Baron Ralph Basset of Drayton1
M, #2551, d. between 1254 and 1261
Father* | Ralph Basset2 d. 1211 | |
Baron Ralph Basset of Drayton|d. bt 1254 - 1261|p86.htm#i2551|Ralph Basset|d. 1211|p485.htm#i14537||||Ralph Basset|d. 1160|p485.htm#i14538|||||||||| |
Death* | between 1254 and 1261 | 3 |
Residence* | Drayton, Staffordshire, England1 |
Family | ||
Child |
|
Last Edited | 30 Apr 2005 |
Ralph de Somery1
M, #2552, d. 1211
Father* | Sir John de Somery2,3 d. bt 1189 - 1199 | |
Mother* | Hawise Paynel2 d. b 1194 | |
Ralph de Somery|d. 1211|p86.htm#i2552|Sir John de Somery|d. bt 1189 - 1199|p86.htm#i2555|Hawise Paynel|d. b 1194|p86.htm#i2554|Ralph de Somery||p473.htm#i14189||||Ralph Paynel|d. b 1153|p86.htm#i2557|(?) Ferrers||p86.htm#i2558| |
Marriage* | 1st=Margaret Marshal1,3 | |
Death* | 1211 | 4 |
Event-Misc* | November 1193 | He was at Speyer, Germany with King Richard5 |
Event-Misc | 1194/95 | He offered 300 marks to have seisin of the barony which was of his mother's brother, Gervase Paynel5 |
Event-Misc | 1201/2 | He paid a fine of 100 marks for 50 knights not to cross the English Channel5 |
Event-Misc | 1202/3 | He was directed to take from the Jews of Domfront £50 to pay the soldiers5 |
Event-Misc | 23 August 1204 | He was granted by royal charter, the manor of Mere in exchange for the manor of Wolverhampton5 |
Title* | Lord of Dudley, Worcestershire4,5 |
Family | Margaret Marshal d. a 1243 | |
Children |
|
Last Edited | 25 Aug 2005 |
Citations
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 55-27A.
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 55-27.
- [S301] Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Robert Abell, p. 219.
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 81-28.
- [S347] Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans, p. 227.
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 122A-29.
- [S338] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 8th ed., 55-29.
Margaret Marshal1
F, #2553, d. after 1243
Father* | John FitzGilbert (?)2,3 b. c 1106, d. b Michaelmas in 1165 | |
Mother* | Sybil de Salisbury2 b. c 1120 | |
Mother | Sybil de Salisbury3 b. c 1120 | |
Margaret Marshal|d. a 1243|p86.htm#i2553|John FitzGilbert (?)|b. c 1106\nd. b Michaelmas in 1165|p89.htm#i2641|Sybil de Salisbury|b. c 1120|p89.htm#i2642|Gilbert le Marshal|d. c 1130|p482.htm#i14433||||Walter of Salisbury|b. c 1087\nd. 1147|p89.htm#i2643|Sibilla de Chaworth|b. c 1082\nd. b 1147|p135.htm#i4044| |
Marriage* | Groom=Ralph de Somery1,4 | |
Marriage* | Groom=Maurice de Gant alias Berkeley4 | |
Death* | after 1243 | 3 |
Family | Ralph de Somery d. 1211 | |
Children |
|
Last Edited | 23 Apr 2005 |
Citations
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 55-27A.
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 81-28.
- [S218] Marlyn Lewis, Ancestry of Elizabeth of York.
- [S301] Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Robert Abell, p. 219.
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 122A-29.
- [S347] Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans, p. 227.
- [S338] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 8th ed., 55-29.
Hawise Paynel1
F, #2554, d. before 1194
Father* | Ralph Paynel2 d. b 1153 | |
Mother* | (?) Ferrers2 | |
Hawise Paynel|d. b 1194|p86.htm#i2554|Ralph Paynel|d. b 1153|p86.htm#i2557|(?) Ferrers||p86.htm#i2558|Fulk Paynel||p86.htm#i2562|Beatrice FitzWilliam||p86.htm#i2563|Robert Ferrers|b. c 1076\nd. 1139|p86.htm#i2559|Hawise of Vitré|b. c 1086|p86.htm#i2560| |
Marriage* | Groom=Sir John de Somery1 | |
Death* | before 1194 | 3 |
Marriage* | circa 1196 | Groom=Roger IV de Berkeley1 |
Family | Sir John de Somery d. bt 1189 - 1199 | |
Children |
|
Last Edited | 23 Apr 2005 |
Sir John de Somery1
M, #2555, d. between 1189 and 1199
Father* | Ralph de Somery2 | |
Sir John de Somery|d. bt 1189 - 1199|p86.htm#i2555|Ralph de Somery||p473.htm#i14189|||||||||||||||| |
Of | Little Crawley, Buckinghamshire, England3 | |
Marriage* | 1st=Hawise Paynel1 | |
Death* | between 1189 and 1199 | During the reign of Richard I3 |
Family | Hawise Paynel d. b 1194 | |
Children |
|
Last Edited | 23 Apr 2005 |
Roger IV de Berkeley1
M, #2556
Marriage* | circa 1196 | 2nd=Hawise Paynel1 |
Last Edited | 27 Nov 2004 |
Citations
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 55-27.
