Nielsen Hayden genealogy

Maud de Briouze

Female


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Maud de Briouze (daughter of William de Briouze and Maud de Clare).

    Maud married Henry de Tracy before May 1220. Henry (son of Oliver de Tracy and Eve Fitz Warin) was born in of Barnstaple, Devon, England; died before 21 Aug 1274. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. Eve de Tracy was born before 1227; died before 1274.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  William de Briouze (son of William de Briouze and Maud de St. Valéry); died in 1210 in Windsor, Berkshire, England.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: 1210, Corfe Castle, Dorset, England

    Notes:

    "By order of King John, he was starved to death with his mother in the dungeons of Windsor Castle in 1210." [Royal Ancestry] Wikipedia says they were subsequently transferred to Corfe Castle in Dorset and died there. Ancestral Roots and CP place their deaths "at Corfe or Windsor Castle".

    William married Maud de Clare before 1198. Maud (daughter of Richard de Clare and Amice of Gloucester) died in 1213. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Maud de Clare (daughter of Richard de Clare and Amice of Gloucester); died in 1213.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: Aft 10 Jul 1220

    Children:
    1. 1. Maud de Briouze
    2. John de Brewes was born about 1197 in of Gower, Swansea, Wales; died between 1231 and 1232.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  William de Briouze was born in of Briouze, Normandy, France (son of William de Briouze and Bertha of Hereford); died on 9 Aug 1211 in Corbeil, near Paris, France.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate birth: of Bramber, Sussex, England
    • Alternate death: Sep 1211, Corbeil, near Paris, France

    Notes:

    "William was the most notable member of the de Braose dynasty. His steady rise and sudden fall at the hands of King John is often taken as an example of that king's arbitrary and capricious behaviour towards his barons." [Wikipedia]

    "William de Briouze, Lord of Briouze, Bramber, Brecon, Over Gwent, &c., s. and h. He m. Maud De St. Valery, "Lady of La Haie." In consequence of his well-known quarrel with King John, his lands were forfeited in 1208, and his wife and 1st s. starved to death in the dungeons of Corfe (or of Windsor) in 1210. He d. at Corbeil near Paris, 9, and was bur. 10 Aug. 1211, in the Abbey of St. Victor at Paris." [Complete Peerage I:22]

    "He slaughtered Seisyll ap Dyvnwal (abovenamed) and a host of unarmed Welshmen, in the castle of Abergavenny in 1175, in revenge for the death of his uncle Henry of Hereford [Brut y Tywysogian, R. de Diceto, etc.). Seisyll was owner of Castle Arnold, and is said in an inaccurate version of the Brut to have captured Abergavenny in 1172, the slaughter being dated 1177 (The Gwentian Chronicle, Cambrian Arch. Assoc, p. 137). But the better version of the Brut (Rolls Ser., p. 218; Y Brutieu, in Welsh Texts, ed. Rhys and Evans, 1890, p. 330) on the contrary, states that Seisyll was captured in 1172 by the garrison of Abergavenny. (ex inform. G. W. Watson.)" [Complete Peerage I:22, footnote (a).]

    William married Maud de St. Valéry. Maud (daughter of Bernard de St. Valéry and Matilda) was born about 1150; died in 1210 in Windsor, Berkshire, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Maud de St. Valéry was born about 1150 (daughter of Bernard de St. Valéry and Matilda); died in 1210 in Windsor, Berkshire, England.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: 1210, Corfe Castle, Dorset, England

    Notes:

    Also called Maud de Braose; Moll Wallbee; Lady of La Haie.

    From Wikipedia:

    "In 1208, William de Braose quarrelled with his friend and patron King John. The reason is not known but it is alleged that Maud made indiscreet comments regarding the murder of King John's nephew Arthur of Brittany. There was also a large sum of money (five thousand marks) de Braose owed the King. Whatever the reason, John demanded Maud's son William be sent to him as a hostage for her husband's loyalty. Maud refused, and stated loudly within earshot of the King's officers that 'she would not deliver her children to a king who had murdered his own nephew.' The King quickly led troops to the Welsh border and seized all of the castles that belonged to William de Braose. Maud and her eldest son William fled to Ireland, where they found refuge at Trim Castle with the de Lacys, the family of her daughter Margaret. In 1210, King John sent an expedition to Ireland. Maud and her son escaped but were apprehended in Galloway by Donnchadh, Earl of Carrick. After being briefly held at Carrickfergus Castle, they were dispatched to England.

    "Maud and her son William were first imprisoned at Windsor Castle, but were shortly afterwards transferred to Corfe Castle in Dorset where they were placed inside the dungeon. Maud and William both starved to death. [...]

