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1022 - 1094
Roger
De
Montgomery
72
72
# Note: Shrewsbury, Earldom of: In early December 1074 Roger de Montgomery was created Earl of Shropshire or Shrewsbury. As with other medieval earldoms, little distinction was then made between the county town and county proper when designating a specific name for a title, chiefly because an earl, who was then more or less and official, albeit often hereditary, was inconceivable except as earl of a county. Roger was son of another Roger de Montgomery, seigneur of the Norman places (St Germain-de-Montgomery and Ste-Foy-de-Montgomery) of that name in the Calvados region. He was a prominent member of the nobles grouped around William (later William I of England, The Conqueror) of Normandy well before the 1066 invasion of England but stayed behind in Normandy during the actual enterprise. The year after Hastings he went to England and received land grants in Sussex. He is thought to have constructed the Castle of Montgomery (now in Powys, but formerly named Mongomeryshire after his family), doing so shortly before the Domesday Survey. [Burke's Peerage, p. 2604] # Note: # Note: -------------------------------- # Note: Seigneur of Montgomery and vicomte of the Heismois [Ref: CP XI:683] # Note: Earl of Arundel or Earl of Chichester, Earl of Shropshire or Salop, called Earl of Montgomery, Seigneur de Bellesme et d'Alencon [Ref: Watney p696] # Note: # Note: Seigneur de Montgomery, Vicomte of Heismois, Earl of Arundel and Shrewsbury, Regent of Normandy and England [Ref: Moriarty p44] # Note: # Note: Viscount of the Hiemois, Lord of the West Marches, Earl of Chichester, Shropshire, and Sussex [Ref: Turton] # Note: 1048: accompanied Duke William on his expedition against Domfront and Alencon [Ref: CP XI:683] # Note: 1066: was with the Duke while preparations were in progress for the invasion of England, but did not accompany the expedition [Ref: CP XI:683] # Note: # Note: Dec 1067: accompanied the King to England and thereupon received a grant of Arundel and Chichester [Ref: CP XI:683] # Note: 1086: 'Comtes Rogerus' at Domesday [Ref: Watney p696] # Note: 1st Earl of Shrewsbury [Ref: Doug Smith message to soc.genealogy.medieval 27 Apr 2002] # Note: Roger Earl of Shrewsbury. Also Roger of Montgomery. From Saint Germain de Montgomery, near Lisieux. Lord of Sussex rape of Arundel, with castle there; Earl of Shrewsbury from 1071-74 to death in 1094. Holdings in 12 counties in south, east and west. [Ref: Domesday Online] # Note: # Note: Shropshire and the Domesday Book in 1086: # Note: Roger de Montgomery II, better known as Earl Roger in the Domesday, but officially the seigneur of Montgomery, was the major recipient of Shropshire holdings. An old man of considerable wealth and power, he contributed 60 ships to the invasion fleet and was in command of a wing at the Battle of Hastings. He returned to Normandy with Queen Matilda, and the young Duke Robert as Duke William's representative in Normandy. He became head of the council that governed the Duchy of Normandy in Duke William's frequent absences in England. The Norman Montgomery family ancestry was closely interwoven either by blood or marriage with the Duchy of Normandy. However, the family history in Normandy was not without blemish. Roger had four brothers, Hugh, Robert, William and Gilbert. All four brothers were murdered in revenge for the murder of Osberne de Crepon, guardian of Duke William. Roger was the survivor. Continuing, Roger de Montgomery had four sons. Eldest was Robert, Count of Alencon, and successor in Normandy to his vast estates which he still held for his father Roger as his chief domain. He was followed by second son, Hugh, who inherited the Earldom of Arundel, Chichester and Shrewsbury, the life custodian of the main Montgomery family domains granted in England. These would eventually go to Robert in 1098, purchased from William Rufus for 3000 pounds. Next youngest was Count Roger de Poitou who was made the first Earl of Lancaster by Duke William of Normandy, a less maganamious grant which befitted the third youngest son. Philip, the youngest, remained in Normandy and accompanied Duke Robert on the first crusade to the Holy land, and died there in 1094. # Note: Earl Roger was responsible to Duke William of Normandy as his chief architect in the defence of the middle marches of the border in his defence against the Welsh. He built many castles including Montgomery, Shrewsbury, Arundel, Ludlow, Clun, Hopton and Oswestry. His son, Robert, described at the Conquest as a 'novice in arms', but who might have been 40 by the Domesday, represented his father Earl Roger, and created some confusion in the records. Roger, the father, became the Earl of Shrewsbury and the Earl of Arundel in England, and retained his domains in Normandy at Bailleul (Kings of Scotland), Belmeis (Beaumais), Pantulf, Vimoutiers, Say and Tornai. However, Earl Roger also became confused with Roger de Beaumont in Normandy, who, it is claimed, was also head of the council in Normandy. [found this online but didn't cite URL, sorry. Try google: keywords: (title above)] # Note: # Note: Earl Roger's Shropshire Land Holdings # Note: Alveley, Baschurch, Berwick (Shrewsbury), Cheney Longville, Chetton, Chirbury, Claverley, Corfham, Culmington, Donington, Dudston, Eardington, Edenhope, Edgmond, Ellesmere, Fenemere, Ford, High Ercall, Hockleton, Hodnet, Kingsmordley, Leebotwood, Loppington, Lydham, Minsterley, Montford, Morville, Netley, Oswestry, Poynton, Pulley, Quatford, Quatt, Rhiston, Romsley, Rorrington, Rowton, Rudge, Ruyton, Shavington, Shawbury, Shifnall, Shipley, Shrewsbury, Siefton, Smethcott, Spoonley, Stottesdon, Stretton, The Marsh, Tong Tuange, Walcot, Wellington, Whittingslow, Whittington, Wilderley, Wistanstow, Withington, Woodcote(Newport), Wotherton, Wrockwardine, Ackley, Aston, Basley, Churchstoke --- Roger of Montgomery, 1st Earl of Shrewsbury (d. 1094) was one of the great Anglo-Norman magnates in the period after the Norman conquest of England. He was the son of another Roger of Montgomery, who was a relative, probably a grandnephew, of duchess Gunnor, wife of duke Robert I of Normandy. The elder Roger had large holdings in central Normandy, chiefly in the valley of the Dives, which the younger Roger inherited. Roger was one of William the Conqueror's principal counselors. He did not fight in the initial invasion of England in 1066, instead staying behind to help govern Normandy. Afterwards he was entrusted with land in two places critical for the defense of England, receiving the Rape of Arundel at the end of 1067 (or in early 1068), and in November 1071 he was created Earl of Shrewsbury. (A few historians believe that while he received the Shropshire territories in 1071 he was not created earl until a few years later.) Roger was thus one of the half a dozen greatest magnates in England during William the Conqueror's reign. In addition to the large part of Sussex included in the Rape of Arundel, and seven-eights of Shropshire which were associated with the earldom of Shrewsbury, he had estates in Surrey, Hampshire, Wiltshire, Middlesex, Hertfordshire, Gloucestershire, Worcestershire, Cambridgeshire, Warwickshire and Staffordshire. After Williams's death in 1087, Roger had joined with other rebels to overthrow the newly crowned king William Rufus in the Rebellion of 1088. However William was able to convince Roger to abandon the rebellion and side with the king, which was fortuitious as the rebels were beaten and lost their land holdings in England. Roger first married Mabel of Belleme, who was heiress to a large territory on both sides of the border between Normandy and Maine. By her he had 10 children: Roger, died before 1066 Robert of Belleme, 3rd Earl of Shrewsbury Hugh of Montgomery, 2nd Earl of Shrewsbury Roger the Poitevin Philip, died 1099 while on crusade at Antioch Arnulf of Montgomery Emma, abbess of Almench ches Matilda, who married Robert, Count of Mortain Mabel, who married Hugh of Ch teauneuf-en-Thimerais Sibyl, who married Robert Fitzhamon Roger then married Adelaide of Le Puiset, by whom he had one son, Everard, who entered the Church. After his death, Roger's estates were divided. The eldest surviving son, Robert, received the bulk of the Norman estates (as well as his mother's estates); the next son, Hugh, received the bulk of the English estates and the earldom of Shrewsbury. After Hugh's death the elder son Robert inherited the earldom.
