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Magna Charta Surety, 1215
Hereditary Master (Lord) Chamberlain of England
3rd Earl of Oxford.
In the 12th Century, Melusine's descendant, Robert de Vere, 3rd Earl of Oxford, and legal pretender to the Earldom of Huntingdon, was appointed as King Richard's steward of the forest lands of Fitzooth. As Lord of the Greenwood, and titular Herne of the Wild Hunt, he was a popular people's champion , and, as a result, he was outlawed for taking up arms against King John. It was he who, subsequently styled Robin Fitzooth, became the prototype for the popular tales of Robin Hood.
(http://www.freewebs.com/weirfamilyorigins/)
The principal residence of the de VERES was Castle Headingham. The keep still stands sentry guard over the River Colne in the North of Essex, probably erected by Aubrey de Vere, who died in 1194. The Headingham keep ranks with that of Rochester as the finest of the square keeps in England.
Oxford Castle was the seat of the Earls de Vere. It now consists of little more than a Norman tower which stands inside the walls of a county jail. It was here that King Stephen laid siege to Matilda in 1141. She escaped by a rope ladder fashioned from bed sheets during the night and, fleeing, found refuge at Wallingford.
Oxford Castle is thought to be the oldest in all England. The Norman structure was built in 1071 by Robert d'Oilly. From what is left of it we can conclude that it was originally a pre-Norman motte and bailey fort. After the 1071 rebuilding, alterations were made by Henry II, between 1165 and 1173. He added the houses inside the shell keep, and also the well. He presumably built the diagonal keep on the motte, the foundations of which were discovered in the 18th Century.
ROBERT de VERE, the Surety, and Crusader, born after 1164, became heir to his brother, Aubrey de Vere, who died without issue before September of 1214, and who was reputed to be one of the "evil councillors" of King John. Although he was hereditary lord great Chamberlain of the kingdom, Robert pursued a different course in politics from that of his brother, and became one of the principal Barons in arms against King John, a party to that covenant which resigned the custody of the City and Tower of London to the Barons, and one of those excommunicated by the Pope. In the beginning of the reign of King Henry III, after he had made his peace with that young monarch following the Battle of Lincoln, Robert was received into his favor, and was appointed one of the judges in the Court of King's Bench, but he died only a few months afterward, 25~ October 1221, and was buried in the Priory of Hatfield, Broad Oak, in Essex. His wife was Isabel, who died 3 February 1248, daughter of Hugh, second Baron de Bolebec in Northumberland.
Robert participated in the ill fated Fifth Crusade with King John, probably as a penance/ peacemaking effort with the church who had excommunicated him during the Magna Carta struggles. It appears he was on Crusade in the company of his illegitimate son Roger at the Battle of Damietta, Egypt in 1221, the year they both died. Sources say he died in Italy of wounds sustained in this battle, on his way home. The crossed feet on his effigy represent he was on crusade in his lifetime. For more on this battle: http://the-orb.net/textbooks/crusade/fifthcru.html
Robert was born in 1170 in Hatfield, Essex, England.1 Robert's father was Earl of Oxford Aubrey de Vere III and his mother was Lucy de Abrincis. His paternal grandparents were Earl of Oxford, Justiciar of England Aubrey de Vere II and Adeliza (Alice) de Clare; his maternal grandparents were Henry de Abrincis and Cecily of Rayleigh. He had three brothers and two sisters, named Aubrey, Henry, William, Adeliza and Sarah. He had a half-sister named Alice. He died before October 25th, 1221 in Colne, Essex, England.2 Above are the arms of Sir Robert de Vere, circa 1164-1221; Magna Carta Surety Baron 1215, 3rd Earl of Oxford, hereditary Master Chamberlain of England; Chief Justice Itinerant in Herefordshire. His blazon is: Arms: quarterly gules and Or in the first quarter a mullet argent.
