Nicholas Greene1
M, #1891
Father* | Sir Henry Greene de Boketon1 | |
Mother* | Catharine de Drayton1 | |
Nicholas Greene||p64.htm#i1891|Sir Henry Greene de Boketon||p63.htm#i1884|Catharine de Drayton||p63.htm#i1885|Sir Thomas Greene de Boketon, M.P.|b. 1280|p64.htm#i1896|Lucy la Zouche||p64.htm#i1897|Sir John de Drayton|d. b 22 Jan 1292|p63.htm#i1886|Philippa de Ardene||p65.htm#i1921| |
Last Edited | 24 Oct 2003 |
Citations
- [S78] Louise Brownell Clarke, Greenes of Rhode Island, p. 7.
Amabilia Greene1
F, #1892
Father* | Sir Henry Greene de Boketon1 | |
Mother* | Catharine de Drayton1 | |
Amabilia Greene||p64.htm#i1892|Sir Henry Greene de Boketon||p63.htm#i1884|Catharine de Drayton||p63.htm#i1885|Sir Thomas Greene de Boketon, M.P.|b. 1280|p64.htm#i1896|Lucy la Zouche||p64.htm#i1897|Sir John de Drayton|d. b 22 Jan 1292|p63.htm#i1886|Philippa de Ardene||p65.htm#i1921| |
Married Name | Reynes1 |
Last Edited | 24 Oct 2003 |
Citations
- [S78] Louise Brownell Clarke, Greenes of Rhode Island, p. 7.
Margaret Greene1
F, #1894
Father* | Sir Henry Greene de Boketon1 | |
Mother* | Catharine de Drayton1 | |
Margaret Greene||p64.htm#i1894|Sir Henry Greene de Boketon||p63.htm#i1884|Catharine de Drayton||p63.htm#i1885|Sir Thomas Greene de Boketon, M.P.|b. 1280|p64.htm#i1896|Lucy la Zouche||p64.htm#i1897|Sir John de Drayton|d. b 22 Jan 1292|p63.htm#i1886|Philippa de Ardene||p65.htm#i1921| |
Married Name | Zouche1 |
Last Edited | 24 Oct 2003 |
Citations
- [S78] Louise Brownell Clarke, Greenes of Rhode Island, p. 7.
Sir Thomas Greene de Boketon, M.P.1
M, #1896, b. 1280
Father* | Sir Thomas de Boketon1 | |
Mother* | Alice de Boltesham1 | |
Sir Thomas Greene de Boketon, M.P.|b. 1280|p64.htm#i1896|Sir Thomas de Boketon||p64.htm#i1905|Alice de Boltesham||p64.htm#i1906|John de Boketon||p64.htm#i1908||||Sir Thomas de Boltesham|d. 25 Jun 1305|p64.htm#i1907|Senicla (?)||p459.htm#i13757| |
Charts | Ann Marbury Pedigree |
Birth* | 1280 | (age 12 at death of grandfather, Sir Thomas de Boltesham.)2 |
Birth | 1292 | 1 |
Marriage* | Principal=Lucy la Zouche1 | |
Burial* | Boughton, Northamptonshire, England1 | |
Occupation* | from 1336 to 1343 | Northamptonshire, England, Member of Parliament1 |
Family 1 | ||
Child |
Family 2 | Lucy la Zouche | |
Child |
Last Edited | 26 Aug 2004 |
Lucy la Zouche1
F, #1897
Father* | Eudo la Zouche1 | |
Lucy la Zouche||p64.htm#i1897|Eudo la Zouche||p64.htm#i1898||||Sir Alan la Zouche|b. c 1205\nd. 10 Aug 1269|p64.htm#i1900|Elene de Quincy|b. c 1222\nd. b 20 Aug 1296|p64.htm#i1911||||||| |
Charts | Ann Marbury Pedigree |
Marriage* | Principal=Sir Thomas Greene de Boketon, M.P.1 | |
Married Name | Greene1 |
Family | Sir Thomas Greene de Boketon, M.P. b. 1280 | |
Child |
Last Edited | 24 Oct 2003 |
Citations
- [S78] Louise Brownell Clarke, Greenes of Rhode Island, p. 5.
Eudo la Zouche1
M, #1898
Father* | Sir Alan la Zouche1 b. c 1205, d. 10 Aug 1269 | |
Mother* | Elene de Quincy2 b. c 1222, d. b 20 Aug 1296 | |
Eudo la Zouche||p64.htm#i1898|Sir Alan la Zouche|b. c 1205\nd. 10 Aug 1269|p64.htm#i1900|Elene de Quincy|b. c 1222\nd. b 20 Aug 1296|p64.htm#i1911|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|Sir Roger de Quincy|b. c 1195\nd. 25 Apr 1264|p64.htm#i1912|Helene of Galloway|b. c 1196\nd. a 21 Nov 1245|p64.htm#i1913| |
Charts | Ann Marbury Pedigree |
HTML* | Eudo la Zouche |
Family | ||
Child |
Last Edited | 5 Jan 2005 |
Millicent Canteloupe1
F, #1899, d. circa 1299
Father* | Sir William de Cantalupe2 b. c 1217, d. 25 Sep 1254 | |
Mother* | Eva de Braiose2 d. bt 20 Jul 1255 - 28 Jul 1255 | |
Millicent Canteloupe|d. c 1299|p64.htm#i1899|Sir William de Cantalupe|b. c 1217\nd. 25 Sep 1254|p156.htm#i4664|Eva de Braiose|d. bt 20 Jul 1255 - 28 Jul 1255|p156.htm#i4665|William de Cauntelo|b. c 1180\nd. 22 Feb 1251|p156.htm#i4658|Melicent de Gurnay|b. c 1183\nd. 1239|p156.htm#i4659|William de Braiose|b. c 1204\nd. 2 May 1230|p92.htm#i2744|Eve Marshal|b. c 1206\nd. b 1246|p92.htm#i2745| |
Marriage* | before 13 December 1273 | Groom=Eudo la Zouche3,4 |
Death* | circa 1299 | 3 |
Death | before 7 January 1299 | | leaving son and heir William la Zouche5 |
Married Name | la Zouche1 | |
Name Variation | Milicent de Cantelou3 | |
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=Eudo la Zouche6 |
Family | Eudo la Zouche d. bt 28 Apr 1279 - 25 Jun 1279 | |
Children |
|
Last Edited | 10 Dec 2004 |
Citations
- [S78] Louise Brownell Clarke, Greenes of Rhode Island, p. 5.
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 66-29.
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 39-29.
- [S338] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 8th ed., 39-29.
- [S325] Rev. C. Moor, Knights of Edward I, v. 5, p. 222.
- [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.