    "Maud de Braose features in many Welsh legends. There is one which says that Maud built the castle of Hay-on-Wye single-handed in one night, carrying the stones in her apron. She was also said to have been extremely tall and often donned armour while leading troops into battle."

    Children:
    1. 2. William de Briouze died in 1210 in Windsor, Berkshire, England.
    2. Reynold de Briouze was born in of Abergavenny, Monmouthshire, Wales; died between 1227 and 1228.
    3. Bertha de Briouze
    4. Matilda de Briouze died on 29 Dec 1210 in Llanbardarn Fawr, Ceredigion, Wales; was buried in Strata Florida Abbey, Ceredigion, Wales.
    5. Margaret de Briouze was born about 1181; died after 25 Jun 1245.

  3. 6.  Richard de Clare was born about 1153 in of Clare, Suffolk, England (son of Roger de Clare and Maud de St. Hilary); died between 30 Oct 1217 and 28 Nov 1217.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate birth: Abt 1155
    • Alternate death: Nov 1217
    • Alternate death: 28 Nov 1217

    Notes:

    Earl of Hertford and of Gloucester. Also styled Earl of Clare.

    Along with his son Gilbert, he was one of the 25 Magna Carta sureties.

    Richard married Amice of Gloucester about 1180. Amice (daughter of William fitz Robert and Hawise of Leicester) died on 1 Jan 1225. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 7.  Amice of Gloucester (daughter of William fitz Robert and Hawise of Leicester); died on 1 Jan 1225.

    Notes:

    Also called Amice fitz William.

    According to RA, she was not "recognized" before her death as "Countess of Gloucester," despite CP's assertion to this effect. All contemporary charters and other documents involving her refer to her as countess of Clare, i.e., Hertford.

    Children:
    1. 3. Maud de Clare died in 1213.
    2. Hawise de Clare died after 1234.
    3. Gilbert de Clare was born about 1180; died on 25 Oct 1230 in Penrose, Brittany, France; was buried in Tewkesbury Abbey, Tewkesbury, Gloucestershire, England.


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  William de Briouze was born about 1100 in of Bramber, Sussex, England (son of Philip de Briouze and Aenor de Totnes); died about 1180.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: Aft 1179
    • Alternate death: Abt 1192
    • Alternate death: Abt 1193

    Notes:

    Sheriff of Hereford, 8 Apr 1173-75.

    "Briouze-Saint-Gervais (formerly Braiose), arrond. of Argentan, dept. of Orne. His descendants spelt the name Brewes. In some 25 early references to this name, not in charter latin, it appears as Breouse, Breuse, or Brewys (the last of which still exists as a surname), but never as Braose, the form adopted in peerages, for which it seems doubtful if there be any good authority." [Complete Peerage I:21, note (e).]

    "William de Briouze, Lord of Briouze in Normandy, and of Bramber, Sussex, s. and h. of Philip de B., of the same, by Aenor, da. and h. of Juhel son of Alvred, Lord of Barnstaple and Totnes. He m., in or before 1150, Bertha, 2nd sister and coh. of William of Hereford abovenamed, being da. of Miles of Gloucester, 1st Earl of Gloucester. Sheriff of Hereford, Easter 1173-1175, at which earlier date probably he already possessed the Lordship of Over Gwent. He was living in 1179." [Complete Peerage I:21-22, as corrected in volume XIV.]

    Chris Phillips' Corrections and Additions to The Complete Peerage notes that Miles was earl of Hereford, not of Gloucester.

    William married Bertha of Hereford about 1150. Bertha (daughter of Miles of Gloucester and Sibyl de Neufmarché) was born in of Brecknock, Breconshire, Wales. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 9.  Bertha of Hereford was born in of Brecknock, Breconshire, Wales (daughter of Miles of Gloucester and Sibyl de Neufmarché).

    Notes:

    The first heir to Miles of Gloucester as was his son Roger of Hereford, king's constable, who died as a monk in 1155

    His brother Walter of Hereford, king's constable, died 1157-59.

    His brother Henry of Hereford, king's constable, died 1159-63, slain on an Easter eve by Seisyll ap Dyvnwal at Castle Arnold near Abergavenny.

    His brother Mahel of Hereford, king's constable, died sometime after Jan 1164.

    His brother William of Hereford, king's constable, died before 1166, mortally hurt by a stone dropped from Bronllys Tower, co. Brecon.

    Which is how the honor of Abergavenny passed to their sister Bertha and to her husband William de Briouze.

