![]() ![]() Johannes de Carletoun had a charter from Robert I of the lands of Dalmakeran in Ayrshire, 1323." ![]() Duncan de Carletone of Ayrshire rendered homage in 1296. In Scotland, "there are places named Carleton in the shires of Kirkcudbright, Wigtown, and Ayr, and the surname is common in the north of England. At present the name is best represented in the neighbourhood of Helston." There was a gentle family of Carlyon at Menaguins in the 17th century, and the name has been established in the parish of Bodmin since the reign of Henry VI. "Carlton is the name of an old Cornish family of distinction. Later the Yorkshire Poll Tax Rolls of 1379 listed Anabella de Carleton Thomas de Carleton and Johannes de Carleton as all holding lands there at that time. In Norfolk, Edmund de Carleton was Rector of Little Portland, (but no date was given.) In Somerset, Robert de Carletone, was listed there 1 Edward III (during the first year of King Edward III's reign.) and later the Hundredorum Rolls of 1273 included John de Carleton, Lincolnshire and Geoffrey de Karlton, Bedfordshire. listed Reginald de Karleton, Lincolnshire, Henry IIl-Edward I. ![]() The Testa de Nevill, sive Liber Feodorum, temp. Later again, Hugh de Carleton was found in the Feet of Fines for Warwickshire in 1240 and Thomas de Carleton was registered in the Yorkshire Poll Tax Rolls of 1379. Later the Curia Regis Rolls included Osmund de Carleton in 1163. Other early records include a record found in 1031, when Elsi de Carleton was recorded in the Feodarium Prioratus Dunelmensis. It appears to have early belonged to the Carletons and the Butlers." "In the Domesday Book this place is written Inscip. The surname Carlton was first found in Lancashire at Inskip with Sowerby, a township, in the parish of St. ![]()
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