William ap Thomas

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William ap Thomas
The tomb of William ap Thomas
Died1445
London
Resting placeAbergavenny Priory, Abergavenny
Occupation(s)Politician, Knight, Courtier
TitleSir
Spouse(s)Elizabeth Bluet
Gwladys ferch Dafydd Gam
Children4 (including William Herbert, 1st Earl of Pembroke)
Parent(s)Sir Thomas ap Gwyllym (died 1438)
Maud Morley
Monumental effigy of Sir William ap Thomas.

Sir William ap Thomas (died 1445) was a

Earl of Pembroke and Montgomery, and also of the Herbert Earl of Carnarvon
.

The castle at

medieval
Welsh castles.

William served King Henry V of England during his first French campaign and in numerous subsequent capacities and was knighted in 1426.

Early life

William ap Thomas was the son of Sir Thomas ap Gwyllym, Knt (d. 1438) of Perth-hir House and Maud Morley, daughter and co-heir of Sir John Morley of Llansantffraed. In 1400 Thomas and his wife Maud inherited Llansantffraed Court, the country seat and estate of Sir John Morley.[1][2] Llansantffraed Court was located approximately 2 miles (3.2 km) west of the town of Raglan and Raglan Castle,[3] near Clytha and Abergavenny, Wales.[2][a]

Later Herbert family pedigrees tracing the family's ancestry to a natural son[4] of Henry I of England have been largely discounted as forgeries,[5] and the dynasty is now considered to be of native Welsh origin, as a cadet branch of the pre-Norman Royal Family of the Kingdom of Gwent.[5][6]

The second earl of the tenth creation quartered the ancient royal arms of Gwent in the 1620 heraldic Visitation, which supports this claim. [1]

The Blue Knight of Gwent

Agincourt battlefield site and memorial.

Sir William was thought by antiquarians to have fought at the battle of

Davy Gam, who fell at Agincourt. Primary sources exist to show that he was made a Knight Bachelor by Henry VI in 1426;[8] and—as Octavius Morgan (died 1888) pointed out—he could not have been knighted twice.[9] He became known to his compatriots as "Y marchog glas o Went" (the Blue Knight of Gwent), because of the colour of his armour.[10][11]

William gradually began to establish himself as a person of consequence in South Wales, and held the following positions:[11]

While William played an active role for the Duke of York, his sphere of influence was generally limited to South Wales.[11]

Death and burial

Gwladys and William ap Thomas were patrons of Abergavenny Priory, where they were both buried

William ap Thomas died in London in 1445 and his body was brought back to Wales.

effigies can still be seen in the church of St Mary's.[12][13][14]
[15]

Family

William married first in 1406 Elizabeth (died 1420[11]),[b] the daughter of Sir John Bluet of Raglan manor and widow of Sir James Berkeley. Elizabeth, "the lady of Raggeland",[16] inherited Raglan Castle with her husband James Berkeley, who later died in 1405 or 1406.[11][16][12][17][18] Before marrying Berkeley she had married and become the widow of Sir Bartholomew Picot. Elizabeth's third marriage, to William, was childless.[18]

William married secondly heiress Gwladys ferch Dafydd Gam (died 1454[11]), described by Welsh poet Lewys Glyn Cothi as 'The Star of Abergavenny' for her beauty. She was the daughter of Sir Dafydd Gam and the widow of Sir Roger Vaughan of Bredwardine. All three men had been part of the Welsh contingent that fought with King Henry V of England in France, including the Battle of Agincourt.[1][12][13]

William and Gwladys had children:

Other children less consistently attributed to Gwladys and William include: Maud, Olivia, Elizabeth (who married Welsh country gentlemen, John ab Gwilym),[13] and Thomas Herbert.[19]

The Cornish family of Thomas (Thomas of Lelant, Thomas of Crowan, Thomas of Tremayne, Thoms, and the Bosarvanes of St Just), all patrilineally descended from "Richard Thomas gent. of Wales" are acknowledged as legitimate agnatic descendants of William ap Thomas in the 1620 Visitation of Cornwall.[25]

The Visitation records state "This coate of Pr pale nebule Ar. B. was ye coate armor of Sr Willm ap Thomas, from whom this familye chalengeth to be descended."[25]

one of the entries for the Cornish Thomas family from the 1620 Visitation
The Thomas armorial achievement as borne by the living descendants of the Rev. William Courtenay Thomas, himself an agnatic descendant of William ap Thomas.

