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Matches 151 to 200 of 7,802

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151 "Odo quickly married a second wife, Ermengarde, DAUGHTER OF WILLIAM IV of Auvergne."

By his second wife, Ermengarde of Auvergne, Odo had three children:

Theobald III, who inherited the county of Blois and most of his other possessions.
Stephen II, who inherited the counties of Meaux and Troyes in Champagne.
Bertha, who married first Alan III, Duke of Brittany, and second Hugh IV, Count of Maine

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Odo_II,_Count_of_Blois

https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eudes_II_de_Blois#Mariages_et_descendance
"Il épouse en secondes noces ERMENGARDE D'AUVERGNE, fille du comte GUILLAUME IV D'AUVERGNE, dont il eut quatre enfants."

https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ermengarda_d%27Alvernia --
"Secondo la Genealogiae comes Flandriae era figlia del Conte d'Alvernia, Guglielmo IV e della moglie Humberge (o Ermengarda)."

!! 
de Blois, Odo II (I35757)
 
152 "Ragnar Lodbrok was a Norse Viking hero and LEGENDARY Scandinavian king known from Viking Age Old Norse poetry, sagas, as well as contemporary chronicles. To those in MODERN ACADEMIA, his life and personage is somewhat DUBIOUS. According to traditional literature, Ragnar distinguished himself by many raids against Eastern Europe, Francia, Ireland, and Britain during the 9th century. His LEGENDARY kingdom is said to have included parts of Denmark, Norway, and Sweden."

"Katherine Holman, writing in 2003, expressed her own personal opinion: Although his sons are historical figures, there is NO EVIDENCE that Ragnar himself EVER LIVED and he seems to be AN AMALGAM of historical figures and literary INVENTION."

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ragnar_Lodbrok 
Sigurdsson, Ragnar (I33817)
 
153 "Sigfried (or Siegfried) was count of the Ardennes and the first person to rule Luxembourg. He was an advocate of the abbeys of St. Maximin in Trier and Saint Willibrord in Echternach. He MAY have been the son of Count Palatine Wigeric of Lotharingia and Cunigunda. He was the founder of the House of Luxembourg, a branch of the House of Ardennes."

"In the mid-10th century, Siegfried acquired the rocky promontory known as Lucilinburhuc (Luxembourg) and its immediate surrounding area, as well as usage rights for the river from the Abbey of Saint-Maximin in Trier; this was in exchange for land he owned near Feulen."

"Around 950, he married Hedwig of Nordgau (937–992), daughter of Eberhard IV of Nordgau. They had the following issue:
- Henry I of Luxembourg
- Siegfried
- Frederick I
- Dietrich II
- Adalberon
- Gislebert
- Cunigunda
- Eve
- Ermentrude
- Luitgarde
- a daughter [that married Thietmar]"

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sigfried,_Count_of_the_Ardennes

[NB: Information sourced from Wikipedia is subject to change by third-parties. Follow the URL noted above to review the latest content.]

of Luxemburg, Siegfried I (I33858)
 
154 "The bride worke a dress of cream charmeause, with train, trimmed with rhinestones and pearls, bodice of handsome gold over lace, the bridal veil being caught up with lilies of the valley. The bride carried a beautiful shower bouquet of lillies of the valley. The groom wore the conventional black, with grey gloves. The ushers were in black suits and grey gloves. They were: Norbert Smith, Joe Burger, Raymond Stretz. Brides maides - Elizabeth Fisher and Nan Meistrell. They were gowned alike in pink dechine, trimmed in pink messalin ribbon, pink tulle hats trimmed in black velvet ribbon and pink roses and carried a large bouquet of pink carnations.
After the nuptial High Mass the bride and groom repaired to the residence of Judge and Mrs. JA Fisher where a sumptuous wedding dinner was served to members of the immediate families of the young couple. At three o'clock Mrs. and Mrs Meistrell departed on the MK &T Limited for an extensive trip through the south.
Out of town guests: HF Meistrell and children, New York City; Joe Meistrell and son, New York City; Judge and Mrs. Will Franken, Norborne, MO; Mrs and Mrs. Joe Fsiher and children, Blackwater, MO; Mrs. Robert Kline, Miss Gertrude Kline, Ben Meyer, Prairie Home; Mrs. ~ Priest adn daughter, Nevada, MO; Mrs. Sam Whitlow, Otterville; Mrs. EF Holing, Kansas City, MO; CF Betteridge, Buncton; Charles A. Lieber, Muskogee, OK." 
Family: Meistrell, John Aloysius "Leo" / Fischer, Mary Elisabeth (F3054)
 
155 "The Genealogy of the Gifford Family from Massachusetts to Maine," by Christine R. Brown, 198?, Campbell Printing Inc., Knoxville, Tennessee, pp. 23-25: FHL film 1321182:
"Robert Gifford, the son of #1, was born about 1656 in Sandwich, Mass. He married first, about 1684 Sarah Wing, dau­ghter of Stephen Wing and his second wife, Sarah (Briggs) Wing. She was born in Sandwich Feb 1657/58, and died after 2 November 1702, when she is mentioned in her father's will.
Robert married (2) perhaps late in life, Elizabeth, who survived him. It is possible that she was a daughter of Stephen Cornell. The Reverend John Cornell in his Cornell Genealogy notes that Stephen Cornell's deeds imply that he had a daughter who married a Gifford.
Robert Gifford was a very young man when his father left Sandwich. It is probable that he returned with his father or elder brother John about 1664.
In 1683 William Gifford conveyed his tract of Dartmouth land to his sons Robert and Christopher. An agreement for division of the property, dated 2 March 1688, relates that "whereas our Honoured Father William Gifford, Senr., of the town of Sandwich had a half share in the precincts of Dartmouth which (he) hath given to us" and "finding four parcells of upland and five parcells of meadow land already laid out," they agreed that Robert should have forty-five acres of land "where he now liveth," fifteen acres on the east side of the bog and thirteen acres of meadow at a place called Petchitshuetts. These three parcels were to be Robert's full part. By a deed of 20 April 1689 Robert Gifford sold to Samuel Cornell of Dartmouth, for ₤42, the thirteen-acre parcel. Five days later, 25 April 1689, he paid the same Samuel Cornell ₤12 for four and one-half acres of Dartmouth land. By a deed of 2 January 1699/1700 he bought from Philip Taber, for ₤12 another Dartmouth lot.
Questions, controversies and debates between Robert Gifford and his brother Christopher over half a share of purchase lands given to them by their father induced the brothers to submit themselves to "the Arbitriment" of Capt John Otis of Barnstable and William Bassett of Sandwich. The arbitrators then chose James Warren as the third member. Judgment was accepted 24 Nov 1701. An indenture of 5 March 1718/19 between Robert and his brother Christopher partitioned the three tracts where they had for many years been tenants in common. A fortnight later, 24 March, a similar division for other common land was signed.
Through the years from 1704 to 1722, Robert Gifford bought and sold Dartmouth lands. By deeds of 25 June 1722, 16 January 1729/30 and 3 February 1729/30, he deeded land to his sons Stephen, Simeon, Timothy and Benjamin.
The will of Robert Gifford, yeoman, of Dartmouth, dated 25 March 1724, proved 21 April 1730, mentions by name his wife Elizabeth, his sons, Jeremiah, Benjamin, Stephen, Timothy and Simeon; his granddaughter Experience, daughter of his son Benjamin. Simeon was made sole executor. The sons were prob­ably named in order of their births, as evidenced by deeds and other data. It is unfortunate that the will fails to mention any daughters. It is believed that four daughters were born to Robert and Sarah Gifford. However, no birth records can be found for either sons or daughters.
Children of Robert Gifford are:
i. Jeremiah, b. abt 1681 md. abt 1703, Mary Wright, daughter of Adam Wright d. 1770 at Dartmouth, intestate. The inventory of his estate is dated 13 March 1771.
ii. Mary Gifford, b. abt 1683 md. 12 June 1704 Nathan Soule son of George Soule, d. 27 Jan 1772 will proved.
iii. Benjamin Gifford, b. abt 1685 md. abt 1709 Sarah Tompkins, dau. of Nathaniel and Elizabeth (Allen) Tompkins, d. between 6 March and 7 May 1754; w. proved.
iv. Stephen Gifford, b. abt 1687 md. 1710 Mary ___, d. after December 1748.
v. Rebecca Gifford, b. abt 1689 md. probably 22 Jan 1709/10 Jacob Soule, son of Nathaniel Soule...
vi. Timothy Gifford, b. abt 1691 md. 18 April 1717 Hannah Tompkins, daughter of Nathaniel d. 1780 in Dartmouth, testate.
vii. Ann Gifford, b. abt 1693... Probably the Ann Gifford who married at Newport, R.I. 26 June 1717 William Swan...
viii. Lydia Gifford, b. abt 1695...
ix. Simeon Gifford, b. abt 1697 md. 13 May 1725 Susannah Jenkins, daughter of Zacariah and Abiah (Allen), d. 1749 in Dartmouth testate.
The New England Historical and Genealogical Register: Vol. 128, No. 4, October 1974; Jan. 1975; July 1975; Oct. 1975; Jan. 1976; April 1976; October 1976; Jan, 1977; April 1977; July 1977; October 1977; Jan. 1978; Apr.1978; July 1978; Oct. 1978; April 1979; July 1979; October 1979; Jan 1980." 
Gifford, Robert (I32939)
 
156 "The identity of Amieria’s parents is NOT KNOWN. She is shown as the daughter of Gilbert in Europäische Stammtafeln, BUT THIS MAY BE NO MORE THAN SPECULATION. The word "neptis" may indicate a more remote family relationship than niece."

http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/NORMANDY%20NOBILITY.htm#RogerIMontgommery 
de Montgomery, Lady Amieria (I33440)
 
157 "The Jefferson Gazette"
Tuesday, September 28, 1920

DEATH OF T. W. SIMMONS
Old Soldier Passed Away Saturday Morning

Thaddeus W. Simmons, an aged and highly respected citizen of Jefferson died at his home on East Ashtabula street on Saturday morning, Sept. 25th, aged 85 years.

Mr. Simmons was born in Harding County, Ohio, on Aug. 4th, 1835. When a small boy his parents moved to Missouri for a year or two and then returned to Ohio. Mr. Simmons spent the greater share of his life in Jefferson township on a fine farm in the northeastern corner of the township near the covered bridge on Mills Creek.

He was married Oct. 10th, 1856, and had he lived a few days longer would have passed his 64th years with his good wife, who survives him.

He enlisted in Co. A, 29th Ohio and served in the Civil War.

He is survived by his wife* and three daughters, Mrs. A. C. Welton, Mrs. E. A. Loomis and Mrs. R. R. Andrews and two sons, W. T. Simmons and W. A. Simmons.

The funeral was held at the late home on Monday afternoon at 2 p.m.

____________________

* On 2 Oct 1920 [1921?], Mary Simmons filed for a Widow's Pension [Application #1163905, Certificate #893241].

Received $600 from father’s will of 27 May 1866 
Simmons, Thaddeus Warsaw (I10580)
 
158 "The long, before the preachers" Stromer, Conrad von Reichenbach (I30321)
 
159 "Tyson or Tisson, a baronial name.The Tessons were commonly said to have possessed a third of Normandy. The name of this family was originally Ticio, and it is stated to have been seated in the vicinity of Angouleme (whence its Gothic origins may be inferred), and to have been distinguished in war against the Saracens, c 725 (Des Bois, Art. Achard).The Tessons were afterwards seated in Anjou (Vaultrier, Apud Mem. Soc. Ant. Norm. x 78).

Radulphus Taxo, of Angers, in 1028 witnessed a charter regarding the Abbey of Coulombs (Gall. Christ. viii.297. Instr.). Ralph T. led 120 knights of his barony to the aid of Duke William at the Battle of Val des Dunes, 1047, and was created Viscount of the Cotentin. He founded the Abbey of Fontenay, near Caen, and from him descended the powerful family of Tesson in Normandy. Gilbert Tyson or Tesson, his brother, obtained the barony of Alnwick from Edward the Confessor, and fell at the Battle of Hastings. William, his son, had a daughter who married Ivo de Vesci. Gilbert Tyson, another son, held great estates in York, Lincoln and Notts 1086 (Domesd.). Adam Tyson granted lands in Notts to the Hospitallers, t. Rich I (Mon. ii) and to Thurgarten Priory (Ib.93). In the 13th century Warin Fitzgerold held lands late the fee of Ralph Tesun (Testa 77). This family appears also to have been the origin of those of PERCY, MARMION and BYRON." excerpted from The Norman people and their existing descendants in the British dominions and the United States of America (author unknown), Henry S. King & Co, 1874, p. 427. Reprinted online (Google Books and archives.com).

CONFLICTING INFORMATION ABOUT GILBERT TYSON--THERE MAY HAVE BEEN TWO OF THEM.

Provided by an unknown person without documentation | Gilbet Tyson fought at the Battle of Hastings on the Anglo-Saxon [English] side and died.
Contrasted with this undocumented info provided 23 December 2014 by Brent Ruesch | Gilbert Tyson (de Tyson) was William the Conqueror's [French] standard bearer at the Battle of Hastings, and was the first Norman owner of Alnwick. It is probable that the Tysons were deprived of their lands owing to their participation in Mowbrays rebellion against William in 1095, when the next year it was transferred to Eves De Vescy.

Fought at the Battle of Hastings on Anglo Saxon side 
de Tyson, Gilbert (I34179)
 
160 "WILLA OF BURGUNDY's parents were Rudolph I of Burgundy and WILLA OF PROVENCE, daughter of Boso of Provence."

"In 912 Willa of Burgundy married Boso, Margrave of Tuscany. Boso was the son of Theobald of Arles and Bertha, a daughter of King Lothair II. His older brother, Hugh of Italy, was married to Willa's mother."

"Willa's date of death is NOT KNOWN."

"With Boso, Willa had several children, including: Willa of Tuscany; Bertha, who married Boso, count of Burgundy, and Raymond II of Rouergue; Richilda; and Gisela."

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Willa_of_Burgundy
-------------
“Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families,” Douglas Richardson (2013):
“BOSO, Count of Avignon, 911-931, Count of Arles, 926-931, Margrave of Tuscany, 931-936, younger son by his mother's 1st marriage. He married WILLA, conjectured to be a daughter of Rudolf I, King of Burgundy. They had four daughters, Bertha (wife of Boso, Count in Upper Burgundy, and Raymond, Count of Rouergue, Margrave of Septimania, Duke of Aquitaine), Willa, Richilda, and Gisela. BOSO conspired against his brother, Hugo, in 936, and was captured and imprisoned by him.
Schwennicke Europäische Stammtafeln 2 (1984): 186 (sub Italy). Winter Descs. of Charlemagne (800-1400) (1987): VI.17, VII.35-VII.38. Bouchard Those of My Blood (2001): 84 (chart), 87. Jackman Ins Hereditarium Encountered II: Approaches to Reginlint (2008): 22-27.
Child of Count Boso, by Willa:
i. WILLA OF ARLES, married BERENGARIO (or BÉRENGER) II, Margrave of Ivrea, King of Italy [see Line D, Gen. 6].”

de Bourgogne, Willa (I32339)
 
161 "Wulgrin married Regelindis (Roselinde), a daughter of Bernard of Septimania."
-- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wulgrin_I_of_Angoulême --

"He marries Regelinde, sister of Guillaume de Toulouse, daughter of Bernard de Septimanie and his wife Dhuoda, who brings him the county of Agen as a dowry. The last example of a royal will imposing an administrator on a region, he transmits his titles and property pertaining thereto to his children."
-- https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vulgrin_Ier_d%27Angoul%C3%AAme -- 
de Toulouse, Roselinde Guilhelmide (I34577)
 
162 “1660 Georg Ebenretter, + 1682, dessen Frau Rosine eine Tochter des Sup. Melchoir Weigler war, die 1686 Konsul Hans Heubner ehelichte, während seine Tochter Sabina an Georg Möring, 1680 Pfarrer in Unsind, Rektor in Neustadt a. d. Aisch, verheiratet war.”

And the English translation :

“1660 Georg Ebenretter [ the fifth Syndicus of Hildburghausen since 1585],died 1682, whose wife Rosine, a daughter of the Sup[erintendent]. Melchoir Weigler, married Consul Hans Heubner in 1686, while his daughter Sabina was married to Georg Möring, 1680 Pastor of Unsind, Rector of Neustadt a. d. Aisch.” 
Ebenretter, Sabina (I26765)
 
163 “1660 Georg Ebenretter, + 1682, dessen Frau Rosine eine Tochter des Sup. Melchoir Weigler war, die 1686 Konsul Hans Heubner ehelichte, während seine Tochter Sabina an Georg Möring, 1680 Pfarrer in Unsind, Rektor in Neustadt a. d. Aisch, verheiratet war.”

And the English translation :

“1660 Georg Ebenretter [ the fifth Syndicus of Hildburghausen since 1585],died 1682, whose wife Rosine, a daughter of the Sup[erintendent]. Melchoir Weigler, married Consul Hans Heubner in 1686, while his daughter Sabina was married to Georg Möring, 1680 Pastor of Unsind, Rector of Neustadt a. d. Aisch.”

Possible definitions of Syndicus:

1. One appointed to represent a corporation, university, or other organization in business transactions; a business agent.
2. A civil magistrate or similar government official in some European countries.

So civil magistrate is a better translation than lawyer. 
Ebenretter, Georg (I26766)
 
164 “1660 Georg Ebenretter, + 1682, dessen Frau Rosine eine Tochter des Sup. Melchoir Weigler war, die 1686 Konsul Hans Heubner ehelichte, während seine Tochter Sabina an Georg Möring, 1680 Pfarrer in Unsind, Rektor in Neustadt a. d. Aisch, verheiratet war.”

And the English translation :

“1660 Georg Ebenretter [ the fifth Syndicus of Hildburghausen since 1585],died 1682, whose wife Rosine, a daughter of the Sup[erintendent]. Melchoir Weigler, married Consul Hans Heubner in 1686, while his daughter Sabina was married to Georg Möring, 1680 Pastor of Unsind, Rector of Neustadt a. d. Aisch.” 
Weigler, Rosine (I26767)
 
165 “Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families,” Douglas Richardson (2013)

“ROGER DE LEWKNOR, Knt., of Broadhurst (in Horsted Keynes), Horsted Keynes, Iteford, and Selmeston, Sussex, South Mimms, Mendlesham, etc., Knight of the Shire for Sussex, Knight of the Shire for Middlesex, Sheriff of Surrey and Sussex, 1354-5, son and heir, born about 1304 (aged 32 in 1336). In 1320 he was granted protection to go beyond the seas with the king. He married by settlement dated 1340 KATHERINE BARDOLF, daughter and heiress of ___ Bardolf. They had two sons, Thomas, Knight, and Richard. In 1344 he released all his right in the manor of Catteshall, Surrey, to his kinsman, Robert de Northwood, Knt., as lineal heir of Robert de Mankesey who received the manor in 1334. He presented to the church of Greatworth, Northamptonshire in 1351 and 1357. SIR ROGER DE LEWKNOR died 14 March 1362. His widow, Katherine, was assigned her dower 15 Oct. 1362.

Bridges Hist. & Antiqs. of Northamptonshire 1 (1791): 125. Berry County Gens.: Sussex Fams. (1830): 130 (Lewknor ped.). Sussex Arch. Colls. 3 (1850): 89-102. Notes & Queries 6th Ser. 9 (1884): 188. Cooke & Mundy Vis. of Worcester 1569 (H.S.P. 27) (1888): 86-87 (Lewknor ped.: "Roger Lewknor An" 14 E. 3, 1339. = Catherin do. & heire of … Bardolph.") (Bardolph arms: Azure, three cinquefoils or). Cal. Entries Papal Regs.: Letters 3 (1897): 180. List of Sheriffs for England & Wales (PRO Lists and Indexes 9) (1898): 136. C.C.R. 1346-1349 (1905): 2. Benolte et al. Vis. of.Sussex 1530 & 1633-4 (H.S.P. 53) (1905): 25-30 (Lewknor ped.: "Roger Lewknor 14 E. 3, 1339 = Catherin d. & heire of... Bardolphe."). Wrottesley Peds.from the Plea Rolls (1905): 432. C.C.R. 1360-1364 (1909): 364. Cal. IPM 8 (1913): 405. Feudal Aids 6 (1920): 581. Comber Sussex Gens. 3 (1933): 148-158 sub Lewknor).” 
Bardolf, Katherine (I32028)
 
166 “Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families,” Douglas Richardson (2013):

“BEATRICE DE BEAUCHAMP, married (1st) before 1264 THOMAS FITZ OTES, Knt., of Mendlesham, Suffolk, Belchamp Otton, Gestingthorpe, and Gosfield, Essex, Dursley and Woodmancote, Gloucestershire, Hamerton, Huntingdonshire, etc., hereditary coiner of the Mint in the Tower of London and City of Canterbury, younger son of Otes Fitz William, of Bekhamp Otton, Gestingthorpe, and Gosfield, Essex, etc., and Lislestone (in Marylebone), Middlesex, hereditary coiner of the Mint. He was born about 1231 (aged 30 in 1261). He was heir in 1261 to his older brother, William Fitz Otes. They had one son, Otes, and three daughters, Joan (wife of Guy Ferre), Maud, and Beatrice. His wife, Beatrice, was co-heiress c.1266-7 to her niece, Joan, daughter of Simon de Beauchamp, Knt., by which she inherited a one-third share in the barony of Bedford, Bedfordshire, consisting of the manors of Astwick, Bromham, Cardington, Dilwick (in Stagsden), etc., Bedfordshire, Linslade and Southcott, Buckinghamshire, Belchamp William, Essex, and Shelsley Beauchamp, Worcestershire. The same year Thomas was given the scrap iron from the broken dies, as his father and ancestors had had. SIR THOMAS FITZ OTES died shortly before 23 March 1274. In June 1275 the king granted custody of the lands and heirs of Thomas Fitz Otes to the king's kinsman, Maurice de Craon, to hold during the minority of the heirs, together with the marriage of the heirs, saving to Hugh Fitz Otes, brother of the said Thomas, land or rent to the value of £40 a year to hold during the said custody.

