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385 pages, Kindle Edition
First published May 2, 2019

“Make sure they have an ancestor who was a very close friend of William the Conqueror”Briefly, the registration of land ownership in the United Kingdom is only required on transfer, so the ownership of land that hasn’t changed hands for many generations - since it was handed out by William the Conqueror to his close friends back in 1066 for example - remains a mystery to most of the citizens of the country.
“...Grosvenor married in 1677; he was aged 21, and his wife, Mary Davies, was only 12 years old. The marriage was arranged by their families in a manner and at an age which was quite normal in England in that era; it proved to be harmonious and conventional…”We think that the lady doth protest too much. This isn’t what the same Wikipedia article said about the good Baronet and his marriage to Mary Davies a couple of years ago when I last looked at it. Instead a rather fuller picture was given, such as contained in this article or more fully here. To quote:
Mary gave her husband Sir Grosvenor, three sons and after he died she inherited a lifetime’s interest in the estate which left her both incredibly wealthy and incredibly vulnerable. For reasons unknown, Mary fled to Paris in 1701 at the age of thirty-six and married a Roman Catholic, Edward Fenwick who was the brother of a rector who had lived with the family on the Grosvenor family estate.“Harmless and conventional” doesn’t quite seem to tell the whole story, and I know that the same Wikipedia article used to give a more complete picture of Mary’s life because I once quoted from it in a comment I posted to the Financial Times website under a story on the Grosvenor Estate.
Mary and Edward remained in Paris for the next four years while the Grosvenor family fought to have the marriage annulled on the grounds of their mother’s supposed “insanity”. They had the forty year old Mary committed to a Lunatic Asylum which was where rich families placed difficult and willful women in the 18th Century. We hear nothing more of Mary except that she eventually died alone in the lunatic asylum.