Ralph Paynel1
M, #2557, d. before 1153
Father* | Fulk Paynel2 | |
Mother* | Beatrice FitzWilliam2 | |
Ralph Paynel|d. b 1153|p86.htm#i2557|Fulk Paynel||p86.htm#i2562|Beatrice FitzWilliam||p86.htm#i2563|||||||William FitzAnculf||p86.htm#i2564|||| |
Marriage* | Principal=(?) Ferrers1 | |
Death* | before 1153 | 1 |
Note* | Ralph Paynel was heir of William FitzAnculf, Principal=William FitzAnculf3 | |
Residence* | Dudley, Worcestershire, England1 | |
Event-Misc* | 1138 | He was a rebel against King Stephen, holding the castle of Dudley against him.1 |
Living* | 1141 | 1 |
Family | (?) Ferrers | |
Children |
|
Last Edited | 27 Nov 2004 |
(?) Ferrers1
F, #2558
Father* | Robert Ferrers1 b. c 1076, d. 1139 | |
Mother* | Hawise of Vitré1 b. c 1086 | |
(?) Ferrers||p86.htm#i2558|Robert Ferrers|b. c 1076\nd. 1139|p86.htm#i2559|Hawise of Vitré|b. c 1086|p86.htm#i2560|Henry de Ferrières|d. a 1088|p142.htm#i4231|Berthe (?)||p142.htm#i4232|André of Vitré||p86.htm#i2561|Agnes de Burgh|d. a 1120|p136.htm#i4055| |
Marriage* | Principal=Ralph Paynel1 | |
Note* | Her maritagium included the Ferrers fee of Greenham, Berkshire2 | |
Married Name | (?) Paynel1 |
Family | Ralph Paynel d. b 1153 | |
Children |
|
Last Edited | 27 Nov 2004 |
Robert Ferrers1
M, #2559, b. circa 1076, d. 1139
Father* | Henry de Ferrières2 d. a 1088 | |
Mother* | Berthe (?)2,3 | |
Robert Ferrers|b. c 1076\nd. 1139|p86.htm#i2559|Henry de Ferrières|d. a 1088|p142.htm#i4231|Berthe (?)||p142.htm#i4232|Walkelin Ferrières|d. a 1066|p142.htm#i4233|||||||||| |
Marriage* | Principal=Hawise of Vitré1,2,3 | |
Birth* | circa 1076 | 2 |
Death* | 1139 | 1,3 |
DNB* | Ferrers, Robert de, first Earl Ferrers [earl of Derby, earl of Nottingham] (d. 1139), magnate, was the third son of Henry de Ferrers (d. 1093x1100), landowner, and his wife, Bertha, who succeeded to their English lands, notably the compact but undeveloped lordship of Tutbury, Staffordshire, around 1100. He is first mentioned, after his brothers, Engenulph and William, and before unnamed sisters, in the foundation charter for Tutbury Priory issued by his father between 1087 and 1100. William joined Robert Curthose and was captured at Tinchebrai; Engenulph is last heard of in 1100, but Robert de Ferrers supported Henry I from an early stage. He played a part in local administration in Derbyshire and elsewhere, chiefly in the midlands, throughout his reign. He also intermittently witnessed the king's charters, being with him at Westminster in 1107, Nottingham in 1122, Winchester in 1123, and in council at Northampton on 8 September 1131, but there is no record of his accompanying Henry I abroad. In 1129/30 he held the farm of Wirksworth soke, Derbyshire, an area rich in lead mines, for £80; around this date he also granted the church of Potterspury, Northamptonshire, to Bernard the Scribe. It is, however, during his last years that he is most in evidence as a leading supporter of King Stephen. As baron, Robert de Ferrers was with Stephen, at Reading about 4 January 1136, at York in February, Westminster at Easter (7 April), and Oxford later that month, witnessing many important royal charters, including a celebrated declaration of the liberties of the church. When civil war broke out Ferrers may have been at the siege of Shrewsbury in early August 1138, but his most notable military service was with William, count of Aumale, William Peverel, Geoffrey Aiselin, Walter Espec, and Gilbert de Lacy in the defeat of David, king of Scotland, and his Scandinavian and rebel allies, at the bitterly contested battle of the Standard, fought near Northallerton on 22 August 1138. In gratitude Stephen named Ferrers earl. Charters and chronicles from this point refer to him interchangeably as Earl Ferrers, earl of Nottingham or earl of Derby. But he died in the following year and was succeeded in his earldom by his son, also Robert (d. 1159), who continued to play a minor and largely temporizing role in the civil war, only finally throwing in his lot with the future Henry II after Tutbury Castle was besieged in 1153. Some authorities claim that Robert de Ferrers married Hawise, or Havisa, daughter of the Breton lord André de Vitré, but no convincing proof has been adduced; Walkelin Maminot (d. 1170) was a son-in-law, won over to Stephen's cause by Ferrers in 1138; another daughter married Ralph Paynel, lord of Dudley, Worcestershire. Relations were also traditionally close with the Peverel family, hereditary castellans of Nottingham, and the younger Robert de Ferrers married the eventual heir, Maud Peverel, between about 1120 and 1135. The elder Robert de Ferrers remained a generous benefactor of Tutbury Priory, but other surviving charters show that he made gifts to Nostell Priory and settled his disputes with Burton Abbey. Michael Jones Sources GEC, Peerage · A. Saltman, ed., The cartulary of Tutbury Priory (1962) · Reg. RAN, vol. 3 · M. Jones, ‘The charters of Robert II de Ferrers, earl of Nottingham, Derby and Ferrers’, Nottingham Medieval Studies, 24 (1980), 7–26 · P. E. Golob, ‘The Ferrers earls of Derby: a study of the honour of Tutbury, 1066–1279’, PhD diss., U. Cam., 1985 · R. H. C. Davis, King Stephen, 3rd edn (1990) · R. Hexham, ‘De gestis regis Stephani et de bello standardi’, Chronicles of the reigns of Stephen, Henry II, and Richard I, ed. R. Howlett, 3, Rolls Series, 82 (1886) © Oxford University Press 2004–5 All rights reserved: see legal notice Oxford University Press Michael Jones, ‘Ferrers, Robert de, first Earl Ferrers (d. 1139)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/9365, accessed 24 Sept 2005] Robert de Ferrers (d. 1139): doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/93654 | |
Name Variation | Robert de Ferrières3 | |
Event-Misc* | August 1138 | He was one of the commanders at the Battle of the Standard5 |
Title* | circa 1138 | 1st Earl of Derby, created by King Stephen6,5 |
Family | Hawise of Vitré b. c 1086 | |
Children |
|
Last Edited | 24 Sep 2005 |
Citations
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 55-26.
- [S218] Marlyn Lewis, Ancestry of Elizabeth of York.
