Places: Walton


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Place Type

Parish

County

Lancashire

Parish

Walton-on-the-Hill

Deanery

Warrington

Causes

EDC 5/1566/2 – Elizabeth Wilson contra William Gooddigar of the parish of Walton

WALTON-ON-THE-HILL

This parish was situated in the south-west corner of the county of Lancashire. It comprised the townships of Bootle cum Linacre, Everton, Fazakerley, Formby, Kirkby, Kirkdale, Liverpool, Walton and West Derby. The extra parochial areas of Simonswood and Toxteth Park were within its borders. The most important town in the parish was Liverpool, which became a separate parish in 1699.

Being a large parish, it included a number of chapelries such as those at Kirkby, Liverpool and West Derby and also the detached chapelry of Formby.

The advowson of the parish was purchased by Thomas Molyneux of Sefton in 1470 and remained with this manor until 1747. Several members of the Molyneux family were rectors during the sixteenth century and most appointed vicars as they were absentees.

The parish church building was largely destroyed during the May Blitz of 1941, but subsequently rebuilt and rededicated.

Sources

Janet E. Hollinshead, Liverpool in the Sixteenth Century (Lancaster, 2007).

https://www.achurchnearyou.com/church/15213/about-us/

https://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/lancs/vol3/pp5-11

Places: Prestbury


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Place Type

Parish

County

Cheshire

Deanery

Macclesfield

Causes

EDC 5/13/2 – Sir Richard Egerton, farmer of the tithes of Prestbury, contra William Andrewe.
EDC 5/14/1 – Elizabeth Smyth, otherwise Rixton, contra Giles Smyth and Margaret Barington.
EDC 5/1566/6 – John Legh, esquire, farmer of the tithes of the hamlets of Sutton and Wincle contra William Sutton and Ralph Gardner.

Prestbury

Prestbury parish was one of the largest in the diocese comprising thirty-two townships, with a circumference of about forty miles. There was a dependent chapelry in Macclesfield and several chapels of ease including Chelford and Siddington. Macclesfield was a much larger and more important settlement than Prestbury by the sixteenth century, being by then the centre of local ecclesiastical and legal administration.

There has probably been a church in Prestbury since Saxon times and a small Norman chapel building still stands in the churchyard. The parish had been granted to the monastery of St Werburgh in the twelfth century and following the dissolution of the monastery Sir Richard Cotton bought the manor and advowson. Both were acquired shortly afterwards by Thomas Legh of Adlington, who became the lay rector. Other branches of the Legh family lived in the parish, including the Leghs of Ridge in the township of Sutton.

In the town of Prestbury, a timber-framed vicarage, dating from the sixteenth century, known as the Priest’s House still stands almost opposite the church and further down the main street is the Legh Arms, dating from the late sixteenth century. This is partly timber-framed and has a roof of local Kerridge slate.

Sources

J. P. Earwaker, East Cheshire Past and Present, vol. 2 (London, 1880), pp. 177-525

George Ormerod, The History of the County Palatine and City of Chester (second edition, revised and enlarged by T. Helsby, London, 1882), vol. iii, pp. 646-653

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Places: Alderley


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Place Type

Parish

County

Cheshire

Parish

Alderley

Deanery

Macclesfield

Causes

EDC 5/9/2 – Elizabeth Stapultun contra Thomas Stapultun
EDC 5/1566/7 – Downes marriage ratification

ALDERLEY

Alderley parish comprised the townships of Over Alderley, Nether Alderley and Great Warford and may have developed from a chapel of ease in Prestbury parish. The escarpment known as Alderley Edge is the site of copper mines, worked from the Bronze Age to the twentieth century, and sandstone was quarried there.

The parish church, built in part from this local sandstone, is situated in the township of Nether Alderley. Little survives of the fourteenth-century building which forms the basis of the present church, the tower was added in 1530 and the Stanley family pew in about 1600.

