Henry de Pinkeney
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/b/bc/Arms_of_Baron_Pinkney.svg/200px-Arms_of_Baron_Pinkney.svg.png)
Arms of Baron Pinkney:Or, four fusils in fess gules.[1]
Henry de Pinkeney (died 1254), Lord of Weden-Pinkeney, Fulmer and Datchet in England and Lord of Crawford in Scotland, was a 13th-century English noble.
Henry was the son of Robert de Pinkeney, Lord of Wedon-Pinkeney. He succeeded to his father's estates and titles upon the death of his father in 1234.
Marriage and issue[]
Henry married Alice, daughter of David de Lindsay, Justiciar of Lothian and Marjorie of Huntingdon,[2] they are known to have had the following issue:
- Henry de Pinkeney, married Mary de Wahull, had issue.
- Alice de Pinkeney, married Ralph de Throp, had issue.
Citations[]
- ^ Burke 1846, p. 421.
- ^ McAndrew 2006, p. 93.
References[]
- Burke, John (1846). A General and Heraldic Dictionary of the Peerages of England, Ireland, and Scotland. Henry Colburn.
- McAndrew, Bruce A. Scotland's Historic Heraldry, Boydell Press, 2006. ISBN 9781843832614
Categories:
- 13th-century English people
- 1254 deaths