Sir Robert de Vere died in Italy returning from a crusade. His body was brought home and buried in the Benedictine priory founded by his grandfather, Hatfield Priory at Broadoak, Essex. The arms of Sir Robert de Vere are carved into the shield with his effigy on his tomb, created within fifty years of his death by order of his son Robert. The tomb effigy is currently in the parish church, where it was moved from the priory circa 1546, after the dissolution of monasteries ordered by King Henry VIII. Sources:
1 http://wc.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=jdp-fam&id=I8706
2 http://wc.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=PED&db=jdp-fam&id=I24361&style=TABLE
3 http://wc.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=jdp-fam&id=I8698
Surety to the Magna Carta
3rd Earl of Oxford
Master Lord Chamberlain of England
Robert de Vere (died 1221) was the second surviving son of Aubrey de Vere III, first earl of Oxford, and Agnes of Essex. Almost nothing of his life is known until he married in 1207 the widow Isabel de Bolebec, the aunt and co-heiress of his deceased sister-in-law. The couple had one child, a son, Hugh, later 4th earl of Oxford. When Robert's brother Aubrey de Vere IV, 2nd earl of Oxford died in Oct. 1214, Robert succeeded to his brother's title, estates, castles, and hereditary office of master chamberlain of England (later Lord Great Chamberlain). He swiftly joined the disaffected barons in opposition to King John; many among the rebels were his kinsmen. He was elected one of the twenty-five barons who were to ensure the king's adherence to the terms of Magna Carta, and as such was excommunicated by Pope Innocent III in 1215.
King John besieged and took Castle Hedingham, Essex, from Robert in March 1216 and gave his lands to a loyal baron. While this prompted Robert to swear loyalty to the king soon thereafter, he nonetheless did homage to Prince Louis when the French prince arrived in Rochester later that year. He remained in the rebel camp until Oct. 1217, when he did homage to the boy-king Henry III, but he was not fully restored in his offices and lands until Feb. 1218.
At this time, aristocratic marriages were routinely contracted after negotiations over dowry and dower. In most cases, dower lands were assigned from the estates held by the groom at the time of the marriage. If specific dower lands were not named, on the death of the husband the widow was entitled to one-third of his estate. When Robert's brother Earl Aubrey married a second time, he did not name a dower for his wife Alice, for Robert determined the division of his estate by having lots drawn. For each manor his sister-in-law drew, he drew two. This is the sole known case of assigning dower lands in this manner.
Robert served as a king's justice in 1220-21, and died in Oct. 1221. He was buried at Hatfield Regis Priory, where his son Earl Hugh or grandson Earl Robert later had an effigy erected. Earl Robert is depicted in chain mail, cross-legged, pulling his sword from its scabbard and holding a shield with the arms of the Veres.
Robert de Vere (died 1221) was the second surviving son of Aubrey de Vere III, first earl of Oxford, and Agnes of Essex. Almost nothing of his life is known until he married in 1207 the widow Isabel de Bolebec, the aunt and co-heiress of his deceased sister-in-law. The couple had one child, a son, Hugh, later 4th earl of Oxford. When Robert's brother Aubrey de Vere IV, 2nd earl of Oxford died in Oct. 1214, Robert succeeded to his brother's title, estates, castles, and hereditary office of master chamberlain of England (later Lord Great Chamberlain). He swiftly joined the disaffected barons in opposition to King John; many among the rebels were his kinsmen. He was elected one of the twenty-five barons who were to ensure the king's adherence to the terms of Magna Carta, and as such was excommunicated by Pope Innocent III in 1215. King John besieged and took Castle Hedingham, Essex, from Robert in March 1216 and gave his lands to a loyal baron. While this prompted Robert to swear loyalty to the king soon thereafter, he nonetheless did homage to Prince Louis when the French prince arrived in Rochester later that year. He remained in the rebel camp until Oct. 1217, when he did homage to the boy-king Henry III, but he was not fully restored in his offices and lands until Feb. 1218. At this time, aristocratic marriages were routinely contracted after negotiations over dowry and dower. In most cases, dower lands were assigned from the estates held by the groom at the time of the marriage. If specific dower lands were not named, on the death of the husband the widow was entitled to one-third of his estate. When Robert's brother Earl Aubrey married a second time, he did not name a dower for his wife Alice, for Robert determined the division of his estate by having lots drawn. For each manor his sister-in-law drew, he drew two. This is the sole known case of assigning dower lands in this manner. Robert served as a king's justice in 1220-21, and died in Oct. 1221. He was buried at Hatfield Regis Priory, where his son Earl Hugh or grandson Earl Robert later had an effigy erected. Earl Robert is depicted in chain mail, cross-legged, pulling his sword from its scabbard and holding a shield with the arms of the Veres.