She married (2nd) before 26 June 1278 (probably as his 2nd wife) 'WILLIAM DE MUNCHENSY (or MONTCHESNEY, Knt., of Edwardstone, Lindsey, and Theberton, Suffolk, and, in right of his wife, of Linslade, Buckinghamshire, Shelsley Beauchamp, Worcestershire, etc., son and heir of William de Munchensy, of Edwardstone and Lindsey, Suffolk, by Joan, daughter and heiress of Geoffrey de Creke, Knt. He was born about 1230 (aged 24 in 1254). They had one son, William, and two daughters. He was heir in 1254 to his cousin, Ralph de la Haye, by which he inherited the manors of Layer de la Haye, Quendon, and Rettendon, Essex. In 1274-5 Master Alexander de Lolling arraigned an assize of novel disseisin against him and others touching a tenement in Bradwell-near-Tillingham, Essex. In 1275-6 Denise de Munchensy, of Holedon, arraigned an assize of mort d'ancestor against him touching possessions in Holton, Stratford, Monk's Eleigh, Chellesworth, and Lindsey, Suffolk. In 1276-7 he was granted letters of protection, he then going in the king's suite to the parts of Wales. He fought in Wales in 1277,1282, and 1283. About 1279 he conveyed 20 acres of arable land in Eldepak field in Finchingfield, Essex to Thomas de Spain. In 1279-80 Thomas de Spain arraigned an assize of novel disseisin against William de Munchensy, of Edwardstone, and others touching a tenement in Finchingfield, Essex. In the same period, Richard de Spain arraigned an assize of mort d'ancestor against William de Munchensy, of Edwardstone, and Thomas de Spain touching possessions in Finchingfield, Essex. In 1280-1 Andrew du Pont arraigned an assize of novel disseisin against William de Munchensy regarding a tenement in Laxfield, Suffolk. In the same year Hamo Pecche arraigned an assize of novel disseisin against William de Munchensy, of Edwardstone, and others regarding a tenement in Lindsey, Suffolk. In 1280-1 Hamo Pecche likewise arraigned an assize of novel disseisin against him touching a tenement in Groton, Aldham, and Haclleigh, Suffolk. The same year Philippe daughter of Richard de Spayne arraigned an assize of novel disseisin against William de Munchensy regarding a tenement in Finchingfield, Essex. In 1283 his kinsman, John de Munchensy granted him the manor of Scales (in Haslingfield), Cambridgeshire. Sometime before 1283 he enfeoffed Roger de Pridinton with the manor of Coddenham, Suffolk. His wife, Beatrice, died before 30 Sept. 1285. In 1285 he was tried and condemned for having sent four men of his household to murder Hugh Bukky at Castle Hedingham, Essex, and for harboring one of the murderers. In 1286 he received pardon on condition that he go to the Holy Land and remain there in God's service for ever. An allowance of 100 marks yearly from the revenues and his lands was made to him, but he was still a prisoner at London in 1290. He appears to have gone to the Holy Land in 1292, and in 1297, he had leave to return to the realm with restoration of his lands. SIR WILLIAM DE MUNCHENSY died shortly before 14 May 1302.
Roberts Excerpta è rotulis finium in Turri Londonnensi asservatis, Henrico Tertio rege, AD 1216-1272 2 (1836): 353, 355. Palgrave Docs. & Recs. Ill. the Hist. of Scotland I. (1837): 219 ("Will's de Monte Caniso" included on list of people owing military service in 1300). Gentleman's Mag. (1855): 159. Harvey Hist. & Antiqs. of the Hundred of Willey (1872-8): opp. 4 (Beauchamp ped.). Reliquary 17 (1876-7): 211. Annual Rpt. of the Deputy Keeper 44 (1883): 39, 78, 104; 45 (1885): 154, 205; 46 (1886): 261; 49 (1888): 67; 50 (1889): 87-88, 101, 136, 138, 219, 251. Trans. Bristol & Gloucs. Arch. Soc. 11 (1886-7): 233-242. Desc. Cat. Ancient Deeds 1 (1890): 108. Price Handbook of London Bankers (1890-91): 125. C.C.R. 1272-1279 (1900): 467. C.P.R. 1272-1281 (1901): 93. Madge Abs. of IPM for Gloucestershire 4 (Index Lib. 30) (1903): 89-90 , 98. Wrottesley Peds. from the Plea Rolls (1905): 122. VCH Bedford 2 (1908): 203; 3 (1912): 9-15, 44, 46, 214-218, 235. Cal. IPM 4 (1913): 64-65. Chambers Beauchamps (Bedfordshire Hist Rec. Soc. 1) (1913): 1-25. VCH Worcester 4 (1924): 331-334. VCH Buckingham 3 (1925): 387-391. Moor Knights of Edward I 1 (H.S.P. 80) (1929): 122-123 Fitz Otes arms: Bendy of six, a canton). Richardson & Sayles Rotuli Parl. Anglie Hactenus Inediti 1274-1373 (Camden Soc. 3rd Ser. 51) (1935): 22-23. C.P. 9 (1936): 416 417 (sub Munchensy). VCH Huntingdon 3 (1936): 67. Fowler Cal. IPM 2 (Bedfordshire Hist. Rec. Soc. 19) (1937): 150-151. Misc. Gen. et Heraldica 5th Ser. 10 (1938): 1-10. Gibbs Early Charters of the Cathedral Church of St. Paul, London (Camden Soc. 3rd Ser. 58) (1939): 136, footnote 1. Paget Baronage of England (1957) 37: 1-8 (sub Beauchamp); 396: 2-3 (sub Munchensi). Sanders English Baronies (1960): 10-12. VCH Cambridge 5 (1973): 230. Gervers Cartulary of the Knights of St. John of Jerusalem in England 1 (Recs. of Soc. & Econ. Hist. n.s. 6) (1982): 40-41 (charter of William de Munchensy dated probably c.1280). Brown Sibton Abbey Cartularies & Charters 2 (Suffolk Charters 8) (1986): 19-20. Waugh Lordship of England (1988): 213. TAG 65 (1990): 24-32. Thompson Hundreds, Manors, Parishes & the Church (Bedfordshire Hist. Rec. Soc. 69) (1990): 8,10. Brault Rolls of Arms Edward 12 (1997): 314 (arms of William de Munchensy: Argent, six bars argent). National Archives, C 47/14/4/10 (Scire facias dated 1283 to the sheriff of Suffolk concerning manor of Codham [Coddenham] - William de Monte Caniso v Joan de Colevile [widow of Roger de Pridinton] to be heard in next parliament) (available at www.catalogue.nationalarchives.gov.uk/search.asp).
Child of Beatrice de Beauchamp, by Thomas Fitz Otes, Knt:
i. MAUD FITZ THOMAS [see next].
Child of Beatrice de Beauchamp, by William de Munchensy, Knt.:
i. WILLIAM DE MUNCHENSY, of Edwardstone, Suffolk, married ALICE [see WALDEGRAVE 8].” 
de Munchensy, William (I35759)
 
167 “Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families,” Douglas Richardson (2013):

“BEATRICE DE BEAUCHAMP, married (1st) before 1264 THOMAS FITZ OTES, Knt., of Mendlesham, Suffolk, Belchamp Otton, Gestingthorpe, and Gosfield, Essex, Dursley and Woodmancote, Gloucestershire, Hamerton, Huntingdonshire, etc., hereditary coiner of the Mint in the Tower of London and City of Canterbury, younger son of Otes Fitz William, of Bekhamp Otton, Gestingthorpe, and Gosfield, Essex, etc., and Lislestone (in Marylebone), Middlesex, hereditary coiner of the Mint. He was born about 1231 (aged 30 in 1261). He was heir in 1261 to his older brother, William Fitz Otes. They had one son, Otes, and three daughters, Joan (wife of Guy Ferre), Maud, and Beatrice. His wife, Beatrice, was co-heiress c.1266-7 to her niece, Joan, daughter of Simon de Beauchamp, Knt., by which she inherited a one-third share in the barony of Bedford, Bedfordshire, consisting of the manors of Astwick, Bromham, Cardington, Dilwick (in Stagsden), etc., Bedfordshire, Linslade and Southcott, Buckinghamshire, Belchamp William, Essex, and Shelsley Beauchamp, Worcestershire. The same year Thomas was given the scrap iron from the broken dies, as his father and ancestors had had. SIR THOMAS FITZ OTES died shortly before 23 March 1274. In June 1275 the king granted custody of the lands and heirs of Thomas Fitz Otes to the king's kinsman, Maurice de Craon, to hold during the minority of the heirs, together with the marriage of the heirs, saving to Hugh Fitz Otes, brother of the said Thomas, land or rent to the value of £40 a year to hold during the said custody. She married (2nd) before 26 June 1278 (probably as his 2nd wife) 'WILLIAM DE MUNCHENSY (or MONTCHESNEY, Knt., of Edwardstone, Lindsey, and Theberton, Suffolk, and, in right of his wife, of Linslade, Buckinghamshire, Shelsley Beauchamp, Worcestershire, etc., son and heir of William de Munchensy, of Edwardstone and Lindsey, Suffolk, by Joan, daughter and heiress of Geoffrey de Creke, Knt. He was born about 1230 (aged 24 in 1254). They had one son, William, and two daughters. He was heir in 1254 to his cousin, Ralph de la Haye, by which he inherited the manors of Layer de la Haye, Quendon, and Rettendon, Essex. In 1274-5 Master Alexander de Lolling arraigned an assize of novel disseisin against him and others touching a tenement in Bradwell-near-Tillingham, Essex. In 1275-6 Denise de Munchensy, of Holedon, arraigned an assize of mort d'ancestor against him touching possessions in Holton, Stratford, Monk's Eleigh, Chellesworth, and Lindsey, Suffolk. In 1276-7 he was granted letters of protection, he then going in the king's suite to the parts of Wales. He fought in Wales in 1277,1282, and 1283. About 1279 he conveyed 20 acres of arable land in Eldepak field in Finchingfield, Essex to Thomas de Spain. In 1279-80 Thomas de Spain arraigned an assize of novel disseisin against William de Munchensy, of Edwardstone, and others touching a tenement in Finchingfield, Essex. In the same period, Richard de Spain arraigned an assize of mort d'ancestor against William de Munchensy, of Edwardstone, and Thomas de Spain touching possessions in Finchingfield, Essex. In 1280-1 Andrew du Pont arraigned an assize of novel disseisin against William de Munchensy regarding a tenement in Laxfield, Suffolk. In the same year Hamo Pecche arraigned an assize of novel disseisin against William de Munchensy, of Edwardstone, and others regarding a tenement in Lindsey, Suffolk. In 1280-1 Hamo Pecche likewise arraigned an assize of novel disseisin against him touching a tenement in Groton, Aldham, and Haclleigh, Suffolk. The same year Philippe daughter of Richard de Spayne arraigned an assize of novel disseisin against William de Munchensy regarding a tenement in Finchingfield, Essex. In 1283 his kinsman, John de Munchensy granted him the manor of Scales (in Haslingfield), Cambridgeshire. Sometime before 1283 he enfeoffed Roger de Pridinton with the manor of Coddenham, Suffolk. His wife, Beatrice, died before 30 Sept. 1285. In 1285 he was tried and condemned for having sent four men of his household to murder Hugh Bukky at Castle Hedingham, Essex, and for harboring one of the murderers. In 1286 he received pardon on condition that he go to the Holy Land and remain there in God's service for ever. An allowance of 100 marks yearly from the revenues and his lands was made to him, but he was still a prisoner at London in 1290. He appears to have gone to the Holy Land in 1292, and in 1297, he had leave to return to the realm with restoration of his lands. SIR WILLIAM DE MUNCHENSY died shortly before 14 May 1302.

Roberts Excerpta è rotulis finium in Turri Londonnensi asservatis, Henrico Tertio rege, AD 1216-1272 2 (1836): 353, 355. Palgrave Docs. & Recs. Ill. the Hist. of Scotland I. (1837): 219 ("Will's de Monte Caniso" included on list of people owing military service in 1300). Gentleman's Mag. (1855): 159. Harvey Hist. & Antiqs. of the Hundred of Willey (1872-8): opp. 4 (Beauchamp ped.). Reliquary 17 (1876-7): 211. Annual Rpt. of the Deputy Keeper 44 (1883): 39, 78, 104; 45 (1885): 154, 205; 46 (1886): 261; 49 (1888): 67; 50 (1889): 87-88, 101, 136, 138, 219, 251. Trans. Bristol & Gloucs. Arch. Soc. 11 (1886-7): 233-242. Desc. Cat. Ancient Deeds 1 (1890): 108. Price Handbook of London Bankers (1890-91): 125. C.C.R. 1272-1279 (1900): 467. C.P.R. 1272-1281 (1901): 93. Madge Abs. of IPM for Gloucestershire 4 (Index Lib. 30) (1903): 89-90 , 98. Wrottesley Peds. from the Plea Rolls (1905): 122. VCH Bedford 2 (1908): 203; 3 (1912): 9-15, 44, 46, 214-218, 235. Cal. IPM 4 (1913): 64-65. Chambers Beauchamps (Bedfordshire Hist Rec. Soc. 1) (1913): 1-25. VCH Worcester 4 (1924): 331-334. VCH Buckingham 3 (1925): 387-391. Moor Knights of Edward I 1 (H.S.P. 80) (1929): 122-123 Fitz Otes arms: Bendy of six, a canton). Richardson & Sayles Rotuli Parl. Anglie Hactenus Inediti 1274-1373 (Camden Soc. 3rd Ser. 51) (1935): 22-23. C.P. 9 (1936): 416 417 (sub Munchensy). VCH Huntingdon 3 (1936): 67. Fowler Cal. IPM 2 (Bedfordshire Hist. Rec. Soc. 19) (1937): 150-151. Misc. Gen. et Heraldica 5th Ser. 10 (1938): 1-10. Gibbs Early Charters of the Cathedral Church of St. Paul, London (Camden Soc. 3rd Ser. 58) (1939): 136, footnote 1. Paget Baronage of England (1957) 37: 1-8 (sub Beauchamp); 396: 2-3 (sub Munchensi). Sanders English Baronies (1960): 10-12. VCH Cambridge 5 (1973): 230. Gervers Cartulary of the Knights of St. John of Jerusalem in England 1 (Recs. of Soc. & Econ. Hist. n.s. 6) (1982): 40-41 (charter of William de Munchensy dated probably c.1280). Brown Sibton Abbey Cartularies & Charters 2 (Suffolk Charters 8) (1986): 19-20. Waugh Lordship of England (1988): 213. TAG 65 (1990): 24-32. Thompson Hundreds, Manors, Parishes & the Church (Bedfordshire Hist. Rec. Soc. 69) (1990): 8,10. Brault Rolls of Arms Edward 12 (1997): 314 (arms of William de Munchensy: Argent, six bars argent). National Archives, C 47/14/4/10 (Scire facias dated 1283 to the sheriff of Suffolk concerning manor of Codham [Coddenham] - William de Monte Caniso v Joan de Colevile [widow of Roger de Pridinton] to be heard in next parliament) (available at www.catalogue.nationalarchives.gov.uk/search.asp).

Child of Beatrice de Beauchamp, by Thomas Fitz Otes, Knt:
i. MAUD FITZ THOMAS [see next].
Child of Beatrice de Beauchamp, by William de Munchensy, Knt.:
i. WILLIAM DE MUNCHENSY, of Edwardstone, Suffolk, married ALICE [see WALDEGRAVE 8].” 
de Munchensy, Alice (I35760)
 
168 “Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families,” Douglas Richardson (2013):

“BOSO, Count of Avignon, 911-931, Count of Arles, 926-931, Margrave of Tuscany, 931-936, younger son by his mother's 1st marriage. He married WILLA, conjectured to be a daughter of Rudolf I, King of Burgundy. They had four daughters, Bertha (wife of Boso, Count in Upper Burgundy, and Raymond, Count of Rouergue, Margrave of Septimania, Duke of Aquitaine), Willa, Richilda, and Gisela. BOSO conspired against his brother, Hugo, in 936, and was captured and imprisoned by him.

Schwennicke Europäische Stammtafeln 2 (1984): 186 (sub Italy). Winter Descs. of Charlemagne (800-1400) (1987): VI.17, VII.35-VII.38. Bouchard Those of My Blood (2001): 84 (chart), 87. Jackman Ins Hereditarium Encountered II: Approaches to Reginlint (2008): 22-27.
Child of Count Boso, by Willa:
i. WILLA OF ARLES, married BERENGARIO (or BÉRENGER) II, Margrave of Ivrea, King of Italy [see Line D, Gen. 6].” 
d'Arles, Dame Richilde (I32337)
 
169 “Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families,” Douglas Richardson (2013):

“EUSTACHE I a l'Oeil,
Count of Boulogne,
son and heir of Baldwin,
Count of Boulogne, by his wife, Adelvie de Gant,
born about 995.

He married MATHILDE (or MAHAUT) OF LOUVAIN,
daughter of Lambert I, Count of Louvain, by Gerberge, daughter of Charles, Duke of Lower Lorraine.

She was born about 993.

They had three sons, Eustache (II) [Count of Boulogne],
Lambert [Count of Lens], and
Godfrey (or Geoffrey) [Bishop of Paris, Arch-Chancellor of France], and one daughter,

Gerberge (wife of Friedrich II, Duke of Lower Lorraine).

EUSTACHE I, Count of Boulogne, died about 1049.

L'Art de Vérifier les Dates 2 (1784): 760-767 (sub Comtes de Boulogne).

Delisle Recueil des Historiens des Gaules et de la France 11 (1876): 205-206 (Ex Genealogia de qua ortis est Carolus Magnus), 346 (Ex Genealogia Comitum Bononiensium), 370 (Ex Genealogia B. Arnulphi Metensis Episcopi); 374 (Genealogix ex Chronicis Hainoniensibus); 13 (1869): 585 (Ex Genealogia Caroli Magni qua Namurcensium Comitum et Boloniens), 647-648 (Ex Genealogia B. Amulphi).

Monumenta Germaniae Historica 9 (1925): 300-301; 14 (1925): 621. Sellers De Carpentier Allied Ancestry (1928): 185-187.

Brandenburg Die Nachkommen Karls des Großen (1935): IX 69.

Schwennicke Europäische Stammtafeln 1 (1980): 95 (sub Hainault, Brabant); 3(4) (1989): 621 (sub Boulogne).

Winter Descs. of Charlemagne (800-1400) (1987): IX.69, XI.461j, X.124-X.127.

Children of Eustache I of Boulogne, by Mathilde of Louvain:
i. EUSTACHE II, Count of Boulogne [see below].
ii. LAMBERT OF BOULOGNE, Count of Lens, married ALICE OF NORMANDY, Countess of Aumale [see AUMALE 1].” 
de Boulogne, Eustace I (I32086)
 
170 “Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families,” Douglas Richardson (2013):

“ISABEL MAUDUIT, married c.1236-40 (date of charter) WILLIAM DE BEAUCHAMP, Knt., of Elmley and Salwarpe, Worcestershire, hereditary Sheriff of Worcestershire, son and heir of Walter de Beauchamp, of Elmley, Holt, and Salwarpe, Worcestershire, hereditary Sheriff of Worcester, by his 1st wife, Joan, daughter of Roger de Mortimer. He was born in 1215. Her maritagium included a share of the manor of Letcombe Basset, Berkshire.
They had four sons,
1. William [Earl of Warwick],
2. Walter, Knt.,
3. John, Knt., and
4. James,
and six daughters,
5. Alice,
6. Joan,
7. Isabel,
8. Margaret (or Margery),
9. Sibyl, and
10. Sarah.
In 1249 William and his wife, Isabel, gave her share of the manor of Letcombe Bassett, Berkshire for a term of years to Isabel de Mortimer. In 1252 they granted two parts of the manor to Alice de Scothot for life. He fought in Gascony in 1253 and in Wales in 1257, 1258, 1260, 1263. In 1254 he was granted a weekly market and a yearly fair at his manor of Elmley, Worcestershire.
His wife, Isabel, died before 30 Jan. 1268, and was buried in Cokehill Nunnery, Worcestershire.
WILLIAM DE BEAUCHAMP died shortly before 25 April 1269. He left a will dated 7 Jan. 1268/9, requesting burial at Friars Minor, Worcester.

Children of Isabel Mauduit, by William de Beauchamp, Knt.:
i. WILLIAM DE BEAUCHAMP, Knt., Earl of Warwick [see next].
ii. WALTER DE BEAUCHAMP, Knt., of Alcester, Warwickshire, married ALICE DE TONY [see POWICK 9].
iii. JOHN DE BEAUCHAMP, Knt., of Holt, Worcestershire, married [see HOLT 9].
iv. ALICE DE BEAUCHAMP, married BERNARD DE BRUS, of Conington, Huntingdonshire and Exton, Rutland [see CONINGTON 6].
v. JOAN DE BEAUCHAMP, married BARTHOLOMEW DE SUDELEY, Knt., of Sudeky, Gloucestershire [see SUDELEY 9].
vi. MARGARET (or MARGERY) DE BEAUCHAMP, married HUBERT HUSSEY, Knt., of Figheldean and Stapleford, Wiltshire [see ESTURMY 9].
vii. SARAH DE BEAUCHAMP, married RICHARD TALBOT, of Eccleswall (in Linton), Herefordshire [see TALBOT 9].” 
Mauduit, Isabel (I35763)
 
171 “Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families,” Douglas Richardson (2013):

“JOAN DE KEYNES, daughter and heiress. She married before 1271 ROGER DE LEWKNOR (or LEUKENORE), Knt., of South Mimms, Middlesex, Mendlesham, Suffolk, and Little Rayne, Essex, and, in right of his wife, of Greatworth, Northamptonshire, and Horsted Keynes, Selmeston, and Iteford, Sussex, Sheriff of Surrey and Sussex, 1289-90, son and heir of Nicholas de Lewknor, Knt., of South Mimms, Middlesex, Mendlesham, Suffolk, and Little Rayne, Essex, Keeper of the Wardrobe, Justice of Forest, Justice to the Jews. He was born about 1244-6 (aged 24 or 26 in 1268). They had one son, Thomas, Knt. In 1265, after the Battle of Evesham, he and his father were involved in the seizure of property in Hertfordshire, Middlesex, and Surrey, mostly owned by London citizens who supported Simon de Montfort and his party. He presented to the church of Greatworth, Northamptonshire in 1272. He was going abroad in 1272, as a knight of Thomas de Clare. He and his wife, Joan, were defendants in a fine for the manor of Selmeston. Sussex in 1276. SIR ROGER DE LEWKNOR died shortly before 24 Sept. 1295.

Bridges Hist. & Antiqs. of Northamptonshire 1 (1791): 125. Berry County Gens.: Sussex Fams, (1830): 130 (Lewknor ped.). Sussex Arch. Colls. 3 (1850): 89-102; 63 (1922): 181-202. List of Sheriffs for England & Wales (PRO Lists and Indexes 9) (1898): 135. Year Books of Edward III: Years XVII & XVIII 10 (Rolls Ser. 31b) (1903): 584-595. Cal. IPM 1(1904): 211-212; 3 (1912): 179-180. Wrottesley Peds. from the Plea Rolls (1905): 432. Feudal Aids 5 (1908): 128. Comber Sussex Gens. 3 (1933): 148-158 (sub Lewknor). VCH Middlesex 5 (1976): 282. VCH Northampton 5 (2002): 77-98.” 
de Keynes, Joan (I32033)
 
172 “Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families,” Douglas Richardson (2013):

“JOAN DE KEYNES, daughter and heiress. She married before 1271 ROGER DE LEWKNOR (or LEUKENORE), Knt., of South Mimms, Middlesex, Mendlesham, Suffolk, and Little Rayne, Essex, and, in right of his wife, of Greatworth, Northamptonshire, and Horsted Keynes, Selmeston, and Iteford, Sussex, Sheriff of Surrey and Sussex, 1289-90, son and heir of Nicholas de Lewknor, Knt., of South Mimms, Middlesex, Mendlesham, Suffolk, and Little Rayne, Essex, Keeper of the Wardrobe, Justice of Forest, Justice to the Jews. He was born about 1244-6 (aged 24 or 26 in 1268). They had one son, Thomas, Knt. In 1265, after the Battle of Evesham, he and his father were involved in the seizure of property in Hertfordshire, Middlesex, and Surrey, mostly owned by London citizens who supported Simon de Montfort and his party. He presented to the church of Greatworth, Northamptonshire in 1272. He was going abroad in 1272, as a knight of Thomas de Clare. He and his wife, Joan, were defendants in a fine for the manor of Selmeston. Sussex in 1276. SIR ROGER DE LEWKNOR died shortly before 24 Sept. 1295.

