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Mansel family

The Mansel family (/mænsəl/, MAN-səl), also known throughout history as Mansell and Maunsell (Old French: Mansel, lit.'someone from Le Mans, France'), is a British noble family.

Mansel
Mansell, Maunsell
Canting arms of Mansel: Argent, a chevron between three maunches sable
CountryUnited Kingdom
Place of originNormandy
Titles
MottoLatin: Quod vult valde vult
("What he wishes, he wishes fervently")
Estate(s)
Portrait of Sir Robert Mansell
Portrait of Thomas Mansel, 1st Baron Mansel by Michael Dahl
Thomas Mansel, 2nd Baron Mansel with his Blackwood half-brothers and sister by Allan Ramsay
Margam Castle, built for Christopher Rice Mansel Talbot in 1830
Oxwich Castle, built by Sir Rice Mansel
Penrice Castle, a 13th-century castle that passed to the Mansel family in 1410
St Donat's Castle, given to Bussy Mansel, 4th Baron Mansel by his cousin Sir Thomas Stradling
Sketty Hall, constructed in the 1720s by Rawleigh Mansel
General John Maunsell of Barkestown, Co. Limerick
Portrait of Robert Maunsell by John Comerford
Church of St Leonard, Thorpe Malsor

History edit

Origin edit

The Mansels came to England during the Norman Conquest and were established in Wales by the time of Henry I. Sir Robert Maunsel (born c. 1150) was a Templar under Baron Gilbert de Lacy in Palestine during the reign of Henry II. His father, Walter, a deacon, was Napkin Bearer to the King. Sir John Maunsell, grandson of Sir Robert, was lord Chancellor to Henry III and England's first secretary of state.[1] He is listed in most Mansel genealogies as ancestor of the Lords Mansell of Margam, the Carmarthenshire Mansells, and the Maunsells of Ireland and Thorpe Malsor.[2]

Baronets of Muddlescombe and Trimsaran edit

The Mansel Baronetcy of Muddlescombe, in the County of Carmarthen, was created in the Baronetage of England on 14 January 1622 for Sir Francis Mansel, younger brother of Sir Thomas Mansell, 1st Baronet of Margam.[3] Sir William Mansel, 9th Baronet sat as Member of Parliament for Carmarthenshire.[4] There was great confusion over the succession after the death of Sir John Bell William Mansel, 11th Baronet in 1883. The rightful heir was believed to be Edward Berkeley Philipps (later Mansel), son of Courtenay Philipps, son of Richard Mansel, younger brother of the tenth Baronet. However, it was widely believed that Courtenay Philipps's first marriage was invalid. The title was therefore assumed by Edward Berkeley Philipps's brother Richard Philipps (later Mansel) as the twelfth Baronet. On his death in 1892 the title was assumed by his son Courtenay Cecil Mansel, the thirteenth Baronet. However, in 1903 the latter discovered evidence that his grandfather's first marriage was indeed valid and relinquished the use of the title in favour of his uncle Edward Berkeley Philipps (later Mansel), who became the twelfth Baronet. When he died childless in 1908 the title was resumed by his nephew Courtenay Cecil Mansel, the thirteenth Baronet.[5] Sir Courtenay Cecil Mansel later represented Penryn and Falmouth in the House of Commons.[5] The Mansel Baronetcy of Muddlescombe is the only extant Mansel baronetcy as of the present day, with Sir Philip Mansel, 15th baronet (born 1943) having succeeded to the baronetcy on the death of his father, Sir John Philip Ferdinand Mansel, 14th baronet in 1947.

The Mansel Baronetcy of Trimsaran, in the County of Carmarthen, was created in the Baronetage of England on 22 February 1697 for Sir Edward Mansel, great-grandson of Sir Francis Mansel, 1st Baronet of Muddlescombe.[6] The title became extinct on the death of the fourth baronet Sir Edward Joseph Shewen Mansel in 1798.

