Sir Giles Daubeney


Sir Giles Daubeney of Barrington Court and South Petherton, in Somerset, was a Knight of the Shire, Sheriff and High Sheriff. His monumental brass effigy survives in South Petherton Church.

Biography

Daubeney was born in 1395 at Kempston in Bedfordshire, where he was baptised on 25 October. He was the second son of Sir Giles Daubeney by his wife Margaret Beauchamp, a daughter of Sir John Beauchamp. His older brother, John Daubeney, died in 1409. Between 1418 and 1421 Daubeney served in the French wars. He was a Knight of the Shire for Somerset in 1425 and 1429; served as Sheriff of Somerset and Dorset from January to December 1426; and as Sheriff of Bedfordshire and Buckinghamshire, 1431–2.
Daubeney married three times. His first wife was Joan Darcy, the third daughter of Philip Darcy, Baron Darcy de Knayth of Lincolnshire, who predeceased her husband. Their eldest son and heir was William Daubeney. After Joan's death, and before 18 May 1436, Daubeney married Mary Lake, the eldest daughter and co-heiress of Simon Lake of Cotham, Nottinghamshire. She died on 17 February 1443 and was buried in South Petherton Church. His third marriage was to a certain Alice who survived him and remarried. She died on 26 or 27 March 1455.
Daubeney died at Barrington on 11 January 1446, at the age of 50.

Monument at South Petherton

The monumental brass effigies of Daubeney and his first wife Joan Darcy survive in the Church of St Peter and St Paul, in South Petherton, and include two inscribed plates and four heraldic shields. The effigy of Daubeney measures high; that of Joan measures high. The inscriptions are on two plates under the feet of the figures; the first measuring x ; the second measuring x. Each heraldic shield is x.

Heraldry

The four heraldic shields, three of which are heavily restored, display coats of arms and are located on either side of the figures, which latter are shown under Gothic arched canopies. The shields show the following quartered arms:
The monument includes a verse epitaph in Latin, of the so-called Quisquis variety, consisting of four lines, two lines on each plate.
The rhyming inscription and a literal translation is as follows:
Translated literally line by line as:

Ancestors