Nielsen Hayden genealogy

Margaret la Zouche

Female 1251 -


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Margaret la Zouche was born in 1251 in Winchester, Hampshire, England (daughter of Alan la Zouche and Ellen de Quincy).

    Margaret married Robert fitz Roger in 1265. Robert (son of Roger fitz John and Isabel of Dunbar) was born about 1247 in of Warkworth, Northumberland, England; died before 29 Apr 1310. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. John fitz Robert was born about 1266 in of Clavering, Essex, England; died on 18 Jan 1332 in Aynho, Northamptonshire, England; was buried in Langley Abbey, Norfolk, England.
    2. Euphemia de Clavering was born after 1265; died about 1320; was buried in Staindrop, Durham, England.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Alan la Zouche was born in of Molton, Devon, England (son of Roger la Zouche and Margaret Biset); died on 10 Aug 1270.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate birth: Bef 1217, of Ashby de la Zouche, Leicestershire, England
    • Alternate birth: Abt 1217, of Ashby de la Zouche, Leicestershire, England
    • Alternate death: 12 Aug 1270

    Notes:

    Constable of the Tower of London.

    "His first taste of high office came in 1250 when he was appointed justice of the county of Chester and the Four Cantrefs (the district of north Wales east of the River Conwy). He paid 1000 marks for the post, allegedly outbidding the current holder of the office. He flaunted the wealth he raised from the district, and boasted that the whole of Wales was now reduced to obedience. But his high-handed and insensitive behaviour provoked royal investigation, and fuelled the resentment in the area against the English, which led to the violent overthrow of English rule in 1256. By then Zouche had entered the service of the Lord Edward (who had been given the royal lands in Wales, Ireland, and Chester in February 1254), and acted as his justiciar in Ireland from June 1256 to October 1258. With the onset of civil discord in England in June 1258, Zouche was given ample opportunity to display his unflinching loyalty to the king." [Oxford Dictionary of National Biography]

    Subsequent offices include steward of the royal household, Oct 1261 - Jan 1263; sheriff of Northamptonshire 1261-4; justice of the forests south of Trent Jun 1261 onward; constable of Rockingham Castle 1261-4 and Northampton Castle 1261-3; warden of London and constable of the Tower, Jun 1268 - Apr 1268.

    "Taken prisoner at the battle of Lewes (14 May 1264), Zouche escaped to Lewes Priory, where he disguised himself as a monk, but he was recaptured and imprisoned. In the aftermath of the king's victory at Evesham (4 August 1265) he played an important part in the pacification of the country: he was one of the twelve arbitrators appointed to arrange the terms of the surrender of Kenilworth Castle in 1266, and was one of the justices appointed to hear the pleas of the disinherited." [Oxford Dictionary of National Biography]

    "During an altercation in Westminster Hall on 1 July 1270, [John de] Warenne and his men assaulted Zouche and his son in the presence of the royal justice and the chancellor. Zouche suffered wounds from which he died on 10 August 1270." [Oxford Dictionary of National Biography]

    Alan married Ellen de Quincy before 1242. Ellen (daughter of Roger de Quincy and Helen of Galloway) was born about 1222 in Winchester, Hampshire, England; died before 20 Aug 1296. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Ellen de Quincy was born about 1222 in Winchester, Hampshire, England (daughter of Roger de Quincy and Helen of Galloway); died before 20 Aug 1296.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate birth: of Brackley, Northamptonshire, England

    Notes:

    Also called Helen; Elena; Elene.

    Children:
    1. Roger la Zouche was born about 1241 in of Ashby de la Zouche, Leicestershire, England; died before 15 Oct 1285.
    2. Oliver la Zouche was born about 1250 in of South Charford, Hampshire, England; died between 1316 and 1327.
    3. 1. Margaret la Zouche was born in 1251 in Winchester, Hampshire, England.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Roger la Zouche was born about 1175 in of Black Torrington, Devon, England (son of Alan la Zouche and Alice de Belmeis); died before 14 May 1238.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate birth: Bef 1178, of Ashby de la Zouche, Leicestershire, England

    Notes:

    Sheriff of Devonshire 1228-31. A witness to Henry III's confirmation of Magna Carta.