Sir Alan la Zouche1
M, #1900, b. circa 1205, d. 10 August 1269
Father* | Roger la Zouche2 b. c 1175, d. b 14 May 1238 | |
Mother* | Margaret (?)2 b. c 1179, d. a 28 Jan 1232 | |
Sir Alan la Zouche|b. c 1205\nd. 10 Aug 1269|p64.htm#i1900|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||||||| |
Charts | Ann Marbury Pedigree |
Birth* | circa 1205 | 2 |
Marriage* | before 1242 | Principal=Elene de Quincy3,2,4 |
Death* | 10 August 1269 | Westminster Hall, Alan la Zouche died after he was violently attacked by John de Warenne. His son Roger, barely escaped, Witness=Sir John de Warenne, Witness=Sir Roger la Zouche5 |
Death | 10 August 1270 | 6 |
Inquisition Post Mor* | 29 September 1270 | he held North Malton Manor, Devon, Esseby la Zuche Manor, Leic., as 1 Kt. Fee, with 3 Fees in Suss., and left s. h. Roger, 28-30.7 |
DNB | Zouche [ de la Zouche] family (per. c.1254-1415), magnates, were descended from Alan de la Zouche (d. 1190), who arrived in England from Brittany in the reign of Henry II. The Northamptonshire branch of the family was established by Eudo [i] de la Zouche (d. 1279), grandson of Alan, son of Roger (d. 1238), and younger brother of Alan de la Zouche (d. 1270), justiciar of Ireland. As a younger son Eudo sought advancement through royal service, which he had already entered before 1254 when he escorted Queen Eleanor to join Henry III in Gascony. He associated with the Lord Edward in the late 1250s when he acted as witness to the prince's charters. Furthermore, during disturbances in the Welsh marches in 1262 he was entrusted with the defence of Edward's castles in Cheshire. Eudo's continuing support for the royal cause in the barons' war is suggested by his summons in arms to the king at Windsor in 1263. Royal service notwithstanding it was Eudo's marriage in 1268 to Millicent (d. 1299), widow of John de Montalt and sister and coheir of Sir George de Cantilupe (1251-1273), which established the family's landed fortune. Millicent inherited a scattered estate comprising lands in Ireland and manors in the south-west and midlands, along with the family's caput of Harringworth. The marriage to Millicent produced three daughters and at least two sons, including William [i] Zouche, first Lord Zouche (c.1277-1352). William was the first of his family to receive a writ of summons to parliament in 1308 as Lord Zouche. His opposition to Edward II's government included involvement in the summary execution of Piers Gaveston in 1312, for which his proposed pilgrimage to Santiago de Compostela in 1317 may have been intended as an act of atonement. William's talents, however, were expressed mainly through military exploits. From 1301 he saw frequent service against the Scots. He also campaigned in Ireland and Gascony and had, too, experience in the law. In May 1330 he was justice in eyre in Derbyshire but had to be replaced before the end of the month because of ill health. Although his disease was believed to be incurable, he did recover, and continued to play a role in local administration and on the king's council (1337). After his recovery he began to make modest alienations of lands and rents in mortmain. William's marriage before February 1296 to Maud, daughter of John, Lord Lovell of Titchmarsh (d. 1310), was clearly designed to extend and strengthen the Zouches' estate in the midlands. Maud was heir of her maternal uncle, William du Bois (d. 1313?), from whom she inherited manors in Northamptonshire, Leicestershire, and Warwickshire. The marriage produced three daughters and seven sons, one of whom, John, maintained the family's court connections as purveyor in Queen Isabella's household between 1327 and 1333, while another, Edmund, was prebendary at St Paul's in London. It is sometimes claimed that William Zouche, king's clerk and archbishop of York (1342–52), was a son of William [i]. In addition to the fact that one of William [i]'s sons was indeed called William, there is other circumstantial evidence to lend credence to such claims. For example, in 1328 William, the king's clerk, held the rectorship of Clipsham in Rutland, a living in the gift of Lord Zouche of Harringworth. Also, again in 1328, William [i]'s daughter-in-law granted to William, king's clerk, her lands in Latchingdon in Essex. Nevertheless, it is more likely that this William was a younger brother of Roger Zouche of Lubesthorpe; in 1337 the two were jointly granted licence to alienate land and rent at Lubesthorpe to fund masses for the souls of their progenitors. William [i]'s large family naturally made demands on his estate but his gifts to his children were life grants, with reversions to William and his heirs. He thus ensured that the long-term integrity of the estate and, therefore, the status of the family were maintained. For a time it appeared that his son and heir, Eudo [ii] Zouche (1298-1326) would continue his father's careful strategies. In or before 1317 Eudo married Joan, daughter and heir of Sir William Inge (d. 1322), chief justice of the king's bench, and of Sir William's wife, Margery, herself a daughter and coheir of Henry Grapinel of Essex. In 1322 Joan and Eudo had seisin of her inheritance, spanning eight counties from Hampshire to Essex. The same year Eudo was commissioned to follow Hugh Despenser in the renewed war against the Scots. In February 1326, however, he became entangled in a confederacy of his Leicestershire cousins and their neighbours, the delinquent Folvilles, in a murderous attack on Justice Roger Beler. To escape retribution Eudo fled to Paris, where he died on 27 April 1326. He was buried there in the church of the Augustinian friars. Eudo's son, William [ii] Zouche, second Baron Zouche (c.1317-1382), commonly known as ‘of Totnes’ in Devon, similarly entered royal service. He joined Henry Burghersh's embassy to Germany in 1337. He also performed military service in France, participating in the siege of Calais in 1347. His appointment to various commissions in Northamptonshire between 1351 and 1380 was interrupted in October 1362 when he nominated attorneys to attend to his affairs while he went on pilgrimage to the Holy Land. His last official appointment was in 1381 to the commission of inquiry into the royal household. He was already married by July 1334 to Elizabeth, daughter of William Ros, Lord Ros of Helmsley. There were two daughters and three sons of the marriage; one of the sons, Eudo, was canon of Lincoln and chancellor at Cambridge. Before his death in April 1382 William [ii] requested burial in Biddlesden Abbey and bequeathed £60 for masses at his tomb. William's heir, William [iii] Zouche, third Baron Zouche (c.1340-1396), continued the family tradition of service to the crown at a time when close association with Richard II provided doubtful security. In 1384 he was accused, but later acquitted, of having slandered John of Gaunt, duke of Lancaster. The following year he accompanied Richard II on his Scottish campaign, but was removed from court by the lords appellant in 1388 as a malign influence on the king. At the height of fears of invasion in 1383 he was ordered to repair to one of his manors in Devon to defend the coast there, but he resided mainly at Harringworth, which he had licence to crenellate and fortify in 1387. He first married, before October 1351, Agnes, daughter of Sir Henry Green and, after her death, Elizabeth, widow of John, Lord Arundel, and daughter of Edward Despenser, Lord Despenser. After his death he was buried in the chapel at Harringworth. Despite William [iii]'s attachment to Richard II, his son and heir, William [iv] Zouche, fourth Baron Zouche (c.1373-1415), was a member of Henry IV's council. He negotiated with Owen Glyn Dw^r in 1402 and performed escort duties for Blanche of Lancaster and Joan of Navarre. Early in Henry V's reign he briefly held the lieutenancy of Calais but his last official act was as one of the peers commissioned to judge the rebels after the Southampton plot in 1415. He died on 3 November 1415 and was succeeded by his eldest son, William (d. 1462), then still a minor. The Zouches of Harringworth reveal how a junior branch of a baronial family could establish and maintain itself through