Individual Details

Ranulph FitzAlan

(1359 - )

This person was created through the import of LJ Pellman ConsolidatedFamily_2011-03-21.ged on 21 March 2011. The following data was included in the gedcom. You may wish to edit it for readability.

=== Name ===
: Name: Ranulph /FitzAlan/
:: Source: [[#S5]]
::: Page: Ancestry Family Trees
::: Data: :::: Text: http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=6835128&pid=-1213981212
::: Note: [[#N1458]]


=== Note ===
: Note: [[#N2971]]

=== Sources ===
: Source S5
: Title: Ancestry Family Trees: Publication: Name: Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: The Generations Network. Original data: Family Tree files submitted by Ancestry members.;: NOTEThis information comes from 1 or more individual Ancestry Family Tree files. This source citation points you to a current version of those files. Note: The owners of these tree files may have removed or changed information since this source citation was created.




=== Notes ===
: Note N1458
: Note N2971The three prevailing schools of thought about Ranulph FitzAlan are that (1) he was the son of Richard "Copped Hat" fitzAlan, 10th Earl Arundel and Eleanor Plantagenet, (2) he was the son of Sir William fitzAlan, who died about 1400, and (3) that he was the son of some inconsequential person named FitzAlan (i.e., son of Alan) who had little or no connection to the Arundel estate. However, none of these theories match the known facts. As to Theory (1) there is no record in any reliable genealogy or book of peerage listing a Ranluph (or Ralph) as the son of Richard, the 10th Earl Arundel and Eleanor Plantagenet. If this were a legitimate claim, it would surely have been documented. Theory (2) is all been disproved by the Last Will and Testament of Sir William fitzAlan who lists his only heir as his wife. And Theory (3) is debunked by an inscription near his tomb in the Church of Towersy, Buckinghamshire, which reads: "Pray for the sowlys [sic] of William [de Grenville] and Christian his wife; also for [Radulphus] Arundell and Julyan [his wife] Also for Bartholomew Collingridge & Alys his wife, and William ther sonn that her’ lyeth upon whose sowlys o’r Lord I.hs haue mercy. Amen.” This linkage of Ranulph [fitzAlan] de Arundel, Julianne [de Wycombe], Bartholomew Collingridge, and Alice [fitzAlan de Arundel] is consistent with notations in various peerages indicating how portions of the Arundel estate came into the Collingridge and later the Dormer families. In addition, several ancient books of heraldry depict the Arms of Radulphus FitzAlan as combining the Arms of both Arundel and Warenne, "quartered and flanched." It was customary for notable, yet illegitimate, children of noble families to bear the Arms of those families quartered and flanched. There was no union of the Arundel and Warenne families until the marriage of Edmund fitAlan, 9th Earl Arundel to Alice de Warenne. Richard "Copped Hat" fitzAlan would therefore have been the first person entitled to bear both Coats of Arms, so an illegiitimate child of his who came into prominence would bear those Arms quartered and flanched. Richard's daughter, Alice, was rumored to have born at least one illegitimate child by Cardinal Beaufort. If this child were Ranulph, however, he would have been entitled to bear the Beaufort Arms quartered and flanched; not the Arundel. It is more likely, therefore, that he was the illegitimate son of Richard "Copped Hat" fitAlan, since his date of birth makes him a contemporary of the children of Richard and Eleanor Plantagenet. A less likely scenario is that he was a child of Edmund "the Bastard" fitzAlan, the eldest (and bastardized by annulment of Richard's first marriage). While this would potentially entitle him to the Coat of Arms he bore, the children of Edmund fitzAlan have been extensively documented and appear not to have included any male heirs, legitimate or otherwise.



}
''Ralph FitzAlan'' is a descendant of Magna Carta surety barons
''[[De_Vere-309|Robert de Vere]]'' and ''[[Quincy-226|Saher de Quincy]]''

[[Category:Quincy-226 Descendants]][[Category:De_Vere-309 Descendants]]

== Biography =="Ralph FitzAlan was buried at Towersey Church, Towersey, Buckinghamshire, England; '''He was illegitimate.''' Buried in Trinity Aisle in the church of Thame, Oxfordshire. He married Juliane de Grenville, daughter of William de Grenville, Sheriff of Oxford & Buckingham and Christian; They had 1 daughter (Alice, wife of Bartholomew Collingridge)."[http://our-royal-titled-noble-and-commoner-ancestors.com/p4808.htm#i144383 Our Royal, Titled, Noble, Commoner Ancestors] website, compiled by Marlyn Lewis, citing pages from Douglas Richardson's books. Birth date (1330) listed is estimated.