    Roger married Margaret Biset. Margaret (daughter of Henry Biset and (Unknown first wife of Henry Biset)) was born in of Kidderminster, Worcestershire, England; died after 15 Aug 1232. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Margaret Biset was born in of Kidderminster, Worcestershire, England (daughter of Henry Biset and (Unknown first wife of Henry Biset)); died after 15 Aug 1232.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: Aft 1232
    • Alternate death: Bef 14 May 1238

    Children:
    1. 2. Alan la Zouche was born in of Molton, Devon, England; died on 10 Aug 1270.
    2. Eudes la Zouche was born in of Harringworth, Northamptonshire, England; died between 25 Apr 1279 and 25 Jun 1279.
    3. William la Zouche was born in of King's Nympton, Devon, England; died before 3 Feb 1272.
    4. Lorette la Zouche
    5. Alice la Zouche

  3. 6.  Roger de Quincy was born about 1195; was christened in Brackley, Northamptonshire, England (son of Saher de Quincy and Margaret of Leicester); died on 25 Apr 1264.

    Notes:

    Earl of Winchester. In right of his first wife, hereditary Constable of Scotland. "At his death he was probably the greatest Anglo-Scottish landowner of his day" [Oxford Dictionary of National Biography].

    From the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography:

    "Little is known of Roger de Quincy before 1219. He was probably the son whom Saer delivered to King John in 1213 as a Scottish hostage for the security of the Anglo-Scottish treaty of 1212. He emerged onto the political stage in 1215 when, along with Saer and the leaders of the baronial rebellion against John, he was excommunicated by Innocent III (r. 1198–1216), but did not figure prominently in the civil war that followed the king's death. [...]

    "Roger de Quincy did not hold the prominence in politics that his father had commanded in England [...] but his wealth secured him an important role. In 1239 and 1246 he joined in written remonstrances from the English nobility to Gregory IX (r. 1227–41) and Innocent IV (r. 1243–54) concerning papal interference in English affairs. Association with the stirrings of dissatisfaction with the government of Henry III expressed in the parliaments of 1248 and 1254 led to identification with the baronial opposition in 1258. At the Oxford parliament Quincy was elected by the barons to the twelve-member commission charged with attendance at the three annual parliaments provided for under the provisions of Oxford, and was appointed also to the committee that arranged the financial aid promised to Henry. In 1259 he led a delegation to St Omer to intercept Richard, earl of Cornwall (d. 1272), and forbid him to return to England until he had sworn to observe the provisions of Oxford. This appears to have been Roger de Quincy's last major act, for he played little part in subsequent events which culminated in open conflict between the king and his baronial opponents, and died on 25 April 1264, eighteen days after Henry had precipitated the country into civil war."

    Roger married Helen of Galloway. Helen (daughter of Alan fitz Roland and (Unknown daughter of Roger de Lacy)) died after 21 Nov 1245; was buried in Brackley, Northamptonshire, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 7.  Helen of Galloway (daughter of Alan fitz Roland and (Unknown daughter of Roger de Lacy)); died after 21 Nov 1245; was buried in Brackley, Northamptonshire, England.

    Notes:

    Also called Ellen.

    Alan Fitz Roland, often called Alan of Galloway, married three times. His first wife was a daughter of Roger of Chester, who is often called Roger de Lacy. His second wife was Margaret of Scotland, daughter of David, Earl of Huntington. His third wife was a daughter of Hugh de Lacy, 1st Earl of Ulster.

    The presence of two marriages to daughters of men called de Lacy, both of which daughters' names have been lost, has created understandable confusion. Many online sources show Alan Fitz Roland's daughter Ellen as a daughter of his third marriage. In fact she was a daughter of his first; her maternal grandfather was Roger of Chester, also called Roger de Lacy -- not Hugh de Lacy. To the best of our knowledge, Alan Fitz Roland's third marriage was without issue.

    Children:
    1. Elizabeth de Quincy died before 4 May 1303.
    2. 3. Ellen de Quincy was born about 1222 in Winchester, Hampshire, England; died before 20 Aug 1296.
    3. Margaret de Quincy was born before 1223; died before 12 Mar 1281.


