David of Huntingdon1
M, #3181, b. 1144, d. 17 June 1219
Father* | Henry of Huntingdon1,2 b. 1114, d. 12 Jun 1152 | |
Mother* | Ada de Warenne1,2 b. c 1120, d. 1178 | |
David of Huntingdon|b. 1144\nd. 17 Jun 1219|p107.htm#i3181|Henry of Huntingdon|b. 1114\nd. 12 Jun 1152|p99.htm#i2949|Ada de Warenne|b. c 1120\nd. 1178|p99.htm#i2948|David I. of Scotland "the Saint"|b. c 1080\nd. 24 May 1153|p99.htm#i2951|Countess Maud of Huntingdon|b. 1072\nd. 1131|p85.htm#i2544|Sir William de Warenne|b. 1071\nd. 11 May 1138|p101.htm#i3006|Isabel de Vermandois|b. 1081\nd. 13 Feb 1131|p64.htm#i1915| |
Birth* | 1144 | 1,3 |
Marriage* | 26 August 1190 | Principal=Maud de Blundeville1,4,5 |
Death* | 17 June 1219 | Yardley, Northamptonshire, England1,3 |
Burial* | Sawtrey Abbey, Scotland1,6 | |
Arms* | Pale d'or et de goules, ung bende noir (Glover).7 | |
Name Variation | David of Scotland8 | |
Knighted* | 31 May 1170 | by King Henry II of England6 |
Event-Misc* | 1174 | Soon after his brother William returned from imprisonment in England, he received from his brother the district of Garioch, Aberdeen, and the Earldom of Lennox.6 |
Event-Misc | 1174 | He was sent by his brother the King to aid the Earl of Leicester6 |
Event-Misc | August 1175 | York, He became a hostage for Scotland at the confirmation of the convention of Falaise6 |
Summoned* | 1185 | London to discuss the Pope's letter calling for a new Crusade with Henry II6 |
Title* | 1185 | Earl of Huntingdon6 |
(Witness) King-England | 3 September 1189 | Westminster, Middlesex, England, Principal=Richard I the Lionhearted9,10,11,12 |
Event-Misc | circa 1191 | He founded the Abbey of Lindores in Fife6 |
Event-Misc | 1194 | He accompanied King Richard Lionheart to Normandy6 |
Event-Misc* | 1194 | David and his brother-in-law the Earl of Chester beseiged the Castle of Nottingham in opposition to Prince John, Principal=Ranulph III of Chester, Witness=John Lackland6 |
Event-Misc | 1205 | He did homage to his nephew William the Lion6 |
Event-Misc | 13 March 1218 | His English honours were restored, which had been revoked in 1215 or 12166 |
Family | Maud de Blundeville b. 1171, d. 6 Jan 1233 | |
Children |
|
Last Edited | 5 Jun 2005 |
Citations
- [S218] Marlyn Lewis, Ancestry of Elizabeth of York.
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 93-25.
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 93-26.
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 94-26.
- [S347] Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans, p. 50.
- [S347] Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans, p. 115.
- [S325] Rev. C. Moor, Knights of Edward I, v. 2, p. 253.
- [S338] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 8th ed., 94-26.
- [S284] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry, Warenne 2.
- [S284] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry, Plantagenet 2.
- [S284] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry, Plantagenet 3.
- [S347] Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans, p. 79.
- [S347] Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans, p. 116.
Maud de Blundeville1
F, #3182, b. 1171, d. 6 January 1233
Father* | Hugh of Kevelioc1,2 b. 1147, d. 30 Jun 1181 | |
Mother* | Bertrade de Montfort1 b. 1155, d. 1227 | |
Maud de Blundeville|b. 1171\nd. 6 Jan 1233|p107.htm#i3182|Hugh of Kevelioc|b. 1147\nd. 30 Jun 1181|p59.htm#i1758|Bertrade de Montfort|b. 1155\nd. 1227|p97.htm#i2903|Ranulph de Gernon|b. c 1100\nd. 16 Dec 1153|p59.htm#i1763|Maud de Caen|b. c 1120\nd. 29 Jul 1189|p59.htm#i1762|Simon de Montfort|d. c 13 Mar 1180/81|p59.htm#i1760|Maud (?)|d. 1168|p59.htm#i1761| |
Birth* | 1171 | 1,3 |
Marriage* | 26 August 1190 | Principal=David of Huntingdon1,4,2 |
Death* | 6 January 1233 | 1,3 |
Name Variation | Maud of Chester5 |
Family | David of Huntingdon b. 1144, d. 17 Jun 1219 | |
Children |
|
Last Edited | 18 May 2005 |
Citations
- [S218] Marlyn Lewis, Ancestry of Elizabeth of York.
- [S347] Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans, p. 50.
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 93-26.
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 94-26.
- [S338] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 8th ed., 94-26.
- [S347] Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans, p. 116.
William FitzAlan III1
M, #3183, d. 1216
Father* | William FitzAlan1 d. c 1210 | |
Mother* | (?) FitzHenry1 | |
William FitzAlan III|d. 1216|p107.htm#i3183|William FitzAlan|d. c 1210|p140.htm#i4186|(?) FitzHenry||p140.htm#i4187|William FitzAlan|b. 1105\nd. 1160|p140.htm#i4183|Isabel de Say||p140.htm#i4184|Henry I. Curtmantel|b. 5 Mar 1132/33\nd. 6 Jul 1189|p55.htm#i1622|Rosamond Clifford|d. 1177|p135.htm#i4030| |
Death* | 1216 | 2 |
Last Edited | 29 May 2005 |
Adam de Aldithley1
M, #3184, b. circa 1145, d. between 1203 and 1211
Father* | Liulf de Aldithley2 | |
Adam de Aldithley|b. c 1145\nd. bt 1203 - 1211|p107.htm#i3184|Liulf de Aldithley||p501.htm#i15009||||Liulf de Aldithley|d. 1130|p209.htm#i6244|||||||||| |
Birth* | circa 1145 | England1 |
Marriage* | 1170 | Principal=Emma de Derleveston1 |
Death* | between 1203 and 1211 | 1 |
DNB* | Audley [ de Audley] family (per. c.1130-1391), gentry, derived from the north Staffordshire township from which they took their name, and which was the original caput of their lordship and the site of a bailey-less motte. The family held Audley from, and also bore the arms of, the Verdons, lords of Alton, Shropshire, differenced (gules, fretty or), and may thus have shared, either as kinsmen or followers, in the early twelfth-century redistribution of estates under Henry I which also established the Verdon family in north Staffordshire. Their connection with the Verdons, as members of the Lacy affinity in the conquest of Ireland, and of the affinity of the earls of Chester in England, continued into the thirteenth century. Liulf de Audley (fl. 1130) is the first known representative of the family, but the early genealogy is insecure. The family acquired other English estates, mostly in the north midlands and south-west, and also lands in Wales and Ireland, through grants, marriage, and purchase, but its members were by practice curial and martial more often than country gentry. Their principal estates contained many tenants but little demesne. Liulf's son Adam de Audley (d. 1203) sat on Staffordshire assizes in the reigns of Richard I and John. His son Adam de Audley (d. 1211) was involved in the colonization of Ireland and in campaigns there, as constable of Ulster under Hugh de Lacy and recipient of grants in Ulster and co. Louth. He was succeeded by his brother Henry Audley (d. 1246) who used the Irish lands, notably the lordship of Dunleer in co. Louth, to set up a younger son. Much of Henry's own career was spent as a vigorous supporter of Ranulf (III), earl of Chester, for whom he was a frequent and prominent witness to charters, including the Cheshire Magna Carta of 1215, and with whose support he received further lands in the honour of Coventry, in Shropshire, and in north Staffordshire, and in 1214 purchased the residual Cheshire lands of the barony of Nantwich from Eleanor Malbank, one of its heirs. By 1227 the Audley estates lay in a swathe across the east–west boundary of Cheshire, Shropshire, and Staffordshire, from the Welsh border