Dau. of Hugh de Grentesmesnil; m. Robert de Bigot/Wigot and was mother of his 7 children. [Falaise Roll, p. 98]
MINOR, NEWLIN LINES
Dau. of Hugue de Grentemesnil and Adeliza de Beaumont; m. Roger d'Ivri. [Falaise Roll, p. 60, 64]
m. Roger I Bigod; mother of Gunnor who m. Robert de Essex. [GRS 3.03, Automated Archives, CD#100]
Dau. of Adeliza de Beaumont and Hugh de Grandmesnil; m. Roger de Albini. [Larry Overmire <larryover@worldnet.att.net, 26 Jun 2002]
Dau. of Robert de Todeni of Guerny, lord of Belvoir Castle; m. Roger le Bigod; mother of Sir Hugh Bigod; mother of Gunnora who m. Robert Fitz Suein. [Charlemagne & Others, Chart 2997,3388b]
NEWLIN, WAITE LINE - 25th ggrandmother
Dau. of Robert de Tosny and Adela/Adeliza; m. Roger I Bigod; mother of Hugh Bigod, Earl of Norfolk, Cecily who m. William I Brito d'Albini, Jane who m. Richard, and Maud who m. William II d'Aubigny. [GRS 3.03, Automated Archives, CD#100]
On p. 231 Wareham says "...By 1130 Roger's widow Alice de Tosny still owed a relief of 198 pounds for the inheritance of her father's estates, but the Tosny fees in Leicester (presumably Belvoir) which formed the dowry of Alice's step-daughter Cecily Bigod were under the control of the latter's husband, William d'Albini Brito...." Wareham argues that King Henry I effectively disinherited Alce de Tosny after Roger Bigod's death and before his children came of age, but, perhaps because he did not consider it problematical, he does not make it clear in the text that his sources specify that Cecily was a step-daughter.
On p. 234 Warehams says: "Hugh Bigod's loss of 10 knights fees to the husband of his half-sister may have cut very deep, and the only record of a gift passing the other way was that of three hides and 40 acres which William I d'Albini granted to Thetford Priory. This was barely a token in comparison to Matilda Bigod's dowry. In none of Hugh Bigod's charters does he make provision for the soul of his half-sisters and their descendants, but a charter drawn up for William I d'Albini records how at the death of Matilda Bigod her husband was weeping and bewailing his loss..." [UTZ@aol.com]