Robert de Vere, 3rd Earl of Oxford
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Robert de Vere (d. 1221) was the second surviving son of Aubrey de Vere III, first earl of Oxford, and Agnes of Essex. Almost nothing of his life is known until he married in 1207 the widow Isabel de Bolebec, the aunt and co-heiress of his deceased sister-in-law. The couple had one child, a son, Hugh, later 4th earl of Oxford. When Robert's brother Aubrey de Vere IV, 2nd earl of Oxford died in Oct. 1214, Robert succeeded to the title and hereditary office of master chamberlain of England (later Lord Great Chamberlain). He swiftly joined the disaffected barons in opposition to King John. Many among the rebels were his kinsmen. He was elected one of the twenty-five barons who were to ensure the king's adherence to the terms of Magna Carta, and as such was excommunicated by Pope Innocent III in 1215.
King John besieged and took Castle Hedingham, Essex, from Robert in March 1216 and gave his lands to a loyal baron. While this prompted Robert to swear loyalty to the king soon thereafter, he nonetheless did homage to Prince Louis when the French prince arrived in Rochester later that year. He remained in the rebel camp until Oct. 1217, when he did homage to the boy-king Henry III, but he was not fully restored in his offices and lands until Feb. 1218.[1]
Robert served as a king's justice in 1220-21, and died in Oct. 1221. He was buried at Hatfield Regis Priory, where his son Earl Hugh later had an effigy erected of his father.[2]
MY DESCENT THROUGH MY MOTHER TO THE DEVERES
MY DESCENT TO THE DEVERES THROUGH MY FATHER
On 12 April 1550 at Castle Hedingham in the county of Essex, his family’s ancestral home. His father, John de Vere, 16th Earl of Oxford, was hereditary Lord Great Chamberlain and attended the coronations of both Mary and Elizabeth Tudor. His mother was Margaret Golding, sister of the famous translator, scholar and poet Arthur Golding. Edward de Vere was eleven when, in 1561, Queen Elizabeth visited Castle Hedingham for four days of masques, feasting and entertainments. When his father died in 1562, Edward left Hedingham to become, like Bertram in All’s Well that Ends Well, a ward of the Crown under the guardianship of William Cecil, the Queen’s private secretary (later Baron Burghley, Lord Treasurer). His mother soon remarried and seems to have passed out of the boy’s life. His sister Mary went to live with her stepfather and the siblings were not reunited for some years.
According to a curriculum in William Cecil’s hand, Edward de Vere’s daily studies included dancing, French, Latin, writing and drawing, cosmography, penmanship, riding, shooting, exercise and prayer.
He showed a prodigious talent for scholarship from his early years, and we may ascribe his lifelong love of learning to the influence of two of his early tutors. The first was Sir Thomas Smith, one of England’s most respected Greek and legal scholars and the former Cambridge tutor of Sir William Cecil. It was, no doubt, through Cecil’s influence that Edward de Vere spent some time living in the household of Smith in his early years, during which time he spent about five months at Smith’s alma mater, Queens’ College, Cambridge. Smith was a scholar of widely varied interests – this was reflected in his 400-volume library, some of which is still extant at Cambridge. Another tutor was Laurence Nowell, who was not only an accomplished cartographer but was also England’s premier scholar of Anglo-Saxon literature – it was Nowell who possessed the only known copy of Beowulf.
In 1570 he served in a military campaign in Scotland under the Earl of Sussex and by 1571 was reported as a leading luminary of the Court and, for a time, a favourite of Queen Elizabeth. In December 1571 he married Anne Cecil, aged fifteen, daughter of his guardian. This was a dynastic marriage where all the advantage accrued to Cecil who, ennobled as Baron Burghley, had reduced the social gap between himself and the young Earl.
