418 BUNCOMBE PARK. 



1 420, and was buried at Belvoir 011 the north side 

 of the quire, near his father. Thomas de Ros, his 

 brother, married Alianor, daughter of Richard 

 Beauchamp, earl of Warwick. He died 9 of Henry. 

 VI., 1431. Thomas de Ros, his son, married Phil- 

 ippa, daughter of John lord Tiptoft, and sister and 

 co-heir of John earl of Worcester. For his firm 

 adherence to the interest of Henry VI., he was at- 

 tainted in parliament, 1 of Edward IV., 1461, hi* 

 lands confiscated, and his castle of Belvoir given to 

 the lord Hastings, earl of Huntingdon ; who pos- 

 sessed the castle of Slingsby, in Yorkshire. He' 

 died the same year". Edmund de Ros, his son, ad- 

 hering to the interest of the house of Lancaster^ 

 was constrained to flee to the continent ; he after- 

 wards returned, but was unsuccessful in an attempt 

 against the house of York. He died at Enfield, 2| 

 of Henry VII., 1508, and was buried in the parish 

 church there ; leaving his three sisters Elianoiv 

 Isabel, and Margaret, his co-heiresses. See Dug* 

 dale's Baronage, vol. I. p. 545 ; also Monasticon, 

 vol. I. p. 728. Elianor de Ros, the. eldest of thf 

 Sisters, married Sir Robert Manners, Knt, of Etali 

 Castle, Northumberland ; by whom she had two 

 tons, George and Edward ; and two daughters^ 

 Elizabeth and Cecilie ; the one married to William 

 Fairfax, and the other to Thomas Fairfax, his bro- 

 ther ; both being sous of Sir Guy Fairfax, lor<J 

 chief justice of the court of common pleas. Sir G. 

 Manners, who had the title of lord Ros, in right of hif 

 mother, married Anne, the sole daughter and heir of 

 Thomas St. Leger, by Anne his wife, duchess of 