    Children:
    1. 4. William de Briouze was born in of Briouze, Normandy, France; died on 9 Aug 1211 in Corbeil, near Paris, France.

  3. 10.  Bernard de St. Valéry was born in of Hinton Waldrist, Berkshire, England (son of Reginald de St. Valéry); died in 1190.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate birth: of Isleworth, Middlesex, England
    • Alternate birth: of Tetbury, Gloucestershire, England
    • Alternate death: Abt 1191

    Bernard married Matilda. Matilda died about 1151. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 11.  Matilda died about 1151.
    Children:
    1. 5. Maud de St. Valéry was born about 1150; died in 1210 in Windsor, Berkshire, England.

  5. 12.  Roger de Clare was born in 1116 in Tunbridge Castle, Kent, England (son of Richard fitz Gilbert de Clare and Alice of Chester); died in 1173; was buried in 1173 in Stoke by Clare Priory, Suffolk, England.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate birth: Aft 1115, of Clare, Herefordshire, England

    Notes:

    Also called Roger Fitz Richard. 2nd Earl of Hertford, but generally styled Earl of Clare.

    Roger married Maud de St. Hilary. Maud (daughter of James de St. Hilary du Harcourt and Aveline) was born in of Field Dalling, Norfolk, England; died on 24 Dec 1193; was buried in Priory of Great Carbrooke, Norfolk, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  6. 13.  Maud de St. Hilary was born in of Field Dalling, Norfolk, England (daughter of James de St. Hilary du Harcourt and Aveline); died on 24 Dec 1193; was buried in Priory of Great Carbrooke, Norfolk, England.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: 1195

    Notes:

    Also called Maud de St. Hilaire du Harcouet.

    Children:
    1. 6. Richard de Clare was born about 1153 in of Clare, Suffolk, England; died between 30 Oct 1217 and 28 Nov 1217.
    2. Aveline de Clare was born about 1172; died before 4 Jun 1225.

  7. 14.  William fitz Robert (son of Robert of Gloucester and Mabel fitz Robert); died on 23 Nov 1183; was buried in Kernsham Abbey, Somerset, England.

    Notes:

    Earl of Gloucester. Governor of Wareham Castle, 1144.

    "After Henry II's accession in 1154 William's status with his royal cousin began to change. The honour of Eudo Dapifer, which Henry had earlier promised to the earl's son, was given to another. Gloucester understandably yielded place of honour at court to members of the royal family like the king's brother William, and even to Robert, earl of Leicester, who was chief justiciar; but William was also regularly outranked by his uncle, Reginald, earl of Cornwall, who held no central administrative office. In the 1150s there is evidence of a certain ambivalence in Henry's government about Gloucester's right to be exempted from geld and other remittances. The earl's infrequent court appearances indicate that he was becoming a political outsider. Even though he was ultimately favoured by the bountiful royal fiscal patronage accorded to members of his class, served as a royal justice, and was promised that he would enjoy all the estates his father had held, William was to die with his career, earldom, and house in ruins." [Oxford Dictionary of National Biography]

    William married Hawise of Leicester about 1150. Hawise (daughter of Robert of Meulan and Amice de Gael) died on 24 Apr 1197. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  8. 15.  Hawise of Leicester (daughter of Robert of Meulan and Amice de Gael); died on 24 Apr 1197.

    Notes:

    Also called Hawise de Beaumont.

    Children:
    1. Isabel of Gloucester died on 14 Oct 1217.
    2. 7. Amice of Gloucester died on 1 Jan 1225.


Generation: 5

  1. 16.  Philip de Briouze was born before 1066 (son of William I de Briouze); died between 1131 and 1139.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate birth: Abt 1070
    • Alternate birth: Abt 1075

    Philip married Aenor de Totnes. Aenor (daughter of Juhel de Totnes) was born in of Totnes, Devon, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 17.  Aenor de Totnes was born in of Totnes, Devon, England (daughter of Juhel de Totnes).

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate birth: Abt 1084, Barnstaple, Devon, England

    Children:
    1. 8. William de Briouze was born about 1100 in of Bramber, Sussex, England; died about 1180.

  3. 18.  Miles of Gloucester was born about 1100 (son of Walter fitz Roger de Pîtres); died on 24 Dec 1143; was buried in Llanthony Priory, outside Gloucester, Gloucestershire, England.

    Notes:

    Constable and hereditary sheriff of Gloucester. Constable of the Court to the Empress Maud. Created Earl of Hereford 25 Jul 1141. Killed in a hunting accident.

    Also called Milo; Miles Fitz Walter.