to the Staffordshire moorlands. Henry Audley seems to have reorganized his new lands, establishing a market and burgage tenure at Betley, Staffordshire. The castle at Audley was abandoned in favour of new castles at Heighley, Staffordshire, and Redcastle, Shropshire, and a hall at Newhall near Nantwich in Cheshire. In 1219 he founded the Cistercian house at Hulton, Staffordshire, where he would be buried and which became the patronal house of the Audleys. Henry's son, James Audley (d. 1272), confirmed the family's position among the marcher lords in the thirteenth century. Matthew Paris described him as a ‘powerful and wealthy lord on the Welsh border’ (Paris, Chron., 5.656). It was in that role, after the end of the Anglo-Norman earldom in Cheshire in 1237, that the Audleys became confirmed royalists. James and later generations of Audleys turned from Cheshire marriages to matches intended to enhance marcher and curial connections. Through his marriage to Ela, daughter of Sir William Longespée (d. 1250), James acquired the Oxfordshire manor of Stratton where he established a younger son, Hugh Audley (d. 1325). James's sister Emma had married Gruffudd Maelor, one of the rulers of northern Powys. However, James's sudden death after a fall from his horse in June 1272 inaugurated a period of crisis in the fortunes of the family, for his four sons James Audley (c.1251–1273), Henry Audley (c.1252–1276), William Audley (1254–1282), and Nicholas Audley, first Lord Audley (c.1258-1299), died in quick succession, three without heirs. William had drowned on the uncompleted boat-bridge across the Menai Strait during the rebellion of Llywelyn ap Gruffudd. Nicholas was summoned to the Salisbury parliament of 1297 (so attaining the dignity of Lord Audley), but his eldest son, Thomas Audley (1288–1308), also died without heir, and was succeeded by his younger brother, Nicholas Audley, second Lord Audley (1289-1316). The marriage of the elder Nicholas to Katherine Giffard had brought new lands in Wales, the commotes of Hirfryn and Perfedd in Cantref Bychan; his second son's marriage to Joan Martin, countess of Lincoln (d. 1322), second wife and widow of Henry de Lacy, later brought extensive lands in Devon and Cemais in Wales. Despite the residual impact of James's debts, and the interrupted succession of the estate, including a minority between 1299 and 1314, the family later enjoyed an income that might have led to further ennoblement, with a territorial title, but never actually did so. The fourteenth-century Audleys were members of the following of the earls of Lancaster. The younger Nicholas's widow was with Thomas of Lancaster at Tutbury in March 1322, when Heighley Castle was plundered by royalist troops. Their son, James Audley, third Lord Audley (1312-1386), served in Scotland and France, as keeper of Berwick in 1342, and, with a retinue of forty men-at-arms under Henry, earl of Lancaster, in Gascony in 1345. At Heighley Castle he entertained Edward, the Black Prince, in 1353, and Edward's son, Richard II, in 1385. The household was a literate one, owning breviaries and books of romance; the youngest sons were named Rowland and Oliver. The blind poet John Audley (fl. 1426) may have belonged to the family. James had rebuilt the parish church at Audley as an elegant family mausoleum in the 1330s but the tomb niches were never occupied and he was buried at Hulton Abbey. DNA analysis of excavated skeletons at the site has revealed a number of related burials there. James was succeeded by his last surviving son, Nicholas Audley, fourth Lord Audley (1329-1391), who died without male heir from his marriage to Elizabeth Beaumont. The estates passed through Nicholas's sister, Joan, to the heirs of John Tuchet who later adopted the title of Lord Audley. Philip Morgan Sources T. W. Lancaster, ‘The barons Audley of Heley Castle and Hulton Abbey’, Transactions of the North Staffordshire Field Club, new ser., 19 (1993–4), 10–31 · J. Wedgwood, ‘The parentage of James de Audley K.G.’, Staffordshire Historical Collections, new ser., 9 (1906), 245–68 · Chancery records · G. Barraclough, ed., The charters of the Anglo-Norman earls of Chester, c.1071–1237, Lancashire and Cheshire RS, 126 (1988) · Calendar of the charter rolls, 6 vols., PRO (1903–27), vol. 1, pp. 36–7 · R. C. Christie, ed. and trans., Annales Cestrienses, or, Chronicle of the abbey of S. Werburg at Chester, Lancashire and Cheshire RS, 14 (1887), 94–8 · CIPM · Reg. Courtenay, LPL · The great chartulary, Staffs. RO, D(W) 1721/1/1, fols. 141–422d · M. Bennett, ‘John Audley: some new evidence on his life and work’, Chaucer Review, 16 (1982), 344–55 · account of Thomas Wildhethe, bailiff of Nicholas, Lord Audley, 1386–7, Ches. & Chester ALSS, CR/72/9/1 · M. C. B. Dawes, ed., Register of Edward the Black Prince, 4 vols. (1930–33), vol. 2, pp. 98–9 · exchequer, king's remembrancer, PRO, accounts various, E101 · R. F. Treharne and I. J. Sanders, eds., Documents of the baronial movement of reform and rebellion, 1258–1267 (1973), 104–5, 118–19, 164–5, 170–71, 282–3 · PRO, KB26/168 m 10 · Paris, Chron., 5.656–7 · W. D. Klemperer, ‘The study of burials at Hulton Abbey’, Medieval Europe 1992: a conference on medieval archaeology in Europe [York 1992], 4: Death and burial, pre-printed papers (1992), 4 © Oxford University Press 2004–5 All rights reserved: see legal notice Oxford University Press Philip Morgan, ‘Audley family (per. c.1130-1391)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/54496, accessed 24 Sept 2005] Audley family (per. c.1130-1391): doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/54496 Liulf de Audley (fl. 1130): doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/65091 Adam de Audley (d. 1203): doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/65092 Adam de Audley (d. 1211): doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/65093 Nicholas Audley, first Lord Audley (c.1258-1299): doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/65094 Nicholas Audley, second Lord Audley (1289-1316): doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/65095 James Audley, third Lord Audley (1312-1386): doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/65096 Nicholas Audley, fourth Lord Audley (1329-1391): doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/650973 |
Family | Emma de Derleveston b. c 1150 | |
Children |
|
Last Edited | 24 Sep 2005 |
Emma de Derleveston1
F, #3185, b. circa 1150
Father* | Radulphus FitzOrm1,2 | |
Emma de Derleveston|b. c 1150|p107.htm#i3185|Radulphus FitzOrm||p209.htm#i6246||||Orme l. G. (?)||p209.htm#i6247|(Miss) de Beauchamp||p209.htm#i6248||||||| |
Birth* | circa 1150 | England1 |
Marriage* | 1170 | Principal=Adam de Aldithley1 |
Death | before November 1246 | 2 |
Family | Adam de Aldithley b. c 1145, d. bt 1203 - 1211 | |
Children |
|
Last Edited | 27 Apr 2005 |
(?) de Audley1
F, #3186
Father* | Adam de Aldithley1 b. c 1145, d. bt 1203 - 1211 | |
Mother* | Emma de Derleveston1 b. c 1150 | |
(?) de Audley||p107.htm#i3186|Adam de Aldithley|b. c 1145\nd. bt 1203 - 1211|p107.htm#i3184|Emma de Derleveston|b. c 1150|p107.htm#i3185|Liulf de Aldithley||p501.htm#i15009||||Radulphus FitzOrm||p209.htm#i6246|||| |
Last Edited | 26 Jan 2005 |
Citations
- [S218] Marlyn Lewis, Ancestry of Elizabeth of York.
