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Family Subtree Diagram : ...Margery Bigod (1174)

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# Note: Page: 2680
# Note: Text: no parents indicated
1075 - 1138 Nicholas de Stafford 63 63 1076 Nigel de Stafford 0958 Hawise de Guines 0985 Adela d'Eu 0978 Brionne 0935 Papia de Normandy 0955 William de Hieme 0973 Hawise Normandy Title: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition, by Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., 1999
Page: 39-22Text: illegal dau of Richard I ,Page: 214-22 
0970 Muriella De Normandy Sources:
Title: DeMontfort.ged
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Text: Date of Import: 7 Feb 2005
Title: William de Talbot.ged
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Text: Date of Import: 10 Feb 2005
Title: Robert de Brus.ged
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Text: Date of Import: 12 Feb 2005
Title: Emma of Brittany.ged
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Text: Date of Import: 12 Feb 2005
Title: The Magnificent.ged
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Text: Date of Import: 12 Feb 2005
Title: geoffery de neville.ged
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Text: Date of Import: 2 Apr 2005
1038 - 1088 Robert de Toeni 50 50 1025 - 1066 Richard le Goz 41 41 # Note: HUGH D'AVRANCHES, EARL OF CHESTER
# Note: The Conqueror and His Companions
# Note: by J.R. Planché, Somerset Herald. London: Tinsley Brothers, 1874.
# Note:
# Note:

    Richard Goz, Vicomte d'Avranches, or more properly of the Avranchin, was one of the sons of the aforesaid Turstain, by his wife Judith de Montanolier, and appears not only to have avoided being implicated in the rebellion of his father, but obtained his pardon and restoration to the Vicomté of the Hiemois, to which at his death he succeeded, and to have strengthened his position at court by securing the hand of Emma de Conteville, one of the daughters of Herluin and Herleve, and half-sister of his sovereign. By this fortunate marriage he naturally recovered the lands forfeited by his father and bestowed on his mother-in-law, and acquired also much property in the Avranchin, of which he obtained the Vicomté, in addition to that of the Hiemois.

# Note:

    There was every reason, therefore, that he should follow his three brothers-in-law in the expedition to England, if not prevented by illness or imperative circumstances. He must have been their senior by some twenty years, but still scarcely past the prime of life, and his son Hugh a stripling under age, as his mother, if even older than her brothers Odo and Robert, could not have been born before 1030, and if married at sixteen, her son in 1066 would not be more than nineteen at the utmost. Mr. Freeman, who places the marriage of Herleve with Herluin after the death of Duke Robert in 1035, would reduce this calculation by at least six years, rendering the presence of her grandson Hugh at Senlac more than problematical.

---------------------------------------------------

    Crispin, M 1969 (pp. 79-80) is no doubt incorrect in showing Emma de Conteville as Richard's wife. Moriarty, 1985 (p. 11) says the marriage is probably unfounded. However Todd A. Farmerie cited the marriage, 7 July 2000, based upon an article by Keats-Rohan. But Todd says the mother was "Turuvai".
0989 - 1041 Thurston Toustien le Goz 52 52 # Note: HUGH D'AVRANCHES, EARL OF CHESTER
# Note: The Conqueror and His Companions
# Note: by J.R. Planché, Somerset Herald. London: Tinsley Brothers, 1874.
# Note:

    The third son of Gerlotte was Ansfrid the Dane, the first Vicomte of the Hiemois, and father of Ansfrid the second, surnamed Goz, above mentioned, whose son Turstain (Thurstan, or Toustain) Goz was the great favourite of Robert Duke of Normandy, the father of the Conqueror, and accompanied him to the Holy Land, and was entrusted to bring back the relics the Duke had obtained from the Patriarch of Jerusalem to present to the Abbey of Cerisi, which he had founded. Revolting against the young Duke William in 1041 (Vide vol. i, p. 21), Turstain was exiled, and his lands confiscated and given by the Duke to his mother, Herleve, wife of Herluin de Conteville.

