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Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Biological Child
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Biological Child
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Biological Child
Biological Child
Biological Child
Biological Child
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Biological Child
Biological Child
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Biological Child
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Biological Child
Biological Child
(five children)
(a child)
(two children)
(two children)
(a child)
(a child)
(three children)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(two children)
(a child)
(a child)
(two children)
(four children)
(a child)
(four children)
(a child)
(two children)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
1237 - 1282
Hugh
Neville
45
45
1190 - 1242
Geoffrey
Fitzrobert
de Neville
52
52
1201 - 1247
Joan
of
Monmouth
46
46
1224
Agnes
de
Neville
1230
Geoffrey
Neville
1170 - 1248
Robert
Fitz
Maldred
78
78
1179 - 1254
Isabelle
de
Neville
75
75
1135 - 1183
Maldred
Fitz
Dolphin
48
48
1171
de
Stuteville
1105 - 1136
Dolphin
Fitzuchtred
31
31
1115
Alice
de
Durham
1140
Patric
Fitzdolfin
Uchtred
FitzMaldred
1110 - 1184
John
de
Stuteville
74
74
1127
Agnes
1150 - 1193
Geoffrey
de
Neville
43
43
[large-G675.FTW] REF: Neville GEDCOM: Must have been of age in 1161. From 1162 he was receiving fifteen pounds yearly revenue from a grant of Ashby and Toynton. He gave lands for churches, among which was St. German's Church of Raby, In 1176 he was a circuit justice in Yorkshire. He married Emma, widow of Geoffrey de Valoignes and daughter of Bertand de Bulmer, before 1176. By the heiress of Bulmer, he acquired extensive estates, which after the death of his son Henry, without issue, devolved upon his daughter. Geoffrey was on the circuit as a Justice in Yorks.
1153 - 1208
Emma
de
Bulmer
55
55
1128 - 1168
Gilbert
de
Neville
40
40
A Companion in arms to William the Conqueror, and by some genealogists, Admiral of the fleet of William the Conqueror, remained in England with William, who in 1166 held five knights fees of the bishop of Lincoln and four of the honour of Manasser Arsic. Between 1150 and 1160 he granted Kirstead Abbey lands and the goodwill of his son and heir apparent, the son being named Geoffrey. He founded an abbey with his brother, Alan and gave land to other churches. He was dead in 1169. On the spelling of the surname Neville: The Abergavenny branch reject the final "e", while the Braybroooke branch retain it. For the sake of further distinction, the Grove, Chevet, Holbeck, Skelbrooke and Willingore baranchs omit one "L". In the old manuscripts, from "De Nova Villa", we get Neuville, Nevylle, Nevyll, Nevyl, Nevill and Nevil while the Latimers are frequently styled Nevell, but the prevailing form is Nevyll or Nevill. Richard de Nova Villa was a cousin of the Conqueror on his maternal side and he left four sons; Gilbert, Robert, Richard and Ralph. From Gilbert de Nevill descends the houses of Westmoreland, Warwick, Latimer and Abergavenny. Gilbert de Nevill is claimed by some to have been the Admiral of the of the Conqueror's fleet, an uncle of Gilbert, Foulk d'Anou furnished 40 ships for the fleet. The Norman family of Nevill came from Teutonic stock. Baldric Teutonicus was Lord of Bacqueville en Caux under Duke William. He married a niece of Gilbert Compte de Brionne, a grandson of duke Richard I who was regent of Normandy in 1040. The fourth son of Baldric Teutonicus was called Richard de Nova Villa, or de Neuville from his fife in Neuville sur Tocque in the department of the Orne, arrondissement of Argenton, and the canton of Grace. His sister, Hawisia, married Robertr Fitz Erneis who was slain at Hastings on October 14, 1066.