1149 - 1228
Sybil
de
Braose
79
79
# Note: Title: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition, by Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., 1999 # Note: Page: 194-6 # Note: Title: Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, by G. E Cokayne, Sutton Publishing Ltd, 2000 # Note: Page: XI:320-321
1140 - 1189
William
de
Ferrers
49
49
# Note: William de Ferrers, 3rd Earl of Derby, rebelled against Henry II and marching at the head of the Leicestershire men (19th Henry II) upon Nottingham, then kept for the king by Reginald de Luci, got possession of the town which he sacked, putting the greater part of the inhabitants to the sword and taking the rest prisoners. He was soon afterwards, however, reduced to submission and obliged to surrender to the crown his castles in Tutbury and Duffield, which were demolished by order of the king. His lordship m. Sibilla, dau. of William de Braose, Lord of Abergavenny and Brecknock, by whom he had issue. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 196, Ferrers, Earls of Derby] ---------- There is substantial confusion over his name. See The Complete Peerage Vol. 4, p 193 for an account. Personally, I feel there could have been two brothers, William and Robert, Robert being the Earl and when he died at Acre his nephew William [son of his brother William] succeeded, but no documents support this theory! In The Complete Peerage vol. XIV, p. 250 it is suggested that Robert is a fabrication by Vincent, Earl of Ferrieres. [Brian Tompsett, Directory of Royal Genealogical Data, http://www.dcs.hull.ac.uk/cgi-bin/gedlkup/n=royal?royal04492] --- Title: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition, by Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., 1999 Page: 194-6
1162 - 1247
William
de
Ferrers
85
85
This nobleman, upon the return of King Richard from captivity, took arms in his behalf and, joining the Earl of Chester, besieged Nottingham Castle, which, after a brief resistance, surrendered. For this and other acts of fidelity, he was chosen by the king to sit with the rest of the peers in the great council held at the said castle in Nottingham in the ensuing March. Moreover, at Richard's second coronation he was one of the four that carried the canopy over the king's head. Upon the accession of King John, his lordship, with the Earls of Clare and Chester, and other great men, swore fealty to the new monarch but upon the condition that each person should have his right. His lordship was present at the coronation of King John and 7 June following, being solemnly created Earl of Derby by special charter dated at Northampton, he was girt with a sword by the king's own hands (being the first of whom in any charter that expression was used). He had also a grant of the third penny of all the pleas before the sheriff throughout the whole country whereof he was earl, to hold to him and his heirs as amply as any of his ancestors had enjoyed the same. Moreover, in consideration of 4,000 marks, he obtained another charter from the king of the manor of Higham-Ferrers, co. Northampton, with the hundred and park; as also of the manors of Bliseworth and Newbottle, in the same shire; which were part of the lands of his great grandfather, William Peverel of Nottingham. King John also conferred upon him a mansion-house situated in the parish of St. Margaret within the city of London, which had belonged to Isaac, a Jew, at Norwich, to hold by the service of waiting upon the king (the earl and his heirs), at all festivals yearly without any cap, but with a garland of the breadth of his little finger upon his head. These liberal marks of royal favour were felt so gratefully by the earl that in all the subsequent struggles between the king and the refractory barons, his lordship never once swerved from his allegiance, but remained true to the monarch; and loyalty to the interests of his son, King henry III. His lordship assisted at the coronation of the new monarch and immediately after the ensuing Easter, he took part with the famous William Marshall (governor of the king and kingdom), the Earls of Chester and Albemarle, and many other great men in the siege of Mountsorell Castle in Leicestershire, then held by Henry de Braybroke and ten other stout knights. And the same year was likewise with those noble persons at raising the siege of Lincoln, which place the rebellious barons with Lewis, King of France, had invested. His lordship m. Agnes, sister and one of the co-heirs of Ranulph, Earl of Chester, by whom he had two sons, William and Thomas. He died of the gout in 1246 and his countess d. in the same year after a union, according to some authorities, of seventy-five, and by others, of fifty-five years. His lordship was s. by his elder son, William de Ferrers, 5th Earl of Derby. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 196, Ferrers, Earls of Derby] ---------- There is substantial confusion over his name. See The Complete Peerage Vol. 4, p 193 for an account. Personally, I feel there could have been two brothers, William and Robert, Robert being the Earl and when he died at Acre his nephew William son of his brother William succeeded, but no documents support this theory either! In The Complete Peerage vol. XIV ,p .250 it is suggested that Robert is a fabrication by Vincent, Earl of Ferrieres. [Brian Tompsett, Directory of Royal Genealogical Data] Title: The Plantagenet Ancestry, by William Henry Turton, 1968 Title: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition, by Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., 1999 Page: 194-7,Page: 127-29
1090 - 1162
Robert
de
Ferrers
72
72
# Note: Robert de Ferrers, 2nd Earl of Derby, in the 12th Henry II, upon levying the aid for marrying the king's daughter, certified the knights' fees then in his possession to be in number seventy-nine for which he paid the sum of 68 marks. This nobleman was also a liberal benefactor to the church. His lordship was buried at the Abbey of Meervale, co. Warwick, one of the religious houses which he had founded, wrapped in an ox's hide according to his desire. His lordship m. Margaret, dau. and heiress of William Peverel, of Nottingham, by whom he had issue. He was s. by his son, William de Ferrers, 3rd Earl of Derby. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 196, Ferrers, Earls of Derby]
1069
Hawise
de
Vitre
# Note: Title: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition, by Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., 1999 # Note: Page: 55-26
1062 - 1139
Robert
de
Ferrers
77
77
