A History of the Cotel, Cottell or Cottle Family, by W H Cottell in 1871
Bud Keeton Family Tree:Information about Edward Cottle
Edward Cottle (b. Bet. 1575 - 1604, d. Jun 15, 1653)
![Includes Notes](https://www.genealogy.com/hasnotes.gif)
DEATH: 15 Jun 1653 in Salisbury, Wiltshire, England from FTM World Family Tree Vol Iv
Family: William, Edward (i folio 206)
NOTES: "of Salisbury, England (1 folio 206)
SOURCE: 1."American Ancestry: Giving the Name and Descent, in the Male Line, of Americans Whose Ancestors Settled In the United States Previous to the Proclamation of Independence, A.D. 1776, Vol VIII. Embracing Lineages From the Whole of the Usa. 1893."Originally Published past Joel Munsell's Son.Baltimore Genealogical Publishing Company1968.
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A History of the Cottle, Cottell, or Cotel Family of the counties of Devon, Somerset, Cornwall and Wilts compiled from County Histories, Heralds' Visitations, Public Records, Wills, Etc.
past W. H. Cottell, Fellow member of the Harleian Guild, Etc.
printed by: Taylor and Co., Petty Queen Street, Lincoln's Inn Fields, 1871
Preface
The origin of this history is shortly told. Ten years ago I was shown by a relative an quondam painting of the Artillery of the Cottell Family, and besides an ancient ring, said to accept been given by an antecedent to his bride on her hymeneals morn in 1633. These relics excited a desire to know more of my forefathers. The results of my researches are given in the following pages, which I diffidently submit to those interested, in the hope that the book, being a collection of historical and recorded facts, may be deemed not
unworthy of their perusal.
W. H. C.
Briston: Dec, 1871
The Cottle, Cottell, or Cotel Family
The original name of this family was Cotel, subsequently inverse to Cottell, Cottel, and Cottle. There is niggling uncertainty that the showtime Cotel came to England from France, where many Cotels are still to be found. The first Cotel came with the army of William the Conqueror, and probably settled in Wiltshire, giving name of Cotels to the chapelry* of that country. Cursory records of the family presently after the Norman Conquest also appear in connectedness with the bordering counties of Somerset and Gloucester. The first lengthened account of the family, however, is obtained from Collinson'southward History of Somerset,wherein, in naming the possessors of the manor of Camerton, nearly Bath, he says that in the time of Henry I, Abbot Herlewin, whose extravagance and profuse liberality involved his church in many difficulties and much disgrace, gave the manor of Camerton, then called Camelerton, to one Sir Robert de Cotel, Knight, his favorite. Cotel, at Herlewin's death in 1120, entered on this estate and many others which he had obtained by the same Abbot's indiscretion. He died himself soon later, and Sigfried, succeeding to the abbacy, set up about proving his correct to this manor, which in the time of his successor, Henry de Blois, was peaceably ceded to the Abbey, nonetheless which, the same family of Cotel connected, for a long succession, tenants nether the corresponding Abbots of Glastonbury. In the aid levied for marrying the Rex's daughter, twelfth Henry 2,* Richard Cotel is certified to agree xx pounds' worth of country which formerly belonged to the demesnes* and refectories of the monks of Glastonbury Abbey. He was exempt from doing service for the same, perhaps through an indulgence to the children of Sir Robert de Cotel, who claimed this manor by virtue of the grant made to him by Abbot Herlewin. To this Sir Richard Cotel succeeded Sir William Cotel, who was a knight in the time of Henry III. Sir Richard left outcome, Sir Ellys Cotel, who held this manor, and free warren by charter in 32nd Male monarch Henry III of the Bishop of Bath and
Wells,by reason of an award made in favor of that come across during the dissensions with the Abbots of Glastonbury. This Sir Ellys Cotel was succeeded past his son, too a Sir Ellys Cotel, who presented the manor to the church of Camerton in ninth of Edward III, and was the last of the name that had any business concern with the place.
