Nielsen Hayden genealogy

Nichole de la Haye

Female - 1230


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Nichole de la Haye was born in of Brattleby, Welton, Lincolnshire, England (daughter of Richard de la Haye and Maud de Vernon); died on 20 Nov 1230 in Swaton, North Kesteven, Lincolnshire, England.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: Bef 1231

    Notes:

    "Acting as hereditary constable ('castellan') of Lincoln, she defended the city against the baronial opponents of King John under Earl William of Lincoln, 1216." [John P. Ravilious, citation details below, citing King John by W. L. Warren (Methuen, 1981).]

    From the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (citation details below):

    The office of constable passed through her to each of her husbands, and in August 1189 she and Canville crossed to Barfleur, Normandy, to obtain a charter confirming their inheritance in both England and Normandy from King Richard. This included Lincoln Castle as it had been held by Nicola's father and grandfather. It is likely that the shrievalty of the county of Lincoln was also included in the grant, which cost Canville and Nicola 700 marks.

    In 1191 Nicola was besieged with her husband at Lincoln Castle when he quarrelled with William de Longchamp (d. 1197), the chancellor and justiciar of England in Richard's absence. In 1194 she fined for the sum of 300 marks with King Richard to marry her daughter, Matilda, according to her will, excepting one of the king's enemies. She continued to account for this debt until 1212, having renegotiated the amount with King John in 1200, and in 1201 she still owed £20, 40 marks, and one palfrey. Nicola enjoyed a cordial relationship with the fickle John. According to a later tradition recorded nearly sixty years after the events, Nicola had met John when he went to Lincoln in 1216. Her husband had recently died, and she went to meet the king leaving the castle by the eastern postern gate with its keys in her hand. She offered them to John saying that she was of great age and unable to continue with the office any longer. John sought her out and said, 'My beloved Nicola, I will that you keep the castle as hitherto, until I shall order otherwise' (Rotuli hundredorum, 1.315). The king granted the shrievalty of Lincoln to Nicola and Philip Marc a few hours before his death on 18 October 1216. The ageing widow was besieged at Lincoln by the rebels under the leadership of Louis of France, and she held the castle for the royalists until she was relieved in 1217. One source alleges that she had been entrusted with the castle 'in exchange for money' and that the castle was relieved since it would have been considered 'dishonourable not to help so brave a lady' (Historical Collections of Walter of Coventry, 2.237–8). The Histoire de Guillaume le Mare?chal narrates that, before the attack by the royalist forces, Peter des Roches, bishop of Winchester, penetrated the castle by a secret route and met Nicola to reassure her that the siege would shortly be raised. She was apparently delighted to hear the news, and it seems that her intransigent defence of the castle facilitated a successful attack by the royalists which saw the rout of the rebel forces. The battle at Lincoln on 20 May 1217 was one of two decisive battles that ended the claim of Louis to the throne of England. The ending of the siege was followed by looting and sacrilege. Despite her alleged earlier protestations of age and incompetence, Nicola determinedly held on to the office in the face of repeated attempts by William (II) Longespée, the husband of her granddaughter Idonea and son of the earl of Salisbury, to eject her from it. In 1219 she is recorded as holding dower in Swaton, Lincolnshire, worth £20 annually. Nicola resigned the office of castellan in 1226 and died in Swaton on 20 November 1230.

    From Women in Thirteenth-Century Lincolnshire (citation details below):

    Significantly, in spite of her legal subordination to her husband, Nicholaa was actively involved in the management of her estates during this marriage. The strongest image of her working in partnership with Gerard can be found in the chronicle of Richard of Devizes and concerns the events of 1191. During the king's absence on crusade, Gerard de Camville became entangled in the violent dispute between the royal chancellor and John, count of Mortain. According to Richard of Devizes, while Gerard was with John, helping him to secure the castles of Nottingham and Tickhill, 'his wife, Nicholaa, not thinking about anything womanly, defended the castle manfully' ('uxor eius Nicolaa nichil femineum cogitans, castellum viriliter custodiebat') against the chancellor's forces. Richard's sympathetic description of Nicholaa's actions contrasts strongly with his less complimentary treatment of her husband: he had characterised Gerard de Camville earlier in his narrative as a 'factious man, prodigal of his allegiance' ('homo factiosus et fidei prodigus'). Richard's choice of language to describe Nicholaa's qualities as a military leader clearly implies that, although the role which she adopted was unusual for a woman, her performance in the author's eyes was all the more praiseworthy because of her sex. Yet it might also have been intended to highlight the less satisfactory conduct of Nicholaa's husband. It was certainly a wise move by Gerard to place Nicholaa, the living focus for loyalties to the la Haye family, in charge of Lincoln castle at a time when their standing in the locality was of paramount importance. Gerard's decision to leave Nicholaa, rather than a male deputy, in command of the garrison on this occasion indicates that she played an important role in the day-to-day running of her inheritance under more stable conditions. Lincoln was, after all, a particularly large and strategically significant castle, situated on a high ridge that looked out to the west over the Trent valley. The pipe roll for 1191 reveals that mercenary soldiers were employed for forty days on the siege of Lincoln castle. It was no mean feat on Nicholaa's part to withstand a siege for over a month. [...]