royal service and judicious marriages. The family, however, remained among the second rank of the nobility, suggesting that bureaucratic and military competence were insufficient talents to ensure further social advancement. Their arms were gules, ten bezants, a canton ermine. Eric Acheson Sources Chancery records · A. Gibbons, ed., Early Lincoln wills (1888) · J. Bridges, The history and antiquities of Northamptonshire, ed. P. Whalley, 2 vols. (1791) · N. H. Nicolas, ed., Proceedings and ordinances of the privy council of England, 7 vols., RC, 26 (1834–7), vols. 1–2 · W. A. Shaw, The knights of England, 2 vols. (1906); repr. (1971) · J. Nichols, The history and antiquities of the county of Leicester, 4 vols. (1795–1815) · Thomae Walsingham, quondam monachi S. Albani, historia Anglicana, ed. H. T. Riley, 2 vols., pt 1 of Chronica monasterii S. Albani, Rolls Series, 28 (1863–4) · CEPR letters, vol. 2, pp. 276, 292, 376, 520, 524, 547, 550 · G. F. Farnham, Leicestershire medieval pedigrees (1925) · VCH Rutland · VCH Northamptonshire · VCH Leicestershire · H. L. Gray, ‘Incomes from land in England in 1436’, EngHR, 49 (1934), 607–39 Wealth at death income of £533 p.a. in 1436 tax: Gray, ‘Incomes from land’, p. 617 © Oxford University Press 2004–5 All rights reserved: see legal notice Oxford University Press Eric Acheson, ‘Zouche family (per. c.1254-1415)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/54535, accessed 24 Sept 2005] Zouche family (per. c.1254-1415): doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/54535 Eudo de la Zouche [i] (d. 1279): doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/61242 William Zouche [i] , first Lord Zouche (c.1277-1352): doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/61243 Eudo Zouche [ii] (1298-1326): doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/61244 William Zouche [ii] , second Baron Zouche (c.1317-1382): doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/61245 William Zouche [iii] , third Baron Zouche (c.1340-1396): doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/61246 William Zouche [iv] , fourth Baron Zouche (c.1373-1415): doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/612478 | |
DNB* | Zouche [Zouch], Alan de la (d. 1270), administrator and soldier, was one of Henry III's trusted supporters and servants. His grandfather, also called Alan, had arrived in England from Brittany in the 1170s, and had founded the family's fortunes in England by his marriage to the heiress Alice de Belmeis, thereby securing extensive estates including Tong (Shropshire), Ashby (Leicestershire), and North Molton (Devon). A junior branch of the family was established in Northamptonshire by Eudo de la Zouche (d. 1279) [see under Zouche family]. Alan succeeded his father, Roger, in 1238, and was soon active in the service of Henry III: in 1242 he was one of those who effected the capture of the notorious outlaw William de Marisco on Lundy island, and in 1242–3 he saw military service in Gascony. His first taste of high office came in 1250 when he was appointed justice of the county of Chester and the Four Cantrefs (the district of north Wales east of the River Conwy). He paid 1000 marks for the post, allegedly outbidding the current holder of the office. He flaunted the wealth he raised from the district, and boasted that the whole of Wales was now reduced to obedience. But his high-handed and insensitive behaviour provoked royal investigation, and fuelled the resentment in the area against the English, which led to the violent overthrow of English rule in 1256. By then Zouche had entered the service of the Lord Edward (who had been given the royal lands in Wales, Ireland, and Chester in February 1254), and acted as his justiciar in Ireland from June 1256 to October 1258. With the onset of civil discord in England in June 1258, Zouche was given ample opportunity to display his unflinching loyalty to the king. His closeness to Henry III during these years is indicated by the fact that he is described at various times between October 1261 and January 1263 as steward of the royal household. He was also given important posts in the country: sheriff of Northamptonshire (1261–4), justice of the forests south of the Trent (from June 1261), and constable of Rockingham Castle (1261–4) and Northampton Castle (1261–3). His Welsh experience prompted the king to dispatch him to guard the Welsh marches against Llywelyn ap Gruffudd in December 1262. Two events in December 1263 showed the measure of the king's confidence in him: on 12 December he was one of the barons chosen on the king's side to submit all points in the political dispute to the arbitration of Louis of France; and on 24 December he was given custody of the counties of Devon, Somerset, and Dorset as a military lieutenant. Taken prisoner at the battle of Lewes (14 May 1264), Zouche escaped to Lewes Priory, where he disguised himself as a monk, but he was recaptured and imprisoned. In the aftermath of the king's victory at Evesham (4 August 1265) he played an important part in the pacification of the country: he was one of the twelve arbitrators appointed to arrange the terms of the surrender of Kenilworth Castle in 1266, and was one of the justices appointed to hear the pleas of the disinherited. The reward for his loyalty included handsome gifts and appointment to the important and lucrative post of warden of London and constable of the Tower from June 1267 to April 1268. During 1270 Zouche became involved in a dispute with John de Warenne (d. 1304), almost certainly over the manors of Ashby and Chadston in Northamptonshire. The manors had been forfeited by their owner, David Ashby, for his support for Simon de Montfort and granted to Zouche; but Warenne, as the guardian of Ashby's granddaughter, also had an interest in them. During an altercation in Westminster Hall on 1 July 1270 Warenne and his men assaulted Zouche and his son in the presence of the royal justice and the chancellor. Zouche suffered wounds from which he died on 10 August 1270. Warenne was forced to perform public acts of contrition for the assault and to offer a fine of 10,000 marks to the king. Zouche was a benefactor of the knights templars and of the Cistercian abbey of Buildwas in Shropshire. He married, before 1242, Helen, one of the daughters and coheirs of Roger de Quincy, earl of Winchester, and in 1267 secured her share of the Quincy estates. He was succeeded by his son Roger la Zouche (d. 1285); his widow died on 20 August 1296. T. F. Tout, rev. R. R. Davies Sources GEC, Peerage · Chancery records · CIPM · Paris, Chron. · A. J. Roderick, ‘The Four Cantrefs’, BBCS, 10 (1939–41), 246–56 · F. M. Powicke, King Henry III and the Lord Edward: the community of the realm in the thirteenth century, 2 vols. (1947) · R. W. Eyton, Antiquities of Shropshire, 12 vols. (1854–60), vol. 2 © Oxford University Press 2004–5 All rights reserved: see legal notice Oxford University Press T. F. Tout, ‘Zouche , Alan de la (d. 1270)’, rev. R. R. Davies, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/30300, accessed 24 Sept 2005] Alan de la Zouche (d. 1270): doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/303008 | |
Arms* | De goules besantee de or (Glover).9 | |
Occupation* | Constable of the Tower of London4 | |
Residence* | Ashby la Zouche, Leicestershire, England4 | |
Title* | 18 March 1253 | Justice of Chester9 |
Event-Misc | between 1256 and 1258 | Justiciar of Ireland6 |
Event-Misc* | 12 June 1261 | He was Constable of Rockingham Castle and Custos of forests between bridges of Oxford and Stamford9 |
Event-Misc | 9 July 1261 | He was made Sheriff of Northants. and Constable of Northampton Castle9 |
Event-Misc | 3 December 1261 | He was made Justice in eyre for forest pleas in Staff., Salop, and Herefordshire9 |
Event-Misc | 31 August 1266 | Alan la Zouche is one of six men chosen to elect six others to reform the realm9 |
Event-Misc | 2 September 1267 | He is made Custos of the City and Tower of London9 |
Family | Elene de Quincy b. c 1222, d. b 20 Aug 1296 | |
Children |
|
Last Edited | 24 Sep 2005 |
Citations
- [S78] Louise Brownell Clarke, Greenes of Rhode Island, p. 5.
