youngest daughter, aged half a year and more at her father's death.
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The Manor of Warmingham belonged to the elder branch of the Mainwarings (Mesnilwaren) from the Norman Survey until the fourteenth century, when Maud, daughter and co-heiress of Sir Warin Mainwaring, conveyed it, by marriage, to Sir William Trussell of Cubblestone, the younger, Knt. 1st Edward II. 2
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29 Apr 1305, Chester, Cheshire
Charter, 55. Agreement between Thomas (de Burchells), abbot of Chester, on the one part, and Agnes (de Arderne), widow of Sir Warin Mainwaring, and William, son of Sir William Trussell, and Matilda, wife of the younger William, daughter and heiress of the said Warin, on the other part, to divide a disputed heath lying between the abbot's manors of Eastham and Childer Thornton and the manor of Willaston belonging to the said Agnes, etc., in the proportion of two to one, the shares to adjoin their respective manors. While the heath remains untilled, both parties are to, retain common of pasture, etc., over it, but neither is to dig, take peat or make any sale, gift or agistment in the share assigned to the other. If the heath is ever taken into cultivation, the said Agnes, etc., may enclose one acre for every two acres enclosed by the abbot and convent, but shall not so approve any part of their share until the abbot or his successors have made an approvement in theirs.
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27 Feb 1308, Westminster
Licence for William Trussel the younger and Matilda, his wife, to grant the manor of Wermyngton and the advowson of the church of that place, held in chief, which are of her inheritance, to Agnes, late the wife of Warin de Maynwaryn, for life.
Calendar of Patent Rolls, Edw. II, vol. 1, p. 47