~1132
Philicia
de
Damoys
1119
Bertram
de
Bulmer
1124
Emma
Fossard
1100 - 1180
Robert
de
Bulmer
80
80
1080
Ascelina
1175
John
of
Monmouth
1165
Walerand
of
Monmouth
1223 - 1271
Robert
de
Neville
48
48
1222
Ralph
de
Neville
1080
Gertrude
Fossard
1047 - 1120
Nele
Fossard
73
73
1045
Osceria
de
Rotherham
1022 - 1120
Nigel
Fossard
98
98
1050
Nigel
Fossard
1052
Adam
Fossard
1187 - 1246
Jollan
de
Neville
59
59
1181
John
de
Neville
1180
Gilbert
FitzMaldred
Hansard
Title: Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, by G. E Cokayne, Sutton Publishing Ltd, 2000 Page: V:393 (d)
1075
Walcher
Durham
~1010 - >1066
Richardus
Teutonicus
de Nova Villa
56
56
[large-G675.FTW] REF: Neville GEDCOM: Richard de Nova Villa was a cousin of the Conqueror on his maternal side and he left four sons; Gilbert, Robert, Richard and Ralph. --- Sources: Title: Ancestry of Richard Plantagenet & Cecily de Neville Author: Ernst-Friedrich Kraentzler Publication: published by author 1978 Repository: Note: J.H. Garner Media: Book Page: chart 1135 Text: Richard de Neville Title: Neville GEDCOM Author: Ren Neville Publication: beschutzer@earthlink.net Note: Ren sent J.H. Garner the GEDCOM, he is interested in "Neville" as a one-name study Repository: Media: Electronic Text: 4th son, AKA Richard de Neuville Title: large-G675.FTW Repository: Media: Other Note: soc.genealogy.medieval (John Cantwell marccant@erols.com) quoting "Hubert de Burgh A Study in Constancy" by Clarence Ellis, pub. 1952 Title: Ancestry of Richard Plantagenet & Cecily de Neville Author: Ernst-Friedrich Kraentzler Publication: published by author 1978 Repository: Note: J.H. Garner Media: Book Title: Neville GEDCOM Author: Ren Neville Publication: beschutzer@earthlink.net Note: Ren sent J.H. Garner the GEDCOM, he is interested in "Neville" as a one-name study Repository: Media: Electronic --- Sources: Title: The Conquerer and his Companions Author: J.R. Planché Publication: Somerset Herald. London: Tinsley Brothers, 1874 Text: RICHARD DE NEVIL The Conqueror and His Companions by J.R. Planché, Somerset Herald. London: Tinsley Brothers, 1874. was the fourth son of Baldric the German, and so called from his fief of Neuville-sur-Tocque, in the department of the Orne, the arrondissement of Argentan, and the canton of Gacé. The name of his wife is as yet unknown to us, but she bore to him four sons, Gilbert, Robert, Richard, and Ralph. Gilbert, apparently the eldest, is the "Gilbert Normanus" traditionally said not only to have come over with the Conqueror, but to have been the admiral of his fleet. This assertion, apparently first made towards the close of the fifteenth century, is reported by Leland on the authority, as he tells us, of "a roulle of the genealogie of the Erles of Westmoreland," but giving us no idea of the date of that roll or the authorities from which it was compiled. At best it can only be looked upon as a family tradition supported, as Mr. Drummond appears to think, by the device of a ship which is to be seen on the seal of his grand-nephew Henry de Neville, preserved in the Duchy of Lancaster Office, and the date of which would be between 1199 and 1216. My experience in these matters induces me to draw an inference from this fact directly opposed to that of Mr. Drummond. It is my belief, founded on the many analogous examples I have met with in the course of a tolerably long period passed in such investigations, that the tradition of Gilbert de Neville having been an admiral has actually arisen from the appearance of this ship, which, so far from indicating any such office, is nothing more than a device alluding to the family name; Nef, in the old French language signifying a ship, and, therefore, picturing the first syllable of Nefville, as we find Muscæ (flies) upon the old seals of the Muscamps, and hosts of similar and much farther-fetched canting devices. Nearly all the strange stories and bold assertions to be met with in the works of early historical writers are found upon examination to have originated in an attempt to account for such concetti, and if Gilbert's uncle did really contribute so large a contingent as forty ships to the invading fleet, the supposition in the present instance seems a very natural one. Monsieur Leopold de Lisle, one of the ablest antiquaries in France, has in a recently compiled catalogue which has been cut in the stone of the western wall of the Church of Dives, introduced a Richard de Neuville amongst the followers of William, but