    Miles married Sibyl de Neufmarché in 1121. Sibyl (daughter of Bernard de Neufmarché and Nest ferch Osbern) was born in of Brecon, Breconshire, Wales; was buried in Llanthony Priory, outside Gloucester, Gloucestershire, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 19.  Sibyl de Neufmarché was born in of Brecon, Breconshire, Wales (daughter of Bernard de Neufmarché and Nest ferch Osbern); was buried in Llanthony Priory, outside Gloucester, Gloucestershire, England.
    Children:
    1. Margaret of Hereford died before 29 Sep 1197; was buried in Llanthony Priory, outside Gloucester, Gloucestershire, England.
    2. 9. Bertha of Hereford was born in of Brecknock, Breconshire, Wales.
    3. Lucy of Hereford died after 1219; was buried in Llanthony Priory, outside Gloucester, Gloucestershire, England.

  5. 20.  Reginald de St. Valéry was born in of Tetbury, Gloucestershire, England (son of Bernard de St. Valéry); died after 1147.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: Aft 1164

    Notes:

    Also called Rainald, etc. "He became seneschal of Normandy ('dapifer Normannie') under Geoffrey, duc de Bretagne, son of Henry II, king of England. Renaud went on Crusade, and in 1158 fought at the siege of Caesarea. Baudouin III, king of Jerusalem, gave him custody of the castle of Harenc. Renaud II died in 1166. He was succeeded by his son Bernard IV." [Leo van de Pas, citation details below.]

    Children:
    1. 10. Bernard de St. Valéry was born in of Hinton Waldrist, Berkshire, England; died in 1190.

  6. 24.  Richard fitz Gilbert de Clare was born about 1090 in Hertford, Hertfordshire, England (son of Gilbert fitz Richard de Clare and Alice de Clermont); died on 15 Apr 1136 in Abergavenny, Monmouthshire, Wales; was buried in 1136 in Chapter House, Gloucester, Gloucestershire, England.

    Notes:

    Also called Richard de Clare; Richard of Ceredigion.

    "Surprised and slain by the Welsh." [Royal Ancestry]

    Richard married Alice of Chester. Alice (daughter of Ranulf le Meschin and Lucy of Bolingbroke) died after 1148. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  7. 25.  Alice of Chester (daughter of Ranulf le Meschin and Lucy of Bolingbroke); died after 1148.

    Notes:

    Also called Adeliza la Meschin. "[Richard fitz Gilbert's] wife was rescued from the Welsh by Miles of Gloucester." [Complete Peerage]

    Children:
    1. Rohese de Clare
    2. 12. Roger de Clare was born in 1116 in Tunbridge Castle, Kent, England; died in 1173; was buried in 1173 in Stoke by Clare Priory, Suffolk, England.

  8. 26.  James de St. Hilary du Harcourt was born in of Field Dalling, Norfolk, England (son of Harscod); died about 1154.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: Bef 1154

    Notes:

    Also called James de St. James. Holder of both English and Breton lands.

    James married Aveline. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  9. 27.  Aveline
    Children:
    1. 13. Maud de St. Hilary was born in of Field Dalling, Norfolk, England; died on 24 Dec 1193; was buried in Priory of Great Carbrooke, Norfolk, England.

  10. 28.  Robert of Gloucester was born about 1090 (son of Henry I, King of England and (Unknown mistress or mistresses of Henry I)); died on 31 Oct 1147 in Bristol, Gloucestershire, England; was buried in Priory of St. James, Bristol, England.

    Notes:

    Earl of Gloucester. Also called Robert de Caen; Robert fitz Roy; Rufus; Robert "The Counsel".

    Fought at Brémulé, 20 Apr 1119, where Henry I defeated Louis VI. Present at the death of Henry I in Dec 1135. Commander-in-chief for the Empress Maud from 1139 on. From Complete Peerage: "In 1140 he burnt Nottingham, and in Feb. 1141 he and his son-in-law, Ranulph, Earl of Chester, relieved Lincoln and took Stephen prisoner, sending him to Bristol. He accompanied Maud in her progress to Winchester and London, and when the citizens drove her out fled with her to Oxford. He took part in the fighting at Winchester and helped Maud escape from the city, but was captured 14 Sep. (1141) at Stockbridge and taken prisoner to Rochester. Shortly afterwards he was exchanged, without concessions on either side, for Stephen, who was set at liberty on 1 Nov., and Robert then joined Maud at Bristol, and with her proceeded to Oxford. In June 1142 Maud sent him over to her husband, Geoffrey of Anjou, to urge him to invade England. It would appear that on this occasion Robert entered into a treaty of alliance with Miles of Gloucester, Earl of Hereford. Geoffrey declined to help until he had conquered Normandy, whereupon Robert joined him in his campaign. On hearing that Maud was besieged in Oxford, Robert hurried back to help her, taking with him her son, afterwards Henry II. He captured Wareham and other places, and on Maud's escape from Oxford he and Henry met her at Wallingford, and they went to Bristol, which was Robert's chief residence till 1146. In 1143 Robert defeated Stephen at Wilton, and in 1144 blockaded Malmesbury, Stephen refusing battle; but Maud's party was now so much reduced that Stephen was able to take Faringdon, which Robert had fortified. In the spring of 1147 Robert took Henry, Maud's son, back to Wareham and sent him over to Anjou; and in the same year, he founded Margam Abbey." Shortly thereafter he died of a sudden fever, in the priory of St. James in Bristol, which he had earlier founded; his death effectively ended Maud's military campaign. The Dictionary of National Biography (1909) said that "his sister's cause almost invariably prospered when she allowed him to direct her counsels, and declined as soon as she neglected his advice."

