Ahnentafel № 131684 · The compiler's 15× great-grandparent

Sir John Warde (Lord of Cheshire)
dates unknown · of Capesthorne, Cheshire, England
Birth
unknown
Death
25 Apr 1540
???, England
Biography
From the Hyten family archive; subject is Sir John Warde, Lord of Cheshire (1480–1540), a 15× great-grandparent of the compiler in the paternal-grandfather (PP) line. This entry covers his birth at Capesthorne, his marriage to Anne, Lady of Capesthorne and Carrington, his son Gilbert Warde, and the Tudor-era English gentry context. Notable: deep English ancestry, landed Cheshire gentry, Henry VIII era.
Sir John Warde, Lord of Cheshire, was born in the year 1480 at Capesthorne in the county of Cheshire, England, and departed this life on the twenty-fifth day of April, 1540. His years upon the earth thus encompassed the closing decades of the medieval order and the opening of the Tudor age, a period of profound transformation in the English realm. Born during the reign of Edward IV and the final convulsions of the Wars of the Roses, he came of age under the early Tudors and lived to witness the reign of Henry VIII, the breach with Rome, and the dissolution of the monasteries — events that reshaped the religious and political landscape of the gentry to which his family belonged.
Capesthorne, the place of his nativity, lay within the rolling lands of east Cheshire, a region long settled by armigerous families whose fortunes were bound to the land, to local magnates, and to service in shire and parish. The title Lord of Cheshire attached to his name speaks to a station among the landed gentry of that county, where stone manor houses, parish churches, and inherited estates formed the fabric of daily life.
Sir John was joined in marriage to Anne, styled Lady of Capesthorne and Carrington, whose own designation suggests a lineage of comparable standing and a union that consolidated the holdings of two notable Cheshire seats. Of this marriage there came a son, Gilbert Warde, through whom the line was carried forward across generations and, in time, across the Atlantic to the New World.
Though the particulars of Sir John's daily occupations, the precise place of his burial, and the wider circle of his kindred have not been preserved in the records gathered here, his place in the descent is firmly established. Sir John Warde stood as a 15× great-grandfather of the compiler upon the paternal-grandfather (PP) line, one of the earliest forebears recorded in this archive.
Family
Children
Sources
Source citations and original documents will appear here as research progresses. Currently sourced from Ancestry tree hints — to be verified.