Biography of Charles Mohun 4th Baron Mohun Okehampton 1675-1712

Paternal Family Tree: Mohun

In 1665 [his grandfather] Warwick Mohun 2nd Baron Mohun Okehampton (age 44) died. In 1665 His son [his father] Charles Mohun 3rd Baron Mohun Okehampton (age 20) succeeded 3rd Baron Mohun Okehampton, 4th Baronet Mohun of Boconnoc in Cornwall.

In 1665 [his father] Charles Mohun 3rd Baron Mohun Okehampton (age 20) and [his mother] Philippa Annesley Baroness Mohun Okehampton were married. She by marriage Baroness Mohun Okehampton. She the daughter of Arthur Annesley 1st Earl Annesley (age 50) and Elizabeth Altham Countess Anglesey (age 44).

Hamilton-Mohun Duel

Pepy's Diary. 21 Feb 1668. Thence with Brouncker and T. Harvey to Westminster Hall [Map], and there met with Colonel Birch (age 52) and Sir John Lowther, and did there in the lobby read over what I have drawn up for our defence, wherein they own themselves mightily satisfied; and Birch (age 52), like a particular friend, do take it upon him to defend us, and do mightily do me right in all his discourse. Here walked in the Hall with him a great while, and discoursed with several members, to prepare them in our business against to-morrow, and meeting my cozen Roger Pepys (age 50), he showed me Granger's written confession1, of his being forced by imprisonment, &c., by my Lord Gerard (age 50), most barbarously to confess his forging of a deed in behalf of Fitton (age 38), in the great case between him [Fitton] and my Lord Gerard (age 50); which business is under examination, and is the foulest against my Lord Gerard (age 50) that ever any thing in the world was, and will, all do believe, ruine him; and I shall be glad of it.

Note 1. Pepys here refers to the extraordinary proceedings which occurred between Charles, Lord Gerard (age 50), and Alexander Fitton (age 38), of which a narrative was published at the Hague in 1665. Granger was a witness in the cause, and was afterwards said to be conscience-stricken from his perjury. Some notice of this case will be found in North's "Examen", p. 558; but the copious and interesting note in Ormerod's "History of Cheshire", Vol. iii., p. 291, will best satisfy the reader, who will not fail to be struck by the paragraph with which it is closed-viz., "It is not improbable that Alexander Fitton (age 38), who, in the first instance, gained rightful possession of Gawsworth [Map] under an acknowledged settlement, was driven headlong into unpremeditated guilt by the production of a revocation by will which Lord Gerard (age 50) had so long concealed. Having lost his own fortune in the prosecution of his claims, he remained in gaol till taken out by James II to be made Chancellor of Ireland (under which character Hume first notices him), was knighted, and subsequently created Lord Gawsworth after the abdication of James, sat in his parliament in Dublin in 1689, and then is supposed to have accompanied his fallen master to France. Whether the conduct of Fitton was met, as he alleges, by similar guilt on the part of Lord Gerard (age 50), God only can judge; but his hand fell heavily on the representatives of that noble house. In less than half a century the husbands of its two co-heiresses, James, Duke of Hamilton (age 9), and Charles, Lord Mohun, were slain by each other's hands in a murderous duel arising out of a dispute relative to the partition of the Fitton estates, and Gawsworth itself passed to an unlineal hand, by a series of alienations complicated beyond example in the annals of this country". B. .

On 12 Nov 1712 Charles Mohun 4th Baron Mohun Okehampton (age 37) duelled with James Hamilton Duke Hamilton, 1st Duke Brandon (age 54) at Hyde Park [Map] over a legal dispute about the estate and inheritance of the late Earl Macclesfield.

Mohun had married [his wife] Charlotte Orby Baroness Mohun Okehampton grand-daughter of Charles Gerard 1st Earl Macclesfield. James Hamilton Duke Hamilton, 1st Duke Brandon (age 54) had married Elizabeth Gerard Duchess Brandon (age 32).

On 15 Nov 1712 James Hamilton Duke Hamilton, 1st Duke Brandon (age 54) died from wounds received duelling. His son James Hamilton 5th Duke Hamilton 2nd Duke Brandon (age 9) succeeded 5th Duke Hamilton, 2nd Duke Brandon of Suffolk, 2nd Baron Dutton of Cheshire.

On 15 Nov 1712 Charles Mohun 4th Baron Mohun Okehampton (age 37) died from wounds received duelling; his father had died the same way. Baron Mohun Okehampton and Baronet Mohun of Boconnoc in Cornwall extinct.

Around 1675 Charles Mohun 4th Baron Mohun Okehampton was born to Charles Mohun 3rd Baron Mohun Okehampton (age 30) and Philippa Annesley Baroness Mohun Okehampton.

In 1677 [his father] Charles Mohun 3rd Baron Mohun Okehampton (age 32) was killed in a duel. In 1677 His son Charles Mohun 4th Baron Mohun Okehampton (age 2) succeeded 4th Baron Mohun Okehampton, 5th Baronet Mohun of Boconnoc in Cornwall.

In 1691 Charles Mohun 4th Baron Mohun Okehampton (age 16) and Charlotte Orby Baroness Mohun Okehampton were married. She by marriage Baroness Mohun Okehampton.

On 10 Dec 1692 William Mountfort (age 28) died. The previous day he had been stabbed accidentally in Howard Street Strand by Charles Mohun 4th Baron Mohun Okehampton (age 17) during a scuffle.