== Note on Ralph's Coat of Arms ==The following note was posted by Douglas Richardson at the [http://archiver.rootsweb.ancestry.com/th/read/GEN-MEDIEVAL/2009-03/1236045603 gen-medieval forum] in 2009:
"The coat of arms of Ralph de Arundel is found in a volume of Robert Glover’s collections (Brit. Mus, MS. Lans. 872). The coat of arms appears to have been taken from a window which was formerly found in the chapelry of the prebendal church of Towersey, Buckinghamshire, where Ralph de Arundel lies buried.
These arms are those of the Earls of Arundel, they being Arundel and Warenne quarterly, placed on two flanches. According to various heraldic experts, the flanches are an indication of illegitimacy, the person so designated being the illegitimate son of a member of the house of Arundel.
These same distinctive arms are also included among the quarterings claimed by Ralph de Arundel’s descendants, the Dormer family, in the 1634 Visitation of Buckinghamshire (see Philipot et al. Vis. of Buckingham 1634 & 1566 (H.S.P. 58) (1909): 40 (Dormer pedigree).
The Dormers would have been quite familiar with the windows and heraldry in the chapel of the church at Towersey, as their male line Dormer forbears resided in the next door parish of Thame, Oxfordshire.
As a matter of history, the arms in question (Arundel and Warenne quarterly) were only brought into being in 1347, when Richard de Arundel, Earl of Arundel (died 1376), became heir to his uncle, John de Warenne, Earl of Surrey. As such, Ralph de Arundel can only have been an child of either Earl Richard de Arundel, or one of his siblings.
Reviewing the evidence, it appears best to assign Ralph de Arundel as a child of Earl Richard himself. The chronology certainly supports this placement.
Also, the earl is known to have had an unhappy firs marriage and to have fathered at least one other illegitimate child.
One heraldic expert has claimed that the flanches on Ralph de Arundel’s arms are an indication that the illegitimate person adopted the arms of his mother, not his father.
If so, then Ralph de Arundel would necessarily be the son of one of Earl Richard’s many sisters.
However, the fact that Ralph bore the surname, Arundel, is good evidence that it was his father who was an Arundel, not his mother, as bastard sons in this time period usually bore the surname of their father."

===Parentage Theories=== The three prevailing schools of thought about Ranulph FitzAlan are that :# he was the son of Richard "Copped Hat" fitzAlan, 10th Earl Arundel and Eleanor Plantagenet
# he was the son of Sir William fitzAlan, who died about 1400# he was the son of some inconsequential person named FitzAlan (i.e., son of Alan) who had little or no connection to the Arundel estate.

However, none of these theories match the known facts. As to :# Theory 1: there is no record in any reliable genealogy or book of peerage listing a Ranluph (or Ralph) as the son of Richard, the 10th Earl Arundel and Eleanor Plantagenet. If this were a legitimate claim, it would surely have been documented. # Theory 2: is all been disproved by the Last Will and Testament of Sir William fitzAlan who lists his only heir as his wife. # Theory 3: is debunked by an inscription near his tomb in the Church of Towersy, Buckinghamshire, which reads: '' Pray for the sowlys [sic] of William [de Grenville] and Christian his wife; also for [Radulphus] Arundell and Julyan [his wife] Also for Bartholomew Collingridge & Alys his wife, and William ther sonn that her’ lyeth upon whose sowlys o’r Lord I.hs haue mercy. Amen.''” This linkage of Ranulph [fitzAlan] de Arundel, Julianne [de Wycombe], Bartholomew Collingridge, and Alice [fitzAlan de Arundel] is consistent with notations in various peerages indicating how portions of the Arundel estate came into the Collingridge and later the Dormer families. In addition, several ancient books of heraldry depict the Arms of Radulphus FitzAlan as combining the Arms of both Arundel and Warenne, "quartered and flanched."
It was customary for notable, yet illegitimate, children of noble families to bear the Arms of those families quartered and flanched.
There was no union of the Arundel and Warenne families until the marriage of Edmund fitAlan, 9th Earl Arundel to Alice de Warenne.
Richard "Copped Hat" fitzAlan would therefore have been the first person entitled to bear both Coats of Arms, so an illegiitimate child of his who came into prominence would bear those Arms quartered and flanched.
Richard's daughter, Alice, was rumored to have born at least one illegitimate child by Cardinal Beaufort. If this child were Ranulph, however, he would have been entitled to bear the Beaufort Arms quartered and flanched; not the Arundel.
It is more likely, therefore, that he was the illegitimate son of Richard "Copped Hat" fitAlan, since his date of birth makes him a contemporary of the children of Richard and Eleanor Plantagenet.
A less likely scenario is that he was a child of Edmund "the Bastard" fitzAlan, the eldest (and bastardized by annulment of Richard's first marriage). While this would potentially entitle him to the Coat of Arms he bore, the children of Edmund fitzAlan have been extensively documented and appear not to have included any male heirs, legitimate or otherwise.

