34:
152:
His second marriage was to Maud
Francis, the widow of John Aubrey, she was a daughter of Adam Francis and Agnes Chaumpneys. Maud was the richest woman in England. A son Alan was born posthumously in 1382 and would later grow up to knighted in turn and the half brother of Thomas Earl of Montague.
556:
129:
has argued that it was men such as
Buxhull—of the household and physically close to the King—who "manipulated his authority" by regulating who was allowed to see him, and thus controlled the royal
109:, where he later claimed to have expended a large sum—more than he could account for—on paying ransoms of English prisoners. He subsequently complained that he had to spend over 3,000
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on "the payment of the ransoms of several bankrupt prisoners who had been captured by the French on different occasions". He was created a Knight of the Garter in 1372.
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notes that the family name "is generally spelt
Buxhill in records, but it represents a place now called Bugshill in Sussex, near Robertabridge, which Alan inherited".
561:
526:
Memorials of the Order of the Garter: From Its
Foundation to the Present Time; with Biographical Notices of the Knights in the Reigns of Edward III and Richard II
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They had a son, also called Sir Alan
Buxhull. His father died in 1325, when Alan was only 2 years old. (Maud Francis became the foster mother of the future
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has suggested that
Buxhill's departure was the spark that led to the disintegration of Knolles's army. He was later placed in command of
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Knight of the Garter, Constable of the Tower of London and
Captain of St Saveur Le Viscomte Castle in Normandy during the 100 Years War.
45:
503:
86:, although there is evidence to suggest that this was a shared command. He took command of the fortified abbey of
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After her husband's death Maud became the wife of the Earl of
Montague, and the foster mother of Henry V.
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Amice
Buxhull, married firstly John Beverley and secondly to Robert Bardolf, had issue for both marriages.
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He married firstly a woman with the surname of
Bigwood, they are known to had the following issue.
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Much information exists, in the form of accounts and receipts, of Buxhull's tenure Saint-Sauveur.
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Buxhull was described by Froissart as "right valiant Knight" and an "uncommonly able man".
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Surname also shown as Boxhulle, Boxhul, Boxhull, Boxhill, Boxhall and Bokeshull
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the same year. He was sufficiently important among Knolles's captains that the
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498:. Vol. III (paperback ed.). London: Faber & Faber.
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Alan married Maud Francis, who was the richest woman in England.
25:(died 2 November 1381) was an English soldier and nobleman.
267:(repr. ed.). New York: Manchester University Press.
244:(repr. ed.). New York: Manchester University Press.
16:
Knight of the Garter and Constable of the Tower of London
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He took part in the naval expedition to France in 1374.
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14th-century military history of the Kingdom of England
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from around 1369 to 1370 and a knight of the chamber.
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The second Sir Alan therefore became the brother of
466:
Chaucer's London: Everyday Life in London 1342-1400
37:
Arms of Alan Buxhull, as shown on his garter plate.
145:Elizabeth Buxhull, married Roger Lynde, had issue.
412:War, Politics and Culture in 14th-Century England
331:War, Politics and Culture in 14th-Century England
289:War, Politics and Culture in 14th-Century England
125:became ill in his later years, and the historian
358:The Soldier Experience in the Fourteenth Century
56:). The younger Sir Alan was the half brother of
469:. Amberley Publishing Limited. pp. 58–.
355:Anne Curry; Andy King; David Simpkin (2011).
265:The Wardrobe, the Chamber and the Small Seals
242:The Wardrobe, the Chamber and the Small Seals
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361:. Boydell & Brewer Ltd. pp. 192–.
162:Alice Montacute, 5th Countess of Salisbury
315:
547:14th-century English military personnel
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212:
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562:Garter Knights appointed by Edward III
496:The Hundred Years' War: Divided Houses
436:G. L. Harriss; Gerald Harriss (2005).
334:. Bloomsbury Publishing. pp. 6–.
166:Richard Neville, 5th Earl of Salisbury
439:Shaping the Nation: England 1360-1461
415:. Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 51.
158:Thomas Montagu, 4th Earl of Salisbury
58:Thomas Montagu, 4th Earl of Salisbury
7:
292:. Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 5.
52:and her future descendants include
46:Maud Francis, Countess of Salisbury
442:. Clarendon Press. pp. 433–.
14:
60:and fought alongside him at the
409:James Sherborne (1 July 1994).
328:James Sherborne (1 July 1994).
286:James Sherborne (1 July 1994).
1:
567:14th-century English nobility
463:A. R. Myers (15 July 2009).
168:(d. 1460) and the mother of
160:, and also was the uncle of
382:Chris Given-Wilson (2010).
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528:. William Pickering, 1841.
385:Fourteenth Century England
90:in 1370 and fought in the
524:Beltz, George Frederick.
103:Saint-Sauveur-le-Vicomte
78:Buxhull was a deputy in
164:(d. 1463), the wife of
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520:Buxhull, Alan (DNB00)
494:Sumption, J. (2009).
170:Warwick the Kingmaker
92:Battle of Pontvallain
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263:Tout, T. F. (1967).
240:Tout, T. F. (1967).
137:Marriage and issue
62:Battle of Verneuil
39:
476:978-1-4456-1222-5
449:978-0-19-822816-5
422:978-0-8264-3273-5
395:978-1-84383-530-1
388:. Boydell Press.
368:978-1-84383-674-2
341:978-0-8264-3273-5
299:978-0-8264-3273-5
99:Jonathan Sumption
84:Hundred Years War
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67:Buxhill was
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542:1381 deaths
190:medievalist
69:chamberlain
54:Anne Boleyn
536:Categories
488:References
193:T. F. Tout
273:797661038
250:797661038
227:Citations
131:patronage
96:historian
29:Biography
107:Normandy
88:St Maur
71:of the
50:Henry V
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111:francs
176:Notes
500:ISBN
471:ISBN
444:ISBN
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390:ISBN
363:ISBN
336:ISBN
294:ISBN
269:OCLC
246:OCLC
188:The
23:K.G.
105:in
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Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.