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John Sully : ウィキペディア英語版
John Sully

Sir John Sully (born c.1283 - died c.1388), KG, of Ruxford and Iddesleigh in Devonshire, was an English knight. He was one of the many deponents who gave evidence in ''Scrope v Grosvenor'' (decided in 1389), one of the earliest heraldic law cases brought in England, at which time he stated his age as 105. In about 1362 he was appointed by King Edward III as the 39th Knight of the Garter.
==Origins==
According to Nicolas (1832) he descended from a younger branch of the family of Sully, lords of the manor of Iddesleigh in Devonshire, and appears to have succeeded to that property as heir male.' According to Pole he possessed Iddesleigh in 1356.〔Pole, p.380, ''Edeslegh'' (regnal date 29 Edward III); Nicolas, p.241, note 1〕 According to Nicholas: "Nothing can with certainty be said of his parents, nor is it positively known whether he left descendants". He may have been a descendant of Reymode de Sully, the son of Walter de Sully, who in 1291 held a fifth moiety of the feudal barony of Great Torrington in Devon, on which he paid feudal relief of £20 to the king, presumambly having just then inherited it from his father. The moiety had been first acquired by his ancestor de Sully who had married one of the five sisters and co-heiresses of Matthew de Torrington, feudal baron of Great Torrington.〔Pole, pp.20-1; co-heiresses of the barony were Matthew's sisters, not daughters as stated by Pole〕 On failure of the male line this de Sully moiety passed to the de Brian family, by the marriage during the reign of King Henry III (1216-1272) of Guy de Brian to the heiress Sibil de Sully (sister of Raymond de Sully and daughter of Walter de Sully).〔Pole, p.274〕 The eventual co-heir to Guy de Brian was Sir John Cary (d.1395) of Cockington, Devon.
He may also have been descended from the 11th century knight Sir Reginald (or Raymond〔Pole, p.83〕) de Sully, one of the Twelve Knights of Glamorgan, the legendary followers of Robert FitzHamon (d.1107), the Norman conqueror of Glamorgan. He was given as his share of the conquered lands the lordship of Sully, where he built his castle.
Risdon apparently confused him〔Risdon, p.261〕 with "John de Sudeley", who in 1301 sealed the Barons' Letter to the Pope with a seal inscribed ''S(igillum) Johannis de Suleye'' ("seal of John de Suleye") and bearing arms of ''two bendlets'',〔See image of seal at :Sullee〕 and who in the document is called ''Joh(ann)es D(omi)n(u)s de Sullee'' ("John, lord of Sullee"), which place Lord Howard de Walden (1903) identified as Sudeley Castle in Gloucestershire.〔Lord Howard de Walden, ''Some Feudal Lords and their Seals 1301'', published 1903〕

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