Fitzhenry, Richard 1

Birth Name Fitzhenry, Richard
Gramps ID I582809334
Gender male
Age at Death 17 years, 10 months, 24 days

Events

Event Date Place Description Notes Sources
Birth 1103    
 
Death 1120-11-25 Drowned In The Wreck Of The White Ship Off Barfleur  
 
Nobility Title     Of England
 

Parents

Relation to main person Name Relation within this family (if not by birth)
Father Beauclerc, Henry [I582805227]
Mother UNKNOWN, Ansfrida [I582809337]
         Fitzhenry, Richard [I582809334]
 
Father Beauclerc, Henry [I582805227]
Stepmother De Tracy, Gieva [I582804245]
    Half-brother     De Tracy, William [I582803566]
 
Father Beauclerc, Henry [I582805227]
Stepmother Dunkeld, Matilda [I582805226]
    Half-sister     Beauclerc, Matilda [I582805124]
    Half-brother     Beauclerc, William [I582809333]
 
Father Beauclerc, Henry [I582805227]
Stepmother Ferch Rhys, Nesta [I582806318]
    Half-brother     Fitzhenry, Henry [I582804293]
 
Father Beauclerc, Henry [I582805227]
Stepmother De Louvain, Adelicia [I582809347]
 
Father Beauclerc, Henry [I582805227]
Stepmother Fitzforne Sigulfsson, Edith [I582808861]
    Half-brother     De Caen, Robert [I582804551]
 
Father Beauclerc, Henry [I582805227]
Stepmother Corbet, Sybilla [I582804548]
    Half-sister     Fitzhenry, Elizabeth Joan [I582804550]
    Half-sister     Fitzhenry, Sibylla Elizabeth [I582812685]
    Half-brother     De Dunstanville, Rainald [I582811664]
    Half-sister     Fitzhenry, Emma [I582809342]
    Half-brother     Fitzhenry, William [I582809667]
    Half-sister     Fitzhenry, Gundrada [I582809341]
    Half-sister     Fitzhenry, Rohese [I582809345]
 
Father Beauclerc, Henry [I582805227]
Stepmother UNKNOWN, Mistress [I582804546]
    Half-sister     Fitzhenry, Constance [I582804549]
    Half-sister     Fitzhenry, Matilda [I582803567]
    Half-sister     Fitzhenry, Alice (Aline) [I582809340]
    Half-sister     UNKNOWN, Elizabeth [I582812672]

Families

    Family of Fitzhenry, Richard and De Gael, Amice [F533083007]
Married Wife De Gael, Amice [I582804380]
   
Event Date Place Description Notes Sources
Marriage 1115    
 
  Narrative

CHAN13 Sep 2003

Narrative

Name Suffix:<NSFX> Of England
He was William's half-brother

On the 25th November 1120 a disaster struck in the English Channel which had a dramatic effect, not only on the families of those involved, but on the very fabric of English Government.
The Norman dynasty had not long established itself on the English throne and King Henry I was eager that his line should continue to wear the crown for many generations to come. Despite having numerous bastard offspring, he had but two surviving legitimate children and his hopes for his family were firmly secured by the birth of his only son, William the Aethling: called by the Saxon princely title to stress that his parents had united both Saxon and Norman Royal Houses. William was a warrior prince who, even at the age of seventeen, fought alongside his father to reassert their rights in their Norman lands on the Continent.
After the successful campaign of 1119 which culminated in King Louis VI of France's defeat and humiliation at the Battle of Brémule, King Henry and his entourage were finally preparing to return to England. Henry was offered a fine vessel, the White Ship, in which to set sail for England, but the King had already made his travelling arrangements and suggested that it would be an excellent choice for his son, William.
As the rising star of the Royal Court, Prince William attracted the cream of society to surround him. He was to be accompanied by some three hundred fellow passengers: 140 knights and 18 noblewomen; his half-brother, Richard; his half-sister, Matilda the Countess of Perche; his cousins, Stephen and Matilda of Blois; the nephew of the German Emperor Henry V; the young Earl of Chester and most of the heirs to the great estates of England and Normandy. There was a mood of celebration in the air and the Prince had wine brought aboard ship by the barrel-load to help the party go with a swing. Both passengers and crew soon became highly intoxicated: shouting abuse at one another and ejecting a group of clerics who had arrived to bless the voyage. Some passengers, including Stephen of Blois, who was ill with diarrhoea, appear to have sensed further trouble and decided to take a later craft.
The onboard revelries had delayed the White Ship's departure and it only finally set out to sea, after night had already fallen. The Prince found that most of the King's forces had already left him far behind yet, as with all young rabble-rousers, he wished to be first back home. He therefore ordered the ship's master to have his oarsmen row full-pelt and overtake the rest of the fleet. Being as drunk as the rest of them, the master complied and the ship soon began to race through the waves.
An excellent vessel though the White Ship was, sea-faring was not as safe as it is today. Many a boat was lost on the most routine of trips and people did not travel over the water unless they really had to. With a drunken crew in charge moreover, it seems that fate had marked out the White Ship for special treatment. It hit a rock in the gloom of the night and the port-side timbers cracked wide-open to reveal a gaping whole.
Prince William's quick-thinking bodyguard immediately rushed him on deck and bundled him into a small dinghy. They were away to safety even before the crew had begun to make their abortive attempts to hook the vessel off the rocks. However, back aboard ship, the Prince could hear his half-sister calling to him, begging him not to leave her to the ravages of the merciless sea. He ordered his little boat to turn round, but the situation was hopeless. As William grew nearer once more, the White Ship began to descend beneath the waves. More and more people were in the water now and they fought desperately for the safety of the Royal dinghy. The turmoil and the weight were too much. The Prince's little boat was capsized and sank without trace.
It is said that the only person to survive the wreck to tell the tale was a Rouen butcher, called Berold,

Pedigree

  1. Beauclerc, Henry [I582805227]
    1. UNKNOWN, Ansfrida [I582809337]
      1. Fitzhenry, Richard
        1. De Gael, Amice [I582804380]

Ancestors

Source References

  1. pemble [S545686325]