He was the son and heir of Richard Danvers (c.1330-post 1399)[4] of
Epwell (anciently Ipswell) in Oxfordshire, by his wife Agnes Brancestre, daughter and heiress of John Brancestre[5] of Calthorpe.
Marriages and children
He married twice:
Firstly, before Michaelmas 1399, to Alice Verney, a daughter and heiress of William Verney of
Byfield, Northamptonshire, by whom he had 3 sons and 1 daughter:[6]
Sir Robert Danvers (c.1400-1467), of Epswell and Culworth, eldest son and heir,
Recorder of London (1442–51), a
Member of Parliament for the
City of London in 1442 and a Justice of the Common Pleas from 1450. He married Agnes Delabar. He left a son who died childless shortly after him, and three daughters and co-heiresses.
Richard Danvers (d.1489), of Prestcote, Northamptonshire/Oxfordshire, Comptroller of Customs and an MP for Horsham and Shaftesbury. He purchased his late brother's manor of Culworth from his nieces, and his descendant was
Sir Samuel Danvers, 1st Baronet (1611–1682) "of Culworth" which title became extinct on the death of the fifth Baronet in 1776.[7] The Danvers baronets adopted the ancient arms of Danvers Gules, a chevron between three mullets of six points pierced or,[8] as is visible on their monuments in St Mary's Church, Culworth,[9] in place of the modern arms of Danvers Ermine, on a bend gules three martlets or winged vert,[10] which were the arms of Brancestre.[11] Richard's second son John Danvers married a great heiress, Ann Stradling, of Dauntsey in Wiltshire, and the family thus became "Danvers of Dauntsey".[12] His descendants included
Henry Danvers, 1st Earl of Danby (1573-1643), KG, who also adopted the ancient arms of Danvers Gules, a chevron between three mullets or.
Secondly, in about 1420, he married Joan Bruley, daughter and heiress of John Bruley, of Waterstock, Oxfordshire, a son of William Bruley, MP, by whom he had a further 5 sons and 4 daughters, including:[14]
MacNamara, F.N., Memorials of the Danvers Family, London, 1895
[4]
Woodger, L.S., biography of Danvers, John (d.1449), of Calthorpe in Banbury and Prescote in Cropredy, Oxon., published in
History of Parliament: House of Commons 1386-1421, ed. J.S. Roskell, L. Clark, C. Rawcliffe., 1993
[5]
References
^MacNamara pp.84, 87-8, 123, 165; Alternatively: Ermine, on a bend gules three martlets or winged vert.
^Woodger, L.S., biography of Danvers, John (d.1449), of Calthorpe in Banbury and Prescote in Cropredy, Oxon.,
Published in
History of Parliament: House of Commons 1386-1421, ed. J.S. Roskell, L. Clark, C. Rawcliffe., 1993
[1]
^MacNamara, p.87-8; Danvers modern/Brancestre was borne by the Danvers baronets of Swithlands, (As blazoned by Burke, p.152) of which MacNamara (Preface X) states: The Danvers family of Leicestershire are only incidentally mentioned. I may, however, say that it seems probable that the Leicestershire family failed in the male line towards the middle of the fourteenth century, and that the recently extinct Danvers of Swithlands sprang from a younger branch of the Oxfordshire line.