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  Alan la Zouche was born in of North Molton, Devon, England (son of Geoffrey de Porhoët and Hawise Fergant); died in 1190.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate birth: Abt 1132, Brittany, France

    Notes:

    Also called Alan Ceoche, Alan la Coche. In England by 1172. Of North Molton, Devonshire.

    Alan married Alice de Belmeis. Alice (daughter of Philip de Belmeis and Maud le Meschin) was born in of Tong, Shropshire, England; died after 1190. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 9.  Alice de Belmeis was born in of Tong, Shropshire, England (daughter of Philip de Belmeis and Maud le Meschin); died after 1190.

    Notes:

    Also called Alix de Beaumez.

    Children:
    1. 4. Roger la Zouche was born about 1175 in of Black Torrington, Devon, England; died before 14 May 1238.

  3. 10.  Henry Biset was born in of Kidderminster, Worcestershire, England (son of Manasser Biset and Alice de Falaise); died in 1208.

    Henry married (Unknown first wife of Henry Biset). (Unknown was born about 1160. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 11.  (Unknown first wife of Henry Biset) was born about 1160.
    Children:
    1. 5. Margaret Biset was born in of Kidderminster, Worcestershire, England; died after 15 Aug 1232.
    2. John Biset was born in of Kidderminster, Worcestershire, England; died in 1241; was buried in Maiden Bradley Priory, Wiltshire, England.

  5. 12.  Saher de Quincy was born in 1155 in Winchester, Hampshire, England (son of Robert de Quincy and Orabel fitz Ness); died on 3 Nov 1219 in Damietta, Egypt; was buried in Acre, Palestine.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate birth: of Grantchester, Cambridgeshire, England

    Notes:

    Earl of Winchester. Also spelled Saier, Saer.

    Magna Carta surety.

    Steward of the King 1205-7; Constable of Fotheringay Castle 1215; Judge in the King's Court 1211, 1213-14; Keeper of Canford and Hedingham Castles 1214.

    Died in the Fifth Crusade. His heart was brought back and interred at Garendon Abbey near Loughborough, a house endowed by his wife's family. The rest of him was buried in Acre. [Royal Ancestry]

    Saher married Margaret of Leicester before 1173. Margaret (daughter of Robert de Breteuil and Pernel de Grandmesnil) died on 12 Jan 1235. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  6. 13.  Margaret of Leicester (daughter of Robert de Breteuil and Pernel de Grandmesnil); died on 12 Jan 1235.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: 1236

    Notes:

    Or Margery. [Royal Ancestry]

    Also known as Margaret de Beaumont.

    Children:
    1. Robert de Quincy died after 20 May 1217 in London, England; was buried in Church of the Hospitallers, Clerkenwell, London, England.
    2. Hawise de Quincy died after 1263; was buried in Earl's Colne Priory, Halstead, Great Bromley, Essex, England.
    3. Orabel de Quincy
    4. 6. Roger de Quincy was born about 1195; was christened in Brackley, Northamptonshire, England; died on 25 Apr 1264.
    5. Robert de Quincy was born before 1200 in of Wakes Colne, Essex, England; died in Aug 1257.

  7. 14.  Alan fitz Roland (son of Roland fitz Uchtred and Ellen de Morville); died about 2 Feb 1234; was buried in Dundrennan Abbey, Kircudbright, Scotland.

    Notes:

    Also called Alan of Galloway. Hereditary Constable of Scotland.

    Present at Magna Carta as an advisor to King John.

    From the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography:

    "Cross-border landholding and kinship with King John of England made Alan a man of consequence in both realms. His relationship with the king of Scots, based on loose overlordship rather than feudal subordination, allowed freedom of manoeuvre where his actions did not conflict with Scottish interests. Galloway's military resources and substantial fleet gave added influence; Alan's aid was courted unsuccessfully by John for his 1210 campaign against the Ulster Lacys, but he agreed to send one thousand men for the abortive Welsh campaign of 1212. [...]

