Le Bigod, Roger 1 2 3

Birth Name Le Bigod, Roger
Gramps ID I582807650
Gender male
Age at Death 47 years, 8 months, 7 days

Events

Event Date Place Description Notes Sources
Birth 1060 St. Sauveur, Normandy  
 
Death 1107-09-08 Thetford, Norfolk, England  
4
Nobility Title     Earl Of East Anglia
 
Burial   Abbey Of Whetford, Norfolk, England  
 
Unknown 1107-09-11   Alt. Death
 
Occupation      
 
Occupation      
 

Parents

Relation to main person Name Relation within this family (if not by birth)
Father Le Bigod, Robert [I582806077]
Mother De St. Sauveur, Dau Of Neil [I582807654]
         Le Bigod, Roger [I582807650]
    Brother     Le Bigod, Robert [I582809568]
 
Stepfather De Meri Mary, Roger [I582809550]
Mother De St. Sauveur, Dau Of Neil [I582807654]

Families

    Family of Le Bigod, Roger and De Toeni, Adelise (Alice) [F533085125]
Married Wife De Toeni, Adelise (Alice) [I582807651]
   
Event Date Place Description Notes Sources
Marriage 1088    
 
  Narrative

CHAN13 Sep 2003

  Children
  1. Bigod, Cecily [I582809548]
  2. Le Bigod, Maud [I582810229]
  3. Bigod, Jane [I582807653]
  4. Bigod, Gunnor [I582810228]
  5. De Bigod, Hugh Of Norfolk [I582807652]
  6. Bigod, Cicely [I582809630]

Narrative

Name Suffix:<NSFX> Earl Of East Anglia
The first of this great family that settled in England was Roger Bigod who, in the Conqueror's time, possessed six lordships in Essex and a hundred and seventeen in Suffolk, besides divers manors in Norfolk. This Roger, adhering to the party that took up arms against William Rufus in the 1st year of that monarch's reign, fortified the castle at Norwich and wasted the country around. At the accession of Henry I, being a witness of the king's laws and staunch in his interests, he obtained Framlingham in Suffolk as a gift from the crown. We find further of him that he founded in 1103, the abbey of Whetford, in Norfolk, and that he was buried there at his decease in four years after, leaving, by Adeliza his wife, dau. and co-heir of Hugh de Grentesmesnil, high steward of England, a son and heir, William Bigod, steward of the household of King Henry I. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 53, Bigod, Earls of Norfolk]

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Roger Bigod was one of the tight-knit group of second-rank Norman nobles who did well out of the conquest of England. Prominent in the Calvados region before 1064 as an under-tenant of Odo of Bayeux, he rose in ducal and royal service to become, but 1086, one of the leading barons in East Anglia, holding wide estates to which he added Belvoir by marriage and Framlingham by grant of Henry I. His territorial fortune was based on his service in the royal household, where he was a close adviser and agent for the first three Norman kings, and the propitious circumstances of post-Conquest politics. Much of his honour in East Anglia was carved out of lands previously belonging to the dispossessed Archbishop Stigand, his brother Aethelmar of Elham, and the disgraced Earl Ralph of Norfolk and Suffolk. Under Rufus --- if not before --- Roger was one of the king's stewards. Usually in attendance on the king, he regularly witnessed writs but was also sent out to the provinces as a justice or commissioner. Apart from a flirtation with the cause of Robert Curthose in 1088, he remained conspicuously loyal to Rufus and Henry I, for whom he continued to act as steward and to witness charters. The adherence of such men was vital to the Norman kings. Through them central business could be conducted and localities controlled. Small wonder they were well rewarded. Roger established a dynasty which dominated East Anglia from the 1140s, as earls of Norfolk, until 1306. Roger's byname and the subsequent family name was derived from a word (bigot) meaning double-headed instrument such as a pickaxe: a tribute, perhaps to Roger's effectiveness as a royal servant; certainly an apt image of one who worked hard both for his masters and for himself. [Who's Who in Early Medieval England, Christopher Tyerman, Shepheard-Walwyn, Ltd., London, 1996]
Roger Bigod or le Bigot, a feudal Baron, the first of this great family that settled in England and was, in the Conqueror's time, possessed of six lordships in Essex, 117 in Suffold. At the accession of King Henry I, being a witness of the King's laws and stanch in his interests, he obtained gifts of land from the crown, and was Lord Stewart of the King's household.

Pedigree

  1. Le Bigod, Robert [I582806077]
    1. De St. Sauveur, Dau Of Neil [I582807654]
      1. Le Bigod, Robert [I582809568]
      2. Le Bigod, Roger
        1. De Toeni, Adelise (Alice) [I582807651]
          1. Bigod, Gunnor [I582810228]
          2. De Bigod, Hugh Of Norfolk [I582807652]
          3. Bigod, Cicely [I582809630]
          4. Bigod, Jane [I582807653]
          5. Le Bigod, Maud [I582810229]
          6. Bigod, Cecily [I582809548]

Ancestors

Source References

  1. pemble [S545686325]
  2. Family History of John Carson Crow & Faye Garnett Woodward [S545686257]
  3. The Pitt County McGowans and Sermons [S545686381]
  4. woodward.FTW [S545686403]