John de Betetourt1
M, #3187, b. circa 1260, d. 25 November 1324
Birth* | circa 1260 | of Mendlesham, Suffolk, England1 |
Death* | 25 November 1324 | 1 |
Last Edited | 9 Mar 2003 |
Citations
- [S218] Marlyn Lewis, Ancestry of Elizabeth of York.
Roger de Somery1
M, #3188, b. 24 June 1255, d. 11 October 1291
Father* | Sir Roger de Somery1 b. c 1208, d. b 26 Aug 1273 | |
Mother* | Amabil de Chaucombe1 b. c 1210, d. c 1278 | |
Roger de Somery|b. 24 Jun 1255\nd. 11 Oct 1291|p107.htm#i3188|Sir Roger de Somery|b. c 1208\nd. b 26 Aug 1273|p59.htm#i1753|Amabil de Chaucombe|b. c 1210\nd. c 1278|p59.htm#i1754|Ralph de Somery|d. 1211|p86.htm#i2552|Margaret Marshal|d. a 1243|p86.htm#i2553|Robert de Chaucombe|b. c 1175|p59.htm#i1755|Julian Chaucomb|b. c 1170|p107.htm#i3195| |
Birth* | 24 June 1255 | 1,2 |
Marriage* | Principal=Agnes (?)3 | |
Death* | 11 October 1291 | Staffordshire, England, shortly before 11 Oct 1291.1,4 |
Arms* | D'or a deux leons d'azure (Walford). Or 2 lions passant az. (Charles, St. George, Dering).4 |
Family | Agnes (?) d. 23 Nov 1308 | |
Child |
|
Last Edited | 25 Aug 2005 |
Citations
- [S218] Marlyn Lewis, Ancestry of Elizabeth of York.
- [S347] Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans, p. 228.
- [S284] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry, Botetourt 7.
- [S325] Rev. C. Moor, Knights of Edward I, v. 4, p. 262.
- [S233] Frederick Lewis Weis, Magna Charta Sureties, 137-3.
William de Munchensi1
M, #3189, b. circa 1229, d. circa 15 May 1302
Mother | Joan de Creke2 |
Birth* | circa 1229 | 24 on 30 Jan 12543 |
Birth | 1230 | 2 |
Marriage* | before 26 June 1278 | 2nd=Beatrice de Beauchamp1,4,5,2 |
Death* | circa 15 May 1302 | 1,2 |
Feudal* | Edwardstone and Lindsey, Suffolk2 | |
Arms* | Barry arg. and az. (Charles)3 | |
Name Variation | Sir William de Montchensy4 | |
Name Variation | William de Monte Caniso5 | |
Event-Misc* | 30 January 1254 | Wm. fil. Sir Wm. de Munchanesi, 24, is heir to Ralph de la Haye, who held Legra de la Haye and Quendene, Ess., and Torringe, Suss.3 |
Event-Misc* | 21 June 1266 | Grant to him lands late of Wm. de Monte Caniso, the King's enemy., Principal=Sir William de Valence6 |
Event-Misc | 14 December 1267 | William de Monte Caniso has ransomed his lands under the Award of Kenilworth, and they are restored to him., Principal=Sir William de Valence6 |
Criminal* | 1285 | He was convicted of having sent four men of his household to murder Hugh Bukky at Castle Hedingham, and for harboring one of the murderers2 |
Event-Misc | 10 May 1286 | Pardon to him, provided he go to the Holy Land before Midsummer 1287, and remain there in God's service for ever.3 |
Event-Misc | 12 July 1288 | Livery to Wm. of his brother Thomas's lands at Lilleseye, Suff., of which he had enfeoffed him3 |
Event-Misc | 20 February 1291 | Grant to Wm. de M. of Edwardeston 100 m. p.a. from his lands, payable to the Prior of Hospitallers in England at Acre or beyond the sea, wherever he may be3 |
Event-Misc | 21 June 1297 | Pardon to him of homicide and other trespasses, and Lic. to return to the realm with restitution of all his lands3 |
Family | Beatrice de Beauchamp d. c 1281 | |
Child |
|
Last Edited | 31 Dec 2004 |
Citations
- [S218] Marlyn Lewis, Ancestry of Elizabeth of York.
- [S284] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry, Botetourt 5.
- [S325] Rev. C. Moor, Knights of Edward I, v. 3, p. 179.
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 122A-30.
- [S325] Rev. C. Moor, Knights of Edward I, v. 2, p. 49.
- [S325] Rev. C. Moor, Knights of Edward I, v. 5, p. 89.
Beatrice de Beauchamp1
F, #3190, d. circa 1281
Father* | Sir William de Beauchamp1 b. c 1185, d. a 28 Dec 1260 | |
Mother* | Idonea de Longespée1 d. b 1270 | |
Beatrice de Beauchamp|d. c 1281|p107.htm#i3190|Sir William de Beauchamp|b. c 1185\nd. a 28 Dec 1260|p107.htm#i3193|Idonea de Longespée|d. b 1270|p107.htm#i3194||||Isabella (?)||p369.htm#i11065|Sir William Longespée|b. 1176\nd. 7 Mar 1225/26|p135.htm#i4028|Ela d' Evereux|b. 1187\nd. 24 Aug 1261|p135.htm#i4029| |
Charts | Ann Marbury Pedigree |
Marriage* | before 1264 | Groom=Sir Thomas FitzOtto2,3 |
Marriage* | before 26 June 1278 | Groom=William de Munchensi1,4,5,6 |
Death* | circa 1281 | |
Death | before 30 September 1285 | 6 |
Event-Misc* | 28 October 1275 | Lic. for Beatrice de Bello Campo to marry at will5 |
Family 1 | Sir Thomas FitzOtto b. c 1231, d. b 28 Mar 1274 | |
Children |
|
Family 2 | William de Munchensi b. c 1229, d. c 15 May 1302 | |
Child |
|
Last Edited | 10 Oct 2004 |
Citations
- [S218] Marlyn Lewis, Ancestry of Elizabeth of York.