# Note:
Title: The Plantagenet Ancestry, by William Henry Turton, 1968
Page: 138

Title: Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, by G. E Cokayne, Sutton Publishing Ltd, 2000
Page: III:164
0994 Judith of Montpellier # Note: Title: The Plantagenet Ancestry, by William Henry Turton, 1968
# Note: Page: 138
0985 Beatrice le Goz 0975 William of Montpellier 0950 William of Montpellier 0980 - 1071 Neil de St. Saveur 91 91 Title: The Plantagenet Ancestry, by William Henry Turton, 1968
Page: 107
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    Lawson, P. H., Fellow of the Society of Antiquarians; "The Duttons of Dutton, county Chester," Chart, Cheshire County, England. Sources cited by Lawson: Ormerod's "Cheshire," 2nd Ed.; J.P. Yeatman, Ho. of Arundel, 1882, in Lt. Col. W.H. Turtor's Plantagenet Ancestry; J. H. Tyrrell's History of the Tyrell's; Latrie's Tresor de Chronologie; Harl., Wills, Visitations of Cheshire, 1580, 1613; Randle Holme pedigrees in Harl MSS; Wills; Marriage Lics; Freeman Rolls; and parish registers from Frodsham, Waverton and Thornton; and private information.

http://www.genealogy.dutton.net/
0989 Roger de St. Sauveur 0940 Roger St. Saveur 0951 Sprota de Normandy 0905 - 0972 Nigel de St. Sauveur 67 67 1060 - 1107 Roger Bigod 47 47 # Note:

    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]

Title: The Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999
Page: 155-1, 156-1, 157-2
1064 - 1135 Adeliza de Toeni 71 71 1116 - 1199 Juliana de Vere 83 83 # Note:

    Juliana de Vere (daughter of Alice and Aubrey de Vere II), living 1185; m. (1) as his (2) wife, Hugh Bigod, 1st Earl of Norfolk, b. c 1095, Lord of Framlingham 1120, Royal Steward 1123 (son of Roger Bigod, d. Sep 1107, and his wife Alice, living 1130, daughter of Robert de Toeni, Lord of Belvoir). The marriage of Juliana and Hugh was annulled. Juliana m. (2) Walkelin Maminot, d. 1182 and (3) Roger de Glanville, dead 7 Richard I. Hugh m. (2) Gundred, d. 1200/8, apparently daughter of Roger, Earl of Warwick, by Gundred, daughter of William de Warenne, Earl of Surrey. [Magna Charta Sureties]

# Note:

Title: Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999
Page: 155-1
1008 - 1073 Nigel de Saint Sauveur 65 65 # Note:

    Citing Rev. Statham's "The Descent of the family of Statham" (London, 1925), only mentions Adele, daughter of William de Vernon as a wife of Niel. However the charter witnessed by Niel and his wife Adele, along with nearly all of their children, took place after all of the children were born. Thus any prior wife would not be indicated. The dates of Niel's 1st children would indicate an earlier wife. The charter did not mention the son Ivo (only sons Roger, William, another William, and Gerard), but did mention two other daughters besides Bilelde (Emma and Mahildis, either one of which could be the daughter that married Robert Bigod).
1090 Jane Bigod 1095 - 1176 Hugh Bigod 81 81 # Note: Hugh Bigod, 1st Earl of Norfolk, b. c. 1095, Lord of Framlingham, 1120, Royal Steward, 1123 (son of Roger Bigod, d. Sep 1107, and his wife Alice, living 1130, daughter of Robert de Toeni, Lord of Belvoir). [Magna Charta Sureties]