# Note: Robert de Ferrers, having contributed, at the head of the Derbyshire men, to King Stephen's victory over King David of Scotland at Northallerton (commonly called the battle of the Standard), was created by that monarch Earl of Derby. By Hawise his wife, he had William who d. s. p.; Robert his successor; Walcheline, of Okeham; Isolda, m. to Stephen de Beauchamp; and Maud, m. to Bertram de Verdon. The earl d. in 1139 and was s. by his son, Robert de Ferrers, as 2nd Earl of Derby. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 196, Verdon, Earls of Derby] # Note: # Note: Title: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition, by Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., 1999 # Note: Page: 55-26
1078 - 1155
William
Perevel
77
77
A chief supporter of King Stephen; commander at Battle of Standard, 1137
1115
Helen
Peverel
1118
Richard
Peverel
1040
Bertha
de l'
Aigle
1036 - 1088
Henry
de
Ferrers
52
52
# Note: Henry Ferrers, son of Walchelin, assumed the name from Ferriers, a small town of Gastinois, in France, otherwise called Ferrieres, from the iron mines with which that country abounded, and, in allusion to the circumstance, he bore for his arms "six horses' shoes," either from the similitude of his cognomen to the French Ferrier, or because the seigneurie produced iron, so essential to the soldier and cavalier in those rude times when war was esteemed the chief business of life, and the adroit management of the steed, even amongst the nobility, the first of accomplishments. Henry de Ferrers came into England with the Conqueror and obtained a grant of Tutbury Castle, in the county of Stafford. According to Stapleton, he was ancestor of the Oakham house of Ferrers, whose memory is preserved by the horseshoes hanging in the hall of their castle. He m. Bertha -----, and had issue, Robert, his heir; Eugenulph, who d. s. p.; and Walkelin, of Radbourne. [John Burke, Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland, Vol. III, R. Bentley, London, 1834-1838, p. 127, Ferrers, of Baddesley Clinton] --- The first of this eminent family that settled in England was Henry de Feriers, son of Walcheline de Feriers, a Norman, who obtained from William the Conqueror a grant of Tutbury Castle, co. Stafford, with extensive possessions in other shires, of which 114 manors were in Derbyshire. This person must have been of considerable rank, not only from these enormous grants, but from the circumstances of his being one of the commissioners appointed by the Conqueror to make the great survey of the kingdom. He was the founder of the Cluniac priory at Tutbury which he liberally endowed. By Berta his wife he had issue, Egenulph, d. v. p.; William, d. v. p.; Robert, his successor; Gundred; and Emmeline. [Bernard Burke, Dormant and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, London, 1883, p. 196, Ferrers, Earls of Derby]
1060
Agnes
de
Mortaigne
1054 - 1139
Andre
de
Vitre
85
85
# Note: Title: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition, by Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., 1999 # Note: Page: 55-26
1062 - 1116
Adelmode
de la
Marche
54
54
1058 - 1123
Roger
de
Montgomery
65
65
ROGER DE MONTGOMERIE, called le Poitevin, Earl of Lancaster, and Count of Marche,5 was involved in the misfortunes of his family, which taking part with Robert, Duke of Normandy, in his vain efforts to supplant Henry I. on the throne of England, lost all its possessions both in England and Wales, as well as many of those in Normandy. In 1094, he gave the priory of St. Martin's, in Lancaster, to the abbey of St. Martin de S‚es in France. He married Almodis, daughter and heiress of Adelbert, Count of Marche, whose son dying in 1091, Roger and his wife succeeded to his estates and honors. Upon the expulsion of his family from England in 1102, he withdrew to the country of his wife, and fixed his residence at the castle of Charroux, which gave him the surname of le Poitevin. He had a long war to sustain against Hugh de Lusignan, his wife's cousin, who claimed the County of Marche, with arms in his hands. He left this quarrel as a heritage to his descendants.
1068
Amice
de
Ferrers
1090
Robert
de
Vitre
1014
1010 - 1089
Walchelin
de
Ferrers
79
79
# Note: Ferrers, the name of a great Norman-English feudal house, derived from Ferrières-St.-Hilaire, to the south of Bernay, in Normandy. Its ancestor Walkelin was slain in a feud during the Conqueror's minority, leaving a son Henry, who took part in the Conquest and held a great fief in the midlands. [Encyclopædia Britannica, 1961 ed., Vol. 9, p. 184, Ferrers] http://wc.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=tamer&id=I12807 --- slain in the civil wars which distracted Normandy during the minority of Duke William, later William the Conqueror. The name Ferrers means in French 'to bind with iron' or 'to shoe a horse'. FerriŠres in Normandy was known for its iron-working industry. The Ferrers coat of arms was black horseshoes on a silver background.
1010
Richeride
1010 - 1066
Engenulph
de l'
Aigle
56
56
0980
Fulbert
de
Deine
# Note: The Plantagenet Ancestry, by William Henry Turton, 1968 # Note: Page: 18 http://wc.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=tamer&id=I6053
1042 - 1085
Richard
de l'
Aigle
43
43
1035 - 1072
Robert
de
Vitre
37
37
1010
Berthe
1005
Robert
de
Vitre
0975
Gauthier
de
Vitre
0954
Guenergant
de
Rennes
0950
Rivallon
de
Vitre
0925
Gerberge
0910 - 0970
Judicael
Berenger
de Rennes
60
60
# Note: curt_hofemann@yahoo.com: # Note: # Note: What I have in mind is her (Katherine Keats-Rohan) article on Poppa, mother of William Longsword of Normandy, which appeared in The American Genealogist a few years back. Basically, she suggested that Juhel/Judicael Berenger was son of a Count Berenger, named by Dudo and William of Juminges, and that both this Count Berenger and William Longsword were maternal grandchildren of an Earlier Frankish Count Berenger. I have seen it speculated (i.e. by Guillotel) that Judicael Berenger's paternal grandfather might have been a son or grandson of King Erispoe, but there was little evidence with which to place him. [Ref: TAF 21 Nov 2000] # Note: # Note: Note: I originally had Juhel as brother of Poppa, but the above reference to Katherine Keats-Rohan indicates that Juhel is probably nephew of Poppa, being son of another Berenger Count. The dates would certainly indicate that Juhel and William Longsword were in the same generation. http://wc.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=tamer&id=I24916
0875 - 0930
Berenger
de
Rennes
55
55
1034 - 1090
Robert
de
Mortaigne
56
56