=== Name ===
: Name: Ranulph /FitzAlan/

=== Birth ===
: Birthdate : 1330
: Birth: Date: Abt 1370

== Sources ==
* [http://www.rootschat.com/forum/index.php?topic=422787.0 Rootschat forum]
*[https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/soc.genealogy.medieval/PvVJ3-nBzpI googlegroups forum medieval info about his wife as well]
* Source: [[#S5]] Page: Ancestry Family Trees Data: Text: http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=6835128&pid=-1213981212 Note: [[#N1458]]* Source S5 Title: Ancestry Family Trees Publication: Name: Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: The Generations Network. Note N1458
* Source: S184 Abbreviation: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Editio n , by Frederick Lewis Reference: 26 May 2003 Title: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition, by Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., 1999
* Source: S648 Abbreviation: Our Kingdom Come Title: Eileen McKinnon-Suggs (suggs1@msn.com), Our Kingdom Come (http://awtc.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=emsuggs&id=I39737 CONT Last updated October 10, 2004 CONT Accessed December 2, 2005)
* [S16] Douglas Richardson, Magna Carta Ancestry, 2nd Edition, Vol. II, p. 418-419.
* [S4] Douglas Richardson, Royal Ancestry, Vol. II, p. 609.
* [S4] Douglas Richardson, Royal Ancestry, Vol. II, p. 605-607.
* [S4] Douglas Richardson, Royal Ancestry, Vol. III, p. 340.}
''Ralph FitzAlan'' is a descendant of Magna Carta surety barons
''[[De_Vere-309|Robert de Vere]]'' and ''[[Quincy-226|Saher de Quincy]]''

[[Category:Quincy-226 Descendants]][[Category:De_Vere-309 Descendants]]

== Biography =="Ralph FitzAlan was buried at Towersey Church, Towersey, Buckinghamshire, England; '''He was illegitimate.''' Buried in Trinity Aisle in the church of Thame, Oxfordshire. He married Juliane de Grenville, daughter of William de Grenville, Sheriff of Oxford & Buckingham and Christian; They had 1 daughter (Alice, wife of Bartholomew Collingridge)."[http://our-royal-titled-noble-and-commoner-ancestors.com/p4808.htm#i144383 Our Royal, Titled, Noble, Commoner Ancestors] website, compiled by Marlyn Lewis, citing pages from Douglas Richardson's books. Birth date (1330) listed is estimated.

== Note on Ralph's Coat of Arms ==The following note was posted by Douglas Richardson at the [http://archiver.rootsweb.ancestry.com/th/read/GEN-MEDIEVAL/2009-03/1236045603 gen-medieval forum] in 2009:
"The coat of arms of Ralph de Arundel is found in a volume of Robert Glover’s collections (Brit. Mus, MS. Lans. 872). The coat of arms appears to have been taken from a window which was formerly found in the chapelry of the prebendal church of Towersey, Buckinghamshire, where Ralph de Arundel lies buried.
These arms are those of the Earls of Arundel, they being Arundel and Warenne quarterly, placed on two flanches. According to various heraldic experts, the flanches are an indication of illegitimacy, the person so designated being the illegitimate son of a member of the house of Arundel.
These same distinctive arms are also included among the quarterings claimed by Ralph de Arundel’s descendants, the Dormer family, in the 1634 Visitation of Buckinghamshire (see Philipot et al. Vis. of Buckingham 1634 & 1566 (H.S.P. 58) (1909): 40 (Dormer pedigree).
The Dormers would have been quite familiar with the windows and heraldry in the chapel of the church at Towersey, as their male line Dormer forbears resided in the next door parish of Thame, Oxfordshire.
As a matter of history, the arms in question (Arundel and Warenne quarterly) were only brought into being in 1347, when Richard de Arundel, Earl of Arundel (died 1376), became heir to his uncle, John de Warenne, Earl of Surrey. As such, Ralph de Arundel can only have been an child of either Earl Richard de Arundel, or one of his siblings.
Reviewing the evidence, it appears best to assign Ralph de Arundel as a child of Earl Richard himself. The chronology certainly supports this placement.
Also, the earl is known to have had an unhappy firs marriage and to have fathered at least one other illegitimate child.
One heraldic expert has claimed that the flanches on Ralph de Arundel’s arms are an indication that the illegitimate person adopted the arms of his mother, not his father.
If so, then Ralph de Arundel would necessarily be the son of one of Earl Richard’s many sisters.
However, the fact that Ralph bore the surname, Arundel, is good evidence that it was his father who was an Arundel, not his mother, as bastard sons in this time period usually bore the surname of their father."

