Notes for Fulk Greville Knt.
“In 1530 Sir David Owen brought an action against Fulk Greville and Francis Dawtrey, the husbands respectively of Elizabeth and Blanche, granddaughters and heirs of Robert Willoughby, who had entered the manor of Isenhampstead (in Chesham), Buckinghamshire ‘with Bucklers, Daggers, Bowes and Arrowes.’ and turned out Robert Durrant, Owen’s tenant. In 1536 by Act of Parliament Fulk and his wife, Elizabeth, secured possession of her share of her father’s lands, namely the manors of Hyde (in Coppenhall), Coppenhall, Fosbroke, Dylron, Robesdon, Crakemarsh, and Littywood (in Bradley), Staffordshire, and £5 of rent and a far[m] in Penkridge, Staffordshire. His wife, Elizabeth, was sole heiress sometime before 1543 to her sister, Blanche, by which she became entitled de jure to the Baronies of Willoughby of Brook and of Latimer. He served with 40 men in the suppression of the Pilgrimage of Grace in 1536. He was appointed to serve in the rearguard in the Boulogne campaign of 1544. He attended the reception of Anne of Cleves and the funeral of King Henry VIII.”
402