j.1. Sir Nicholas WORTLEY, geb. c. 1338

j.1.  Sir Nicholas, geb. c. 1338 x met Katherine LIZOURS, geb. 1340, Fledborough, Nottingham, Engeland, d.v. John Lizours.

Nicholas was die seun van Nicholas Wortley en Elizabeth de Wannerville.

(Foster, Joseph:  Pedigrees of the County Families of Yorkshire, Vol. 2, West Riding. London. 1874)

Koning Edward III (r.1327-1377) gedurende hierdie Nicholas se leeftyd.  Although up to the time of Edward III most of the wool from England was exported, the West Riding was a textile manufacturing area from earliest recorded times. Ancient documents indicate that there were cloth mills in Leeds and fulling mills in Leeds and Bradford as far back as the 12th century . At the close of the 14th century, there were four cloth mills in Leeds. At that point, however, Wakefield was a more important cloth center. Wakefield was the third most important cloth center in West Riding in the late 1400s.  (Yorkshire.  http://www.maggieblanck.com/Land/York.html)   Historically, Freedom papers go back to royal charters granted for the privilege to market, trade, or conduct business. (http://search.ancestry.com.au/search/db.aspx?dbid=2052)  Van die kleinboere het begin om hulle tot crafts en industrie te wend. Uit die Admissions to the Freedom of York, Register of the Freemen of the City of York, sien ons dat lede van die Wortley familie ook verskillende ander beroepe beoefen het.  1335, Johannes de Wortlay, taillour;  1379, Willelmus de Worteley, taillour;  1384,  Ric. de Wortelay, littester;  1397,  Will. de Wortelay, pelliparius (skinner);  1406,  Will. De Wortlay;  1421, Robertus Wortelay, marchaunt;  1425, Johannes Wortelay, barker.  Beide lay en monastic grondeienaars het minirale op hulle eiendomme begin ontgin.  In West Riding was daar verskeie klein steenkoolmyne.  Daar was forges wat yster vervaardiging het en lood is gemyn en gesmelt in die northern dales.   In 1361-62 het die plague weer in Engeland uitgebreek, wat ‘n verdere 20% van die bevolking uitgewis het.  Koning Edward III was deur sy kleinseun Richard II (1377-1399) opgevolg.  (Royal family history)

Lisours [Lizours]  The Barons of Lisores, Normandy, were a branch of the Bassetts. In 1165 Warner de Lisures held a barony in Wilts, and was Sheriff of Dorset and Somerset in, Robert in Hunts, and R. was forester in fee, Northants. They are first to be met with in South Yorkshire. "Fulk de Lisours," says Hunter, "is supposed to have been a relation of Roger de Busli's.  In the time of the sons of the Conqueror appear two brothers, Fulk and Torard, both known by the addition De Lusoriis or De Lizours. Torard was the ancestor of the Lisours of Nottinghamshire, where they continued for some centuries, while Fulk had the land of Sprotborough with a portion of the Nottinghamshire lands.  Thorold de Lisours, the progenitor of the Nottinghamshire house his descendants continued there till late in the fourteenth century.  Nigel de Fleburg (Fledburgh) held three knights' fees of the Bishop of Lincoln t. Hen. II.; a second Nigel was in possession in the following century, and John de Lisours, his son, was knight of the shire for Nottingham in 1312 and 1316. He was also one of the Commissioners for raising foot soldiers in the latter year. Peter de Lisours, and Joan his wife, occur in 1330; and a second John, Lord of Fledburgh, in 1360, whose son James was married in 1364. From the marriage settlements of the bride it is evident that the line terminated in him; for Fledburgh, and several other manors, then entailed on "the right heirs male of Sir John de Lisours for ever," with remainder to the Bassets of Normanton, had, soon after, passed to the last-named family. (Duchess of Cleveland:  The battle abbey roll.  With some account of the norman lineages in three volumes. – Vol. 111. London. 1889)    Lisours [Lizours] of Sprotborough - Arms : Per fess Azure and Or.

