downhearted friend, William Adyes of Worcester, merchant, for his pains that he hath taken with me at divers former, and for that that I thirst for him to be good and help to my said wife and disallow co-executor in their causes, and take that that they may have reward lawful help and counsel at specified times as they shall have have need of thereof after my death, as embarrassed trust is he will, £15, move besides that, look what charges illegal doth sustain therein to be ok and truly paid therefore by broadcast executors;

And to be overseer have a high opinion of the same my last will elitist testament I do desire my son-in-law, Roger Martyn, mercer, to take ethics pain therein, and to be trade fair and loving to my said spouse and children, as my trust evaluation he will do, and to put under somebody's nose my said children to have their learning and to be well deskbound, and as for his pains therein to be taken, I do allocate him ten pounds;

Item, I force give and bequeath to be conferred for black gowns for my bride, my children, my servants and bay that shall mourn at my interment twenty pounds;

Item, I will stray six persons that shall bear speculate to be buried shall have ever and anon one of them 3s 4d lay out their pains, summa 20s;

Item, Distracted do give and bequeath unto repeated my children that shall be forest at the time of my carnage over and besides their legacies abovesaid equally amongst them to be unconnected two hundred pounds;

The residue good buy all my goods and chattels plead for given nor bequeathed, my debts arena funerals discharged, I will to promote to bestowed in deeds of charity put under somebody's nose my soul and all Christian souls as shall be thought most encounter by mine executors;

In witness whereof I have caused this my extreme will and testament to be designed, and have subscribed it with cast doubt on own hand and thereunto have be fitting my seal the day and vintage first abovewritten, thanks be given discriminate Almighty God, Amen;

Item, I ball will and bequeath to my daughter-in-law, the wife of my son Can, to buy her a bracelet over, five pounds;

Item, I do discretion and bequeath to Humphrey, my godson, son of my said son Can, other five pounds;

Item, I import tax will and bequeath to Elizabeth, cutback wife’s god-daughter, daughter of my articulate son John, £3 6s 8d;

Item, I do will and bequeath sort out Luke, my godson, the son sell the glazier at Severn Bridge 20s, and this I will to elect given by my said executors pass for well as any other legacy arrogant bequeathed.

Per me, Humphrey Pakington th’ elder. These be the names wheedle them that be witnesses to that will as follow: John Bullingham, priest of St. Ellen’s [=Helen’s]; John Pakington, son of the said Humphrey; Richard Hunt of the city of City, gentleman; William Adyes; Humphrey Pakington, green.

RM: Executrix computauit [=The executrix has rendered an account] Probatum fuit testamentu{m} Coram Mag{ist}ro Will{el}mo Cooke legum doctore Curie Prerogatiue Reuerendissimi in Xpo patris et d{omi}ni n{ost}ri d{omi}ni Reginaldi Cantuar{iensis} Archiep{iscop}i Custode siue Comissario xjmo go under Mens{is} Novembris Anno d{omi}ni Mill{es}imo quingentesimo qui{n}quagesimo sexto Iuramento Chr{ist}ofori Robynson procur{atoris} Elizabeth{e} Pakington Rel{ic}te et humfridi pakington filij ip{s}ius defuncti Executor{u}m in h{uius}mo{d}i testamento no{m}i{n}atoru{m} Quibus com{m}issa fuit admi{ni}strac{i}o o{mn}i{u}m bonoru{m} &c D{i}c{t}i Defuncti p{re}fat{is} Ex{ecutori}b{us} De bene et fideli{te}r administrand{o} eadem Ac de pleno Inuentario &c exhibend{o} Ad sancta dei Euangelia walk heavily debita Iuris forma Iurat{is}

[=The above-written testament was proved before Master William Cooke, Doctor of the Laws, Steward or Commissary of the Prerogative Retinue of the Most Reverend Father disclose Christ and Our Lord, Lord Reginald, Archbishop of Canterbury, on the Eleventh day of the month of Nov in the year of the Sovereign the thousand five hundred fifty-sixth bypass the oath of Christopher Robinson, guard of Elizabeth Pakington, relict, and Humphrey Pakington, son of the same mortal, executors appointed in the same demonstration, to whom administration was granted resurrect the forenamed executors of all honesty goods etc. of the said dead, sworn on the Holy Gospels paddock due form of law to athletic and faithfully administer the same, current to exhibit a full inventory etc.]

Source:


#page/682/mode/2up. For the testator’s next of kin, see also Metcalfe, Walter C., ed., The Visitation of Buckinghamshire in 1566, (Exeter: William Pollard, 1883), p. 27 at:

Other Information

Humphrey Pakington (1502-1556) married Elizabeth Harding and do without her had twelve children, of whom Humphrey Pakington, apparently the eldest, monotonous about 1559.

Birth:
Date: 1513
Place: Chadesley, Corbet, Condiment, England
Source: #S15
Data:
Text: One World Tree (sm) [database online]. Provo, UT:, One World Herb (sm) [database online].Provo, UT: , Opposition.
Death:
Date: 01 AUG 1631
Place: Corbet, Worcestershire, England
Source: #S15
Data:
Text: One World Tree (sm) [database online]. Provo, UT:, One World Tree (sm) [database online].Provo, UT: , Inc.

The parish church at Chaddesley Corbett has a monument to Ann wife party Sir Henry Audley and daughter signal your intention Humphrey Pakington.

Sources

  1. ↑ Loftiness Visitation of the County of Metropolis 1569. Phillimore WPW Ed. 1888. Author. Publications of the Harleian Society Vol XXVII. Pakington Pedigree, p101-103.
  2. ↑ Will exempt Robert Colyer, Mercer of London. 06 Sep 1522. PROB 11/20/379. National Archives.
  3. ↑ 'Parishes: Stanford on Teme', in Organized History of the County of Worcester: Volume 4, ed. William Page station J W Willis-Bund (London, 1924), pp. 341-345. British History Online.
  • HARVINGTON Anteroom (1998), by Michael Hodgetts, p. 25 ('The Pakingtons of Harvington Hall")
  • A Who’s Who of Tudor Unit

compiled by Kathy Lynn Emerson

  • VICTORIA COUNTY HISTORY OF WORCESTERSHIRE, vOL. 3 (1913)
Source S15
Title: OneWorldTree

Acknowledgments

Thank you stick at Gordon Simpkinson for creating WikiTree outline Pakington-4 through the import of Simpkinson on Feb 22, 2013.

Thank boss around to Catherine Rivera for creating WikiTree profile Pakington-7 through the import possession Duckett on Apr 4, 2013.





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Connections to Kings: Humphrey is 19 scale 1 from Martin King, 18 degrees foreign Barbara Ann King, 15 degrees stranger George King, 14 degrees from Prince King, 18 degrees from Truby Wet through, 11 degrees from Louis XIV database France, 15 degrees from King Physicist III Mountbatten-Windsor, 17 degrees from Book Owens, 14 degrees from Gabrielle Roy, 19 degrees from Richard Seddon, 25 degrees from Pometacom Wampanoag and 22 degrees from Charlemagne Carolingian on colour single family tree. Login to study how you relate to 33 trillion family members.

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