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 216-29.
- [S284] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry, Botetourt 6.
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 122A-30.
- [S325] Rev. C. Moor, Knights of Edward I, v. 2, p. 49.
- [S284] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry, Botetourt 5.
Sir William de Munchensey1
M, #3191, d. before 7 May 1204
Father* | Warin de Munchensey2 d. b 1162 | |
Mother* | Agnes FitzPayn2 b. c 1125 | |
Sir William de Munchensey|d. b 7 May 1204|p107.htm#i3191|Warin de Munchensey|d. b 1162|p533.htm#i15975|Agnes FitzPayn|b. c 1125|p533.htm#i15976|||||||Payn FitzJohn|b. b 1100\nd. 10 Jul 1137|p209.htm#i6250|Sibyl Talbot|d. a 10 Jul 1137|p209.htm#i6251| |
Of | Swanscombe, Kent3 | |
Marriage* | before 1186 | 1st=Aveline de Clare1,4,5 |
Death* | before 7 May 1204 | 6 |
Family | Aveline de Clare b. c 1172, d. b 4 Jun 1225 | |
Children |
|
Last Edited | 26 Jun 2005 |
Citations
- [S218] Marlyn Lewis, Ancestry of Elizabeth of York.
- [S347] Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans, p. 174.
- [S347] Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans, p. 175.
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 246C-27.
- [S233] Frederick Lewis Weis, Magna Charta Sureties, 160-3.
- [S347] Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans, p. 53.
- [S325] Rev. C. Moor, Knights of Edward I, v. 3, p. 179.
Aveline de Clare1
F, #3192, b. circa 1172, d. before 4 June 1225
Father* | Roger de Clare1,2,3 b. c 1116, d. 1173 | |
Mother* | Maud de St. Hilary1,4,3 b. c 1132 | |
Aveline de Clare|b. c 1172\nd. b 4 Jun 1225|p107.htm#i3192|Roger de Clare|b. c 1116\nd. 1173|p86.htm#i2569|Maud de St. Hilary|b. c 1132|p86.htm#i2566|Richard F. de Clare|b. c 1090\nd. 15 Apr 1136|p116.htm#i3467|Alice of Chester||p116.htm#i3468|James de St. Hilary|b. c 1110\nd. c 1154|p86.htm#i2567|Aveline (?)||p86.htm#i2568| |
Birth* | circa 1172 | of Hereford, Herefordshire, England1 |
Marriage* | before 1186 | Groom=Sir William de Munchensey1,5,6 |
Marriage* | before 20 May 1205 | Groom=Sir Geoffrey FitzPiers1,4,7 |
Death* | before 4 June 1225 | 1,4 |
Living* | 22 November 1220 | 8 |
Family 1 | Sir William de Munchensey d. b 7 May 1204 | |
Children |
|
Family 2 | Sir Geoffrey FitzPiers b. 1165, d. 14 Oct 1213 | |
Children |
|
Last Edited | 9 Sep 2005 |
Citations
- [S218] Marlyn Lewis, Ancestry of Elizabeth of York.
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 246B-26.
- [S233] Frederick Lewis Weis, Magna Charta Sureties, 153A-4.
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 246B-27.
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 246C-27.
- [S233] Frederick Lewis Weis, Magna Charta Sureties, 160-3.
- [S233] Frederick Lewis Weis, Magna Charta Sureties, 4-3.
- [S347] Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans, p. 53.
- [S325] Rev. C. Moor, Knights of Edward I, v. 3, p. 179.
- [S347] Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans, p. 175.
- [S347] Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans, p. 88.
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 246C-28.
- [S374] Douglas Richardson, Magna Carta Ancestry, Verdun 3.
- [S233] Frederick Lewis Weis, Magna Charta Sureties, 153A-5.
Sir William de Beauchamp1
M, #3193, b. circa 1185, d. after 28 December 1260
Mother* | Isabella (?)2 | |
Sir William de Beauchamp|b. c 1185\nd. a 28 Dec 1260|p107.htm#i3193||||Isabella (?)||p369.htm#i11065||||||||||||| |
Charts | Ann Marbury Pedigree |
Birth* | circa 1185 | 1,2 |
Marriage* | before 1207 | Bride=Gunnor de Lanvalay3 |
Marriage* | circa January 1220 | 2nd=Idonea de Longespée1,2,4 |
Death* | after 28 December 1260 | 2,3 |
(Witness) DNB | Beauchamp, de, family (per. c.1080-c.1265), gentry, held a modest barony of about forty-five knights' fees, predominantly in Bedfordshire, with some land in Buckinghamshire, Hertfordshire, Cambridgeshire, Essex, and Huntingdonshire. The family exercised a local dominance in Bedfordshire, but was only occasionally prominent on the national stage. No connection has been found to the Beauchamps of Worcester. The family was first represented by Hugh de Beauchamp (fl. 1080-c.1118), presumably of Norman origin, who acquired his lands and position through marriage to Matilda, apparently the daughter and heir of Ralf Tallebosc, post-conquest castellan of Bedford and sheriff of Bedfordshire, and Azelina, who held lands in Bedfordshire and Cambridgeshire in her own right. Information for the early twelfth century is scarce, but Hugh seems to have had at least two sons, Simon and Robert. Simon [i] de Beauchamp (d. 1136/7), who witnessed King Stephen's charter of liberties as royal steward in 1136, was probably the eldest son and heir to the barony. His daughter married Hugh Poer, who was granted the honour and castle of Bedford and created earl by King Stephen, to the anger of Robert's sons, who believed they were being deprived of their rightful inheritance. The elder son, Miles de Beauchamp (d. 1142x53), tried unsuccessfully to turn Stephen's problems to his advantage, promising to support Stephen if he did not try to remove him from Bedford Castle, but he was forced out after a siege at Christmas 1137. In 1141 Miles and his followers recovered the castle, ‘as triumphant and fierce as they had once been humble and downcast’ (Gesta Stephani, 33), only to lose it once again before both barony and castle were returned to the Beauchamps by Henry II. Miles's brother and heir, Payn de Beauchamp (d. in or before 1155), was both outlived and overshadowed by his wife, Rohese [Rose] de Beauchamp (d. 1166). The daughter of Aubrey (II) de Vere (d. 1141), she had previously been married to the powerful Geoffrey de Mandeville, first earl of Essex (d. 1144). The connection between the two families remained close for some time, with the Beauchamps adopting a variation of the Mandeville arms. In common with most of their contemporaries the earlier Beauchamps had already made grants to religious houses, including St Albans and Bermondsey, but the Beauchamps' patronage of the church now moved onto a new plane with the foundation of a priory for Gilbertine nuns at Chicksands, Bedfordshire, c.1150. Although her husband, Payn, was associated with her in early charters, Rohese was always spoken of as the founder. Her support for the priory and her forceful personality were vividly illustrated by her response to the death of her son from her first marriage, Geoffrey de Mandeville. After his death his men tried to take his body to Walden, Essex, for burial at the abbey founded by his father. On hearing this Rohese gathered a band of armed retainers and caught up with the cortège, ordering it to go instead to Chicksands. However, early the next morning her son's servants turned the bier around and took it to Walden Abbey before Rohese could prevent it. Thwarted in her efforts to have her son's body in her own chosen burial place, Rohese retaliated by taking all the furnishings of Geoffrey's private chapel for Chicksands. Rohese was also closely involved in the early stages of the foundation (c.1166) of Newnham Priory by her son Simon [ii] de Beauchamp (c.1145-1206/7). This conversion of the college of secular canons at St Paul's, Bedford, into