Barons Mansel of Margam edit

The title of Baron Mansel, of Margam in the County of Glamorgan, was created on 1 January 1712 for Sir Thomas Mansel, 5th Baronet, previously Member of Parliament for Cardiff and Glamorganshire. His great-grandfather Sir Thomas Mansell, 1st Baronet had been created a Baronet, of Margam in the County of Glamorgan, in the Baronetage of England on 22 May 1611. He held the office of High Sheriff of Glamorgan in 1593 and was twice elected as Member of Parliament for Glamorgan in 1597 and 1605.[7] Sir Edward Mansel, 4th Baronet was also elected to the House of Commons representing Glamorgan.

Thomas Mansel, 1st Baron Mansel was succeeded by his grandson Thomas Mansel, son of Hon. Robert Mansel.[8] Thomas Mansel, 2nd Baron Mansel died unmarried on 29 January 1744 and the title passed to Christopher Mansel, son of the first Baron, who also died unmarried.[9] Bussy Mansel, third son of the first Baron, thus inherited the title.[9]

Bussy Mansel, 4th Baron Mansel sat as Member of Parliament for Cardiff and Glamorganshire. He married Lady Elizabeth Hervey, the daughter of John Hervey, 1st Earl of Bristol[10] and died without issue on 29 November 1750. On the death of the 4th baron, the barony and baronetcy became extinct and the Margam estates passed to his daughter Louisa, who married George Venables-Vernon, subsequently 2nd Baron Vernon. Following her death without issue in 1786, it passed to her aunt Mary Mansell, who had married John Ivory Talbot of Lacock Abbey, Wiltshire.[7] However, other parts of the estates (subsequently known as the Briton Ferry estate) passed to her uncle Thomas Villiers, 1st Earl of Clarendon then to William Henry Augustus Villiers (who took the surname Mansell to inherit this estate). On his death without issue, it passed to his elder brother's son George Child Villiers, 5th Earl of Jersey.[11]

Maunsells of Thorpe Malsor edit

In 1622, John Maunsell, Esq., of Chicheley, Buckinghamshire, a barrister, purchased from Lord Holland the rectory, manor, and estate of Thorpe Malsor, about two miles west from Kettering, Northamptonshire, in Rothwell Hundred.[12][13] From that time, the main stock of the family continued to reside at Thorpe Malsor in affluence and distinction.[14][15] John Maunsell died on 19 October 1625.[13] He had two sons with Katherine Ward, daughter of Sir Richard Ward of Hurst.[13]

Pedigree edit

  • Sir John Maunsell (c. 1190–1265)
    • Sir Thomas Maunsell
      • Henry Maunsell (born c. 1250)
        • Sir Walter Maunsell (died c. 1327)
          • Sir Robert Maunsell
            • Richard Maunsell
              • Sir Hugh Maunsell (born c. 1340)
                • Sir Richard Maunsell (c. 1375–1435)
                  • John Maunsell
                    • Sir Philip Maunsell (1420–1471)
                      • Jenkin Mansel (1461–1510)
                        • Sir Rice Mansel (c. 1487–1559)
                          • Sir Edward Mansel (1531–1595)
                            • Sir Thomas Mansell, 1st Baronet (1556–1631)
                            • Sir Francis Mansel, 1st Baronet (c. 1560c. 1628)
                              • Francis Mansell (1579–1665)
                              • Sir Walter Mansel, 2nd Baronet (1586–1640)
                                • Sir Francis Mansel, 3rd Baronet (died c. 1650)
                              • Sir Anthony Mansel (1588–1644)
                                • Sir Edward Mansel, 4th Baronet (died c. 1680)
                              • Richard Mansel (died c. 1635)
                                • Sir Richard Mansel, 5th Baronet (1641–1691)
                                  • Sir Richard Mansel, 6th Baronet (died 1696)
                                  • Sir William Mansel, 7th Baronet (1670–c. 1732)
                                    • Sir Richard Mansel, 8th Baronet (died 1749)
                                      • Sir William Mansel, 9th Baronet (1739–1804)
                                        • Sir William Mansel, 10th Baronet (1766–1829)
                                          • Sir John Bell William Mansel, 11th Baronet (1806–1883)
                                        • Richard Mansel (died 1844)
                                          • Courtenay Mansel (1801–1875)
                                            • Sir Richard Berkeley Mansel, 12th Baronet (1850–1892)
                                            • Sir Richard Mansel, 12th Baronet (1850–1892)
                                        • John Mansel (1776–1863)
                                          • George Pleydell Mansel (1817–1896)
                                            • John Delalynde Mansel (1850–1915)
                              • John Mansel (born 1611)
                                • Henry Mansel (died before 1683)
                                  • Sir Edward Mansel, 1st Baronet (died 1720)
                                    • Sir Edward Mansel, 2nd Baronet (died 1754)
                                      • Sir Edward Vaughan Mansel, 3rd Baronet (died 1788)
                                        • Sir Edward Joseph Shewen Mansel, 4th Baronet (died 1798)
                            • Sir Robert Mansell (1573–1656)
                      • Richard Maunsell (died 1543)
                        • Richard Maunsell (died 1559)
                          • Thomas Maunsell (born 1536)
                            • Thomas Maunsell (born 1577)
                          • John Maunsell (1539–1605)
                            • Samuel Maunsell (born 1581)

