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Parents also seen as Thomas Hare (1464–1503) Of Homersfield.Norfolk,England
William Knightley of Norwich (died 1548) married 2nd to Agnes, sister of Sir Nicholas Hare, Knight, Master of the rolls, who survived him. His first wife was Margaret Pawe.
His children were all under age & last 3 daughters unmarried when will was written in 1547: George (son & heir), Letitia, Wynefryd, Awdry, & Catherine.
The children of Margaret Pawe and William Knightley were:
The children of Agnes Hare and William Knightley were:
This family of Knightley bore for their arms, quarterly, or and ermine on the 1st & 4th, 3 pallets gules.
Marriage (1) settlement 30 Sept. 1548, Audrey, da. and coh. of William Knightley of Norwich, 3s. inc. Henry† 4da
WINIFRED KNIGHTLEY (1515-January 16, 1569)
Winifred Knightley was the daughter of William Knightley of Morgrave Knightley and Norwich (d. 1545+), a wealthy attorney, and Margaret Pawe, whose father was also a Norwich lawyer. On December 22, 1543, she married Robert Coke of Melcham, Norfolk (1513-1561)
http://www.oxford-shakespeare.com/Probate/PROB_11-19_f_102.pdf
The testator’s nephew, William Knightley (d. 27 January 1548?), married firstly Margaret Pawe, and secondly Agnes Hare. His daughter, Winifred Knightley, was the mother of Sir Edward Coke. See Boyer, Allen, D., Sir Edward Coke and the Elizabethan Age, (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2003), p. 2 at:
https://books.google.ca/books?id=lkEv6eccC44C&pg=PA2
Winifred Knightley Coke, the Chief Justice’s mother, came from a family at least as old and likely more prominent. Her grandfather, Andrew Pawe, had practiced law in Norwich for thirty-odd years, beginning under Edward IV and continuing into the reign of Henry VIII. William Knightley had practiced law in Norwich for forty-five years, from around 1495 to around 1540. (He seems to have lived most of a decade beyond this; the Chief Justice’s longevity may have been inherited from this side of the family.). William belonged to the Knightley family who were prominent in Northamptonshire; he may have settled in Norwich upon marrying Margaret Pawe. The Pawe family’s status was reason enough. Old Andrew had been town clerk for Norwich and clerk of the peace for Norfolk, and he had married his daughters well. Winifred’s sister Audrey married Sir Thomas Gawdy – lawyer and landholder, right-hand man to the Duke of Norfolk, father of two judges, connections which would be invaluable to Coke.
Other lasting connections were forged at this juncture. William Knightley’s second wife Agnes was the sister of Lord Keeper Sir Nicholas Hare. . . . Winifred’s other sister, Lettice, had a granddaughter who married Sir Ranulph Crewe. . . .
For the will of William Knightley, see NRO Will register 55 (Wymer).
Note: seems to miss first wife Margaret Pawe in the Visitations of Essex (1558) and therefore, in the chart below. The children of Anne Hare were George and Katherine Knightley.
http://www.stirnet.co.uk/genie/data/british/kk/knightley2.php#con1
1529 |
1529
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Norfolk, England, United Kingdom
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1535 |
1535
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Norwich, Norfolk, England
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1549 |
1549
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Marsham, Norwich, Norfolkshire, England
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???? |
Norwich, Norfolk, England (United Kingdom)
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Marsham, Norwich, Norfolkshire, England
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