DACKOMBE Chart 1303

This is a Chart for Brune Dackombe and Mary Barnard

 

married
13th November
1639
Holy Trinity
Dorchester, Dorset

 

1
BRUNE DACKOMBE
born 1617
York
died before 1672

 

2
MARY BARNARD


3
Edward
DACKOMBE

born 1642
died 1683

married
Elizabeth
St. LOE

4
Anne
DACKOMBE

alive in 1659 
and in 1670

married
???
DYER

5
Mary
DACKOMBE

alive in 1659
  1. Brune Dackombe, the son of Edward of Corfe Castle by his second marriage to Anne, daughter of Henry Brune of Athelhampton, was born in 1617 at York; this date is based on the Visitation of Dorset in 1623, but is at variance with the date given in the Alumni Oxonienses. He was educated at Trinity College, Oxford - having matriculated at 15.  He married under a marriage settlement dated 11th November 1639, Mary, the daughter of Sir Lawrence Bernard. Their son and heir, Edward, is the only child ascribed to them in the Corfe Pedigrees but in later Composition Papers, Brune states 'his four children'.  As described in the preceding Corfe history, he inherited the lease of the Manor house in Corfe from his father, and this was given as his residence at the Hearth Tax Assesment in 1662-1664; also living there was Lady Grace Lawrence and other members of the Dackombe family.  In 1645, after the famous seige, Corfe Castle fell to the Roundheads, and Brune's lands, valued in 1641 at £100 p.a., were sequestered; it is clear that he had already declared for the King, and was imprisoned in the Castle about 1646 where he 'languored for some months'.  In April, 1646 he appealed for the restoration of his sequestered estate, but it appears that some dispute had arisen as to the payment of his Delinquency fine. He made claim on his estates for the upbringing of his four children and the guardianship of William Fortesque's children.  In a letter dated 23 May, 1664 from Brune to the Earl of Clarendon, Lord High Chancellor, concerning a Bill of Chancery, he states that he 'had to borrow money to meet a Delinquency fine from Thorpe Groome - London (shoemaker) on security of a mill at Corfe Castle'.  It is not yet established when Brune died, but his son Edward's children were on the Pedigree from 1672 and it is to be presumed that Brune was deceased before this date.  The Purbeck stone has lasted a little longer - both the mill and Manor House still stand.
    The following is an Article by Doreen William in 1992 about Brune DACKOMBE, some of the information it contains is already contained in the other notes. A SEVENTEENTH CENTURY CAVALIER - BRUNE DACKOMBE Brune Dackombe, the son of Edward of Corfe Castle by his second marriage to Anne, daughter of Henry Brune of Athelhampton, was born in 1617 at York; this date is based on the Visitation of Dorset in 1623, but is at variance with the date given in the Alumni Oxonienses. He was educated at Trinity College, Oxford - having matriculated at 15. He married under a marriage settlement dated 11th November 1639, Mary, the daughter of Sir Lawrence Bernard. Their son and heir, Edward, is the only child ascribed to them in the Corfe Pedigrees but in later Composition Papers, Brune states 'his four children'. As described in the preceding Corfe history, he inherited the lease of the Manor house in Corfe from his father, and this was given as his residence at the Hearth Tax Assesment in 1662-1664; also living there was Lady Grace Lawrence and other members of the Dackombe family. In 1645, after the famous seige, Corfe Castle fell to the Roundheads, and Brune's lands, valued in 1641 at £100 p.a., were sequestered; it is clear that he had already declared for the King, and was imprisoned in the Castle about 1646 where he 'languored for some months'. In April, 1646 he appealed for the restoration of his sequestered estate, but it appears that some dispute had arisen as to the payment of his Delinquency fine. He made claim on his estates for the upbringing of his four children and the guardianship of William Fortesque's children. In a letter dated 23 May, 1664 from Brune to the Earl of Clarendon, Lord High Chancellor, concerning a Bill of Chancery, he states that he 'had to borrow money to meet a Delinquency fine from Thorpe Groome - London (shoemaker) on security of a mill at Corfe Castle'. It is not yet established when Brune died, but his son Edward's children were on the Pedigree from 1672 and it is to be presumed that Brune was deceased before this date.
    1670 Brune DACKOMBE of Corfe Castle admon. to his daughter Anne DYER.
  2. Father – Lawrence BARNARD of Picket in South Periott in Somerset (Dorset) Gent.
  3.  
  4. 1670 Brune DACKOMBE of Corfe Castle admon. to his daughter Anne DYER.
  5.  

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