Mohuns Ottery
Mohuns Ottery or Mohun's Ottery, is a house and historic manor in the parish of Luppitt, 1 mile south-east of the village of Luppitt and 4 miles north-east of Honiton in east Devon, England. From the 14th to the 16th centuries it was a seat of the Carew family. Several manorial court rolls survive at the Somerset Heritage Centre, Taunton, Somerset.
The old manor house burnt down in 1868 and was completely rebuilt as a farmhouse, categorised as a grade II listed building since 1955. The ruins of a mid-16th century gatehouse lie to the south of the house; these and the adjoining garden walls, probably built in the mid-19th century at the same time as the farmhouse, are grade II* listed. The house now has six reception rooms and six bedrooms. Around the courtyard are a cottage, stables and farm buildings. The River Otter forms part of the eastern boundary of the estate. In January 2014 the house with 228 acres was offered for sale for £3.5 million.
Toponymy
The word Ottery derives from the River Otter, Old English "oter" + "īe". The first appearance of the place-name is in the Domesday Book where it is recorded as Otri – one of the twelve places in Devon that had that or a very similar name. It appeared in the Book of Fees in 1242 as Otery. In 1247 it was recorded as Otery Flandrensis and as Ottery Flemeng' in 1279, after the family of William le Flemmeng who held part of the manor between 1219 and 1244.The name later reflected the residency of the Mohun family, appearing in the Feudal Aids in 1285 as Otermoun, and as Oteri Mohoun in an Inquisition post mortem of 1297. In 1453 it was recorded in the Patent Rolls as Mounesotery, and as Moonsotery in the Recovery Rolls in 1630. Tristram Risdon, writing in the early 17th century, referred to it as Mohun's Ottery, while his close contemporary Thomas Westcote, called it Mohuns-Ottery.
Descent
Alsi
The Domesday Book of 1086 records that before the Norman Conquest the manor of Otri was held by an Anglo-Saxon thegn known as Alsi. He held several other properties near to Otri, as well as another in Devon, at Dunsford, and probably two more near Dunsford at Lowley and Doddiscombsleigh. He had a large manor at Castle Cary in Somerset and other holdings around this, and single holdings in Dorset and Wiltshire.de Douai
In 1086 as recorded in the Domesday Book, the manor of OTRI was the 18th of the 27 Devonshire holdings of Walter of Douai, one of the Devonshire tenants-in-chief of King William the Conqueror. His tenant was a certain Ludo, who held a further five manors from him, namely Little Rackenford, Hetfelle, Luppitt, Greenway and Stoch. The last four manors held by Ludo, but not Little Rackenford, descended to the de Mandeville feudal barony of Marshwood and later to the de Mohun family, at least one via the Flemings.de Mandeville
It passed at some time, by means unknown, from Walter of Douai to the de Mandeville family, feudal barons of Marshwood in Dorset. A tenant of Geoffrey de Mandeville's manor of Ottery was Reginald de Mohun, as recorded in the Feudal Aid records.Fleming
The Fleming family at some time held Ottery, which became known as Ottery Fleming. They were also lord of the manor of adjoining Luppitt, which manors thenceforth descended under common ownership for several centuries. It is not known what relationship if any this family bore to the Fleming family, named after its likely origins in Flanders, of Bratton Fleming and other manors in North Devon. The descent was as follows:- Richard Fleming
- William I Fleming
- William II Fleming
Mohun
The arms of Mohun survive at Mohuns Ottery: "There, on a shield in the spandrel, is carved, amid elegant scroll work and foliage, the old coat-armour of the family — an arm vested in an ermine maunch, the hand grasping a golden fleur-de-lys; a bearing, which, for some reason unknown, John de Mohun, Baron of Dunster, who died in 1330, abandoned for the afterward well-known coat, adopted also by the Abbeys of Newenham and Bruton — a cross engrailed sable, on a field or".
