i82 COMPLETE PEERAGE aquitaine APPIN DuGALD Stewart, 2nd, but only surv. s. and h. of Robert S., 8th Chief of Appin, by his 2nd wife, Anne, da. of Sir Duncan Campbell, ot Lochnell, was cr., by the titular King, James III, 6 June 1743, BARON APPIN [S.], with rem. to heirs male. (") He did not join in the Rising of 1745. He m. Mary, da. of Alexander Mackenzie. He sold Appin in 1765, and d. s.p.m., 1769. For his successors see Ruvigny's Jacobite Peerage. APSLEY i.e. "Apsley, Sussex," Barony (^Bathursi), cr. 1771 ; see "Bathurst," Earldom, cr. 1772, under the 2nd Earl, who sue. to that Earldom in 1775. APULDERCOMBE i.e. " Worsley of Apuldercombe in the Isle of Wight, " Barony {Anderson-Pelhani)^ cr. 1837, with the Earldom of Yarborough, which see. AQUITAINE Edward, Prince of Wales, i£c., s. and h. ap. of Edward III, was Visitation — Coll. Arm. MSS., H8). He and Joan, his wife, demised Badamscourt in Tidenham, 10 Sep. (1448) 27 Hen. VI. John ap Thomlyn, his s. and h., is described as " dominus de Beatisley " in a conveyance of 20 Mar. (1498/9) 14 Hen. VII. He
- . the da. and h. of John Roulf of Llanllowel, and had 4 daughters and coheirs,
(i) Margaret, mother of William Edmond, who is described in a deed, 26 Nov. 1536, as " dominus de Betisley filius et heres Edmundi ap Gwyllym ap Hopkin et Margarete uxoris ejus unius filiarum et heredum Johannis ap Thomlyn. " (2) Margery, wife of Thomas Parker, of Monmouth, ancestress of the Parkers of Llanllowel. (3) Jane, wife of Reynalt ap Gwiliym. (4) Elizabeth. Thus Dr. Ormerod, partly on the authority of Thomas Wakeman. The Welsh genealogists, who omit two generations altogether, and on whose statements no reliance can be placed, describe these coheirs as (i) Margery, h. of Llanllowel, wife of Thomas Parker, (2) Margaret, h. of Tre Owen and half Llanarth, wife of David ap Jenkin (Herbert) of Cefn-y-ddwy-glwyd (slain at Edgcott Field in 1469), (3) Anne or Matilda, h. of half Llanarth, wife of David ap Gwiliym (Herbert), (4) Joan, wife of Robin Wallis, and (5) Alice, wife of Thomas William. (Bradney, ut supra, vol. i, p. 44 : isfc). (") For a list of the Jacobite Peerages, see Appendix F, in this volume. ^) It appears from The Glory of Regality, by Arthur Taylor, F.S.A., 1820, p. 104, Wc, that, among the Principal State officers of France, who act at the Coronation, " of the lay Peers, the Duke of Burgundy carries the Crown ; the Duke OF Aquitaine, or Guienne, the ist banner ; the Duke of Normandy, the second, " iifc. : " and here, " adds Mr. Taylor, " I take occasion to notice two attendants on