a community of regular Augustinian canons was part of the widespread contemporary movement towards the regular monastic orders. It has traditionally been linked with the case of Philip de Broy, a canon of Bedford accused of homicide. The failure of the church courts to deal adequately with his case was one of the grievances of Henry II against Thomas Becket, and this notorious incident may have acted as a catalyst by attracting attention to Bedford. Simon was a generous patron of the church; he made several additions to Newnham's original endowment, and also made grants to Warden Abbey, Chicksands Priory, and the hospital of St John at Bedford. Simon [ii] de Beauchamp held the Bedford barony for over fifty years, including a nine-year minority. The Beauchamp family clearly had a claim to be hereditary constables of Bedford Castle, but it was not acknowledged as a formality: in 1189/90 Simon had to pay £100 for custody of the castle. From 1194 to 1197 he served as sheriff of Bedfordshire and Buckinghamshire, but only after paying 200 marks for the privilege. Simon was succeeded by his son, William de Beauchamp (c.1185-1260), who served in the royal army in Ireland in 1210 and Poitou in 1214, but who joined the rebels in 1215 and was excommunicated by Pope Innocent III. Captured at the battle of Lincoln, he was soon restored to favour. Bedford Castle, however, had been taken by Falkes de Bréauté in December 1215. Following his fall from power, Bréauté was forced out after a siege in 1224, and the castle partially demolished. It was returned to William on condition that he maintain only an unfortified residence there. In his later years, William served as a baron of the exchequer, as sheriff of Bedfordshire and Buckinghamshire, and as hereditary almoner at the coronation of Henry and Eleanor in 1236. He married first Gunnora de Lanvaley (d. before 1220), and second, Ida (d. 1266×9), daughter of William Longespée, earl of Salisbury. William was praised in the Flores historiarum as a benefactor of the church, but with Ida he became involved in disputes with Newnham Priory and Warden Abbey. His younger brother Geoffrey was also to be found in the king's service; he fought in both Wales and Gascony, and served as provost of Bayonne in 1253–4. Clearly another forceful woman, after her husband's death Ida raided Simon of Pattishall's manor of Little Crawley, Buckinghamshire. Marriage to Ida brought William the manor of Newport Pagnell and patronage of the priory there, which she held as dower from her first marriage to Ralph de Somery. The temporary nature of this acquisition is typical of the Beauchamp family, whose land holdings remained virtually constant throughout the twelfth and thirteenth centuries. In 1257 William surrendered his barony to his third son William de Beauchamp (d. 1262), his elder sons John and Simon [iii] having predeceased him. He died at an advanced age in 1260. The younger William held the barony for only five years until his death, reputedly by poison, after which the Beauchamp lands were in wardship while his brother and heir John de Beauchamp (b. after 1241, d. 1265) was a minor. John was killed fighting for Simon de Montfort at the battle of Evesham on 4 August 1265. His niece and heir Joan, Simon [iii]'s daughter, died soon after. Of John's three sisters, Matilda (d. by 1275) married first Roger de Mowbray and second Roger Lestrange (d. 1311), Ela married Baldwin de Wake, and Beatrice married first Thomas fitz Otto and second William de Munchensi, of Edwardstone, Suffolk. The barony was broken up by division between the sisters and their heirs. The Beauchamp family arms were quarterly or and gules, a bend gules. Kathryn Faulkner Sources C. Gore Chambers and G. H. Fowler, The Beauchamps, barons of Bedford, Bedfordshire Historical RS, 1 (1913), 1–24 · J. Godber, ed., The cartulary of Newnham Priory, 1 vol. in 2 pts, Bedfordshire Historical RS, 43 (1963–4) · G. H. Fowler, Early charters of the priory of Chicksand, Bedfordshire Historical RS, 1 (1913), 101–23 · VCH Bedfordshire · J. Godber, History of Bedfordshire, 1066–1888 (1969) · Chancery records · Pipe rolls · Ann. mon., vol. 3 · Paris, Chron. · K. R. Potter and R. H. C. Davis, eds., Gesta Stephani, OMT (1976) · H. R. Luard, ed., Flores historiarum, 3 vols., Rolls Series, 95 (1890) · CIPM, 1, no. 516 · Calendar of inquisitions miscellaneous (chancery), PRO, 1 (1916), 612–13, 629, 936 © Oxford University Press 2004–5 All rights reserved: see legal notice Oxford University Press Kathryn Faulkner, ‘Beauchamp, de, family (per. c.1080-c.1265)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/54497, accessed 24 Sept 2005] de Beauchamp (per. c.1080-c.1265): doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/54497 Hugh de Beauchamp (fl. 1080-c.1118): doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/61191 Simon de Beauchamp [i] (d. 1136/7): doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/61192 Miles de Beauchamp (d. 1142x53): doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/61193 Payn de Beauchamp (d. in or before 1155): doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/61194 Rohese de Beauchamp (d. 1166): doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/61195 Simon de Beauchamp [ii] (c.1145-1206/7): doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/61196 William de Beauchamp (d. 1262): doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/61198 John de Beauchamp (b. after 1241, d. 1265): doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/61199, Principal=Hugh de Beauchamp5 | |
Event-Misc* | 1214 | He took part in King John's expedition to Poitou3 |
Excommunication* | December 1215 | 3 |
Event-Misc | May 1217 | He was taken prisoner by Royal forces at Lincoln, but made his peace by the end of the year.3 |
Event-Misc | from 1244 to 1245 | He was with the army in Wales3 |
Title* | Baron of the Exchequer, Hereditary Grand Almoner, Sheriff of Bedford and Buckshire.2,3 |
Family 1 | Gunnor de Lanvalay | |
Child |
|
Family 2 | Idonea de Longespée d. b 1270 | |
Children |
|
Last Edited | 24 Sep 2005 |
Idonea de Longespée1
F, #3194, d. before 1270
Father* | Sir William Longespée1,2,3 b. 1176, d. 7 Mar 1225/26 | |
Mother* | Ela d' Evereux1,4 b. 1187, d. 24 Aug 1261 | |
Idonea de Longespée|d. b 1270|p107.htm#i3194|Sir William Longespée|b. 1176\nd. 7 Mar 1225/26|p135.htm#i4028|Ela d' Evereux|b. 1187\nd. 24 Aug 1261|p135.htm#i4029|Henry I. Curtmantel|b. 5 Mar 1132/33\nd. 6 Jul 1189|p55.htm#i1622|Ida de Tony||p70.htm#i2076|William d' Evereux|b. c 1150\nd. 17 Apr 1196|p135.htm#i4031|Eleanor de Vitré|b. c 1145\nd. bt 31 May 1232 - 12 Aug 1233|p135.htm#i4032| |
Charts | Ann Marbury Pedigree |
Marriage* | without issue, Groom=Ralph de Somery5 | |
Marriage* | circa January 1220 | 2nd=Sir William de Beauchamp1,4,5 |
Death* | before 1270 | 1,4,6 |
Name Variation | Ida7 | |
Event-Misc* | after 1260 | Claiming her dower, she raided the manor of Little Crawley, Buckshire, pulled down houses, cut down tress, and did other enormous damage, for which she was fined.6 |
Family | Sir William de Beauchamp b. c 1185, d. a 28 Dec 1260 | |
Children |
|
Last Edited | 17 Nov 2004 |
Citations
- [S218] Marlyn Lewis, Ancestry of Elizabeth of York.