    "From 1225 Alan used the freedom afforded by the loose overlordship of the Scottish crown to interfere in the feud between King Ragnvald of Man and his half-brother, Olaf. His private interest, arising from efforts to secure Antrim with Ragnvald's support against the threat of a Lacy restoration, coincided at first with Anglo-Scottish policy towards the region and received the tacit support of his Scottish overlord. The prospect of a pro-Scottish client in Man led Alexander II to acquiesce to the marriage in 1226 of Alan's bastard son, Thomas, to Ragnvald's daughter, but the marriage provoked revolt against Ragnvald. Despite the support of Galwegian galleys and warriors, Ragnvald was overthrown and slain in 1229 by Olaf. Alan's ensuing attempts to conquer Man for Thomas destabilized the Hebrides and western highlands, thereby threatening Scottish territorial interests, and in 1230–31 prompted active Norwegian support for Olaf. Joint action by Alan and Alexander averted catastrophe, but Scottish and Galwegian interests had diverged and the 1231 campaign marked the end of further Galwegian involvement in the Manx succession; Alan's dynastic ambitions had caused an undesirable war with a major foreign power."

    From Wikipedia:

    "Although under the traditional Celtic custom of Galloway, Alan's illegitimate son could have succeeded to the Lordship of Galloway, under the feudal custom of the Scottish realm, Alan's nearest heirs were his surviving daughters. Using Alan's death as an opportunity to further integrate Galloway within his realm, Alexander forced the partition of the lordship amongst Alan's daughters. Alan was the last legitimate ruler of Galloway, descending from the native dynasty of Fergus, Lord of Galloway."

    Alan married (Unknown daughter of Roger de Lacy) between 1200 and 1205. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  8. 15.  (Unknown daughter of Roger de Lacy) (daughter of Roger de Lacy and Maud de Clare).
    Children:
    1. 7. Helen of Galloway died after 21 Nov 1245; was buried in Brackley, Northamptonshire, England.


Generation: 5

  1. 16.  Geoffrey de Porhoët was born in 1092 (son of Eudon de Porhoët and Emme de Léon); died in 1141.

    Notes:

    Vicomte de Porhoët.

    Geoffrey married Hawise Fergant. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 17.  Hawise Fergant (daughter of Alain Fergant and Ermengarde of Anjou).

    Notes:

    Also called Havide de Bretagne; Hawise of Brittany.

    Children:
    1. 8. Alan la Zouche was born in of North Molton, Devon, England; died in 1190.

  3. 18.  Philip de Belmeis was born about 1106 in of Tong, Shropshire, England (son of Walter de Belmeis); died before 1154.

    Notes:

    Also called Philippe de Beaumez. In Aug 1138 he was with King Stephen besieging Shrewsbury.

    Philip married Maud le Meschin before 1139. Maud (daughter of William Meschin and Cecily de Rumilly) was born in of Skipton-in-Craven, Yorkshire, England; died after 1180. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 19.  Maud le Meschin was born in of Skipton-in-Craven, Yorkshire, England (daughter of William Meschin and Cecily de Rumilly); died after 1180.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: Aft 6 Jul 1189

    Children:
    1. 9. Alice de Belmeis was born in of Tong, Shropshire, England; died after 1190.

  5. 20.  Manasser Biset (son of William Biset and Hawise); died in 1177.

    Notes:

    Also called Manser; Mancel.

    Steward to Henry II by 1153.

    Manasser married Alice de Falaise. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  6. 21.  Alice de Falaise

    Notes:

    Also called Alice de Cany.

    Children:
    1. 10. Henry Biset was born in of Kidderminster, Worcestershire, England; died in 1208.

  7. 24.  Robert de Quincy was born in of Tranant, East Lothian, Scotland (son of Saher I de Quincy and Maud de Senlis); died after 20 Aug 1201.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate birth: of Buckby, Northamptonshire, England
    • Alternate death: Bef 29 Sep 1197
    • Alternate death: Bef 1208

    Notes:

    Or de Quency. [Royal Ancestry] Justiciar of Scotland; Crusader.