In the same work,among "Les Chevaliers and Hommes du Mark," in the county of Somerset, in the 17th Edward I, appears the proper name of "Sire Ellys Cottel," whose armorial escutcheon* is there given as, "Or, a bend gules."This escutcheon has been the invariable armorial bearings of all Cottells or Cottles using artillery from that period unto the nowadays time. The glaze is represented by the government at Heralds' College to rank among the highest honours of heraldry; the claret-blood-red band across the shield of gilded being 1 of the nine honorable ordinaries, and symbolical of its wearer having distinguished himself valiantly in war. This Sir Ellys, or Elias Cottell, seems to take been a person of smashing note and distinction. He was a man-at-arms in the 17th of Edward I, and with that monarch, in all hys warres in Scotland and elsewhere agaynst Robert de Bruis, usurper, as appeareth by an erstwhile chronicle.He was likewise subescheator* to the rex for the county of Wilts, and the possessor of several manors and lands in that and the county of Somerset.He held a knight's fee in Croscombe, near Shepton Mallet, in fifth Edward II, and in 9th Edward III. John Atti Chambre held at Whiteoxmead one messuage,* ten acres of arable, and ii acres of wood, by service of suit at the three weeks court of the said Sir Ellys Cotel, at Camerton.He also, by his marriage with Margaret, daughter and co-heir of Sir John de Peverell, Alree Peverell, and Halberton, in the county of Devon.He died at Sampford Peverell in 1337, leaving every bit heiress his girl, Edith, at that time thirty years of age, and the wife of Sir Oliver de Dinham, Knight,who carried his possessions into the Dinham family.
A branch of the family of Cotel was also settled at a very early period at Frampton, in Gloucestershire. Atkyns, in his history of that canton, says, "[The Manor of Frampton Cotterell], soon after the Norman Conquest belonged to the family unit of the Cotels. John Cotel, the final of the family, died, seized thereof,* the 29th Henry III,and the parish had before obtained the name of Frampton Cotel from that family unit. One of the co-heirs of this John Cotel was his sis Maud, who in 20th Henry III had become the second wife of Sir William Lucy, of Charlecote, county of Warwick, and who had brought him as her inheritance the manor of Berenton, in Hampshire.Artillery of Cotel of Frampton: Or, a bend gules. (See plates of arms at the start of Atkyns, History of Gloucestershire.)
It has been noticed that Sir Ellys Cotel earlier named was subescheator for the canton of Wilts. Sir Ellys, doubtless, was related to William Cotel, of Cotel, in the time of Edward II, and to Richard Cotel, of Atworth, in that county, whose daughter Isolde married Phillip Tropnell in the twelvemonth 1267.The Cotels at that time appeared to accept been a rich and powerful family; they owned extensive estates in many parishes in Wilts, including Atworth, Alwick, Chelworth, Wraxall, and Farley Wick, and at the breaking up of the monasteries in 1540 possessed well-nigh the whole of the country in the last-named parish. The chapelry and mansion of Cotels, now called Cottles, most Melksham, derive that name from this family unit, many descendants of which are be to be plant in Somerset and Wilts, ii of these having been Joseph Cottle, the poet (the friend of Southey and Coleridge) and Amos Cottle, also a poet, who were the sons of a merchant clothier of Trowbridge.Aubrey, in his Wiltshire Notes, year 1670, thus wrote of the family:
Cotells…this is in the parish of Atworth, and was anciently belonging to Cotell, who had great possessions in these parts; vide de hoc the Leiger Volume of Tropnell at Neston, where it is at big recited. In that location is an old house with large windows, every bit in the church, of the time of the starting time Edward.This "erstwhile house has long since disappeared and been replaced by a modern mansion, possessed past Captain Connelly, lately high sheriff for Wilts. Aubrey farther wrote: Cotells was Atworth Parva. Sir Roger de Cotell, Knight, is named in an Inquisition taken at Melksham in 1275. The Cotell family unit appear to accept remained here, their names occurring as patrons of Atworth Chapel to 1309.
This is confirmed past the post-obit excerpt from Sir Thomas Phillipps' Wiltshire Institutions:
Anno Dni.1298Capel AtteworthPatrons…Ricardus Cotell ClericusThomas de Muleton
Anno Dni.1309Capel Atteworth Parva Patrons…Ricardus Cotel de Parva Atteworth ClericusWalterus de Farleigh
Under the heading of "The Parish of Biddeston," Aubrey further alludes to this family, he says,On the one-time gateway at Mr. Monjoys, by St. Peter'south Church, was a Scutcheon in Freestone, charged only with a bend. Now the coate of Cotel is, 'or, a bend gules,' and, every bit I recollect, in Tropnell's manuscript Cotel has an estate here which was subsequently given to the monks of Monkton Farley.