Bridges Hist. & Antiqs. of Northamptonshire 1 (1791): 125. Berry County Gens.: Sussex Fams, (1830): 130 (Lewknor ped.). Sussex Arch. Colls. 3 (1850): 89-102; 63 (1922): 181-202. List of Sheriffs for England & Wales (PRO Lists and Indexes 9) (1898): 135. Year Books of Edward III: Years XVII & XVIII 10 (Rolls Ser. 31b) (1903): 584-595. Cal. IPM 1(1904): 211-212; 3 (1912): 179-180. Wrottesley Peds. from the Plea Rolls (1905): 432. Feudal Aids 5 (1908): 128. Comber Sussex Gens. 3 (1933): 148-158 (sub Lewknor). VCH Middlesex 5 (1976): 282. VCH Northampton 5 (2002): 77-98.” 
de Lewknor, Sir Roger (I32034)
 
173 “Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families,” Douglas Richardson (2013):

“JOAN MARSHAL, married after 1219 (as his 1st wife) WARIN DE MUNCHENSY, Knt., of Swanscombe, Kent, 2nd son of William de Munchensy, Knt., of Swanscombe, Kent, Winfarthing and Gooderstone, Norfolk, etc., by Aveline, daughter of Roger de Clare, Earl of Hertford [see CLARE 4.ii for his ancestry]. He was born about 1192 (came of age in 1213). He was heir about 1208 to his older brother, William de Munchensy. They had one son, John, and one daughter, Joan. He was involved on the side of the Barons against King John, and his lands were forfeited. He was taken prisoner at the Battle of Lincoln 20 May 1217. He returned to allegiance by Nov. 1217. In 1221 he accompanied the king to the Siege of Byham. He was serving in Wales in 1223, with his brother-in-law, William Marshal, Earl of Pembroke. He was with the king overseas in 1229-30, and in Wales at the end of 1233. He married (2nd) between November 1234 and June 1235 DENISE DE ANESTY, widow of Walter Langton (died 1234), of Langton, Lincolnshire, and Ridgwell, Essex (brother of Archbishop Stephen Langton), and daughter and heiress of Nicholas de Anesty, of Ansty and Little Hormead, Hertfordshire, Bourn, Cambridgeshire, etc., by ___, sister of Hamon Pecche. They had one son, William. In 1237-8 he and his wife, Denise, acquired 1-1/2 virgate in Bourn, Cambridgeshire from William Haretail. He was serving in Gascony in 1242-44, where he took part in the Battle of Saintes. He was summoned against the Scots in 1244, and, in June 1245, for service in Wales. He was in Gascony again in 1252. He was at Dover 26 Dec. 1254, the day King Henry III appears to have crossed from Boulogne. SIR WARIN DE MUNCHENSY died testate about 20 July 1255. His widow, Denise, married (3rd) before 4 June 1260 ROBERT LE BOTELER (or LE BOTILLER). In 1260 he and his wife, Denise, were granted protection, they then going beyond seas. In 1266 he was granted a safe conduct, he then coming to the king's court. His wife, Denise, again went beyond seas in 1271. ROBERT LE BOTELER died before autumn 1272. In 1294 his widow, Denise, founded the nunnery of Waterbeach, Cambridgeshire. She died shortly before 23 May 1304, and was buried in the church of the Grey Friars, London.

Dugdale Monasticon Anglicanum 5 (1825): 271 (Abbey of Tintern, Titulus illorum de Verdon et de Genevill …: "Secunda filia antedicto Willihelmi Marescalli vocabatur Johanna, nupta Warino de Montecaniso, de qua habuit exitum Johannem de Montecaniso qui obiit sine hærede de se, et Johannam sororem ejus nuptam domino Willihelmo de Valentia."). Lipscomb Hist. & Antiqs. of Buckingham 1 (1847): 200-201 (Clare ped.). Clark Earls, Earldom, & Castle of Pembroke (1880): 69-75. Matthew of Paris Chronica Majora 5 (Rolls Ser. 57) (1880):504 (sub AD. 1255: "Obiit eodem tempore nobilis baro, inter omnes Angliae nobiles vel nobilissimus et sapientissimus vel unus de nobilioribus et sapientibus, Warinus de Muntcheinsil ... Dominus autem rex ilico custodiam haeredis ejus nomine Willeimi contulit Willelmo de Valentia fratri suo uterino, qui filiam ejusdem Warini, ut gener ejus esset, desponsaverat."). Stubbs Historical Works of Gervase of Canterbury 2 (Rolls Ser. 73) (1880): 110-111. Francisque-Michel Riles Gascons 1 (1885): 6, 10-11, 30-32, 190. Papal Regs.: Letters 1 (1893): 566 (Denise de Munchensy, foundress of Waterbeach Abbey, styled "king's kinswoman"). Desc. Cat. Ancient Deeds 2 (1894): 91. C.C.R. 1302-1307 (1908): 513. C.P.R. 1258-1266 (1910): 75, 621, 667. C.F.R. 1 (1911): 493. Inv. of the Hist. Monuments in Herefordshire (1911): 12. VCH Hampshire 4 (1911): 51-56. VCH Hertford 3 (1912): 232-240. Genealogist n.s. 34 (1918): 181-189 (William d'Aubeney, Earl of Arundel, styled "uncle" [avunculus] of Warin de Munchensy in 1213, he being half-brother of Warin's mother, Aveline de Clare). Bourdillon Order of Minoresses in England (1926): 13-16. Powicke Stephen Langton (1928). Pubs Bedfordshire Hist. oc. 13 (1930): Ped. 11 (Lenveyse, Birkin, Anstey ped.). C.P. 9 (1936): 421-422 (sub Munchensy). VCH Cambridge 2 (1948): 292-293; 5 (1973): 4-16. Sanders English Baronies (1960): 63, 144. Clanchy From Memory to Written Record: England 1066-1307 (1993): 197-200, 245. McCash Cultural Patronage of Medieval Women (1996): 245-246, 262-263. Higgitt Murthly Hours (2000): 175. Gee Women, Art & Patronage from Henry III to Edward III: 1216-1377 (2002): 75-76, 142. Lawrence Letters of Adam Marsh 1 (2006): 56-63.”
--------------------------------------------------------------
From Medieval Lands:
WARIN [II] de Munchensy, son of WILLIAM de Munchensy & his wife Aveline de Clare (-[20 Jul 1255]). "Guarinus de Munchainesy" paid a fine for "hereditarie" with "W. com Arundell avunculus ipsius Warini" acting as guarantor, dated 23 Dec 1213[1708]. William Earl of Arundel was the son of the second husband of Warin’s maternal grandmother. "…Warinus de Muntchenesi…" witnessed a document dated 25 Aug 1223[1709].
Bracton records a claim, dated 1224, by "Warinus de Monte Canisio" against "Walterum de Godarduilla" requesting "feodum…in Wicham" which had been held by "Willelmo de Monte Canisio fratre eiusdem Warini cuius heres ipse est dum fuit infra etatem"[1710].
Bracton records a claim, dated 1224, by "Prior de Suwere" against "Warinum de Monte Canisio" for "ecclesiam de Suanescamp…advocacionem" which "comitissa Cecilia avia sua" [Cecilia Countess of Hereford, Warin’s great-aunt not his grandmother] granted to "Jacobum le Sauuage"[1711].
Bracton records a claim in 1232 made by “Warinus de Monte Canisio” against “Adam de Kailly et Mabiliam uxorem eius...Isabellam de Friuilla...Matillidem Giffard” for land “in Luddeduna” inherited from “Cecilia [...comitissa] antecess sua...quia obiit sine herede de se descendit...Agneti...sorori et heredi et quia ipse Willelmus obiit sine herede...de se descendit...isti Warino...fratri et heredi suo”, and that the defendants replied that “Cecilia comitissa” had given the land, which “Willelmus de Pictavia...virum suum” held for one knight’s fee, to “Ricardo Giffard patri predictarum Mabilie et Isabelle...Osbertus filius Ricardi” and that “mortuo predicto Willelmo” Cecilia had married “Walterum de Meinne”[1712]. "Warin de Montechanes and Denise his wife" were granted rights "in the demesne lands of Rodewell" dated 21 Oct 1242[1713].

m firstly JOAN Marshal, daughter of WILLIAM Marshal Earl of Pembroke & his wife Isabel de Clare Ctss of Pembroke. The Chronicle of Tintern Abbey, Monmouthshire, names (in order) ”Matilda…Johanna…Isabella” as the daughters of “Willielmi Marescalli comitis Penbrochiæ”[1714]. The same source records in a later passage that "secunda filia…Willihelmi Marescalli…Johanna" married "Warino de Montecaniso" by whom she was mother of "Johannem de Montecaniso" who died childless and "Johannam sororem eius" who married "domino Willihelmo de Valentia"[1715].

m secondly ([Nov 1234/Jun 1235]) as her second husband, DENISE de Anesty, widow of WALTER Langton of Langton, Lincolnshire and Ridgewell, Essex, daughter of NICHOLAS de Anesty of Ansty and Little Hormead, Hertfordshire & his wife --- (-1304, bur London Grey Friars Church).
An order dated 15 Jun 1235 records a claim brought by "Warinum de Munchanes et Dionisiam uxorem eius" against "magistrum Simonem de Langet archidiaconum Cantuarie" to enforce payment of “dote ipsius Dionisie”[1716]. "Warin de Montechanes and Denise his wife" were granted rights "in the demesne lands of Rodewell" dated 21 Oct 1242[1717]. She married thirdly (before 29 Sep 1260) [Robert/Richard] Butyller.

Warin [II] & his first wife had two children:

1. JOHN de Munchensy (-[Jun] 1247). The Chronicle of Tintern Abbey, Monmouthshire names "Johannem de Montecaniso" as the son of "Warino de Montecaniso" and his wife, adding that he died childless[1718].

2. JOAN de Munchensy (-1307 before 20 Sep). The Chronicle of Tintern Abbey, Monmouthshire names "Johannam" as the daughter of "Warino de Montecaniso" and his wife, adding that she married "domino Willihelmo de Valentia"[1719]. Matthew of Paris names her and her father when he records her marriage[1720]. A charter dated 13 Aug 1247 ordered "William de Valence the king’s brother and Joan his wife to have seisin of the lands which belonged to John de Muntchesny of the inheritance of Walter Marshall late Earl of Pembroke, and which after John’s death ought to descend to Joan as his sister and heir"[1721]. m (before 13 Aug 1247) GUILLAUME de Lusignan "de Valence", son of HUGUES [XI] "le Brun" de Lusignan Comte de la Marche et d'Angoulême & his wife Isabelle Ctss d'Angoulême ([Cistercian Abbey of Valence, near Lusignan] after 1225[1722]-in England [1294/18 May 1296], bur Westminster Abbey). He styled himself Lord of Pembroke, he was never invested with the earldom of Pembroke[1723].

Warin [II] & his second wife had one child:

3. WILLIAM de Munchensy (-Drylswyn Castle, near Carmarthen before 16 Sep 1287, bur Dereham). m AMICE, daughter of ---. William & his wife had one child:

a) DENISE de Munchensy (before 22 Jul 1283-before 13 Apr 1314). m firstly JOHN de Hull of Hill Croome, Worcestershire, son of ---. m secondly (after 12 Jun 1294) HUGH de Vere, son of ROBERT de Vere Earl of Oxford & his wife Alice de Sanford ([Jun 1258/Mar1259]-after 22 May 1319). He was summoned to parliament 6 Feb 1298, whereby he is held to have become Lord Vere.

[Source: Medieval Lands, "Warin [II] de Muchensy", downloaded 8 August 2018, dvmansur, see link in Sources.]

Warin and Joan had two children. Refer to life story of Dionisiede Anesty. Dionisiedi was stepmother to Joan and John. John must not have lived very long, because the life stories of Joan de Munchensi refer to her as the surviving child of Warin and Joan Marshall. 
de Munchensy, Warin (I35765)
 
174 “Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families,” Douglas Richardson (2013):

“JOAN MARSHAL, married after 1219 (as his 1st wife) WARIN DE MUNCHENSY, Knt., of Swanscombe, Kent, 2nd son of William de Munchensy, Knt., of Swanscombe, Kent, Winfarthing and Gooderstone, Norfolk, etc., by Aveline, daughter of Roger de Clare, Earl of Hertford [see CLARE 4.ii for his ancestry]. He was born about 1192 (came of age in 1213). He was heir about 1208 to his older brother, William de Munchensy. They had one son, John, and one daughter, Joan. He was involved on the side of the Barons against King John, and his lands were forfeited. He was taken prisoner at the Battle of Lincoln 20 May 1217. He returned to allegiance by Nov. 1217. In 1221 he accompanied the king to the Siege of Byham. He was serving in Wales in 1223, with his brother-in-law, William Marshal, Earl of Pembroke. He was with the king overseas in 1229-30, and in Wales at the end of 1233. He married (2nd) between November 1234 and June 1235 DENISE DE ANESTY, widow of Walter Langton (died 1234), of Langton, Lincolnshire, and Ridgwell, Essex (brother of Archbishop Stephen Langton), and daughter and heiress of Nicholas de Anesty, of Ansty and Little Hormead, Hertfordshire, Bourn, Cambridgeshire, etc., by ___, sister of Hamon Pecche. They had one son, William. In 1237-8 he and his wife, Denise, acquired 1-1/2 virgate in Bourn, Cambridgeshire from William Haretail. He was serving in Gascony in 1242-44, where he took part in the Battle of Saintes. He was summoned against the Scots in 1244, and, in June 1245, for service in Wales. He was in Gascony again in 1252. He was at Dover 26 Dec. 1254, the day King Henry III appears to have crossed from Boulogne. SIR WARIN DE MUNCHENSY died testate about 20 July 1255. His widow, Denise, married (3rd) before 4 June 1260 ROBERT LE BOTELER (or LE BOTILLER). In 1260 he and his wife, Denise, were granted protection, they then going beyond seas. In 1266 he was granted a safe conduct, he then coming to the king's court. His wife, Denise, again went beyond seas in 1271. ROBERT LE BOTELER died before autumn 1272. In 1294 his widow, Denise, founded the nunnery of Waterbeach, Cambridgeshire. She died shortly before 23 May 1304, and was buried in the church of the Grey Friars, London.

Dugdale Monasticon Anglicanum 5 (1825): 271 (Abbey of Tintern, Titulus illorum de Verdon et de Genevill …: "Secunda filia antedicto Willihelmi Marescalli vocabatur Johanna, nupta Warino de Montecaniso, de qua habuit exitum Johannem de Montecaniso qui obiit sine hærede de se, et Johannam sororem ejus nuptam domino Willihelmo de Valentia."). Lipscomb Hist. & Antiqs. of Buckingham 1 (1847): 200-201 (Clare ped.). Clark Earls, Earldom, & Castle of Pembroke (1880): 69-75. Matthew of Paris Chronica Majora 5 (Rolls Ser. 57) (1880):504 (sub AD. 1255: "Obiit eodem tempore nobilis baro, inter omnes Angliae nobiles vel nobilissimus et sapientissimus vel unus de nobilioribus et sapientibus, Warinus de Muntcheinsil ... Dominus autem rex ilico custodiam haeredis ejus nomine Willeimi contulit Willelmo de Valentia fratri suo uterino, qui filiam ejusdem Warini, ut gener ejus esset, desponsaverat."). Stubbs Historical Works of Gervase of Canterbury 2 (Rolls Ser. 73) (1880): 110-111. Francisque-Michel Riles Gascons 1 (1885): 6, 10-11, 30-32, 190. Papal Regs.: Letters 1 (1893): 566 (Denise de Munchensy, foundress of Waterbeach Abbey, styled "king's kinswoman"). Desc. Cat. Ancient Deeds 2 (1894): 91. C.C.R. 1302-1307 (1908): 513. C.P.R. 1258-1266 (1910): 75, 621, 667. C.F.R. 1 (1911): 493. Inv. of the Hist. Monuments in Herefordshire (1911): 12. VCH Hampshire 4 (1911): 51-56. VCH Hertford 3 (1912): 232-240. Genealogist n.s. 34 (1918): 181-189 (William d'Aubeney, Earl of Arundel, styled "uncle" [avunculus] of Warin de Munchensy in 1213, he being half-brother of Warin's mother, Aveline de Clare). Bourdillon Order of Minoresses in England (1926): 13-16. Powicke Stephen Langton (1928). Pubs Bedfordshire Hist. oc. 13 (1930): Ped. 11 (Lenveyse, Birkin, Anstey ped.). C.P. 9 (1936): 421-422 (sub Munchensy). VCH Cambridge 2 (1948): 292-293; 5 (1973): 4-16. Sanders English Baronies (1960): 63, 144. Clanchy From Memory to Written Record: England 1066-1307 (1993): 197-200, 245. McCash Cultural Patronage of Medieval Women (1996): 245-246, 262-263. Higgitt Murthly Hours (2000): 175. Gee Women, Art & Patronage from Henry III to Edward III: 1216-1377 (2002): 75-76, 142. Lawrence Letters of Adam Marsh 1 (2006): 56-63.”

-------------------------------
From Medieval Lands:
JOAN (-before 1242). The Chronicle of Tintern Abbey, Monmouthshire, names (in order) ”Matilda…Johanna…Isabella” as the daughters of “Willielmi Marescalli comitis Penbrochiæ”[1596]. The same source records in a later passage that "secunda filia…Willihelmi Marescalli…Johanna" married "Warino de Montecaniso" by whom she was mother of "Johannem de Montecaniso" who died childless and "Johannam sororem eius" who married "domino Willihelmo de Valentia"[1597]. m as his first wife, WARIN de Munchensy, son of WILLIAM de Munchensy & his wife Aveline de Clare (-[20 Jul 1255]).

[Source: Medieval Lands, "JOAN Marshal", downloaded 8 August 2018, dvmansur.] 
Marshal, Lady Joane (I35744)
 
175 “Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families,” Douglas Richardson (2013):

“PATRICK (or PATRICE) DE CHAOURCES (or DE SOURCHES), of Kempsford, Gloucestershire, son and heir. He married WIBURGE (or GUIBURGE, GUIBOURGE) They had two sons, Pain (or Payen) [de Mondoubleau] and Hugh (or Hugues). In 1130 he granted to St. Peter's, Gloucester the mill of Horcote, near Kempsford, Gloucestershire. At an unknown date he and his son, Pain, granted the monks of la Couture their right to the patronage of the churches of Brillon, Bemay, and Saint-Mars-sous-Ballon. PATRICK DE CHAOURCES was deceased before 1149. About 1149 Wilburge, and her son, Pain, founded Tironneau Abbey (commune de Saint-Aignan, canton de Marolles-les-Braux).

Pesche Dictionnaire topographique, historique et statistique de la Sarthe 6 (1842): 224-226. Gueranger Essai historique sur l'Abbaye de Solesmes (1846): 23 ("En 1147, Patrice de Sourches et Guiburge sa mere [fonda l'abbaye] de Tironneau."). Herald & Genealogist 6 (1871): 241-253. Cartulaire des Abbeyes de Saint-Pierre de la Couture et de Saint-Pierre de Solesmes (1881): 42 (charter of Patrick de Sourches and his son, Pain). Inventaire-Sommaire des Archives Départementales antérieures 1790: Sarthe 3 (1881): 414 ("Abbaye de Tironneau. XIIe siècle. Chartes … que les religieux avaient payé a Guiburge de Cadurcis (Chaourses) 25 sols, et a Massile, son fils aine, 5 sols, pour que l'un et l'autre ratifiassent cette donation comme seigneurs suzerains …”). Duc des Cars Le Chateau de Sourches au Maine & ses Seigneurs (1887). Money Hist. of Newbury (1887): 72-79 (Chaworth ped). Genealogist n.s. 5 (1889): 209-212

("Patrick de Cadurcis (I) had a son of the same name, who had apparently succeeded him prior to 1130, when he appears, from the Cartulary of St. Peter's, Gloucester, to have added the mill of Horcote, near Kempsford, to the donations which his grandfather, Arnulph de Hesding, had made to that Abbey. This Patrick (II), however, seems, from the Pipe Roll of 31 Hen. I, to have had his lands seized by the King, and there is some reason to suppose that they were never restored to him. Not improbably he succeeded to the headship of the family in France, and, dying there, left sons too young to assert a claim to their English heritage, which, during the confusion of the Civil war, came into the hands of the other descendants of Arnulph de Hesding of Domesday."). Province du Maine 5 (1897): 179-180. Bull. de la Société Archéologique, Scientifique & Littéraire du Vendomois 43 (1904): 100-104 ("Geoffroy de Brulon … ce personnage tenait ce lieu de sa mere N... de Mondoubleau, file probablement de Payen de Mondoubleau et mariée avant 1167 a Payen de Sourches qui devint seigneur de Brulon par le fait même de son mariage."). Pubs. of Bedfordshire Hist. Rec. Soc. 7 (1923): 165-167; 10 (1926): 304-306 ("Patric II de Chaworth hardly appears in records, and probably died young and in his father's lifetime. With his son Payn he confirmed to la Couture three churches in Maine; there is also a notification possibly granted by him. His wife Wiburga seems to have long survived him."). Boussard Le Comte d'Anjou sous Henri Plantegenet & ses Fils (1151-1204) (1938): 55-57. Sanders English Baronies (1960): 125. Keats-Rohan Domesday Descendants (2002): 391-392.” 
de Chaworth, Patrick II (I35601)
 
176 “Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families,” Douglas Richardson (2013):

“RICHARD DE KEYNES, of Horsted Keynes, Selmeston, and lteford, Sussex, and Charwelton, Northamptonshire, younger son, but eventual heir, born about 1228. He was granted livery of his father's lands in 1249. He married ALICE DE MANKESEY, daughter and heiress of Robert de Mankesey, of Catteshal and Lingfield, Surrey, and Thornham, Kent, by Isabel, daughter of Thomas de Bavelingham. They had one daughter, Joan. He was supporter of his overlord, Simon de Montfort, in 1264. RICHARD DE KEYNES was living in 1276, and died sometime before 1295.
Year Books of Edward III: Years XVII & XVIII 10 (Rolls Ser. 31b) (1903): 584-595. Wrottesley Peds.from the Plea Rolls (1905): 432. Sussex Arch. Colls. 50 (1907): 70; 63 (1922): 181-202. VCH Surrey 3 (1911): 32. Cal. Mgrs. Misc. 1 (1916): 546 (Date of Inquisition: 1307. Location Sussex. "Richard de Kaynes held of Simon de Montfort, sometime earl of Leicester, 2 1/2 knights of the honour of Leicester of the yearly value of 301, in Selmeston, Iteford and Horsted Kaynes, and after the forfeiture of the said earl [the said Richard] attorned to King Henry III for his homage and service; he was succeeded by Joan, his daughter and heir, who married Roger de Leukenore; Thomas de Leukenore, their son and heir, succeeded them, and now holds the said fees, and has attorned to the present king for his homage"). C.C.R 1247-1251 (1922): 187. Book of Fees 2 (1923): 666, 674, 688, 1289, 1362, 1377 (Robert de Mankesey held the manor of Lingfield, Surrey, in 1242/3. It reappears in the mid-1500s held by Drew Barantine, Esq., one of the heirs of the senior Lewknor family), VCH Northampton 5 (2002): 77-98.” 
de Bavelingham, Isabel (I32038)
 
177 “Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families,” Douglas Richardson (2013):

“ROBERT, Count of Mortain (in Cotentin), Domesday lord of Pitstone and West Wycombe, Buckinghamshire, Blisland, Boyton, Lancarffe, Poundstock, Treroosel, and Truthwall, Cornwall, Bere Ferrers, Bolberry, Bratton Fleming, Buckland Brewer, Densham, Dunsdon, Fardel, and Weare Giffard, Devon, Ashill, Barton St. David, Bishopston, Brompton Regis, Bruton, Crewkerne, Curry Rivel, Kingstone, Shepton Montague, Stoke sub Hamdon, Swell, and Tintinhill, Somerset, etc.,

Born about 1040. He was an uterine half-brother of William the Conqueror, King of England.
He was created a count about 1060.

He married (1st) before 1066 MAUD DE MONTGOMERY, daughter of Roger de Montgomery, Earl of Shrewsbury, by his 1st wife, Mabel, daughter and heiress of William, seigneur of Alencon and Bellême.

They had one son, William [Count of Mortain], and four daughters:
Agnes,
Denise (wife of Guy III, seigneur of Laval),
Emma (wife of William IV, Count of Toulouse), and Sibylle [Abbess of Saintes].

About 1082 he and his wife, Maud, founded a collegiate church at St. Evroult at Mortain. His wife, Maud, died 21 Sept. 1082, and was buried in Grestain Abbey.

He married (2nd) ALMODIS ___. They had one son, Robert, and one daughter, Almodis (wife of Raimon Berenguer III of Barcelona).

In the period, 1082-84, he granted land in Dorset to Marmoutier Abbey at Tours. He joined the rebellion against King William Rufus in 1088, which was soon put down. He was a benefactor of many religious houses, including the abbeys of Grestain, Marmoutier, Caen, Préaux, Fécamp, Mont-St-Michel, St.- Nicholas, Angers and St. Albans.

ROBERT, Count of Mortain, died 8 Dec. 1090.