- [S301] Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Robert Abell, p. 100.
- [S376] Unknown editor, unknown short title.
- [S347] Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans, p. 82.
- [S338] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 8th ed., 55-26.
Hawise of Vitré1
F, #2560, b. circa 1086
Father* | André of Vitré1,2 | |
Mother* | Agnes de Burgh2 d. a 1120 | |
Hawise of Vitré|b. c 1086|p86.htm#i2560|André of Vitré||p86.htm#i2561|Agnes de Burgh|d. a 1120|p136.htm#i4055|Robert d. Vitre|d. 1106|p253.htm#i7578|Berthe (?)|d. a 1106|p339.htm#i10148|Robert de Burgo|b. c 1031\nd. 8 Dec 1090|p115.htm#i3435|Maud de Montgomerie||p115.htm#i3436| |
Marriage | Principal=Robert Ferrers1,2,3 | |
Birth* | circa 1086 | 2 |
Family | Robert Ferrers b. c 1076, d. 1139 | |
Children |
|
Last Edited | 16 Feb 2005 |
André of Vitré1
M, #2561
Father* | Robert de Vitre2 d. 1106 | |
Mother* | Berthe (?)2 d. a 1106 | |
André of Vitré||p86.htm#i2561|Robert de Vitre|d. 1106|p253.htm#i7578|Berthe (?)|d. a 1106|p339.htm#i10148|Tristan d. Vitre|d. a 1034|p253.htm#i7580|Ennoguende d. Fougeres Vitre/|d. a 1050|p253.htm#i7581||||||| |
Marriage* | Principal=Agnes de Burgh2 | |
Residence* | Vitré, Brittany, France1 | |
Name Variation | Andre Gui de Nal de Vitrie2 |
Family | Agnes de Burgh d. a 1120 | |
Children |
|
Last Edited | 4 Dec 2004 |
Fulk Paynel1
M, #2562
Marriage* | Principal=Beatrice FitzWilliam2 | |
Arms* | Sealed, 12th century: Two lions passant in pale between 2 fleurs de lis (Birch).3 | |
Name Variation | Pagnell2 | |
Residence* | Dudley, Worcestershire, England1 | |
Event-Misc* | Tickford Priory, Newport Pagnell, Buckinghamshire, England, founded1 | |
Living* | 1130 | 1 |
Family | Beatrice FitzWilliam | |
Child |
|
Last Edited | 1 Jan 2005 |
Beatrice FitzWilliam1,2
F, #2563
Father* | William FitzAnculf1 | |
Beatrice FitzWilliam||p86.htm#i2563|William FitzAnculf||p86.htm#i2564|||||||||||||||| |
Marriage* | Principal=Fulk Paynel2 |
Family | Fulk Paynel | |
Child |
|
Last Edited | 27 Nov 2004 |
William FitzAnculf1
M, #2564
Note | Ralph Paynel was heir of William FitzAnculf, Principal=Ralph Paynel2 |
Family | ||
Child |
Last Edited | 24 Oct 2003 |
Sir William d' Aubigny1
M, #2565, b. circa 1139, d. 24 December 1193
Father* | Sir William d' Aubigny "Pincerna (Strong Hand)"3,4 b. 1110, d. 12 Oct 1176 | |
Mother* | Adeliza of Louvain2 b. 1103, d. 23 Apr 1151 | |
Mother | Adeliza of Louvain3 b. 1103, d. 23 Apr 1151 | |
Sir William d' Aubigny|b. c 1139\nd. 24 Dec 1193|p86.htm#i2565|Sir William d' Aubigny "Pincerna (Strong Hand)"|b. 1110\nd. 12 Oct 1176|p86.htm#i2571|Adeliza of Louvain|b. 1103\nd. 23 Apr 1151|p86.htm#i2570|William d' Aubigny|d. 1139|p106.htm#i3155|Maud Bigod|b. c 1084|p140.htm#i4194|Duke Godfrey I. of Brabant "The Bearded"|b. 1060\nd. 25 Jan 1140|p86.htm#i2573|Ida de Chiny and de Namur|b. c 1083\nd. bt 1117 - 1122|p86.htm#i2572| |
Marriage* | 2nd=Maud de St. Hilary5,3,4 | |
Birth* | circa 1139 | Arundel, Essex, England3 |
Death* | 24 December 1193 | 1,3,4 |
Burial* | Wymondham Priory, Norfolk, England3 | |
Title* | Earl of Arundel and Sussex4 | |
Name Variation | William III de Albini3 | |
Arms* | Gu. A lion rampant double queued or (M. Paris I)6 | |
Occupation* | 27 June 1190 | a crusader, he obtained restoration of his father's titles and lands, which had been taken to the crown by Richard I5,4 |
Family | Maud de St. Hilary b. c 1132 | |
Children |
|
Last Edited | 27 Apr 2005 |
Citations
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 149-26.
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 149-24.
- [S218] Marlyn Lewis, Ancestry of Elizabeth of York.
- [S347] Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans, p. 8.
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 149-25.
- [S325] Rev. C. Moor, Knights of Edward I.
- [S284] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry, Warenne 3.
- [S325] Rev. C. Moor, Knights of Edward I, p. 6.
Maud de St. Hilary1
F, #2566, b. circa 1132
Father* | James de St. Hilary1 b. c 1110, d. c 1154 | |
Mother* | Aveline (?)1 | |
Maud de St. Hilary|b. c 1132|p86.htm#i2566|James de St. Hilary|b. c 1110\nd. c 1154|p86.htm#i2567|Aveline (?)||p86.htm#i2568|Hasculf d. St. Hilarie||p327.htm#i9808|||||||||| |
Of | Dalling, Norfolk, England2 | |
Marriage* | Groom=Roger de Clare3,2,4 | |
Marriage* | Groom=Sir William d' Aubigny1,2,5 | |
Birth* | circa 1132 | 2 |
Event-Misc* | after 1173 | She confirmed to the monks of Eynsham the gifts of Henry and of Roger FitzGerold6 |
Family 1 | Roger de Clare b. c 1116, d. 1173 | |
Children |
|
Family 2 | Sir William d' Aubigny b. c 1139, d. 24 Dec 1193 | |
Children |
|
Last Edited | 20 May 2005 |
Citations
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 149-25.