    He was highly literate, a patron of scholars and chroniclers such as Geoffrey of Monmouth and William of Malmesbury, the latter of whom wrote the Historia Novella at his request. An enemy, Baldwin Fitz Gilbert, called him someone who "threatens much but does little, lionlike in his speech, but like a hare in his heart, great in eloquence but insignificant through laziness", which is pretty much the same insult lobbed by all of history's meatheads at people who are, like Robert, both well-spoken and ruthless at war. When Ralph Peters calls the slayer of Osama bin Laden, warlord of Libya and Afghanistan, commander of a secret empire of unimaginable violence, a "pussy", it's the voice of Baldwin Fitz Gilbert we hear. No matter how many cities you burn, if you also talk like an intellectual, some people will feel that you've let the meathead side down.

    Robert married Mabel fitz Robert before 1122. Mabel (daughter of Robert fitz Hamon and Sibyl de Montgomery) died on 29 Sep 1157. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  11. 29.  Mabel fitz Robert (daughter of Robert fitz Hamon and Sibyl de Montgomery); died on 29 Sep 1157.

    Notes:

    Also called Mabel Fitz Hamon.

    Children:
    1. 14. William fitz Robert died on 23 Nov 1183; was buried in Kernsham Abbey, Somerset, England.
    2. Matilda of Gloucester died on 29 Jul 1189.
    3. Mabira de Caen was born in of Gloucester, Gloucestershire, England; died after 1190.
    4. Robert fitz Robert was born in of Conarton in Gwithian, Cornwall, England; died in 1170.

  12. 30.  Robert of Meulan was born in 1104 in Meulan, Île-de-France, France (son of Robert of Meulan and Isabel de Vermandois); died on 5 Apr 1168; was buried in Leicester Abbey, Leicester, Leicestershire, England.

    Notes:

    Earl of Leicester. Also called, but only by later historians and genealogists, Robert de Beaumont.

    Twin brother of Waleran, Count of Muelan, 1st Earl of Worcester. After their father's death, the two brothers were raised together in the royal household. Much detail on his career here.

    Justiciar of England, 1155-1168.

    Robert married Amice de Gael after Nov 1120. Amice (daughter of Ralph II de Gael) died in Nuneaton, Warwickshire, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  13. 31.  Amice de Gael (daughter of Ralph II de Gael); died in Nuneaton, Warwickshire, England.

    Notes:

    Also called Amice de Montfort.

    She died as a nun in Nuneaton Priory. Complete Peerage says she died after 1168. Royal Ancestry says she died on a 31 August, year uncertain.

    Children:
    1. Robert de Breteuil was born in of Leicester, Leicestershire, England; died in 1190; was buried in Durazzo, Greece.
    2. Isabel of Leicester died after 1190.
    3. 15. Hawise of Leicester died on 24 Apr 1197.
    4. Margaret of Leicester was born about 1125; died after 1185.


Generation: 6

  1. 32.  William I de Briouze (son of Gunnor); died between Dec 1093 and Mar 1096.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: Between 1093 and 1096

    Children:
    1. 16. Philip de Briouze was born before 1066; died between 1131 and 1139.

  2. 34.  Juhel de Totnes was born in of Totnes, Devon, England (son of Alvred de Totnes); died between 1123 and 1130.

    Notes:

    Also called Johel, Judael.

    Children:
    1. 17. Aenor de Totnes was born in of Totnes, Devon, England.

  3. 36.  Walter fitz Roger de Pîtres (son of Roger de Pîtres); died about 1126 in Llanthony Priory, outside Gloucester, Gloucestershire, England.