L'Art de Vérifier les Dates 2 (1784): 790 (sub Montgomeri). Rud Coelicum Manuscriptorum Ecclesia Cathedralis Dunelmensis (1825): 214 ("Nomina quae in Kalendario (supra Tr. 5.) occurrunt: XI. Kal. Octobr. [21 September] - Obiit Mathildis Comitissa de Moretonio."). Dugdale Monasticon Anglicanum 6(2) (1830): 1090-1091 (Robert, Count of Mortain, styled "brother" [fratris] of King William the Conqueror in charter dated 1189). Guerard Cartulaire de l'Abbaye de Saint-Bertin (Coll. des Cartulaires de France 3) (1840): 462-463 (Count Robert, brother of the King [i.e., King William the Conqueror] witness to doc. dated c.1066-87). Le Prévost Notes pour servir el la Topographie et a l'Histoire des Communes du Département de l'Eure (1849): 30-31 (charter dated April 1066 witnessed by William, Duke of Normandy, his wife, Maud, and his "brother" [fratris], Robert). Desroches Annales civiles, militaires et généalogiques du Pays d'Avranches (1856): 58. Munford Analysis of the Domesday Book of the County of Norfolk (1858): 7-8. Delisle Rouleaux des Morts du IXe au XVe Siècle (1866): 207-208, 289-290. Delisle Chronique de Robert de Torigni 1 (1872): 319 ("Siquidem Robertus, comes Moritonii, uterinus frater Willermi regis qui regnum Angliæ subjugavit, habuit unum filium Guillermum, qui ei successit ... et tres filias, quarum unam duxit Andreas de Vitreio, aliam Guido de Laval, terciam comes Tolosanus, frater Raimundi comitis Sancti Ægidii, qui in expeditione Ierosolimitana viriliter se habuit. Genuit autem ex ea comes Tolosanus unam solummodo filiam, quam Guillermus, comes Pictavensis et dux Aquitanorum, mortuo patre prædictæ puellæ, cum hereditate propria, scilicet urbe Tolosa et comitatu Tolosano, duxit uxorem; ex qua genuit idem Guillermus filium Guillermum nomine, qui ei successit, qui pater fuit Alienor, reginæ Anglorum."). Planché The Conqueror & his Companions 1 (1874): 107-116 (biog. of Robert, Comte de Mortain and Earl of Cornwall). Le Fizelier Mémoire chronologique de Maucourt de Bourjolly seer la Ville de Laval 1 (1886): 122-128. Recueil des Historiens des Gaules et de la France 23 (1894): 583 (Ex Obtuario Ecclesiæ Moretoniensis: "8. Dec. Obiit Robertus comes Moretonii fundator istius ecclesi"). Two Cartularies of the Augustinian Priory of Bruton & Cluniac Priory of Montacute (Somerset Rec. Soc. 8) (1894): 119-120 (foundation charter of William, Count of Mortain for Montacute Cartulary dated 1102; charter names his parents, Count Robert and Countess Matilda). Round Cal. of Docs. Preserved in France 918-1206 (1899): 108, 256 (charter of Robert, Count of Mortain dated ?1085), 256-257 (charter of Robert, Count of Mortain and Almodis his wife dated 1087-91), 359, 433. Notes & Oueries 9th Ser. 8 (1901): 525-526. Bréard L’Abbaye de Notre-Dame de Grestain (1904.) Rpt. & Trans. of the Devonshire Assoc. for the Advancement of Science, Lit. & Art 2nd Ser. 8 (1906): 338-339. D.N.B. 13 (1909): 1014 (biog. of Robert of Mortain, Count of Mortain). VCH Somerset 2 (1911): 111-115. C.P. 3 (1913): 427- 428 (sub Cornwall). Douglas Domesday Monachorum (1944): 33-36. Hull Cartulary of St. Michael's Mount (Devon & Cornwall Rec. Soc. n.s. 5) (1962): 3-4. Douglas William the Conqueror (1964). D. Bates "Herluin de Conteville et sa famille" in Annales de Normandie 23 (1973): 21-38. Brown Angle-Norman Studies III (1981): 74-75. Hull Cartulary of Launceston Priory (Devon & Cornwall Rec. Soc. n.s. 30) (1987): 2-4 (charter of Robert, Count of Mortain, Earl of Cornwall brother [frater] of William King of the English, and Maud his wife dated 1076). Bates and Gazeau `L'Abbaye de Grestain & la Famille d'Herluin de Conteville,' in Annales de Normandie 40 (1990): 5-30. Anglo-Norman Studies 13 (1991): 119-144. Haskins Soc. Jour. 3 (1991): 161-162. Bates & Curry England & Normandy in the Middle Ages (1994): 136-137. Cownie Religious Patronage in Anglo-Norman England, 1066-1135 (1998): 197-199. Fleming Domesday Book & the Law (1998).

Children of Robert, Count of Mortain, by Maud de Montgomery:
i. AGNES OF MORTAIN
ii. EMMA OF MORTAIN, married WILLIAM IV, Count of Toulouse 
de Montgomery, Countess Maud (I33702)
 
178 “Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families,” Douglas Richardson (2013):

“SARAH DE HUNTINGFIELD, married (1st) after 11 Dec. 1213 WILLIAM BISET, of Kidderminster, Worcestershire, and Shamblehurst and Rockbourne, Hampshire, son and heir of Henry Biset, of Kidderminster, Worcestershire, and Rockbourne, Hampshire, by an unknown wife. They had no issue. WILLIAM BISET died before 1 Nov. 1220. She married (2nd) after 1221 (when she was in the king's gift) but before Hilary 1223 (date of lawsuit) RICHARD DE KEYNES (or KAYNES), of Horsted Keynes, Selmeston, and Iteford, Sussex, Greatworth, Cosgrove, Puxley (in Passenham), and Tiffield, Northamptonshire, etc., son and heir of William de Keynes, of Greatworth, Northamptonshire, etc., by his wife, Gunnor. They had two sons, William (minor at father's death, and evidently died after 1241) and Richard, and one daughter. He had livery of his father's lands 5 April 1218, and fought at the Siege of Bytham Castle in 1221. In Hilary term 1223 Richard and his wife, Sarah, were sued for dower in the vill of Kidderminster, Worcestershire by her former husband, William Biset's step-mother, Iseult Pantulf, and her husband, Amaury de Saint Amand. His wife, Sarah, was living 1226/8. RICHARD DE KEYNES died in 1241.

Coll. Top. et Gen. 6 (1840): 154-157 (Biset). Maitland Bracton's Note Book 3 (1887): 336. Feudal Aids 4 (1906): 43. VCH Hampshire 4 (1911): 582, VCH Worcester 3 (1913): 159. Sussex Arch. Colls. 63 (1922): 180-202. Book of Fees 2 (1923): 378, 602-3. Book of Fees 2 (1923): 692, 932, 944, 1337. Stenton Rolls of the Justices in Eyre for Lincolnshire (1218-1219) & Worcestershire (1221) (Selden Soc. 53) (1934): 520. Stenton Rolls of Justices in Eyre for Gloucestershire, Warwickshire & Shropshire (1221) (Selden Soc. 59) (1940): 105-106. Curia Regis Rolls 9. (1952): 76, 129-130, 293; 10 (1949): 18-19, 26, 119. Paget Baronage of England (1957) 304: 2. VCH Northampton 5 (2002): 77-98.” 
de Huntingfield, Lady Sarah (I32052)
 
179 “Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families,” Douglas Richardson (2013):

“SARAH DE HUNTINGFIELD, married (1st) after 11 Dec. 1213 WILLIAM BISET, of Kidderminster, Worcestershire, and Shamblehurst and Rockbourne, Hampshire, son and heir of Henry Biset, of Kidderminster, Worcestershire, and Rockbourne, Hampshire, by an unknown wife. They had no issue. WILLIAM BISET died before 1 Nov. 1220. She married (2nd) after 1221 (when she was in the king's gift) but before Hilary 1223 (date of lawsuit) RICHARD DE KEYNES (or KAYNES), of Horsted Keynes, Selmeston, and Iteford, Sussex, Greatworth, Cosgrove, Puxley (in Passenham), and Tiffield, Northamptonshire, etc., son and heir of William de Keynes, of Greatworth, Northamptonshire, etc., by his wife, Gunnor. They had two sons, William (minor at father's death, and evidently died after 1241) and Richard, and one daughter. He had livery of his father's lands 5 April 1218, and fought at the Siege of Bytham Castle in 1221. In Hilary term 1223 Richard and his wife, Sarah, were sued for dower in the vill of Kidderminster, Worcestershire by her former husband, William Biset's step-mother, Iseult Pantulf, and her husband, Amaury de Saint Amand. His wife, Sarah, was living 1226/8. RICHARD DE KEYNES died in 1241.

Coll. Top. et Gen. 6 (1840): 154-157 (Biset). Maitland Bracton's Note Book 3 (1887): 336. Feudal Aids 4 (1906): 43. VCH Hampshire 4 (1911): 582, VCH Worcester 3 (1913): 159. Sussex Arch. Colls. 63 (1922): 180-202. Book of Fees 2 (1923): 378, 602-3. Book of Fees 2 (1923): 692, 932, 944, 1337. Stenton Rolls of the Justices in Eyre for Lincolnshire (1218-1219) & Worcestershire (1221) (Selden Soc. 53) (1934): 520. Stenton Rolls of Justices in Eyre for Gloucestershire, Warwickshire & Shropshire (1221) (Selden Soc. 59) (1940): 105-106. Curia Regis Rolls 9. (1952): 76, 129-130, 293; 10 (1949): 18-19, 26, 119. Paget Baronage of England (1957) 304: 2. VCH Northampton 5 (2002): 77-98.” 
de Keynes, Lord Richard (I32053)
 
180 “Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families,” Douglas Richardson (2013):

“WALTER OF SALISBURY (otherwise known as WALTER FITZ EDWARD, WALTER THE SHERIFF), of Chitterne, Alton Barnes, Amesbury, Chicklade, Etchilhampton, Lake (in Wilsford), Little Langford, Mildenhall, North Tidworth, Rockley (in Preshute), Shrewton, Somerford (in Great Somerford), Tollard (in Tollard Royal), and Wilcot, Wiltshire, Great Gaddesden, Hertfordshire, North Aston, Oxfordshire, etc., hereditary Sheriff of Wiltshire, Constable of Salisbury Castle, son and heir.

He married SIBYL DE CHAOURCES, daughter of Patrick (or Patrice) de Chaources (or de Sourches), seigneur of Sourches (in Saint-Symphorien) in Maine, Toddington, Bedfordshire, Great Wishford, Wiltshire, etc., by Maud, daughter of Ernulph (or Arnulph) de Hesdin (or Hesding) [see CHAWORTH 1 for her ancestry].

They had three sons,
1. William,
2. Patrick [1st Earl of Salisbury], and
3. Walter [Canon of Bradenstoke],
and two daughters,
4. Hawise and
5. Sibyl.

About 1115 King Henry I gave, or more probably confirmed, to the church of Salisbury two hides of land at Warminster, Wiltshire which Walter, son of Edward of Salisbury, had held. In 1130 he was acquitted of £4 of Danegeld in Dorset and £7 in Wiltshire. He was present at the Council of Northampton in 1131. He was with King Stephen at Westminster at Easter 1136, and at Salisbury at Christmas 1139. He founded Bradenstoke Priory in the parish of Lyneham, Wiltshire in 1139. He endowed the priory with the vill of Bradenstoke and the church to Lyneham, Wiltshire; his charter was confirmed by his wife, Sibyl, and his sons, William and Patrick. In 1142 he granted the manor of Tarlton (in Rodmarton), Gloucestershire to the Cathedral church of Salisbury, in recompense for the harm done to the church by his son, William. His wife, Sibyl, predeceased him.

WALTER OF SALISBURY took the habit of a canon at Bradenstoke Priory. He died in 1147.
He and his wife, Sibyl, were buried at Bradenstoke Priory in the same grave.

Children of Walter of Salisbury, by Sibyl de Chaources:
i. PATRICK OF SALISBURY, Earl of Salisbury [see next].
ii. HAWISE OF SALISBURY, married (1st) ROTROU II, Count of Perche [see ENGLAND 2.i]; (2nd) ROBERT I, Count of Dreux and Braine) [see DREUX 6].
iii. SIBYL OF SALISBURY, married JOHN MARSHAL, Marshal of England [see MARSHAL 2].”

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WALTER FitzEdward de Salisbury (-1147, bur Bradenstoke Priory[1406]). The Book of Lacock names “Walterum de Saresburia” as son of “Edwardum…vicecomitem Wiltes”[1407]. Sheriff of Wiltshire during the reign of King Henry I[1408]. Military fee certifications in the Red Book of the Exchequer, in 1166, record that "Walterus de Sireburne" used to hold one knight’s fee from the abbot of Glastonbury in Somerset "tempore Regis Henrici" (presumably indicating King Henry I) and that "comes Patricius" now held the same[1409]. m ([1115/20]) SIBYL de Chaources, daughter of PATRICK [I] de Chaources [Chaworth] & his wife Mathilde de Hesdin (----, bur Bradenstoke Priory[1410]). The Book of Lacock records that “Walterus de Saresburia” married “Sibillam de Cadurcia”[1411]. The date of her marriage can be estimated very approximately from the likely birth date of her son William. Bracton lists a claim by "[Willelmus Comes] Sarr et Ela [uxor eius]" against "Paganum de Chawtesteford in comitatu Gloucestrie" dated 1218, recording that "Patricius de Chawrtes antecessor eiusdem Pagani" gave a manor (unnamed) "[in maritagium] --- Sibilla sua" from whom it descended to "Patricio filio suo et de ipse Patricio --- [patri ipsius] Ele et de ipso Willelmo predicte Ele"[1412]. Walter & his wife had five children:
a) WILLIAM ([before 1120]-after 1 Jul 1143, bur Bradenstoke Priory[1413]). ...
b) PATRICK (-killed in battle Poitou [7 Apr] 1168, bur Poitiers, Abbaye de Saint-Hilaire). ...
c) HAWISE ([1120]-13 Jan before 1152). ...
d) WALTER . The primary source which confirms his parentage has not been identified. Canon at Bradenstoke.
e) SIBYL . The early 13th century Histoire de Guillaume le Maréchal records that John divorced his first wife and married "damesele Sibire la sorur le cunte Patriz"[1449]. m (before [1144]) as his second wife, JOHN FitzGilbert, the Marshal, son of GILBERT the Marshal & his wife --- (-before Nov 1165).

http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/ENGLISH%20NOBILITY%20MEDIEVAL1.htm#WilliamSalisburydied1147

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SIBYL de Chaources (----, bur Bradenstoke Priory[1320]). The Book of Lacock records that “Walterus de Saresburia” married “Sibillam de Cadurcia”[1321]. The date of her marriage can be estimated very approximately from the likely birth date of her son William. Bracton lists a claim by "[Willelmus Comes] Sarr et Ela [uxor eius]" against "Paganum de Chawtesteford in comitatu Gloucestrie" dated 1218, recording that "Patricius de Chawrtes antecessor eiusdem Pagani" gave a manor (unnamed) "[in maritagium] --- Sibilla sua" from whom it descended to "Patricio filio suo et de ipse Patricio --- [patri ipsius] Ele et de ipso Willelmo predicte Ele"[1322]. m ([1115/20]) WALTER de Salisbury, son of EDWARD de Salisbury & his wife --- (-1147).

http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/enguntac.htm#SibylChaourcesMWalterSalisbury 
Chaworth, Sibyl (I35746)
 
181 “Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families,” Douglas Richardson (2013):

Children of Roger de Clare, by Maud de St. Hilary...
ii. AVELINE DE CLARE, married (1st) before 1186 WILLIAM DE MUNCHENSY, Knt., of Swanscombe, Kent, Winfarthing and Gooderstone, Norfolk, etc., younger son of Warin de Munchensy, by Agnes, daughter and co-heiress of Pain Fitz John. They had two sons, William and Warin, Knt. He was heir before Michaelmas 1190 to his older brother, Ralph de Munchensy, Knt. In 1198 he was serving in Normandy. He was one of the guarantors of the treaty between King John and the Count of Flanders at Roche d'Andelys in 1199. He was fined for not serving overseas in 1201. He was a benefactor of the religious houses of West Dereham and Missenden. SIR WILLIAM DE MUNCHENSY died before 7 May 1204. His widow, Aveline, married (2nd) before 29 May 1205 (date of grant) (as his 2nd wife) GEOFFREY FITZ PETER, Knt., Earl of Essex [see ESSEX 2], of Wellsworth (in Chalton), Hampshire, Cherhill and Costow, Wiltshire, Chief Forester, Sheriff of Northamptonshire, 1184-89, 1191-94, Sheriff of Essex and Hertfordshire, 1190-93, Constable of Hertford Castle, Justiciar of England, 1198-1213, Sheriff of Staffordshire, 1198, Sheriff of Yorkshire, 1198-1200, 1202-4, Sheriff of Bedfordshire and Buckinghamshire, 1199-1204, Sheriff of Westmorland, 1199-1200, Sheriff of Hampshire, 1201-4, Sheriff of Shropshire, 1201-4, and, in right of his 1st wife, of Streadey, Berkshire, Amersham and Quarrendon, Buckinghamshire, Pleshey, Essex, Digswell, Hertfordshire, Kimbolton, Huntingdonshire, etc., younger son of Peter de Ludgershall, of Cherhill and Linley (in Tisbury), Wiltshire, and Gussage Saint Andrew (in Sixpenny Handley), Dorset, by his wife, Maud. He was born before 1145. They had one son, John, Knt., and four daughters, Hawise, Cecily, ___, and Maud. Sometime in the period, 1157-66, he witnessed an exchange of land between Roger de Tichborne and the Bishop of Winchester. He held a fee in Cherhill, Wiltshire of new enfeoffment in 1166. Sometime in the period, c.1166-90, Elias de Studley conveyed to him his land held of the fee of William Malbanc in Heytesbury and Cherhill, Wiltshire at an annual rent of 20s. In 1184 he accounted for the farm of Kinver before the itinerant justices in Oxfordshire. He married before 25 Jan. 1184/5 BEATRICE DE SAY (died before 19 April 1197), daughter and co-heiress of William de Say, of Kimbolton, Huntingdonshire, and Saham, Norfolk [see SAY 4i for her ancestry]. They had three sons, Geoffrey de Mandeville [5th Earl of Essex], William de Mandeville, Knt. [6th Earl of Essex], and Henry [Dean of Wolverhampton], and two daughters, Maud and Alice. In 1186-7 King Henry II granted him the manor of Cherhill, Wiltshire, to hold in fee and inheritance by the service of one knight, as his father Peter or his brother Robert held it. In the period, 1186-89, he and his two half-brothers, William and Hugh de Buckland, witnessed a charter of William, Earl of Ferrers, to Ralph Fitz Stephen. In the period, c.1189-99, he founded Shouldham Abbey, Norfolk, to which he gave the manor and the advowson of the church of Shouldham, Norfolk, together with the churches of Shouldham Thorpe, Stoke Ferry, and Wereham, Norfolk. In 1190 he obtained the lands to which his 1st wife's grandmother, Beatrice, had become heir on the death of her nephew, William de Mandeville, Earl of Essex. From Easter 1190 he received the third penny of the county of Essex. Sometime in the period, 1190-1213, Sibyl de Fiennes, daughter of Pharamus of Boulogne, conveyed to him 300 acres on Hyngeshill [?in Quarrendon, Buckinghamshire] at an annual rent of an unmewed sparrowhawk, or 12d. Sometime in the period 1190-1213, he granted the manor of Cherhill, Wiltshire to his younger son, William de Mandeville. He was one of those excommunicated for his part in removing Longchamp in 1191. About 1195 he and his two half-brothers, William and Geoffrey de Buckland, witnessed a charter of Geoffrey Fitz Nigel de Gardino to William de Ultra la Haia. In 1195 he owed £4 4s. in the vill of Lydford, Devon for making the market of the king there. In 1198, Eustace de Balliol and his wife, Pernel (widow of Geoffrey's brother Robert), quitclaimed all their right to lands in Salthrop (in Wroughton), Wiltshire to Geoffrey, in return for 30 marks silver. In the period, 1199-1216, Geoffrey further gave Shouldham Priory, Norfolk twelve shops, with the rooms over them, in the parish of St. Mary's Colechurch, London, for the purpose of sustaining the lights of the church and of providing the sacramental wine. Sometime in or before 1199, he made a grant to William de Wrotham, Archdeacon of Taunton, of all his land of Sutton at Hone, Kent to make a hospital for the maintenance of thirteen poor men and three chaplains in honour of the Holy Trinity, St. Mary, and All Saints. In the period, 1200-13, he made notification that Abbot Ralph and the convent of Westminster had at his petition confirmed to the nuns of Shouldham all tithes pertaining to them in Clakelose Hundred, Norfolk, in return for £1 10s. due annually to the almoner of Westminster. In the same period, Abbot Ralph and the convent of Westminster granted him the vill of Claygate, Surrey to hold of them for his lifetime. In 1204 King John granted him the manor of Winterslow, Wiltshire, and, in 1205, the honour of Berkhampstead, Hertfordshire with the castle at a fee farm of £100 per annum. He campaigned against the Welsh in 1206 and 1210. He was granted a significant part of the lands forfeited by Normans, including the manors of Depden and Hatfield Peverel, Essex, and other lands in Norfolk and Suffolk, all worth over £100 per annum. In 1207 the king confirmed his possession of the manor of Notgrove, Gloucestershire, which Geoffrey had by the gift of John Eskelling. Sometime before 1212, he was granted the manor of Gussage Dynaunt (or Gussage St. Michael), Dorset, which manor was forfeited by Roland de Dinan. At some unspecified date, when already earl, he granted all his right in St. Peter's chapel in Drayton to the canons of St. Peter's Cathedral, York. He was the founder of the first church of Wintney Priory, Hampshire. SIR GEOFFREY FITZ PETER, Earl of Essex, died 14 October 1213, and was buried in Shouldham Priory, Norfolk. In 1213-4 the king commanded Geoffrey de Buckland to let the king have, at the price any others would give for them, the corn, pigs, and other chattels at Berkhampstead, Hertfordshire which belonged his brother, Geoffrey Fitz Peter, lately deceased. About 1214 his widow, Aveline, granted the canons of Holy Trinity, London, in frank almoin, a half mark quit rent out of her Manor of Towcester, Northamptonshire, part of whose body is buried there. In 1221 the Prior of the Hospital of Jerusalem in England sued her regarding two virgates and five acres of land in Towcester, Northamptonshire. Aveline, Countess of Essex, died before 4 June 1225. Blomefield Essay towards a Top. Hist. of Norfolk 7 (1807): 414-427. Clutterbuck Hist. & Antiq. of the County of Hertford 1 (1815): 293 (Fitz Peter ped.). Montmorency-Morres Genealogical Memoir of the Fam. of Montmorency (1817): xxxii-xxxvi. Baker Hist. & Antiqs. of Northampton 1 (1822-1830): 544-545 (Mandeville-Fitz Peter-Bohun ped.). Dugdale Monasticon Anglicanum 5 (1825): 721-722; 6(1) (1830): 339-340; 6(3) (1830): 1191 (charter of Geoffrey Fitz Peter). Clutterbuck Hist. & Antiqs. of Hertford 3 (1827): 190-194 (Mandeville-Say ped). Luard Annales Monastici 2 (Rolls Ser. 36) (1865): 273 (Annals of Waverley sub A.D. 1213: "Obiit Gaufridus filius Petri comes de Essexe, et justitiatius totius Angliæ, tunc temporis cunctis in Anglia præstantion"). Notes & Queries 4th Ser. 3 (1869): 484-485 (Fitz Peter ped). Clark Earls, Earldom, & Castle of Pembroke (1880): 76-114. Lee Hist., Desc. & Antiqs. of … Thame (1883): 332 (Mandeville ped.). Maitland Bracton's Note Book 2 (1887): 193-194; 3 (1887): 452-453. Round Ancient Charters Royal & Private Prior to A.D. 1200 (Pipe Roll Soc. 10) (1888): 97-99 (confirmation by King Richard I dated 1191 to Geoffrey Fitz Peter and Beatrice his wife, as rightful and next heirs, of all the land of Earl William de Mandeville, which was hers by hereditary right), 108-110 (confirmation by King Richard I dated 1198 of the division of their inheritance made by Beatrice and Maud, daughters and co-heirs of William de Say, in the time of his father, King Henry II). Desc. Cat. Ancient Deeds 2 (1894): 91,93. Moore Cartularium Monasteri Sancti Johannis Baptiste de Colecestria 2 (1897): 349-350, 354, 371-372. Feet of Fines of King Richard I A.D. 1197 to A.D. 1198 (Pubs. Pipe Roll Soc. 23) (1898): 36-37, 58-59, 85, 130-131. List of Sheriffs for England & Wales (PRO Lists and Indexes 9) (1898): 1, 43, 54, 92, 117, 127, 150, 161...
Child of Aveline de Clare, by William de Munchensy:
a. WARIN DE MUNCHENSY, Knt., of Swanscombe, Kent, married (1st) JOAN MARSHAL [see MARSHAL 4]; (2nd) DENISE DE ANESTY [see MARSHAL 4].
Children of Aveline de Clare, by Geoffrey Fitz Peter, Knt:
a. JOHN FITZ GEOFFREY, Knt., of Shere, Surrey, Fambridge, Essex, etc., married ISABEL LE BIGOD [see VERDUN 8].
b. HAWISE FITZ GEOFFREY, married REYNOLD DE MOHUN, Knt., of Dunster, Somerset [see MOHUN ??].
c. CECILY FITZ GEOFFREY, married SAVARY DE BOHUN, of Midhurst, Sussex [see MIDHURST 3].
d. FITZ GEOFFREY. She married WILLIAM DE LA ROCHELLE, of South Ockendon, Essex, Market Lavington, Wiltshire, etc. [see HARLESTON 3].
e. MAUD FITZ GEOFFREY, married (1st) HENRY D'OILLY, of Hook Norton, Oxfordshire, King's Constable [see CANTELOWE 4]; (2nd) WILLIAM DE CANTELOWE, Knt., of Eaton Bray, Bedfordshire, Steward of the Royal Household [see CANTELOWE 
de Clare, Aveline (I35769)
 
