Previously, I believed that the parents of 1050811Joan ___ were 2101622Thomas de Dene and 2101623Martha de Shelving. However, researcher Pete Andrews called my attention to 2101622Thomas' inquisitions post mortem, which I had overlooked. 2101622Thomas' two IPM's strongly suggest that he is not 1050811Joan's father (since the IPM explicitly notes 2101622Thomas' daughter Joan as deceased in early childhood, among other incongruences).

Nevertheless, because 1050811Joan certainly seems to be related to 2101622Thomas in some manner, and because my older work could prove useful for future research, I've isolated the profile pages that I'd written for 1050811Joan's formerly proposed ancestors into a separate section of my website, starting from the old version of Joan's page onward.

You can see a list of those ancestors or a family tree of them.
269007688Hamund de Throwley
Key Facts
Parents:538015376Hemfred/Herefred de Throwley
His mother's identity is unknown.
Born:unknown
Died:unknown
Buried:unknown

269007688Hamund de Throwley is the son of 538015376Hemfred/Herefred.1,2

Sometime between 1162 and 1165, 269007688Hamund granted a church in Throwley to the Abbey of Saint Bertin in France,2 who subsequently developed it into Throwley Priory. The same charter also mentions 269007688Hamund's wife but (somewhat strangely) shows two different names for her: Matilda and Mabel.2

Circa 1186, 269007688Hamund—who is described as miles, et Dominus de Trulega ("knight, and Lord of Throwley")—along with many others petitioned the Archdeacon of Canterbury to have their vicar removed from office. They alleged that the vicar had fled due to debts, and that the vicar had sent untrustworthy strangers as his replacement.3

Sources Cited:

1: Daniel Haigneré, ed., Les Chartes de Saint-Bertin, Tome I: 648-1240 (Saint-Omer, 1886), page 161. See also: Archaeologia Cantiana, Volume IV (London, 1861), page 217.

2: Archaeologia Cantiana, Volume IV (London, 1861), pages 210-211. See also: Daniel Haigneré, ed., Les Chartes de Saint-Bertin, Tome I: 648-1240 (Saint-Omer, 1886), page 112.

3: Archaeologia Cantiana, Volume IV (London, 1861), pages 216-217