- [S218] Marlyn Lewis, Ancestry of Elizabeth of York.
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 63-27.
- [S233] Frederick Lewis Weis, Magna Charta Sureties, 28-1.
- [S347] Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans, p. 8.
- [S347] Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans, p. 53.
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 246B-27.
- [S233] Frederick Lewis Weis, Magna Charta Sureties, 153A-4.
- [S284] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry, Warenne 3.
James de St. Hilary1
M, #2567, b. circa 1110, d. circa 1154
Father* | Hasculf de St. Hilarie2 | |
James de St. Hilary|b. c 1110\nd. c 1154|p86.htm#i2567|Hasculf de St. Hilarie||p327.htm#i9808|||||||||||||||| |
Marriage* | Principal=Aveline (?)1 | |
Birth* | circa 1110 | of Dalling, Norfolk, England2 |
Death* | circa 1154 | 1 |
Residence* | Field Dalling, Norfolk, England1 |
Family | Aveline (?) | |
Child |
|
Last Edited | 24 Oct 2003 |
Aveline (?)1
F, #2568
Marriage* | Principal=James de St. Hilary1 | |
Name Variation | Aveline (?)2 |
Family | James de St. Hilary b. c 1110, d. c 1154 | |
Child |
|
Last Edited | 24 Oct 2003 |
Roger de Clare1
M, #2569, b. circa 1116, d. 1173
Father* | Richard FitzGilbert de Clare2,3,4 b. c 1090, d. 15 Apr 1136 | |
Mother* | Alice of Chester2,3,4 | |
Roger de Clare|b. c 1116\nd. 1173|p86.htm#i2569|Richard FitzGilbert de Clare|b. c 1090\nd. 15 Apr 1136|p116.htm#i3467|Alice of Chester||p116.htm#i3468|Gilbert FitzRichard de Clare|b. b 1066\nd. bt 1114 - 1117|p101.htm#i3018|Adeliza de Clermont|b. c 1074|p101.htm#i3019|Ranulph I. le Meschin de Briquessart|b. c 1070\nd. 17 Jan 1128/29 or 27 Jan 1128/29|p102.htm#i3036|Lucy (?)|b. c 1068\nd. 1141|p59.htm#i1764| |
Marriage* | 1st=Maud de St. Hilary5,2,6 | |
Birth* | circa 1116 | 2 |
Death* | 1173 | Oxfordshire, England2,7,4 |
Event-Misc | ||
HTML* | Clare Line | |
Title* | Earl of Hertford, Earl of Clare8,9 | |
Event-Misc* | January 1155/56 | He witnessed a charter from Henry II to Geoffrey de Mandeville, the Younger9 |
Event-Misc* | 1157 | Roger de Clare and Rhys ap Gruffyd fought against each other in Wales, Principal=Rhys ap Gruffyd9 |
Event-Misc | 1163 | He disputed the claim of Thomas Becket for fealty in respect of Tonbridge Castle, which he held by "the serjeanty of being High Steward." In spite of support of the King, Archbishop Hubert eventually recovered fealty.9 |
Event-Misc | 1164 | He took part in the Constitutions of Clarendon9 |
Event-Misc | 1165 | He abandoned his campaigns against the Welsh in Cardigan after a defeat9 |
Event-Misc | 1170 | He served as commissioner equiring into the proceedings of the sheriffs in Kent, Surrey, Middlesex, Berkshire, Oxon, and Bedfordshire9 |
Family | Maud de St. Hilary b. c 1132 | |
Children |
|
Last Edited | 21 May 2005 |
Citations
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 149-25.
- [S218] Marlyn Lewis, Ancestry of Elizabeth of York.
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 246B-25.
- [S233] Frederick Lewis Weis, Magna Charta Sureties, 153-3.
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 63-27.
- [S233] Frederick Lewis Weis, Magna Charta Sureties, 28-1.
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 246B-26.
- [S301] Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Robert Abell, p. 59.
- [S347] Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans, p. 53.
- [S233] Frederick Lewis Weis, Magna Charta Sureties, 153A-4.