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 30-27.
- [S284] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry, Longespee 3.
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 122A-29.
- [S284] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry, Botetourt 5.
- [S284] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry, Mowbray 4.
- [S285] Leo van de Pas, 30 Jun 2004.
Julian Chaucomb1
F, #3195, b. circa 1170
Birth* | circa 1170 | 1 |
Marriage* | Principal=Robert de Chaucombe1 |
Family | Robert de Chaucombe b. c 1175 | |
Children |
|
Last Edited | 24 Oct 2003 |
Citations
- [S218] Marlyn Lewis, Ancestry of Elizabeth of York.
Eudo la Zouche1
M, #3196, d. between 28 April 1279 and 25 June 1279
Father* | Roger la Zouche2,3 b. c 1175, d. b 14 May 1238 | |
Mother* | Margaret (?)2 b. c 1179, d. a 28 Jan 1232 | |
Eudo la Zouche|d. bt 28 Apr 1279 - 25 Jun 1279|p107.htm#i3196|Roger la Zouche|b. c 1175\nd. b 14 May 1238|p99.htm#i2970|Margaret (?)|b. c 1179\nd. a 28 Jan 1232|p134.htm#i4013|Alan la Zouche|b. c 1136\nd. 1190|p134.htm#i4014|Adeline de Belmeis|b. c 1136\nd. a 1190|p134.htm#i4015||||||| |
Of* | Ashby, Leicestershire, England2 | |
Marriage* | before 13 December 1273 | 2nd=Millicent Canteloupe1,4 |
Death* | between 28 April 1279 and 25 June 1279 | | leaving son and heir William la Zouche2,5,6 |
Arms* | Gu. bezanty, a canton erm. (St. George).6 | |
Name Variation | Eudes la Zouche2 | |
Name Variation | Eon4 | |
Event-Misc* | 1 March 1274 | Livery to Eudo la Zouche and wife Milicent, sister coheir of Geo. de Cantilupo, manors late of said George at Eyton, Houton in Beds., Haringworth, Beruby, Rowell, and Bolewik, Northants., Bridgewater and Edenworth, Som., Calston, Bridmerston, Roele, and Calne, Wilts., Corneworthy, Darthmouth, and Totness, Devon, Moles-Bracy, Salop, Stok St. Edwald, Dors., Hamme, Bucks., Byngele, Yorks., Baseford, Notts., and Hereford, Principal=Millicent Canteloupe6 |
Family | Millicent Canteloupe d. c 1299 | |
Children |
|
Last Edited | 24 Apr 2005 |
Citations
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 39-29.
- [S218] Marlyn Lewis, Ancestry of Elizabeth of York.
- [S301] Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Robert Abell, p. 271.
- [S338] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 8th ed., 39-29.
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 39-28.
- [S325] Rev. C. Moor, Knights of Edward I, v. 5, p. 221.
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 39-30.
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 38-29.
- [S325] Rev. C. Moor, Knights of Edward I, v. 5, p. 222.
Petronilla de Lacey1
F, #3197, d. after 1288
Father* | Walter de Lacy1,2 b. c 1172, d. Feb 1241 | |
Mother* | Margaret de Braiose1 b. c 1177, d. 19 Nov 1200 | |
Petronilla de Lacey|d. a 1288|p107.htm#i3197|Walter de Lacy|b. c 1172\nd. Feb 1241|p89.htm#i2667|Margaret de Braiose|b. c 1177\nd. 19 Nov 1200|p89.htm#i2668|Hugh de Lacey|d. 25 Jul 1185|p210.htm#i6300|Rose of Monmouth||p211.htm#i6301|William de Braiose|b. c 1144\nd. 9 Aug 1211|p89.htm#i2669|Maud St. Valery "Lady of La Haie"|b. c 1148\nd. 1210|p89.htm#i2670| |
Marriage* | Principal=Ralph VI de Toeni2 | |
Birth* | Dublin, Ireland1 | |
Death* | after 1288 | 1 |
Last Edited | 5 Jun 2005 |
Elizabeth de Burgh1,2
F, #3198, d. 26 October 1327
Father* | Richard de Burgh1 b. 1259, d. 24 Jun 1326 | |
Mother* | Margaret of Guines (?)1 b. c 1262, d. bt 1303 - 1304 | |
Elizabeth de Burgh|d. 26 Oct 1327|p107.htm#i3198|Richard de Burgh|b. 1259\nd. 24 Jun 1326|p107.htm#i3208|Margaret of Guines (?)|b. c 1262\nd. bt 1303 - 1304|p107.htm#i3199|Walter de Burgh|b. 1232\nd. 28 Jul 1271|p106.htm#i3165|Aveline FitzJohn|b. c 1238\nd. c 20 May 1274|p106.htm#i3166|Arnold I. (?)|b. c 1216\nd. 1283|p227.htm#i6808|Alix d. Coucy|b. c 1219|p287.htm#i8586| |
Death* | 26 October 1327 | Cullen, Scotland1 |
Burial* | Dunfermline, Scotland1 |
Last Edited | 2 Aug 2004 |
Margaret of Guines (?)1
F, #3199, b. circa 1262, d. between 1303 and 1304
Father* | Arnold III (?)1 b. c 1216, d. 1283 | |
Mother* | Alix de Coucy1 b. c 1219 | |
Father | Sir John de Burgh1 d. c 3 Mar 1279/80 | |
Mother | Cecily de Baliol1 d. b 1273 | |
Margaret of Guines (?)|b. c 1262\nd. bt 1303 - 1304|p107.htm#i3199|Arnold III (?)|b. c 1216\nd. 1283|p227.htm#i6808|Alix de Coucy|b. c 1219|p287.htm#i8586|Baldwin I. (?)|d. 1244|p332.htm#i9943|Mahaut de Fiennes de Guines|d. a 1244|p227.htm#i6809|Enguerrand I. d. Coucy|b. c 1182\nd. 1242|p297.htm#i8896|Marie d. Montmirail|b. c 1184\nd. 20 Sep 1272|p297.htm#i8897| |
Birth* | circa 1262 | 1 |
Marriage | before 27 February 1281 | Principal=Richard de Burgh1,2 |
Death* | between 1303 and 1304 | 1 |
Name Variation | Margaret Burgh1 |
Family | Richard de Burgh b. 1259, d. 24 Jun 1326 | |
Children |
|
Last Edited | 2 Aug 2004 |
Sir John de Burgh1
M, #3200, d. circa 3 March 1279/80
Father* | John de Burgh1,2 b. 1210, d. 1275 | |
Mother* | Hawise de Lanvallei1,2 d. 1249 | |