- [S218] Marlyn Lewis, Ancestry of Elizabeth of York.
- [S78] Louise Brownell Clarke, Greenes of Rhode Island, p. 10.
- [S233] Frederick Lewis Weis, Magna Charta Sureties, 74-3.
- [S284] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry, Warenne 4.
- [S301] Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Robert Abell, p. 272.
- [S325] Rev. C. Moor, Knights of Edward I, v. 5, p. 219.
- [S376] Unknown editor, unknown short title.
- [S325] Rev. C. Moor, Knights of Edward I, v. 5, p. 218.
- [S233] Frederick Lewis Weis, Magna Charta Sureties, 90-4.
Nicholas Greene1
M, #1902
Father* | Sir Thomas Greene de Boketon, M.P.1 b. 1280 | |
Nicholas Greene||p64.htm#i1902|Sir Thomas Greene de Boketon, M.P.|b. 1280|p64.htm#i1896||||Sir Thomas de Boketon||p64.htm#i1905|Alice de Boltesham||p64.htm#i1906||||||| |
Last Edited | 24 Oct 2003 |
Citations
- [S78] Louise Brownell Clarke, Greenes of Rhode Island, p. 5.
Sir Thomas de Boketon1
M, #1905
Father* | John de Boketon1 | |
Sir Thomas de Boketon||p64.htm#i1905|John de Boketon||p64.htm#i1908||||Walter de Boketon||p64.htm#i1909|||||||||| |
Charts | Ann Marbury Pedigree |
Marriage* | Principal=Alice de Boltesham1 | |
Living* | 1319 | England1 |
Family | Alice de Boltesham | |
Child |
|
Last Edited | 3 Aug 2004 |
Citations
- [S78] Louise Brownell Clarke, Greenes of Rhode Island, p. 5.
Alice de Boltesham1,2
F, #1906
Father* | Sir Thomas de Boltesham1,2 d. 25 Jun 1305 | |
Mother* | Senicla (?)2 | |
Alice de Boltesham||p64.htm#i1906|Sir Thomas de Boltesham|d. 25 Jun 1305|p64.htm#i1907|Senicla (?)||p459.htm#i13757||||||||||||| |
Charts | Ann Marbury Pedigree |
Marriage* | Principal=Sir Thomas de Boketon1 | |
Married Name | de Boketon1 |
Family | Sir Thomas de Boketon | |
Child |
|
Last Edited | 26 Aug 2004 |
Sir Thomas de Boltesham1,2
M, #1907, d. 25 June 1305
Charts | Ann Marbury Pedigree |
Birth* | Braunston1 | |
Marriage* | Principal=Senicla (?)2 | |
Death* | 25 June 1305 | 2 |
Arms* | Gu. 3 bosons arg.2 | |
Event-Misc* | 1278/79 | He was granted 3 years respite from Knighthood on £20 fine2 |
Event-Misc | 6 February 1292 | License granted for alienation by him to Newstead Priory by Stamford, 9 marks rent in Branston, Lincs. (P. R.)2 |
Feudal* | 25 June 1305 | lands at Long Ichinton, Warw., Braundeston, Staverton, Northants.2 |
Family | Senicla (?) | |
Children |
Last Edited | 25 Dec 2004 |
John de Boketon1
M, #1908
Father* | Walter de Boketon1 | |
John de Boketon||p64.htm#i1908|Walter de Boketon||p64.htm#i1909||||Alexander de Boketon||p64.htm#i1910|||||||||| |
Charts | Ann Marbury Pedigree |
Living* | 1313 | England1 |
Family | ||
Child |
Last Edited | 24 Oct 2003 |
Citations
- [S78] Louise Brownell Clarke, Greenes of Rhode Island, p. 5.
Walter de Boketon1
M, #1909
Father* | Alexander de Boketon1 | |
Walter de Boketon||p64.htm#i1909|Alexander de Boketon||p64.htm#i1910|||||||||||||||| |
Living* | 1235 | England1 |
Living | 1260 | England1 |
Living | 1273 | England1 |
Family | ||
Child |
Last Edited | 24 Oct 2003 |
Citations
- [S78] Louise Brownell Clarke, Greenes of Rhode Island, p. 5.
Alexander de Boketon1
M, #1910
Living* | 1203 | England1 |
Family | ||
Child |
Last Edited | 24 Oct 2003 |
Citations
- [S78] Louise Brownell Clarke, Greenes of Rhode Island, p. 5.
Elene de Quincy1
F, #1911, b. circa 1222, d. before 20 August 1296
Father* | Sir Roger de Quincy1,2,3 b. c 1195, d. 25 Apr 1264 | |
Mother* | Helene of Galloway4,2,3 b. c 1196, d. a 21 Nov 1245 | |
Elene de Quincy|b. c 1222\nd. b 20 Aug 1296|p64.htm#i1911|Sir Roger de Quincy|b. c 1195\nd. 25 Apr 1264|p64.htm#i1912|Helene of Galloway|b. c 1196\nd. a 21 Nov 1245|p64.htm#i1913|Saher I. de Quincy|b. c 1155\nd. 3 Nov 1219|p69.htm#i2046|Margaret de Beaumont|b. c 1155\nd. 12 Jan 1234/35|p69.htm#i2047|Alan of Galloway|b. c 1170\nd. 1234|p64.htm#i1914|Anonyma de Lacy|d. b 1209|p93.htm#i2767| |
Charts | Ann Marbury Pedigree |
Birth* | circa 1222 | Winchester, Hampshire, England2,5 |
Marriage* | before 1242 | Principal=Sir Alan la Zouche1,2,3 |
Death* | before 20 August 1296 | |leaving g.s.h. Sir Alan fil. Rog. la Zouche2,3,6 |
Name Variation | Elena7 | |
Name Variation | Elene Quinci2 | |
Name Variation | Ellen6 | |
Event-Misc* | 14 October 1271 | Ellen, wid. of Alan la Zouche is coheir of Roger (de Quincy), E. of Winchester.6 |
(Witness) Inquisition Post Mor | 2 November 1271 | His co-heirs are found to be Margaret, C'ss of Derby, Ellen, wid. of Alan la Zouch, and Alex., E. of Buchan, and w. Elizabeth, Principal=Sir Roger de Quincy8 |
Event-Misc | 9 May 1283 | Lic. for her to alienate 60/- rent at Avesbury for a chaplain to celebrate at Swaveseye, Cambridgeshire6 |
Event-Misc | 28 April 1286 | Lic. for her to alienate 10 m. rent at Brakele, Northants., for 2 chaplains for the leper hospital there6 |
Family | Sir Alan la Zouche b. c 1205, d. 10 Aug 1269 | |
Children |
|
Last Edited | 24 Apr 2005 |
Citations
- [S78] Louise Brownell Clarke, Greenes of Rhode Island, p. 10.