Adeliza of Louvain1
F, #2570, b. 1103, d. 23 April 1151
Father* | Duke Godfrey I of Brabant "The Bearded"2,3 b. 1060, d. 25 Jan 1140 | |
Mother* | Ida de Chiny and de Namur2,3 b. c 1083, d. bt 1117 - 1122 | |
Adeliza of Louvain|b. 1103\nd. 23 Apr 1151|p86.htm#i2570|Duke Godfrey I of Brabant "The Bearded"|b. 1060\nd. 25 Jan 1140|p86.htm#i2573|Ida de Chiny and de Namur|b. c 1083\nd. bt 1117 - 1122|p86.htm#i2572|Count Henry I. of Brabant|b. c 1021\nd. 1079|p86.htm#i2574|Adelaide Orlamunda|b. c 1045\nd. a 1086|p87.htm#i2593|Count Otto I. of Chiny|d. 28 Apr 1125|p86.htm#i2576|Adelaide de Namur|b. 1068\nd. 1124|p86.htm#i2575| |
Birth* | 1103 | 1,3 |
Marriage* | 29 January 1121 | Windsor Castle, Berkshire, England, 2nd=Henry I Beauclerc4,3 |
Marriage | 2 December 1135 | Principal=Sir William d' Aubigny "Pincerna (Strong Hand)"3 |
Burial* | Afflinghem, South Brabant3 | |
Marriage* | 1138 | Conflict=Sir William d' Aubigny "Pincerna (Strong Hand)"1 |
Death* | 23 April 1151 | Nunnery of Afflinghem, South Brabant, France1,3,5 |
DNB* | Adeliza [Adeliza of Louvain] (c.1103-1151), queen of England, second consort of Henry I, was a daughter of Godfrey, count of Lower Lorraine and duke of Brabant (d. 1139), and his first wife, Ide, daughter of Henri (III), count of Namur. Adeliza's birth date is unknown, but the often cited approximate date of 1103 cannot be far wrong, since chroniclers refer to her as puella (a girl) at the time of her marriage to Henry I (1068/9-1135) in 1121, and she bore seven children after 1135. Charlemagne was an ancestor of both her parents, a fact that was celebrated by Adeliza's descendants but unknown or irrelevant to contemporaries. Nothing is known of Adeliza's education, but her later patronage of French poetry suggests early exposure to literature. King Henry, whose first wife had died in 1118, married her soon after his only legitimate son was drowned in 1120, when he stood in urgent need of a male heir. Eadmer of Canterbury reports that Henry's advisers agreed that she had the necessary beauty, morals, and character to become queen of England. In addition to giving Henry the possibility of fathering more children, the marriage strengthened England's existing diplomatic alliances within the German empire. The chronicler John of Worcester states that Adeliza was chosen queen before her wedding and formal coronation, which took place in Windsor on 24 and 25 January 1121. Henry's decision to have the ceremonies performed by the diocesan bishop, Roger of Salisbury (d. 1139), led to a dispute with the archbishop of Canterbury, culminating in the articulation of the archbishop's right to serve as the royal chaplain anywhere in England. In marked contrast to her predecessor, Queen Matilda, Adeliza took little part in governing the realm. Although she attested a few of her husband's charters, and accompanied Henry to Normandy in 1125, 1129, and probably 1131, she never served as a regent, and does not appear as part of the king's curia. Personal inclination probably contributed to her absence from the public sphere, as did the diminishing need for day-to-day administrative involvement by members of the royal family as Henry's government developed. Adeliza did receive and administer substantial dower properties, including the county of Shropshire. Several of these properties, such as Queenhithe in London and the custody of Barking and Waltham abbeys, both in Essex, had been held by Henry's first wife and were claimed by subsequent queens consort as belonging to them by right of office. Adeliza maintained her own household, bringing several staff members from Lorraine. Her first two chancellors were promoted to bishoprics during Henry's reign, Godfrey to Bath in 1123, and Simon to Worcester two years later. She retained ties to her natal family, giving wedding gifts of land to both a brother and a cousin. The chronicler Henry of Huntingdon quotes a Latin poem written to celebrate Adeliza's beauty, but she is perhaps best remembered as a patron of French literature. She sponsored Philip de Thaon's Bestiaire, and the Anglo-Norman version of the Voyage of St Brendan was rededicated to her. Geoffrey Gaimar implies that she commissioned a lost verse biography of Henry I from the poet David. But her most significant contribution to the Anglo-Norman realm into which she had married was a negative one: although there is no reason to doubt the fertility of either husband or wife, Adeliza failed to bear the looked-for son to Henry I. After Henry's death in 1135, and probably after 1137, Adeliza married William d'Aubigny (Pincerna), Henry's butler (d. 1176). William took the title of earl of Arundel after property belonging to the dowager queen. They had seven children who survived to adulthood. In 1139 Henry's daughter, the Empress Matilda (d. 1166) landed in Sussex to claim the English throne. William of Malmesbury reports that Adeliza had sent messengers to Normandy guaranteeing the empress's safety, but after receiving her at Arundel Castle, she surrendered her to King Stephen when threatened with an army. Adeliza did, however, negotiate a safe conduct allowing Matilda to join her half-brother, Robert, earl of Gloucester (d. 1147), in Bristol. Throughout the rest of the civil war Adeliza and her husband remained loyal to King Stephen. Like most other aristocratic women of the era, Adeliza patronized a number of religious houses. Among the recipients of her charity were Boxgrove Priory, Sussex, the cathedral church at Chichester, Henry's monastic foundation of Reading, her own foundation of the Augustinian priory of Pynham, Sussex, and several leper houses. The date of Adeliza's death is reported in continental sources as 24 March 1151. Her last datable charter was issued in 1150, at which time she had retired to the continental monastery of Affligham in Flanders, which had been founded by her father and uncle. The annals of Margam claim that the queen is buried in Affligham, but a charter issued by Adeliza's half-brother Jocelyn in favour of Reading Abbey states that she was buried there, presumably next to her first husband. Lois L. Huneycutt Sources L. Wertheimer, ‘Adeliza of Louvain and Anglo-Norman queenship’, Haskins Society Journal, 7 (1995), 101–15 · Reg. RAN, vol. 2 · B. R. Kemp, ed., Reading Abbey cartularies, 2 vols., CS, 4th ser., 31, 33 (1986–7) · Eadmeri Historia novorum in Anglia, ed. M. Rule, Rolls Series, 81 (1884) · William of Malmesbury, The Historia novella, ed. and trans. K. R. Potter (1955) · ‘Arundel’, GEC, Peerage · A. Strickland and [E. Strickland], Lives of the queens of England, new edn, 1 (1902) · E. M. C. van Houts, ‘Latin poetry and the Anglo-Norman court, 1066–1135: the Carmen de Hastingae proelio’, Journal of Medieval History, 15 (1989), 39–62 · The Anglo-Norman voyage of St Brendan by Benedeit, ed. E. G. R. Waters (1928) · Ann. mon., vol. 1 Archives priv. coll., charter Likenesses seal (after a seal of Queen Matilda I and Queen Matilda II), priv. coll. Wealth at death Honour of Arundel and other properties © Oxford University Press 2004–5 All rights reserved: see legal notice Oxford University Press Lois L. Huneycutt, ‘Adeliza (c.1103-1151)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/165, accessed 24 Sept 2005] Adeliza (c.1103-1151): doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/1656 |
Family | Sir William d' Aubigny "Pincerna (Strong Hand)" b. 1110, d. 12 Oct 1176 | |
Children |
|
Last Edited | 24 Sep 2005 |
Citations
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 149-24.
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 149-23.
- [S218] Marlyn Lewis, Ancestry of Elizabeth of York.
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 1-23.
- [S347] Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans, p. 7.
