Abt 1560 - 1597 (~ 37 years)
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Name |
Carlile, Lawrence |
Born |
Abt 1560 |
Gender |
Male |
Buried |
9 May 1597 |
St Mary Aldermary, London, England |
Person ID |
I08780 |
My Genealogy |
Last Modified |
7 Mar 2015 |
Family |
Burbage, Margaret, b. Abt 1570, London, England , bur. 24 Feb 1639/40, St Swithin Stone, London, England (Age ~ 70 years) |
Married |
Abt 1585 |
England |
Children |
+ | 1. Carlile, Margaret, b. Abt 1585, Of London, England , d. Aft 1640 (Age ~ 56 years) |
| 2. Carlile, Laurence, b. Abt 1586, Of London, England , d. Aft 1651, Of Bishops Norton, Lincolnshire, England (Age ~ 66 years) |
| 3. Carlile, Bridget, c. 22 Oct 1588, St Dunstan's in the West, London, England |
| 4. Carlile, Alice, c. 23 Jan 1589/90, St Mary Aldermary, London, England |
| 5. Carlile, William, c. 22 Oct 1590, St Mary Aldermary, London, England |
| 6. Carlile, Anthony, c. 7 Aug 1594, St Mary Aldermary, London, England |
| 7. Carlile, Christopher, b. 1596, St Mary Aldermary, London, England [Natural] |
| 8. Carlile, William, b. 1597, St Mary Aldermary, London, England [Natural] |
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Last Modified |
7 Mar 2015 |
Family ID |
F02700 |
Group Sheet | Family Chart |
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Notes |
- Check burial Aldermary or Aldermanbury
Will of Lawrence Carleyll, Skinner of Saint Aldermary, City of London 10 May 1597 PROB 11/89
LAWRENCE CARLEYLL, Citizen and Skinner of London, by his Will, dated the 2d of May 1597, and proved on the 10th of the same month and year, directs his funeral expenses and debts to be paid, and one third of the residue of his effects he gives to his wife Margaret,-another third part to his children,-and the remaining third part also to his wife, to her own use,-mentions his father-in-law, ANTHONY BURBAGE,--- makes his wife sole Executrix, and appoints as Overseers of his Will, his “ loving friends, his Cousin ROBERT JENKENSON, JAMES BERRY, and EDWARD WHALLEY, all three inhabiting in Fleet Street, praying them to aid his wife in any thing they can.
"Ye ROBERT JENKENSON, who is here designated as his “ loving frieind, and cousin,” is the immediate Ancestor of the Noble Family of LIVERPOOL, which came originally from Wales,-- but several branches of it settled in England, and ANTHONY J ENKENSON, the famous Traveller and skilful Navigator, for the period in which he flourished, is represented as the origin of that branch which settled at Walcot, near Charlbury, in the County of Oxford, some time in the reign of Queen ELIZABETH.
This ANTHONY, in the reigns of EDWARD the Sixth, of Queen MARY, and of ELIZABETH, acting as a Merchant, was at the same time appointed an Ambassador from England to the Sultan at Constantinople, and afterwards was appointed Ambassador to the Czar of Muscovy, in whose Country he travelled much, and there is a Creel: in the Caspian Sea which is named after him. He acquired a very considerable fortune by his enterprising industry,-and, in the decline of his life, he returned to his native country, and. settled in London, where he purchased an estate in Houses. He is represented also to have purchased the Family Mansion and Estate in Oxfordshire. He left a considerable fortune in money, which was afterwards vested in the purchase of estates in the County of Gloucester. VVhen James the First instituted the Order of Knighthood, and required a large fee for their creation, this Family were obliged, from their wealth, to take out their Knighthood. There is also an Exemplification of their Arms, made in the 16th of James the First, 1618, in which Sir RoBER'r JENKENSON, of London, who had then the honour of Knighthood conferred upon him, is stated to be descended from an ancient Family of that name, and “ by his mother from the ancient Familie of the CARLILES,” in the County of Cumberland, and signed by WILLIAM CAMDEN, then Clarenceux, wherein certain alterations were made, indicative of the Voyages of AN'rHoNY J ENKENsoN.'
' From that Gentleman is descended the present Earl of LIvERPooL, First Lord of the Treasury, whom Virtue, Honour, and Renown, will ever love to celebrate in the brightest pages of History, as one of the wisest and the best of men,-and one who has unceasingly employed his unrivalled and splendid talents to promote the Glory, the Security, and the Happiness of his Country.
An Inquisition, taken at Penrith, on the 29th of May, in the 3d of CHARLES the First, 1628, after the death of THoMAs CARLIELL of the City of Carlisle, states, that he died seized of a messuage in Grinsdale, in the County of Cumberland, and of 20 acres of land, meadow and pasture, in Grins(lale aforesaid, to the said Messuage belonging,-That he died at Carlisle, on the 29th of March then last,--and that THomas CARLIELL was his son and heir, aged 16 years and
3 months.“ -
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