1 Hashemite kingdom of jordan Cotel was rector of Kington in 1261. At that place is a curious contract of that date given in Aubrey and Jackson's Wiltshire Collections, between the Abbot of Kington and himself, whereby it is agreed (inter alia) that he may graze his cows and pigs in the Abbot's meadows, on conditions that they go through the Abbot's principal court-g, and no other mode.The Cotel artillery are on Plate ii, Figure 1, of the same book. In the Wiltshire Archaeological Magazine, Vol V, p. 237, an allusion is thus fabricated to the Cotel family,
In Bradford-on-Avon Church is a mural tablet to Edward Cottle, of Bradfordsleigh, who died 14th February, 1718, and Ann, his married woman, who died 13th March, 1728, and to two of their sons.Artillery: 'or, a bend gules.'* This is the same coat which Aubrey gives to Cotele, who, he says, had big possessions at Atford. The name is preserved in Cottles, or every bit it was formerly called Cotels Atteward, or Coteles Atteworth.
At that place have been many knights belonging to this family. Sir Robert de Cotel, temp. 1102, is the start traced; the last appears to have been a Sir Thomas Cotell, of Somerset, who attended the coronation of Richard Three in Westminster Abbey on fourth July, 1483.Matilda, married woman of William Cotel, Knight, died in the eighth year of King Edward Iii (1335), possessed of lands in Chelworth and Colworth, Wilts; leaving one son, John Cotel, and 5 daughters, viz. Joan, Ailanor, Matilda, Elizabeth, and Isabell, (?) plene
etatis.Hoare, in his History of Wilts, mentions an ancient tomb in Corsham Church, in Sir William Hanham's Aisle, with the arms of Cottell (or, a bend gules) thereon, only whose remains information technology covers is unknown.
Cornwall
Cotele, almost Calstock in Cornwall, derives its name from another branch of the Cotel family, settled at that place prior to 1353, considering in that year it fell into possession of the Edgecumbes, by the marriage of Hillaria "daughter and heiress of William de Cotele" with William de Edgecumbe.Cotele, or Cothele, is to this solar day preserved by Lord Mount Edgecumbe every bit a faithful representation of what were the residences of land gentlemen or barons, in the ancient acceptation of the word. For many years information technology was the chief seat of the Edgecumbe family unit, and is now – with its aboriginal article of furniture, armor, and tapestry – a place of neat interest to visitors and tourists in the Due west of England.
Arms of Cotele of Cotele: or, a bend gules– these go along to form the second quartering in the coat of arms borne by Lord Mount Edgecumbe. For a full clarification of Cotele, vide Gilbert'due south Parochial History of Cornwall.The recorded full-blooded of the Cottell family unit at Herald'southward Higher commences on the female side with Geoffrey Malherb, who lived about the year 1200 (Malherb or Malsherb being Norman French); a proper noun which volition be constitute in the parchment roll of Battle Abbey of those who came to England with William the Conquistador.The arms of Malherb, equally given in the pedigree in the Heralds' Visitation of Devon for 1564, are: or, a chevron gules, charged with an annulet* between three oaken leaves vert (in subsequent Visitations these are given as nettle leaves); crest a demi-fell, holding in his hand an oaken branch with acorns.The John Cottell, or Yeolmbridge, who commences the pedigree on the male side, it is computed, lived circa 1400. The arms immune him by the Heralds were as borne past Sir Elias Cottell, of Sampford Peverell, and by the Cotels of Cotele. Sir Elias Cottell left no male issue, then there cannot be a doubt merely that this John Cottell was descended from a younger branch of the business firm of Cotele, from which identify Yeolmbridge is twelve miles distant. This opinion is confirmed by the post-obit excerpt from C. Southward. Gilbert's History of Cornwall, Cottell of Aldercombe and Kilhampton" …the Cottels of Aldercombe and Marhamchurch are supposed to have descended from the house of Cothele in Calstock, which was carried past an heiress in marriage to Edgecumbe.
