Page:The Complete Peerage Ed 1 Vol 7.djvu/12

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10 SAINT AMAND— SAINT COLMK. VI. 1490 ? 5. RiciiAnn(T : !EAUCiiAMr),LonDSAiN T TAMAND(so(li;si } ,'nito(l to 20 Sep. [1507] 23 Hen. VII.), s. and h. of the above-named Elizabeth 150S l'}' l»e>" tirst husband, ft. 1454 ; sue. his father (three years later) in 145? : K.B. (as " Sir Richard Beauchamp of St. Amand "), 18 April 1475; was attainted by Richard III. in 14S3 but restored by Henry VII. in 1 185 ; served in 141)3 in aid of the Emperor against the French and in 1 198 against the Cornish insurrection. He m. Anne who survived hitu. He d. s.p. logit. (") June 150S, aged 51, when the Ilarony became dormant or cxtinct.i}') Will, directing hi* burial to be at the church of the Blackfriars, London, dat. 12 June and pr. 8 July 150S. SAINT ANDREWS.(') Sue "Clarence and Saint Andrews" Dukedom (U.K. II. Prince William Ilcnri/), cr. 17S9 ; menjed iu tho Crown, 1830. Sue "Campuell of Saint Andrews, co. Fife," Barony (Campbell), cr. 1841. SAINT ASAPH. i.e., " Saint Asaph, in Wales," Viscountcy (Ashburnham) cr. 1730 with the Earldom of Ashbuknuam, which see. SAINT COLMK. Barony [S.] /. Henry Stewart, yr. br. of James, Eaul of Moray [S.] I 1611 being 2d s. of James (Stewaut), 1st Loan DorN [S.], by Margaret, 1st da. of Archibald, 1th Karl OP AltriYM. [S.J, received from his father the Abbey of St. Colme in the Firth of Forth and the lauds thereof in the counties of Edinburgh, Fife, Linlithgow and Perth, and had, 23 Aug. 1581, a charter " adpriorattm <h ■ Inehemahonit. The said lands were made into the temporal lordship of Saint Colme, (■') and he was cr. 7 March 1611 a Lord of Pari, as LORD SAINT COLME [S.] with rem. to his heirs male and assignees whatsoever. that this transaction accounts for Sir John Cornewall, already Lord Fanhope (1 133), being created Baron of Milbroke in 1412, a hitherto mysterious title. He adds that this deed certainly suggests that the St. Amand estates came to Sir William Beauchamp through his mother, not his wife (in which case the Bayntons were heirB in blood of St. Amand). But, as this pedigree seems clearly proved, he presumes that the deeds must be explained by some previous family arrangement. ( a ) To Anthony St. Amand, his illegit s. (by Mary Wroughtou), he left lauds in Wilts, Beds, Berks, Huntingdonshire, and Herefordshire. ( b ) "Although no other issue is assigned," writes Nicolas, "to William (Beau- champ), Lord Saint Amand (in " the numerous pedigrees which [he] the Editor has consulted") than his son, Richard, the last Baron, " it is to be remarked that in the will of the Baid Richard, Lord St. Amand, he bequeaths a cup to his niece Lcvcrteyc : the expression, however, was probably used to describe hit wije's niece." J. H. Round (who is himself the Benior heir general of the family of Baynton, the heirs of the last Barous) informs the Editor that he once came across evidence, proving that NicolaB was right iu his coujecture as to the niece — a Leversege. It is, however, certain that the issue of Sir William Beauchamp, of Bromham, by the heiress of St. Amand, is extinct, the heir of the last Baron (hiB son) being John Baynton, of Bromham, whose mother Jane (Dauudeley) was da. and h. of Elizabeth, litter of the said William. The issue of Almaric (IVth) 3d Baron, was also extinct, (see p. 9, notes "a" and "c"), and the representation is presumed to have become vested in the descendant of Isabella, da. of John (11th) 1st Baron, which Isabella m. firstly Richard Handlo, and had issue, and secondly Robert de Ildesle. ( c ) See vol. iv, p. 247, tub •' Holyroodhouse, as to tho estates of this Bishopric having been made over iu 1593 to Ludowiek (Steward) Duke of Lennox [S.J ('") See as iu note " c " above many cases of abbey lauds similarly granted.