An important influence on Edward de Vere’s early studies was his maternal uncle Arthur Golding, an officer in the Court of Wards under Cecil, who is credited with the translation of Ovid’s Metamorphoses, published in 1567, a book widely recognised as having a major influence on ‘Shakespeare’. Following on from his matriculation at Cambridge in November 1558, de Vere was awarded an honorary MA by Cambridge during a Royal progress in August 1564, and another degree by Oxford University during a Royal progress in 1566. Edward de Vere then attended Gray’s Inn to study law. One notable feature of the Elizabethan Inns of Court was a tradition of mounting dramatic productions and of hosting the various touring companies of players.
While Oxford was away on a Grand Tour of Europe, he heard that his daughter Elizabeth Vere had been born in July 1575. On his return in early 1576, he appeared to have been convinced that Elizabeth was not his child; consequently he became estranged from Anne for five years, and exiled himself from Court, taking up residence in the Savoy and concerning himself with literary and musical patronage. In 1573, Cardanus Comfort was translated from Latin by Thomas Bedingfield and published at Oxford’s command with a letter and poem by him. In 1576 an anthology, A Paradise of Daintie Devices, including several poems by Oxford, was published. These are juvenile works but already show affinities, in both style and thought, with those of the mature Shakespeare.
Oxford’s Grand Tour took him to Paris, Strasbourg, Venice, Genoa, Florence, Palermo and, on his way back through France, Rousillon – the setting for Love’s Labour’s Lost. In 1575-6 Oxford borrowed money and sold many of his estates in order to travel round Italy, returning to England fluent in Italian and well acquainted with the northern Italian cities. In England he was satirised by Gabriel Harvey as a foppish Italianate poet earl. On his way back his ship was attacked by pirates in the English Channel (cf. Hamlet). Fourteen of ‘Shakespeare’s’ plays have Italian settings, in which he put his detailed knowledge of the country, beyond pure book knowledge, to good use.
The Earle of Oxenforde to the Reader.
“So hee that takes the payne to penne the booke
Reapes not the giftes, of goodlye golden Muse
But those gayne that, who on the worke that looke
And from the soure, the sweete by skill doth chuse.
For hee that beates the bushe the byrde not gets,
But who sittes still, and holdeth fast the nets.”
Final verse from the poem The labouring man by Edward de Vere
Source: Cardanus Comforte (1573)
In May 1577 Oxford invested in Frobisher’s voyage in the ship Edward Bonaventure. Despite its name, the ship’s voyage across the Atlantic in search of the North-West Passage lost money; consequently he was forced to sell three more estates (cf. Hamlet’s words ‘I am but mad north-north-west’ II. i.). In 1578 he invested in Frobisher’s second expedition, which also lost money, forcing further sales.
He was mentioned by Gabriel Harvey in an address to Queen Elizabeth in July 1578 as a prolific private poet and one ‘whose countenance shakes spears’. In the same year John Lyly, Oxford’s secretary, published Euphues. The Anatomy of Wit, followed in 1579 by Euphues and his England, dedicated to Oxford. These two books launched the fashion for ‘Euphuism’, a style characterized by high-flown language, satirized in Love’s Labour’s Lost.
In March 1581 Oxford’s mistress, Anne Vavasour, who was one of Queen Elizabeth’s Ladies of the Bedchamber, gave birth to a son. The lovers and their son were sent to the Tower by an infuriated Queen but swiftly released (cf. Measure for Measure). After his release, Oxford was wounded in a street-fight provoked by Thomas Knyvet, a kinsman of Anne Vavasour; affrays continued in the streets of London between the rival gangs of supporters for over a year (cf. Romeo and Juliet).
In December 1581, after five years of acrimonious separation, he was reunited with his long-suffering and devoted wife, and finally accepted Elizabeth Vere as his child. Their only son died one day after his birth. Three more daughters followed, of whom Susan and Bridget survived.
