Page:The Boynton family and the family seat of Burton Agnes.djvu/22

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(IV)SIR WILLIAM BOYNTON [1249 - 1310] son of Ingelram de Boynton (III), aged 60, 21st March, 3 Edw. II (1309-10).[1] In 1262 he appears as a juror, and 22nd October, 1279, he appears with others who say that Peter de Brus held of the King in chief sixteen Knights fees, whereof Roger de Merley held two in Burton Annes and elsewhere, William de Bovington one fee and half a carucate of land in Acclum.[2] In 1277 he made a grant of lands in Scaling whereby he obliged his tenants there to grind all their corn at his mill.[1] According to Kirkby's Inquest, p. 56, William de Bouyngton and ]ohn de Munceus held five carucates of land in Bouyngton. The same authority (p. 127) says that William de Bovington held three parts of a fee in Acklam, Linthorpe, Thometon near Stainton, Marton, Tollesby and Roxby, where ten carucates make a fee et redd. ballivo domini regis pro fine iijs (note ijs). Sir William married Alice, daughter of Ingelram de Monceaux, who married for her second husband William de Percy.[3]

This lady in her widowhood gave two oxgangs of land in Boynton to Nunappleton Priory.[4]

In the time of Henry VI a claim was made ot the lands forming the gift of Ingelram de Monceaux to Alice his daughter. It is stated that Ingelram de Muncels by deed, gave with Alice, his daughter, in marriage to a certain William de Boynton who did marry her, and to the heirs of their bodies, two messuages, three cottages and sixteen bovates of land in Boynton, in the County of York, by the name of three carucates of land in Boynton, the whole being in demesne except two bovates which Henry, son of Peter held, which two bovates are part of the said three carucates together
  1. 1.0 1.1 Inq. p. m. 21 Mar. 3 Ed, 11.
  2. Inq. p. m. Vol. I p. 202. Y.A.S. Rec. Ser.
  3. There is a Release by Alice de Moncell, widow of William de Bovington to Sir Richard de Percy of all lands she had in dower in the vill of Herghum (now Arram) on Hull, and in return Percy paid Ingelram, her eldest son, 40 marks of silver to free him from the debts (ad quietandum se de Judaismo) he owed Aaron and Manasser and other jews. (Dodsworth, MSS. lxxiv, 77d.)
  4. Burton's Monast., p. 277.