182 “Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families,” Douglas Richardson (2013):
“ALICE DE SENLIS, married ROGER [FITZ WILLIAM] DE HUNTINGFIELD, of Huntingfield, Linstead, and Mendham, Suffolk, Frampton, Huttoft, and Southorpe, Lincolnshire, East Bradenham, Norfolk, etc., son and heir of William Fitz Roger de Huntingfield, by Sibyl, daughter of Roger de Gigny. He was born before 1145. They had four sons, William, Roger, Thomas, and John. About 1180-83, by permission of her husband, Roger, Alice gave land and pasture which she held in Tytton (in Wyberton), Lincolnshire to Stixwould Priory. In 1183 Maurice de Craon acknowledged his rights to various manors in Lincolnshire, in exchange for the manor of Warneborne. In 1189 he had a dispute with the Prior of Longeville concerning the advowson of Harleton, Cambridgeshire. He subsequently took the case to the king's court, and a decision reached at Westminster in 1196 in the presence of Hubert Walter. In 1196 the Longeville monks agreed that the lord. of the manor shall nominate to the rectory, in return for a pension from the church; he in turn promised that if the Bishop will not increase the pension of the monks from 20s. to 40s., he will himself pay the money. In the period, 1198-1204, he gave Mendham Priory a pasture in Mendham, Suffolk and a water mill called `Kingesholme.' In 1199 he gave 200 marks for 15 librates of land of the honour of Lancaster in Norfolk and Suffolk. In 1200 Roger de Huntingfield was present when William the Lion, King of Scots, paid homage to King John at Lincoln. At an unknown date, he witnessed a charter of his wife's brother, Saher de Quincy, to Sibton Abbey. At an unknown date, he confirmed a gift of Thomas de Multon to Spalding Abbey. ROGER DE HUNTINGFIELD died in 1204. His wife, Alice, died the same year.

Blomefield Essay towards a Top. Hist. of Norfolk 5 (1806): 375. Stubbs Chronica Magistri Rogeri de Hovedene 4 (Rolls Ser. 51(4)) (1871): 141-142. Warner & Ellis Facsimiles of Royal & Other Charters in the British Museum 1 (1903): #45. Foster Final Concords of the County of Lincoln from the Feet of Fines A.D. 1244-1272 2 (Lincoln Rec. Soc. 17) (1920): 307-308. Salter Newington Longeville Charters (Oxfordshire Rec. Soc. 3) (1921): xxxiv-xxxvii, 75-76 (charter of Roger Fitz William de Huntingfield). CP. 6 (1926): 671 footnote a. Hatton Book of Seals (1950): 194-195, 200-201 (charter of Roger Fitz William dated 1198-1204). Paget Baronage of England (1957) 299:1. Hallam Settlement & Society (1965): 51. VCH Cambridge 5 (1973): 216. Franklin Cartulary of Daventry Priory (Pubs. of Northamptonshire Rec. Soc. 35) (1988): xx-xxi, 2-4. Wilkinson Women in 13th-Cent. Lincolnshire (2007): 174-175.

[Note: Evidence of the maiden name of Alice de Senlis (died 1204), mother of William de Huntingfield, the Magna Carta baron, is provided by her own charter to Stixwould Priory dated c.1180-3 [see Hallam Settlement & Society (1965): 51; Wilkinson Women in 13th Cent. Lincolnshire (2007): 174-175]. Alice has been identified by one recent historian as "perhaps" the daughter of Maud de Senlis, wife successively of Robert Fitz Richard (de Clare) (died 1136) and Saber de Quincy I [see Wilkinson Women in 13th Cent. Lincolnshire (2007): 175; Franklin Cartulary of Darentry Priory (Pubs. of Northamptonshire Rec. Soc. 35) (1988): xx-xxi, 2-4]. Another historian states Alice "was probably related to the [Senlis] earls of Northampton" [see Hatton Book of Seals (1950): 201]. Surviving charters indicate that Alice de Senlis' husband, Roger de Huntingfield, witnessed charters for both of Maud de Senlis' sons, Walter Fitz Robert and Saber de Quincy II [see Hatton Book of Seals (1950): 194, 201]. Roger de Huntingfield likewise held property at East Bradenham, Norfolk, the chief manor of which was previously held by Maud de Senlis, who gave the church there sometime before 1176 to Norwich Cathedral [see Blomefield Essay towards a Top. Hist. of Norfolk 6 (1807): 134-138; Dugdale Monasticon Anglicanum 5 (1825): 56, 58; Dugdale Monasticon Anglicanum 6(1) (1830): 148-149; Dodwell Charters of the Norwich Cathedral Priory 1 (Pubs. Pipe Roll Soc. n.s. 40) (1974): 180-183; Ward Women of the English Nobility & Gentry 1066-1500 (1995): 49-50]. In 1200 Roger de Huntingfield was present when William the Lion, King of Scots, paid homage to King John at Lincoln [see Stubbs Chronica Magistri Rogeri de Honedene 4 (Rolls Ser. 51(4)) (1871): 141-142]. Also present on this occasion were Roger le Bigod, Earl of Norfolk, Henry de Bohun, Earl of Hereford, Saber de Quincy IV, William Longespee, Earl of Salisbury, Robert de Roos, and William de Vescy, all of whom were near kinsfolk or related by marriage to King William the Lion. If Alice de Senlis, wife of Roger de Huntingfield, was the daughter of Maud de Senlis, it would make Alice a first cousin of King William the Lion. Given the chronology, passage of lands, naming patterns, etc., it seems virtually certain that Alice de Senlis was the daughter of Maud de Senlis and her 2nd husband, Saber de Quincy I, and that Alice's maritagium included Senlis family property at East Bradenham, Norfolk].” 
de Senlis, Alice (I32065)
 
183 “Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families,” Douglas Richardson (2013):
“ALICE DE SENLIS, married ROGER [FITZ WILLIAM] DE HUNTINGFIELD, of Huntingfield, Linstead, and Mendham, Suffolk, Frampton, Huttoft, and Southorpe, Lincolnshire, East Bradenham, Norfolk, etc., son and heir of William Fitz Roger de Huntingfield, by Sibyl, daughter of Roger de Gigny. He was born before 1145. They had four sons, William, Roger, Thomas, and John. About 1180-83, by permission of her husband, Roger, Alice gave land and pasture which she held in Tytton (in Wyberton), Lincolnshire to Stixwould Priory. In 1183 Maurice de Craon acknowledged his rights to various manors in Lincolnshire, in exchange for the manor of Warneborne. In 1189 he had a dispute with the Prior of Longeville concerning the advowson of Harleton, Cambridgeshire. He subsequently took the case to the king's court, and a decision reached at Westminster in 1196 in the presence of Hubert Walter. In 1196 the Longeville monks agreed that the lord. of the manor shall nominate to the rectory, in return for a pension from the church; he in turn promised that if the Bishop will not increase the pension of the monks from 20s. to 40s., he will himself pay the money. In the period, 1198-1204, he gave Mendham Priory a pasture in Mendham, Suffolk and a water mill called `Kingesholme.' In 1199 he gave 200 marks for 15 librates of land of the honour of Lancaster in Norfolk and Suffolk. In 1200 Roger de Huntingfield was present when William the Lion, King of Scots, paid homage to King John at Lincoln. At an unknown date, he witnessed a charter of his wife's brother, Saher de Quincy, to Sibton Abbey. At an unknown date, he confirmed a gift of Thomas de Multon to Spalding Abbey. ROGER DE HUNTINGFIELD died in 1204. His wife, Alice, died the same year.

Blomefield Essay towards a Top. Hist. of Norfolk 5 (1806): 375. Stubbs Chronica Magistri Rogeri de Hovedene 4 (Rolls Ser. 51(4)) (1871): 141-142. Warner & Ellis Facsimiles of Royal & Other Charters in the British Museum 1 (1903): #45. Foster Final Concords of the County of Lincoln from the Feet of Fines A.D. 1244-1272 2 (Lincoln Rec. Soc. 17) (1920): 307-308. Salter Newington Longeville Charters (Oxfordshire Rec. Soc. 3) (1921): xxxiv-xxxvii, 75-76 (charter of Roger Fitz William de Huntingfield). CP. 6 (1926): 671 footnote a. Hatton Book of Seals (1950): 194-195, 200-201 (charter of Roger Fitz William dated 1198-1204). Paget Baronage of England (1957) 299:1. Hallam Settlement & Society (1965): 51. VCH Cambridge 5 (1973): 216. Franklin Cartulary of Daventry Priory (Pubs. of Northamptonshire Rec. Soc. 35) (1988): xx-xxi, 2-4. Wilkinson Women in 13th-Cent. Lincolnshire (2007): 174-175.

[Note: Evidence of the maiden name of Alice de Senlis (died 1204), mother of William de Huntingfield, the Magna Carta baron, is provided by her own charter to Stixwould Priory dated c.1180-3 [see Hallam Settlement & Society (1965): 51; Wilkinson Women in 13th Cent. Lincolnshire (2007): 174-175]. Alice has been identified by one recent historian as "perhaps" the daughter of Maud de Senlis, wife successively of Robert Fitz Richard (de Clare) (died 1136) and Saber de Quincy I [see Wilkinson Women in 13th Cent. Lincolnshire (2007): 175; Franklin Cartulary of Darentry Priory (Pubs. of Northamptonshire Rec. Soc. 35) (1988): xx-xxi, 2-4]. Another historian states Alice "was probably related to the [Senlis] earls of Northampton" [see Hatton Book of Seals (1950): 201]. Surviving charters indicate that Alice de Senlis' husband, Roger de Huntingfield, witnessed charters for both of Maud de Senlis' sons, Walter Fitz Robert and Saber de Quincy II [see Hatton Book of Seals (1950): 194, 201]. Roger de Huntingfield likewise held property at East Bradenham, Norfolk, the chief manor of which was previously held by Maud de Senlis, who gave the church there sometime before 1176 to Norwich Cathedral [see Blomefield Essay towards a Top. Hist. of Norfolk 6 (1807): 134-138; Dugdale Monasticon Anglicanum 5 (1825): 56, 58; Dugdale Monasticon Anglicanum 6(1) (1830): 148-149; Dodwell Charters of the Norwich Cathedral Priory 1 (Pubs. Pipe Roll Soc. n.s. 40) (1974): 180-183; Ward Women of the English Nobility & Gentry 1066-1500 (1995): 49-50]. In 1200 Roger de Huntingfield was present when William the Lion, King of Scots, paid homage to King John at Lincoln [see Stubbs Chronica Magistri Rogeri de Honedene 4 (Rolls Ser. 51(4)) (1871): 141-142]. Also present on this occasion were Roger le Bigod, Earl of Norfolk, Henry de Bohun, Earl of Hereford, Saber de Quincy IV, William Longespee, Earl of Salisbury, Robert de Roos, and William de Vescy, all of whom were near kinsfolk or related by marriage to King William the Lion. If Alice de Senlis, wife of Roger de Huntingfield, was the daughter of Maud de Senlis, it would make Alice a first cousin of King William the Lion. Given the chronology, passage of lands, naming patterns, etc., it seems virtually certain that Alice de Senlis was the daughter of Maud de Senlis and her 2nd husband, Saber de Quincy I, and that Alice's maritagium included Senlis family property at East Bradenham, Norfolk].” 
de Huntingfield, Sir Roger (I32066)
 
184 “Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families,” Douglas Richardson (2013):
“BEATRICE DE BEAUCHAMP, married (1st) before 1264 THOMAS FITZ OTES, Knt., of Mendlesham, Suffolk, Belchamp Otton, Gestingthorpe, and Gosfield, Essex, Dursley and Woodmancote, Gloucestershire, Hamerton, Huntingdonshire, etc., hereditary coiner of the Mint in the Tower of London and City of Canterbury, younger son of Otes Fitz William, of Bekhamp Otton, Gestingthorpe, and Gosfield, Essex, etc., and Lislestone (in Marylebone), Middlesex, hereditary coiner of the Mint. He was born about 1231 (aged 30 in 1261). He was heir in 1261 to his older brother, William Fitz Otes. They had one son, Otes, and three daughters, Joan (wife of Guy Ferre), Maud, and Beatrice. His wife, Beatrice, was co-heiress c.1266-7 to her niece, Joan, daughter of Simon de Beauchamp, Knt., by which she inherited a one-third share in the barony of Bedford, Bedfordshire, consisting of the manors of Astwick, Bromham, Cardington, Dilwick (in Stagsden), etc., Bedfordshire, Linslade and Southcott, Buckinghamshire, Belchamp William, Essex, and Shelsley Beauchamp, Worcestershire. The same year Thomas was given the scrap iron from the broken dies, as his father and ancestors had had. SIR THOMAS FITZ OTES died shortly before 23 March 1274. In June 1275 the king granted custody of the lands and heirs of Thomas Fitz Otes to the king's kinsman, Maurice de Craon, to hold during the minority of the heirs, together with the marriage of the heirs, saving to Hugh Fitz Otes, brother of the said Thomas, land or rent to the value of £40 a year to hold during the said custody. She married (2nd) before 26 June 1278 (probably as his 2nd wife) 'WILLIAM DE MUNCHENSY (or MONTCHESNEY, Knt., of Edwardstone, Lindsey, and Theberton, Suffolk, and, in right of his wife, of Linslade, Buckinghamshire, Shelsley Beauchamp, Worcestershire, etc., son and heir of William de Munchensy, of Edwardstone and Lindsey, Suffolk, by Joan, daughter and heiress of Geoffrey de Creke, Knt. He was born about 1230 (aged 24 in 1254). They had one son, William, and two daughters. He was heir in 1254 to his cousin, Ralph de la Haye, by which he inherited the manors of Layer de la Haye, Quendon, and Rettendon, Essex. In 1274-5 Master Alexander de Lolling arraigned an assize of novel disseisin against him and others touching a tenement in Bradwell-near-Tillingham, Essex. In 1275-6 Denise de Munchensy, of Holedon, arraigned an assize of mort d'ancestor against him touching possessions in Holton, Stratford, Monk's Eleigh, Chellesworth, and Lindsey, Suffolk. In 1276-7 he was granted letters of protection, he then going in the king's suite to the parts of Wales. He fought in Wales in 1277,1282, and 1283. About 1279 he conveyed 20 acres of arable land in Eldepak field in Finchingfield, Essex to Thomas de Spain. In 1279-80 Thomas de Spain arraigned an assize of novel disseisin against William de Munchensy, of Edwardstone, and others touching a tenement in Finchingfield, Essex. In the same period, Richard de Spain arraigned an assize of mort d'ancestor against William de Munchensy, of Edwardstone, and Thomas de Spain touching possessions in Finchingfield, Essex. In 1280-1 Andrew du Pont arraigned an assize of novel disseisin against William de Munchensy regarding a tenement in Laxfield, Suffolk. In the same year Hamo Pecche arraigned an assize of novel disseisin against William de Munchensy, of Edwardstone, and others regarding a tenement in Lindsey, Suffolk. In 1280-1 Hamo Pecche likewise arraigned an assize of novel disseisin against him touching a tenement in Groton, Aldham, and Haclleigh, Suffolk. The same year Philippe daughter of Richard de Spayne arraigned an assize of novel disseisin against William de Munchensy regarding a tenement in Finchingfield, Essex. In 1283 his kinsman, John de Munchensy granted him the manor of Scales (in Haslingfield), Cambridgeshire. Sometime before 1283 he enfeoffed Roger de Pridinton with the manor of Coddenham, Suffolk. His wife, Beatrice, died before 30 Sept. 1285. In 1285 he was tried and condemned for having sent four men of his household to murder Hugh Bukky at Castle Hedingham, Essex, and for harboring one of the murderers. In 1286 he received pardon on condition that he go to the Holy Land and remain there in God's service for ever. An allowance of 100 marks yearly from the revenues and his lands was made to him, but he was still a prisoner at London in 1290. He appears to have gone to the Holy Land in 1292, and in 1297, he had leave to return to the realm with restoration of his lands. SIR WILLIAM DE MUNCHENSY died shortly before 14 May 1302.
Roberts Excerpta è rotulis finium in Turri Londonnensi asservatis, Henrico Tertio rege, AD 1216-1272 2 (1836): 353, 355. Palgrave Docs. & Recs. Ill. the Hist. of Scotland I. (1837): 219 ("Will's de Monte Caniso" included on list of people owing military service in 1300). Gentleman's Mag. (1855): 159. Harvey Hist. & Antiqs. of the Hundred of Willey (1872-8): opp. 4 (Beauchamp ped.). Reliquary 17 (1876-7): 211. Annual Rpt. of the Deputy Keeper 44 (1883): 39, 78, 104; 45 (1885): 154, 205; 46 (1886): 261; 49 (1888): 67; 50 (1889): 87-88, 101, 136, 138, 219, 251. Trans. Bristol & Gloucs. Arch. Soc. 11 (1886-7): 233-242. Desc. Cat. Ancient Deeds 1 (1890): 108. Price Handbook of London Bankers (1890-91): 125. C.C.R. 1272-1279 (1900): 467. C.P.R. 1272-1281 (1901): 93. Madge Abs. of IPM for Gloucestershire 4 (Index Lib. 30) (1903): 89-90 , 98. Wrottesley Peds. from the Plea Rolls (1905): 122. VCH Bedford 2 (1908): 203; 3 (1912): 9-15, 44, 46, 214-218, 235. Cal. IPM 4 (1913): 64-65. Chambers Beauchamps (Bedfordshire Hist Rec. Soc. 1) (1913): 1-25. VCH Worcester 4 (1924): 331-334. VCH Buckingham 3 (1925): 387-391. Moor Knights of Edward I 1 (H.S.P. 80) (1929): 122-123 Fitz Otes arms: Bendy of six, a canton). Richardson & Sayles Rotuli Parl. Anglie Hactenus Inediti 1274-1373 (Camden Soc. 3rd Ser. 51) (1935): 22-23. C.P. 9 (1936): 416 417 (sub Munchensy). VCH Huntingdon 3 (1936): 67. Fowler Cal. IPM 2 (Bedfordshire Hist. Rec. Soc. 19) (1937): 150-151. Misc. Gen. et Heraldica 5th Ser. 10 (1938): 1-10. Gibbs Early Charters of the Cathedral Church of St. Paul, London (Camden Soc. 3rd Ser. 58) (1939): 136, footnote 1. Paget Baronage of England (1957) 37: 1-8 (sub Beauchamp); 396: 2-3 (sub Munchensi). Sanders English Baronies (1960): 10-12. VCH Cambridge 5 (1973): 230. Gervers Cartulary of the Knights of St. John of Jerusalem in England 1 (Recs. of Soc. & Econ. Hist. n.s. 6) (1982): 40-41 (charter of William de Munchensy dated probably c.1280). Brown Sibton Abbey Cartularies & Charters 2 (Suffolk Charters 8) (1986): 19-20. Waugh Lordship of England (1988): 213. TAG 65 (1990): 24-32. Thompson Hundreds, Manors, Parishes & the Church (Bedfordshire Hist. Rec. Soc. 69) (1990): 8,10. Brault Rolls of Arms Edward 12 (1997): 314 (arms of William de Munchensy: Argent, six bars argent). National Archives, C 47/14/4/10 (Scire facias dated 1283 to the sheriff of Suffolk concerning manor of Codham [Coddenham] - William de Monte Caniso v Joan de Colevile [widow of Roger de Pridinton] to be heard in next parliament) (available at www.catalogue.nationalarchives.gov.uk/search.asp).
Child of Beatrice de Beauchamp, by Thomas Fitz Otes, Knt:
i. MAUD FITZ THOMAS [see next].
Child of Beatrice de Beauchamp, by William de Munchensy, Knt.:
i. WILLIAM DE MUNCHENSY, of Edwardstone, Suffolk, married ALICE [see WALDEGRAVE 8].” 
Munchesney, Sir William (I35762)
 
185 “Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families,” Douglas Richardson (2013):
“DAVID I, King of Scots, youngest son by his father's 2nd marriage, probably born about 1085. He married before Midsummer 1113 MAUD OF NORTHUMBERLAND, widow of Simon de Senlis, Earl of Huntingdon and Northampton (living 8 August 1111) [see BEAUCHAMP 3], and daughter and co-heiress of Waltheof, Earl of Northumberland, by Judith, daughter of Lambert, Count of Lens [see BEAUCHAMP 2 for her ancestry]. She was born about 1072 (aged 18 in 1090). They had two sons, Malcolm and Henry [Earl of Northumberland], and two daughters, Clarice and Hodierne. David was recognized as Earl of Huntingdon to the exclusion of his step-son, Simon; the earldom of Northampton reverted to the crown. As Earl of Huntingdon, he made various grants to St. Andrew's, Northampton. In 1113 he founded an abbey at Selkirk, afterwards removed to Kelso, and gave it land at Hardingstone and Northampton. He founded another abbey at Jedworth in 1118. He succeeded his brother, Alexander I, as King of Scotland 25 April 1124. In 1127 he joined in the Barons' recognition of Empress Maud to succeed her father on the throne of England. When Stephen seized the crown, David took arms against him. His wife, Queen Maud, died 1130 or 1131, and was buried at Scone. About 1132 he gave the church of Tottenham, Middlesex to the canons of the church of Holy Trinity, London. In 1136 King David I resigned the earldom of Huntingdon to his son, Henry, who did homage to Stephen. David was defeated at the Battle of Standard 22 August 1138. DAVID I, King of Scots, died at Carilie 24 May 1153; and was buried at Dunfermline, Fife.
[References match those with his wife’s entry.]
Children of King David I, by Maud of Northumberland:
i. MALCOLM OF SCOTLAND, said to have been strangled when aged two. Scots Peerage 1 (1904): 3-5 (sub Kings of Scotland). Dunbar Scottish Kings (1906): 58-70.
ii. HENRY OF SCOTLAND, Earl of Northumberland [see next].
iii. CLARICE OF SCOTLAND, died unmarried. Scots Peerage 1 (1904): 3-5 (sub Kings of Scotland). Dunbar Scottish Kings (1906): 58-70. Tanner Fams., Friends, & Allies (2004): 313 (Scotland ped.).
iv. HODIERNE OF SCOTLAND, died unmarried. Scots Peerage 1 (1904): 3-5 (sub Kings of Scotland). Dunbar Scottish Kings (1906): 58-70. Tanner Fams., Friends, & Allies (2004): 313 (Scotland ped.).“
______________________
Scottish Monarch and Saint. Son of Malcolm III Canmore and Saint Margaret of Scotland. He succeeded his brother Alexander in 1124. David accelerated the process, begun by his mother, of introducing the Roman Catholic church into Scotland, displacing the Celtic church. He founded many abbeys, including Melrose, Holyrood, Paisley, and Dryburgh. He also introduced the orders of the Knights Templar and Knights Hospitaller into Scotland. He married his queen, Matilda in 1114. They had 2 sons and 2 daughters, all of whom pre-deceased their father. At the time of David's death at the old age of 73, Scotland stretched further south than ever before or since. Though never formally canonized, David is recognized on both Catholic and Protestant calendars. His feast day is May 24. He was succeeded by his grandson, William I "The Lion."
Bio by: Kristen Conrad 
of Scotland, King David I (I32432)
 
186 “Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families,” Douglas Richardson (2013):
“JUDITH OF LENS, born about 1054. She married after January 1070 WALTHEOF, Earl of Northumberland, lord of Potton, Bedfordshire, Waltharnstow, Essex, Conington, Leighton Bromswold, Little Catford, and Sawtry, Huntingdonshire, Barnack, East Farndon, Fotheringay, Harringworth, and Lilford, Northamptonshire, etc., son and heir of Siward, Earl of Northumberland, by Ælfflaed, daughter of Earl Ealdred. They had two daughters, Maud [Queen of Scotland] and Alice. He was still young at the death of his father in 1055. He was active against the Norman in the northern counties and especially at York in 1069. In 1070 he made his peace with King William the Conqueror. He occurs as one of the witnesses to King William's charter to Wells dated 1068. He was present at the marriage of Ralph de Wader at Exning, Cambridgeshire, where the guests entered into a conspiracy against the king. In this he was to some slight extent implicated, but acting on the advise of Archbishop Lanfranc, he crossed over to Normandy to the king, and disclosed the matter to him. The conspiracy having been crushed, the king kept Waltheof with him. But he was accused by his wife, Judith, of more than a mere knowledge of the plot. After a year's deliberation, during which he was imprisoned at Winchester, Waltheof was executed at Winchester, Hampshire 31 May 1075 (or 1076). Two weeks afterwards the king allowed his body to be removed to Croyland Abbey, Lincolnshire, where the abbot buried him in the chapterhouse; his remains were subsequently translated into the church near the altar. At an unknown date, Judith was granted the manor of Elstow, Bedfordshire by her uncle, King William the Conqueror. Sometime prior to 1086, she founded a nunnery at Elstow and endowed it with the vill. She was living in 1086, and presumably died about 1090.