    It was both a measure of Nicholaa's high esteem in [King] John's eyes and a sign of the desperate circumstances in which he found himself that on 18 October 1216, presumably just hours before his death, Nicholaa was appointed joint sheriff of Lincolnshire with Philip Mark. This appointment of a woman as a sheriff was unprecedented and needs explanation. Although Round found a near-contemporary case in Norfolk where a woman, Margaret de Caisneto, had apparently carried her late father's claim to the shrievalty to her second husband, there is no evidence that she ever held or exercised the duties associated with this office in her own right. Nicholaa's appointment might, however, have helped to set a precedent. Ela, the widowed countess of Salisbury, served as sheriff of Wiltshire in 1227-8 and 1231-7, and even appeared at the exchequer in person at Michaelmas 1236 to render account. The reasoning behind King John's apparent disregard for convention in Nicholaa's case emerges from the political conditions in Lincolnshire in 1216. William Morris, commenting on the immediate aftermath of Magna Carta, observed, 'To hold the counties at such a time required strong men'. Many of the men who might otherwise have been appointed sheriff under more peaceful conditions either were or recently had been in rebellion against the king. Thomas of Moulton, Gerard de Camville's successor to the shrievalty in 1205, was one example, and Alexander of Pointon, who accounted as sheriff to the exchequer at Michaelmas 1213, was another. Simon III of Kyme, a similarly experienced former royal administrator, also opposed John. Although Nicholaa's son and heir, Richard, was still alive in 1216 and had attained his majority, his untimely death in early March 1217 suggests that he was already suffering from poor health which prevented his emergence as a viable candidate. In any case, Richard had already forged a career in Leicestershire, Warwickshire and Oxfordshire, administering his inheritance from his father and the estates of his wife, Eustachia Basset. Nicholaa was a woman but at least she possessed an association with the shrievalty of Lincolnshire through her second husband, Gerard, and had enjoyed an opportunity to observe the workings of the office at first hand. The combination of Nicholaa's experience in managing and defending Lincoln castle, and the autonomy that she enjoyed as a widow, also made her a viable appointee. Hence her description by the 'Barnwell' chronicler as a 'matron' ('matrona'), a term that reflected both Nicholaa's standing and maturity.

    Family/Spouse: William fitz Erneis. William (son of Erneis) died about 1178. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Nichole married Gerard de Camville before 1185. Gerard (son of Richard de Camville and Alice) was born about 1150 in of Brattleby, Welton, Lincolnshire, England; died in Jan 1215. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. Richard de Camville was born in of Avington, Berkshire, England; died in Mar 1217.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Richard de la Haye was born in of Brattleby, Welton, Lincolnshire, England (son of Robert de la Haye and Muriel of Lincoln); died in 1169.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: Aft 1189

    Notes:

    Heriditary constable of Lincoln Castle.

    Richard married Maud de Vernon. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Maud de Vernon (daughter of William de Vernon and Lucy de Tancarville).
    Children:
    1. 1. Nichole de la Haye was born in of Brattleby, Welton, Lincolnshire, England; died on 20 Nov 1230 in Swaton, North Kesteven, Lincolnshire, England.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Robert de la Haye was born in of La Haye-du-Puits, Normandy, France (son of Ralph de la Haye and (Unknown) Haldup); died before 1156.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: Abt 1135

    Notes:

    Lord of Brattleby by right of his wife. Founder of Boxgrove priory. "One of Henry I's new men." [John Watson, citation details below.]

