84 JOURNAL OF THE PLYMOUTH INSTITUTION. 
11. Lord Willoughby de Broke, Quarterly : I. Quartered 1 Jf 
Sa. a cross eng. or ; Willoughby : 2 § 3 Gu. a cross moline org. ; 
Beke : II. Gu. a cross jieury arg. ; Latimer : III. Gu. four fusils 
conjoined in fess arg., each charged with an escallop sa. ; Cheney : 
IV. Or a chev. gu. within a bord. invecked sa.; Stafford. On 
the centre a crescent for difference: imp. Gu. a saltire vaire, 
betio. twelve billets or; Champernoun. This was Sir Robert 
Willoughby of Broke, who having taken arms in the cause of 
Henry Tudor, Earl of Richmond, was, upon that nobleman be- 
coming King Henry VII., summoned to Parliament as Lord 
Willoughby de Broke. His lordship became connected with this 
neighbourhood by marrying Blanche, daughter and heiress of Sir 
John Champernoun, by whom he had issue Robert, second Lord 
Willoughby de Broke ; Elizabeth, married to John, Lord Dynham ; 
and Margaret, married to Nicholas Assheton, of Callington; and 
is there buried under a monument with a brass to his memory. A 
Saracen's head, crowned, and a ship's rudder, badges of the 
Willoughby family, are to be seen in Landulph Church on some 
ancient bench-ends. His lordship, who was a Knight of the 
Garter (8th King Henry VII.) and Marshal of the king's army in 
France, was Lord High Steward of Plymouth. He died in 1502. 
12. Roger Budockshed, Sa. three lozenges in fess arg. betw. as 
many bucks' heads caboshed of the second : imp. Gu. a saltire 
vaire betw. twelve billets or; Champernoun. Roger Budockshed, 
whose ancestors resided at Budockshed, or Budockside, now 
Butshed, from the time of King Henry III., was born at the 
family mansion. He built the present church of St. Budeaux in 
1563, and gave the village green in 1566 ; he was M.P. for 
Plymouth in 1553-54. Roger Budockshed married Frances, 
daughter of Sir Philip Champernoun, of Modbury, by his wife 
Catherine, daughter of Sir Edmund Carew, Baron Carew. He 
had issue by this lady (1) John, (2) Dorothy, (3) Katherine, and 
(4) Richard, who all died young. (5) Philip, who married Margery, 
daughter of Robert Smith, of Tregonick, but died without issue 
at Carrickfergus in 1583. (6) Winifred, married to Sir Edward 
Gorges, Vice- Admiral of the Fleet (he died in 1584, and was 
buried within the Tower of London), by whom she had issue 
Tristram Gorges, who inherited Butshed ; Robert Gorges, who 
died in 1575; Sir Arthur Gorges, of Chelsea, who married first 