Wharton Anglia Sacra (1691): 159 (Chronicon Sanctæ Crucis Edinburgensis sub A.D. 1076: "Walthevus Comes decollatus est."). Lysons Environs of London 1(2) (1811): 699-700. Dugdale Monasticon Anglicanum 5 (1825): 522-523. Palgrave Docs. & Recs. illus. the Hist. of Scotland 1 (1837): 100-101 xxx (Cronica Canonicorum Beate Marie Huntingdon: "David qui regnavit et duxit Matildam Comitissam Huntingd' neptem Willelmi Regis Anglorum filiam Ivette que fuit filia Lamberti de Louns Comitis."). Col. Top. et Gen. 6 (1840): 261-265. Edwards Liber Monasterii de Hyda (Rolls Ser. 45) (1866): 294-295 (Judith [of Lens], wife of Earl Waltheof, styled "king's kinswoman" [consanguineam regis] [i.e., kinswoman of King William the Conqueror]). Freeman Hist. of the Norman Conquest of England 4 (1871): 813-815 (re. connection of Earl Waltheof with conspiracy of Ralph). Remarks & Colls. of Thomas Hearne 3 (Oxford Hist. Soc.) (1889): 104 (ped. chart). Searle Ingulf & the Historia Croylandensis (1894): 104-110 (biog. of Earl Waltheof, the martyr). Notes & Queries 9th Ser. 8 (1901): 525-526. Rutland Mag. & County Hist. Rec. 3 (1908): 97-106, 129-137. VCH Bedford 2 (1908): 237-242; 3 (1912): 280-281, 296-305. Pubs. of Bedfordshire Hist. Rec. Soc. 9 (1925): 23-34. VCH Northampton 3 (1930): 227-231. VCH Huntingdon 3 (1936): 86-92, 144-151, 203-212. Arch. Aeliana 30 (1952): 200-201. Giles Vita et Passio Waldevi comitis in Original Lives of Anglo-Saxons and others who lived before the Conquest (Caxton Soc. 16) (1954): 1-30. Offler Durham Episcopal Charters 1071-1152 (1968): 2, 5, 6, 16n, 27, 30-31, 39-47. VCH Essex 6 (1973): 253-263. VCH Cambridge 6 (1978): 177-182. Winter Descs. of Charlemagne (800-1400) (1987): XI.227, XII.398-XII.399. Schwennicke Europaische Stammtafeln 3(4) (1989): 621 (sub Boulogne). Bower Scotichronicon 3 (1995): 64-65 & 126-127 (instances of Judith, wife of Earl Waltheof, styled "niece" [neptis] of King William the Conqueror). Van Houts Gesta Normannorum Ducum of William of Jumièges, Orderic Vitalis, and Robert of Torigny 2 (1995): 270-273 (Deeds of the Norman Dukes: "Waltheof had three daughters by his wife [Judith], a daughter of the countess of Aumâle, who was a uterine sister of William the elder, king of the English. Simon de Senlis married another of Earl Waltheof’s daughters and received with her the earldom of Huntingdon. He had by her a son called Simon. After the death of Earl Simon, David, brother of secundae Maud, queen of the English, married his widow, by whom he had one son. After the death of his brothers Duncan and Alexander, kings of Scots, he became king. Another of Waltheof’s daughters, Judith [recte Alice], married Rodolf de Toeny, as we have already mentioned. The third daughter [recte granddaughter] was married by Robert Fitz Richard, as we have also mentioned above."). William The English & the Norman Conquest (1995). Tanner Fams., Friends, & Allies (2004): 290 (chart).
Children of Judith of Lens, by Waltheof of Northumberland:
i. MAUD OF NORTHUMBERLAND [see next].
ii. ALICE OF NORTHUMBERLAND, married RALPH DE TONY, of Flamstead, Hertfordshire [see TONY 3].”
_______________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Judith was a niece of William the Conqueror. She was a daughter of his sister Adelaide of Normandy, Countess of Aumale and Lambert II, Count of Lens.
In 1070, Judith married Earl Waltheof of Huntingdon and Northumbria. They had three children. Their eldest daughter, Maud, brought the earldom of Huntingdon to her second husband, David I of Scotland. Their daughter, Adelise, married Raoul III de Conches whose sister, Godehilde, married Baldwin I of Jerusalem.

In 1075, Waltheof joined the Revolt of the Earls against William. It was the last serious act of resistance against the Norman conquest of England. Judith betrayed Waltheof to her uncle, who had Waltheof beheaded on 31 May 1076. After Waltheof's execution Judith was betrothed by William to Simon I of St. Liz, 1st Earl of Northampton. Judith refused to marry Simon and she fled the country to avoid William's anger. William then temporarily confiscated all of Judith's English estates. Simon, later, married, as his second wife, Judith's daughter, Maud, as her first husband.
Judith founded Elstow Abbey in Bedfordshire around 1078. She also founded churches at Kempston and Hitchin.
She had land-holdings in 10 counties in the Midlands and East Anglia. Her holdings included land at:
• Earls Barton, Northamptonshire
• Great Doddington, Northamptonshire
• Grendon, Northamptonshire
• Merton, Oxfordshire
• Piddington, Oxfordshire
• Potton, Bedfordshire

"Countess Judith of Lens was a niece of William the Conqueror. She was a daughter of his sister Adelaide of Normandy, Countess of Aumale and Lambert II, Count of Lens."

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Judith_of_Lens

[NB: Information sourced from Wikipedia is subject to change by third-parties. Follow the URL(s) noted above to review the latest content.]

. In 1070, Judith married Earl Waltheof of Huntingdon and Northumbria. They had three children - Maud de Lens aka Matilda (1074-1130), Judith (1075-1137) and Adelese aka Alice (c1075/6-1126). Their eldest daughter, Maud, brought the earldom of Huntingdon to her second husband, David I of Scotland. Their daughter, Adelise, married Raoul III de Conches whose sister, Godehilde, married Baldwin I of Jerusalem.

In 1075, Waltheof joined the Revolt of the Earls against William. It was the last serious act of resistance against the Norman conquest of England. Some sources claim that Judith betrayed Waltheof to the bishop of Winchester, who informed her uncle, the king. Other sources say that Waltheof was innocent and that it was he who notified the bishop and king of the plot. Waltheof was beheaded on 31 May 1076 at St. Giles Hill, near Winchester.

After Waltheof's execution, Judith was betrothed by William to Simon I of St. Liz, 1st Earl of Northampton by her uncle, William. Judith refused to marry Simon and fled the country to avoid William's anger. He then (temporarily) confiscated all Judith's English estates. Simon married Judith's daughter, Maud, in or before 1090.
The parish of Sawtry Judith in Huntingdonshire is named after the Countess 
of Lens, Countess of Lens Judith (I32072)
 
187 “Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families,” Douglas Richardson (2013):
“MAUD DE SENLIS, married in 1112 ROBERT FITZ RICHARD, of Little Dunmow, Essex, Baynard's Castle, London, Cratfield, Suffolk, etc., Steward of Kings Henry I and Stephen, 5th son of Richard Fitz Gilbert, of Bienfaite and Orbec, Normandy, Clare, Suffolk, Tonbridge, Kent, by Rohese, daughter of Walter Giffard, of Long Crendon, Buckinghamshire [see CLARE 1 for his ancestry]. They had one son, Walter, and one daughter, Maud. He witnessed a number of charters of King Henry I. Sometime before 1136 he gave all his part of the water of Stour Mere, for the souls of himself and his ancestors, and for the love of his kinsman, Gerard Giffard the prior, to Stoke by Clare Priory, Suffolk. He accompanied King Stephen to York and Exeter in 1136. ROBERT FITZ RICHARD died in 1137, after 28 November, and was buried at St. Neot's Priory, Cambridgeshire. His widow, Maud, married (2rid) between 1137 and 1140 (as his 1st wife) SAHER DE QUINCY (or QUENCY), of Long Buckby, Northamptonshire and Wimpole, Cambridgeshire, and, in right of his 1st wife, of East Bradenham, Norfolk and Daventry, Northamptonshire; and, in right of his 2nd wife, of Great Childerley (in Childerley), Cambridgeshire. They had two sons, Robert and Saher, and one daughter, Alice.

Sometime before 1176 Maud granted the church of East Bradenham, Norfolk to Norwich Cathedral with the consent of her son, Walter Fitz Robert. At an unknown date, with consent of Walter her son, she granted to Maurice Fitz Geoffrey all her dower lands in Essex and London, which William Fitz Walcher formerly held. He witnessed a charter of Simon son of Simon Earl of Northampton in 1153-7. His wife, Maud, was living in 1158. In 1158 he was pardoned 25s. danegeld in Northamptonshire. Sometime after 1163 he granted Sibton Abbey 20 acres of land from his demesne and 30 acres of broken heath in the village of Tuddenham, Suffolk. At an unknown date, Saher granted the canons of Dunmow, Essex a yearly rent of 10s. issuing out of the lordship of East Bradenham, Norfolk. Saher married (2nd) after 1165 ASCELINE PEVEREL, widow of Geoffrey de Waterville (occurs c.1138-61, dead in 1162), of Ailsworth and Upton (in Castor), Northamptonshire, and daughter of Robert Peverel, by his wife, Adelicia. They had no issue. She was co-heiress in 1148 to her brother, William Peverel, of Dover, by which she inherited a one-quarter share of the barony of Bourn, Cambridgeshire. Sometime between 1161 and 1172, she and her son, Ralph de Waterville, conceded to Shrewsbury Abbey a third of Crugelton and Slepe, Shropshire, as given previously by her uncle, Hamon Peverel. Sometime in the 1170s Saher confirmed William [de Belvoir] and his son, Reynold [de Oakley], in their possession of the manor of Great Childerley (in Childerley), Cambridgeshire. SAHER DE QUINCY died in 1190 (or about 1193).

Weever Antient Funeral Monuments (1767): 388-391.
Baker Hist. & Antiqs. of Northampton 1 (1822-30): 563 (Beaumont-Quincy ped.).
Dugdale Monasticon Anglicanum 5 (1825): 181 (charter of Maud de Senlis to Daventry Priory, naming her deceased husband, [Robert] Fitz Richard, and her mother, Queen Maud [of Scotland]); 6(1) (1830): 147 ("[Year] 1112. Robertus filius Ricardi deponsavit Matildam de Sancto Licio quae fuit domina de Brade[n]ham"). Clutterbuck Hist. & Antiqs. of Hertford 3 (1827): 225-226 (Clare ped). Hodgson Hist. of Northumberland Pt. 2 Vol. 3 (1840): 6-8 (ped.)". Trans. British Arch. Assoc., 2nd Annual Congress (1846): 294-306. Lipscomb Hist. & Antiqs. of Buckingham 1 (1847): 200-201 (Clare ped.). Eyton Antiqs. of Shropshire 9 (1859): 62-78. Notes & Queries 4th Ser. 11(1873): 269-271, 305-308. Remarks & Colls. of Thomas Hearne 3 (Oxford Hist. Soc.) (1889): 104 (ped. chart). Birch Catalogue of Seals in the British Museum 2 (1892): 397 (seal of Maud de Senlis dated temp. Henry II.- Pointed oval. To the left. In tightly-fitting dress with long maunches, in the right hand a fleur-cle-lis. Standing. Legend wanting,). Round Feudal England (1895): 468 -479,575 (ped.). Arch. Jour. 2nd Ser. 6 (1899): 221-231. Warner & Ellis Facsimiles of Royal & Other Charters in the British Museum 1 (1903): #37 (charter of William, Count of Boulogne and [Earl] of Warenne dated 1154; charter witnessed by Saher de Quincy). Copinger Manors of Suffolk (1905): 45-46; 2 (1908): 45-53. VCH Northampton 2 (1906): 483. Lindsay et al. Charters, Bulls and other Docs. Rel. to the Abbey of Inchaffray (Scottish Hist. Soc. 56) (1908): lxxxvi-lxxxix. C.P. 5 (1926): 472, footnote f; 6 (1926): 641, footnote b. Leys Sandford Cartulary 2 (Oxfordshire Rec. Soc. 22) (1941): 280-281 (charter of Simon son of Simon Earl of Northampton dated 1153-7; charter witnessed by Saher de Quincy). Hatton Book of Seals (1950): 102-103 (charter of Maud de Senlis dated early Henry II; charter witnessed by Walter Fitz Robert and Saher [de Quincy] her sons; attached seal displays a lady standing in mantle and gown, no legend), 194-195 (charter of Saher de Quincy dated after 1163; charter witnessed his son, Saher de Quincy, and [son-in-law], Roger de Huntingfield). Paget (1957) 14:2 (daughter Maud, who retained her mother's surname, has been confused with the latter), 230:1 (he died after Easter 1136 when he was one of the witnesses to Stephen's Charter to Winchester). Sanders English Baronies (1960): 129-130. VCH Cambridge 5 (1973): 4-16, 16-25,111-120, 241-251; 6 (1978): 220-230; 8 (1982): 97-110, 127-135, 248-267; 9 (1989): 41-44, 118-120. Dodwell Charters of the Norwich Cathedral Priory 1 (Pubs. Pipe Roll Soc. n.s. 40) (1974): 180-183 (charter dated 1176 mentions gift of the church of Bradenham, Norfolk "quarn Matilda de Silvenecti concessione filii sin Gwalteri ecclesie tue dedit et carta sua confirmauit"). Harper-Bill Stoke by Clare Cartulary 1 (Suffolk Charters 4) (1982): 115 (Gerard Giffard, Prior of Stoke by Clare, styled "kinsman" by Robert Fitz Richard before 1136). Kealey Harvesting the Air (1987): 107-131. Caenegem English Lawsuits from William Ito Richard 11 (Selden Soc. 106) (1990): 249-250. Franklin English Episcopal Acta 14: Coventry and Lichfield 1072-1159 (1997): 85-87. Raban White Book of Peterborough (2001): 250. Tanner Fams., Friends, & Allies (2004): 291 (chart), 313 (Scotland ped.), 316 (Clare ped.).

Children of Maud de Senlis, by Robert Fitz Richard:
i. WALTER FITZ ROBERT [see next].
ii. MAUD DE SENLIS, married (1st) WILLIAM D'AUBENEY, of Belvoir, Leicestershire [see DAUBENEY 5]. (2nd) RICHARD DE LUVETOT, of Sheffield, Yorkshire [see DAUBENEY 5].
Children of Maud de Senlis, by Saher de Quincy:
i. ROBERT DE QUINCY, of Tranent, Fawside, and Longniddry, East Lothian, Scotland, Grantchester, Cambridgeshire, Long Buckby, Northamptonshire, etc., married ORABEL FITZ NESS [see QUINCY 5].
ii. ALICE DE SENLIS, married ROGER DE HUNTINGFIELD, of Linstead and Mendham, Suffolk, Frampton, Lincolnshire, East Bradenham, Norfolk, etc. [see HUNTINGFIELD 5].” 
de Senlis, Matilda (I34797)
 
188 “Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families,” Douglas Richardson (2013):
“RICHARD DE KEYNES, of Horsted Keynes, Selmeston, and lteford, Sussex, and Charwelton, Northamptonshire, younger son, but eventual heir, born about 1228. He was granted livery of his father's lands in 1249. He married ALICE DE MANKESEY, daughter and heiress of Robert de Mankesey, of Catteshal and Lingfield, Surrey, and Thornham, Kent, by Isabel, daughter of Thomas de Bavelingham. They had one daughter, Joan. He was supporter of his overlord, Simon de Montfort, in 1264. RICHARD DE KEYNES was living in 1276, and died sometime before 1295.
Year Books of Edward III: Years XVII & XVIII 10 (Rolls Ser. 31b) (1903): 584-595. Wrottesley Peds.from the Plea Rolls (1905): 432. Sussex Arch. Colls. 50 (1907): 70; 63 (1922): 181-202. VCH Surrey 3 (1911): 32. Cal. Mgrs. Misc. 1 (1916): 546 (Date of Inquisition: 1307. Location Sussex. "Richard de Kaynes held of Simon de Montfort, sometime earl of Leicester, 2 1/2 knights of the honour of Leicester of the yearly value of 301, in Selmeston, Iteford and Horsted Kaynes, and after the forfeiture of the said earl [the said Richard] attorned to King Henry III for his homage and service; he was succeeded by Joan, his daughter and heir, who married Roger de Leukenore; Thomas de Leukenore, their son and heir, succeeded them, and now holds the said fees, and has attorned to the present king for his homage"). C.C.R 1247-1251 (1922): 187. Book of Fees 2 (1923): 666, 674, 688, 1289, 1362, 1377 (Robert de Mankesey held the manor of Lingfield, Surrey, in 1242/3. It reappears in the mid-1500s held by Drew Barantine, Esq., one of the heirs of the senior Lewknor family), VCH Northampton 5 (2002): 77-98.” 
de Mankesey, Robert (I32037)
 
189 “Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families,” Douglas Richardson (2013):
“RICHARD DE KEYNES, of Horsted Keynes, Selmeston, and lteford, Sussex, and Charwelton, Northamptonshire, younger son, but eventual heir, born about 1228. He was granted livery of his father's lands in 1249. He married ALICE DE MANKESEY, daughter and heiress of Robert de Mankesey, of Catteshal and Lingfield, Surrey, and Thornham, Kent, by Isabel, daughter of Thomas de Bavelingham. They had one daughter, Joan. He was supporter of his overlord, Simon de Montfort, in 1264. RICHARD DE KEYNES was living in 1276, and died sometime before 1295.

Year Books of Edward III: Years XVII & XVIII 10 (Rolls Ser. 31b) (1903): 584-595. Wrottesley Peds.from the Plea Rolls (1905): 432. Sussex Arch. Colls. 50 (1907): 70; 63 (1922): 181-202. VCH Surrey 3 (1911): 32. Cal. Mgrs. Misc. 1 (1916): 546 (Date of Inquisition: 1307. Location Sussex. "Richard de Kaynes held of Simon de Montfort, sometime earl of Leicester, 2 1/2 knights of the honour of Leicester of the yearly value of 301, in Selmeston, Iteford and Horsted Kaynes, and after the forfeiture of the said earl [the said Richard] attorned to King Henry III for his homage and service; he was succeeded by Joan, his daughter and heir, who married Roger de Leukenore; Thomas de Leukenore, their son and heir, succeeded them, and now holds the said fees, and has attorned to the present king for his homage"). C.C.R 1247-1251 (1922): 187. Book of Fees 2 (1923): 666, 674, 688, 1289, 1362, 1377 (Robert de Mankesey held the manor of Lingfield, Surrey, in 1242/3. It reappears in the mid-1500s held by Drew Barantine, Esq., one of the heirs of the senior Lewknor family), VCH Northampton 5 (2002): 77-98.” 
de Mankesey, Alice (I32035)
 
190 “Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families,” Douglas Richardson (2013):
“ROGER DE LEWKNOR, Knt., of Broadhurst (in Horsted Keynes), Horsted Keynes, Iteford, and Selmeston, Sussex, South Mimms, Mendlesham, etc., Knight of the Shire for Sussex, Knight of the Shire for Middlesex, Sheriff of Surrey and Sussex, 1354-5, son and heir, born about 1304 (aged 32 in 1336). In 1320 he was granted protection to go beyond the seas with the king. He married by settlement dated 1340 KATHERINE BARDOLF, daughter and heiress of ___ Bardolf. They had two sons, Thomas, Knt., and Richard. In 1344 he released all his right in the manor of Catteshall, Surrey, to his kinsman, Robert de Northwood, Knt., as lineal heir of Robert de Mankesey who received the manor in 1334. He presented to the church of Greatworth, Northamptonshire in 1351 and 1357. SIR ROGER DE LEWKNOR died 14 March 1362. His widow, Katherine, was assigned her dower 15 Oct. 1362.