Descendants of this family include Members of Parliament, such as John Thomas who sat in the 1555 Parliament for the Cornish borough of Mitchell,[26] members of the clergy such as Methodist minister the Reverend William Courtenay Thomas[27] and his descendants,[28] and related pioneering families in Australia.[29]

Raglan Castle

Reconstruction of Raglan Castle around 1620

When Sir John Bloet died, Raglan manor passed to Elizabeth Bloet and her husband James Berkeley.[17][30] When William's wife Elizabeth died in 1420, Elizabeth's son Lord James Berkeley inherited Raglan Manor. William resided at Raglan manor as a tenant of his stepson[16] until 1432 when he purchased the manor[17] from Lord Berkeley.[11][16]

Grandiose expansion for defence and comfort occurred between 1432 when William ap Thomas bought the manor and 1469 when his son, Sir William Herbert, was executed. Improvements by father and son included the twin-towered gatehouse, five storied Great Tower encircled by a moat, a self-contained fortress in its own right, South Gate, Pitched Stone Court, drawbridge and portcullis.[16][17]

Thomas Churchyard praised Raglan Castle in his 16th-century poem, The Worthiness of Wales:[31]

"The Earle of Penbroke that was created Earle by King Edward the four bult the Castell sumptuously at the first
Not farre from thence, a famous castle fine
That Raggland hight, stands moted almost round
Made of freestone, upright straight as line
Whose workmanship in beautie doth abound
The curious knots, wrought all with edged toole
The stately tower, that looks ore pond and poole
The fountaine trim, that runs both day and night
Doth yield in showe, a rare and noble sight"

Dafydd Llwyd proclaimed Raglan the castle with its "hundred rooms filled with festive fare, its hundred towers, parlours and doors, its hundred heaped-up fires of long-dried fuel, its hundred chimneys for men of high degree."[32]

Notes

  1. Elizabeth de Beauchamp, Lady of Abergavenny. Llansantffraed Court was held by Philip's descendants in an unbroken line until the 17th century.[2]
  2. ^ Elizabeth is also known as Isabel Bluet (also spelled Bloet)[16]
  1. ^ .
  2. ^ a b c Gobion, C. "Llansantffraed Court, A Potted History of the House". Llansantffraed Court. Retrieved 25 February 2011.
  3. ^ a b Ragland, C (1978). The Raglands: the history of a British-American family. Vol. 2.
  4. ^ Dwnn, Lewys (1846). Page 312, Heraldic Visitations of Wales and Part of the Marches: Between the Years 1586 and 1613, Under the Authority of Clarencieux and Norroy, Two Kings at Arms. W. Rees.
  5. ^ a b "The Herbert Family Pedigree". ancientwalesstudies.org. Retrieved 15 August 2019.
  6. ^ "Rethinking the Gwent Pedigrees". ancientwalesstudies.org. Retrieved 15 August 2019.
  7. Harris Nicolas, in his History of the Battle of Agincourt, gives the name of every knight, man-at-arms, and esquire in the army, but does not name any William ap Thomas" (Morgan 1872
    , p. 50)
  8. ^ (Morgan 1872, p. 50) cites Leland's Collectanea, Vol. II., p. 491, in a copy made out of a "booke of Chroniques in Peter College Library".
  9. ^ Morgan 1872, p. 50.
  10. .
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h Cadw (1994). Guidebook for Raglan Castle (Section transcribed at CastleWales.com). Cadw. Retrieved 25 February 2011.
  12. ^ .
  13. ^ .
  14. ^ "Abergavenney Priory-William ap Thomas, Sir". Aberystwyth University. Retrieved 7 February 2011.
  15. ^ "St. Mary's Priory of Abergavenny, William ap Thomas and Gwladys Monuments". St Mary's Priory Church. 2008. Archived from the original on 12 November 2010. Retrieved 7 February 2011.
  16. ^ .
  17. ^ .
  18. ^ .
  19. ^ .
  20. required.)
  21. required.)
  22. ^ "Sloane Charters". Cymmrodorion Record Series. 4. London: Honourable Society of Cymmrodorion: 618. 1908.
  23. LCCN 15019453
    .
  24. .
  25. ^ a b "The Visitations of Cornwall". ukga.org. Retrieved 15 August 2019.
  26. ^ "THOMAS, John II (c.153I-81/90), of the Middle Temple, London and Constantine, Cornw. | History of Parliament Online". historyofparliamentonline.org. Retrieved 15 August 2019.
  27. ^ Joseph A. Alexander (ed.), Who's Who in Australia 1955 (Melbourne: Colorgravure Publications, 1955), p.749.
  28. ^ "Jeffrey Raeder Thomas - Coat of arms (crest) of Jeffrey Raeder Thomas". heraldry-wiki.com. Retrieved 15 August 2019.
  29. ^ "THOMAS, Edward Courtney". Western District Families. 21 September 2017. Retrieved 15 August 2019.
  30. .
  31. ^ Churchyard, T. "A Description of Monmouth Shiere". Worthiness of Wales. Retrieved 25 February 2011.
  32. ^ Jones, R (2003). Haunted castles of Britain and Ireland.

References

External links