---------------------------

# Note:

    Hugh Bigod, brother of William, steward of the household of King Henry I, was also steward to King Henry I, who being mainly instrumental in raising Stephen, Earl of Bologne, to the throne upon the decease of his royal master, was rewarded by this new king with the Earldom of the East Angles, commonly called Norfolk, and by that designation we find him styled in 1140 (6th Stephen). His lordship remained faithful in his allegiance to King Stephen through the difficulties which afterwards beset that monarch, and gallantly defended the castle of Ipswich against the Empress Maud and her son until obligated at length to surrender for want of timely relief. In the 12th Henry II, this powerful noble certified his knight's fee to be one hundred and twenty-five "de vetri feoffamento," and thirty-five "de novo," upon the occasion of the assessment in aid of the marriage of the king's daughter; and he appears to have acquired at this period a considerable degree of royal favour, for we find him not only re-created Earl of Norfolk,by charter, dated at Northampton, but by the same instrument obtaining a grant of the office of steward, to hold in as ample a manner as his father had done in the time of Henry I. Notwithstanding, however, these and other equally substantial marks of the kings liberality, the Earl of Norfolk sided with Robert, Earl of Leicester, in the insurrection incited by that nobleman in favor of the king's son (whom Henry himself had crowned,) in the 19th of the monarch's reign; but his treason upon this occasion cost him the surrender of his strongest castles, and a find of 1,000 marks. After which he went into the Holy Land with the Earl of Flanders, and died in 1177. His lordship had married twice; by his 1st wife, Julian, dau. of Alberic de Vere, he had a son, Rogers; and by his 2nd, Gundred, he had two sons, Hugh and William. He was s. by his eldest son, Roger Bigod, 2nd earl. [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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# Note:

The Bigods held the hereditary office of steward (dapifer) of the royal household, and their chief castle was at Framlingham in Suffolk. (Encyclopædia Britannica, 1961 ed, Vol. 3, pages 556/557, Hugh Bigod, Earl of Norfolk.)

# Note:

Title: The Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999
Page: 155-1

Title: Burke's Peerage & Baronetage, 106th Edition, Charles Mosley Editor-in-Chief, 1999
Page: 2090
1096 Gunnor Bigod 1035 - 1071 Robert Bigod 36 36 Title: The Plantagenet Ancestry, by William Henry Turton, 1968
Page: 138
1040 Saint Sauveur 1015 - 1071 Robert Bigod 56 56 1044 Adela de Vernon 1060 Billihild de Saint Sauveur 1176 Mary Bigod 1134 Isabel Bigod Gundred Hugh Bigod William Bigod 1170 - 1224 Hugh Bigod 54 54 Hugh Bigod (1186-1225) of Thetford, was the eldest son of Roger, Earl of Norfolk, and for a short time the 3rd Earl of Norfolk, Earl Marshall of England, and one of the 25 surites of Magna Carta of King John. He succeeded to his father s estates circa 1220, during the 5th year of the reign of King Henry III. (Richard Thomson: An Historical Essay on Magna Charta, London, 1829; Page 311.) Hugh Bigod, the 3rd Earl of Norfolk, was one of the eight Barons who resisted the King's autocratic maladministration of the economy in what later became known as the barons war which was led by Simon de Montfort, Earl of Leicester, and brother-in-law to Henry III. The revolt now represents the most important demand for parliamentary democracy in England, called for by peers of the realm, after the events that led King John to sign Magna Charta.

Simon de Montfort was one of the 12 signitories of the 'April Confederacy', which represented the inception of the revolutionary movement, and one of the 24 authors of the 'Provisions of Oxford'. He was one of the 15 members of the privy council, along with Hugh Bigod and the earls of Gloucester and Hereford, Roger Mortimer, John fitz Geoffrey, Peter de Montfort, (not related to Simon), and the Bishop of Worcester. These barons thought fit to stand against the King and signed an oath to form a commune 'in which they swore to look after each others interests'. Richard de Clare, Earl of Gloucester, and Roger, then the Earl of Norfolk (Hugh Bigod's father), and Peter of Savoy signed the oath.

The conservative faction, led by Richard, Earl of Gloucester, supported the Provisions of Oxford and the Ordinance of the Sheriffs, but opposed the Provisions of Westminster. They wanted control over the king and his officials, but rejected a similar control over themselves and their agents. While many of the barons joined this alliance, Hugh Bigod, the justiciar, and Humphrey de Bohun, Earl of Hereford, remained neutral.

King Henry III's foreign advisors were compelled to leave the country, for fear of their lives, following the disruption that followed these events, but were met at the castle of the Bishop of Winchester, Aymer of Valance, one of the foreign advisors employed by Henry, and were besieged by the Barons. The Barons confederaton, lead by Hugh Bigod, banished the French from the country, confiscating their castles issuing a stern warning not to return.