In addition to the matrimony of John Cottell with the heiress of Carhuta, the eldest sons of the Cottells of Yeolmbridge married the heiresses of Godfrey, Bodigood, and Browne. Yeolmbridge, with manors and lands in Cornwall and Devon, were held by this family unit for well-nigh three hundred years, when, in 1675, Walter Cottell, the and so possessor, disposed of the place, and other portions of his estate to one Ezekiel Wood, of Lifton, Clerk. This Walter Cottell died at Launceston in 1678, giving by his will – proved in the Archdeaconry of Cornwall, and now in the Probate Courtroom at Bodmin Barton of Padford in Werrington, too lands in St. Kew, to his sister Radagon Escott.The Manor House at Yeolmbridge has long since been swept away. The old parish church and churchyard accept shared the same fate. And, the parish registers prior to 1678 accept been lost; so that no trace of the Cottells remain, excepting the recorded pedigree at Herald's College, and the aboriginal deeds of their estates, in the possession of Mrs. Brendon, the present possessor of Yeolmbridge. However, the name however lingers in the locality in connection with the by, and non many years since some of the descendants could be plant in apprehensive life in the bordering town of Launceston.
Thomas Cottell, second son of John Cottell, of Yeolmbridge, Gentlemen, by Margaret, daughter of John Copplestone, of Exeter, married Alice, girl of Dunstan Heywood, of North Tawton, Esquire, and settled at the latter place about the year 1545. He died the 9th December, 1587, and was buried in the chancel of Northward Tawton Church, beingness succeeded by his eldest son and heir, Mark,whose will, written by his own hand, from its quaint simplicity, affection towards his kindred, and axiomatic goodness of dispositions, is hither supplied verbatim:In the name of God, Amen. I, Mark Cottell, of North Tawton in the Countie of Devon Esquier being in practiced health of body and of skilful and perfect memorie, thank you be unto Almighty God therfor exercise make and ordain this my last will and testament in writing with my ain manus of all my appurtenances and chattels any in manner and form following. First, I do by these presents revoke, abrogate, disannul and make voyd all quondam will by me made before the engagement hereof and most joyfully commit my soul into the hands of Omnipotent God whom I humbly beseech to accept the same and to pardon all my sins through his mercie and for Jesus Christ his sake and for the meritte of that bluddie decease and cruel passion which I believe he suffered for my sins and as for my torso my will and desire is that when I shall depart this life it may by interred and cached in the chancel of the parish church building of Due north Tawton, of which I am the true patron, in the grave in which the torso of my Male parent Thomas Cottell was interred and wholly burried, who died nine Dec, 1587; and equally concerning my appurtenances and chattels of what nature kind and qualitie and so ever they be (except the wainscott, glass windows and all immovable implements at present beingness in my firm at Barton, all of which by this my Will I give and bestow unto my grandchild, Marker Cottell, son of my son Richard Cottell deceased, who is my next heir to my house at Barton), I do past this my terminal Volition and Testament requite and bequeath unto my dearly and entirely love wife, Mary Cottell, whom I do hereby make my whole and sole executrix of this my last Will and Attestation; and for that I fear that later on my debts are paid and such money as I have engaged as suretie for other menn be truly paid, there will not be so much left my said wife; every bit she, for the bang-up love and care had of me and mine for the space of well almost two-and-thirty years past hath well and worthily meritted and deserved at my hands. I accept given piddling to her and nevertheless I do hereby earnestly intreate her past all the love that has passed betwixt us that if God shall bless her and increase her store having no children of her own she will be good and kind to my poor Grandchildren who are destitute of means to live past and also to my quondam household Servant and bestow somewhat on them equally God shall enable her. In witness whereof I have hereunto fix my hand and Coate of Arms the get-go day of July 1620.
SignedMark Cottell
WitnessesMary Cottell,Mark Heywood
He died 31st August, 1622, aged 72 years.The Cottell estate at North Tawton consisted of the manorial rights of Barton Bathe, farms, lands, and advowson* to the living of North Tawton Church, of which Christopher Cottell, fourth son of Thomas Cottell, died rector in 1604. The direct male line of this branch became extinct in 1665 by the death of Mark Cottell. His proper name appears in the list of the noblemen and gentry of Devon, who, in February, 1660, signed the address to General Monk for the restoration of Rex Charles 2.The property subsequently savage into the possession of Mark Cottle, of St. Mary-le-Savoy, London, who proved his right every bit next heir, and recorded his pedigree at Herald's Higher, showing
his descent from William Cottell, or Larkbere, Tallaton, Devon, who was second son of Thomas Cottell, of N Tawton. This Mark Cottle,* and his eldest son, John, cut off the entail.* The latter, by his will, 1720, directed the whole property to be sold, and gain to exist divided amongst his two sons, Alexander and John, and his two daughters, Susannah and Alicia.
