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Abt 1410 - 1449 (~ 39 years)
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Name |
Isabel Feteplace |
Birth |
Abt 1410 |
(Wiltshire) England [1] |
Gender |
Female |
Death |
0___ 1449 |
(Wiltshire) England [1] |
Person ID |
I35782 |
The Hennessee Family |
Last Modified |
25 May 2013 |
Family |
Thomas Ryngewode, b. Abt 1405, Wiltshire, England d. 0___ 1474, Wiltshire, England (Age ~ 69 years) |
Marriage |
Abt 1439 |
Ringwood, Hampshire, England [2, 3] |
Children |
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Family ID |
F13178 |
Group Sheet | Family Chart |
Last Modified |
30 Apr 2023 |
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Notes |
- The origin of the name of Fettiplace (variously spelt by members of the family, Fetyplace, Feteplace or Phetyplas) is veiled in obscurity, and the fact mentioned by Twyne in his MS. that the owner of Ape Hall, Oxford, in the time of King Henry III, was one, Torold L'Ape (afterwards called Adam Fetteplace) "appears to be an impossible solution of the matter".
The late Mr. T. C. Button, whose family was connected with the Dunches of Little Wittenham, Berks, as well as with the Fettiplaces, and who was himself an antiquary, gives Fitz-de-Plaas, or Pleasy, as the origin, and this seems a more reasonable supposition. Be this as it may, all writers concur in stating that the first Fettiplace, who came over to England in the Norman invasion, was Gentleman Usher to William the Conqueror, and as, generally speaking, there is a considerable amount of truth to be found in tradition, the statement may be fairly accepted as correct.
Fettiplace is probably from old French "fãaites place" for 'make room', the shout allegedly given by the ushers/bodyguards/protectors of the French Kings and nobility. The name Fettiplace is now largely modernized within the direct descendants as Fetterplace and known as Phetteplaces in the United States. source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fettiplace [4]
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