In 1584, Robert Greene’s Gwydonius; the Card of Fancy was dedicated to Oxford. In 1586, when he was thirty-six, he served on the tribunal which condemned Mary, Queen of Scots to execution. In the same year, the Queen awarded Oxford an unconditional pension of £1,000 a year for life (about £500,000 at today’s value). The motive for this uncharacteristic generosity on the part of the Queen remains a mystery – no accounting was required of Oxford. Her successor, King James I, continued to pay the pension. In reply to Sir Robert Cecil’s request that Lord Sheffield’s pension be increased, the King refused, saying, ‘Great Oxford got no more …’ Why Great Oxford? His greatness does not seem to have resided in war or any of the known offices of State. Perhaps a clue can be found in a letter to Burghley, written in 1594, in which Edward de Vere seeks his favour in a matter involving what he describes as ‘in mine office’ and that this office is beholden to the Queen.
In 1589, George Puttenham published The Arte of English Poesie and this contains the most telling recognition of Edward de Vere’s literary standing amongst his contemporaries: ‘And in her Majesties time that now is are sprong up an other crew of Courtly makers Noble men and Gentlemen of her Majesties owne servantes, who have written excellently well as it would appeare if their doings could be found out and made publicke with the rest, of which number is first that noble Gentleman Edward Earle of Oxford.’
“And arte made tongue-tied by authoritie”
In 1588 his wife Anne died and in extant letters written at this time, it is reported that Burghley was so incapacitated by grief over the death of his favourite daughter that he is incapable of conducting any Privy Council business. Three years later, in 1591, Oxford married another of the Queen’s Maids of Honour, Elizabeth Trentham, with whom, the books of nobility aver, he became the father of a male heir; Henry de Vere, 18th Earl of Oxford. Although there is evidence of his continued involvement in Court affairs, from the date of this marriage Oxford’s life at his new home at King’s Place in Hackney is perhaps the most obscure of his entire life.
In 1594, his financed ship the Edward Bonaventure was wrecked in Bermuda (cf. The Tempest). In January 1595, his daughter Elizabeth Vere married William Stanley, 6th Earl of Derby, another literary earl who maintained his own company of players – many scholars believe that A Midsummer Night’s Dream was written for these festivities which were attended by the whole royal Court.
On 7 September 1598, Francis Meres’ Palladis Tamia was registered for publication, placing Oxford at the top of a list of brilliant playwrights as ‘best for comedy’. This is a vital document in Shakespearean history because it includes the first mention of ‘Shakespeare’ as a playwright, attributing twelve plays to him. Until then Shakespeare’s reputation had rested on the two narrative poems only.
Oxford suffered all his life from financial difficulties, many of which can be traced to the fact that Queen Elizabeth handed out the bulk of his estate to her favourite courtier the Earl of Leicester during Oxford’s minority as a royal ward (estates which Oxford found almost impossible to reclaim), and the ruinous debt she placed upon him over his marriage to Anne Cecil. It is, however, notable that his new brother-in-law, the wealthy Staffordshire landowner and Knight of the Shire Francis Trentham, eased the problem by buying de Vere estates and holding them in trust for his descendants.
On the Queen’s death in 1603 Oxford wrote eloquently to Sir Robert Cecil, son and heir of Lord Burghley, of his ‘great grief’. He wrote, ‘In this common shipwreck, mine is above all the rest, who least regarded, though often comforted, she hath left to try my fortune among the alterations of time and chance’.
Oxford died in Hackney in 1604, cause unknown. Parish records state that he was buried in Hackney Church on 6 July, but a family history by his first cousin Percival Golding, states ‘Edward de Veer … a man in mind and body absolutely accomplished with honorable endowments … lieth buried at Westminster’. No record of such a burial can now be traced in Westminster Abbey, where there is a Vere family tomb.
In 1622 Henry Peacham published, in The Compleat Gentleman, a list of poets who made Elizabeth’s reign a ‘golden age’. Unaccountably, he omitted Shakespeare but placed the Earl of Oxford in first place in his list – perhaps he knew them to be the same person. This is unlike Meres who included them both – maybe one reason was because he didn’t know Oxford and Shakespeare were the same person.
During the winter season 1604-05, six of Shakespeare’s plays were presented at Court by command of King James I. This has an air of commemoration. In 1609 Shake-speares Sonnets were published in a pirated edition. The famous dedication describes the author as ‘our ever-living’, a phrase invariably used only of the dead.