EARLDOM of CORNWALL Robert, Count of Mortain in Normandy, one of the two sons of Herluin de Conteville, by Herleve, mother of William the Conqueror, was b. about 1031. About 1050 he received, from his uterine brother, William, then Duke of Normandy, the comte of Mortain, and was thenceforth known as Count of Mortain. He accompanied William in the invasion of England, where he was in command of the chivalry of the Cotentin at the battle of Hastings, 1066. His share of the spoil was one of the greatest, as, with the exception of the lands of the King and the Church, he received nearly the whole of the county of Cornwall, and is, consequently, usually considered Earl of Cornwall, though only known as Comes Moritoniensis. At the time of Domesday, he was possessed of 797 manors in various counties, besides the borough of Pevensey in Sussex, etc. In 1069 he, with Robert, Count of Eu, defeated the Danes in the parts of Lindsey, with great slaughter. He joined his brother, the Earl of Kent in 1088 in a rebellion against William II in favour of his brother Robert Courthose, but was subsequently pardoned. He m. 1stly, before 1066, Maud, daughter of Robert de Montgomery, Earl of Shrewsbury, by his 1st wife, Mabel, daughter and heir of William Talvas (5th son of William de Belleme, Seigneur of Alencon and Belleme). She was buried in the Abbey of Grestain. He m. 2ndly, Almodis. He d. 8 Dec 1090, and was buried with his 1st wife. [Complete Peerage III:427-8 as corrected by XIV:207] Title: Burke's Peerage & Baronetage, 106th Edition, Charles Mosley Editor-in-Chief, 1999 Page: cxiv Title: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition, by Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., 1999 Page: 121-26 Title: Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, by G. E Cokayne, Sutton Publishing Ltd, 2000 Page: III:427-8 --- Robert, Count of Mortain From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Robert, Count of Mortain (d. 1095) was a half-brother of William the Conqueror, and became a great landholder in both England and Normandy. He was the son of William the Conqueror's mother Herleva, and Herluin de Conteville. Odo, Bishop of Bayeux was his older full brother. He was probably born around 1040, but perhaps a few years earlier. Around 1055 Duke William was consolidating his hold on the duchy, and having disposessed the count of Mortain, gave the county to Robert. Mortain was a frontier territory, bordering on Brittany and Maine, and Robert contributed to the defense of the duchy by constructing castles at the town of Mortain, and at St. Hilaire-du-Harcouet, le Tilleul, and Tinchebrai. During the next decade Robert was a close counselor of his half-brother, appearing frequently at his court, including the councils at which the invasion of England was planned. He surely fought at the Battle of Hastings, though his chronicles of the time are not specific, however he contributed a significant part of the invasion fleet. After the conquest, Robert obtained a large holding in England, including the strategic Rape of Pevensey in Sussex, and other lands guarding London, including Berkhamsted, Lambeth and Bermondsey. In 1072 he was entrusted with Cornwall after the previous ruler returned home to Brittany, though probably was never formally made an earl. Nevertheless, he was the second greatest lay magnate in England. Robert seems to have been uninterested in English politics -- some say he lacked the cleverness for it -- and he spent most of the remainder of William I's reign in Normandy. He remained loyal to his half-blood brother William to the end, even when his full-blooded brother Odo of Bayeux rebelled and was imprisoned. At the dying duke's bedside he successfully argued for Odo's release. Odo seems to have pushed him into action, for Robert took part in the Rebellion of 1088 which attempted to replace William Rufus with Robert Curthose. After Pevensey surrendered and the rebellion failed, Rufus pardoned Robert, while Odo was exiled to Normandy. Their differing treatment may reflect contemporary assessment of Robert's lack of initiative. He married Matilda, daughter of Roger of Montgomery, 1st Earl of Shrewsbury, and was succeeded by their son William, Count of Mortain.
1001 - 1087
Harlevin
de
Conteville
86
86
Title: Burke's Peerage & Baronetage, 106th Edition, Charles Mosley Editor-in-Chief, 1999 Page: cxiv Text: States Robert de Mortain is half brother of William I The Conqueror. The Conteville's are the relationship for that. Title: Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, by G. E Cokayne, Sutton Publishing Ltd, 2000 Page: III:164 http://wc.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=tamer&id=I5037
1015 - 1079
Mabel de
Balleme
Talvas
64
64
1029
Emma
de
Conteville
1030 - 1096
Odo
de
Conteville
66
66
~1037
Miss
de
Conteville
1035 - 1119
Robert
de
Montgomery
84
84
1044 - 1098
Hugues
de
Montgomery
54
54
Hugh of Montgomery, 2nd Earl of Shrewsbury (d. 1098) was an Anglo-Norman aristocrat. He was the second surviving son of Roger of Montgomery, 1st Earl of Shrewsbury and Mabel of Bellême. As was typical of the first post-conquest generation, he inherited most of his father's English possessions while his older brother Robert of Bellême, 3rd Earl of Shrewsbury inherited the Continental possessions. During his four years as earl he spent most of his time in the Welsh march fighthing against the Welsh. In 1098 he joined forces with Hugh d'Avranches, 1st Earl of Chester in an attempt to possess Anglesey. There he was killed while fighting off a raid by king Magnus Barefoot of Norway. Hugh was never married, and while it is likely he intended his younger brother Arnulf of Montgomery be his heir, his properties were inherited by the elder brother Robert. Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugh_of_Montgomery%2C_2nd_Earl_of_Shrewsbury" --------------------------------------------------- HUGH DE MONTGOMERIE, Earl of Shrewsbury and Arundel, succeeded his father in his English possessions. The Welsh gave him the name of Hugh Goch, i. e. Red headed.1 This might be presumed to be a term of reproach, applied as it was by a people who had but little love for the new race which had taken possession of England, and less even for the family, which from its estates on the borders, was foremost in their oppression. While Roger pushed the dominion of his master successfully over the refractory Welsh, his memory is not charged with the same severity and cruelty as adhere to some of his sons in their dealings with them. Hugh survived his father but four years; dying in 1098,2 unmarried, his possessions and honors came to his brother Robert. He met his death at the hands of the Norwegians, who at the time were apparently redressing the wrongs the Welsh were suffering under. "Owen, a Welsh lord, father-in-law of Griffith and Cadagan, kings of Wales, having been disobliged by his sons-in-law, privately invited the Earls