- [S218] Marlyn Lewis, Ancestry of Elizabeth of York.
- [S233] Frederick Lewis Weis, Magna Charta Sureties, 74-3.
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 38-28.
- [S301] Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Robert Abell, p. 272.
- [S325] Rev. C. Moor, Knights of Edward I, v. 5, p. 219.
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 38-29.
- [S325] Rev. C. Moor, Knights of Edward I, v. 4, p. 107.
- [S233] Frederick Lewis Weis, Magna Charta Sureties, 90-4.
Sir Roger de Quincy1,2
M, #1912, b. circa 1195, d. 25 April 1264
Father* | Saher IV de Quincy1,3,4,5 b. c 1155, d. 3 Nov 1219 | |
Mother* | Margaret de Beaumont1,3,4 b. c 1155, d. 12 Jan 1234/35 | |
Sir Roger de Quincy|b. c 1195\nd. 25 Apr 1264|p64.htm#i1912|Saher IV de Quincy|b. c 1155\nd. 3 Nov 1219|p69.htm#i2046|Margaret de Beaumont|b. c 1155\nd. 12 Jan 1234/35|p69.htm#i2047|Robert de Quincey|d. c 1198|p92.htm#i2746|Orabella of Leuchars|d. b 30 Jun 1203|p92.htm#i2747|Sir Robert de Beaumont|b. b 1135\nd. 31 Aug 1190|p365.htm#i10927|Petronilla de Grandmesnil|b. 1149\nd. 1 Apr 1212|p92.htm#i2749| |
Birth* | circa 1195 | of Winchester, Hampshire, England3 |
Marriage* | before 1234 | Bride=Helene of Galloway1,6,3,7 |
Marriage* | before 5 June 1250 | 2nd=Maud de Bohun2,8 |
Marriage | before 5 December 1252 | without license, 2nd=Alianore de Ferrers8 |
Death* | 25 April 1264 | | holding Manors of Elmesale, Yorks., Steventon, Beds., Wadenho, Northants., and Kneshall, Notts., with c. 8 Kt. Fees in Notts., and his heirs are Joan, 19, w. of Sir Humphry de Boun, jun., and Hawis, 14, daus. of Rob. de Quency., Witness=Hawise de Quincy, Witness=Joan de Quincy9,3,4,10,5 |
Inquisition Post Mor* | 2 November 1271 | His co-heirs are found to be Margaret, C'ss of Derby, Ellen, wid. of Alan la Zouch, and Alex., E. of Buchan, and w. Elizabeth, Witness=Margaret de Quincy, Witness=Elizabeth de Quincy, Witness=Elene de Quincy5 |
Excommunication* | 16 December 1215 | by Pope Innocent III11 |
Event-Misc | 1219 | He was on crusade in the Holy Land when his father died8 |
Event-Misc | 16 February 1220/21 | He did homage for his father's lands8 |
Event-Misc | 1230 | He traveled with his mother's knights to Brittany12 |
Event-Misc | 1234 | He became constable of Scotland in the right of his first wife12 |
Title* | 1235 | Constable of Scotland9,6,4 |
Event-Misc | 25 September 1237 | He witnessed an agreement between Alexander of Scotland and Henry III12 |
Event-Misc | 1242 | He served in Gascony12 |
Event-Misc | 1247 | He required the help of the Scottish king to quash a rebellion in his Scottish lands resulting from his tyrannical rule there.12 |
Arms* | circa 1250 | Sealed: Seven mascles.5 |
Name Variation | Roger de Quency5 | |
Event-Misc | 1257 | He was abitrator between Henry III and the King of Scotland12 |
Event-Misc | between 1258 and 1263 | He served several times against the Welsh12 |
Event-Misc* | 9 January 1259 | Grant that his Exors. shall have free execution of his will, and his debts be paid by his heirs5 |
Protection* | 5 September 1259 | to Scotland5 |
Event-Misc* | 17 August 1260 | Roger de Quency and Jn. Bayllol are to conduct the King and Queen of Scotland to england to speak with the King, her father, Principal=Sir John de Baliol, Witness=Henry III Plantagenet King of England, Witness=Margaret Plantagenet, Witness=Alexander III of Scotland5 |
Protection | 9 May 1261 | to Scotland5 |
Summoned* | 7 October 1263 | the King at Windsor with horses and arms to treat of certain matters5 |
Family | Helene of Galloway b. c 1196, d. a 21 Nov 1245 | |
Children |
|
Last Edited | 30 Oct 2005 |
Citations
- [S78] Louise Brownell Clarke, Greenes of Rhode Island, p. 10.
- [S284] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry, Bohun 5.
- [S218] Marlyn Lewis, Ancestry of Elizabeth of York.
- [S233] Frederick Lewis Weis, Magna Charta Sureties, 74-2.
- [S325] Rev. C. Moor, Knights of Edward I, v. 4, p. 107.
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 38-28.
- [S233] Frederick Lewis Weis, Magna Charta Sureties, 139-2.
- [S347] Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans, p. 210.
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 53-28.
- [S285] Leo van de Pas, 30 Jun 2004.
- [S374] Douglas Richardson, Magna Carta Ancestry, Quincy 2.
- [S347] Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans, p. 211.
- [S233] Frederick Lewis Weis, Magna Charta Sureties, 74-3.
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 57-29.
- [S233] Frederick Lewis Weis, Magna Charta Sureties, 88-3.
- [S325] Rev. C. Moor, Knights of Edward I, v. 2, p. 18.
- [S284] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry, Ferrers 7.
