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This romantic love story was turned into wild legends involving alleged murder and a family curse, despite considerable disproof and contrary documentation. See Bridgett's biography for folk tradition, photographs, and all of the sources we found about this line that became extinct despite great efforts to secure the heirs' future. 13.
BRIDGETT LEIGH (est 1640 - aft 1669). Father:
8. RICHARD LEIGH
(II) Sir FRANCIS' wife Mary Vaughan was childless through at least twenty years of marriage. Their pre-nuptial bond was dated 1 Oct 1633 (as summarized in a legal document in a later Lloyd suit against Sir FRANCIS' heirs (NLW 1704 Cynwyl Gaeo (Box 6), though the marriage may have occurred several years later. In any event, Sir FRANCIS must have been much older than BRIDGETT and their life together was a December and May romance (GG, Tydwal Gloff 23A83, Film no.104351, and Adv Carm 212, Film no.104349). For this relation and the lives of their children and grandchildren, see the biography of BRIDGETT. Sir FRANCIS LLOYD’S family had an ancient coat of arms showing a ladder used to scale Norman castle walls during Strongbow’s 12th century invasion of Wales. His father Sir Marmaduke Lloyd was an important chief justice in Wales and the Marches, and Sir FRANCIS himself was MP for Carmarthen from 1640. He served as Comptroller of the Household to King Charles I, from whom he received a knighthood and for whom he fought as commander-in-chief of the horse in Pembrokeshire and was captured in battle twice during the Civil War. After the Restoration in 1660 he became a gentleman of the privy chamber to Charles II and obviously could feel assured of the Merry Monarch’s understanding of his marital situation and his mistress BRIDGETT. This high status is probably relevant to the folk tradition of the so-called Curse of Maesyfelin, which is treated in BRIDGETT’S biography as well as the biographies of Stephen Hughes and OAKLEY LEIGH (III). For the story of King Charles II and his Welsh mistress, doubtless known at least in outline to Sir FRANCIS LLOYD, see the Biography of Lucy Walter.
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