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.
8406294Thomas de Shelving
Key Facts
Parents:unknown
Born:unknown
Died:unknown
Buried:unknown

In 1287 or 1288, 8406492Thomas became a patron of the recently founded St. John's Hospital,1 an almshouse for the poor, which was at coordinates N51.2747 E1.3379. The original structures no longer exist, but the site still offers short-term rentals; see their website.

Circa 1305, 8406492Thomas de Shelving gave property at Woodnesborough, Kent to his son 4203246John and daughter-in-law 4203247Benedicta, presumably as a wedding gift.2

He may have retained some portion of the Woodnesborough property (or gave it away later than estimated above), since on 6 June 1306 he granted a spring that lay on the property to the Carmelite friary of Sandwich,3 who apparently piped the water to their friary nearby. A 2014 archaeological team found and excavated the well, the remains of which are at coordinates N51.2679 E1.3094. Below are two photos from their report.4

Remains of the well built over the spring that 8406492Thomas gave to Sandwich's Carmelite friary in 13064

Sources Cited:

1: William Boys, Collections for an History of Sandwich in Kent: With notices of the Other Cinque Ports and Members, and of Richborough (Canterbury, 1792), page 132

2: Calendar of Inquisitions Post Mortem and Other Analogous Documents, Volume VII, Edward III (1909), page 212, entry #292. The writ was issued on 6 February 1329/30.

3: Calendar of the Patent Rolls Preserved in the Public Record Office: Edward II, A.D. 1301-1307 (London, 1898), page 440

4: Keith Parfitt and Helen Clarke, "'Scouring the Conduit Head at Woodnesborough': Investigations into Convent Well near Sandwich," Archaeologia Cantiana, volume 137, pages 127-148. The photos shown above are figures 11 and 6, respectively, from the report.