    Notes:

    Also called Walter of Gloucester. In Domesday as a tenant-in-chief. Hereditary sheriff, and probably constable, of Gloucestershire.

    Children:
    1. Maud of Gloucester
    2. 18. Miles of Gloucester was born about 1100; died on 24 Dec 1143; was buried in Llanthony Priory, outside Gloucester, Gloucestershire, England.

  4. 38.  Bernard de Neufmarché was born in of Neuf-Marche, Normandy, France (son of Geoffrey de Neufmarché and Ada de Hugleville); died in 1093.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: Between 1121 and 1125

    Notes:

    Lord of Brecon, according to CP, which cites Round, Ancient Charters, no. 6. Henry James Young (citation details below) calls him “lord of Brecknock.”

    From the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography:

    He was in England by 1086-7, witnessing William’s ‘foundation charter’ to Battle Abbey. He does not appear in Domesday Book. Between 1086 and 1088 he was granted lands in Herefordshire (including Burghill, Brinsop, and Much Cowarne) by either William I or William II. At about the same time, Bernard married Nest (also known as Agnes), daughter and heir of the Herefordshire lord Osbern fitz Richard, and granddaughter of the north Welsh king Gruffudd ap Llywelyn. [...]

    In 1088, Bernard de Neufmarché participated in the rebellion against William II, joining the force which attacked Worcester. He may have been drawn into the rebellion by his father-in-law, and was apparently not punished for his actions. Also in 1088, he seems to have embarked upon his conquest of the minor Welsh kingdom of Brycheiniog, for late in 1088 he made a grant of Glasbury in Brycheiniog, together with Much Cowarne church, to St Peter’s, Gloucester. This may have been a ‘first fruits’ offering. By 1093, Bernard was probably in possession of the Welsh capital of Brycheiniog, Talgarth, and in that year, the south Welsh king Rhys ap Tewdwr was killed near Aberhonddu by the Norman invaders of Brycheiniog. His death cleared the way for Bernard to annex the whole region, establishing himself and his feudal vassals in new castles and fiefs there.

    Bernard married Nest ferch Osbern between 1086 and 1088. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  5. 39.  Nest ferch Osbern (daughter of Osbern fitz Richard and Nest ferch Gruffydd).

    Notes:

    Also called Agnes.

    Children:
    1. 19. Sibyl de Neufmarché was born in of Brecon, Breconshire, Wales; was buried in Llanthony Priory, outside Gloucester, Gloucestershire, England.

  6. 40.  Bernard de St. Valéry (son of Gauthier de St. Valéry and Elizabeth de Montlhéry); died after 1095.
    Children:
    1. 20. Reginald de St. Valéry was born in of Tetbury, Gloucestershire, England; died after 1147.

  7. 48.  Gilbert fitz Richard de Clare was born about 1060 (son of Richard fitz Gilbert and Rohese Giffard); died in 1117.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate birth: Bef 1066
    • Alternate death: 1114

    Notes:

    Also called Gilbert de Clare; Gilbert de Tonbridge. Earl of Clare.

    "The Welsh annals note his death in 1117." [Royal Ancestry]

    Gilbert married Alice de Clermont. Alice (daughter of Hugues and Marguerite de Montdidier) was born in of Clermont, Oise, Picardie, France; died after 1136. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  8. 49.  Alice de Clermont was born in of Clermont, Oise, Picardie, France (daughter of Hugues and Marguerite de Montdidier); died after 1136.

    Notes:

    Also called Adelaide de Clermont; Adeliza de Clermont-in-Beauvaisis.

    Children:
    1. Baldwin fitz Gilbert was born in of Bourne, Lincoln, Lincolnshire, England; died after 1154.
    2. Alice de Clare died in 1163 in St. Osyth Priory, Essex, England.
    3. Rohese fitz Gilbert died before 1166.
    4. Margaret fitz Gilbert died after 1185.
    5. 24. Richard fitz Gilbert de Clare was born about 1090 in Hertford, Hertfordshire, England; died on 15 Apr 1136 in Abergavenny, Monmouthshire, Wales; was buried in 1136 in Chapter House, Gloucester, Gloucestershire, England.
    6. Gilbert "Strongbow" fitz Gilbert was born about 1100; died on 6 Jan 1148; was buried in Tintern Abbey, Monmouthshire, Wales.

  9. 50.  Ranulf le Meschin (son of Ranulph de Briquessart and Margaret d'Avranches); died about 1129; was buried in Abbey of St. Werburg, Chester, Cheshire, England.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: Jan 1129
    • Alternate death: 17 Jan 1129
    • Alternate death: 27 Jan 1129

    Notes:

    Also called Randle; Ranulf de Briquessart; de Bricasard; Ranulf du Bessin; Ranulf of Chester.