of Chester and Shrewsbury into his country, promising them a great booty. The two earls levying some troops, were received by Owen into Wales, where they committed unspeakable cruelties. The two kings, surprised by this unexpected attack, were forced to fly into Ireland, and leave the country to the mercy of the English. Their flight giving their enemies an opportunity to continue their march, they penetrated as far as the Isle of Anglesey, where they destroyed all with fire and sword."3 "Magnus, the son of Harold, King of Norway, having taken possession of the Orkneys and of the Isle of Man, arrived accidentally upon the coast of Anglesey. Hearing of the cruelties committed by the English, and touched with a sense of generous pity, he determined to land his forces, and to preserve the miserable inhabitants from destruction. The English endeavored to oppose the Norwegians. In the attempt, the Earl of Shrewsbury was slain. The prince of Norway, observing that nobleman resolute in opposing his landing, and whose impetuous valor had carried him into the sea, levelled an arrow, which through the opening of his armor pierced his right eye, and reaching the brain, he fell down convulsed in the water. The Norwegian prince, on seeing him fall, cried 'Let him dance,' or rather, 'Let him depart.' This accidental stroke of justice seen by the eye of superstition, made the Welsh to conclude, that the arrow had been directed by the immediate hand of the Almighty."4 In Llandyfrydog being mentioned as the place of Hugh's death, superstition goes further, when it states that one night his dogs being put into the church ran mad, "and the Earl himself died miserably in less than a month after." Another account states that the Earl of Shrewsbury arrived with his vassals first at Diganwy, the place of rendezvous, and waited several days for his auxiliaries. On a threatened landing of the northmen one day, Earl Hugh mounting his horse, put himself at the head of his men, and rushed into the water to meet the enemy. He was immediately killed by an arrow from the hands of Magnus. "His bow string twangs,--its biting hail Rattles against the ring-linked mail. Upon the land in deadly strife, Our Norse king took Earl Hugo's life."6 His body was not recovered until the ebbing of the tide, and was brought from Anglesey, and buried alongside of his father at the great Abbey of Shrewsbury.1 He built the castle at Cleobury, of which there are now scarcely any remains.2 And he added considerably to the endowments of his father's abbey at Shrewsbury, "with a heavy curse on the violator."3 "He was the only one of Mabel's sons who was courteous and amiable; and he conducted himself with great moderation during the four years he held the family honors and domains. 1 Rapin's History, i. 187. 2 Gough's Camden, iii. 9. 3 Rapin's History, i. 187. 4 Warrington's Wales, i. 358-9. 5 Gough's Camden, iii. 205. 6 Saga of King Magnus, quoted in Wiffen's Mem. of House of Russell. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- He was at the Castle of Bures when his mother was murdered there and he pursued the murderers in vain. In the summer of 1080 at Caen he joined his brothers in attesting his father's charter for Troarn fo rthe soul of their mother. Before his father's death he was already recognised as his heir in England. In 1092 he was at the siege of Breval and with other magnates he made peace between William deBréteui l and Ascelin Goel. On Roger's death in 1094 he succeeded him as EARL OF SHROPSHIRE or SHREWSBURY and to all his land s in England and Wales. In that year the Welsh rose in arms . Hugh fought them with some success in North Wales, but in 1095 they took Montgomery and slaughtered the garrison. Hugh took part in the conspiracy against William II in 1095 , but he bought the King's favour for £3,000. In1098 with the Earl of Chester he invaded and conquered Anglesey, treating the Welsh with great cruelty. When a Norwegian fleet appeared off the coast of North Wales, the 2 Earls met at Diganwy (co.Carnarvon) and crossed to Anglesey. As the fleet approached the land, the Earl rode along the shore and was struck by an arrow shot, or a javelin thrown, from a ship and fell dying into the sea. Thus he died unmarried about 31 July 1098 and was buried about 17 August at Shrewsbury Abbey.[d] [Complete Peerage XI:688-9, (transcribe d by DaveUtzinger)] The Normans and English long sought for his corpse, drawn a way by the tide, and found it at length; and on the 17th da y after his death bore it to Shrewsbury, where it was buried in the abbey amid great mourning. He was the only one of the sons of Mabel who was gentle and amiable. This seems hardly compatible with the alleged cruelties tothe Welsh in Anglesey. Records show that he left as issue one illegitimate son, Ralph Montgomery.
0974
de
Meulan
1005
Eustache
de Burgo
Burgh
0995 - 1067
Hildeburge
de
Beaumont
72
72
0995 - 1098
Guillaume
de Alencon
Talvas
103
103
0937 - 0990
Hildegarde
Flanders
53
53
# Note: I Originally had Hildegarde de Flanders m. Wichman, Count de Gand, and their daughter Hildegarde de Gand m. Dietrich. According to sources quoted by Curt, below, Hildegarde de Gand & Hildegarde de Flanders are one and the same person. I left the marriage to Wichman as a 1st husband; her marriage to Dietrich seems somewhat late, and possibly she had a 1st husband. # Note: # Note: Curt Hofemann, curt_hofemann@yahoo.com, writes in a post-em: # Note: # Note: Hi Jim, # Note: ES II:5 lists b. ca 934. # Note: ES II:2, 5 lists d. 10 Apr 990 & Moriarty lists 990. # Note: # Note: ES II:2 makes her the daughter of Arnold I Count of Flanders (not granddaughter). # Note: Moriarty p55 "perhaps dau of Arnulf I Count of Flanders" # Note: Todd A. Farmerie in a message to Gen-Medieval 13 Mar 2001: mother unk, not Adele of Vermandois # Note: # Note: A somewhat new, very worthwhile website by Stewart Baldwin is the Henry Project at: # Note: http://sbaldw.home.mindspring.com/hproject/henry.htm # Note: which states: # Note: No direct evidence is known for the suggestion that Hildegard was Arnulf's daughter. However, the onomastic evidence for such an affiliation is strong, given that Hildegard had sons named Arnulf and Egbert, the latter of which is an Anglo-Saxon name that had only been recently introduced into the family of Flemish counts through Arnulf's mother. However, chronological considerations make it highly unlikely that Hildegard was born late enough to be a daughter of Adele of Vermandois. Since the chronology leaves plenty of room for an earlier marriage of Arnulf (who was probably in his 40's when he married Adele), it is most likely that Hildegard was born to an earlier marriage. [Ref: Erich Brandenburg, Die Nachkommen Karls des Großen, Frankfurt, 1964, 91-2; = Karl Ferdinand Werner, 'Die Nachkommen Karls des Großen bis um das Jahr 1000 (1.-8. Generation)', Karl der Große 4 (1967), 69-70 http://wc.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=tamer&id=I10123
0970 - 1024