Helene of Galloway1
F, #1913, b. circa 1196, d. after 21 November 1245
Father* | Alan of Galloway1,2 b. c 1170, d. 1234 | |
Mother* | Anonyma de Lacy3,2,4 d. b 1209 | |
Mother | Anonyma of the Isles5 | |
Helene of Galloway|b. c 1196\nd. a 21 Nov 1245|p64.htm#i1913|Alan of Galloway|b. c 1170\nd. 1234|p64.htm#i1914|Anonyma de Lacy|d. b 1209|p93.htm#i2767|Roland of Galloway|b. c 1135\nd. 19 Dec 1200|p93.htm#i2771|Elena de Morville|b. c 1153\nd. 11 Jun 1217|p93.htm#i2772|Hugh de Lacy|b. c 1176\nd. b 26 Dec 1242|p524.htm#i15709|Lesceline de Verdun||p93.htm#i2768| |
Birth* | circa 1196 | 2 |
Marriage* | before 1234 | 1st=Sir Roger de Quincy1,6,2,7 |
Death* | after 21 November 1245 | 2,7 |
Burial | Brackley8 | |
Name Variation | Helen Of Galloway | |
Name Variation | Helen MacDonal2 | |
Name Variation | Alianora de Galloway2 |
Family | Sir Roger de Quincy b. c 1195, d. 25 Apr 1264 | |
Children |
|
Last Edited | 3 Aug 2005 |
Citations
- [S78] Louise Brownell Clarke, Greenes of Rhode Island, p. 10.
- [S218] Marlyn Lewis, Ancestry of Elizabeth of York.
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 38-26.
- [S233] Frederick Lewis Weis, Magna Charta Sureties, 139-1.
- [S338] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 8th ed., 38-26.
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 38-28.
- [S233] Frederick Lewis Weis, Magna Charta Sureties, 139-2.
- [S347] Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans, p. 210.
- [S233] Frederick Lewis Weis, Magna Charta Sureties, 74-3.
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 57-29.
- [S233] Frederick Lewis Weis, Magna Charta Sureties, 88-3.
- [S347] Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans, p. 211.
Alan of Galloway1
M, #1914, b. circa 1170, d. 1234
Father* | Roland of Galloway2,3 b. c 1135, d. 19 Dec 1200 | |
Mother* | Elena de Morville4,3 b. c 1153, d. 11 Jun 1217 | |
Alan of Galloway|b. c 1170\nd. 1234|p64.htm#i1914|Roland of Galloway|b. c 1135\nd. 19 Dec 1200|p93.htm#i2771|Elena de Morville|b. c 1153\nd. 11 Jun 1217|p93.htm#i2772|Uchtred of Galloway|d. 22 Sep 1174|p93.htm#i2778|Gunnild of Dunbar|d. 1144|p93.htm#i2776|Richard de Morville|b. c 1125\nd. 1189|p93.htm#i2773|Avice of Lancaster|b. c 1134\nd. 1 Jan 1191|p93.htm#i2774| |
Birth* | circa 1170 | 3 |
Marriage* | Bride=Anonyma of the Isles5 | |
Marriage* | 1209 | Bride=Margaret of Huntingdon3,6,7 |
Marriage* | 1228 | Bride=Anonyma de Lacy3,7,5 |
Death* | 1234 | 2,3,7 |
Burial* | Abbey of Dundrennan, Scotland3,8 | |
DNB* | Alan, lord of Galloway (b. before 1199, d. 1234), magnate, was the eldest son of Roland, lord of Galloway (d. 1200), and Helen de Morville (d. 1217), sister and heir of William de Morville, lord of Lauderdale and Cunningham and royal constable. He had two brothers and two sisters, of whom Thomas (d. 1231) became earl of Atholl in right of his wife, Ada married Walter Bisset of Aboyne, and Dervorguilla married Nicholas de Stuteville of Liddel in Cumbria. Alan contracted three marriages: to a daughter of Roger de Lacy, constable of Chester; to Margaret (d. before 1228), eldest daughter of David, earl of Huntingdon, in 1209; and, c.1229, to Rose, daughter of Hugh de Lacy, earl of Ulster. The first two marriages produced children, but only daughters attained adulthood. Helen, his daughter by his first marriage, married Roger de Quincy, while Christina (or Christiana) and Dervorguilla [see Balliol, Dervorguilla de], the children of Alan and Margaret, married William de Forz and John de Balliol respectively. Alan had one bastard son, Thomas. Cross-border landholding and kinship with King John of England made Alan a man of consequence in both realms. His relationship with the king of Scots, based on loose overlordship rather than feudal subordination, allowed freedom of manoeuvre where his actions did not conflict with Scottish interests. Galloway's military resources and substantial fleet gave added influence; Alan's aid was courted unsuccessfully by John for his 1210 campaign against the Ulster Lacys, but he agreed to send one thousand men for the abortive Welsh campaign of 1212. A grant of estates in Antrim in 1212 was designed to draw him actively into the defence of Angevin Ulster against the native Irish. Despite such favours from John, when Alexander II entered the civil war in England in 1215, aligning himself with John's baronial opponents, Alan joined the Scottish king and was his chief lieutenant in the occupation of Cumberland and Westmorland from 1215 to 1217. From 1225 Alan used the freedom afforded by the loose overlordship of the Scottish crown to interfere in the feud between King Ragnvald of Man and his half-brother, Olaf. His private interest, arising from efforts to secure Antrim with Ragnvald's support against the threat of a Lacy restoration, coincided at first with Anglo-Scottish policy towards the region and received the tacit support of his Scottish overlord. The prospect of a pro-Scottish client in Man led Alexander II to acquiesce to the marriage in 1226 of Alan's bastard son, Thomas, to Ragnvald's daughter, but the marriage provoked revolt against Ragnvald. Despite the support of Galwegian galleys and warriors, Ragnvald was overthrown and slain in 1229 by Olaf. Alan's ensuing attempts to conquer Man for Thomas destabilized the Hebrides and western highlands, thereby threatening Scottish territorial interests, and in 1230–31 prompted active Norwegian support for Olaf. Joint action by Alan and Alexander averted catastrophe, but Scottish and Galwegian interests had diverged and the 1231 campaign marked the end of further Galwegian involvement in the Manx succession; Alan's dynastic ambitions had caused an undesirable war with a major foreign power. Uncertainty over the succession to Galloway shadowed Alan's later years. His nearest legitimate male heir was Patrick of Atholl [see under Thomas, earl of Atholl], son of his younger brother, Thomas, who had died in 1231, but, although Celtic practice did not debar his bastard son, Thomas, Alan's closest heirs by feudal law were his three daughters, all married to important Anglo-Scottish noblemen. To King Alexander, the crisis precipitated by Alan's Manx ventures made partition, and the attendant opportunity to replace the loose overlordship enjoyed by Alan with a more tightly defined relationship, an attractive proposition, for succession by Thomas threatened a revival of Galwegian interests in Man and so of risks to Scottish security. Alan died about 2 February 1234 and was buried in Dundrennan Abbey, where his mutilated tomb effigy survives. Partition of the lordship followed and, despite a rebellion in 1235 in favour of Thomas, was successfully enforced. Richard D. Oram Sources Scots peerage, 4.139–43 · K. J. Stringer, ‘Periphery