References edit

Sources edit

  • Addison, Charles Greenstreet (1842). The History of the Knights Templars, The Temple Church, and the Temple. London: Longman, Brown, Green, and Longmans.
  • Various (13 September 1845). "Obituary of Eminent Persons, Recently Deceased. Captain Robert Maunsell, C.B." The Illustrated London News.
  • Cokayne, George E (1900). Complete baronetage. Exeter : W. Pollard & co., ltd. – via Internet Archive.
  • Maunsell, Robert George (1903). History of Maunsell, or Mansel, and of Crayford, Gabbett, Knoyle, Persse, Toler, Waller, Castletown; Waller, Prior Park; Warren, White, Winthrop, and Mansell of Guernsey. Cork: Guy and Company Limited. pp. 72, 85 (note), 179–80 (appendix 111).
  • Maunsell, Charles Albert; Stratham, Edward Phillips (1917). History of the family of Maunsell (Mansell, Mansel). London, K. Paul – via Internet Archive.
  • Davies, William Llewelyn (1959). "MANSEL family, of Oxwich, Penrice, and Margam abbey, Glamorganshire". Dictionary of Welsh Biography. National Library of Wales. Retrieved 29 August 2023.
  • "Mansell family of Margam" (2019). Cowbridge History Society Archive.

mansel, family, səl, also, known, throughout, history, mansell, maunsell, french, mansel, someone, from, mans, france, british, noble, family, manselmansell, maunsellcanting, arms, mansel, argent, chevron, between, three, maunches, sablecountryunited, kingdomp. The Mansel family m ae n s e l MAN sel also known throughout history as Mansell and Maunsell Old French Mansel lit someone from Le Mans France is a British noble family ManselMansell MaunsellCanting arms of Mansel Argent a chevron between three maunches sableCountryUnited KingdomPlace of originNormandyTitlesBaron Mansel of Margam Baronet of Margam Baronet of Muddlescombe Baronet of TrimsaranMottoLatin Quod vult valde vult What he wishes he wishes fervently Estate s Current Smedmore House Former Margam Castle Oxwich Castle Penrice Castle St Donat s Castle Iscoed Manor Briton Ferry Estate Sketty Hall Cosgrove HallPortrait of Sir Robert MansellPortrait of Thomas Mansel 1st Baron Mansel by Michael DahlThomas Mansel 2nd Baron Mansel with his Blackwood half brothers and sister by Allan RamsayMargam Castle built for Christopher Rice Mansel Talbot in 1830Oxwich Castle built by Sir Rice ManselPenrice Castle a 13th century castle that passed to the Mansel family in 1410St Donat s Castle given to Bussy Mansel 4th Baron Mansel by his cousin Sir Thomas StradlingSketty Hall constructed in the 1720s by Rawleigh ManselGeneral John Maunsell of Barkestown Co LimerickPortrait of Robert Maunsell by John ComerfordChurch of St Leonard Thorpe Malsor Contents 1 History 1 1 Origin 1 2 Baronets of Muddlescombe and Trimsaran 1 3 Barons Mansel of Margam 1 4 Maunsells of Thorpe Malsor 2 Pedigree 3 References 4 SourcesHistory editOrigin edit The Mansels came to England during the Norman Conquest and were established in Wales by the time of Henry I Sir Robert Maunsel born c 1150 was a Templar under Baron Gilbert de Lacy in Palestine during the reign of Henry II His father Walter a deacon was Napkin Bearer to the King Sir John Maunsell grandson of