She married Warin de Lisle about 1302. They were the parents of:
Sir Gerard de Lisle, 1st Baron de Lisle of Kingston
Alice de Lisle
Margery de Lisle
On March 16, 1331, her Husband Warin was condemned as a traitor and executed at Pontefract, dragged by horses and hanged, and was buried in the Black Friar. In 1334 Alice obtained leave to transfer Warin's body and that of her brother Henry (also executed and buried in the Carmelites' church in London), to Chilton, Wilts, where her ancestors were buried and where chantries were founded.
In Dec 1326 she had a grant of the custody of Kingston and other of her husband's manors, and in March following had a further grant of all the goods of her late husband and her brother Henry. As all proceedings against Thomas, Earl of Lancaster, and his adherents were annulled in the Parliament of Edward III, the forfeiture of her brother Henry was presumably reversed and she would, according to modern doctrine, be held to have become Baroness Tyeys or Tyes. In 1330 she received a general pardon and in 1332 obtained a charter for markets and fairs at Penzance and other manors in Cornwall, and in 1336 a charter for the free warren at Chilton, Kingston Lisle, etc. She died August 2, 1347
She married Warin de Lisle about 1302. They were the parents of:
Sir Gerard de Lisle, 1st Baron de Lisle of Kingston
Alice de Lisle
Margery de Lisle
On March 16, 1331, her Husband Warin was condemned as a traitor and executed at Pontefract, dragged by horses and hanged, and was buried in the Black Friar. In 1334 Alice obtained leave to transfer Warin's body and that of her brother Henry (also executed and buried in the Carmelites' church in London), to Chilton, Wilts, where her ancestors were buried and where chantries were founded.
In Dec 1326 she had a grant of the custody of Kingston and other of her husband's manors, and in March following had a further grant of all the goods of her late husband and her brother Henry. As all proceedings against Thomas, Earl of Lancaster, and his adherents were annulled in the Parliament of Edward III, the forfeiture of her brother Henry was presumably reversed and she would, according to modern doctrine, be held to have become Baroness Tyeys or Tyes. In 1330 she received a general pardon and in 1332 obtained a charter for markets and fairs at Penzance and other manors in Cornwall, and in 1336 a charter for the free warren at Chilton, Kingston Lisle, etc. She died August 2, 1347
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