Carew
The Carew family succeeded to the Mohun family as holders of Ottery, but never changed the proprietorial suffix. The descent of Mohuns Ottery from Sir William Mohun was as follows:John I Carew (d.1324)
John I Carew, who married firstly Elinor Mohun, heiress of Mohuns Ottery. He was the eldest son and heir of Nicholas I Carew, feudal lord of Carew Castle in Pembrokeshire and lord of the manor of Moulsford in Berkshire. He survived his first wife and remarried to Joan Talbot, daughter of Sir Gilbert Talbot, by whom he had issue. It is believed that the now empty arched recess in Luppit Church may originally have housed his effigy.Nicholas II Carew (d.1323)
Nicholas II Carew, son and heir apparent, who married Elinor Talbot, daughter of Richard Lord Talbot, but died without progeny. He bequeathed his estates including Mohuns Ottery to his younger half-brother John Carew, the son of John Carew by his second wife Joan Talbot, daughter of Sir Gilbert Talbot.John II Carew (d.1363)
John II Carew, younger half-brother, the son of John Carew by his second wife Joan Talbot, daughter of Sir Gilbert Talbot. He was a great soldier and fought at the Battle of Crécy in 1346. He married twice:- *Firstly to Margaret de Mohun, daughter of John IV de Mohun, eldest son and heir apparent of John III de Mohun, 1st Baron Mohun, feudal baron of Dunster, whom he predeceased, having married Christiana Segrave, daughter of William Segrave, and having fought at the Battle of Boroughbridge in 1322 and died some time after in Scotland. Margaret's eldest brother was Sir John V de Mohun, 2nd Baron Mohun, KG,, the last in the senior male line of Mohun of Dunster.
- *Secondly he married Elizabeth "Corbit".
Sir Leonard Carew (1343–1369)
Thomas Carew (1361–1430)
Thomas Carew, son and heir, "a valiant knight" who served under King Henry V at the Battle of Agincourt in 1415. He married Elizabeth Bonville, daughter of Sir William Bonville of Shute, Devon, by his wife Margaret Damerell.Nicholas III Carew (d.1447)
Nicholas III Carew, eldest son and heir, who married Joane Courtenay, a daughter of Sir Hugh Courtenay of Haccombe in Devon and of Boconnoc in Cornwall, MP and Sheriff of Devon, a grandson of Hugh Courtenay, 2nd/10th Earl of Devon and grandfather of Edward Courtenay, 1st Earl of Devon. Joane Courtenay's mother was Phillipa Archdekne, daughter and heiress of Sir Warren Archdekne of Haccombe in Devon. Joane Courtenay was the eventual sole-heiress of her mother, and was the heiress of 16 manors, which she divided amongst her younger Carew sons. She survived her husband and re-married, by royal licence dated 5 October 1450, to Sir Robert Vere, younger brother of John de Vere, 13th Earl of Oxford. He had by his wife Joane Courtenay three daughters and five sons, as follows:- Thomas Carew of Mohuns Ottery, eldest son and heir. "Disobliging his mother ", he was excluded from his maternal inheritance.
- Nicholas Carew of Haccombe, who was given that estate by his mother Joane Courtenay, and where he founded an important branch of the Carew family. Sir Thomas Carew, 1st Baronet of Haccombe, a Member of Parliament for Tiverton in Devon, was created a baronet in 1661 and although the estate of Haccombe was sold by the family in 1942 the Carew baronetcy "of Haccombe" survives today, the 11th Baronet in 2015 living in Cambridge.
- Hugh Carew, 3rd son, died without progeny. He had been given by his mother the estates of Lyham, Manedon, Comb-Hall, and South Tawton, which passed by entail to his elder brother Nicholas Carew.
- Alexander Carew, 4th son, who received from his mother the estates of East-Anthony in Cornwall, Shoggebroke, and Landegy. He founded the Carew family of Antony in Cornwall. Sir Richard Carew, 1st Baronet of Antony, a Member of Parliament for Cornwall and for St Michael's, was created a baronet in 1641. This baronetcy expired in 1799 on the death of the 8th Baronet. However, the estate of Antony was inherited by marriage by the Pole baronets of Shute, Devon, who later adopted the surname "Carew-Pole", which baronetcy survives today although both Antony House and Shute were given by the family to the National Trust.