and core in thirteenth-century Scotland: Alan, son of Roland, lord of Galloway and constable of Scotland’, Medieval Scotland: crown, lordship and community: essays presented to G. W. S. Barrow, ed. A. Grant and K. J. Stringer (1993), 82–113 · G. W. S. Barrow, ed., Regesta regum Scottorum, 2 (1971), 37 · A. A. M. Duncan, Scotland: the making of the kingdom (1975), vol. 1 of The Edinburgh history of Scotland, ed. G. Donaldson (1965–75), 186–7, 250–53, 529–30, 543–4 · K. J. Stringer, ‘The early lords of Lauderdale, Dryburgh Abbey and St Andrew's Priory at Northampton’, Essays on the nobility of medieval Scotland, ed. K. J. Stringer (1985), 44–71, esp. 50–52 · J. Stevenson, ed., Chronicon de Lanercost, 1201–1346, Bannatyne Club, 65 (1839) · K. J. Stringer, ‘Acts of lordship: the records of the lords of Galloway to 1234’, Freedom and authority: historical and historiographical essays presented to Grant G. Simpson, ed. T. Brotherstone and D. Ditchburn (2000) · K. J. Stringer, ‘Reform monasticism and Celtic Scotland: Galloway, c.1140–c.1240’, Alloa: Celtic Scotland in the middle ages, ed. E. J. Cowan and R. A. McDonald (2000) Likenesses effigy, Dundrennan Abbey © Oxford University Press 2004–5 All rights reserved: see legal notice Oxford University Press Richard D. Oram, ‘Alan, lord of Galloway (b. before 1199, d. 1234)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/49362, accessed 24 Sept 2005] Alan (b. before 1199, d. 1234): doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/493629 | |
Event-Misc* | July 1212 | He was asked to assist in the invasion of Ireland by King John.8 |
Event-Misc | 1213 | He was granted Irish fiefs with rights of forests, and privileges of markets and fairs.8 |
Title* | between 1215 and 1234 | Constable of Scotland2,7 |
(King) Magna Carta | 12 June 1215 | Runningmede, Surrey, England, King=John Lackland10,11,12,13,14,15 |
Event-Misc | 1219 | He did homage to King Henry III for his English lands8 |
Event-Misc | 15 June 1220 | He swore to observe King Alexander's oath to marry Joanna, King Henry's oldest sister.8 |
Event-Misc | 1225 | He took charge of Hugh de Lacy's Irish lands after Hugh rebelled.8 |
Summoned* | October 1229 | go abroad with the King of England8 |
Family 1 | Margaret of Huntingdon d. Epiphany 1233 | |
Children |
|
Family 2 | Anonyma de Lacy d. b 1209 | |
Children |
|
Last Edited | 24 Sep 2005 |
Citations
- [S78] Louise Brownell Clarke, Greenes of Rhode Island, p. 10.
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 38-26.
- [S218] Marlyn Lewis, Ancestry of Elizabeth of York.
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 38-25.
- [S338] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 8th ed., 38-26.
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 94-27.
- [S233] Frederick Lewis Weis, Magna Charta Sureties, 139-1.
- [S347] Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans, p. 102.
- [S376] Unknown editor, unknown short title.
- [S284] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry, Longespée 3.
- [S284] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry, Warenne 3.
- [S338] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 8th ed., 56-27.
- [S338] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 8th ed., 60-28.
- [S347] Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans, p. 8.
- [S347] Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans, p. 34.
- [S233] Frederick Lewis Weis, Magna Charta Sureties, 140-1.
- [S301] Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Robert Abell, p. 12.
- [S347] Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans, p. 103.
Isabel de Vermandois1
F, #1915, b. 1081, d. 13 February 1131
Father* | Hugh Magnus of France1,2,3 b. 1057, d. 18 Oct 1101 | |
Mother* | Adelaide de Vermandois1,3,4 b. c 1062, d. 28 Sep 1124 | |
Isabel de Vermandois|b. 1081\nd. 13 Feb 1131|p64.htm#i1915|Hugh Magnus of France|b. 1057\nd. 18 Oct 1101|p64.htm#i1916|Adelaide de Vermandois|b. c 1062\nd. 28 Sep 1124|p64.htm#i1917|Henry I. of France|b. 1008\nd. 4 Aug 1060|p64.htm#i1919|Anne of Kiev|b. c 1024\nd. a 1075|p64.htm#i1920|Count Herbert I. de Vermandois|b. c 1032\nd. 1080|p64.htm#i1918|Adele of Vexin|b. b 1043\nd. bt 1085 - 1090|p114.htm#i3392| |
Birth* | 1081 | France3 |
Marriage* | 1096 | Groom=Robert de Beaumont5,3 |
Divorce* | 1115 | Principal=Robert de Beaumont6 |
Marriage* | 1118 | Groom=Sir William de Warenne7,3,8 |
Death* | 13 February 1131 | 5,6 |
Death | 17 February 1131 | St. Nicaise, Meulan, D-Sens, France3 |
Title* | Countess of Leicester9 |
Family 1 | Robert de Beaumont b. 1049, d. 5 Jun 1118 | |
Children |
|
Family 2 | Sir William de Warenne b. 1071, d. 11 May 1138 | |
Children |
|
Last Edited | 5 Sep 2005 |
Citations
- [S78] Louise Brownell Clarke, Greenes of Rhode Island, p. 10.
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 53-23.
- [S218] Marlyn Lewis, Ancestry of Elizabeth of York.
- [S338] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 8th ed., 50-23.
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 53-24.
- [S347] Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans, p. 17.
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 83-24.
- [S347] Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans, p. 259.
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 50-24.
- [S347] Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans, p. 18.
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 66-24.
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 53-25.
- [S338] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 8th ed., 50-24.
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 84-25.
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 83-25.
Hugh Magnus of France1,2
M, #1916, b. 1057, d. 18 October 1101
Father* | Henry I of France1,3,4 b. 1008, d. 4 Aug 1060 | |
Mother* | Anne of Kiev5,3 b. c 1024, d. a 1075 | |
Hugh Magnus of France|b. 1057\nd. 18 Oct 1101|p64.htm#i1916|Henry I of France|b. 1008\nd. 4 Aug 1060|p64.htm#i1919|Anne of Kiev|b. c 1024\nd. a 1075|p64.htm#i1920|Robert I. of France "the Pious"|b. 27 Mar 972\nd. 20 Jul 1031|p92.htm#i2758|Constance of Provence|b. c 986\nd. 25 Jul 1032|p92.htm#i2759|Grand Prince Jaroslaus I. of Kiev|b. 978\nd. 20 Feb 1054|p92.htm#i2755|Ingegard Olafsdotter of Sweden|b. c 1001\nd. 10 Feb 1050|p92.htm#i2756| |
Birth* | 1057 | 3 |
Marriage* | 1078 | 1st=Adelaide de Vermandois1,3 |
Marriage | before 1080 | Conflict=Adelaide de Vermandois6 |
Death* | 18 October 1101 | Tarsus, Cicicia2,3 |
Title* | Duke of France and Burgundy6 | |
Name Variation | Hugh de Crépi7 |
Family | Adelaide de Vermandois b. c 1062, d. 28 Sep 1124 | |
Children |
|
Last Edited | 1 May 2005 |
Citations
- [S78] Louise Brownell Clarke, Greenes of Rhode Island, p. 10.
