WHOSYERDAD-E Who's Your Daddy?
Wikigenealogy

Sir Ralph Deincourt, 12101251 (aged 41 years)

Sizergh Castle, Helsington, Cumbria, England
Name
Sir Ralph /Deincourt/
Name prefix
Sir
Given names
Ralph
Surname
Deincourt
Family with parents
father
Sizergh Castle, Helsington, Cumbria, England
11801228
Birth: 1180 30 Helsington, Cumbria, England
Death: 1228Helsington, Cumbria, England
mother
11871228
Birth: 1187 35 35 Stainton, Kendal, Cumbria, England
Death: 1228Cumbria, England
Marriage Marriage
himself
Sizergh Castle, Helsington, Cumbria, England
12101251
Birth: 1210 30 23 Helsington, Cumbria, England
Death: 1251Helsington, Cumbria, England
Family with Alice de Thursby
himself
Sizergh Castle, Helsington, Cumbria, England
12101251
Birth: 1210 30 23 Helsington, Cumbria, England
Death: 1251Helsington, Cumbria, England
wife
12101260
Birth: 1210 15 Wigton, Cumbria, England
Death: 1260Sizergh, Cumbria, England
Marriage Marriage
son
daughter
12351292
Birth: 1235 25 25 Branston, Lincolnshire, England
Death: 1292Sizergh, Cumbria, England
Birth
Address: Sizergh Castle, Helsington, Cumbria, England.
Marriage
Death of a maternal grandfather
Death of a father
Address: Sizergh Castle, Helsington, Cumbria, England.
Death of a mother
Birth of a daughter
Birth of a son
Death
Address: Sizergh Castle, Helsington, Cumbria, England.
Last change
7 June 201505:31:25
Author of last change: Danny
Media object
Sizergh Castle, Helsington, Cumbria, England
Sizergh Castle, Helsington, Cumbria, England
Note: Sizergh Castle and Garden is a castle, stately home and garden at Helsington in the English county of Cumbria, about 4 miles (6.4 km) south of Kendal, and in the care of the National Trust.

Sizergh Castle and Garden is a castle, stately home and garden at Helsington in the English county of Cumbria, about 4 miles (6.4 km) south of Kendal, and in the care of the National Trust.

History

The Deincourt family owned this land from the 1170s. On the marriage of Elizabeth Deincourt to Sir William de Stirkeland in 1239, the estate passed into the hands of what became the Strickland family, who owned it until it was gifted to the National Trust in 1950 by Gerald Strickland, 1st Baron Strickland's grandson Lt. Cdr. Thomas Hornyold-Strickland, 7th Count della Catena.

Catherine Parr, the sixth wife of Henry VIII and a relative of the Stricklands, is thought to have lived here after her first husband died in 1533. Catherine's second husband, Lord Latymer, was kin to the dowager Lady Strickland.

It was extended in Elizabethan times. Sir Thomas Strickland went into exile with James II.

Around 1770, the great hall was again expanded in the Georgian style.