The old house of the family however stands, over the porch is the inscription, "R. C. 1567;" and in it are several ancient rooms, with fantabulous specimens of cornice and ceilings in carved oak. Over the fireplace of the cracking hall are the arms of Cottell, with the letters, "One thousand. C. 1599.".The estate is now the property of Lord Portsmouth. A highly respectable family of the name of Durant succeeded the Cottells as tenant-farmers of part of the estate, and their descendants keep to this twenty-four hour period. The post-obit are
extracts from the Parish Register of North Tawton:
Marking, sone of Thomas Cottell Esquire, was baptized November. ye 30th, 1550.
Annals missing from 1551 to 1559.
Anthony, son of Thomas Cottell Gent, was baptised July xx, 1560.
Christopher, son of Thomas Cottell Gent, was baptised February 16, 1562.
Hannybatt, son of Thomas Cottell Gent, was baptized Dec. 17, 1564.
Hannybatt, son of Thomas Cottell Gent was buried the xv Dec 1565.
Amyas, son of Thomas Cottell Gent, Baptized March sixteen, 1566.
William Gilbert Gent, and Jane ye girl of Thomas Cottell Gent, were married the 12th solar day of October 1572.
Isett, the Daughter of Marke Cottell Gent, was Baptd April ye 20th 1578.
Marke, the son of Marke Cottell Gent, was Baptd 17 Baronial, 1580.
Richard, son of Mark Cottell Gent, was Baptd 8th Jan 1583.
Amye, the wife of Marke Cottle Gent, was cached 22 December 1587.
Thomas Cottell, Gent, was buried 15th December 1587.
Register missing from 1601 to 1611.
Richard Cottell Esquier, and Elizabeth Woods, were married August 2nd, 1612.
Marcus filius Richard Cottell Esquier, was Baptised vicesimo dice June 1613.
Richard Cottell, the son of Richard Cottell, lately deceased, was baptd 10 May 1618.
Mark Cottell Esquier, Buried September 3rd 1622.
Richard Cottell burried, ye 24 January 1624.
Marcus, filius Marcus Cottell Armiger, baptd quarto die September 1642.
Joan, ye daughter of Marke Cottell Esquier, baptd 14 May 1650.
Marie, ye daughter of Mark Cottell Esqr. baptd 20 June 1652.
Gracia, filie Marci Cottell Armiger, Sepulta tertio May 1643.
Marcius, filius Marci Cottell Armiger, Buried Decimo Sep. Dice June 1643.
Grace, ye wife of Mark Cottell Esq; was Buried 6 day of April 1664.
Mark Cottell Esquier, was Buried March 28th 1665.
Roger Geare, Clerk, and Elizabeth Cottell, Gentlewoman, were married 12th February 1662.
Grace, the daughter of Richard Cottell Esquier, was Baptised 15 November 1669.
Richard Cottell Exqr, was buried 22 April 1672.
Grace, daughter of Marke Cottell Esqre. deceased was buried 15th February 1673.
Martha, girl of Richard Cottell Esquier, deceased was buried Nov 30th, 1674.
Morwenstow
At the extreme northwestern function of the coast line of the canton of Cornwall, and some 16 miles from Yeolmbridge, is the extensive parish of Morwenstow, which derives its proper name from St. Morwenna, by whom the church was founded, A. D. 860. In this parish, with its many hamlets and widely scattered population, another buck* of the Cottell family settled early on in the sixteenth century. By a reference to the names of those in that portion recorded in the Heralds' Visitation of Devon in 1564 and 1620, and the primeval names in the parish register of Morwenstow, there volition appear potent presumption evidence that he was a younger son of John Cottell, Yeolmbridge, by the daughter of Nicholas Godfrey, of Padford.Symond Cottell, Gentleman, was Treasurer for the canton of Cornwall and Captain of a troop of horse in the army of Charles I, and took part in the battles of Stratton and Lansdowne in 1642, under his neighbor, Sir Bevil Grenville, of Stow. The post-obit is taken from Symond'southward Diary of the Western Marches of the Regal Army.