===Parentage Theories=== The three prevailing schools of thought about Ranulph FitzAlan are that :# he was the son of Richard "Copped Hat" fitzAlan, 10th Earl Arundel and Eleanor Plantagenet
# he was the son of Sir William fitzAlan, who died about 1400# he was the son of some inconsequential person named FitzAlan (i.e., son of Alan) who had little or no connection to the Arundel estate.

However, none of these theories match the known facts. As to :# Theory 1: there is no record in any reliable genealogy or book of peerage listing a Ranluph (or Ralph) as the son of Richard, the 10th Earl Arundel and Eleanor Plantagenet. If this were a legitimate claim, it would surely have been documented. # Theory 2: is all been disproved by the Last Will and Testament of Sir William fitzAlan who lists his only heir as his wife. # Theory 3: is debunked by an inscription near his tomb in the Church of Towersy, Buckinghamshire, which reads: '' Pray for the sowlys [sic] of William [de Grenville] and Christian his wife; also for [Radulphus] Arundell and Julyan [his wife] Also for Bartholomew Collingridge & Alys his wife, and William ther sonn that her’ lyeth upon whose sowlys o’r Lord I.hs haue mercy. Amen.''” This linkage of Ranulph [fitzAlan] de Arundel, Julianne [de Wycombe], Bartholomew Collingridge, and Alice [fitzAlan de Arundel] is consistent with notations in various peerages indicating how portions of the Arundel estate came into the Collingridge and later the Dormer families. In addition, several ancient books of heraldry depict the Arms of Radulphus FitzAlan as combining the Arms of both Arundel and Warenne, "quartered and flanched."
It was customary for notable, yet illegitimate, children of noble families to bear the Arms of those families quartered and flanched.
There was no union of the Arundel and Warenne families until the marriage of Edmund fitAlan, 9th Earl Arundel to Alice de Warenne.
Richard "Copped Hat" fitzAlan would therefore have been the first person entitled to bear both Coats of Arms, so an illegiitimate child of his who came into prominence would bear those Arms quartered and flanched.
Richard's daughter, Alice, was rumored to have born at least one illegitimate child by Cardinal Beaufort. If this child were Ranulph, however, he would have been entitled to bear the Beaufort Arms quartered and flanched; not the Arundel.
It is more likely, therefore, that he was the illegitimate son of Richard "Copped Hat" fitAlan, since his date of birth makes him a contemporary of the children of Richard and Eleanor Plantagenet.
A less likely scenario is that he was a child of Edmund "the Bastard" fitzAlan, the eldest (and bastardized by annulment of Richard's first marriage). While this would potentially entitle him to the Coat of Arms he bore, the children of Edmund fitzAlan have been extensively documented and appear not to have included any male heirs, legitimate or otherwise.