no Gilbert; but neither by him nor by the Viscount de Magny, who has printed the list with some additions in his " Nobiliaire de Normandie," is any authority quoted in support of the statement, and they have probably so distinguished him from observing that the first of the name, and who was a contemporary of Duke William, was Richard de Novavilla, the father of Gilbert; but this Richard had also a son named Richard, and that some of the sons or nephews of the elder Richard were present at Hastings is very probable. The name of Nevil, it has been confidently asserted, does not appear in Domesday. Like many other confident assertions, it is untrue. Dugdale, who states this, and those who have followed him, have overlooked the name of Ralph Nevil, who held Thorpe of Turold, Abbot of Peterborough. Sir Henry Ellis has also omitted the name in his "Introduction " and indexes. It occurs however in the Clamores in Westriding, county Lincoln, and if Ralph the bishop's man be identical with the Ralph Nevil of Thorpe, as there is reason to believe, he was tenant of several other lands at the time of the survey, and we have seen that the youngest brother of Gilbert was named Ralph. Be this however as it may, it is no disparagement to the family of Nevil to hesitate, in the absence of positive authority, to number their direct ancestor amongst the leaders of that famous host; for many of the greatest men in Normandy set down in the catalogues as having fought at Senlac are now known to have first set foot in England after Duke William had secured the crown. Gilbert, the traditionary admiral, was the direct progenitor of Isabella de Neville, wife of Robert Fitz Maldred, Lord of Raby, and sole heir to her brother, the Henry de Neville before mentioned. From her son Geoffrey Fitz Maldred, who assumed his mother's name but retained his father's arms, sprang the magnificent tree the branches of which are truly said to have overshadowed the land. This Saxon line of Nevil has given to England two queens, a Princess of Wales, a mother of two kings, a Duke of Bedford, a Marquis of Montacute, Earls of Northumberland, Westmoreland, Salisbury, Kent, Warwick, and Montacute; Barons Nevil, Furnival, Latimer, Fauconberg, Montacute, and Abergavenny; Duchesses of Norfolk, Exeter, York, Buckingham, Warwick, Clarence, and Bedford; a Marchioness of Dorset; Countesses of Northumberland, Westmoreland, Arundel, Worcester, Derby, Oxford, Suffolk, Rutland, Exeter, Bridgewater, and Norwich; Baronesses de Ros, Dacre, Scrope, Dovercourt, Mountjoy, Spencer, Fitz Hugh, Harrington, Hastings, Comyn, Willoughby de Broke, Hunsdon, Cobham, Strange, Montacute, and Lucas; nine Knights of the Garter, two Lord High Chancellors, two Archbishops of York, a Bishop of Salisbury, of Exeter, and of Durham I regret that the nature and limits of this work debar me from particular notice of many members of this wonderful family, the above remarkable list of illustrious descendants being of itself a departure from the rule I have generally observed of confining my annotations to the origin and actions of the actual companions and contemporaries of the Conqueror. Memoirs of "the Peacock of the North" and "the King-maker" would alone demand a volume for their illustration; and it is unnecessary to point out the impossibility of doing similar justice to the many distinguished descendants of other families whose ancestors are recorded to have been present with Duke William at Hastings, and would have equal claims on my consideration.
Robert
de
Neville
Richard
de
Neville
Ralph
de
Neville
1080 - 1129
Thomas
de
Bulmer
49
49
Thomas de Bulmer, in the 18th Henry II [1172], paid a hundred shillings scutage for not joining the expedition then made into Ireland. He was s. by his son, Robert de Bulmer. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 88, Bulmer, Baron Bulmer]
1055
Stephen
de
Bulmer
1080
Ansketil
de
Bulmer
1031
Bertram
de
Bulmer
Bertram de Bulmer, sheriff of Yorkshire temp. King Stephen and Henry II, and founder of the priory of Barton, in that county.
1078 - 1135
Robert
Fossard
57
57
1070
Walter
Fossard
~1085
Gilbert
de
Neville
~1050
Gilbert
de
Neville
~1115 - >1165
William
Fossard
50
50
Durand de Hotham held two knights' fees of William Fossard 1165.[Burke's Peerage] Sources: Title: The Phillips, Weber, Kirk and Staggs Family Abbrev: The Phillips, Weber, Kirk and Staggs Family Author: Jim Weber Title: AFN: Abbrev: AFN:
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