A Coppy of a Commission for Constituting a Provost Marshall
By the generall of his Majestys Forces employed confronting Plymouth: To Josias Hearle, of Kiskeard in the Countie of Cornwall…
These are to certify to all whom it may business that I practice hereby plant and appoint yous to be Provost Marshall for the Countie of Cornwall, to take and safely keep in your custody every such person or persons every bit y'all shall from time to fourth dimension receive from Captayne Symon Cottell, Treasurer to the said Army for the County of Cornwall, or any of his Troop, and them not release without Special society from me or the said Captayne Cottell, and for the doing thereof this shall exist your sufficient Warrant.
Given under my hand and Seal this 25th 24-hour interval of July 1644. R. Grenville
For his exertions and services in the Royalist cause this Helm Cottell's estates at Morwenstow were sequestrated by Cromwell's Commissioners; they were, however, restored to him in 1649 on payment of heavy fine.
Some Cottells still reside at Morwenstow, farming their ain estate of Youlson, which identify has been held as "heirship land" by virtually twelve generations of the aforementioned family.
Another branch of the Yeolmbridge family unit was settled at Marhamchurch in the same canton prior to 1643. The primeval evidence of their residence in that parish is a landscape tablet in the left-hand aisle of the church with the following:
Resurgamus In Memoria Gulielmi Cottell hujus Parochiae Generosi, Qui Obiit Vicesimo tertio die Novemberies, Anno Domino 1643.
Etiam Johanni Cottell ejus nepotis ex filio Qui Obiit Decimo Octavo Martii Anno Domini 1682.
The higher up inscription is surrounded past the Cottell artillery and crests (a leopard sejant on a ducal coronet, Or), richly emblazoned. In tracing out the pedigree of this family, the author found at the Record Office, Fetter Lane ii Chancery bills,which narrated how Alexander Cottell, of Marhamchurch,
Gentleman, being a widower and an onetime man, and all his three sons being dead, married in the year 1695, Phoebe, daughter of John Giffard, of Launcells, Gentleman, and had issue, Alexander Cottell; and dying in 1696, left his said wife Phoebe guardian to the estate of his baby son and heir. And how, within ane month of the onetime human being's death, she intermarried with one Francis Keast, who had for many years been a retainer belonging unto the said family.In a short time after, the said Phoebe died, then John Giffard, the grandfather, as next friend to the infant and representative of the dead, Jan and May, filed the bills in Chancery to obtain possession of a farm, lands, and other properties of the kid, which were so held by and being appropriated to the use and benefit of the said Francis Keast.
This Alexander Cottell grew to manhood, and subsequently serving his articles in Penzance as an attorney, about the year 1720, married Sarah, girl of Mr. Samuyel Phillips of Pendrea, and for some time resided at the manor-house of Aldercombe, in the parish of Kilkampton, which had been held for many years on lease for lives by the Cottell family. His married woman died on the 7th of August, 1727, in her 30th twelvemonth (every bit recorded on a monument in Kilkampton Church), and he before long afterwards married Ann, daughter and heiress of Joyns Champneys, Esquire of Yarnuscombe, Devon. He appears to have led a reckless life, and to have dissipated the whole of his property.
The living descendants of this admirer have not been traced; those, nonetheless, of his uncle, Mark, are represented by the Cottells of St. Tudy, near Bodmin.
On a reference to the recorded full-blooded at Herald's Higher of the descendants of William Cottell, second son of Thomas Cottell of North Tawton, it will exist seen that he had a grandson, John, who resided at Bottreaux Castle, in the parish of Forrabury Church building in the summer of 1867: this gravestone of a lady was discovered inside the porch of that church thus inscribed:
Here lyeth the body of Mary, married woman of Samuel Robins, Rector of Trevalge (she was the daughter of John Cottell Gent) who was buried the 16th day of May 1688.
My bones hither by my Begetter's bones do lye. My soul in Abraham's bust is on high.
Through the disposal of their estates, nearly all the members of the various branches of the Cotel family, in course of fourth dimension, cruel from the degrees of Knights and Esquires into lower spheres, and in which many of the descendants at present living continue. Perhaps, in years to come, some of future generations may rise to wealth and fame, to whom it may exist gratifying to know that, however lowly their immediate ancestors may have been, yet, nevertheless, they descend from those who, in the olden time, ranked high among the knights and gentlemen of the western counties of England.