=== Name ===
: Name: Ranulph /FitzAlan/

=== Birth ===
: Birthdate : 1330
: Birth: Date: Abt 1370

== Sources ==
* [http://www.rootschat.com/forum/index.php?topic=422787.0 Rootschat forum]
*[https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/soc.genealogy.medieval/PvVJ3-nBzpI googlegroups forum medieval info about his wife as well]
* Source: [[#S5]] Page: Ancestry Family Trees Data: Text: http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=6835128&pid=-1213981212 Note: [[#N1458]]* Source S5 Title: Ancestry Family Trees Publication: Name: Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: The Generations Network. Note N1458
* Source: S184 Abbreviation: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Editio n , by Frederick Lewis Reference: 26 May 2003 Title: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition, by Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., 1999
* Source: S648 Abbreviation: Our Kingdom Come Title: Eileen McKinnon-Suggs (suggs1@msn.com), Our Kingdom Come (http://awtc.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=emsuggs&id=I39737 CONT Last updated October 10, 2004 CONT Accessed December 2, 2005)
* [S16] Douglas Richardson, Magna Carta Ancestry, 2nd Edition, Vol. II, p. 418-419.
* [S4] Douglas Richardson, Royal Ancestry, Vol. II, p. 609.
* [S4] Douglas Richardson, Royal Ancestry, Vol. II, p. 605-607.
* [S4] Douglas Richardson, Royal Ancestry, Vol. III, p. 340.}
''Ralph FitzAlan'' is a descendant of Magna Carta surety barons
''[[De_Vere-309|Robert de Vere]]'' and ''[[Quincy-226|Saher de Quincy]]''

[[Category:Quincy-226 Descendants]][[Category:De_Vere-309 Descendants]]

== Biography =="Ralph FitzAlan was buried at Towersey Church, Towersey, Buckinghamshire, England; '''He was illegitimate.''' Buried in Trinity Aisle in the church of Thame, Oxfordshire. He married Juliane de Grenville, daughter of William de Grenville, Sheriff of Oxford & Buckingham and Christian; They had 1 daughter (Alice, wife of Bartholomew Collingridge)."[http://our-royal-titled-noble-and-commoner-ancestors.com/p4808.htm#i144383 Our Royal, Titled, Noble, Commoner Ancestors] website, compiled by Marlyn Lewis, citing pages from Douglas Richardson's books. Birth date (1330) listed is estimated.

== Note on Ralph's Coat of Arms ==The following note was posted by Douglas Richardson at the [http://archiver.rootsweb.ancestry.com/th/read/GEN-MEDIEVAL/2009-03/1236045603 gen-medieval forum] in 2009:
"The coat of arms of Ralph de Arundel is found in a volume of Robert Glover’s collections (Brit. Mus, MS. Lans. 872). The coat of arms appears to have been taken from a window which was formerly found in the chapelry of the prebendal church of Towersey, Buckinghamshire, where Ralph de Arundel lies buried.
These arms are those of the Earls of Arundel, they being Arundel and Warenne quarterly, placed on two flanches. According to various heraldic experts, the flanches are an indication of illegitimacy, the person so designated being the illegitimate son of a member of the house of Arundel.
These same distinctive arms are also included among the quarterings claimed by Ralph de Arundel’s descendants, the Dormer family, in the 1634 Visitation of Buckinghamshire (see Philipot et al. Vis. of Buckingham 1634 & 1566 (H.S.P. 58) (1909): 40 (Dormer pedigree).
The Dormers would have been quite familiar with the windows and heraldry in the chapel of the church at Towersey, as their male line Dormer forbears resided in the next door parish of Thame, Oxfordshire.
As a matter of history, the arms in question (Arundel and Warenne quarterly) were only brought into being in 1347, when Richard de Arundel, Earl of Arundel (died 1376), became heir to his uncle, John de Warenne, Earl of Surrey. As such, Ralph de Arundel can only have been an child of either Earl Richard de Arundel, or one of his siblings.
Reviewing the evidence, it appears best to assign Ralph de Arundel as a child of Earl Richard himself. The chronology certainly supports this placement.
Also, the earl is known to have had an unhappy firs marriage and to have fathered at least one other illegitimate child.
One heraldic expert has claimed that the flanches on Ralph de Arundel’s arms are an indication that the illegitimate person adopted the arms of his mother, not his father.
If so, then Ralph de Arundel would necessarily be the son of one of Earl Richard’s many sisters.
However, the fact that Ralph bore the surname, Arundel, is good evidence that it was his father who was an Arundel, not his mother, as bastard sons in this time period usually bore the surname of their father."

===Parentage Theories=== The three prevailing schools of thought about Ranulph FitzAlan are that :# he was the son of Richard "Copped Hat" fitzAlan, 10th Earl Arundel and Eleanor Plantagenet
# he was the son of Sir William fitzAlan, who died about 1400# he was the son of some inconsequential person named FitzAlan (i.e., son of Alan) who had little or no connection to the Arundel estate.

