Graham Milne
2012-10-26 22:06:42 UTC
I am looking into a barony of the Holy Roman Empire, the Barony of St. Hippolyte created in 1706, which stated to be descendible to male and female descendants. Melville Henry Massue, Marquis de Ruvigny, 'The Nobilities of Europe', Melville & Co., London, 1910, Elibron Classics re-print, p. 350 states:
'DE MONTOLIEU. David de Montolieu, SEIGNEUR DE ST. HIPPOLYTE in France, a French Protestant refugee, came to England with William, Prince of Orange, in 1688, and entered the army, becoming a Lieut.-General. For his services with the allies in Piedmont he was, by letters patent dated at Vienna 14 Feb. 1706, cr. by the Emperor Joseph I, a BARON OF THE HOLY ROMAN EMPIRE as BARON OF ST. HIPPOLYTE (FREIHERR VON ST. HIPPLOYTE), with rem. to his descendants male and female for ever. His male issue became extinct on the death s.p.m.s [without male issue] of his grandson, Lewis (Montolieu), 3rd Baron de St. Hippolyte, 20 May 1817. The heir of line of the Barons de St. Hippolyte [H. R. E.] is his great grandda. Constance Maria (née Hammersley), widow of Lieut.-Col. Henry Edward Stopford, and not Lord Elibank, as is often stated.'
http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=LHKBWAz9MMQC&pg=PA350#v=onepage&q&f=false
If the baron has two daughters, would the elder daughter inherit the barony and would it pass to her son?
'DE MONTOLIEU. David de Montolieu, SEIGNEUR DE ST. HIPPOLYTE in France, a French Protestant refugee, came to England with William, Prince of Orange, in 1688, and entered the army, becoming a Lieut.-General. For his services with the allies in Piedmont he was, by letters patent dated at Vienna 14 Feb. 1706, cr. by the Emperor Joseph I, a BARON OF THE HOLY ROMAN EMPIRE as BARON OF ST. HIPPOLYTE (FREIHERR VON ST. HIPPLOYTE), with rem. to his descendants male and female for ever. His male issue became extinct on the death s.p.m.s [without male issue] of his grandson, Lewis (Montolieu), 3rd Baron de St. Hippolyte, 20 May 1817. The heir of line of the Barons de St. Hippolyte [H. R. E.] is his great grandda. Constance Maria (née Hammersley), widow of Lieut.-Col. Henry Edward Stopford, and not Lord Elibank, as is often stated.'
http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=LHKBWAz9MMQC&pg=PA350#v=onepage&q&f=false
If the baron has two daughters, would the elder daughter inherit the barony and would it pass to her son?