Sir Robert was lord Chancellor to Henry III and England s first secretary of state 1 He is listed in most Mansel genealogies as ancestor of the Lords Mansell of Margam the Carmarthenshire Mansells and the Maunsells of Ireland and Thorpe Malsor 2 Baronets of Muddlescombe and Trimsaran edit Main article Mansel baronets The Mansel Baronetcy of Muddlescombe in the County of Carmarthen was created in the Baronetage of England on 14 January 1622 for Sir Francis Mansel younger brother of Sir Thomas Mansell 1st Baronet of Margam 3 Sir William Mansel 9th Baronet sat as Member of Parliament for Carmarthenshire 4 There was great confusion over the succession after the death of Sir John Bell William Mansel 11th Baronet in 1883 The rightful heir was believed to be Edward Berkeley Philipps later Mansel son of Courtenay Philipps son of Richard Mansel younger brother of the tenth Baronet However it was widely believed that Courtenay Philipps s first marriage was invalid The title was therefore assumed by Edward Berkeley Philipps s brother Richard Philipps later Mansel as the twelfth Baronet On his death in 1892 the title was assumed by his son Courtenay Cecil Mansel the thirteenth Baronet However in 1903 the latter discovered evidence that his grandfather s first marriage was indeed valid and relinquished the use of the title in favour of his uncle Edward Berkeley Philipps later Mansel who became the twelfth Baronet When he died childless in 1908 the title was resumed by his nephew Courtenay Cecil Mansel the thirteenth Baronet 5 Sir Courtenay Cecil Mansel later represented Penryn and Falmouth in the House of Commons 5 The Mansel Baronetcy of Muddlescombe is the only extant Mansel baronetcy as of the present day with Sir Philip Mansel 15th baronet born 1943 having succeeded to the baronetcy on the death of his father Sir John Philip Ferdinand Mansel 14th baronet in 1947 The Mansel Baronetcy of Trimsaran in the County of Carmarthen was created in the Baronetage of England on 22 February 1697 for Sir Edward Mansel great grandson of Sir Francis Mansel 1st Baronet of Muddlescombe 6 The title became extinct on the death of the fourth baronet Sir Edward Joseph Shewen Mansel in 1798 Barons Mansel of Margam edit Main article Baron Mansel The title of Baron Mansel of Margam in the County of Glamorgan was created on 1 January 1712 for Sir Thomas Mansel 5th Baronet previously Member of Parliament for Cardiff and Glamorganshire His great grandfather Sir Thomas Mansell 1st Baronet had been created a Baronet of Margam in the County of Glamorgan in the Baronetage of England on 22 May 1611 He held the office of High Sheriff of Glamorgan in 1593 and was twice elected as Member of Parliament for Glamorgan in 1597 and 1605 7 Sir Edward Mansel 4th Baronet was also elected to the House of Commons representing Glamorgan Thomas Mansel 1st Baron Mansel was succeeded by his grandson Thomas Mansel son of Hon Robert Mansel 8 Thomas Mansel 2nd Baron Mansel died unmarried on 29 January 1744 and the title passed to Christopher Mansel son of the first Baron who also died unmarried 9 Bussy Mansel third son of the first Baron thus inherited the