- Sir William Carew of Bury St Edmunds in Suffolk, created a knight banneret by King Henry VII, after the Battle of Blackheath. He received from his mother the estates of "Wicheband", "Widebridge", Bokeland and "Bledeuagh". His tomb survives on the north side of the chancel of St. Mary's Church, Bury St. Edmunds, with recumbent effigies of himself and his second wife Margaret Chedworth, a niece of John Chadworth, Bishop of Lincoln, and is near that of Princess Mary Tudor, younger sister of King Henry VIII, wife of King Louis XII of France and secondly of Charles Brandon, 1st Duke of Suffolk. His great-grandson Thomas Carew married the heiress of Crowcombe in Somerset, and founded a branch of the Carew family there, which in the early 19th century recovered possession of the family's most ancient seat of Carew Castle in Pembrokeshire, and was still surviving in the late 19th century. The surviving Palladian mansion of Crowcombe Court was built by Thomas Carew, circa 1724–39 and was described by Nikolaus Pevsner as "the finest house of its date in Somerset south of the Bath area".
Thomas Carew (d.1471)
- Nicholas IV Carew, son and heir apparent, who married Margaret Dynham, a daughter of Sir John Dynham of Nutwell in the parish of Woodbury and of Hartland, both in Devon, and a sister and co-heiress of John Dynham, 1st Baron Dynham, Lord High Treasurer of England and Lord Chancellor of Ireland. Her mother was Joan Arches, sister and heiress of John Arches and daughter of Sir Richard Arches, a Member of Parliament for Buckinghamshire in 1402, of Eythrope, Cranwell and Little Kimble, Buckinghamshire. The purbeck marble chest tomb of Nicholas IV Carew survives in the Chapel of St Nicholas in Westminster Abbey, the ledger stone of which bore a Latin inscription, now effaced. The Devonshire biographer Prince wrote concerning this monument "To whose memory an antient plain tomb of gray marble is there still seen erected with an inscription in brass round the ledg, and some coats of arms on the pedestal". The inscription and arms were still remaining in 1733, but had disappeared by 1877. The Latin epitaph was recorded by Prince as follows:
Sir Edmund Carew (1465–1513)
Sir Edmund Carew of Mohun's Ottery, son of Nicholas IV Carew and grandson and heir of Thomas Carew of Mohun's Ottery. He was knighted by the victorious King Henry VII at the Battle of Bosworth in 1485 and was killed in action at the Siege of Thérouanne, near Calais in France, on 24 June 1513, by a cannon ball fired from the town, while King Henry VIII sat in council, according to the Chronicle of the Kings of England from the Time of the Romans' Government unto the Death of King James by Richard Baker. He married Katherine Huddesfield one of the daughters and co-heiresses of Sir William Huddesfield of Shillingford St George in Devon, Attorney-General to Kings Edward IV and Henry VII. He left numerous issue, who with their descendants "multiplied into almost a galaxy of distinguished men that for chivalry and learning took front rank among those who added such brilliancy and renown to the remarkable reign of the Virgin Queen and the early Stuart".Later Carews
Later Carew lords of the manor included:to Sir Peter Carew "the last and most conspicuous member of this family, and who, owing to the decease of his two brothers, George and Philip, before him, was the last male owner also of this antient seat of his name and blood — Mohuns-Ottery, the which, from his initials, P. C, sculptured in the spandrels of the main door-way, he probably re-built or greatly re-edified"
- Sir Edmund Carew, who was knighted by King Henry VII at the Battle of Bosworth in 1485 and was killed in 1513 at the Siege of Thérouanne, in Artois, part of the Battle of the Spurs or Battle of Guinegate. He married Catherine Huddesfield, a daughter and co-heiress of Sir William Huddesfield of Shillingford St George in Devon, Attorney-General to Kings Edward IV and Henry VII.