Sir John de Burgh|d. c 3 Mar 1279/80|p107.htm#i3200|John de Burgh|b. 1210\nd. 1275|p107.htm#i3202|Hawise de Lanvallei|d. 1249|p107.htm#i3203|Hubert de Burgh|b. 1175\nd. 4 May 1243|p107.htm#i3204|Margaret de Arsic||p107.htm#i3205|William I. d. Lanvallei|b. c 1195\nd. 1217|p107.htm#i3206|Hawise Basset||p107.htm#i3207| |
Marriage* | Principal=Cecily de Baliol1,3,4 | |
Death* | circa 3 March 1279/80 | 1,4 |
Family | Cecily de Baliol d. b 1273 | |
Children |
|
Last Edited | 19 Jun 2005 |
Cecily de Baliol1
F, #3201, d. before 1273
Father* | Sir John de Baliol1,2 d. 27 Oct 1268 | |
Mother* | Devorguilla of Galloway1,3,2 d. 28 Jan 1289/90 | |
Cecily de Baliol|d. b 1273|p107.htm#i3201|Sir John de Baliol|d. 27 Oct 1268|p91.htm#i2725|Devorguilla of Galloway|d. 28 Jan 1289/90|p91.htm#i2726|Hugh de Baliol|b. c 1182\nd. c 2 May 1229|p106.htm#i3167|Cicely de Fontaines|b. c 1186|p106.htm#i3168|Alan of Galloway|b. c 1170\nd. 1234|p64.htm#i1914|Margaret of Huntingdon|d. Epiphany 1233|p106.htm#i3180| |
Marriage* | Principal=Sir John de Burgh1,3,2 | |
Death* | before 1273 | 1,3,2 |
Family | Sir John de Burgh d. c 3 Mar 1279/80 | |
Children |
|
Last Edited | 19 Jun 2005 |
John de Burgh1
M, #3202, b. 1210, d. 1275
Father* | Hubert de Burgh1 b. 1175, d. 4 May 1243 | |
Mother* | Margaret de Arsic1 | |
John de Burgh|b. 1210\nd. 1275|p107.htm#i3202|Hubert de Burgh|b. 1175\nd. 4 May 1243|p107.htm#i3204|Margaret de Arsic||p107.htm#i3205|John d. Burgh||p148.htm#i4420||||Robert d. Arsic||p148.htm#i4421|||| |
Birth* | 1210 | 1,2 |
Marriage* | Principal=Hawise de Lanvallei1,2 | |
Death* | 1275 | 1,2 |
Event-Misc* | 24 December 1264 | King sends Jn. de Burgo, sen, to conduct Ralph FitzRanulph to the King., Principal=Sir Ralph FitzRanulph3 |
Family | Hawise de Lanvallei d. 1249 | |
Child |
|
Last Edited | 19 Jun 2005 |
Hawise de Lanvallei1
F, #3203, d. 1249
Father* | William III de Lanvallei1 b. c 1195, d. 1217 | |
Mother* | Hawise Basset1 | |
Hawise de Lanvallei|d. 1249|p107.htm#i3203|William III de Lanvallei|b. c 1195\nd. 1217|p107.htm#i3206|Hawise Basset||p107.htm#i3207|William I. d. Lanvallei|d. b 18 May 1205|p148.htm#i4422|Hawise de Bocland|d. b 19 Jul 1233|p148.htm#i4423|Alan Basset|b. c 1155\nd. 1233|p210.htm#i6279|Aline de Gay|b. c 1159|p210.htm#i6280| |
Marriage* | Principal=John de Burgh1,2 | |
Death* | 1249 | 1,2 |
Burial* | Chapter House, Colchester1 |
Family | John de Burgh b. 1210, d. 1275 | |
Child |
|
Last Edited | 19 Jun 2005 |
Hubert de Burgh1
M, #3204, b. 1175, d. 4 May 1243
Father* | John de Burgh1 | |
Hubert de Burgh|b. 1175\nd. 4 May 1243|p107.htm#i3204|John de Burgh||p148.htm#i4420||||William d. Burgo de Moreton|b. b 1084\nd. a 1140|p115.htm#i3433|Isabel FitzRichard||p115.htm#i3434||||||| |
Birth* | 1175 | 1 |
Marriage* | 1217 | 3rd=Isabel of Gloucester (?)1 |
Marriage* | June 1221 | York, Yorkshire, England, Principal=Margaret of Scotland1 |
Marriage* | Principal=Margaret de Arsic1 | |
Death* | 4 May 1243 | Banstade, Surrey, England1 |
Burial* | Church of the Black Friars, London, England1 | |
Note* | Boyer says William was Hubert's elder brother, Principal=William de Burgh2 | |
Event-Misc* | August 1217 | William Longespée and Hubert de Burgh participated in the victory over the French fleet off Thanet., Principal=Sir William Longespée3 |
(Witness) Event-Misc | July 1227 | He supported Richard, Earl of Cornwall in a dispute with Henry III over the forest laws and misgovernment by Hubert de Burgh, Principal=Sir Gilbert de Clare4 |
Event-Misc* | 1232 | John de Lacy was the King's commissioner against Hubert de Burgh, who lost his post as Judiciar in July, Principal=John de Lacy5 |
Event-Misc* | 8 August 1232 | Hubert de Burgh fell and was ordered to hand over Dover and the Tower of London to Stephen de Segrave, the new justiciar, Principal=Sir Stephen de Segrave6 |
Event-Misc | 9 December 1233 | He was given custody of the castle of Oswestry, but was subject to the King's wrath when he let Hubert de Burgh escape., Principal=John de Lacy5 |
Family 1 | Margaret of Scotland d. 17 Nov 1244 | |
Child |
Family 2 | Margaret de Arsic | |
Child |
|
Last Edited | 10 Jul 2005 |
Citations
- [S218] Marlyn Lewis, Ancestry of Elizabeth of York.
- [S301] Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Robert Abell, p. 41.
- [S284] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry, Longespée 3.
- [S347] Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans, p. 55.
- [S347] Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans, p. 121.
- [S301] Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Robert Abell, p. 217.
- [S301] Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Robert Abell, p. 59.
Margaret de Arsic1
F, #3205
Father* | Robert de Arsic1 | |
Margaret de Arsic||p107.htm#i3205|Robert de Arsic||p148.htm#i4421|||||||||||||||| |
Marriage* | Principal=Hubert de Burgh1 |
Family | Hubert de Burgh b. 1175, d. 4 May 1243 | |
Child |
|
Last Edited | 19 Jun 2005 |
Citations
- [S218] Marlyn Lewis, Ancestry of Elizabeth of York.
