Page:Dictionary of National Biography volume 43.djvu/43

 soon left to become partner in a printing firm in London; but in 1839 he settled in Glasgow on the staff of the ‘Glasgow Herald,’ and also edited a little broadsheet, ‘The Prospective Observer.’

In 1856 he was appointed successor to George Outram [q. v.] as editor of the ‘Glasgow Herald,’ which he converted from a tri-weekly into a daily paper. Under his editorship the ‘Herald’ became one of the first provincial daily papers. Pagan died in Glasgow on 11 Feb. 1870.

In 1841 Pagan married Ann McNight-Kerr, a native of Dumfries, and a personal friend of Robert Burns's widow, Jean Armour. He had three sons (two of whom died in infancy) and two daughters.

Pagan was a devoted student of Glasgow history and antiquities, and published: 1. ‘Sketches of the History of Glasgow,’ 8vo, Glasgow, 1847. 2. ‘History of the Cathedral and See of Glasgow,’ 8vo, Glasgow, 1851. 3. ‘Glasgow Past and Present; illustrated in Dean of Guild Reports …,’ 2 vols. 8vo, Glasgow, 1851 (vol. iii. published in 1856; another edition, 3 vols 4to, Glasgow, 1884). 4. ‘Old Glasgow and its Environs,’ 8vo, Glasgow, 1864. 5. ‘Relics of Ancient Architecture and other Picturesque Scenes in Glasgow,’ thirty drawings by Thomas Fairbairn. With letterpress description by James Pagan and James H. Stoddart, folio, Glasgow, 1885.

[In Memoriam Mr. James Pagan, printed for private circulation; Stoddart's Memoir in ‘One Hundred Glasgow Men;’ private information.]  PAGANEL, RALPH (fl. 1089), sheriff of Yorkshire, was probably a member of the Norman family which held land at Montiers Hubert in the honour of Lieuvin (, v. 69). In 1086 he held ten lordships in Devon, five in Somerset, fifteen in Lincolnshire, fifteen in Yorkshire, and others in Gloucestershire and Northamptonshire (, Domesday, i. 464). He received the lands which had belonged to Merleswain (, William Rufus, i. 31). In 1088 he was sheriff of Yorkshire, and seized the lands of William of St. Calais, bishop of Durham, at the command of William II, whose cause he defended at the meeting at Salisbury in November 1088 (ib. i. 31, 90). In 1089 he refounded the priory of Holy Trinity, York, and made it a cell to Marmoutier; to it he gave Drax, his chief Yorkshire vill (Mon. Angl. iv. 680). His wife's name was Matilda, and he had four sons—William, Jordan, Elias, and Alan.

The eldest son,, founded a house of Austin canons at Drax or Herlham in the time of Henry I, by the advice of Archbishop Thurstan (Mon. Angl. vi. 194). He confirmed his father's grant to Selby (ib. iii. 501). It was probably he who was defeated at Montiers Hubert in 1136 by Geoffrey Plantagenet (, v. 69). William Paganel appears on the Yorkshire pipe rolls, 1160–2, 1164–5, 1167–9, and in the ‘Liber Rubeus,’ 12 Henry II, as holding under the old enfeoffment fifteen knights' fees, and half a fee under the new. He married Avicia de Romeilli and died before 1140; his daughter Alice married Robert de Gaunt [see ].

His son (d. 1182), baron of Hambie in Normandy, was a constant attendant on Henry II when abroad. He is found attesting a charter at Silverston, 1155, urging a claim on lands in possession of Mont St. Michel, 1155 (, ed. Delisle, ii. 341); in 1166 he was at Fougères in Brittany, 1167 at Valognes, 1170 at Mortain and at Shaftesbury, 1173 at Mont Ferrand and Caen, 1174 at Falaise, 1175 at Caen, always with the king. In 1177 he held an assize at Caen, acting as king's justiciar; in 1180 he was at Oxford, where the king confirmed his gift of Renham to Gilbert de Vere (Abbrev. Plac. p. 98, Essex), and perhaps in this year he confirmed his father's grants to Drax (Mon. Angl. iii. 196). In this year he paid one thousand marks for the livery of his mother's honour of Bampton (Rot. Pip. Devon. 26 Henry II, quoted by Dugdale). In June 1180 he was at Caen and at Bur-le-roy, and in 1181 at Clipston with the king. He married Lescelina de Gripon or de Subligny, sister of Gilbert d'Avranches (, Rot. Scacc. vol. ii. p. vi), and had four sons and three daughters, Gundreda (ib. vol. i. p. lxxix), Juliana, and Christiana (Mon. Angl. v. 202). His eldest son, William, married Alianora de Vitré, and died in 1184.

His second son (d. 1210?), forfeited Bampton, but recovered it in 1199 on payment of one thousand marks (Rot. Obl. 1 John, m. 22). In 1190 he confirmed his father's grant to Drax (Mon. Angl. vi. 196). In 1203 he was suspected of treachery to John (Rot. Norm. 4 Joh. in dorso m. 2), but was restored to favour on delivering his son as a hostage (Rot. Scacc. vol. ii. p. ccxliv). He died about 1210. He married first a Viscountess Cecilia, and, secondly, Ada or Agatha de Humez (Mon. Angl. v. 102), and had two sons, William and Fulk. William (d. 1216?) sided with the barons against John; his lands were seized, and he died about 1216. He married 