Southcote
- Thomas Southcote of Indio, Bovey Tracey. Sir Peter Carew, the last in the male line, settled Mohun's Ottery and other lands on Thomas Southcote of Indio, Bovey Tracey, who had married Carew's niece, Thomasine Kirkham, daughter of Thomas Kirkham of Blagdon in the parish of Paignton, by his 2nd wife Cicely Carew, sister of Sir Peter Carew. Thomas Southcote was in possession in 1589.
- George Southcot of Indio, son and heir, admitted to the Inner Temple in 1575. He married Elizabeth Seymour, daughter of Sir Henry Seymour, apparently younger brother of Edward Seymour, 1st Duke of Somerset, KG, Lord Protector of England and brother to Queen Jane Seymour.
- Thomas Southcote of Mohuns Ottery, only son and heir. He married Katherine Pole, 2nd daughter of the Devon historian Sir William Pole, of Shute and Colcombe Castle, Devon, MP. In his history of Mohuns Ottery Pole wrote: "Thomas Southcot, Esquier, nowe dwellinge at Mouns Otery, maried Kateryn my 2 daughtr, by whom hee hath issue Sir Popham Southcot, Kt."
- Sir Popham Southcote of Indio, eldest son and heir, who married Margaret Berkeley, daughter of Sir Maurice Berkeley of Bruton, Somerset. He had three sons, all of whom either died as infants or otherwise predeceased him, and five daughters, two of whom survived him as co-heiresses, married to Brian and Southcote. Most of the lands were dismembered from the manor by the Southcotes in about 1670.
Yonge
Hawker
In about 1793 the estates of Sir George Yonge, 5th Baronet, K.B., were sold, including the manors of Luppit and Mohuns Ottery, to William II Hawker of Poundisford Lodge, Pitminster, near Taunton, Somerset. Sir George Yonge, 5th Baronet was MP for Honiton and Secretary at War, but died without progeny, when the baronetcy became extinct. William II Hawker of Poundisford Lodge was the only son of William I Hawker of Luppitt by his wife Mary Sampson. He married Elizabeth Welman, only child of Thomas Welman of Poundisford Park. He was described as: "A steady Dissenter and a firm Whig who used to speak with a virtuous glow of his descent on the maternal side from the Reverend and Learned Thomas Sampson, Dean of Christ Church, Oxford, the bold opposer of superstition and tyranny in the reign of Queen Elizabeth"Bernard
- Rev. James Bernard. Rev. James Bernard of Crowcombe and Sidmouth, was the son of Rev. James Camplin, Rector of Coombe Flory, Somerset. He was educated at Eton and King's College, Cambridge. He entered Lincoln's Inn in 1807 and was called to the bar in 1813. In about 1810 he changed his surname to Bernard. This was apparently the result of an inheritance: a certain James Bernard, of the Middle Temple, who died without progeny, had inherited Crowcombe Court, Somerset, and Carew Castle in Pembrokeshire, from his wife Elizabeth Carew , daughter and heiress of Thomas Carew of Crowcombe Carew, Somerset. Elizabeth Carew's heir to Crowcombe Court and Carew Castle was her cousin Mary Carew, wife of George Henry Warrington of Pentrepart Hall, who in 1811 assumed the surname Carew. He married Mary Hawker, one of the three daughters and co-heiresses of William II Hawker, and was the proprietor of Mohuns Ottery in 1822. Lysons stated: "Some part of the ancient mansion of the barons Carew is still remaining, and occupied as a farm-house. The park has been long ago converted into tillage". A deed of partition had been signed in 1808 splitting the Hawker patrimony between the three Hawker sisters and co-heiresses. James Bernard owned the library of "Thomas Carew", and made it available to Joshua Toulmin, for researching his work "History of the Town of Taunton".
- Rev. William Bernard. In 1850 Rev. William Bernard of Clatworthy, Somerset, was lord of the manors of Luppitt and Mohun's Ottery, but the manor house was being used as a farmhouse. In 1870 Mohuns Ottery was occupied by James Bishop, a farmer, but "W.H. Bernard" was still lord of the manor of Luppitt.
20th century