Mathilda
de
Ganelon
54
54
0965 - 1048
Guillaume
Belleme
83
83
0942
Godchilde
de
Ponthieu
# Note: Title: The Plantagenet Ancestry, by William Henry Turton, 1968 # Note: Page: 6 # Note: Text: Godchilde (no last name)
0940 - 0997
Yves II de
Creil de
Belleme
57
57
# Occupation: Domfort # Note: Title: The Plantagenet Ancestry, by William Henry Turton, 1968 # Note: Page: 6, 13 # Note: # Note: provided by curt_hofemann@yahoo.com # Note: Seigneur de Belleme, Count of Alençon and Domfront [Ref: Moriarty p12] # Note: Yves I de Creil, Seigneur de Belleme and d'Alencon, d. 997 [Ref: David B. Boles <bolesd@cortez.its.rpi.edu> 12 Feb 1995 msg to SGM citing: Stokvis] Research note: find Stokvis # Note: # Note: More from FranceBalade (beware my translation): # Note: Les Seigneurs de Belleme # Note: Yves de Creil (ca 930-ca 997) # Note: Yves de Creil was a vassal of Hugues Capet, Duke of France and was also close to the Duke of Normandy. In 960 he was with Richard I (Duke) of Normandy when he defeated the armies of Thibault of Blois, taking & mostly destroying the towns of Chartres and Corbon (Mortagne). --- The Seigniory of Belleme was then created for Yves, by Hugues Capet, at the expense and opposition of Thibault 'le Tricheur/the Cheat' Count of Chartres and Blois. Yves de Belleme was immediately in conflict with Hugues I Count of Maine, who managed to take part of the Saosnois, and, with the Count du Perche allied with Thibault of Blois in common opposition & protection in particular against the Dukes of Normandy. Yves had the feudal fortress of Belleme built. --- Yves married Godehilde, the sister of Sigefroi, Bishop du Mans & by her had three sons and two daughters: Guillaume, Yves, Avesgaud Bishop du Mans, Hildeburge who married Haimon, Seigneur de Chateau du Loir and Godehilde who was the mother of Albert, Abbot of Micy (and father of Arnoul, Archbishop of Tours). Yves died towards 997. --- Note: Moriarty p11 & 12 indicates he was living 1005, but unfortunately I did not note Moriarty's source of this & think it suspect. http://wc.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=tamer&id=I6414
0915
Rolais
0912 - 0950
Fulk (Fulcuin)
Seigneur de
Corbonais
38
38
0970
Yves
de
Belleme
0968
Godehilde
de
Belleme
0985 - 1035
Hildeburge
de
Belleme
50
50
0895
Geile
0905 - 0983
Yves
Creil
78
78
0963 - 1005
Liutgard
Luxembourg
42
42
0961 - 0993
Arnulf
Holland
32
32
Sources: Title: AFN: Abbrev: AFN: Title: Royal Genealogy Abbrev: Royal Genealogy Author: Brian Tompsett Publication: 1994-1999 Title: Dynasties of the World Abbrev: Dynasties of the World Author: John E. Morby Publication: Oxford University Press, 1989 Title: Paul B. McBride's Genealogy Abbrev: Paul B. McBride's Genealogy Author: Paul B. McBride Title: Descendants of Kong Grom den Gamle Abbrev: Descendants of Kong Grom den Gamle Author: Herbert Stoyan Publication: Aug. 2000 Title: Kingdoms of Europe Abbrev: Kingdoms of Europe Author: Gene Gurney Publication: Crown Publishers, Inc., 1982 Title: Horrocks, Philips, Winget, Keeler, Clark, Watson, Lockwood, Strong, Gates and ancestors Abbrev: Horrocks, Philips, Winget, Keeler, Clark, Watson, Author: Lloyd A. Horocks Title: The Phillips, Weber, Kirk and Staggs Family Abbrev: The Phillips, Weber, Kirk and Staggs Family Author: Jim Weber Title: Royalty for Commoners Abbrev: Royalty for Commoners Author: Roderick W. Stuart Publication: Genealogical Publishing Co. Inc, 4th Edition 2002
0981
Dirk III
Holland
0938 - 0988
Dietrich
of
Holland
50
50
Sources: Title: AFN: Abbrev: AFN: Title: Royal Families of Medieval Scandinavia, Flanders, and Kiev Abbrev: Royal Families of Medieval Scandinavia, Flanders, Author: Rupert Alen and Anna Marie Dahlquist Publication: King River Publications, 1997 Title: Royal Genealogy Abbrev: Royal Genealogy Author: Brian Tompsett Publication: 1994-1999 Title: Dynasties of the World Abbrev: Dynasties of the World Author: John E. Morby Publication: Oxford University Press, 1989 Title: Paul B. McBride's Genealogy Abbrev: Paul B. McBride's Genealogy Author: Paul B. McBride Title: Descendants of Kong Grom den Gamle Abbrev: Descendants of Kong Grom den Gamle Author: Herbert Stoyan Publication: Aug. 2000 Title: Kingdoms of Europe Abbrev: Kingdoms of Europe Author: Gene Gurney Publication: Crown Publishers, Inc., 1982 Title: Horrocks, Philips, Winget, Keeler, Clark, Watson, Lockwood, Strong, Gates and ancestors Abbrev: Horrocks, Philips, Winget, Keeler, Clark, Watson, Author: Lloyd A. Horocks Title: The Phillips, Weber, Kirk and Staggs Family Abbrev: The Phillips, Weber, Kirk and Staggs Family Author: Jim Weber Title: Royalty for Commoners Abbrev: Royalty for Commoners Author: Roderick W. Stuart Publication: Genealogical Publishing Co. Inc, 4th Edition 2002
0903
Geva
Hamalant
0900 - 0939
Dietrich
Holland
39
39
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~hwbradley/aqwg1230.h tm#20095 Selected Families and Individuals Thierry I of HOLLAND Count of Holland [Parents] 1 was born 888 in Noordwijk-Binnen, Zuid-Holland, Netherlands. He died 6 Oct 939 in Noordwijk-Binnen, Zuid-Holland, Netherlands. Thierry married Geva of HAINAUT on 923 in Noordwijk-Binnen, Zuid-Holland, Netherlands. Geva of HAINAUT [Parents] 1 was born 903 in Mons, Hainaut, Belgium. She died 928 in Noordwijk-Binnen, Zuid-Holland, Netherlands. Geva married Thierry I of HOLLAND Count of Holland on 923 in Noordwijk-Binnen, Zuid-Holland, Netherlands. They had the following children: M i Thierry II of HOLLAND Count of West Friesland was born 924 and died 6 May 988. M ii Wichmann II of HAMALAND Count of Hamaland was born 926 and died after 14 Dec 973. Thierry I of HOLLAND Count of Holland 1Schwennicke, Detlev, Europäische Stammtafeln: Stammtafeln zur Geschichte der Europäischen Staaten (Marburg: Verlag von J. A. Stargardt, 1978-), II-2, Family History Library, 940 D5es.
0939
Gerberge
Vermandois
0961
Hildegarde
de
Hollands
0870
Gerulf
II
1030
Ponce
(Poncia)
1020 - 1088
Alberic
III de la
Marche
68
68
1174 - 1247
Agnes
de
Meschines
73
73
1216
Sybil
Ferrers
1200 - 1267
Bertha
de
Ferrers
67
67
Berta (married 2nd Ralph (le) Bigod (d. by 28 July 1260), 3rdson of 3rd Earl of Norfolk). [Burke's Peerage] ---------------------- Sir Thomas DE FURNIVALLE (g), by Berta, his wife (h). [CompletePeerage V:580-1, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)] (h) This Berta was living 10 Feb 1266/7. She had m. 2ndly Ralphle Bigod, whose widow she was, 28 July 1260.