    Robert married Muriel of Lincoln. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Muriel of Lincoln (daughter of Picot of Lincoln and Beatrix).
    Children:
    1. 2. Richard de la Haye was born in of Brattleby, Welton, Lincolnshire, England; died in 1169.

  3. 6.  William de Vernon (son of Richard de Revières and Adelise Peverel); died before 1174.

    William married Lucy de Tancarville. Lucy (daughter of William de Tancarville and Maud d'Arques) died about 1165. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 7.  Lucy de Tancarville (daughter of William de Tancarville and Maud d'Arques); died about 1165.
    Children:
    1. 3. Maud de Vernon


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  Ralph de la Haye

    Notes:

    Seneschal of Robert count of Mortain.

    According to Women in Thirteenth-Century Lincolnshire by Louise J. Wilkinson (Woodbridge, Suffolk: A Royal Historical Society Publication, published by the Boydell Press, 2007), the la Haye family took their name from the honour of la Haie-du-Puits in Normandy.

    Ralph married (Unknown) Haldup. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 9.  (Unknown) Haldup (daughter of Thurstan Haldup).
    Children:
    1. 4. Robert de la Haye was born in of La Haye-du-Puits, Normandy, France; died before 1156.

  3. 10.  Picot of Lincoln was born in of Brattleby, Welton, Lincolnshire, England (son of Colswein of Lincoln).

    Picot married Beatrix. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 11.  Beatrix
    Children:
    1. 5. Muriel of Lincoln

  5. 12.  Richard de Revières was born in of Revièrs, Calvados, Normandy, France; died on 8 Sep 1107; was buried after 8 Sep 1107 in Abbey of Montebourg, Manche, Normandy, France.

    Notes:

    Or Redvers, Rivers, or Latinized to de Ripariis ("from the river-banks").

    A major supporter of Henry I against Curthose, for which he was rewarded with estates enough to make him one of the richest magnates in England.

    Long considered the first Earl of Devon, but no contemporary source confirms this; his son Baldwin is now held to have been the first of that title.

    Richard married Adelise Peverel. Adelise (daughter of William "The Elder" Peverel and Adeline) was born about 1080; died after 27 May 1156. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  6. 13.  Adelise Peverel was born about 1080 (daughter of William "The Elder" Peverel and Adeline); died after 27 May 1156.
    Children:
    1. 6. William de Vernon died before 1174.
    2. Baldwin de Revières was born about 1095; died on 4 Jun 1155; was buried in Quarr Abbey, Isle of Wight, England.

  7. 14.  William de Tancarville (son of Ralph "The Chamberlain" and Agnes Stigand); died in 1129.

    Notes:

    Chamberlain of Normandy.

    William married Maud d'Arques. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  8. 15.  Maud d'Arques (daughter of William d'Arques and Beatrice Malet).
    Children:
    1. 7. Lucy de Tancarville died about 1165.
    2. Rabel de Tancarville was born in of Tancarville, Normandy, France; died in 1140.
    3. Geoffrey de Clinton died about 1133.


Generation: 5

  1. 18.  Thurstan Haldup was born in of La Haye-du-Puits, Normandy, France.

    Notes:

    Also called Turstain; Thurstin Haldup; Richard de la Haye.

    Children:
    1. 9. (Unknown) Haldup

  2. 20.  Colswein of Lincoln was born in of Brattleby, Welton, Lincolnshire, England.

    Notes:

    Domesday tenant of Brattleby.

    Children:
    1. 10. Picot of Lincoln was born in of Brattleby, Welton, Lincolnshire, England.

  3. 26.  William "The Elder" Peverel was born in of Nottingham, Nottinghamshire, England (son of Ranulf Peverel); died on 28 Jan 1114.

    Notes:

    "[H]ad extensive holdings, afterwards known as the honor of Peverel, consisting of 100 lordships in co. Nottingham and Northants, fourteen in co. Derby, and some twenty others; founded Lenton Priory and St. James's Abbey near Nottingham." [The Wallop Family, citation details below.]

    William married Adeline. Adeline died after 1129. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 27.  Adeline died after 1129.
    Children:
    1. 13. Adelise Peverel was born about 1080; died after 27 May 1156.
    2. William Peverel was born about 1090 in of Nottingham, Nottinghamshire, England; died after 1155.

  5. 28.  Ralph "The Chamberlain" was born in of Tancarville, Normandy, France (son of Ralph fitz Gerald); died before 1083.

    Ralph married Agnes Stigand. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  6. 29.  Agnes Stigand (daughter of Eudes Stigand).
    Children:
    1. 14. William de Tancarville died in 1129.

