Rose Trevor
- Born:
- Married: Abt 1435
- Died:
Research Notes:
Rose Trevor, the girl with the charming name whom Otewell Worsley married, was Welsh, and it was only in her generation that her family adopted a surname after the English fashion. The first hint of who she was came from a pedigree of the family of Lee of Great Delce in Kent, into which her daughter, Joyce Worsley, married and in which Joyce's mother is called "The Daughter of Trevor as the windows in the oratory at Delce show — Party per bend sinister ermine and a sable Lyon rampant or langued and armed gu," this latter clause describing the Trevor arms. Additional evidence came in the Visitation of Surrey of 1530, by Benolt, Garter King of Arms, in which is drawn a shield, headed "Worselle Travor," which is Worsley quartering Stokeport and impaling Trevor. Finally, in the pedigrees made by the Welsh herald Lewis Dwnn, "between the years 1586 and 1613, under the authority of Clarenceux and Norroy, two Kings at Arms," John Trevor of Brynkynallt is given an only sister whose marriage and children conformed to what was already known of the family of Otewell Worsley.
John Trevor, who was the ancestor of the extinct Lords Trevor and Viscounts Hampden, his brother Robert Trevor and his sister Rose were children of Iorweth (Edward) ap Dafydd ap Ednyfed Gam and his wife Angharad Puleston. 1
Marriage Information:
Rose married Otewell Worsley, son of Richard Worsley and Katherine Clark, about 1435. (Otewell Worsley was born about 1410 and died on 24 Mar 1470 in Calais, Nord-Pas-de-Calais, France.)
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