Arms of Dynham: Gules, four fusils in fess ermineArms of Sapcotes Sable, three dovecotes argent[4]impaling Dinham Gules, four fusils in fess ermine (quarteringArchesGules, three arches argent), Bampton Church
Fulk Bourchier married Elizabeth Dynham (died 19 October 1516),[5] the daughter of Sir John Dinham (1406–1458) of Nutwell by his wife Joan Arches (died 1497), and sister and coheir of John Dynham, 1st Baron Dynham (died 1501). After the death of Fulk Bourchier, Elizabeth Dynham remarried twice, firstly to Sir John Sapcotes (died 1501) of Elton, Huntingdonshire; a stained glass heraldic escutcheon survives in Bampton church showing the arms of Sapcotes impaling Dinham. After the death of Sapcotes, Elizabeth Dynham remarried secondly to Sir Thomas Brandon (died 27 January 1510) of Duddington, Northamptonshire.[6] There was no issue of Elizabeth Dynham's marriage to Thomas Brandon, and according to Gunn, after his death she took a vow of celibacy before Bishop Fisher on 21 April 1510.[7] She died 19 October 1516, and was buried in the Greyfriars, London.[8][9]
By Elizabeth Dynham, Fulk Bourchier had the following children:
Bourchier died 18 September 1479 at the age of thirty-three. In his will, dated 1 April 1475 and proved 10 November 1480, he requested burial in the chapel of the Blessed Virgin at Bampton, Devon, next to the tomb of his mother, the Lady Thomasine. He left the residue of his estate to his wife, Elizabeth Dynham, whom he made his sole executrix.[14]
Dugdale, quoting the will of Fulk Bourchier, shows that his father, William Bourchier, and his mother, Thomasine Hankford, are also buried at Bampton, as he bequeathed his body to be buried at Bampton near the grave of his mother, Lady Thomasine, and he willed that marble stones with inscriptions should be placed on his own grave and that of his father, Lord William, and his mother, Lady Thomasine.[15][16]
Notes
^Dallas gives the arms of William Bourchier, his son Fulk and grandson John as 'Argent, a cross engrailed gules between four water-bougets sable, a label of three points azure each charged with as many fleurs-de-lys or'; Dallas 1897, pp. 107–8, 110.
^Also the arms of the ancient family of Shapcott of Shapcott in the parish of Knowstone, Devon, sometimes shown with a chevron or between the dovecotes (Vivian, p.677, pedigree of Shapcott of Shapcott)
Richardson, Douglas (2011). Everingham, Kimball G. (ed.). Magna Carta Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families. Vol. I (2nd ed.). Salt Lake City. p. 282. ISBN978-1449966379.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)