    Robert married Orabel fitz Ness before 1155, and was divorced before 1174. Orabel (daughter of Ness fitz William) died before 30 Jun 1203. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  8. 25.  Orabel fitz Ness (daughter of Ness fitz William); died before 30 Jun 1203.

    Notes:

    Countess of Mar. Also called Orabel de Leuchars.

    Children:
    1. 12. Saher de Quincy was born in 1155 in Winchester, Hampshire, England; died on 3 Nov 1219 in Damietta, Egypt; was buried in Acre, Palestine.

  9. 26.  Robert de Breteuil was born in of Leicester, Leicestershire, England (son of Robert of Meulan and Amice de Gael); died in 1190; was buried in Durazzo, Greece.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate birth: Bef 1135
    • Alternate death: 31 Aug 1190, At sea
    • Alternate death: 31 Aug 1190, Romania

    Notes:

    Earl of Leicester. Also known as Robert de Beaumont. According to Complete Peerage, nicknamed ès Blanchemains, which translates as "white-hands".

    Steward of England and Normandy; seigneur of Bréteuil and Paci in Normandy. In 1173, he supported Prince Henry, the "young king," in his rebellion against his father Henry II, and in consequence he and his wife were imprisoned by the elder Henry from fall 1173 to fall 1174.

    Died on the way to Jerusalem. Durazzo is now the city of Durres in Albania.

    Robert married Pernel de Grandmesnil in 1155. Pernel (daughter of William de Grandmesnil) died on 1 Apr 1212. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  10. 27.  Pernel de Grandmesnil (daughter of William de Grandmesnil); died on 1 Apr 1212.

    Notes:

    Called "Petronilla" in many sources.

    Royal Ancestry gives her as the "daughter of Hugh de Grandmesnil of Hinckley, Leicestershire."

    Complete Peerage says "[Robert, Earl of Leicester (d. 1190)] m., before 1155-1159, Pernel (Petronilla), heiress of the Norman honour of Grandmesnil, great-granddaughter of Hugh de Grandmesnil, the Domesday tenant, but her ancestry has not been discovered. (h)
    "Note (h):
    "Hugh de Grandmesnil, the Domesday tenant, had five sons -- Robert, William, Hugh, Ives and Aubrey ... Robert, the eldest son, inherited the Norman lands which are later found in Robert FitzPernel's hands [i.e. Robert, Earl of Leicester (d. 1204), the son of Pernel]. He m., 1stly, Agnes, da. of Ranulph de Bayeux; 2ndly, Emma, da. of Robert d'Estouteville; and, 3rdly, Lucy, da. of Savary FitzCana (Orderic, vol. iii, p. 359). ... if she [Pernel] inherited the Norman lands she would in all probability be a daughter of a son of Hugh's son Robert. Hugh's father and son are both called Robert, and if this alternating nomenclature -- a very usual system -- was continued, a son of Robert the younger would be named Hugh. This is the name given to Pernel's father in the foundation narrative of Leicester Abbey, and although the story told there is fictitious ... it is possible that the writer may have had before him a document such as a list of obits giving the authentic name. It is not claimed that this suggested descent is more than speculative."

    Chris Phillips, in his Some corrections and additions to the Complete Peerage, Volume 7: Leicester, says "In fact, Pernel's father was called William, as shown by a charter for St-Evroult discovered by David Crouch [The Beaumont Twins, p.91, citing the Cartulary of St-Evroult, ii, fo 33v]. However, the argument that her grandfather is likely to have been Robert, the eldest son of Hugh de Grandmesnil, still seems sound. To some extent it is supported by the following evidence.

    "In 1157, Henry II confirmed gifts made to the hospital of Falaise by William de Grentmesnil and others [Cal. Docs France, no 1157]. By an undated charter (perhaps from 1160 or later), one Beatrix de Rye gave land to the abbey of St Jean of Falaise, for the well-being of her mother Emma and of her brother William de Grentemesnil [Lechaude d'Anisy, Extrait des Chartes ... dans les archives du Calvados, vol.1, p.232, no 9 (1834)]. It seems likely that this Beatrix was a daughter of Robert de Grandmesnil by his second wife, Emma d'Estouteville, particularly as the name Beatrix occurs in the Estouteville family, and was possibly borne by Emma's mother [C.T. Clay, ed., Early Yorkshire Charters, vol.9, p.2 (1952)]. If so, this would confirm that Robert also had a son William, who would probably be Pernel's father.