  7. 30.  William d'Arques was born in of Arques-la-Bataille, France (son of Godfrey de Bolbec and (Unknown) d'Arques); died after 1086.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: Abt 1095

    Notes:

    Domesday lord of Folkestone.

    William married Beatrice Malet. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  8. 31.  Beatrice Malet (daughter of William Malet and Hesilia Crispin).
    Children:
    1. 15. Maud d'Arques
    2. Emma d'Arques


Generation: 6

  1. 52.  Ranulf Peverel

    Notes:

    There seems little doubt that Ranulf Peverel existed; what's at issue is whether he was father to any of the other real and alleged Peverels of the late eleventh century. It seems at least plausible that he was father to William Peverel "the Elder" (d. 1114), and that Robert Peverel (father of Ascelina, wife of Geoffrey de Walterville) was William the Elder's brother -- or possibly half-brother, sharing with him a father but not a mother. A somewhat messy collection of snippets from the literature is here.

    Children:
    1. Robert Peverel
    2. 26. William "The Elder" Peverel was born in of Nottingham, Nottinghamshire, England; died on 28 Jan 1114.

  2. 56.  Ralph fitz Gerald died before 1066.
    Children:
    1. 28. Ralph "The Chamberlain" was born in of Tancarville, Normandy, France; died before 1083.

  3. 58.  Eudes Stigand
    Children:
    1. 29. Agnes Stigand

  4. 60.  Godfrey de Bolbec (son of Osbern de Bolbec and Wevia).

    Notes:

    Viscount of Arques.

    Godfrey married (Unknown) d'Arques. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  5. 61.  (Unknown) d'Arques (daughter of Gozelon d'Arques and Emeline).
    Children:
    1. 30. William d'Arques was born in of Arques-la-Bataille, France; died after 1086.

  6. 62.  William Malet was born in of Graville St Honorine, Seine Inferieure, Normandy, France; died in 1071.

    Notes:

    Proven companion of William the Conqueror.

    Sheriff of York. Castellan of York.

    "Of unknown parentage, he was described by Guy d'Amiens as part Norman part English and as 'compater Heraldi', which indicates either spiritual affinity or close companionship with Harold Godwinsson (Carmen de Hastingae Proelio, 2nd, edn, p. 34). His father was probably his predecessor as lord of Graville and tenant of the Giffards in numerous other fiefs in the same region. Legends associating his son-in-law Turold the Sheriff with Godiva of Mercia, mother of Harold's wife, probably indicate a relationship between William's mother and the earls of Mercia or their wives. A strong association of William and his family with Lincolnshire suggest that his English roots lay there. Between 1060 and c. 1066 William occurs with William I in a number of charters relating to the abbeys of Montivilliers and Jumieges (Fauroux, 89; CDF 329). He was associated with the abbey of Preaux in the Lieuvin, of which he was given the fellowship by Abbot Ansfrid in 1060, and with the abbey of Bee, which later mistakenly identified him with his descendant, a monk of the same name. His interests in the region of Lisieux probably originated in his marriage to Esilia, daughter of Gilbert I Crispin, castellan of Tillieres in the Vexin. He fought at Hastings and was soon credited with having been ordered to bury Harold's body on the sea-shore; whether he had anything to do with Harold's burial is uncertain, but it now seems clear that the body was buried at the church Harold founded at Waltham. In 1068 William became castellan of the first castle at York and sheriff of Yorkshire. In September 1069 the city was attacked by Danes. Briefly held captive, William, his wife, and their younger children were among the few to escape alive (Ord. ViI. 2, 178, 222; Symeon of Durham, Opera Omnia, ii. 188). He lost the shrievalty of York and the land associated with it soon afterwards, and was thereafter occupied in suppressing the fenland revolt led by Hereward the Wake. Domesday Book makes it clear that he died in the campaign, probably in 107l. At his death, the bulk of his wealth lay in the vast lordship (the honour of Eye) granted to him in East Anglia, principally in Suffolk (where he had a castle and a market at Eye), but also in Norfolk, Essex, Surrey, Bedfordshire and Nottinghamshire." [Domesday Descendants, citation details below]

    William married Hesilia Crispin. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  7. 63.  Hesilia Crispin (daughter of Gilbert Crispin).
    Children:
    1. 31. Beatrice Malet
    2. Gilbert Malet