-
TRIBAL AFFILIATION
Shabtau
-
SURNAME HERITAGE
England Ireland
Henley History, Family Crest & Coats of Arms
The ancestors of the name Henley date back to the Anglo-Saxon tribes of Britain. The name is derived from when the Henley family lived in one of the settlements called Henley in Oxfordshire, Shropshire, Somerset, Suffolk, Surrey, and Warwickshire. The oldest of the parishes is found in Somerset where it was known as Henleighe in 973. The place names literally mean “high wood or clearing” 1 with the exception of the Shropshire parish which means “one frequented by wild birds.” 2
Early Origins of the Henley family
The surname Henley was first found in Somerset where they held a family seat from ancient times as Lords of the Manor of Henley, the main line of the family producing the Barons Henley, the Earls of Northington, the Barons Ongley and many other knightly branches.
John de Heneleghe was registered as holding lands in Somerset, 1 Edward III (during the first year of the reign of King Edward III.) 3
Gilbert de Henlega was listed in the Pipe Rolls of Worcester in 1181; Robert de Henlay in Yorkshire in 1270; and William Heneley in Northumberland in 1392. 4
The Hundredorum Rolls of 1273 included: Philipp de Heneley, Salop (Shropshire); and John de Heneleye, Warwickshire as holding lands in their respective shires. 5
Walter de Henley (fl. 1250), was a writer on agriculture, “is stated to have been a ‘Chivaler,’ and afterwards to have become a Dominican friar. Henley’s original text has clearly been much garbled and interpolated in the extant manuscripts; the early text is said to be best represented in two manuscripts in the Cambridge University Library. They appear to date from the time of Edward I or Edward II.” 6