REGARDS TO THE INFORMATION PRESENTED TO US BY THE DEVERE SOCIETY, LINK ON THE SHAKESPEARE/DEVERE PICTURE
Verey interesting facts..... so there was a fight to over throw the queen for the throne...... Edward de Vere 17th Earl Of Oxford Knights Templar, defendant of the Truth became acquaint with the mathematics & astrology of John Dee, with aspiring seriousness, mastery and keen interest in occultism, studying magic & conjuring. Edward de Vere funded Martin Frobisher's expeditions in search of the Northwest Passage and fortune. In 1577 Ed Vere asked the Crown for the grant of Castle Rising which had been forfeited to the Crown due to his cousin Norfolk's attainder in 1572. Upon granting, Edward Vere sold it with two other manors, sank over �3,000 & more into these northwest expeditions including the 'Sea Venture'. Vinland Viking Gold This Oxford & Frobisher mix attracted lots of smaller investors, including even the Queen and The London collective, Joint stock company also known as 'The London Company'. Stories & rumours abounded, tails of mountains of Vinland Viking Gold made money flow like a river. However, upon expedition return Frobisher was dogboggled & buffooned with stories that the Golden Cargo of 1100 tons of Golden Ore was totally worthless {yeah, sure it was}. 300 expert Cornish miners just can't all be wrong or could they? The crown was said to help out by taking over the [golden] cargo claiming to be only good for repairing roads in Kent. Oxford being away returned to inspect his Golden Cargo but only found he was totally cornered, lost all of his investment by this event and thus coining the term 'Fools Gold'. Yes Well! That's doing business with pirates, event today. In short one of the stories is: It was though that area around Canada could have been a source of Viking Gold akin to or exceed the Spanish bootie stolen from the Aztecs. The Earl of Oxford with his many cousins sort to over throw the Queen E I with the more legitimate royal bloodlines. The Queen won the issue and the Earls of Oxford histories were so long in Royal bloodlines and far too connected to knock off. So she plotted with Cecil to rid the family by stealing everything they had and again her plots and scams were too good to beat. On the expeditions they did find this Viking Gold but to be told its not gold, yea sure it was! it looks more like the Queen tripled crossed everyone ended up with the lot. However, rumours still abound today that she may have only got a part of the bootie and the balance is still there at Oak Island today. Free Treasure Newsletter Frobisher Voyages - 1578 Gold Fever Gold Fever had struck England and the Queen, so it was believed, had a source of gold equal to the Spanish. Queen Elizabeth I allowed the commission of yet another voyage of Martin Frobisher. With most if not all of the funding came from The Earl of Oxford, Frobisher set sail in 1578 with 15 ships, 300 Cornish miners and enough Oak lumber to build a colony. It was the largest Arctic expedition in history. Shortly after setting sail, one of the ships deserted and returned to England. Later, reaching Greenland, the ship carrying the lumber sank, thus ending any hope of settlement. And yes there's more, Frobisher and others continued on and mined 1,100 tons of ore then returned to England with the Gold bootie. Fools & Gold. So it is reported the 1,100 tons of ore, turned out to be worthless, causing many investors to go bankrupt thus Frobisher's reputation was ruined. Interestingly, the Earl of Oxford Edward de Vere was overseas when this Arctic Gold was brought back, upon the Earls return he was told the ore was Iron Pyrite Sulphide but like many unreported accounts in history the Earl was also told that 'the ore was when it arrived was quickly whisked away by the Crown to an unknown place before being used to repair roads in the county of Kent'. This event gave rise for the Earl of Oxford Edward de Vere to use the term we use today as 'Fools Gold'. {Sure sounds like a con going on here}. Shortly after all this, Frobisher returned to piracy and along with Francis Drake, Frobisher is said to have begun raiding Spanish ships and settlements in the Caribbean. 