- [S376] Unknown editor, unknown short title.
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 139-25.
Sir William d' Aubigny "Pincerna (Strong Hand)"1,2
M, #2571, b. 1110, d. 12 October 1176
Father* | William d' Aubigny3,2 d. 1139 | |
Mother* | Maud Bigod3 b. c 1084 | |
Sir William d' Aubigny "Pincerna (Strong Hand)"|b. 1110\nd. 12 Oct 1176|p86.htm#i2571|William d' Aubigny|d. 1139|p106.htm#i3155|Maud Bigod|b. c 1084|p140.htm#i4194|Roger d' Aubigny|b. 1050\nd. 1136|p106.htm#i3156|Amice (?)||p481.htm#i14407|Roger Bigod|b. c 1050\nd. 8 Sep 1107|p140.htm#i4195|Adelaide (?)||p511.htm#i15328| |
Birth* | 1110 | 3 |
Marriage | 2 December 1135 | Principal=Adeliza of Louvain3 |
Marriage* | 1138 | Conflict=Adeliza of Louvain1 |
Death* | 12 October 1176 | Waverley Abbey, Surrey, England1,3,2 |
Burial* | Wymondham Priory, Norfolk, England2 | |
Note* | Legend has it that he acquired the appellation "Strong Hand" when he was attacked by a lion, loosed on him by Adeliz, Queen Dowager of France, after he rejected her in favor of Adeliz, Queen Dowager of England, and tore the tongue out of the lion.2 | |
DNB* | Aubigny, William d' [William de Albini; known as William d'Aubigny Pincerna], first earl of Arundel (d. 1176), magnate, was the son of William d'Aubigny Pincerna (d. 1139), lord of Buckenham, Norfolk, and Maud (Matilda), daughter of Roger Bigod. The family took its name from St Martin-d'Aubigny in the Cotentin. Possibly in 1138 and certainly not later than 30 September 1139 he married Adeliza of Louvain (d. 1151), widow of Henry I, and became, in right of her life interest, lord of the castle and honour of Arundel. It was at Arundel that the Empress Matilda landed on 30 September 1139 to begin her campaign for the throne, but d'Aubigny was otherwise loyal to King Stephen, who appointed him successively earl of Lincoln (c.1139–40) and earl of Arundel (by Christmas 1141); although this was his usual style thereafter, he also occurs as earl of Chichester and earl of Sussex. He did not figure prominently in the civil war, but when the future Henry II faced Stephen at Wallingford in August 1153, d'Aubigny was foremost in proposing and arranging a truce. He subsequently headed the earls named as witnesses to the final composition between them. After the accession of Henry II in 1154, d'Aubigny was confirmed in his earldom, and was given in fee the honour of Arundel, previously held in right of his wife. Apparently in September 1158 he successfully claimed his hereditary butlership, before Henry II and Louis VII at Paris, following a three-year absence on pilgrimage to Jerusalem. In November 1164, after Thomas Becket's flight to France, he was sent with other magnates on an embassy to Pope Alexander III, and delivered a speech expressing Henry II's hopes of reconciliation. He also escorted the king's daughter Matilda to Germany for her marriage to Henry the Lion, duke of Saxony, in 1168. He played a leading role in the defeat of the rebels in 1173, making a speech exhorting the king's army at Breteuil in August and participating in the victory near Bury St Edmunds in October. The earl died at Waverley in Surrey on 12 October 1176, leaving four sons, the eldest of whom was William (d. 1193); a daughter married John, count of Eu. He was buried a week later at Wymondham Priory, his father's foundation. He was noted for his eloquence and wit, but his brilliant marriage to Henry I's widow was said to have made him insufferably conceited. It was possibly in celebration of his marriage that he built a new castle at Rising, Norfolk, with a palatial rectangular stone keep. Later in Stephen's reign he also built New Buckenham Castle, Norfolk, with the earliest known example of a cylindrical stone keep in England. He founded an Augustinian priory at Old Buckenham about 1146. Graeme White Sources Reg. RAN, vol. 3 · R. Howlett, ed., Chronicles of the reigns of Stephen, Henry II, and Richard I, 4 vols., Rolls Series, 82 (1884–9) · The historical works of Gervase of Canterbury, ed. W. Stubbs, 2 vols., Rolls Series, 73 (1879–80) · Radulfi de Diceto … opera historica, ed. W. Stubbs, 1: 1148–79, Rolls Series, 68 (1876) · W. Stubbs, ed., Gesta regis Henrici secundi Benedicti abbatis: the chronicle of the reigns of Henry II and Richard I, AD 1169–1192, 2 vols., Rolls Series, 49 (1867), vol. 1 · W. Map, De nugis curialium / Courtiers' trifles, ed. and trans. M. R. James, rev. C. N. L. Brooke and R. A. B. Mynors, OMT (1983) · J. H. Round, Geoffrey de Mandeville: a study of the anarchy (1892) · J. H. Round, The king's serjeants and officers of state (1911) · GEC, Peerage · L. C. Loyd, The origins of some Anglo-Norman families, ed. C. T. Clay and D. C. Douglas, Harleian Society, 103 (1951) · R. H. C. Davis, King Stephen, 3rd edn (1990) · R. A. Brown, Castle Rising, Norfolk (1978) · VCH Norfolk, vol. 2 · Ann. mon., 2.240 · L. Watkiss and M. Chibnall, eds. and trans., The Waltham chronicle: an account of the discovery of our holy cross at Montacute and its conveyance to Waltham, OMT (1994) © Oxford University Press 2004–5 All rights reserved: see legal notice Oxford University Press Graeme White, ‘Aubigny, William d' , first earl of Arundel (d. 1176)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/282, accessed 24 Sept 2005] William d' Aubigny (d. 1176): doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/2824 | |
Name Variation | Aubeney5 | |
Note | between 1139 and 1153 | During the war of succession following the death of Henry I, William backed King Stephen, who made him Earl of Arundel. Hen Henry II landed in 1153, William proposed and arranged the truce.2 |
Event-Misc* | 1141 | created Earl of Arundel1 |
Note | 1154 | When King Stephen died, King Henry II confirmed William as Earl of Sussex and gave him fee title to Arundel2 |
Event-Misc | November 1164 | He and other magnates made a diplomatic mission to King Louis VII of France and the Pope concerning an appeal by Thomas Becket.2 |
Event-Misc | 1167 | He escorted Henry II's daughter to Germany for her marriage to Henry of Saxony.2 |
Event-Misc | 17 October 1173 | He was head of the Royal army in Normandy when young Henry rebelled against his father. He defeated the Earl of Leicester's army near Bury St. Edmunds2 |
Family | Adeliza of Louvain b. 1103, d. 23 Apr 1151 | |
Children |
|
Last Edited | 24 Sep 2005 |
Citations
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 149-24.
