William, the
earliest ancestor of the Hotham family, was a retainer of the family of Fossard
and no doubt of Norman origin. His feudal overlord Nigel Fossard, or his son
Robert had enfeoffed William or his father with two knight’s fees in the East
Riding of Yorkshire. It appears that William or his son Durand took up
residence in the village of Hotham and adopted the name of “de Hotham”.
Durand, son
of William de Hotham succeeded his father before 1165. He is called Durand de Hodum in the Pipe Roll of 12
Henry II (1164-5) [1].
In 1166, Durant filius Willelmi, held
two knight's fees of William Fossard of the old feoffment [2].
In 1240-42, Robert de Hothum II was holding two knight's fees of Peter de
Mauley (the successor of the Fossards) in Hotham, Cranswick, Seaton and
Easthorpe [3].
These were the two knight's fees which his ancestor, Durand, son of William de
Hothum held in 1166 of Fossard.
In a deed
dated between 1162 and 1165, Durandus de
Hothum, witnessed a confirmation by Henry II to the canons of Warter of
Akenbergh and Belhagh (in Lockington), which the canons of Merton had granted
to them [4].
In a deed
dated between 1175 and 1183, Durando de
Hothum witnessed a confirmation by William Fossard II, at the request of Odard
Canoun and William de Vescy, his lord, (of the gift made by the said Odard and
confirmed by William de Vescy, his lord, to the nuns of Watton), of the mill of
Pouzthwaite and a carucate of land there [5].
[1] The Great Roll of the Pipe for
the Eleventh Year of the Reign of King Henry the Second, A.D. 1164-1165, Pipe Roll Society 8, 1887,
48.
[2] Hubert Hall, ed., The Red
Book of the Exchequer, vol. 1 (London: HMSO, 1896), 407.
[3] H. C. Maxwell Lyte, ed., Liber
Feodorum. The Book of Fees Commonly Called Testa de Nevill. Part II, A.D.
1242-1293 (London: HMSO, 1923), 1098.
[4] Dodsw. MS. vii, f. 324d as
cited in William Farrer, ed., Early Yorkshire Charters; Being a Collection
of Documents Anterior to the Thirteenth Century Made from the Public Records,
Monastic Chartularies, Roger Dodsworth’s Manuscripts and Other Available
Sources, vol. 3 (Edinburgh, 1916), 413.
[5] Chancery
Miscel. (P.R.O.), bund. 9, n. 5, m. 5 as cited in ibid., 3:411.
Thanks for all the Hotham documentation. Much appreciated. Susan Molder, Toronto, 2021
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