title 9 Bussy Mansel 4th Baron Mansel sat as Member of Parliament for Cardiff and Glamorganshire He married Lady Elizabeth Hervey the daughter of John Hervey 1st Earl of Bristol 10 and died without issue on 29 November 1750 On the death of the 4th baron the barony and baronetcy became extinct and the Margam estates passed to his daughter Louisa who married George Venables Vernon subsequently 2nd Baron Vernon Following her death without issue in 1786 it passed to her aunt Mary Mansell who had married John Ivory Talbot of Lacock Abbey Wiltshire 7 However other parts of the estates subsequently known as the Briton Ferry estate passed to her uncle Thomas Villiers 1st Earl of Clarendon then to William Henry Augustus Villiers who took the surname Mansell to inherit this estate On his death without issue it passed to his elder brother s son George Child Villiers 5th Earl of Jersey 11 Maunsells of Thorpe Malsor edit In 1622 John Maunsell Esq of Chicheley Buckinghamshire a barrister purchased from Lord Holland the rectory manor and estate of Thorpe Malsor about two miles west from Kettering Northamptonshire in Rothwell Hundred 12 13 From that time the main stock of the family continued to reside at Thorpe Malsor in affluence and distinction 14 15 John Maunsell died on 19 October 1625 13 He had two sons with Katherine Ward daughter of Sir Richard Ward of Hurst 13 Pedigree editSir John Maunsell c 1190 1265 Sir Thomas Maunsell Henry Maunsell born c 1250 Sir Walter Maunsell died c 1327 Sir Robert Maunsell Richard Maunsell Sir Hugh Maunsell born c 1340 Sir Richard Maunsell c 1375 1435 John Maunsell Sir Philip Maunsell 1420 1471 Jenkin Mansel 1461 1510 Sir Rice Mansel c 1487 1559 Sir Edward Mansel 1531 1595 Sir Thomas Mansell 1st Baronet 1556 1631 Sir Lewis Mansel 2nd Baronet c 1594 1638 Sir Henry Mansel 3rd Baronet c 1629 c 1640 Sir Edward Mansel 4th Baronet 1637 1706 Sir Thomas Mansel 1st Baron Mansel 1667 1723 Robert Mansel 1695 1723 Thomas Mansel 2nd Baron Mansel 1719 1744 Sir Christopher Mansel 3rd Baron Mansel c 1696 1744 Bussy Mansel 4th Baron Mansel c 1697 1750 Sir Francis Mansel 1st Baronet c 1560 c 1628 Francis Mansell 1579 1665 Sir Walter Mansel 2nd Baronet 1586 1640 Sir Francis Mansel 3rd Baronet died c 1650 Sir Anthony Mansel 1588 1644 Sir Edward Mansel 4th Baronet died c 1680 Richard Mansel died c 1635 Sir Richard Mansel 5th Baronet 1641 1691 Sir Richard Mansel 6th Baronet died 1696 Sir William Mansel 7th Baronet 1670 c 1732 Sir Richard Mansel 8th Baronet died 1749 Sir William Mansel 9th Baronet 1739 1804 Sir William Mansel 10th Baronet 1766 1829 Sir John Bell William Mansel 11th Baronet 1806 1883 Richard Mansel died 1844 Courtenay Mansel 1801 1875 Sir Richard Berkeley Mansel 12th Baronet 1850 1892 Sir Richard Mansel 12th Baronet 1850 1892 Sir Courtenay Cecil Mansel 13th Baronet 1880 1933 Sir John Philip Ferdinand Mansel 14th Baronet 1910 1947 Sir Philip Mansel 15th Baronet born 1943 John Mansel 1776 1863 George Pleydell Mansel 1817 1896 John Delalynde Mansel 1850 1915 Rhys Clavell Mansel 1891 1969 John Clavell Mansel 1917 2007 Philip Robert Rhys Mansel born 1951 John Mansel born 1611 Henry Mansel