Evelyn's Diary. 04 Feb 1693. After five days' trial and extraordinary contest, the Lord Mohun (age 18) was acquitted by the Lords of the murder of Montford, the player, notwithstanding the judges, from the pregnant witnesses of the fact, had declared him guilty; but whether in commiseration of his youth, being not eighteen years old, though exceedingly dissolute, or upon whatever other reason, the King (age 42) himself present some part of the trial, and satisfied, as they report, that he was culpable. 69 acquitted him, only 14 condemned him.

In 1699 Edward Rich 6th Earl Warwick 3rd Earl Holland (age 26) and Charles Mohun 4th Baron Mohun Okehampton (age 24) were tried for the murder of Richard Coote following a duel on Leicester Square and found guilty of manslaughter. He escaped punishment by pleading privilege of peerage. He and Mohun had killed Coote in a duel and it was common for a seventeenth-century jury in such cases to take a lenient view of such matters.

Royal Ancestors of Charles Mohun 4th Baron Mohun Okehampton 1675-1712

Kings Wessex: Great x 20 Grand Son of King Edmund "Ironside" I of England

Kings Gwynedd: Great x 17 Grand Son of Owain "Great" King Gwynedd

Kings Seisyllwg: Great x 23 Grand Son of Hywel "Dda aka Good" King Seisyllwg King Deheubarth

Kings Powys: Great x 18 Grand Son of Maredudd ap Bleddyn King Powys

Kings England: Great x 10 Grand Son of King Edward III of England

Kings Scotland: Great x 18 Grand Son of Malcolm III King Scotland

Kings Franks: Great x 16 Grand Son of Louis VII King Franks

Kings France: Great x 12 Grand Son of Philip "The Fair" IV King France

Ancestors of Charles Mohun 4th Baron Mohun Okehampton 1675-1712

Great x 4 Grandfather: Reginald Mohun 6 x Great Grand Son of King Edward "Longshanks" I of England

Great x 3 Grandfather: William Mohun 7 x Great Grand Son of King Edward "Longshanks" I of England

Great x 4 Grandmother: Joan Trevannion

Great x 2 Grandfather: Reginald Mohun 1st Baronet 8 x Great Grand Son of King Edward "Longshanks" I of England

Great x 4 Grandfather: John Horsey

Great x 3 Grandmother: Elizabeth Horsey

Great x 4 Grandmother: Edith Phelips

Great x 1 Grandfather: John Mohun 1st Baron Mohun Okehampton 9 x Great Grand Son of King Edward "Longshanks" I of England

Great x 4 Grandfather: Nicholas Hele of South Hele

Great x 3 Grandfather: John Hele

Great x 2 Grandmother: Philippa Hele Baroness Mohun

GrandFather: Warwick Mohun 2nd Baron Mohun Okehampton 8 x Great Grand Son of King Edward III of England

Great x 4 Grandfather: Michael Stanhope 4 x Great Grand Son of King Edward III of England

Great x 3 Grandfather: Thomas Stanhope 5 x Great Grand Son of King Edward III of England

Great x 4 Grandmother: Anne Rawson

Great x 2 Grandfather: John Stanhope 6 x Great Grand Son of King Edward III of England

Great x 4 Grandfather: John Port

Great x 3 Grandmother: Margaret Port

Great x 1 Grandmother: Cordelia Stanhope Baroness Mohun Okehampton 7 x Great Grand Daughter of King Edward III of England

Great x 4 Grandfather: Richard Trentham of Rocester Abbey

Great x 3 Grandfather: Thomas Trentham

Great x 2 Grandmother: Catherine Trentham

Great x 4 Grandfather: William Sneyd of Bradwell Cheshire

Great x 3 Grandmother: Jane Sneyd

Father: Charles Mohun 3rd Baron Mohun Okehampton 9 x Great Grand Son of King Edward III of England

Charles Mohun 4th Baron Mohun Okehampton 10 x Great Grand Son of King Edward III of England

Great x 2 Grandfather: Robert Annesley

Great x 1 Grandfather: Francis Annesley 1st Viscount Valentia

GrandFather: Arthur Annesley 1st Earl Annesley 9 x Great Grand Son of King Edward III of England

Great x 3 Grandfather: Morgan Philipps

Great x 2 Grandfather: John Philipps 1st Baronet

Great x 4 Grandfather: Richard Fletcher

Great x 3 Grandmother: Elizabeth Fletcher

Great x 1 Grandmother: Dorothy Philipps Viscountess Valentia 8 x Great Grand Daughter of King Edward III of England

Great x 4 Grandfather: Thomas Perrot

Great x 3 Grandfather: John Perrot 6 x Great Grand Son of King Edward III of England

Great x 4 Grandmother: Mary Berkeley 5 x Great Grand Daughter of King Edward III of England

Great x 2 Grandmother: Anne Elizabeth Perrot Lady Philips 7 x Great Grand Daughter of King Edward III of England

Great x 3 Grandmother: Jane Prust

Mother: Philippa Annesley Baroness Mohun Okehampton 10 x Great Grand Daughter of King Edward III of England

Great x 2 Grandfather: James Altham

Great x 1 Grandfather: James Altham of Oxhey

Great x 3 Grandfather: Oliver Skinner

Great x 2 Grandmother: Margaret Skinner

GrandMother: Elizabeth Altham Countess Anglesey