Which has been thus translated:

To have and to hold to the same Duke, and to the first begotten sons of him, and of his heirs, Kings of England, and to the Dukes of the said place in the Kingdom of England, hereditarily to succeed. (See Lord Dunstanville’s Edition of Carew, pp. 433-441.)

2. Richard Plantagenet, afterwards King Richard the Second, in opposition, as it would seem, to the words of the grant, as his father had never been King of England.

3. Henry Plantagenet, son and heir of King Henry the Fourth, afterwards King Henry the Fifth.

4. Edward Plantagenet, son and heir of King Henry the Sixth, murdered in 1471.

5. Edward Plantagenet, son and heir of King Edward the Fourth, nominally King in 1483, but murdered the same year.

6. Edward Plantagenet, son and heir of King Richard the Third.

7. Arthur Tudor, son and heir of King Henry the Seventh, died in his father’s lifetime.

8. Henry Tudor, afterwards King Henry the Eighth.

9. Henry Frederick Stuart, son and heir of King James the First, died in his father’s lifetime.