However, none of these theories match the known facts. As to :# Theory 1: there is no record in any reliable genealogy or book of peerage listing a Ranluph (or Ralph) as the son of Richard, the 10th Earl Arundel and Eleanor Plantagenet. If this were a legitimate claim, it would surely have been documented. # Theory 2: is all been disproved by the Last Will and Testament of Sir William fitzAlan who lists his only heir as his wife. # Theory 3: is debunked by an inscription near his tomb in the Church of Towersy, Buckinghamshire, which reads: '' Pray for the sowlys [sic] of William [de Grenville] and Christian his wife; also for [Radulphus] Arundell and Julyan [his wife] Also for Bartholomew Collingridge & Alys his wife, and William ther sonn that her’ lyeth upon whose sowlys o’r Lord I.hs haue mercy. Amen.''” This linkage of Ranulph [fitzAlan] de Arundel, Julianne [de Wycombe], Bartholomew Collingridge, and Alice [fitzAlan de Arundel] is consistent with notations in various peerages indicating how portions of the Arundel estate came into the Collingridge and later the Dormer families. In addition, several ancient books of heraldry depict the Arms of Radulphus FitzAlan as combining the Arms of both Arundel and Warenne, "quartered and flanched."
It was customary for notable, yet illegitimate, children of noble families to bear the Arms of those families quartered and flanched.
There was no union of the Arundel and Warenne families until the marriage of Edmund fitAlan, 9th Earl Arundel to Alice de Warenne.
Richard "Copped Hat" fitzAlan would therefore have been the first person entitled to bear both Coats of Arms, so an illegiitimate child of his who came into prominence would bear those Arms quartered and flanched.
Richard's daughter, Alice, was rumored to have born at least one illegitimate child by Cardinal Beaufort. If this child were Ranulph, however, he would have been entitled to bear the Beaufort Arms quartered and flanched; not the Arundel.
It is more likely, therefore, that he was the illegitimate son of Richard "Copped Hat" fitAlan, since his date of birth makes him a contemporary of the children of Richard and Eleanor Plantagenet.
A less likely scenario is that he was a child of Edmund "the Bastard" fitzAlan, the eldest (and bastardized by annulment of Richard's first marriage). While this would potentially entitle him to the Coat of Arms he bore, the children of Edmund fitzAlan have been extensively documented and appear not to have included any male heirs, legitimate or otherwise.

=== Name ===
: Name: Ranulph /FitzAlan/

=== Birth ===
: Birthdate : 1330
: Birth: Date: Abt 1370

== Sources ==
* [http://www.rootschat.com/forum/index.php?topic=422787.0 Rootschat forum]
*[https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/soc.genealogy.medieval/PvVJ3-nBzpI googlegroups forum medieval info about his wife as well]
* Source: [[#S5]] Page: Ancestry Family Trees Data: Text: http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=6835128&pid=-1213981212 Note: [[#N1458]]* Source S5 Title: Ancestry Family Trees Publication: Name: Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: The Generations Network. Note N1458
* Source: S184 Abbreviation: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Editio n , by Frederick Lewis Reference: 26 May 2003 Title: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition, by Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., 1999
* Source: S648 Abbreviation: Our Kingdom Come Title: Eileen McKinnon-Suggs (suggs1@msn.com), Our Kingdom Come (http://awtc.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=emsuggs&id=I39737 CONT Last updated October 10, 2004 CONT Accessed December 2, 2005)
* [S16] Douglas Richardson, Magna Carta Ancestry, 2nd Edition, Vol. II, p. 418-419.
* [S4] Douglas Richardson, Royal Ancestry, Vol. II, p. 609.
* [S4] Douglas Richardson, Royal Ancestry, Vol. II, p. 605-607.
* [S4] Douglas Richardson, Royal Ancestry, Vol. III, p. 340.

Events

Birth1359West Wycombe, Buckinghamshire, England
Birth1359West Wycomb, Buckinghamshire, England
Marriage1385Wycombe, Buckinghamshire, England - Juliana de Wycombe

Families

SpouseJuliana de Wycombe (1361 - )
ChildAlice FitzAlan (1385 - 1447)
FatherRichard FitzAlan (1306 - 1376)
MotherUnknown Mistress ( - )
SiblingPhilippa FitzAlan (1325 - 1365)
SiblingKatherine FitzAlan (1355 - )

Endnotes