Bridges Hist. & Antiqs. of Northamptonshire 1 (1791): 125. Berry County Gens.: Sussex Fams. (1830): 130 (Lewknor ped.). Sussex Arch. Colls. 3 (1850): 89-102. Notes & Queries 6th Ser. 9 (1884): 188. Cooke & Mundy Vis. of Worcester 1569 (H.S.P. 27) (1888): 86-87 (Lewknor ped.: "Roger Lewknor An" 14 E. 3, 1339. = Catherin do. & heire of … Bardolph.") (Bardolph arms: Azure, three cinquefoils or). Cal. Entries Papal Regs.: Letters 3 (1897): 180. List of Sheriffs for England & Wales (PRO Lists and Indexes 9) (1898): 136. C.C.R. 1346-1349 (1905): 2. Benolte et al. Vis. of.Sussex 1530 & 1633-4 (H.S.P. 53) (1905): 25-30 (Lewknor ped.: "Roger Lewknor 14 E. 3, 1339 = Catherin d. & heire of... Bardolphe."). Wrottesley Peds.from the Plea Rolls (1905): 432. C.C.R. 1360-1364 (1909): 364. Cal. IPM 8 (1913): 405. Feudal Aids 6 (1920): 581. Comber Sussex Gens. 3 (1933): 148-158 sub Lewknor).” 
de Lewknor, Sir Roger (I32029)
 
191 “Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families,” Douglas Richardson (2013):
“WALTER DE CANTELOWE, of Brimpton, Berkshire, Adber and Leigh, Dorset, Fontley and Oakley, Hampshire, and Barwick, Camel, and Chilton Cantelo, Somerset. He held two knights' fees of William de Roumare in 1166. He also held lands of William de Roumare in Normandy. He married AMICE ___. They had three sons, William, Knt., Robert Barat (or Cantelowe), and Roger Orget, and three daughters, Nichole, Sibyl, and probably Isabel. His name occurs on a role of the Norman Exchequer dated 1184. He was a member of the entourage of John, Count of Mortain [afterwards King John]. In 1195 William de Saint Mary accounted £4 for the farm at Barwick, Somerset of Walter de Cantelowe for half a year. In 1201 he sued Robert de Cantelowe for the vill of Chilton Cantelo, Somerset as being his right and inheritance, whereof his father, William de Cantelowe, was seised during the reign of King Henry II [1154-89]. In 1201-2 he conveyed all his right in the vill of Chilton Cantelo, Somerset to Robert de Cantelowe; for this concession Robert gave Walter 28 marks of money, and thereupon Walter did homage to Robert in the Court. In 1204-5 the king issued a writ to the Sheriff of Norfolk to deliver to Walter certain lands in that county which the king had previously committed to the custody of William his son. At an unknown date, he granted in pure and perpetual alms for the salvation of his soul and those of his wife, Amice, his son and heir, William de Cantelowe, his other children, and his ancestors to Christchurch Priory 1/2 mark a year from his rent at Leigh, Dorset, viz. 20d. to be paid each quarter by Sampson de Leigh and his heirs. WALTER DE CANTELOWE was living in 1205, when the king gave him a dolium of wine.

Mémoires de la Société des Antiquaires de Normandie 8 (1834): 349-350, 352. Palgrave Rotuli Curice Regis 1 (1835): 172. Green Feet of Fines for Somerset 1 (Somerset Rec. Soc. 6) (1892): 15. Batten Hist. & Topog. Colls. ReL to the early Hist. of Parts of South Somerset (1894): 1-7,29-32. Hall Red Book of the Exchequer 1 (1896): 376-377. Trans. Shropshire Arch. & Natural Hist. Soc. 3rd Ser. 1 (1901): 170-177. VCH Rutland 2 (1935): 88-91. Medieval Miscellany for Doris Mag Stenton (Pubs. Pipe Roll Soc. n.s. 36) (1962): 77-84. Hanna Christchurch Priory Cartulary (Hampshire Rec. Ser. 18) (2007): 169 (charter of Walter de Cantelowe; charter witnessed by his son, Robert de Cantelowe).

Children of Walter de Cantelowe, by Amice ...

vi. ISABEL DE CANTELOWE (probable daughter).* She married (as his 2nd wife) STEPHEN DEVEREUX, of Lyonshall and Frome Herbert, Herefordshire, Wilby, Norfolk, etc., son and heir of John Devereux, of Lyonshall, Herefordshire. They had one son, William. In 1227 he and his heirs were granted a weekly market and yearly fair at Lyonshall, Herefordshire. STEPHEN DEVEREUX died in 1228. His widow, Isabel, married (2nd) RALPH DE PEMBRIDGE (or PENEBRUG). In her second widowhood, she gave to the Hospital of St Ethelbert for the souls of herself and her two husbands "unam ladum bladi" at the Feast of St. Andrew during her life to be received at her house of Frome. She was living in 1245. Coll. Top. et Gen. 2 (1835): 250 (charter of Isabel de Cantelowe dated pre-1244). Duncumb Colls. towards Hist. & Antiqs. of the County of Hereford: Hundred of Huntington (1897): 21, 49 (Devereux ped.). Holden Lords of the Central Marches (2008): 97-102 (re. Devereux fam.).
(*Isabel de Cantelowe's maiden name is attested by her own charter [see Coll. Top. et Gen. 2 (1835): 2501. That Isabel was the sister of Sir William de Cantelowe (died 1239) seems virtually certain. Her son, William Devereux, is known to have had a daughter who married Sir John de Pycheford. Sir John de Pycheford's wife was styled "kinswoman" of Sir George de Cantelowe [died 1273] [see Cal. /P21,1 2 (1906): 16-211. Sir George de Cantelowe was the great-grandson and heir male of Sir William de Cantelowe (died 1239). For further particulars, see Eyton Antiqs. of Shropshire 6 (1858): 273.)” 
Cantelowe, Lady Isabel (I25966)
 
192 “Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families,” Douglas Richardson (2013):
“WILLIAM DE HUNTINGFIELD, Knt., of Huntingfield and Mendham, Suffolk, Harlton, Cambridgeshire, Frampton, Fishtoft, and Southorpe, Lincolnshire, etc., Constable of Dover Castle, 1203-4, Warden of the Cinque Ports, and Sheriff of Norfolk and Suffolk, 1209-11, justice itinerant in Lincolnshire, and, in right of his wife, patron of Castleacre Priory, son and heir of Roger [Fitz William] de Huntingfield, of Huntingfield, Linstead, and Mendham, Suffolk, Frampton, Huttoft, Southorpe, and Tytton (in Wyberton), Lincolnshire, East Bradenham, Norfolk, etc., by Alice de Senlis, daughter of Saher de Quincy, of Long Buckby and Daventry, Northamptonshire. He was born about 1160. He married before 1194 ISABEL FITZ WILLIAM (otherwise DE GRESSENHALL), widow successively of Berenger de Cressy, and Osmond de Stuteville, of Weston Colville, Cambridgeshire (died in Palestine, probably during the Siege of Joppa about 1187), and daughter and heiress of William Fitz Roger, of Gressenhall and Castleacre, Norfolk, by his wife, Aeliva. They had two sons, Roger, Knt., and presumably Saher, and four daughters, Alice, Isabel, Sarah, and Margaret (or Margery). In 1194 he disputed with his wife's son, William de Stuteville, concerning his wife's dower. In 1195 the Abbot of St. Edmunds granted the whole vill of Wendling, Norfolk to William de Huntingfield and his wife, Isabel, and her heirs for 50s. a year. Sometime c.1204-12, he witnessed a charter of Alexander, Abbot of Sibton to Thomas son of Roger de Huntingfield, presumably his brother. In 1205 he was granted the manor of Clafford, Hampshire. In the period, 1204-17, he witnessed a charter of Ralph the chaplain of Heveningham to John Fitz Robert, lord of Ubbeston. His wife, Isabel, died in 1207. In 1208 he had custody of the lands of his brother, Roger, which had been seized in consequence of the interdict. From 1208 to 1210 he was one of the justices before whom fines were levied. In the period, 1210-18, he witnessed a charter of his kinsman, Saher de Quincy, Earl of Winchester. In 1211 he gave the king six fair Norway goshawks for license to marry his daughter, Alice, then widow of Richard de Solers, and to have assignation of her dowry out of the lands of her late husband. In 1213 he held the office of accountant with Aubrey de Vere, Earl of Oxford, for the customs of Norfolk and Suffolk. In 1215 he joined the confederate barons against the king. He was one of the twenty-five barons appointed to secure the observance of Magna Carta, which King John signed 15 June 1215. He served as a witness to the charter granting freedom of elections to the abbeys. He was among the barons excommunicated by Pope Innocent III in late 1215, and his lands were taken into the king's hands. He reduced Essex and Suffolk for Prince Louis of France, and in retaliation John plundered his estates in Norfolk and Suffolk. In Nov. 1216 he was granted the vill of Grimsby, Lincolnshire with all liberties and free customs by Prince Louis of France. He fought at the Battle of Lincoln 20 May 1217, where he was taken prisoner by the king's forces. On 23 June 1217 all his lands in Lincolnshire were granted to John Marshal. On conclusion of peace, he made peace with King Henry III 6 Oct. 1217, and had restitution of his estates. In 1218 he sued Nichole de la Haye for the recovery of chattels worth £273, which she seized from him in Lincolnshire when he was at arms against the king; a compromise was reached whereby Nichole gave William 30 silver marks in return for which he quitclaimed to her "all the right and claim that he had against her." In 1219 he had leave to go to the Holy Land on crusade; he appointed Thomas his brother to act on his behalf during his absence. SIR WILLIAM DE HUNTINGFIELD died on crusade, possibly in the Holy Land, before 25 Jan. 1220/1.
Blomefield Essay towards a Top. Hist. of Norfolk 6 (1807): 134-138; 9 (1808): 510-515. Placitorum in Domo Capitulari Westmonasteriensi Asservatorum Abbrevatio (1811): 3, 38. Dugdale Monasticon Anglicarium 5 (1825): 52 (charter of Isabel de Gressenhall, wife of William de Huntingfield), 58. Benedict of Peterborough Gesta Regis Henrici Secundi Benedict Abbatis (or Chron. of the Reigns of Heny II. & Richard I. A.D. 1169-1192) 2 (Rolls Ser. 49) (1867): 149-150 (death of Osmund de Stuteville at Joppa). Foss Judges of England (1870): 358-359 (biog. of William de Huntingfield). Paris Chronica Majora 2 (Rolls Ser. 57) (1874): 604-605, 642-645. Lincolnshire Notes & Queries 2 (1891): 65-67. List of Sheriffs for England & Wales (PRO Lists and Indexes 9) (1898): 86. Copinger Manors of Suffolk 2 (1908): 100-103; 4 (1909): 66-68. Copinger Manors of Suffolk, 4(1909): 66-67. D.N.B. 10 (1908): 306 (biog. of William de Huntingfield). Lindsay et al. Charters, Bulls & Other Docs. Rel. the Abbey of Inchaffray (Scottish Hist. Soc. 56) (1908): 157-158. Rye Norfolk Fams. (1911): 386-387. Foster Final Concords of Lincoln from the Feet of Fines A.D. 1244-1272 2 (Lincoln Rec. Soc. 17) (1920): 333. Book of Fees 1 (1920): 195. Salter Newington Longeville Charters (Oxfordshire Rec. Soc. 3) (1921): 76. Farrer Honours & Knights Fees 3 (1925): 395-397. C.P. 6 (1926): 671, footnote a (sub Huntingfield) (also known as Isabel de Freville, and is stated to have died in 1209). Stenton Rolls of the Justices in Eyre (Selden Soc. 53) (1934): 233. TAG 14 (1937-38): 10-12. Stenton Pleas Before the King 1198-1202 1 (Selden Soc. 67) (1953): 199. Foster Reg. Antignissimum of the Cathedral Church of Lincoln 7 (Lincoln Rec. Soc. 46) (1953): 14. Davis Kalendar of Abbot Samson of Bury St. Edmunds & Related Docs. (Camden 3rd Ser. 84) (1954): 159 (charter of William and wife, Isabel; available at www.utoronto.ca/deeds/research/research.html). Paget Baronage of England (1957) 299: 1-5 (sub Huntingfield). Stenton Pleas Before the King1198-1202 3 (Selden Soc. 83) (1967): xxxi, cclxiv-vi, cdxix. VCH Cambridge 5 (1973): 217. Brown Sibton Abbey Cartularies & Charters 1 (Suffolk Charters 7) (1985): 21-22 (re. Cressy him.), 64, 91-92; 2 (Suffolk Charters 8) (1986): 53-56; 3 (Suffolk Charters 9) (1987): 152; 4 (Suffolk Charters 10) (1988): 4-5. Caenegem English Lawsuits from William I to Richard I 2 (Selden Soc. 107) (1991): 598-599. White Restoration & Reform; 1153-1165 (2000): 168. Kauffmann Biblical Imagery in Medieval England, 700-1550 (2003): 160. Jobson English Government in the 13th Cent. (2004): 117. Wilkinson Women in 13th-Cent. Lincolnshire (2007): 21. Suffolk Rec. Office, Ipswich Branch: Iveagh (Plaillipps) Suffolk MSS, HD 1538/301/1 (feoffment dated before 1221 in free alms from William de Huntingfeld to the Monks of St. Mary of Mendham, Suffolk for salvation of souls of himself, his wife Isabel, and his parents and all ancestors, he grants to the monks in free alms all his wood in Metfield, Suffolk called Haute) (available at www.a2a.org.uk/search/index.asp).
Children of William de Huntingfield, Knt., by Isabel Fitz William:
i. ROGER DE HUNTINGFIELD, Knt. [see next].
ii. ALICE DE HUNTINGFIELD, married (1st) in or after 1200 RICHARD DE SOLERS, of Faccombe and Tangley, Hampshire, and Bonby, Lincolnshire, younger son of Guillaume (or William) de Solers (or Soliers), of Ellingham, Hampshire, Constable of Moulins-la-Marche, 1180, by Mabel, daughter of Robert Fitz Robert (or Fitz Count), of Conerton, Cornwell, Castellan of Gloucester [grandson of King Henry I of England]. In 1200, as "Ric[ardus] de "Soliis," he gave £600 Anjou to have his lands in Normandy and England, and to marry as he pleased. RICHARD DE SOLERS died shortly before Michaelmas 1207. In 1208 his widow, Alice, sued Thomas Peverel for one-half of vill of Faccornbe, Hampshire as her dower. In 1211 her father gave the king six fair Norway goshawks for the marriage of his daughter, Alice, widow of Richard de Solers, and to have assignation of her dowry out of the lands of her late husband. She married (2nd) before 1215 HUGH LE RUS (or RUFUS, RUFFUS), of Akenharn, Bircholt, Clopton, Hasketon, Stradbroke, and Whittingham (in Fressingfield), Suffolk, Sheriff of Norfolk and Suffolk, 1225-7, son and heir of Ernald Rufus, of Bircholt, Hasketon, Stradbroke, and Whittingham (in Fressingfield), Suffolk, by his wife, Isabel. They had two sons, Hugh and William. He was granted the manor of Fawsley, Northamptonshire in 1214 by King John. In 1215 the Sheriff of Hampshire was ordered to deliver up to Hugh and Alice his wife the dower of Alice in Faccombe and Tangle)', Hampshire, of which they had been disseised in the Barons' War. He was granted a weekly market at Stradbroke, Suffolk in 1225. In 1227 he was granted a weekly market at Woodbridge, Suffolk, which he later granted to Woodbridge Priory. HUGH LE RUS died in 1230. Blomefield Essay towards a Top. Hist. of Norfolk 6 (1807): 134-138. Hardy Rotuli Normanniae in Turri Londinensi Asservati 1 (1835): 38. List of Sheriffs for England & Wales (PRO Lists and Indexes 9) (1898): 86. Copinger Manors of Suffolk 4 (1909): 84-85. VCH Hampshire 4 (1911): 314, 326-328. Book of Fees 2 (1923): 1268. Kirkus Great Roll of the Pipe for the 9th Year of the Reign of King John Michaelmas 1207 (Pubs. Pipe Roll Soc. n.s. 22) (1946): 60, 148. Stenton Great Roll of the Pipe for the 13th Year of the Reign of King John Michaelmas 1211 (Pubs. Pipe Roll Soc. n.s. 28) (1953): 6, 179, 185. Paget Baronage of England (1957) 299: 1-5 (sub Huntingfield). Hockey Beaulieu Cartulag (Southampton Recs. 17) (1974): 104. Brown Eye Priory Cartulay & Charters 1 (Suffolk Charters 12) (1992): 235-236; 2 (Suffolk Charters 13) (1994): 77-81.
Children of Alice de Huntingfield, by Hugh le Rus:
a. HUGH LE RUS, of Stradbroke, Suffolk, son and heir. He died without issue shortly before 24 Sept. 1232. Brown Eye Priory Cartulary & Charters 2 (Suffolk Charters 13) 
de Huntingfield, Sir William (I32054)
 
193 “Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families,” Douglas Richardson (2013):
“WILLIAM DE HUNTINGFIELD, Knt., of Huntingfield and Mendham, Suffolk, Harlton, Cambridgeshire, Frampton, Fishtoft, and Southorpe, Lincolnshire, etc., Constable of Dover Castle, 1203-4, Warden of the Cinque Ports, and Sheriff of Norfolk and Suffolk, 1209-11, justice itinerant in Lincolnshire, and, in right of his wife, patron of Castleacre Priory, son and heir of Roger [Fitz William] de Huntingfield, of Huntingfield, Linstead, and Mendham, Suffolk, Frampton, Huttoft, Southorpe, and Tytton (in Wyberton), Lincolnshire, East Bradenham, Norfolk, etc., by Alice de Senlis, daughter of Saher de Quincy, of Long Buckby and Daventry, Northamptonshire. He was born about 1160. He married before 1194 ISABEL FITZ WILLIAM (otherwise DE GRESSENHALL), widow successively of Berenger de Cressy, and Osmond de Stuteville, of Weston Colville, Cambridgeshire (died in Palestine, probably during the Siege of Joppa about 1187), and daughter and heiress of William Fitz Roger, of Gressenhall and Castleacre, Norfolk, by his wife, Aeliva. They had two sons, Roger, Knt., and presumably Saher, and four daughters, Alice, Isabel, Sarah, and Margaret (or Margery). In 1194 he disputed with his wife's son, William de Stuteville, concerning his wife's dower. In 1195 the Abbot of St. Edmunds granted the whole vill of Wendling, Norfolk to William de Huntingfield and his wife, Isabel, and her heirs for 50s. a year. Sometime c.1204-12, he witnessed a charter of Alexander, Abbot of Sibton to Thomas son of Roger de Huntingfield, presumably his brother. In 1205 he was granted the manor of Clafford, Hampshire. In the period, 1204-17, he witnessed a charter of Ralph the chaplain of Heveningham to John Fitz Robert, lord of Ubbeston. His wife, Isabel, died in 1207. In 1208 he had custody of the lands of his brother, Roger, which had been seized in consequence of the interdict. From 1208 to 1210 he was one of the justices before whom fines were levied. In the period, 1210-18, he witnessed a charter of his kinsman, Saher de Quincy, Earl of Winchester. In 1211 he gave the king six fair Norway goshawks for license to marry his daughter, Alice, then widow of Richard de Solers, and to have assignation of her dowry out of the lands of her late husband. In 1213 he held the office of accountant with Aubrey de Vere, Earl of Oxford, for the customs of Norfolk and Suffolk. In 1215 he joined the confederate barons against the king. He was one of the twenty-five barons appointed to secure the observance of Magna Carta, which King John signed 15 June 1215. He served as a witness to the charter granting freedom of elections to the abbeys. He was among the barons excommunicated by Pope Innocent III in late 1215, and his lands were taken into the king's hands. He reduced Essex and Suffolk for Prince Louis of France, and in retaliation John plundered his estates in Norfolk and Suffolk. In Nov. 1216 he was granted the vill of Grimsby, Lincolnshire with all liberties and free customs by Prince Louis of France. He fought at the Battle of Lincoln 20 May 1217, where he was taken prisoner by the king's forces. On 23 June 1217 all his lands in Lincolnshire were granted to John Marshal. On conclusion of peace, he made peace with King Henry III 6 Oct. 1217, and had restitution of his estates. In 1218 he sued Nichole de la Haye for the recovery of chattels worth £273, which she seized from him in Lincolnshire when he was at arms against the king; a compromise was reached whereby Nichole gave William 30 silver marks in return for which he quitclaimed to her "all the right and claim that he had against her." In 1219 he had leave to go to the Holy Land on crusade; he appointed Thomas his brother to act on his behalf during his absence. SIR WILLIAM DE HUNTINGFIELD died on crusade, possibly in the Holy Land, before 25 Jan. 1220/1.
Blomefield Essay towards a Top. Hist. of Norfolk 6 (1807): 134-138; 9 (1808): 510-515. Placitorum in Domo Capitulari Westmonasteriensi Asservatorum Abbrevatio (1811): 3, 38. Dugdale Monasticon Anglicarium 5 (1825): 52 (charter of Isabel de Gressenhall, wife of William de Huntingfield), 58. Benedict of Peterborough Gesta Regis Henrici Secundi Benedict Abbatis (or Chron. of the Reigns of Heny II. & Richard I. A.D. 1169-1192) 2 (Rolls Ser. 49) (1867): 149-150 (death of Osmund de Stuteville at Joppa). Foss Judges of England (1870): 358-359 (biog. of William de Huntingfield). Paris Chronica Majora 2 (Rolls Ser. 57) (1874): 604-605, 642-645. Lincolnshire Notes & Queries 2 (1891): 65-67. List of Sheriffs for England & Wales (PRO Lists and Indexes 9) (1898): 86. Copinger Manors of Suffolk 2 (1908): 100-103; 4 (1909): 66-68. Copinger Manors of Suffolk, 4(1909): 66-67. D.N.B. 10 (1908): 306 (biog. of William de Huntingfield). Lindsay et al. Charters, Bulls & Other Docs. Rel. the Abbey of Inchaffray (Scottish Hist. Soc. 56) (1908): 157-158. Rye Norfolk Fams. (1911): 386-387. Foster Final Concords of Lincoln from the Feet of Fines A.D. 1244-1272 2 (Lincoln Rec. Soc. 17) (1920): 333. Book of Fees 1 (1920): 195. Salter Newington Longeville Charters (Oxfordshire Rec. Soc. 3) (1921): 76. Farrer Honours & Knights Fees 3 (1925): 395-397. C.P. 6 (1926): 671, footnote a (sub Huntingfield) (also known as Isabel de Freville, and is stated to have died in 1209). Stenton Rolls of the Justices in Eyre (Selden Soc. 53) (1934): 233. TAG 14 (1937-38): 10-12. Stenton Pleas Before the King 1198-1202 1 (Selden Soc. 67) (1953): 199. Foster Reg. Antignissimum of the Cathedral Church of Lincoln 7 (Lincoln Rec. Soc. 46) (1953): 14. Davis Kalendar of Abbot Samson of Bury St. Edmunds & Related Docs. (Camden 3rd Ser. 84) (1954): 159 (charter of William and wife, Isabel; available at www.utoronto.ca/deeds/research/research.html). Paget Baronage of England (1957) 299: 1-5 (sub Huntingfield). Stenton Pleas Before the King1198-1202 3 (Selden Soc. 83) (1967): xxxi, cclxiv-vi, cdxix. VCH Cambridge 5 (1973): 217. Brown Sibton Abbey Cartularies & Charters 1 (Suffolk Charters 7) (1985): 21-22 (re. Cressy him.), 64, 91-92; 2 (Suffolk Charters 8) (1986): 53-56; 3 (Suffolk Charters 9) (1987): 152; 4 (Suffolk Charters 10) (1988): 4-5. Caenegem English Lawsuits from William I to Richard I 2 (Selden Soc. 107) (1991): 598-599. White Restoration & Reform; 1153-1165 (2000): 168. Kauffmann Biblical Imagery in Medieval England, 700-1550 (2003): 160. Jobson English Government in the 13th Cent. (2004): 117. Wilkinson Women in 13th-Cent. Lincolnshire (2007): 21. Suffolk Rec. Office, Ipswich Branch: Iveagh (Plaillipps) Suffolk MSS, HD 1538/301/1 (feoffment dated before 1221 in free alms from William de Huntingfeld to the Monks of St. Mary of Mendham, Suffolk for salvation of souls of himself, his wife Isabel, and his parents and all ancestors, he grants to the monks in free alms all his wood in Metfield, Suffolk called Haute) (available at www.a2a.org.uk/search/index.asp).
Children of William de Huntingfield, Knt., by Isabel Fitz William:
i. ROGER DE HUNTINGFIELD, Knt. [see next].
ii. ALICE DE HUNTINGFIELD, married (1st) in or after 1200 RICHARD DE SOLERS, of Faccombe and Tangley, Hampshire, and Bonby, Lincolnshire, younger son of Guillaume (or William) de Solers (or Soliers), of Ellingham, Hampshire, Constable of Moulins-la-Marche, 1180, by Mabel, daughter of Robert Fitz Robert (or Fitz Count), of Conerton, Cornwell, Castellan of Gloucester [grandson of King Henry I of England]. In 1200, as "Ric[ardus] de "Soliis," he gave £600 Anjou to have his lands in Normandy and England, and to marry as he pleased. RICHARD DE SOLERS died shortly before Michaelmas 1207. In 1208 his widow, Alice, sued Thomas Peverel for one-half of vill of Faccornbe, Hampshire as her dower. In 1211 her father gave the king six fair Norway goshawks for the marriage of his daughter, Alice, widow of Richard de Solers, and to have assignation of her dowry out of the lands of her late husband. She married (2nd) before 1215 HUGH LE RUS (or RUFUS, RUFFUS), of Akenharn, Bircholt, Clopton, Hasketon, Stradbroke, and Whittingham (in Fressingfield), Suffolk, Sheriff of Norfolk and Suffolk, 1225-7, son and heir of Ernald Rufus, of Bircholt, Hasketon, Stradbroke, and Whittingham (in Fressingfield), Suffolk, by his wife, Isabel. They had two sons, Hugh and William. He was granted the manor of Fawsley, Northamptonshire in 1214 by King John. In 1215 the Sheriff of Hampshire was ordered to deliver up to Hugh and Alice his wife the dower of Alice in Faccombe and Tangle)', Hampshire, of which they had been disseised in the Barons' War. He was granted a weekly market at Stradbroke, Suffolk in 1225. In 1227 he was granted a weekly market at Woodbridge, Suffolk, which he later granted to Woodbridge Priory. HUGH LE RUS died in 1230. Blomefield Essay towards a Top. Hist. of Norfolk 6 (1807): 134-138. Hardy Rotuli Normanniae in Turri Londinensi Asservati 1 (1835): 38. List of Sheriffs for England & Wales (PRO Lists and Indexes 9) (1898): 86. Copinger Manors of Suffolk 4 (1909): 84-85. VCH Hampshire 4 (1911): 314, 326-328. Book of Fees 2 (1923): 1268. Kirkus Great Roll of the Pipe for the 9th Year of the Reign of King John Michaelmas 1207 (Pubs. Pipe Roll Soc. n.s. 22) (1946): 60, 148. Stenton Great Roll of the Pipe for the 13th Year of the Reign of King John Michaelmas 1211 (Pubs. Pipe Roll Soc. n.s. 28) (1953): 6, 179, 185. Paget Baronage of England (1957) 299: 1-5 (sub Huntingfield). Hockey Beaulieu Cartulag (Southampton Recs. 17) (1974): 104. Brown Eye Priory Cartulay & Charters 1 (Suffolk Charters 12) (1992): 235-236; 2 (Suffolk Charters 13) (1994): 77-81.
Children of Alice de Huntingfield, by Hugh le Rus:
a. HUGH LE RUS, of Stradbroke, Suffolk, son and heir. He died without issue shortly before 24 Sept. 1232. Brown Eye Priory Cartulary & Charters 2 (Suffolk Charters 13) 
FitzWilliam, Isabel (I32055)
 
