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Fonds

COURTENAY OF POWDERHAM

Catalogue reference: L1508M

What’s it about?

This record is about the COURTENAY OF POWDERHAM dating from c1500-1959.

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Full description and record details

Reference
L1508M
Title
COURTENAY OF POWDERHAM
Date
c1500-1959
Description

The following is a list of the deeds and papers formerly kept by the London solicitors

TITLE

Family Settlements

Marriage Settlements

Mortgages

Mortgage papers

Copy Deeds

Abstracts

Drafts

Deeds, Leases and Papers concerning title (strays)

MANORIAL

FAMILY

Household and Personal

Genealogy and Historical Notes

Testamentary Papers

ESTATE

Rentals

Valuations

Sale Catalogues

Maps and Plans

Building Contracts, specifications etc.

Powderham Castle

Vouchers

Accounts

Legal and General Correspondence

LEGAL

Court and Estate Papers

Family Papers

Mining

Parish

Transport

Harbours and Rivers

Fisheries

Markets and Fairs

Irish Estate

Powderham School

Quarter Sessions

Miscellaneous

Miscellaneous: printed

Related material

<p>The Courtenay records have come to Devon Record Office from two sources. Collection L1508M comprises records received from the family's London solicitors. For deposits received from Powderham Castle, and the Estate Office at the castle gates, in Devon, see the original collection D1508M and its additional deposits, collections D1508M-1 to D1508M-14.</p>

Held by
Devon Archives and Local Studies Service (South West Heritage Trust)
Language
English
Creator(s)
<famname>Courtenay family, Earls of Devon</famname>
Physical description
6 Subfonds
Administrative / biographical background

The Courtenays crossed from France to England with Eleanor, wife of Henry II, in 1152, and immediately established themselves among the most eminent families in Devon through the acquisition by marriage and descent of extensive properties in the county. The family, in the person of Hugh Courtenay, were granted the earldom of Devon in 1335. Their fortunes suffered in the Wars of the Roses with the forfeiture of the earldom, together with their estates, in 1461 and the extinguishment of the main line. However, Henry VII restored the earldom and all the former lands and honours to the next heir, Edward Courtenay of Boconnoc, in Cornwall, whose son, William, married Catherine, daughter of Edward IV. His son, Henry, a cousin of Henry VIII, created Marquis of Exeter, suffered from this relationship by attainder and execution in 1539 as a result of his opposition to Henry's dispute with the Pope over the control of the English Church, and the great estates of the elder branch of the Courtenays were lost for ever. His son was recreated earl in 1553 but died without issue. Powderham, which came to the family through marriage in the late 14th century with another eminent Devon family, the Bohuns, and was settled on a younger son of the 2nd Earl, now became the principal home of what became the main branch of the Courtenays. This family acquired a baronetcy in 1644, a viscounty in 1762, and in 1831, in the person of the 3rd Viscount, William Courtenay, the earldom of Devon was revived with him as the 9th Earl. Only the 11th Earl (1807-1888) achieved national political office, in the Poor Law Board and as Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster. Otherwise, these Courtenays were prominent in local government and local affairs and occasionally as MPs. In 1873 the family had the third largest Devon based estate.

Record URL
https://beta.nationalarchives.gov.uk/catalogue/id/df196636-55e7-4e45-a606-5125001420c1/

Catalogue hierarchy

You are currently looking at the fonds: L1508M

COURTENAY OF POWDERHAM