- [S347] Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans, p. 7.
- [S218] Marlyn Lewis, Ancestry of Elizabeth of York.
- [S376] Unknown editor, unknown short title.
- [S284] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry, Bohun 3.
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 139-25.
- [S347] Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans, p. 8.
Ida de Chiny and de Namur1
F, #2572, b. circa 1083, d. between 1117 and 1122
Father* | Count Otto II of Chiny2,3 d. 28 Apr 1125 | |
Mother* | Adelaide de Namur2,3 b. 1068, d. 1124 | |
Ida de Chiny and de Namur|b. c 1083\nd. bt 1117 - 1122|p86.htm#i2572|Count Otto II of Chiny|d. 28 Apr 1125|p86.htm#i2576|Adelaide de Namur|b. 1068\nd. 1124|p86.htm#i2575|Count Arnold I. of Chiny|d. 1106|p86.htm#i2577|Adela de Romeru|d. bt 1068 - 1069|p86.htm#i2578|Count Albert I. of Namur||p86.htm#i2580|Ida of Saxony|b. c 1035\nd. a 1117|p87.htm#i2581| |
Birth* | circa 1083 | 1,3 |
Marriage* | circa 1100 | Principal=Duke Godfrey I of Brabant "The Bearded"1,3 |
Death* | between 1117 and 1122 | 1 |
Death | circa 1125 | 3 |
Family | Duke Godfrey I of Brabant "The Bearded" b. 1060, d. 25 Jan 1140 | |
Children |
|
Last Edited | 24 Oct 2003 |
Duke Godfrey I of Brabant "The Bearded"1
M, #2573, b. 1060, d. 25 January 1140
Father* | Count Henry II of Brabant1,2 b. c 1021, d. 1079 | |
Mother* | Adelaide Orlamunda3,2 b. c 1045, d. a 1086 | |
Duke Godfrey I of Brabant "The Bearded"|b. 1060\nd. 25 Jan 1140|p86.htm#i2573|Count Henry II of Brabant|b. c 1021\nd. 1079|p86.htm#i2574|Adelaide Orlamunda|b. c 1045\nd. a 1086|p87.htm#i2593|Count Lambert I. of Louvain|b. c 991\nd. a 21 Sep 1062|p87.htm#i2595|Oda (?)|d. 23 Oct 1044|p87.htm#i2596|Count Eberhard von der Betuwe und Tristerbaut||p87.htm#i2594|||| |
Birth* | 1060 | 4,2 |
Marriage* | circa 1100 | Principal=Ida de Chiny and de Namur1,2 |
Marriage* | circa 1125 | Bride=Clemence of Burgundy2,5 |
Death* | 25 January 1140 | 4 |
Burial* | Efflighem2 | |
Occupation* | Count of Louvain4 | |
Occupation | Duke of Lower Lorraine4 |
Family 1 | Ida de Chiny and de Namur b. c 1083, d. bt 1117 - 1122 | |
Children |
|
Family 2 | Clemence of Burgundy d. 1133 | |
Child |
|
Last Edited | 9 Jan 2005 |
Count Henry II of Brabant1
M, #2574, b. circa 1021, d. 1079
Father* | Count Lambert II of Louvain2,3 b. c 991, d. a 21 Sep 1062 | |
Mother* | Oda (?)2,3 d. 23 Oct 1044 | |
Count Henry II of Brabant|b. c 1021\nd. 1079|p86.htm#i2574|Count Lambert II of Louvain|b. c 991\nd. a 21 Sep 1062|p87.htm#i2595|Oda (?)|d. 23 Oct 1044|p87.htm#i2596|Count Lambert I. of Louvain "The Bearded"|b. c 950\nd. 12 Sep 1015|p87.htm#i2597|Gerberga of Lorraine|b. c 976\nd. 27 Jan 1018|p87.htm#i2598|Count Gozelon I. of Verdun|d. 19 Apr 1044|p87.htm#i2587|Urraca o. I. (?)||p308.htm#i9232| |
Birth | circa 1021 | of Brabant, Louvain, France3 |
Birth* | circa 1021 | 4 |
Marriage* | Principal=Adelaide Orlamunda4,3 | |
Death | between 1078 and 1079 | 3 |
Death* | 1079 | 4 |
Burial* | Nivelles3 | |
Title* | Count of Lorraine and Louvain4 |
Family | Adelaide Orlamunda b. c 1045, d. a 1086 | |
Children |
|
Last Edited | 24 Oct 2003 |
Adelaide de Namur1
F, #2575, b. 1068, d. 1124
Father* | Count Albert III of Namur2 | |
Mother* | Ida of Saxony2,3 b. c 1035, d. a 1117 | |
Father | Count Albert III of Namur3 | |
Adelaide de Namur|b. 1068\nd. 1124|p86.htm#i2575|Count Albert III of Namur||p86.htm#i2580|Ida of Saxony|b. c 1035\nd. a 1117|p87.htm#i2581|Count Albert I. of Namur|b. c 1000\nd. 1064|p87.htm#i2585|Regilinde of Lorraine|b. c 994\nd. 1064|p87.htm#i2586|Bernard I. of Saxony|b. c 995\nd. 29 Jun 1059|p87.htm#i2582|Elicia (?)|b. c 1000\nd. b 1055|p87.htm#i2583| |
Birth | 1068 | 3 |
Birth* | 1068 | 1 |
Marriage* | Principal=Count Otto II of Chiny1,3 | |
Death | 1124 | 3 |
Death* | 1124 | 1 |
Married Name | Chiny1 |
Family | Count Otto II of Chiny d. 28 Apr 1125 | |
Children |
|
Last Edited | 24 Oct 2003 |
Count Otto II of Chiny1
M, #2576, d. 28 April 1125
