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Walter Oliver
Noted events in his life were:
• Background Information. 160 Sir Humphrey de Beauchamp, Knight, younger son (adult by 1274), living in 1316, but dead by 1317, was lord of Ryme Intriseca, Dorset & Oburnford, Oulescombe, Teignhervy & Buckerell, co. Devon. He married, as his first wife, by 1254 Sibyl Oliver who was living in 1306, the daughter and heir of Walter Oliver, lord of Wambrook, Somerset, from whom he divorced between 1297 and 1290.
~Weis' Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America before 1700, 8th Edition, 246B:30
• Background Information. 1271 The manor in Wambrook may have been held in 1086 by one of two knights, William and Walter, entered in Domesday under Chardstock [V.C.H. Dors. iii. 72]. It had been subinfeudated by the mid 12th century when the fee of Nicholas Oliver of Wambrook was quitclaimed to the bishop by Baldwin, earl of Exeter [Sarum Chart. and Doc. (Rolls Ser.), 20\endash 1]. Jordan Oliver was holding one fee under the bishop of Salisbury in 1166 and the manor evidently continued in the Oliver family as a second Jordan Oliver was holding lands in Wambrook in the early 13th century [Red Bk. Exch. (Rolls Ser.), i. 236; Univ. of Nott., MiD 2137/2, 3; MiD 3849/1.]. The latter may probably be identified with Sir Jordan Oliver of Dorset, husband of Sibyl de Aumale, who was evidently succeeded by Jordan Oliver (III), a justice in eyre and sheriff of Somerset and Dorset 1239\endash 40, who probably lived in the parish [Cur. Reg. R. iii, pp. 29, 260; iv, pp. 19, 65, 155; S. W. Rawlins, Sheriffs of Som. 9]. The latter was probably followed by his son Walter Oliver (fl. 1240\endash 83) [Bk. of Fees, ii. 1378; Cal. Close, 1279\endash 88, 246]. The manor had passed by 1280 to an heiress, Sibyl Oliver, wife of Humphrey de Beauchamp of Ryme (Dors.), from whom she was divorced between 1287 and 1290 [Feet of Fines, Dors. 1195\endash 1327, ed. E. A. and G. S. Fry, 188, 192\endash 3; Feud. Aids, ii. 7; C.P. 40/67 rot. 39; C.P. 40/86 rot. 38d.; C.P. 40/100 rot. 31]. By 1292 Sibyl had carried the manor to her second husband John de Aldham and in the following year Cecily, widow of John Beauchamp, Lord Beauchamp of Hatch, whose husband had acted as trustee for his brother Humphrey, unsuccessfully claimed dower in the estate [C.P. 40/92 rot. 181; C.P. 40/100 rot. 31; Feet of Fines, Dors. 1195\endash 1327, 188, 21]. In 1306 Sibyl Oliver granted the advowson and the reversion of the manor to John de Hertrugge and Nichole his wife, with a reservation for life to Sibyl's son William, and John and Nichole secured a quitclaim of the manor from Humphrey de Beauchamp two years later [Feet of Fines, Dors. 1195\endash 1327, 234\endash 5; C.P. 40/161 rot. 82; Univ. of Nott., MiD 2141].
A P Baggs and R J E Bush, 'Parishes: Wambrook', in A History of the County of Somerset: Volume 4, ed. R W Dunning (London, 1978), pp. 222-231
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