De Montfort had the support of the Earl of Gloucester, the 'Cinque Ports', and the citizens of London, besides most of the lesser nobility, and controlled the south of the country. In May 1264, Leicester discovered the king was camped at Lewes, and on 14th, attacked and won the Battle of Lewes, capturing Henry, his brother the Prince Edward, Richard of Cornwall and Henry of Almain.

Simon De Montfort later was killed at the Battle of Evesham, but the revolt continued until July of 1267 with small pockets of resistance remaining in different parts of the country.

Hugh Bigod's family conections to the king of Scotland
The 3rd Earl Norfolk had married in 1207 to Maude Marshall (1192-1248), daughter of Sir William Marshal, Earl of Pembroke, at Pembroke in Pembrokeshire.

Hugh and Maud had the following children:
Roger Bigod, 4th Earl of Norfolk, born in 1212.

Hugh Bigod, Justiciar of England.

Isabel de Bigod (married first to Gilbert de Lacy)

Sir Ralph Bigod.

William Bigod.

1150 - 1221 Roger Bigod 71 71 # Note:

    Roger Bigod, 2nd earl of Norfolk, who, in the 1st year of Richard I, had a charter dated at Westminster, 27 November, reconstituting him Earl of Norfolk and steward of the household, his lordship obtaining at the same time restitution of some manors, with grants of others, and confirmation of all his wide-spreading demesnes. In the same year he was made one of the ambassadors from the English monarch to Philip of France, for obtaining aid towards the recovery of the Holy Land. Upon return of King Richard from his captivity, the Earl of Norfolk assisted at the great council held by the king at Nottingham; and at his second coronation, his lordship was one of the four earls that carried the silken canopy over the monarch's head. In the reign of King John he was one of the barons that extorted the great Charters of Freedom from that prince, and was amongst the twenty-five lords appointed to enforce their fulfillment. His lordship m. Isabel, dau. of Hamelyn, Earl of Warrenne and Surrey, and had issue,

# Note: Hugh, his successor.
# Note: William, m. Margaret, dau of Robert de Sutton, with whom he acquired considerable property.
# Note: Thomas.
# Note: Margery, m. to William de Hastings.
# Note: Adeliza, m. to Alberic de Vere, Earl of Oxford.
# Note: Mary, m. to Ralph Fitz-Robert, Lord of Middlesham.

# Note: The earl d. in 1220 and was s. by his eldest son, Hugh Bigod, 3rd earl.
# Note:
# Note: [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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# Note: The Bigods held the hereditary office of steward (dapifer) of the royal household, and their chief castle was at Framlingham in Suffolk. [Encyclopaedia Britannica, 1961 ed, Vol. 3, pages 556/557, article Hugh Bigod, Earl of Norfolk.)

# Note:

Title: The Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999
Page: 3-1, 7-1, 17c-1, 155-2

Title: Burke's Peerage & Baronetage, 106th Edition, Charles Mosley Editor-in-Chief, 1999
Page: 2090
1154 Isabella Ida De Warrenne # Note:

Title: Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999
Page: 7-1, 17c-1, 155-2
Text: States only the first name "Ida" as wife

Title: The Plantagenet Ancestry, by William Henry Turton, 1968
Page: 138
1087 - 1136 Mary Bigod 49 49 0880 - 0933 Richard de St. Sauveur 53 53 0980 Pappia Normandy # Note: Title: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition, by Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., 1999
# Note: Page: 177-3

Marriage 1 *Gulbert de Saint Valery b: ABT 0977 in St Valery,France

    * Married: ABT 1004 in St Valery,France

Children

   1. Has Children *Bernard II de Saint Valery b: ABT 1005 in St Valery,France
   2. Has Children *Richard de Hugleville b: 1008 in St Valaery-en-Caux, Normandy, France
0933 - 0996 Richard Normandy 63 63 # Note: Sources: RC 24, 89, 166, 168, 222; Coe; AF; Kings and Queens of Britain;Norr (pages 46, 60); The Dukes of Normandy by Onslow; Butler; Pfafman;