Father* | Count Arnold II of Chiny1,2 d. 1106 | |
Mother* | Adela de Romeru1,2 d. bt 1068 - 1069 | |
Count Otto II of Chiny|d. 28 Apr 1125|p86.htm#i2576|Count Arnold II of Chiny|d. 1106|p86.htm#i2577|Adela de Romeru|d. bt 1068 - 1069|p86.htm#i2578|Count Louis I. of Chiny|d. 1068|p193.htm#i5778|Sophia of Verdun|d. 1078|p193.htm#i5779|Count Hildouin de Rameru|d. 1063|p94.htm#i2814|Alix de Roucy|d. 1062|p86.htm#i2579| |
Marriage* | Principal=Adelaide de Namur1,2 | |
Death* | 28 April 1125 | as a monk1,2 |
Family | Adelaide de Namur b. 1068, d. 1124 | |
Children |
|
Last Edited | 14 Jul 2005 |
Count Arnold II of Chiny1
M, #2577, d. 1106
Father* | Count Louis II of Chiny2 d. 1068 | |
Mother* | Sophia of Verdun2 d. 1078 | |
Count Arnold II of Chiny|d. 1106|p86.htm#i2577|Count Louis II of Chiny|d. 1068|p193.htm#i5778|Sophia of Verdun|d. 1078|p193.htm#i5779|Count Louis I. of Chiny|d. 28 Sep 1025|p193.htm#i5780|Adelaide (?)||p193.htm#i5781|Count Frederick of Verdun|d. 6 Jan 1022|p193.htm#i5782|||| |
Marriage* | Principal=Adela de Romeru1,2 | |
Death* | 1106 | 1 |
Death | 16 April 1106 | 2 |
Name Variation | Arnulf II (?)2 |
Family | Adela de Romeru d. bt 1068 - 1069 | |
Child |
|
Last Edited | 14 Jul 2005 |
Adela de Romeru1
F, #2578, d. between 1068 and 1069
Father* | Count Hildouin de Rameru2,1 d. 1063 | |
Mother* | Alix de Roucy2,1 d. 1062 | |
Adela de Romeru|d. bt 1068 - 1069|p86.htm#i2578|Count Hildouin de Rameru|d. 1063|p94.htm#i2814|Alix de Roucy|d. 1062|p86.htm#i2579|Hildouin I. de Rameru|d. a 1032|p118.htm#i3522||||Count Ebles I. of Roucy|b. c 988\nd. 11 May 1033|p168.htm#i5037|Beatrix o. Hainaut|b. c 997\nd. a 1035|p168.htm#i5038| |
Marriage* | Principal=Count Arnold II of Chiny2,1 | |
Death* | between 1068 and 1069 | 1 |
Burial* | Lescair (Lescier)1 | |
Name Variation | Adela2 |
Family | Count Arnold II of Chiny d. 1106 | |
Child |
|
Last Edited | 14 Jul 2005 |
Alix de Roucy1
F, #2579, d. 1062
Father* | Count Ebles I of Roucy2,3 b. c 988, d. 11 May 1033 | |
Mother* | Beatrix of Hainaut2 b. c 997, d. a 1035 | |
Alix de Roucy|d. 1062|p86.htm#i2579|Count Ebles I of Roucy|b. c 988\nd. 11 May 1033|p168.htm#i5037|Beatrix of Hainaut|b. c 997\nd. a 1035|p168.htm#i5038|Count Gilbert of Roucy|b. c 956\nd. bt 991 - 1000|p168.htm#i5039|(?) de Macon||p168.htm#i5040|Count Rainier I. of Hainaut|b. 957\nd. 1013|p169.htm#i5041|Hedwiga of France|b. c 972\nd. a 1013|p169.htm#i5042| |
Marriage* | 1031 | Principal=Count Hildouin de Rameru2,4 |
Death* | 1062 | 5 |
Name Variation | Adele de Roucy2 | |
Name Variation | Adele4 |
Family | Count Hildouin de Rameru d. 1063 | |
Children |
|
Last Edited | 24 Oct 2003 |
Citations
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 149-22A.
- [S218] Marlyn Lewis, Ancestry of Elizabeth of York.
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 151-21.
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 246-22.
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 151-23.
- [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 111-25.
Count Albert III of Namur1
M, #2580
Father* | Count Albert II of Namur2 b. c 1000, d. 1064 | |
Mother* | Regilinde of Lorraine2 b. c 994, d. 1064 | |
Mother | Regilinde of Lorraine3 b. c 994, d. 1064 | |
Count Albert III of Namur||p86.htm#i2580|Count Albert II of Namur|b. c 1000\nd. 1064|p87.htm#i2585|Regilinde of Lorraine|b. c 994\nd. 1064|p87.htm#i2586|Count Albert I. of Namur|d. bt 998 - 1011|p87.htm#i2589|Ermengarde of Lorraine|b. bt 970 - 975\nd. a 1022|p87.htm#i2588|Count Gozelon I. of Verdun|d. 19 Apr 1044|p87.htm#i2587|Urraca o. I. (?)||p308.htm#i9232| |
Birth* | 1 | |
Birth | circa 1030 | of Namur, Namur, France3 |
Death* | 1 | |
Marriage* | before 1065 | Principal=Ida of Saxony3 |
Marriage* | circa 1067 | Principal=Ida of Saxony1 |
Death | 22 June 1102 | 3,4 |
Family | Ida of Saxony b. c 1035, d. a 1117 | |
Children |
|
Last Edited | 9 Jan 2005 |
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