'Pirates' - you wouldn't believe it! Soon after that he returned to England with 60,000 pounds of pure gold [960000 ounces @1250 US$1,200,000,000] when much of the [most] share went to the Queen. Jewish Pirates of the Caribbean 25 Most Feared Pirates Well, Frobisher regaining some modicum of favour with the Elizabeth Queen of thieves and pirates, yet none of it went to the Earl of Oxford, thus making it the greatest GOLD BULLION heist in history.... Viking Gold Edward de Vere: Crossed the Queen and the Earl lost out big time, over the timeline rumours suggest that over 20-30,000 pounds (weight) of gold went missing and the family thought the Queen pinched it all. Interestingly the 17th Earl and his numerous Vere Sons and Cousins all together funded these expeditions with dual purposes to seek out profit and find a northwest passage - trade route. Interestingly the Earl may have been on one of these trips as he went missing for 7 years [unconfirmed]. The connections between missing Gold, what happened to the Oxford family, issues surrounding Nova Scotia, pirating and lost treasures, accounts of Oxfords missing of 2 million pounds or 32000000oz of Gold are all now emerging out of the shadows of history. Now at this point it is interesting to note that the Oak Timber used in the Money Pit has been C-14 carbon dated around 1575.Video 17th Earl was around in the 15-1600s and his Vere cousins who appear to have been more famous than him at the time, they all looked at North America with high interest, that interest continues today with many surviving family lines going back to Nova Scotia and having a look around ever since, wishfully hoping to find lost Crown heisted Gold bootie. Who done it, where is it? Will be ever know? You know if this is all true and correct we must also ask to where did the Sun Kings of France get their rather sudden wealth from? Did they find or steal or dig up the hidden booty. MYSTERY 'INFINITY COIN' WITH TEMPLAR FREE MASON SYMBOLS PUZZLES EXPERTS Vatican coin may be an important historical and significance find. Bronze - Gold - Silver Infinity Coins found Curse broken? King Edward IV (1461-1470). The price of gold rose from the 1430s onward, and this meant that gold coins were worth more in Europe than in England, which resulted in a gold shortage in England as coins were exported for profit. Only a small quantity of Nobles were minted during Edward IV's Heavy Coinage period (1461-1464), at London. Finally, in 1464 in an attempt to stop the coins drifting over to the continent, the value of all gold Nobles was raised from six shillings and eight pence, (6/8) = 80 pence to eight shillings and four pence, (8/4) = 100 pence and a new coin, the "Rose Noble, or Ryal" worth ten shillings and weighing 120 grains (7.8 grams) was introduced -- however it was unpopular and was discontinued after 1470. In contrast, a new coin worth six shillings and eight pence (the same as the original Noble), the Angel was introduced in 1464 and soon became a popular and important coin. On the Oak Island parchment could this be a 'V' in Vere? Oak Island Episode 1 This is a story yet to be told so where's the Gold? The Money Pit Of Oak Island Martin Frobisher (b. 1535 - d. 1594) (fool) Sir Martin Frobisher was an English privateer (a pirate licensed to plunder), navigator, explorer, and naval officer. After years of sailing to north-western Africa, and looting French ships in the English Channel, Frobisher sailed to North America to search for a Northwest Passage. This was believed to be a sea route across northern Canada from the Atlantic Ocean to the Pacific Ocean, making the trip to Asia easier. In 1576, Frobisher began a series of three trips to what is now Canada, and found some ore on Baffin Island that he thought was gold . He claimed Baffin Island for England. He also discovered Resolution Island and Frobisher Bay. On his third trip, in 1578, Frobisher sailed 15 ships up the Hudson Strait, and set up a temporary mining settlement near Frobisher Bay and formed a mining company called the Cathay Company. The mining venture was a failure. [Missing Gold]. Frobisher's stone house was discovered in 1862 by the American explorer Charles Francis Hall. Frobisher is said to have held the first Canadian Thanksgiving feast in what is now known as Newfoundland. Frobisher was one of the first people to explore this area of Canada, although he failed to find either a Northwest Passage. In 1585, Frobisher was a vice admiral on Sir Francis Drake's expedition to the West Indies. Frobisher died on November 22, 1594, from wounds he received fighting the Spanish. http://www.houseofvere.com/
Was Edward DeVere The Real Shakespeare?
I found out through my own research that Aubrey Devere is my 20th Grandfather,
We are related to the people who bought us the Magna Carta, Perhaps Shakespeare as it has been known, This family has been hidden from history.
Now we can learn more about this fantastic family and their love for the Arts, Politics and Battle
What is the link between the dragon court and the Weirs/ Deveres
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