PRINCIPAL LANDOWNERS IN CORNWALL. 381 



Banks, in his "Extinct Baronage of England," thus writes of 

 Maude, who is said to have remarried Bichard de Bipariis, 

 and died in 1242-3, which, if the fact, she must have lived 

 to a great age, this period being 63 years after her father's 

 death; he died in 1179. Rohais, Dugdale makes to be 

 daughter of Bichard de Lucie ; but in his account of the 

 family of Dovor, he affirms her to be daughter of Greffery, 

 son of the said Bichard, the chief justice. 



Banks says of Hugh Dovor, that he married Maud, one of 

 the daughters and co-heiresses of Bain Beverel of Brunne, in 

 Cambridgeshire, which Maud died sine prole. 



This Hugh was succeeded by Fulbert de Dovor, who married 

 Boese, daughter of Greffery, son of Bichard de Lucy, and had 

 issue : — 



Bobert who died circa 1203, leaving Boese, his daughter and 

 heir, who married first Bichard, son of King John (after- 

 wards Earl of Cornwall), but this marriage being before she 

 came of age, she dissented thereto, and married secondly 

 Bichard, son of Boger de Chilham, called also Bichard de 

 Dovor. On the decease of Bichard de Chilham, the said 

 Boese married thirdly Bichard, a natural son of King 

 John, commonly called Bichard le Fitz-Boy, by whom she 

 had two daughters : 1, Lora, who married William Marmion, 

 of Bolesworth, Warwickshire. 2, Isabel, married to David 

 de Strathbolgie, Earl of Athol. 



Having now exhausted the enquiry into the descendants of 

 Bichard de Lucy, it is very unlikely that Bobert Beverel, as 

 Lysons supposed, held these 9 fees as trustee for Bohesia, 

 daughter of Bichard de Lucy, who in the 9th King John had 

 livery of lands, since the earliest date we can assign to this 

 Boll is 14th John, five years after Bohesia had paid a fine to 

 the crown. 



Bobert Beverel was probably son of William Beverel, who 

 circa 1170, was Lord of Hamatethy, and gave the church of 

 S. Breward to the priory of Tywardreth. (Befer to the Briors 

 of Tywardreth in the 12th century. Journal No. xxxiv, Vol. 

 9, 1888). 



