Joan Chaworth

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Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox noble

Joan Chaworth (died 29 August 1507) was the heiress of the manor of Alfreton.[1][2] Her father was Sir William Chaworth.

Life

Joan Chaworth was the daughter of Sir William Chaworth (d.1467) and Elizabeth Bowett, daughter and coheir of Nicholas Bowett of Rippingale, Lincolnshire.Template:Sfn She was the granddaughter of Sir Thomas Chaworth (d.1459), who had four sons, Sir William Chaworth (d.1467), John Chaworth (d. 1464), Sir Thomas Chaworth (d. May 1465), and George Chaworth (d.1466).Template:Sfn

In 1465 Joan's father, Sir William, was described as 'a sickly man', unable even to ride,Template:Sfn and died within two years. Joan's only brother, Thomas Chaworth (1457–1483), married Margaret Talbot, daughter of John Talbot, 2nd Earl of Shrewsbury, and sister of John Talbot, 3rd Earl of Shrewsbury,Template:Sfn but he suffered a mental illness and died without issue in 1483.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Sir Thomas Chaworth's three younger sons had all also died by that time, and only the fourth son, George, left surviving male issue. John Chaworth was murdered in 1464, leaving an only son, Thomas, who died without issue in December 1485; Sir Thomas Chaworth died without issue in May 1465; and George Chaworth died in 1466, leaving a young grandson, George Chaworth (d.1521), who inherited the manors of Wiverton and Edwalton, and was ancestor of George Chaworth (d.1639), created Viscount Chaworth of Armagh in 1628.Template:Sfn With the death of Joan's brother Thomas in 1483, the male Chaworth line was thus all but extinguished, and Joan, as her brother's heir at law, inherited most of the extensive Chaworth estates.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

By her marriage to John Ormond (d.1503), Joan had three daughters, among whom any barony of Chaworth which had been created by a writ in 1299 to her ancestor, Thomas de Chaworth (d.1315), is considered to have fallen into abeyance.Template:Sfn

Joan died 29 August 1507. In the chancel of the parish church of Alfreton a memorial tablet inlaid with brass plates bears the engraved effigies of Joan and her husband, John Ormond.Template:Sfn[3] The arms of Chaworth of Alfreton were Barry of ten, argent and gules, three martlets sable.Template:Sfn

Graves Park, Sheffield, part of the Norton estate, was included in the lands of the former manor of Alfreton.[4]

Marriage and issue

Joan Chaworth married, in 1458, John Ormond (d. 5 October 1503), esquire.Template:Sfn John Ormond and his two brothers, Sir James Ormond (d. 17 July 1497) and Edward Ormond, were illegitimate sons of John Butler, 6th Earl of Ormond (d. 14 October 1476), by his mistress Reynalda O'Brien, daughter of Turlogh "The Brown" O'Brien, King of Thomond.Template:Sfn By John Ormond, Joan had three daughters:Template:Sfn

Notes

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References

External links

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