    "Note that K.S.B. Keats-Rohan [Domesday People I, p. 263 (1999)] states that Pernel's father William was the son of Robert by Emma d'Estouteville, but no evidence is cited for the relationship."

    Children:
    1. 13. Margaret of Leicester died on 12 Jan 1235.
    2. Amicie de Beaumont died on 3 Sep 1215.

  11. 28.  Roland fitz Uchtred was born in of Galloway, Perthshire, Scotland (son of Uchtred of Galloway and Gunnild of Dunbar); died on 19 Dec 1200 in Northampton, Northamptonshire, England; was buried in Priory of St. Andrew, Northampton, Northamptonshire, England.

    Notes:

    Also called Lachlan, de Galwaye, Galloway. "Known in his youth as Lachlan, his preference in adulthood for being known as Roland, the Norman-French equivalent of Lachlan, symbolizes the spread of foreign influences into Galloway which followed the overthrow in 1160 of his grandfather, Fergus of Galloway." [Oxford Dictionary of National Biography]

    Hereditary Constable of Scotland, 1196-1200 (jure uxoris).

    Roland married Ellen de Morville before 1185. Ellen (daughter of Richard de Morville and Avice de Lancaster) died on 11 Jun 1217 in Galloway, Perthshire, Scotland. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  12. 29.  Ellen de Morville (daughter of Richard de Morville and Avice de Lancaster); died on 11 Jun 1217 in Galloway, Perthshire, Scotland.
    Children:
    1. 14. Alan fitz Roland died about 2 Feb 1234; was buried in Dundrennan Abbey, Kircudbright, Scotland.
    2. Devorguilla of Galloway died after Jan 1240.

  13. 30.  Roger de Lacy was born about 1165 in of Halton, Runcorn, Cheshire, England (son of John fitz Richard and Alice fitz Roger); died on 1 Oct 1211; was buried in Stanlaw Abbey, Wirrall, Cheshire, England.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: Jan 1212

    Notes:

    Also called Roger of Chester, Roger Helle, Roger de Lisours.

    Hereditary Constable of Cheshire; Sheriff of Lancashire. Sheriff of York and Chester, 1204-10. Was at the storming of Acre, 1191. "His raids against the Welsh are said to have earned him the nickname 'Roger of Hell.'" [The Ancestry of Dorothea Poyntz]

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


  14. 31.  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. 15. (Unknown daughter of Roger de Lacy)
    2. John de Lacy was born about 1192 in of Pontefract, Yorkshire, England; died on 22 Jul 1240; was buried in Stanlaw Abbey, Wirrall, Cheshire, England.


Generation: 6

  1. 32.  Eudon de Porhoët (son of Josselin de Porhoët).

    Notes:

    Also called Eudes; Eon; Odo. Viscount of Porhoët and Rennes.

    Eudon married Emme de Léon. Emme died before 1092. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 33.  Emme de Léon died before 1092.

    Notes:

    Or Ann.

    Children:
    1. 16. Geoffrey de Porhoët was born in 1092; died in 1141.

  3. 34.  Alain Fergant was born about 1066 (son of Hoël II of Cornouaille and Hawise of Rennes); died on 13 Oct 1119.

    Notes:

    Duke of Brittany 1084 until his abdication in 1112. Count of Nantes; Count of Rennes.

    Alain married Ermengarde of Anjou in 1093. Ermengarde (daughter of Fulk IV "Le Rechin" and Hildegarde de Beaugency) was born about 1066; died about 1146. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 35.  Ermengarde of Anjou was born about 1066 (daughter of Fulk IV "Le Rechin" and Hildegarde de Beaugency); died about 1146.
    Children:
    1. 17. Hawise Fergant
    2. Conan III of Brittany was born about 1093; died in 1148.

  5. 36.  Walter de Belmeis
    Children:
    1. 18. Philip de Belmeis was born about 1106 in of Tong, Shropshire, England; died before 1154.