died before 1683 Sir Edward Mansel 1st Baronet died 1720 Sir Edward Mansel 2nd Baronet died 1754 Sir Edward Vaughan Mansel 3rd Baronet died 1788 Sir Edward Joseph Shewen Mansel 4th Baronet died 1798 Sir Robert Mansell 1573 1656 Richard Maunsell died 1543 Richard Maunsell died 1559 Thomas Maunsell born 1536 Thomas Maunsell born 1577 Thomas Maunsell c 1600 1686 Thomas Maunsell died 1692 Richard Maunsell died 1773 Thomas Maunsell c 1705 c 1773 Robert Maunsell 1745 1832 Frederick Maunsell 1793 1875 Robert George Stone Maunsell 1842 1936 Frederick Henry Robert Maunsell 1888 1957 Henry Ian Geoffrey Maunsell 1924 2013 John Henry Richard Maunsell born 1955 Dorothea Maunsell c 1750 1814 m Giusto Fernando Tenducci Richard Maunsell 1721 1790 Daniel Maunsell 1747 1824 Daniel Henry Maunsell 1791 1834 Sir Frederick Richard Maunsell 1828 1916 Manuel Charles Maunsell 1866 1933 Raymond John Maunsell 1903 1976 Edward Charles Maunsell 1794 1857 Edward Henry Maunsell 1837 1913 Guy Anson Maunsell 1884 1961 Robert Maunsell 1795 1875 John Maunsell 1824 1899 Richard Edward Lloyd Maunsell 1868 1944 George Maunsell 1754 1834 Robert Maunsell 1810 1894 John Maunsell c 1622 1695 Thomas Maunsell died 1739 Thomas Maunsell 1704 1768 William Maunsell 1729 1818 Thomas Philip Maunsell 1781 1866 Robert Charles Maunsell 1786 1845 William Wray Maunsell 1782 1860 John Maunsell 1539 1605 Samuel Maunsell born 1581 Edward Mansel 1627 1696 Christopher Mansel 1686 1741 John Mansel 1729 1794 Henry Longueville Mansel 1783 1835 Henry Longueville Mansel 1820 1871 References edit Addison 1842 Maunsell amp Stratham 1917 p 577 Cokayne 1900 p 209 Cokayne 1900 p 211 a b Cokayne 1900 p 212 Maunsell amp Stratham 1917 p 381 a b Davies 1959 Maunsell amp Stratham 1917 p 109 a b Maunsell amp Stratham 1917 p 111 Maunsell amp Stratham 1917 p 153 Maunsell amp Stratham 1917 p 119 Maunsell amp Stratham 1917 p 571 a b c Maunsell amp Stratham 1917 p 583 Various 1845 p 170 Maunsell 1903 p 77 Sources editAddison Charles Greenstreet 1842 The History of the Knights Templars The Temple Church and the Temple London Longman Brown Green and Longmans Various 13 September 1845 Obituary of Eminent Persons Recently Deceased Captain Robert Maunsell C B The Illustrated London News Cokayne George E 1900 Complete baronetage Exeter W Pollard amp co ltd via Internet Archive Maunsell Robert George 1903 History of Maunsell or Mansel and of Crayford Gabbett Knoyle Persse Toler Waller Castletown Waller Prior Park Warren White Winthrop and Mansell of Guernsey Cork Guy and Company Limited pp 72 85 note 179 80 appendix 111 Maunsell Charles Albert Stratham Edward Phillips 1917 History of the family of Maunsell Mansell Mansel London K Paul via Internet Archive Davies William Llewelyn 1959 MANSEL family of Oxwich Penrice and Margam abbey Glamorganshire Dictionary of Welsh Biography National Library of Wales Retrieved 29 August 2023 Mansell family of Margam 2019 Cowbridge History Society Archive Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mansel family amp oldid 1189897646, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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