Endnotes
Newly edited by Wm. Andrew -x- Cottle, July twenty, 1996; found in Schwabe, James B., The Cottle Family Genealogy, 1977.
Cottel de Kerjean, Bretagne: D'Azur, au poingnard, garni dior, Engaine de gules. Coutel, Auvergne: D'Azur, a lion or, au chef de trois pais de gules (Reitstap'due south Armorial Full general of Noble and Patrician Families of Europe [Gouda, 1861]). Cotel: attaché a l'assist publique, St. Pere, 54. Cotelie, O.: ancien Avocat, etc., Bac, 26. Cotelle: Notaire honoraire, ancien depute, Godot de Mauroy. (Paris Postal service-off. Directory for 1868).Vol. Iii, p. 330.
Herlewin was chosen Abbot of Glastonbury in 1102. He had previously been a monk at Caen, in Normandy. Vide Phelps' History of Somerset, Vol. I, p. 514. Phelps describes Cotel as possessed of many virtues, and 1 of the greatest of the Abbey'southward benefactors.
Grant of Charters, Record Part.
Collinson, History of Somerset, Vol. I, Introduction, p. 1.
Ex Codice MS, Jos. Hollond de quo. Vide Ath. Oxon., vol. I, col. 521.
Roll of Arms, etc., of thirteenth century, Harl. MS 6589, p. 7, fol. 14, Brit. Mus.
Nomina Villarium, Harl. MS 6281, fol. 44, 180, 231 and 234. Brit. Mus.
Collinson, Somerset, Vol. III, p. 327, 469.
Polwhele, History of Devon, Vol. III, p. 199.
Inq. post mortem, 10 Edward Three, No. 54, Record Office.
Atkyns, History of Gloucestershire, p. 231.
Burke, History of the Commoners, Vol. III, p. 97; and, Fosbrooke, History of Gloucestershire, Vol. II, p. 96.
Shush, History of the Commoners, Vol. Three, p. 97; and, Dugdale, Antiq. of Warwickshire, Vol. I, p. 303.
Hoare, History of Wilts, Vol. 4 & V, pp. 117, 118.
Harleian MS 1386.
Additional MS, Brit. Mus. 197004, p. 163.
Debrett, Peerage, "Lineage of Lord Mountain Edgecumbe;" and, Lyson, Cornwall, p. 130.
Lyson, Devon, p. 158.
Seager, Baronagium et Genealogicum, Vol. five, pp. 436, 484.Vol. I, p. 154.
This crest, as well as the Malherb coat, is incorporated with the arms of the Cottells of Yeolmbridge, vide Heralds' "Visitation of Devon," 1562-five, Harl. MSS 5185, 889, p. 88, Brit. Mus.
Cottell, Sir Elias, Knight: or, bend gules. this coate hath been borne in Devon of neat antiquitie, a man at artillery 17 Edward 1st. Sampford Peverell, Alree Peverell, Halbertons Hundreds were his in xvi Edward 2nd." (Visitations of Devon, year 1565, Harl. MS 5871, p. 24, in Brit. Museum.) Vol. II, p. 74.
He was a justice of the peace for Devon. (Harl. MS, 3288, Fol. 9b.)
In Prerogative Court of Canterbury, year 1622. (Saints, 95.)
Declarations, Letters, etc., Devon, p. 299. Brit. Mus.
Middlesex K., p. 66-vii.
The final of the Cottells that resided at the family seat at Barton, every bit shown by the North Tawton parish books.
The Heralds recorded the son and heir simply in the get-go four generations of the pedigree; a practice common with them in all early on Visitations.
Camden Social club (London: 1859).
Royalist Composition Papers, beginning series, Sixteen, FF. 604-five; 2nd series, XLV, FF. 79 to 83.
More About Edward Cottle:
Engagement born 2: Bet. 1560 - 1600, England.
Died 2: Jun fifteen, 1653, Salisbury, Wiltshire, England. 706
More than About Edward Cottle and <Unnamed>:
Union: Bet. 1598 - 1626
Children of Edward Cottle are:
- +Edward Cottle, b. Abt. 1628, Landsford, Wilts, England 707 , d. 1710, Tisbury, Danes, Ma 707 .
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Source: https://www.genealogy.com/ftm/k/e/e/Buddy-S-Keeton/WEBSITE-0001/UHP-0558.html
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