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The feudal barony of Hatch Beauchamp or honour of Hatch Beauchamp was an English feudal barony with its caput at the manor of Hatch Beauchamp in Somerset. The site of the mediaeval manor house, to the immediate south of the ancient parish church of St John the Baptist, is today occupied by Hatch Court , a grade I listed [ 1 ] mansion built in ...
Hatch Court, main entrance front, viewed in 1989 from within the deer park Hatch Court, side view. Hatch Court in the parish of Hatch Beauchamp, [1] in Somerset, England, is a grade I listed [2] mansion built in about 1755 in the Palladian style with Bath Stone by the wool merchant John Collins to the design of Thomas Prowse.
Hatch Beauchamp is the burial place of Colonel John Rouse Merriott Chard, VC, RE (21 December 1847 – 1 November 1897) a British soldier who won the Victoria Cross for his role in the defence of Rorke's Drift in 1879.
On 17 February 1547 [12] the Council created him "Duke of Somerset", which reflected his ancient title as feudal baron of Hatch in Somerset, centred on the manor of Hatch Beauchamp, inherited by his ancestor Roger Seymour (d.c.1361) from his marriage to Cecily Beauchamp (d.1393), the aunt and heiress of John IV de Beauchamp, 3rd Baron Beauchamp ...
Arms of Beauchamp of Hatch: Vair (Descendants of the feudal barons of Hatch Beauchamp in Somerset) John de Beauchamp, 1st Baron Beauchamp (1274–1336) John de Beauchamp, 2nd Baron Beauchamp (d. 1343) John de Beauchamp, 3rd Baron Beauchamp (1330–1361) (abeyant on his death) The barony was unsuccessfully claimed in 1924 by Ulric Oliver Thynne.
He was born on 25 July 1274, the son and heir of John de Beauchamp (died 1283), [2] feudal baron of Hatch, seated at Hatch Beauchamp in Somerset, by his wife Cicely de Vivonne/de Forz (died 1320), one of the four daughters and co-heiresses of William de Vivonne/de Forz (died 1259), who had held a half share of the feudal barony of Curry Mallet in Somerset. [3]
These arms suggest that the family of Beauchamp of Hatch was unrelated to the family of Beauchamp, Earls of Warwick from 1267, which bore arms: Gules, a fesse between six cross crosslets or. [2] John de Beauchamp, 2nd Baron Beauchamp of Somerset (4 October 1304 – 19 May 1343) was an English peer and was feudal baron of Hatch Beauchamp in ...
Arms of Beauchamp of Hatch: Vair. The estate then passed to the family of Beauchamp of Ryme in Dorset, a junior branch of the Beauchamp feudal barons of Hatch Beauchamp in Somerset. Thomas Beauchamp (son of Sir John Beauchamp [9] (1315–1349)) died without children, when his heirs to one moiety each became the descendants of his two sisters: [10]