    A. Roots 1-19, 39, 121E; Kraentzler 1153, 1156, 1174, 1176, 1180, 1194, 1211,1218, 1265, 1432, 1443; Davis; Magna Charta Sureties 157-1.Roots: Richard I, "the Fearless," b. Fecamp, ca. 933; named father's heir 29 May 942. Married first (Danish wife) Gunnor but betrothed ca. 945 and

# Note: eventually married 960 to Emma. After Emma's death he married (Christian marriage) Gunnor to legitimize their children.
# Note: Sureties: Richard I, the Fearless, Duke of Normandy.
# Note: Richard "sans Peur," Third Duke of Normandy, 942-996.

    The line to the dukes of Normandy comes through Isabel St. Liz, and the line to Charlemagne comes through her husband, William Mauduit. The lines merge again with the marriage of Richard I, Duke of Normandy, and Emma, daughter of Hugh "The Grand," who was--in all but name--King of France. His son, Hugh Capet, later assumed the title, and primogeniture began in the French line of kings.The two lines met again later with the marriage of Adele, daughter of King Robert II, and Richard III, Duke of Normandy.Richard was betrothed to Emma for some time but did not marry her until about 960, after the death of her father, Hugh the Great, in 956. Richard was the guardian of Hugh's son, the Duke of Paris, and eventually married Emma to strengthen his position. He did not treat her unkindly, he merely loved Gunnor."Poor Emma passed her life at Rouen alone and solitary, and eventually she pined away and died about the year 962," Onslow says.

    Davis: Richard I, the Fearless, Duke of Normandy from 942-996.Norr: Richard I, the Fearless (san Peur), born about 933, 3rd duke. Married (1) Agnes, daughter of Hugh le Grand and had issue. Married (2) Gunora, born about 952, sister of a forester's wife whom Richard desired but who tricked him with her younger sister.

# Note: Richard I, "the Fearless" (sans Peur), 3rd Duke of Normandy (942/3-996), son of William Longsword and Sprote de Bretagne.

# Note: SOURCES:
# Note: 1. Stuart, Roderick W. _Royalty for Commoners_. 2nd Edition. Baltimore,
# Note: MD: Genealogical Publishing Company, Inc., 1992; line 166-33. Only says that he was born about 933. Died 20 Nov 996 at Fecamp. Married after 962, (1) Emma (Agnes), daughter of Hugh le Grand, Count of Paris.
# Note: 2. Taute, Anne. "Kings and Queens of Great Britain" chart. __ Edition.
# Note: Gives her date of death as 996.
# Note:

    3. Norr, Vernon M. _Some Early English Pedigrees_, page 60, generation 38.Gives his death date as 996. This source states that he married (1)Agnes, daughter of Hugh le Grand; had issue by and later married (2),after Agnes' death, Gunora, born 952.4. Ancestral File (AFN:9HMD-VF). Gives his birth date as 28 Aug 933. Death date agrees with that given in Stuart.

0953 - 1015 Geoffroy FitzRichard Brionne 62 62 # Note: Gilbert, Count of Brionne, who was son of Godfrey, Count of Brionne, illegitimate son of Richard I, the Fearless, Duke of Normandy. [Magna Charta Sureties, line 157-1]

# Note: Title: Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999
# Note: Page: 157-1
1010 - 1066 William d'Aubigny 56 56 William d'Aubigny, Seigneur of Aubigny (subsequently Saint-Martin d'Aubigny), Normandy; married by 1048 sister of Grimald de Plessis. [Burke's Peerage]
# Note:
# Note: ---------------------------------
# Note:
# Note: Aubigny, Alibini, etc., Earls of Arundel
# Note:
# Note: Saint-Martin d'Aubigny: Manche, arr. Coutances, cant. Periers.
# Note:
# Note:

    The early history of the family will be found in The Complete Peerage, surname Mowbray, new ed., vol. ix, pp. 366-7. The details of their benefactions to the abbey of Lessay as confirmed by a charter of Henry II, 1185-1188, identify St-Martin d'Aubigny with the Aubigny which was the caput of their Norman honour; thus the "ecclesiam de Folgeriis" is Feugeres 2 1/2 kil. SE of Aubigny, the "feria Sancti Christofori" mentioned in conjunction with the "forum Albinneii" is St-Christophe-d'Aubigny, a parish now united to that of St-Martin, and "Marchesis" is Marchesieux, 5 kil. NE of Aubigny. There is no trace of a feudal castle at Aubigny itself, but Gerville found nearby at Le Mesnil-Vigot the remains of a considerable castle with a well-defined motte, then known as "le chateau de St-Clair". [Origins of Some Anglo-Norman Families]

0985 Roger de Montgomerie 1023 - 1059 Yvron Bellomontensis 36 36 1020 - 1072 de Lassy Hughes 52 52 0970 - 1034 Ansfred Unfroi le Goz 64 64 0964 Fredesende de Normandy 0890 Ragnald Swenosson 0917 Gerletta of Normandy 0845 Sweno Eiriksson 0810 Eiric Eiriksson 0780 Eiric Gudrodsson 0812 Sigurd Eiriksson 0815 Ragnhild Eiriksdottir 1072 Agnes de Toeni 1086 William d'Albini 1100 Cicely Bigod # Note: Abbrev: Complete Peerage
# Note: Title: Cokayne, George E, Periodical Cokayne's "Complete Peerage". (Norfolk)
# Note: Page: (Norfolk, p.578, note c)
D. 1060 Billeheude de St. Sauveur  [Pullen010502.FTW]

Excerpted from Les Seigneurs de Bohon by Jean LeMelletier, Coutances:
Arnaud-Bellee, 1978: Billeheude is sometimes considered the daughter of a certain Richard de Billeheust or Richard de Saint Sauveur. In the family we find a Bileud or Bilelde, but at a later date she is considered the daughter of Neel II of Saint Saveur, one of the principal barons who revolted against William the Bastard during his youth.

Sources:

   1. Abbrev: Pullen010502.FTW
      Title: Pullen010502.FTW
      Note:
      Call number:
      Text: Date of Import: Jan 5, 2002
   2. Abbrev: Les Seigneurs de Bohun
      Title: Jean LeMelletier, Les Seigneurs de Bohun (Coutances, Arnaud-Bellee, 1978)8.
      Note:
      Call number: CS 439 D416L45 1978

      UCLA Research Library 
0930 - 0968 Sigfried de Guines 38 38 Sigfried (the Dane) de Guisnes
Sex: M
Birth: ABT 920 in Castle at Guines, Pas-de-Calais, France
Death: 968
Note: Count of Guines

Father: Gottfried de Haithabu b: ABT 852 in Denmark
Mother: Gisela de Lorraine

Marriage 1 Elisende de Flanders
Married: 947
Children
Heloise de Guines b: ABT 960 in Castle at Guines, Pas-de-Calais, France

http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=adamsribs&id=I8243
0937 - 0970 Elisende de Flanders 33 33 1002 Aubree de Brionne 0994 Richard de Brionne 0911 Sprote Adela de Senlis # Note: Title: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition, by Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., 1999
Page: 121e-19

Text: Sprota (Danish wife of William I of Normandy), a Breton (no last name)

# Note: Title: The Plantagenet Ancestry, by William Henry Turton, 1968
Page: 6, 100
Text: Sporta de Senlis

# Note: Title: Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, by G. E Cokayne, Sutton Publishing Ltd, 2000
Page: VI:447 (g)
Text: not named but implied as mother of Richard I & Ralph d'Ivry
1026 Ivo de Cotentin 0955 Hammon de Saint Sauveur Title: The Plantagenet Ancestry, by William Henry Turton, 1968
Page: 123
1174 - 1237 Margery Bigod 63 63 Title: The Plantagenet Ancestry, by William Henry Turton, 1968
Page: 118

Title: The Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999
Page: 164-2
~1090 - 1140 Hervey Fitz de Bigod 50 50 0968 - 1020 Giroie le Goz 52 52
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