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 53-23.
- [S218] Marlyn Lewis, Ancestry of Elizabeth of York.
- [S338] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 8th ed., 53-23.
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 53-22.
- [S338] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 8th ed., 50-23.
- [S347] Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans, p. 17.
Adelaide de Vermandois1
F, #1917, b. circa 1062, d. 28 September 1124
Father* | Count Herbert IV de Vermandois1,2 b. c 1032, d. 1080 | |
Mother* | Adele of Vexin2 b. b 1043, d. bt 1085 - 1090 | |
Adelaide de Vermandois|b. c 1062\nd. 28 Sep 1124|p64.htm#i1917|Count Herbert IV de Vermandois|b. c 1032\nd. 1080|p64.htm#i1918|Adele of Vexin|b. b 1043\nd. bt 1085 - 1090|p114.htm#i3392|Count Otto de Vermandois|b. c 1000\nd. 25 May 1045|p158.htm#i4720|Pavie o. V. (?)||p158.htm#i4721|Raoul III "the Great" of Vexin|b. 1025\nd. 8 Sep 1074|p122.htm#i3653|Adele of Bar-sur-Aube|d. 1053|p122.htm#i3654| |
Birth* | circa 1062 | of Vermandois, Normandy, France2 |
Marriage* | 1078 | Groom=Hugh Magnus of France1,2 |
Marriage | before 1080 | Conflict=Hugh Magnus of France3 |
Marriage* | 1102 | Groom=Count Reinald of Clermont3 |
Death | circa 1120 | 3 |
Death* | 28 September 1124 | Meulan, D-Sens, France2 |
Title* | Countess of Vermandois and Valois3 | |
Name Variation | Adelheid de Vermandois2 |
Family | Hugh Magnus of France b. 1057, d. 18 Oct 1101 | |
Children |
|
Last Edited | 26 Nov 2004 |
Count Herbert IV de Vermandois1
M, #1918, b. circa 1032, d. 1080
Father* | Count Otto de Vermandois2,3 b. c 1000, d. 25 May 1045 | |
Mother* | Pavie of Valois (?)2,4 | |
Count Herbert IV de Vermandois|b. c 1032\nd. 1080|p64.htm#i1918|Count Otto de Vermandois|b. c 1000\nd. 25 May 1045|p158.htm#i4720|Pavie of Valois (?)||p158.htm#i4721|Count Heribert I. of Vermandois|b. c 955\nd. 29 Aug 1002|p158.htm#i4722|Hermengarde o. B. (?)|b. c 970\nd. a 1035|p158.htm#i4723||||||| |
Birth* | circa 1032 | France2,5 |
Marriage* | before 1068 | Principal=Adele of Vexin2,6 |
Death* | 1080 | 2,6 |
Family | Adele of Vexin b. b 1043, d. bt 1085 - 1090 | |
Child |
|
Last Edited | 26 Nov 2004 |
Citations
- [S78] Louise Brownell Clarke, Greenes of Rhode Island, p. 10.
- [S218] Marlyn Lewis, Ancestry of Elizabeth of York.
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 50-21.
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 50-20.
- [S338] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 8th ed., 50-22.
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 50-22.
Henry I of France1
M, #1919, b. 1008, d. 4 August 1060
Father* | Robert II of France "the Pious"2,3 b. 27 Mar 972, d. 20 Jul 1031 | |
Mother* | Constance of Provence2,3 b. c 986, d. 25 Jul 1032 | |
Henry I of France|b. 1008\nd. 4 Aug 1060|p64.htm#i1919|Robert II of France "the Pious"|b. 27 Mar 972\nd. 20 Jul 1031|p92.htm#i2758|Constance of Provence|b. c 986\nd. 25 Jul 1032|p92.htm#i2759|Hugh Capet|b. 941\nd. 24 Oct 996|p93.htm#i2762|Adelaide of Poitou|b. c 945\nd. c 1004|p93.htm#i2763|Count William I. of Provence and Arles|b. 950\nd. 994|p92.htm#i2760|Adelaide of Anjou|d. 1016|p93.htm#i2761| |
Birth* | 1008 | 4 |
Birth | 15 May 1008 | Bourgogne, France3 |
Marriage* | 20 January 1044 | Principal=Anne of Kiev1,3,5 |
Death* | 4 August 1060 | Vitry-en-Brie, France6,3 |
Burial* | St. Denis, France6,3 | |
Title* | between 1031 and 1060 | King of France6 |
HTML* | National Politics Web Guide | |
Title | Count of Paris6 |
Family | Anne of Kiev b. c 1024, d. a 1075 | |
Children |
|
Last Edited | 3 Dec 2004 |
Citations
- [S78] Louise Brownell Clarke, Greenes of Rhode Island, p. 10.
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 53-21.
- [S218] Marlyn Lewis, Ancestry of Elizabeth of York.
- [S338] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 8th ed., 53-22.
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 241-6.
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 53-22.
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 101-22.
- [S338] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 8th ed., 53-23.
Anne of Kiev1
F, #1920, b. circa 1024, d. after 1075
Father* | Grand Prince Jaroslaus I of Kiev2,3 b. 978, d. 20 Feb 1054 | |
Mother* | Ingegard Olafsdotter of Sweden2,3 b. c 1001, d. 10 Feb 1050 | |
Anne of Kiev|b. c 1024\nd. a 1075|p64.htm#i1920|Grand Prince Jaroslaus I of Kiev|b. 978\nd. 20 Feb 1054|p92.htm#i2755|Ingegard Olafsdotter of Sweden|b. c 1001\nd. 10 Feb 1050|p92.htm#i2756|Grand Prince St. V. of Kiev|b. c 960\nd. 15 Jul 1015|p158.htm#i4717|Ann of Constantiople|b. 13 Mar 963\nd. 1011|p158.htm#i4718|King Olaf I. Skötkonung of Sweden|b. 984\nd. bt 1021 - 1022|p92.htm#i2757|Astrid (Gyda) of Sweden (?)|b. c 979|p158.htm#i4719| |
Birth* | circa 1024 | Ukraine2 |
Birth | 1036 | 3 |
Marriage* | 20 January 1044 | Principal=Henry I of France1,3,4 |
Death | circa 1068 | 5 |
Death* | after 1075 | 2,3 |
Burial* | Abbaye Villiers3 | |
Name Variation | Anne of Russia (?)3 |
Family | Henry I of France b. 1008, d. 4 Aug 1060 | |
Children |
|
Last Edited | 16 Jun 2005 |
Citations
- [S78] Louise Brownell Clarke, Greenes of Rhode Island, p. 10.
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 53-22.
- [S218] Marlyn Lewis, Ancestry of Elizabeth of York.
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 241-6.
- [S338] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 8th ed., 241-6.
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 101-22.
Close