1209 - 1245
Sibyl
Marshal
36
36
1228 - 1298
Maud
de
Ferrers
70
70
1228
Joan
de
Ferrers
1218 - 1284
Margaret
de
Quincy
66
66
1239 - 1279
Robert
de
Ferrers
40
40
1248
Joan
de
Ferrers
1240 - 1287
William
de
Ferrers
47
47
He obtained, by gift of Margaret, his mother, the manor of Groby in Leicestershire, assuming the arms of the family of De Quincy. He married (1) Anne le Despencer, daughter of Hugh le Despencer, and (2) Eleanor, daughter of Matthew Lovaine.He obtained, by gift of Margaret, his mother, the manor of Groby in Leicestershire, assuming the arms of the family of De Quincy. (From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia)
1242
Elizabeth
de
Ferrers
1003 - 1072
Guerin
de
Craon
69
69
1005
Anne
de
Crequy
0965
Baudoin
de
Crequy
0970
Marguerite
de
Louvain
0975 - 1037
Suhard
de
Craon
62
62
0959 - 1007
Lisois le
Vieux
de Craon
48
48
0960
de
Bazougers
0980 - 1014
Hugh
de
Bazougers
34
34
0891 - 0960
Andre
de
Craon
69
69
0940 - 0987
Agnes
d'
Anjou
47
47
0860 - 0916
Lisois
de
Craon
56
56
0827
Lisois
de
Craon
0808
Warner
de
Nantes
1073 - 1158
Eudes
de
Vitry
85
85
1063 - 1107
Sybil
Matilda De
Montgomery
44
44
1222 - 1290
Agnes
de
Ferrers
68
68
# Note: Agnes, daughter of William de Ferrers, 5th Earl of Derby of the 1138 creation. [Burke's Peerage] # Note: # Note: ---------------------------------- # Note: # Note: He [William de Vescy] married, 2ndly, before 1244, Agnes, 1st daughter of William (DE FERRERS), 5th EARL OF DERBY, by his 1st wife, Sibyl, sister and, in her issue, coheir of Anselm, 9th EARL OF PEMBROKE, 3rd daughter of William (MARSHAL), 4th EARL OF PEMBROKE. He died in Gascony, shortly before 7 October 1253, and was buried at Watton Priory, co. York. His widow died 11 May 1290, and was buried in the Greyfriars, at Scarborough. Complete Peerage XII/2:276-8 # Note: # Note: Title: Burke's Peerage & Baronetage, 106th Edition, Charles Mosley Editor-in-Chief, 1999 # Note: Page: 2884 # Note: # Note: Title: Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, by G. E Cokayne, Sutton Publishing Ltd, 2000 # Note: Page: XII/2:277-278
1092
Maude
de
Ferreres
1198
Petronille
de
Ferrers
1172 - 1252
Isabel
Millicent
de Ferrers
80
80
1064 - 1088
Milisent
de
Ferrers
24
24
1039 - 1109
Berthe
de
Craon
70
70
1042 - 1107
Maud
de
Montgomery
65
65
# Note: He [Robert, Count of Mortain] m. 1stly, before 1066, Maud, daughter of Robert de Montgomery, Earl of Shrewsbury, by his 1st wife, Mabel, daughter and heir of William Talvas (5th son of William de Belleme, Seigneur of Alencon and Belleme). She was buried in the Abbey of Grestain. He m. 2ndly, Almodis. He d. 8 Dec 1090, and was buried with his 1st wife. [Complete Peerage III:427-8 as corrected by XIV:207] # Note: Title: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition, by Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., 1999 # Note: Page: 185-1 # Note: Title: Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, by G. E Cokayne, Sutton Publishing Ltd, 2000 # Note: Page: III:428
1168
Agatha
de
Ferrers
1058 - 1123
Roger
de
Montgomery
65
65
ROGER DE MONTGOMERIE, called le Poitevin, Earl of Lancaster, and Count of Marche,5 was involved in the misfortunes of his family, which taking part with Robert, Duke of Normandy, in his vain efforts to supplant Henry I. on the throne of England, lost all its possessions both in England and Wales, as well as many of those in Normandy. In 1094, he gave the priory of St. Martin's, in Lancaster, to the abbey of St. Martin de S‚es in France. He married Almodis, daughter and heiress of Adelbert, Count of Marche, whose son dying in 1091, Roger and his wife succeeded to his estates and honors. Upon the expulsion of his family from England in 1102, he withdrew to the country of his wife, and fixed his residence at the castle of Charroux, which gave him the surname of le Poitevin. He had a long war to sustain against Hugh de Lusignan, his wife's cousin, who claimed the County of Marche, with arms in his hands. He left this quarrel as a heritage to his descendants.
1074 - 1122
Arnulph
de
Montgomery
48
48
1110 - 1162
Isabelle
de
Vitre
52
52
1114
Margaret
Peverel
1088 - 1149
Avise
de
Montgomery
61
61
0994
Oda
de
Conteville
0880
Miss
de
Bayeux
0845 - 0888
Judicael
de
Rennes
43
43
0794 - 0836
Theodrate
de
France
42
42
0783 - 0852
Lambert
de
Nantes
69
69
0969 - 1012
Jean
de
Conteville
43
43
Occupation: of Comwyn & Tonsburgh Title: The Plantagenet Ancestry, by William Henry Turton, 1968 Page: 100 --- Note: [Lasceline de clinton.ged] General of the French King's forces & governor of his chief towns. Descendants include Baldwin, 2nd King of Jerusalem.[Hamon III de Massey.ged] General of the French King's forces & governor of his chief towns. Descendants include Baldwin, 2nd King of Jerusalem.
1003 - 1050
Heleve
Arlette de
Falaise
47
47
Title: Burke's Peerage & Baronetage, 106th Edition, Charles Mosley Editor-in-Chief, 1999 Page: cxiv Text: Harlette is the common mother between William I and Robert de Mortain. Title: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition, by Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., 1999 Page: 121-23, 130-23 Title: Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, by G. E Cokayne, Sutton Publishing Ltd, 2000 Page: III:164 http://wc.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=tamer&id=I5702
1052 - 1131
Robert
de la
Spencer
79
79
* Chamberlain to William the Conqueror * Event: Name Change Took the name Despencer He succeeded his mother in the Seigneuries of Bellême and Alençon in 1082 ROBERT DE MONTGOMERY, surnamed Belesme, succeeded in 1082 to the Earldoms of Belesme and Alençon, Arundel and Shrewsbury; sided with Robert Courte-Heuse; in 1102 forfeited his English earldoms; imprisoned at Wareham, Dorsetshire, by Henry I in 1113; married Agnes, daughter and heiress of Guy, Count de Ponthieu (ped. 61) (*)Bank's Extinct Peerage, Vol. 1, p. 5; House of Arundel, by Yeatman, p. 8; L'Art, Vol. XIII, p. 147. Robert of Bellême, 3rd Earl of Shrewsbury From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Robert of Bellême, 3rd Earl of Shrewsbury (1052- after 1130) was an Anglo-Norman nobleman, and one of the most promiment figures in the competition for the succession to England and Normandy between the sons of William the Conqueror. He was the eldest son of Roger of Montgomery, 1st Earl of Shrewsbury and Mabel of Bellême. Robert's first notable act, as a young man, was to take part in the 1077 revolt of the young Robert Curthose against William the Conqueror, an act he shared with many other Norman nobles of his generation. The rebellion was put down, and the participants pardoned. William did require that ducal garrisons be placed in the important baronial castles, which would make future rebellion much more difficult. Robert's mother Mabel was killed in 1082, whereupon