    Earl of Chester. Vicomte of Bayeux. Commander of the royal forces in Normandy, 1124.

    "Ranulph le Meschin, styled also, 'de Briquessart,' Vicomte de Bayeux in Normandy, s. and h. of Ranulph, Vicomte de Bayeux, by Margaret, sister of Hugh (d'Avranches), Earl of Chester abovenamed, being thus 1st cousin and h. to the last Earl (whom he suc. as Vicomte d'Avranches, &c., in Normandy), obtained, after the Earl's death in 1120, the grant of the county palatine of Chester, becoming thereby Earl of Chester. He appears thereupon to have surrendered the Lordship of the great district of Cumberland, which he had acquired, shortly before, from Henry I. In 1124 he was Commander of the Royal forces in Normandy. He m. Lucy, widow of Roger Fitz-Gerold (by whom she was mother of William de Roumare, afterwards Earl of Lincoln). He d. 17 or 27 Jan. 1129, and was bur. at St. Werburg's, Chester. The Countess Lucy confirmed, as his widow, the grant of the Manor of Spalding to the monks of that place." [Complete Peerage III:166, incorporating corrections from volume XIV.]

    Ranulf married Lucy of Bolingbroke about 1098. Lucy was born in of Spalding, Lincolnshire, England; died about 1138. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  10. 51.  Lucy of Bolingbroke was born in of Spalding, Lincolnshire, England; died about 1138.

    Notes:

    "Lucy of Bolingbroke (died circa 1138) was an Anglo-Norman heiress in central England and, later in life, countess of Chester. Probably related to the old English earls of Mercia, she came to possess extensive lands in Lincolnshire which she passed on to her husbands and sons. She was a notable religious patron, founding or co-founding two small religious houses and endowing several with lands and churches. [...] Lucy, as widowed countess, founded the convent of Stixwould in 1135, becoming, in the words of one historian, 'one of the few aristocratic women of the late eleventh and twelfth centuries to achieve the role of independent lay founder.'" [Wikipedia]

    Much controversy has ensued over her parentage. Appendix J to volume 7 of the Complete Peerage sums up the state of play in 1929: "The parentage of the Countess Lucy is one of the unsolved puzzles of genealogy. The only direct statements about it are in the Peterborough Chronicle and the pseudo-Ingulf’s Chronicle of Crowland, which agree in saying that she was daughter of Aelfgar, Earl of Mercia, and niece or grandniece of Thorold, sometime Sheriff of co. Lincoln. All that is certainly known is that she was niece of Robert Malet of Eye and of Alan of Lincoln, and that Thorold the Sheriff was a kinsman." The essay goes on to state that a good but not conclusive case can be made for her parents being Thorold the sheriff and an unnamed daughter of Robert Malet.

    The ODNB calls Lucy merely "heir of the honour of Bolingbroke". In 1995 Katharine Keats-Rohan made a case for the Thorold hypothesis, but Rosie Bevan argued on SGM that "the main sticking point [...] is that although Lucy is mentioned a few times as Thorold's heir she is not named as his daughter." Bevan went on to propose that the incomplete evidence could as easily be used to argue that Lucy's parents were William Malet (son of Robert) and a daughter of earl Alfgar III.

    The one point on which everyone appears to agree is that one of Lucy's parents has to have been a Malet, because in 1153 the future Henry II promised the honour of Eye to Ranulph, earl of Chester, to be held as "Robert Malet the uncle of his mother [i.e., Lucy] held it."

    Children:
    1. 25. Alice of Chester died after 1148.
    2. Ranulph de Gernons was born before 1100 in Guernon Castle, Normandy, France; died on 16 Dec 1153; was buried in Abbey of St. Werburg, Chester, Cheshire, England.

  11. 52.  Harscod died between 1115 and 1130.

    Notes:

    Also called Hasculf, Harscoit. Seigneur de St.James et St. Hilaire du Harscouet.

    Children:
    1. 26. James de St. Hilary du Harcourt was born in of Field Dalling, Norfolk, England; died about 1154.
    2. Roald fitz Harscod died between 1152 and 1158.

  12. 56.  Henry I, King of England was born in 1068 (son of William I, King of England and Matilda of Flanders, Queen Consort of England); died on 1 Dec 1135 in Lyon-la-Forêt, near Rouen, Seine-Maritime, Normandy, France; was buried in Reading Abbey, Berkshire, England.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate birth: Between May and Sep 1068, Selby, Yorkshire, England
    • Alternate birth: Between Feb and May 1069, Selby, Yorkshire, England
    • Alternate birth: 1068-1069
    • Alternate birth: 1068-1069

    Notes:

    Called "Beauclerc" by later historians, but not during his lifetime.

