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 FANE — FANHOPE. FNK. Viscouutcy [Lj jf, Charles Fane, of liasilden, Berks, s. and li. of I 17i8 l'' riUK ' s Fane, °f t' 10 ranic, K.B., by Elizabeth, da. and h. of Thomas Sai'Cjtt, of Exeter, stir, his father in 1700 and was CIV, 22 April 1718, BARON OF LOUGHGUYRE, co. Limerick, and VISCOUNT FANE [I.] He m. Alary, sister of James, 1st Eakl Stanhopb, da. of Alexander Stanhope, by Catharine, da. of Arnold BURfiHlLL. He d. 1 July 1744. Will pr. 1714. His widow, who had been Maid of Honour to Queen Aune, d. 17 Aug. 1762, aged 70. II. 1744, S. Charles (Fane), Viscount Fane and Bahojt of to LoOOHGCTKE [I.], only s. and h. ; sometime M.P. for Tavistock ; 17GC. English Resident at the Court at Florence, Turin, and Constan- tinople. He in. 7 June 1719. at St. Beunet's Paul's Wharf, London, Susanna, widow of Sir William Juxox, 2d Dart., yst. da. of Joint Marriott, of Sturton Hall, co. Suffolk. He d. s.p. 24 Jany. 1760, when the Peerage became extinct.^) Will pr. 1760. His widow d. 10 April 1702, aged 80. M.I. at Little Compton. Her will pr. April 1792. FANHOPE. Barony. Sin John Cornwall, s. and h. of another Sir John I 1433 C-;C') ,j y n niece of the Duke ok Rhitannv was born at sea in St. . Michael's Mount bay, Cornwall and bap. at the church of Markeu- . . - „ shaw. Having distinguished himself at a tournament, at York, in liio. 1400, he is said there to have won the heart of the King's sister, Elizabeth, widow of John (Holand), Duke of Exeter (see under that dignity), da. of John (Plantagf.net styled "of Gaunt"), Duke of Lancaster, by his first wife, Blanche, da. and coheir of Henry (Plantagenkt), Duke of Lancaster. This lady he soon afterwards married, but she died before him [1 125-20], k Hen. VI., and was bur. at Burford, Salop. M.I. at Burford and at Ampthill, Beds. He was ci: K.G., 1 109-10; was at the battle of Agiucourt, 1415 ; and, on the departure of the King from France, was left there in high command. He was cr. 17 July 1133, in open Pari., BARON OF FANHOPE, co. Hereford,( c ) tho' he appears to have been always sum. to Pari, [as LORD CORNWALL ?] by writsC) directed " Johanni Cornevall, Chevalier." He was, also in open Pari. cr. 30 Jan. 1442, BARON OF MILBROKE, co. Bedford.^) Ho d. at Ampthill, Beds, s.p. legit, iu 1443 when all his honours became extinct. Will pr. 6 Jany. 1-443/4, at Lincoln. His eldest sister, Mary, m. in 1735, Jerome, Count Do Salis, by whom she had a son and h., Jerome, Count De Salis, who in 1835 took the additional surname of Fane. ( b ) This Sir John (the elder) was 3d s. of Sir Richard Cornwall, usually spoken of as "Baron of Burford," who was s. and h. of Sir Geoffrey, Cornwall, by Margaret, da. and coheir of Hugh Mortimer, Lord of tho manor of Burford. A good account of these "Barons of Burford," is in Marshall's Genealogist," vols, iii and iv. (<=) Fanhope appears to be but the second (and Milbroke the fourth) Barony which was <r. by patent. See p. 31 note "e," sub " Daubeney " for a list of the 16 Baronies, a: by patent before the 16th century. There are no words of limitation whatever to either of these creations. ( d ) There is proof in tho rolls of Pari, of his sitting. (°) The reason of this creation is very obscure. It is justly observed in " Court- hope " that " the case of Sir John Cornwall is remarkable in several respects. Both of his creations were in Parliament and enrolled in Parliament, but the former only was exemplified by Patent ; iii the latter, creating him Baron of Milbroke, he is styled Sir John Cornwall only, without reference to his former creation as Baron of Fanhope ; in neither case are there any words of inheritance, and although the absence of such words, under ordinary circumstances, would give only a life-estate to the grantee, Lord Lyndhurst, in his argument on the Wcusleydale Peerage, considered that his being created in Parliament a Baron ' with all and singular rights, privileges,