NamePenna De Caux, 851
Birth Date1434
Birth PlaceTouffreville , Normandy Fr
Birth MemoSt. Sulpice L’Eglise
Death PlaceSt Ouens Manor Jersey
Burial PlaceSt Ouens Church Jersey
Bapt Date1434 Age: <1
Bapt PlaceTouffreville Normandy
FatherPerrine De Caux , 852
Spouses
Birth Date1432
Birth PlaceSt Ouens Manor Jersey
Death Date1460 Age: 28
Death PlaceSt Ouen Jersey
Burial Date1460
Burial PlaceSt Ouens Church Jersey
FatherSir Philippe de Carteret V1 , 2292 (~1402-)
MotherMargaret Newton , 2293
Marr PlaceSt Ouens Church. Gen XV11
Family ID9
ChildrenPhilippe V111 , 843 (1450-1500)
Notes for Penna De Caux
"Rawlin Tampier, Lord of Roselle, slayne at ye seige of ye castle of
Jersey, (temp, Edward IV, 1461-1483) married the daughter of Richard
Weston, a Captain under Sir Richard Harliston, at ye Castle of Jersey.

Their daughter married Dominique Perrin, a Burgess of the Town of
St. Pol, in Guernsey. Their children were Edmund (who became Lord
of Rosel, in the right of his mother, after the death of her bachelor
brother) John, James, and a daughter who married James Guill, Bailey
of Guernsey." (A Bailey ranked next after a Lieutenant-Governor.)

In a copy of another old chart in my possession, of the date 1564, the
name of presumably the aforesaid Edmund Perrin, again appears. This
chart states that "Isabel, daughter of Edmund Perrin, Seigneur of Rosel,
married one John Dumaresq, Seigneur of Vinchelles de Bas, and des
Angres, in the Island of Jersey, and they had issue."

This chart goes on to state that between 1644 and 1693, Anne Du-
maresq, a lineal descendant of John and Isabel (Perrin) Dumaresq, was
married to Philip de Carteret, Lord of St. Ouen, and Serk, and who,
upon that marriage, became also Lord of Rosel, in right of his wife.

Thus it would appear that the title passed from Edmund Perrin into
the Dumaresq family, and from that family to the Carterets, through
marriages, or through failure of direct male heirs.

This last chart contains another curious and interesting item, and
singularly this time the spelling "Perrine" appears.

It states that Sir Philip de Carteret, son and heir of Philip, Lord of
Carteret and St. Ouen, married "Perrine Caux," but that Sir Philip dying
before his father (circa 1440), the titles and estates passed to Sir Philip's
son, Philip.

Philip, Lord of Carteret and St. Ouen, died in 1460, and was succeeded
by his grandson Philip, who died in 1500. (New England Historical
Genealogical Register and Genealogical Record, Vol. 17, p. 31 5.)
51
Notes for Philippe (Spouse 1)
Philippe whose horse’s great leap carried him to safety to the time of the French occupation in the 1460s.

This horse’s remains Col E C Mallet de Carteret would have found them
when a archaeology dig happened in the Manor grounds
It's a shoulder blade which sits in a casket underneath the said horses oil picture(18th century) in the Great Hall
Last Modified Aug 10, 2012Created Apr 26, 2023 using Reunion for Macintosh