194 “Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families,” Douglas Richardson (2013):
Children of Roger de Clare, by Maud de St. Hilary...
ii. AVELINE DE CLARE, married (1st) before 1186 WILLIAM DE MUNCHENSY, Knt., of Swanscombe, Kent, Winfarthing and Gooderstone, Norfolk, etc., younger son of Warin de Munchensy, by Agnes, daughter and co-heiress of Pain Fitz John. They had two sons, William and Warin, Knt. He was heir before Michaelmas 1190 to his older brother, Ralph de Munchensy, Knt. In 1198 he was serving in Normandy. He was one of the guarantors of the treaty between King John and the Count of Flanders at Roche d'Andelys in 1199. He was fined for not serving overseas in 1201. He was a benefactor of the religious houses of West Dereham and Missenden. SIR WILLIAM DE MUNCHENSY died before 7 May 1204.

His widow, Aveline, married (2nd) before 29 May 1205 (date of grant) (as his 2nd wife) GEOFFREY FITZ PETER, Knt., Earl of Essex [see ESSEX 2], of Wellsworth (in Chalton), Hampshire, Cherhill and Costow, Wiltshire, Chief Forester, Sheriff of Northamptonshire, 1184-89, 1191-94, Sheriff of Essex and Hertfordshire, 1190-93, Constable of Hertford Castle, Justiciar of England, 1198-1213, Sheriff of Staffordshire, 1198, Sheriff of Yorkshire, 1198-1200, 1202-4, Sheriff of Bedfordshire and Buckinghamshire, 1199-1204, Sheriff of Westmorland, 1199-1200, Sheriff of Hampshire, 1201-4, Sheriff of Shropshire, 1201-4, and, in right of his 1st wife, of Streadey, Berkshire, Amersham and Quarrendon, Buckinghamshire, Pleshey, Essex, Digswell, Hertfordshire, Kimbolton, Huntingdonshire, etc., younger son of Peter de Ludgershall, of Cherhill and Linley (in Tisbury), Wiltshire, and Gussage Saint Andrew (in Sixpenny Handley), Dorset, by his wife, Maud. He was born before 1145. They had one son, John, Knt., and four daughters, Hawise, Cecily, ___, and Maud. Sometime in the period, 1157-66, he witnessed an exchange of land between Roger de Tichborne and the Bishop of Winchester. He held a fee in Cherhill, Wiltshire of new enfeoffment in 1166. Sometime in the period, c.1166-90, Elias de Studley conveyed to him his land held of the fee of William Malbanc in Heytesbury and Cherhill, Wiltshire at an annual rent of 20s. In 1184 he accounted for the farm of Kinver before the itinerant justices in Oxfordshire. He married before 25 Jan. 1184/5 BEATRICE DE SAY (died before 19 April 1197), daughter and co-heiress of William de Say, of Kimbolton, Huntingdonshire, and Saham, Norfolk [see SAY 4i for her ancestry]. They had three sons, Geoffrey de Mandeville [5th Earl of Essex], William de Mandeville, Knt. [6th Earl of Essex], and Henry [Dean of Wolverhampton], and two daughters, Maud and Alice. In 1186-7 King Henry II granted him the manor of Cherhill, Wiltshire, to hold in fee and inheritance by the service of one knight, as his father Peter or his brother Robert held it. In the period, 1186-89, he and his two half-brothers, William and Hugh de Buckland, witnessed a charter of William, Earl of Ferrers, to Ralph Fitz Stephen. In the period, c.1189-99, he founded Shouldham Abbey, Norfolk, to which he gave the manor and the advowson of the church of Shouldham, Norfolk, together with the churches of Shouldham Thorpe, Stoke Ferry, and Wereham, Norfolk. In 1190 he obtained the lands to which his 1st wife's grandmother, Beatrice, had become heir on the death of her nephew, William de Mandeville, Earl of Essex. From Easter 1190 he received the third penny of the county of Essex. Sometime in the period, 1190-1213, Sibyl de Fiennes, daughter of Pharamus of Boulogne, conveyed to him 300 acres on Hyngeshill [?in Quarrendon, Buckinghamshire] at an annual rent of an unmewed sparrowhawk, or 12d. Sometime in the period 1190-1213, he granted the manor of Cherhill, Wiltshire to his younger son, William de Mandeville. He was one of those excommunicated for his part in removing Longchamp in 1191. About 1195 he and his two half-brothers, William and Geoffrey de Buckland, witnessed a charter of Geoffrey Fitz Nigel de Gardino to William de Ultra la Haia. In 1195 he owed £4 4s. in the vill of Lydford, Devon for making the market of the king there. In 1198, Eustace de Balliol and his wife, Pernel (widow of Geoffrey's brother Robert), quitclaimed all their right to lands in Salthrop (in Wroughton), Wiltshire to Geoffrey, in return for 30 marks silver. In the period, 1199-1216, Geoffrey further gave Shouldham Priory, Norfolk twelve shops, with the rooms over them, in the parish of St. Mary's Colechurch, London, for the purpose of sustaining the lights of the church and of providing the sacramental wine. Sometime in or before 1199, he made a grant to William de Wrotham, Archdeacon of Taunton, of all his land of Sutton at Hone, Kent to make a hospital for the maintenance of thirteen poor men and three chaplains in honour of the Holy Trinity, St. Mary, and All Saints. In the period, 1200-13, he made notification that Abbot Ralph and the convent of Westminster had at his petition confirmed to the nuns of Shouldham all tithes pertaining to them in Clakelose Hundred, Norfolk, in return for £1 10s. due annually to the almoner of Westminster. In the same period, Abbot Ralph and the convent of Westminster granted him the vill of Claygate, Surrey to hold of them for his lifetime. In 1204 King John granted him the manor of Winterslow, Wiltshire, and, in 1205, the honour of Berkhampstead, Hertfordshire with the castle at a fee farm of £100 per annum. He campaigned against the Welsh in 1206 and 1210. He was granted a significant part of the lands forfeited by Normans, including the manors of Depden and Hatfield Peverel, Essex, and other lands in Norfolk and Suffolk, all worth over £100 per annum. In 1207 the king confirmed his possession of the manor of Notgrove, Gloucestershire, which Geoffrey had by the gift of John Eskelling. Sometime before 1212, he was granted the manor of Gussage Dynaunt (or Gussage St. Michael), Dorset, which manor was forfeited by Roland de Dinan. At some unspecified date, when already earl, he granted all his right in St. Peter's chapel in Drayton to the canons of St. Peter's Cathedral, York. He was the founder of the first church of Wintney Priory, Hampshire. SIR GEOFFREY FITZ PETER, Earl of Essex, died 14 October 1213, and was buried in Shouldham Priory, Norfolk. In 1213-4 the king commanded Geoffrey de Buckland to let the king have, at the price any others would give for them, the corn, pigs, and other chattels at Berkhampstead, Hertfordshire which belonged his brother, Geoffrey Fitz Peter, lately deceased. About 1214 his widow, Aveline, granted the canons of Holy Trinity, London, in frank almoin, a half mark quit rent out of her Manor of Towcester, Northamptonshire, part of whose body is buried there. In 1221 the Prior of the Hospital of Jerusalem in England sued her regarding two virgates and five acres of land in Towcester, Northamptonshire. Aveline, Countess of Essex, died before 4 June 1225. Blomefield Essay towards a Top. Hist. of Norfolk 7 (1807): 414-427. Clutterbuck Hist. & Antiq. of the County of Hertford 1 (1815): 293 (Fitz Peter ped.). Montmorency-Morres Genealogical Memoir of the Fam. of Montmorency (1817): xxxii-xxxvi. Baker Hist. & Antiqs. of Northampton 1 (1822-1830): 544-545 (Mandeville-Fitz Peter-Bohun ped.). Dugdale Monasticon Anglicanum 5 (1825): 721-722; 6(1) (1830): 339-340; 6(3) (1830): 1191 (charter of Geoffrey Fitz Peter). Clutterbuck Hist. & Antiqs. of Hertford 3 (1827): 190-194 (Mandeville-Say ped). Luard Annales Monastici 2 (Rolls Ser. 36) (1865): 273 (Annals of Waverley sub A.D. 1213: "Obiit Gaufridus filius Petri comes de Essexe, et justitiatius totius Angliæ, tunc temporis cunctis in Anglia præstantion"). Notes & Queries 4th Ser. 3 (1869): 484-485 (Fitz Peter ped). Clark Earls, Earldom, & Castle of Pembroke (1880): 76-114. Lee Hist., Desc. & Antiqs. of … Thame (1883): 332 (Mandeville ped.). Maitland Bracton's Note Book 2 (1887): 193-194; 3 (1887): 452-453. Round Ancient Charters Royal & Private Prior to A.D. 1200 (Pipe Roll Soc. 10) (1888): 97-99 (confirmation by King Richard I dated 1191 to Geoffrey Fitz Peter and Beatrice his wife, as rightful and next heirs, of all the land of Earl William de Mandeville, which was hers by hereditary right), 108-110 (confirmation by King Richard I dated 1198 of the division of their inheritance made by Beatrice and Maud, daughters and co-heirs of William de Say, in the time of his father, King Henry II). Desc. Cat. Ancient Deeds 2 (1894): 91,93. Moore Cartularium Monasteri Sancti Johannis Baptiste de Colecestria 2 (1897): 349-350, 354, 371-372. Feet of Fines of King Richard I A.D. 1197 to A.D. 1198 (Pubs. Pipe Roll Soc. 23) (1898): 36-37, 58-59, 85, 130-131. List of Sheriffs for England & Wales (PRO Lists and Indexes 9) (1898): 1, 43, 54, 92, 117, 127, 150, 161...
Child of Aveline de Clare, by William de Munchensy:
a. WARIN DE MUNCHENSY, Knt., of Swanscombe, Kent, married (1st) JOAN MARSHAL [see MARSHAL 4]; (2nd) DENISE DE ANESTY [see MARSHAL 4].
Children of Aveline de Clare, by Geoffrey Fitz Peter, Knt:
a. JOHN FITZ GEOFFREY, Knt., of Shere, Surrey, Fambridge, Essex, etc., married ISABEL LE BIGOD [see VERDUN 8].
b. HAWISE FITZ GEOFFREY, married REYNOLD DE MOHUN, Knt., of Dunster, Somerset [see MOHUN ??].
c. CECILY FITZ GEOFFREY, married SAVARY DE BOHUN, of Midhurst, Sussex [see MIDHURST 3].
d. FITZ GEOFFREY. She married WILLIAM DE LA ROCHELLE, of South Ockendon, Essex, Market Lavington, Wiltshire, etc. [see HARLESTON 3].
e. MAUD FITZ GEOFFREY, married (1st) HENRY D'OILLY, of Hook Norton, Oxfordshire, King's Constable [see CANTELOWE 4]; (2nd) WILLIAM DE CANTELOWE, Knt., of Eaton Bray, Bedfordshire, Steward of the Royal Household [see CANTELOWE 
de Munchensy, William (I35770)
 
195 “Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families,” Douglas Richardson (2013): ERRORS
“PATRICK (or PATRICE) DE CHAOURCES (or DE SOURCHES), seigneur of Sourches (in Saint-Symphorien) in Maine, and, in right of his wife, of Toddington, Bedfordshire.
He married MAUD DE HESDIN (or HESDING), daughter of Ernulf (or Arnulph) de Hesdin, of Keevil, Wiltshire, Kempsford, Gloucestershire, etc., by his wife, Emmeline.
They had two sons,
1. Hugues and
2. Patrick (or Patrice),
and two daughters,
3. Sibyl and
4. Cecily (wife of Henry d'Aubeney).
He made grants in certain parts of the manor of Toddington, Bedfordshire which eventually devolved on Dunstable Priory. About 1081-90 he gave various rights at Bernay to Geoffrey de Brolon. He went on Crusade in 1095. Sometime after 1100 he was granted the manor of Great Wishford, Wiltshire by King Henry I. Sometime in the period, 1100-22, he and his wife, Maud, gave the Abbey of St. Pierre de la Couture, Le Mans the church of Toddington, Bedforshire, for the soul of Ernulf de Hodine [Ernulf de Hesdin]. Sometime before 1127 he granted the manor of Great Wishford, and possibly part of the manor of Berwick St. James, Wiltshire to his son-in-law, Henry Daubeney. At an unknown date, he and his wife, Maud, granted the same Abbey an exchange for the land which its monks previously held in the time of three kings, together with a virgate of Eduine's land to be free and quit. At an unknown date he granted la Couture his rights in the forest of Charnie.
Patrick and his wife, Maud, were living in 1133.
...
Money Hist. of Newbury (1887): 72-79 (Chaworth ped.). Genealogist n.s. 5 (1889): 209-212 ("According to the pedigree thus admitted in court, it is clear that Sibilla was daughter to the original Patrick de Chaworth, who had acquired, through marrying Matilda, one of Arnulph de Hesding's daiughters, a share of Arnulph's Domesday manors, some of which were afterwards again given as a marriage portion with Sibilla to Walter of Salisbury ... The difficulties as to the dates of the birth of Sibilla's children, supposed to be involved, have no real existence. All that is known as to her son, Earl Patrick, is that he was of age in 1142, and born, therefore, at least as early as 1121, whilst his sister, Hawise, is said to have become the second wife of Rotrou (III), Count of Perche, in 1126, when she may have been, perhaps, sixteen. It seems to follow, from a passage in the Liber Niger (p. 171), that Patrick and Matilda de Chaworth had another daughter who married into the family of De Albini, and had a son named Nigel, stated to hold, in 1165, a manor, worth £20 a year, of their fief 'de matrimonio matris suæ.' The hypothesis that Sibilla herself was Nigel's mother, by a second husband, is inadmissible, since Walter of Salisbury lived until 1147 ... Patrick de Cadurcis (I) had a son of the same name, who had apparently succeeded him prior to 1130, when he appears, from the Cartulary of St. Peter's, Gloucester, to have added the mill of Horcote, near Kempsford, to the donations which his grandfather, Arnulph de Hesding, had made to that Abbey.").
Round Cal. Docs. Preserved in France 1 (1899): 364. Pubs. of Bedfordshire Hist. Rec. Soc. 7 (1923): 165-167; 10 (1926): 304-306 ("The family of which the name was anglicized as Chaworth, but latinised as de Cadurcis Cadulcis Chaurciis Chaurces Chaorciis etc., appearing also as Chauarz Chauard Cahurt etc., drew its style from Chaorches, the modern Smirches, near le Mans in the old province of Maine. Something of the early history of this very difficult family has already been sketched, but the line can be extended further backwards. Its founder appears to be Hugh, younger son of Ernauld lord of Marigne in southern Maine, who built a castle at Sourches; he occurs in the Cartulary of Marrnoutier about 1046/50 as Hugues de Sourches le Marigné. He gave St. Mars de Ballon (vicum sancti Medardi juxta castrum Baledoni) to the Abbey of la Couture. His son Patric became a monk of la Couture, and under the style Patricus de Cadurcis filius flugonis de Matrinniaco [Marigné] gave Lavaré to the Abbey about 1050, his sons Hugh and Geoffrey consenting. His successor, probably his grandson and the son of Hugh (who attests 1050 and 1085), is the Patric I de Chaworth who heads the family in the accounts already published by this Society. Having accidentally killed a lad, he made atonement to the father by giving the church of Bemay, and land at Bemay and Sourches to la Couture about 1080/90; when making ready for the First Crusade in 1095, he entrusted his son Hugh to the same Abbey. His wife Matilda was probably a daughter of Ernulf de Hesdin, the Domesday tenant of Toddington; she and her husband granted the church there (Dedingtona Dodingetona) to la Couture, and the grant was confirmed by King Henry I, in a charter of the probable date 1105/7. To St. Peter Gloucester he gave a hide at Ampney before 1104, confirmed by Henry I probably in 1105; in 1115/30 he further gave to the monastery the church of Kempsford with lands and mills there and elsewhere in co. Gloucs.; their last gift is dated 1133. He appears in the Pipe Roll of 1130 as pardoned Danegeld in Oxon. Wilts. Glos. Beds. and Berks.; and it is implied that he was alive in 1135."). ...

Children of Patrick de Chaources, by Maud de Hesdin:
i. PATRICK DE CHAOURCES (or DE SOURCHES) [see next].
ii. SIBYL DE CHAOURCES, married WALTER OF SALISBURY (also known as WALTER FITZ II EDWARD), of Chitterne, Wiltshire [see LONGESPÉE 2].”

----------------------------------------------------------------

PATRICK [III] [renumbered [I] for the purposes of the present document] de Chaources [Chaworth], son of [PATRICE [II] de Chaources & his wife ---] (-after 1133). ...
m (before 14 Sep 1100) MATHILDE, daughter and co-heiress of ARNOUL de Hesdin & his wife Emmeline [de Ballon] (-after 1133). The Historia sancti Petri Gloucestriæ records that "Ernulphus de Hesdyng" donated "ecclesiam de Heythrop, Lynkbolt…et ecclesiam de Kynemerforde", confirmed by "Patricius de Cadurcis et Matilda uxor eius", and by "hæredum suorum" in "quatuor cartæ", in the fourth of which "Paganus filius Patricii" donated "decimam domini sui de Kynermerforde", that "Johannes episcopus" confirmed and donated "quatuor marcas annuas in ecclesia de Kynermerforde", with the confirmation of "Rex Henricus senior…tempore Serlonis abbatis" [abbot from 1072 to 1104][1295]. The date of her marriage is set by the charter dated 14 Sep 1100 under which her husband donated property for the soul of his father-in-law, although the document does not specify the relationships between the parties. “Patricius de Cadurcis et uxor mea Mathildis” donated “ecclesiam de Dedintona” to Saint-Pierre de la Couture, for the soul of “Ernulfi de Hodine”, by charter dated to [1120][1296]. "Patricius de Cadurcis et Matilda uxor mea" donated "unam virgatam in Kynemereforde" to Gloucester St Peter by charter dated 1133[1297]. Patrick [I] & his wife had [four] children:

1. [PAGAN de Chaources (-after [1100]). ... it is possible that Pagan was the same person as Patrick [II], before he had been baptised.

2. PATRICK [II] de Chaources (-before [1142]). ...
m GUIBURGE [de Mondoubleau], daughter of --- & his wife [--- de Mondoubleau] (-after 1151). ... Patrick [II] & his wife had two children.

3. SIBYL de Chaources (----, bur Bradenstoke Priory[1320]). ...
m ([1115/20]) WALTER de Salisbury, son of EDWARD de Salisbury & his wife --- (-1147).

4. [CECILIA . ...
m HENRY de Albini, son of NELE [Nigel] de Albini of Cainhoe & his wife Amice de Ferrers (-after 1130).]

http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/enguntac.htm#SibylChaourcesMWalterSalisbury 
de Chaworth, Sir Patrick I (I35604)
 
196 “Vict.” is probably the Victimatio, the Latin word for the statement made by the victim against the offender.  It’s an archaic and very rare word.  It doesn’t show up in Google searches and it’s not in the Oxford Classical Latin Dictionary.  But, since the Reformers liked to use a lot of Latin words, it’s the only possible word that would fit the abbreviation in the context of the actions of both the Rev. Johannes Rosenfeld and his wife, Dorothea Schade.

The key clue is in the Visitation of 1569.  It stated, in your words, that Johannes was “completely rude”.  His congregation probably found him so unpleasant that they wouldn’t pay him a decent salary.  ( In those days, it was cheaper to drive out the priests and take over their churches in the name of the Reformation, especially when the sovereign was Protestant.  In 1569, the sovereign of Scherneck was the Duke of Saxony, Johann Wilhelm, the uncle of our Johann Casimir.  The Duchy of Saxe-Coburg, including Scherneck, would not be created until 1572. )  Dorothea probably felt the same way about him, too, and complained to the Visitationers, who would have written down all her words into a Victimatio ( a combo of the Latin word for “victim” and the Latin suffix, —tio, used to denote “statement” ).  But she probably wanted only sympathetic ears, not a public airing of dirty laundry, so she would have been so mortified by the sight of her Victimatio that she would have refused to sign it. 
Rosenfeld, Johannes (I34849)
 
197 «b»Biography«/b»
Elizabeth de Hastings was a daughter of Sir John de Hastings, 1st Baron Hastings, by his 1st wife Isabel de Valence.

She married Sir Roger de Grey, a younger son of the 2nd Lord Grey of Wilton. Her husband had a goodly chunk of the family property settled on him, including Ruthin Castle, and became the 1st Lord Grey of Ruthin.

«b»Children:«/b»
1.) Sir John

2.) Sir Reynold, who succeeded

3.) Julian, wife of Sir John Talbot, of Richard's Castle

4.) Mary, wife of Sir John de Burgh

5.) Joan, wife of Sir William de Patshull

6.) Maud, wife of William de la Roche 
de Hastings, Baroness Elizabeth (I35738)
 
198 (From Willis Kunz July 1999) Wolf, Margaretha Elizabetha (I19063)
 
199 (Owned in 1652 ¼ Komturlehn in Birkenfeld, Hildburghausen, Thüringen). Klipper, Barbara (I29295)
 
200 (the elder)

Son's wiki:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marcus_Atius_Balbus 
Marcus Atius Balbus (I34079)
 

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