Abt 1525 - 1576 (~ 51 years)
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Name |
Mathewe, Elizabeth |
Born |
Abt 1525 |
Of Bradon, Northamptonshire, England |
Gender |
Female |
Buried |
14 Sep 1576 |
St Mary's Colechurch, London, England |
Person ID |
I05434 |
My Genealogy |
Last Modified |
2 Jun 2015 |
Family |
Barnes, John Baron alias, b. Abt 1522, Of Colechurch, London, England , d. Aft 1555, Colechurch, London, England (Age ~ 34 years) |
Married |
14 Jun 1545 |
St Mary Le Bow, London, England |
Children |
| 1. Barnes, Anne, d. Aft 1598 [Natural] |
| 2. Barnes, Elizabeth [Natural] |
+ | 3. Barnes, Bartholemew, b. Abt 1546, Of St Swithins, London, England , d. 01 Oct 1606, Bath, Somerset, England (Age ~ 60 years) |
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Family ID |
F01622 |
Group Sheet | Family Chart |
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Notes |
- Possibly buried St Marys Colechurch, London.
Possibility??
Elizabeth Barnes, widow was buried the 14th day of September, 1576.
Possibly the daughter of John Matthew of Braddon, Norths who left a will 9th April, 1557 written at the house of John Barnes, mercer of St Mary's Colechurch, London. From the Genealogical memoirs of the extinct family of Chester of Chicheley ..., Volume 1 By Robert Edmond Chester Waters
John Mathewe of Bradden co. Northampton Esq. ^Vill dated 8tli April 1557. He then lying sick in the dwelling-house of one John Barnes Mercer of London in the Parish of our Ijady of Colechurch, made his noncupativc will as follows : to my three younger sons Thomas Robert and Richard Mathew £W each, my eldest son "William to see them paid and to give to my servants and to the poor of Bradden at his discretion. Administration with the Will annexed granted in C. P. C. I'ith Apiil 1557, to William Mathew son and heir of the deceased. [10 AVrastley.] John Barnes the Mercer, in whose house John Mathew died, was the husband of his daughter Elizabeth Mathew, and lived in Cheapside opposite to Mercers Chapel. Barnes was a notorious Puritan, and when the image of St. Thomas Becket over the gate of the hospital of St. Thomas of Aeon was mutilated in the night of 17th Feb- ruary 1554-5, Barnes was accused of being accessory to the outrage, and was compelled to restore the image at his own charge. (29)
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