    Died after eating lampreys, which had been forbidden to him by his physician. Body buried at Reading Abbey, England. Entrails buried at Port-du-Salut Abbey, France. The Middle Ages: weird.

    Henry married (Unknown mistress or mistresses of Henry I). [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  13. 57.  (Unknown mistress or mistresses of Henry I)
    Children:
    1. Constance of England died after 1175.
    2. Mabel of England died after 1125.
    3. Maud fitz Roy
    4. Alice
    5. 28. Robert of Gloucester was born about 1090; died on 31 Oct 1147 in Bristol, Gloucestershire, England; was buried in Priory of St. James, Bristol, England.

  14. 58.  Robert fitz Hamon died in Mar 1107 in Falais, Calvados, Normandy, France; was buried in Tewkesbury Abbey, Tewkesbury, Gloucestershire, England.

    Notes:

    Made (by Henry I) hereditary Governor of Caen, circa 1105. Called by the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (in the article on his father-in-law) "of south Wales." Called "Earl of Gloucester" by later chroniclers, but he was never styled that in his lifetime. Refounded Tewkesbury Abbey in 1092.

    Robert married Sibyl de Montgomery between 1087 and 1090. Sibyl (daughter of Roger de Montgomery and Mabel de Bellême) died after 1107. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  15. 59.  Sibyl de Montgomery (daughter of Roger de Montgomery and Mabel de Bellême); died after 1107.
    Children:
    1. 29. Mabel fitz Robert died on 29 Sep 1157.

  16. 60.  Robert of Meulan was born about 1046 in Beaumont-le-Roger, Eure, Normandy, France (son of Roger "Barbatus" de Beaumont and Adeline de Meulan); died on 5 Jun 1118; was buried in Abbey St. Pierre, Preaux, Eure, Normandy, France.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate birth: Abt 1049

    Notes:

    Also known as Robert de Beaumont. Count of Meulan. Created Earl of Leicester.

    * One of the only fifteen "Proven Companions" of William the Conqueror at Hastings.

    * Inherited the title Count of Meulan when his mother died in 1081; paid homage for it to Philip I of France and sat as a French peer in the parliament at Poissy.

    * A member of the royal hunting party in the New Forest, 2 Aug 1100, during which William II was accidentally killed by an arrow. Pledged allegiance to Henry I, who created him Earl of Leicester in 1107.

    * Excommunicated by Paschal II during the Investiture Controversy. Excommunication later revoked by Anselm, exiled archbishop of Canterbury; revocation later ratified by Paschal.

    * Lived to be the last surviving Norman nobleman who was at Hastings.

    Robert married Isabel de Vermandois in 1096. Isabel (daughter of Hugues le Grand and Adèle de Vermandois) died before Jun 1147. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  17. 61.  Isabel de Vermandois (daughter of Hugues le Grand and Adèle de Vermandois); died before Jun 1147.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: Bef Jul 1147

    Notes:

    Countess of Leicester. Also called Elizabeth de Vermandois.

    Royal Ancestry says she was living c. 1138 and that she died "13 (or 17) February, sometime before June 1147, when her son, William de Warenne, 3rd Earl of Surrey, left on crusade." Several sources say she died in the priory of Lewes, Sussex.

    Via her two husbands and thirteen children, descent from her is so common among modern people with traceable medieval ancestry that Douglas Richardson once jokingly asserted the existence of an exclusive lineage organization called the Society of Non-Descendants of Isabel de Vermandois. Of the 19 root people in this database with demonstrable descent from any monarch, only three would be eligible for membership in such a group.

    Children:
    1. Isabel de Beaumont died after 1172.
    2. Maud of Meulan died after 1189.
    3. Waleran of Meulan was born in 1104; died on 9 Apr 1166 in Abbey St. Pierre, Preaux, Eure, Normandy, France; was buried in Abbey St. Pierre, Preaux, Eure, Normandy, France.
    4. 30. Robert of Meulan was born in 1104 in Meulan, Île-de-France, France; died on 5 Apr 1168; was buried in Leicester Abbey, Leicester, Leicestershire, England.

  18. 62.  Ralph II de Gael was born in of Montfort de Gael, Brittany, France (son of Ralph I de Gael and Emma de Breteuil).
    Children:
    1. 31. Amice de Gael died in Nuneaton, Warwickshire, England.