n.8. Elizabeth WORTLEY, geb. 1445

n.8.  Elizabeth,  geb. 1445, Wortley, Yorkshire, Engeland x John BOSVILE of Newhall, Yorkshire, s.v. Thomas Bosvile en Isabel Hastinges of Fenwyke.

Elizabeth was die dogter van Nicolaas Wortley en Isabella Tunstall.

(Foster, Joseph:  Pedigrees of the County Families of Yorkshire, Vol. 2, West Riding. London. 1874)

Foster's pedigree of Bosvile has John marrying Isabel Wortley, whereas his pedigree of Wortley has John marrying Elizabeth Wortley, Isabel's sister. In both cases, John's parents-in-law would have been Nicholas Wortley and Isabel Tustall.

Bosvile/ Bosville/Boswell of New Hall, Ardsley also known as New Hall, Darfield and New Hall, Wombwell, also of Gunthwaite. 
Arms: Argent, five fusils in fesse gules, in chief three bears' heads, sable. 
Crest: An ox issuing from a bolt of trees, proper.  
Motto: "Intento in Deum animo 
The following epigram was written on the family's name and crest in the time of Elizabeth I - “Dii tibi dent Bosvile, boves villasque Radulphi, nec villa careat bosve vel illa bove."



At Gunthwaite, the ancient seat of the Bosvilles, is a noted Mineral Spring. The surrounding country is lovely, and lying as it does, midway between the populous city of Sheffield, and towns of Barnsley, Huddersfield, Halifax, and Bradford, and with other cities and towns not far away, a more convenient, attractive, and healthy situation for a hydropathic establishment, or consumptive sanatorium, it would be difficult to find. It is a district typical of rural England. Woodsome Hall, Bretton Hall, Cannon Hall, Wentworth Castle, and Wortley Hall and Wharncliffe, are all within a few miles drive. (https://huddersfield.exposed/api/content/books/ocr/17984/)

Near the house at Gunthwaite is a venerable oak which it is no unwarrantable conjecture to suppose may have been planted by one of the early Gunnoldthwaites. The barn said to have been built by the first Godfrey, is of the extraordinary dimensions of fifty-five yards by fifteen. In different parts of the mansion are arms of Bosvile impaling Hardwicke, and Bosvile impaling Hotham, the first and the third Godfrey, who were the great advancers of Gunthwaite. The three bends on an ermine field, the arms of Gunthwaite, appear upon the house, and also over one of the doors, what is supposed to have been a crest of Gunthwaite, a falcon or other bird, with their motto, a good old Engish sentiment inscribed in the old English character:Try and Eryvst. (https://huddersfield.exposed/api/content/books/ocr/17984/)