William III de Lanvallei1
M, #3206, b. circa 1195, d. 1217
Father* | William II de Lanvallei1,2 d. b 18 May 1205 | |
Mother* | Hawise de Bocland1,2 d. b 19 Jul 1233 | |
William III de Lanvallei|b. c 1195\nd. 1217|p107.htm#i3206|William II de Lanvallei|d. b 18 May 1205|p148.htm#i4422|Hawise de Bocland|d. b 19 Jul 1233|p148.htm#i4423|William Lanvallei||p148.htm#i4424|Gunnora St. Clair||p148.htm#i4425|Hugh d. Bocland|d. a 1176|p308.htm#i9235|Maud de Mandeville|b. c 1138|p116.htm#i3464| |
Birth* | circa 1195 | of Lexden1 |
Marriage* | 1212 | Principal=Hawise Basset1,2 |
Death* | 1217 | of Great Bromley, Essex, England1,2 |
Burial* | Chapter House, Colcester1 | |
Event-Misc* | 15 June 1215 | Runningmede, England, a Magna Charta Surety2 |
Family | Hawise Basset | |
Child |
|
Last Edited | 19 Jun 2005 |
Hawise Basset1
F, #3207
Father* | Alan Basset1 b. c 1155, d. 1233 | |
Mother* | Aline de Gay1 b. c 1159 | |
Hawise Basset||p107.htm#i3207|Alan Basset|b. c 1155\nd. 1233|p210.htm#i6279|Aline de Gay|b. c 1159|p210.htm#i6280|Thomas Bassett|d. c Feb 1181|p210.htm#i6282|Adeliza Dunstanville|d. a 1186|p210.htm#i6283|Steven de Gay||p210.htm#i6284|Aline Pippard||p210.htm#i6285| |
Marriage* | 1212 | Principal=William III de Lanvallei1,2 |
Burial* | Chapter House, Colchester1 |
Family | William III de Lanvallei b. c 1195, d. 1217 | |
Child |
|
Last Edited | 24 Oct 2003 |
Richard de Burgh1
M, #3208, b. 1259, d. 24 June 1326
Father* | Walter de Burgh b. 1232, d. 28 Jul 1271; son and heir1,2 | |
Mother* | Aveline FitzJohn1 b. c 1238, d. c 20 May 1274 | |
Richard de Burgh|b. 1259\nd. 24 Jun 1326|p107.htm#i3208|Walter de Burgh|b. 1232\nd. 28 Jul 1271|p106.htm#i3165|Aveline FitzJohn|b. c 1238\nd. c 20 May 1274|p106.htm#i3166|Richard de Burgh|b. c 1200\nd. c 17 Feb 1243|p92.htm#i2741|Egidia de Lacy|b. c 1200|p229.htm#i6860|Sir John FitzGeoffrey|b. c 1205\nd. 23 Nov 1258|p70.htm#i2079|Isabel Bigod|b. c 1210|p70.htm#i2078| |
Birth* | 1259 | 1 |
Marriage* | before 27 February 1281 | Principal=Margaret of Guines (?)1,3 |
Death* | 24 June 1326 | 4 |
Death | 29 July 1326 | Athassel1 |
Title* | Earl of Ulster5 | |
Arms* | Lozengy vair and gu. (M. Paris I).2 | |
Event-Misc* | 5 January 1280 | Granted, in the belief that he is of full or nearly full age, seisin of all his father's Irish lands.2 |
Event-Misc | December 1280 | Was the King's yeoman2 |
Event-Misc | 27 February 1281 | Quittance of 500m., at request of his w. Margaret (P.R.)2 |
Protection* | 15 February 1282 | to England to stay with the King4 |
Event-Misc | 2 July 1283 | Queen Eleanor gave to him and wife Margaret, Rotenche Manor, Ireland4 |
Event-Misc | 4 June 1290 | He surrendered the Isle of Man to the King4 |
Event-Misc* | 1294 | Sir John FitzThomas FitzGerald took captive Richard de Burgh, Earl of Ulster, but was force to release him by the outcry in Ireland, Principal=Sir John FitzThomas FitzGerald Knt.5 |
Summoned* | 1 September 1294 | serve against France4 |
Event-Misc | 1298 | Sir John and Earl Richard made peace, Principal=Sir John FitzThomas FitzGerald Knt.5 |
Summoned | 1308 | the English Parliament4 |
Occupation* | 15 June 1308 | Chief Governor in Ireland4 |
Feudal* | 16 December 1310 | the Manors of Clontarf and Kilsaran, Ireland4 |
Family | Margaret of Guines (?) b. c 1262, d. bt 1303 - 1304 | |
Children |
|
Last Edited | 3 Apr 2005 |
Citations
- [S218] Marlyn Lewis, Ancestry of Elizabeth of York.
- [S325] Rev. C. Moor, Knights of Edward I, p. 161.
- [S285] Leo van de Pas, 30 Jun 2004.
- [S325] Rev. C. Moor, Knights of Edward I, p. 162.
- [S301] Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Robert Abell, p. 114.
- [S285] Leo van de Pas, 30 Jun 2004, p. 32.
Eleanor Montfort1
F, #3209, b. 1252, d. June 1282
Father* | Simon VI de Montfort1 b. c 1208, d. 4 Aug 1265 | |
Mother* | Eleanor of England1 b. c 1215, d. 13 Apr 1275 | |
Eleanor Montfort|b. 1252\nd. Jun 1282|p107.htm#i3209|Simon VI de Montfort|b. c 1208\nd. 4 Aug 1265|p109.htm#i3253|Eleanor of England|b. c 1215\nd. 13 Apr 1275|p109.htm#i3254|Simon V. Montfort|b. 1170\nd. 25 Jun 1218|p268.htm#i8014|Alice d. Montmorency Montfort/|d. 24 Feb 1221|p268.htm#i8015|John Lackland|b. 27 Dec 1166\nd. 19 Oct 1216|p54.htm#i1620|Isabella of Angoulême|b. 1188\nd. 31 May 1246|p55.htm#i1621| |
Birth* | 1252 | Kenilworth1 |
Death* | June 1282 | Llanfaes, Wales1 |
Last Edited | 14 Oct 2003 |
Citations
- [S218] Marlyn Lewis, Ancestry of Elizabeth of York.
Melmare (?)1
M, #3210
Father* | Duncan I MacCrinan1 b. c 1001, d. 14 Aug 1040 | |
Mother* | Sibel (?)1 b. c 1009 | |
Melmare (?)||p107.htm#i3210|Duncan I MacCrinan|b. c 1001\nd. 14 Aug 1040|p98.htm#i2915|Sibel (?)|b. c 1009|p114.htm#i3404|Crinan (?) "the Thane"|b. 978\nd. 1045|p98.htm#i2918|Bethoc MacMalcolm|b. c 984|p98.htm#i2919|Siward of Northumberland|b. c 1020\nd. 1055|p85.htm#i2547|||| |
Last Edited | 24 Oct 2003 |
Citations
- [S218] Marlyn Lewis, Ancestry of Elizabeth of York.
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