User talk:Maunch

Issue of Nicholas Vaux, 1st Baron Vaux of Harrowden
Please refer to Douglas Richardson's Magna Carta and Plantagenet Ancestry. The correct issue from both marriages is stated there. This lineage and offspring is conserved in many sources including books on Catherine Parr. I'm not sure where your information came from. Have you actually seen a document stating that Nicholas Vaux and Elizabeth FitzHugh only had "one" daughter named "Amy"? If this information is coming from an online ancestry site, especially ancestry.com, that is not reputable. Those two books by Richardson were thoroughly researched and list the many sources that were used. Here is one link of many to an online clip of the Plantagenet Ancestry. Here is also a link to a book written by Catherine Parr herself which proves that Elizabeth and Vaux had Katherine or Catherine Vaux The Works of Katherine Parr. There is also a book published by the New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1999 -- called Plantagenet ancestry of seventeenth-century colonists. Other sources: Honestly, I could write all the sources here on your page, but that would take up too much space. The issue of Vaux and Elizabeth FitzHugh is Katherine, Alice, and Anne. There was no Amy. The issue of Vaux and Anne Green is Thomas, 2nd Lord; William; Bridget; Margaret; and Maud. -- Lady Meg (talk) 23:43, 12 August 2011 (UTC)
 * Throckmorton family history: being the records of the Throckmortons in the United States of America with cognate branches, emigrant ancestors located at Salem, Massachusetts, 1630, and in Gloucester county, Virginia, 1660
 * Ancestral roots of certain American colonists who came to America by Frederick Lewis Weis, Walter Lee Sheppard, David Faris.
 * Catholic gentry in English society: the Throckmortons of Coughton by Peter Marshall
 * Women and politics in early modern England, 1450-1700 By James Daybell
 * The Magna Charta sureties, 1215: the barons named in the Magna Charta, 1215 by Frederick Lewis Weis
 * The Family Forest Descendants of Lady Joan Beaufort by Bruce Harrison
 * The House of Commons: 1509 - 1558 ; 1, Appendices, constituencies, members A - C, Volume 4
 * Dictionary of national biography, Volume 56 by Sir Leslie Stephen, Sir Sidney Lee
 * Six Wives: The Queens of Henry VIII by David Starkey
 * Katherine, the Queen by Linda Porter
 * Kateryn Parr: the making of a queen by Susan James

Thanks for the correction. Have rechecked the land dispute and it appears that Ann Tattershall was also known as Amy, giving rise to the "second" marriage. Elizabeth Fitzhugh was related to the Hastings family via the Nevilles and through the Parr and Talbot connections not the Vaux. Thanks, that has solved the puzzle. The land dispute over Wanstead where her father was mentioned was John Tattershall. Sorry for the mistake. .