The Stanleys are historically associated with the parish and their pew is accessible only by a flight of stone steps outside the church. The front of the pew is now decorated with six coats of arms of wives of the Stanleys from 1600 to 1800.

The font, which had been buried, was rediscovered in 1821 and is thought to date from the fourteenth century. The remains of a medieval stone cross survive in the churchyard, where an ancient yew tree also stands.

The grooves in the wall of the porch are said to have been caused by arrows being sharpened.

A sixteenth-century sandstone water mill with a roof of Kerridge slate at Nether Alderley now belongs to the National Trust. This mill was close to the house where the Stanley family lived. The house, having been rebuilt in the late sixteenth century, was rebuilt again in the early eighteenth century but burned down in 1779.

Sources:

J. P. Earwaker, East Cheshire Past and Present, vol. 2 (London, 1880), pp. 594-642 (images from this volume courtesy of HathiTrust)

George Ormerod, The History of the County Palatine and City of Chester, (second edition, revised and enlarged by T. Helsby, London, 1882), vol. iii, pp. 565-585

 

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People: Lloyd Matthew, David


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Surname

Lloyd Mathew

Forename

David

Sex

Male

Parish

Bangor

Marital Status

Unknown

Causes

EDC 5/1575/15 – defendant

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People: ap David, Reginald


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Surname

ap David

Forename

Reginald

Sex

Male

Parish

Bangor

Marital Status

Unknown

Causes

EDC 5/1566/15 – defendant
EDC 5/1575/15 – defendant

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People: ap Ellis, Edward


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Surname

ap Ellis

Forename

Edward

Sex

Male

Parish

Bangor

Marital Status

Unknown

Causes

EDC 5/1566/15 – defendant
EDC 5/1575/15 – owner of the land on which the tithes were claimed

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Subjects: Desertion


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Sometimes when one partner had left the other, the deserted spouse might bring a suit for restitution of conjugal rights. If the errant partner failed to return the deserted party might then bring a suit for separation from bed and board and if desertion had been established this could affect the rights of the wife to receive financial support from her husband.

Restitution of conjugal rights

EDC 5/1566/1– Henry Hall contra Helen Hall, his wife

 

Types of Cause: Matrimonial – annulment (bigamy)


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Although a bigamous marriage was not legal, this type of annulment was often referred to as ‘divorce’ rather than ‘annulment’ at this time.

EDC 5/1/3 – Margery Thornycrofte contra John Cokkes alias Stokes
EDC 5/9/3 – William Renshaye contra Clement Bent alias Renshaye
EDC 5/11/2 – Sir Robert Worsley

Subjects: Bigamy


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Divorce as we know it today was not permitted in the sixteenth century, but if it was established that one of the parties had already contracted a legal marriage and the first spouse was still living his or her second marriage was invalid, or bigamous, so the second marriage might be annulled. This was sometimes referred to as a divorce. Such marriages might be uncovered during a clerical visitation and sometimes one of the parties was pressurised into applying to the consistory court for a dissolution.

Bigamy as grounds for separation/annulment or ‘divorce’

EDC 5/9/3 – William Renshaye contra Clement Bent alias Renshaye
EDC 5/1/3 – Margery Thornycrofte contra John Cokkes alias Stokes

Second marriage considered bigamous

EDC 5/11/2 – Sir Robert Worsley – the papers in this matter indicate that Sir Robert Worsley understood that his first marriage was invalidated by his wife’s adultery but this was not accepted by the church authorities who considered that his second marriage was bigamous and he was therefore committing adultery.
EDC 5/14/1 – Elizabeth Smyth, otherwise Rixton, contra Giles Smyth and Margaret Barington.

People: Strete, Thomas


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Surname

Strete

Forename

Thomas

Sex

Male

Marital Status

Unknown

Literacy

Yes - described as literatus

Causes

EDC 5/1566/14 – witness to the sentence

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