  6. 38.  William Meschin was born in of Skipton-in-Craven, Yorkshire, England (son of Ranulph de Briquessart and Margaret d'Avranches); died before 1135.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: Abt 1135

    Notes:

    "The most important member of a tightly knit family group was Ranulf's younger brother William le Meschin (d. 1129x35). William went on the first crusade, where he is mentioned, as 'William son of Ranulf le vicomte' at the siege of Nicaea in 1097 (Ordericus Vitalis, Eccl. hist., 5.59). In Cumbria William le Meschin was first given charge of Gilsland, which he failed to hold against the Scots, and then Egremont (the barony of Copeland). He built the castle at Egremont, and close by on the coast he founded the priory of St Bees, a further daughter house of St Mary's, York. William le Meschin married Cecily de Rumilly, the daughter of Robert de Rumilly and heir to the barony of Skipton in Craven, west Yorkshire, thus creating a substantial cross-Pennine estate. William and Cecily were the founders of the priory of Embsay, which later removed to Bolton in Wharfedale. In addition to the two baronies of Egremont and Skipton, William le Meschin acquired tenancies in several counties, the more significant held of his brother in Lincolnshire (where the Lindsey survey of 1115 - 18 provides detailed record) and in Cheshire. William remained closely linked with Ranulf, whom he survived by just a few years, dying before 1135. An elder son, Matthew, having predeceased him, William's heirs were successively his younger son, also called Ranulf le Meschin, and three sisters, Amice, Alice, and Matilda, who in the course of a total of seven marriages comprehensively dismembered the estate." [Oxford Dictionary of National Biography]

    "William le Meschin, Lord of Copeland, br. of Ranulph, 1st Earl of Chester, yr. s. of Rannulf, Vicomte of the Bessin, m. Cicely de Rumilly, Lady of Skipton, da. and h. of Robert de Rumelli, of Harewood and Skipton, co. York (see ped. of Lisle in vol. viii, between pp. 48 and 49), and had 3 daughters and coheirs. (1) Alice, Lady of Skipton, who m., 1stly, William fitz Duncan, s. of Duncan II, King of Scots. See Clay, Early Yorks Charters, vol. vii, pp. 9—10. They had one s., William, 'the Boy of Egremont', who d. in the King’s ward after 1155, leaving his 3 sisters his coheirs: (i) Cicely, as in the text; (ii) Amabel, Lady of Copeland (called in the Pipe Rolls and elsewhere, Comitissa de Couplanda, who m. Reynold de Lucy (see vol. iii, pp. 247-8, sub Lucy); (iii) Alice de Rumilly, Lady of Allerdale, who m., 1stly, Gilbert Pipard, Sheriff of cos. Gloucester and Hereford, and 2ndly, Robert de Courtenay, Sheriff of Cumberland and d. s.p. (see vol. ix, pp. 527-8, sub Pipard). Alice, Lady of Skipton, m. 2ndly, Alexander FitzGerold. (2) Avice, Lady of Harewood, who m., 1stly, William de Courcy III, 2ndly, William Paynell, of Drax, co. York, and 3rdly, William de Percy of Rougemont, in Harewood, co. York (see vol. x, p. 319, sub Paynel, and p. 439, sub Percy). (3) Maud, m. 1stly, Philip de Belmeis, of Tong, Salop., and 2ndly, Hugh de Mortimer, of Wigmore, co. Hereford (see vol. ix, p. 271, note sub Mortimer (of Wigmore), and vol. xii, part 2, pp. 930—1, sub Zouche.)" [Complete Peerage I:353, footnote (d), as thoroughly corrected in Volume XIV.]

    William married Cecily de Rumilly. Cecily (daughter of Robert de Rumilly) was born in of Skipton, Yorkshire, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  7. 39.  Cecily de Rumilly was born in of Skipton, Yorkshire, England (daughter of Robert de Rumilly).
    Children:
    1. Avice de Rumilly
    2. 19. Maud le Meschin was born in of Skipton-in-Craven, Yorkshire, England; died after 1180.
    3. Alice de Rumilly was born in of Skipton-in-Craven, Yorkshire, England; died in 1187.