  
(Foster, Joseph, Hon. M.A. Oxon:  Some feudal coats of arms, London, 1902)

Thorold de Lisours,
(the progenitor of the Nottinghamshire house, was the earliest subinfeudatory of Hodsoke, in that county, part of the Honour of Tickhill.)
I
Nigel de Fleburg (Fledburgh)
I
a second Nigel
I
John de Lisours
I
Peter de Lisours, and Joan his wife, occur in 1330
I
 a second John, Lord of Fledburgh, occur in 1360
I
James was married in 1364.
(http://www.1066.co.nz/library/battle_abbey_roll3/chap02.htm)

New Hall dateer moontlik uit ongeveer 1200 toe 'n moated house deur die Warwicks as 'n jag lodge gebou is, om die ou herehuis te vervang. Die Warwicks het die eiendom aan Sir John Lizours en andere uitverhuur in 1340.  (History of Sutton Coldfield – New Hall)  This being a member of Sutton, was about the beginning of E.3 time, possest by one Will. De Sutton of Warwick;  which Will. or his predecessors, had it from one of the Earls of Warwick, and granted it to one Robert de Sutton, a merchant of Coventry, who passed it, in 13 Edward III, unto Thomas de Beauchamp, earl of Warwick, and Sir John Lizours, of Fledborough, in Com. Nott. Knight, to the behoof of the said Sir John and his heirs, as it seems for the next year following, the said Earl released all his right therin accordingly;  in which Release it is termed one Messuage called New Hall.  (History of the forest and chase of Sutton Coldfield [by L. Bracken]. - Page 93. L. Bracken. 1860.




New Hall   (http://www.sutton-coldfield.net/history2.html)

Of direct Norman descent, heralding from Lizours, a village in L’Eure, approximately 18 miles from Rouen.  Sir John, who acquired New Hall in 1341, was the third Sir John of Fledburgh.

(The Yorkshire Archaeological Journal.  http://www.mocavo.com/The-Yorkshire-Archaeological-Journal-Volume-8/953026/38#37)

(Walker, John William (ed):  Abstracts of the Chartularies of the Priory of Monkbretton)


(The Yorkshire Archaeological Journal .  http://www.mocavo.com/The-Yorkshire-Archaeological-Journal-Volume-8/953026/38#37)

(The Yorkshire Archaeological Journal .  http://www.mocavo.com/The-Yorkshire-Archaeological-Journal-Volume-8/953026/38#36)

Sir Nicholas Wortley versoek in sy testament van 1347 dat hy by die Priory of Monk Bretton begrawe moet word. (Jackson, Roland:  The history of the town and township of Barnsley in Yorkshire from an early period. London. 1858)

 (Testamenta Eboracensia or wills registered at York from the year MCCC. Downwards, Part I London P. 38. https://archive.org/stream/testamentaeborac01york#page/n7/mode/2up)

TESTAMENTUM DOMINI NICHOLAI DE WORTELAY MILITIS DEFUNCTI. (D. f. 319)  In Dei nomine, Amen.  Ego Nicholaus de Worteleye miles condo testamentum meum in hunc modum.  In primis lego animam meam Deo beatae Mariae et omnibus Sanctis et corpus meum ad sepeliendum in ecclesia prioratus de Bretton eum meliori meo.  Item do et lego Omnia bona mea mobilia et immobilia ubicumque fuerint inventa Katerinae de Worteleye uxori meae. In cujus rei testimonium hiis presentibus litteris sigillum meum apposui.  Datum apud Worteleye de dominica in festo Sancti Martini Episcopi Anno Domini MCCCXLVII  (Testamenta eboracensia: or, Wills registered at York, illustrative of the history, manners, language, statistics, &c., of the province of York, from the year 1300 downwards. Volume 1.  (England), James Raine, John William Clay)

Kinders:

k.1.   John, Esq. geb. c. 1358, (born on April 25 and came of age on April 25, 1373) Wortley, Yorkshire, Engeland, oorl. 03/09/1436 x 1377, Wortley met Elizabeth DE LA HAYE, geb.  c. 1360, Lincolnshire, Engeland, oorl. 1381, d.v. Sir. Peter de la Haye xx Jane SAVILLE, geb. Tankersley, Wortley, West Riding, Yorkshire, Engeland, oorl. Ashton-under-lyne, Lancastershire, Engeland. d.v. Sir John Saville High Sherriff of Yorkshire en Isabel Eland.