  8. 40.  William Biset was born in of Holderness, Yorkshire, England.

    William married Hawise. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  9. 41.  Hawise
    Children:
    1. 20. Manasser Biset died in 1177.

  10. 48.  Saher I de Quincy was born in of Long Buckby, Northamptonshire, England; died between 1156 and 1158.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate birth: of Daventry, Northamptonshire, England

    Saher married Maud de Senlis after 1136. Maud (daughter of Simon I de Senlis and Maud of Northumberland) was born about 1092; died after 1158. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  11. 49.  Maud de Senlis was born about 1092 (daughter of Simon I de Senlis and Maud of Northumberland); died after 1158.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: 1140
    • Alternate death: Between 1158 and 1163
    • Alternate death: Bef 1165

    Notes:

    Also called Maud de St. Liz.

    Children:
    1. 24. Robert de Quincy was born in of Tranant, East Lothian, Scotland; died after 20 Aug 1201.
    2. Alice de Senlis died in 1204.

  12. 50.  Ness fitz William was born in of Leuchars, Fife, Scotland (son of William of Leuchars).

    Notes:

    Also known as Ness Fitz Countess [Royal Ancestry] and Ness de Leuchars.

    Children:
    1. 25. Orabel fitz Ness died before 30 Jun 1203.

  13. 52.  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]


  14. 53.  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. 26. 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. Hawise of Leicester died on 24 Apr 1197.
    4. Margaret of Leicester was born about 1125; died after 1185.

  15. 54.  William de Grandmesnil (son of Robert de Grandmesnil and Agnes de Bayeux).
    Children:
    1. 27. Pernel de Grandmesnil died on 1 Apr 1212.

  16. 56.  Uchtred of Galloway was born in of Galloway, Perthshire, Scotland (son of Fergus of Galloway and (Unknown wife of Fergus of Galloway)); died on 22 Sep 1174.

    Notes:

    Slain by his brother Gilbert in a dispute over the fruits of William the Lion's invasion of Northumberland.

    Uchtred married Gunnild of Dunbar. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  17. 57.  Gunnild of Dunbar (daughter of Waltheof of Dunbar and Sigrid).
    Children:
    1. 28. Roland fitz Uchtred was born in of Galloway, Perthshire, Scotland; died on 19 Dec 1200 in Northampton, Northamptonshire, England; was buried in Priory of St. Andrew, Northampton, Northamptonshire, England.
    2. Devorguilla of Galloway

  18. 58.  Richard de Morville was born in 1125 in of Lauder in Lauderdale, Berwickshire, Scotland (son of Hugh de Morville and Beatrice de Beauchamp); died in 1189.

    Notes:

    Hereditary Constable of Scotland.

    Richard married Avice de Lancaster. Avice (daughter of William de Lancaster and Gundred de Warenne) was born in 1155; died in 1191. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  19. 59.  Avice de Lancaster was born in 1155 (daughter of William de Lancaster and Gundred de Warenne); died in 1191.
    Children:
    1. 29. Ellen de Morville died on 11 Jun 1217 in Galloway, Perthshire, Scotland.

  20. 60.  John fitz Richard was born about 1145 in of Halton, Runcorn, Cheshire, England (son of Robert fitz Eustace and Aubrey de Lisours); died in 1190 in Acre, Palestine.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: 1190, Tyre

    Notes:

    Constable of Chester. Died at the siege of Acre in the Third Crusade.

    Also called John de Lacy; John fitz Eustace. Richardson calls him only "John."

    John married Alice fitz Roger. Alice (daughter of Roger fitz Richard and Alice de Vere) died after 1190. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  21. 61.  Alice fitz Roger (daughter of Roger fitz Richard and Alice de Vere); died after 1190.

    Notes:

    Also called Alice de Vere.

    Children:
    1. Joan of Chester
    2. 30. Roger de Lacy was born about 1165 in of Halton, Runcorn, Cheshire, England; died on 1 Oct 1211; was buried in Stanlaw Abbey, Wirrall, Cheshire, England.

  22. 62.  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]


  23. 63.  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. 31. 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.