Robert inherited her property which stretched across the hilly border region between Normandy and Maine. It is due to this early inheritance that Robert has come be known as of Bellême rather than of Montgomery. William the Conqueror died in 1087, and Robert's first act on hearing the news was to expel the ducal garrisons from his castles. Robert Curthose was the new duke of Normandy, but he was unable to keep order, and Robert of Bellême had a free hand to make war against his less powerful neighbors. The next year in the Rebellion of 1088, Odo of Bayeux rebelled in an attempt to place Curthose on the English throne in place of William Rufus. At Curthose's request Robert went to England, where he joined in the rebels' defense of Rochester Castle. The rebels were permitted to leave after the surrender of the castle and failure of the rebellion. Robert returned to Normandy. But Odo had preceded him, had gotten the ear of the duke, and conviced Curthose that Robert was a danger to the security of the duchy. Thus Robert was arrested and imprisoned upon his disembarkation. (The duke's younger brother Henry, who was on the same ship, was also arrested.) Robert's father earl Roger came over from England, and, taking over his son's castles, defied Curthose. The duke captured several of the castles, but he soon tired of the matter and released Robert. Once released, Robert returned to his wars and depredations against his neighbors in southern Normandy. He did help Curthose in putting down a revolt by the citizens of Rouen, but his motive seems to have been in large part to seize as many wealthy townspeople and their goods as possible. Curthose in turn subsequently helped Robert is some of his fights againsts his neighbors. In 1094 one of Robert's most important castles, Domfront, was taken over by the duke's brother Henry, who never relinquished it and was to be an enemy of Robert for the rest of his life. Later that year (1094) Robert's father earl Roger died. Robert's younger brother Hugh of Montgomery, 2nd Earl of Shrewsbury inherited the English lands and titles, while Robert inherited his father's Norman properties, which included good part of central and southern Normandy, in part adjacent to the Bellême territories he had already inherited from his mother. In 1098 Robert's younger brother Hugh died, and Robert inherited the English properties that had been their father's, including the Rape of Arundel and the Earldom of Shrewsbury. Robert was one of the great magnates who joined Robert Curthose's 1101 invasion of England, along with his brothers Roger the Poitevin and Arnulf of Montgomery and his nephew William of Mortain. This invasion, which aimed to depose Henry I, ended in the Treaty of Alton. The treaty called for amnesty for the participants but allowed traitors to be punished. Henry had a series of charges drawn up against Robert in 1102, and when Robert refused to answer for them, gathered his forces and besieged and captured Robert's English castles. Robert lost his English lands and titles (as did his brothers), was banished from England, and returned to Normandy. He was one of Curthose's commanders at the Battle of Tinchebrai and by flight from the field avoided being captured as Curthose was. With Normandy now under Henry's rule, he submitted and was allowed to retain his Norman fiefs. But after various conspiracies and plans to free Curthose Robert was seized and imprisoned in 1112. He spent the rest of his life in prison; the exact date of his death is not known. Robert married Agnes of Ponthieu, by whom he had one child, William Talvas, who via his mother inherited the county of Ponthieu. Robert had a quick wit, was a good military leader and was perhaps the best castle designer of his generation, but had a terrible reputation as a cruel sadist.
1216 - 1273
Sibyl
de
Ferrers
57
57
1042
Muriel
de
Conteville
0927 - 0992
Conan
of
Brittany
65
65
0996 - 1026
Warin
de
Belleme
30
30
0998
Yves
de
Belleme
1062
Denise
de
Mortagne
1058
Richard
de
Mortagne
1066
Muriel
de
Mortagne
1068
Sybilla
de
Mortagne
1064 - 1140
Guillaume
de
Mortagne
76
76
WILLIAM, Earl of Cornwall, who rebelled against Henry I., supporting the claims of Duke Robert to the throne, and joining the party at the head of which was his uncle Robert de Belˆsme. He was attainted, and died a prisoner.
1112 - 1160
Robert
Peverell
48
48
1122
Henry
Peverell
1084
Philip
de
Montgomery
1090
Maud
de
Montgomery
1100
Ponce
de
Montgomery
1152
Thomas
de
Ferrers
1135
Walcheline
de
Ferrers
1138
Hugo
de
Ferrers
1144
Henry
de
Ferrers
1147
Ralph
de
Ferrers
1150
Robert
de
Ferrers
1072
Engenulf
William de
Ferrieres
1072
Gundreda
de
Ferrers
1066
William
de
Ferrers
1070
Emmeline
de
Ferrers
1040
Isbel
de
Ferrers
1038
Hugh
de
Ferrers
1036
Gundella
Ferreres
0988 - 1032
Adalbert
de
Gand
44
44
SOURCES: LDS FHL Ancestal File # MQD4-S3 (familysearch.org) "Ancestors/Descendants of Royal Lines" (Contributors: Manuel Abranches de Soveral, Reynaud de Paysac, F.L. Jacquier , H.R. Moser , L. Orlandini, O.Guionneau, L.B. de Rouge, E. Polti, A.Terlinden , L. Gustavsson, C. Cheneaux, E. Lodge, S. Bontron , R. Dewkinandan, H. de la Villarmois, C. Donadello; Scevole de Livonniere, H. de la Villarmois, I. Flatmoen)... http://geneastar.org. "Updated 02/2004-Family Ancestry Tree For Weaver and Sanders" David Weaver dave@satcover.com
0978
Thierry
de
Gand
0980
Adelaide
de
Gand
0846
Gervunde
de
Rennes
0829
de
Nantes
0934
Godebelt
de
Creil
0980
Adele
of
Holland
0983 - 1030
Siegried
de
Holand
47
47
1038
Herleva
de
Conteville
1222
Isabel
de
Ferrers
1230 - 1306
Agatha
de
Ferrers
76
76
0985
Henry
de
Ferrers
The son of Egenulf De Feriers, Master of the House of the Duke of Normandy, who obtained of William, the Conqueror, large grants of land in the counties of Staffordshire, Derbyshire and Leicestershire. It is said he took an active part in the Battle of Hastings, having invaded England with the Conqueror.
Bertha
0960
Eugenulf
de
Ferrers
0930
Martin
de
Vitre
0940
Arnulf
de
Ganelon
0920 - 0973
Wickmann
de
Gand
53
53
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~hwbradley/aqwg1230.h tm#20095 Selected Families and Individuals Wichmann II of HAMALAND Count of Hamaland [Parents] 1, 2 was born 926 in Noordwijk-Binnen, Zuid-Holland, Netherlands. He died after 14 Dec 973. Wichmann married Liutgard of FLANDERS on 950 in Hamaland, Netherlands. Liutgard of FLANDERS [Parents] 1, 2 was born 937 in , Flanders, Belgium. She died 29 Sep 964 in Hamaland, Netherlands. Liutgard married Wichmann II of HAMALAND Count of Hamaland on 950 in Hamaland, Netherlands. They had the following children: F i Adela de HAMALAND was born 957 and died 1017. Wichmann II of HAMALAND Count of Hamaland 1Farmerie, Todd A., Counts of Boulogne, Flanders, Ghent, Guines. 2Moriarty, George Andrews, The Plantagenet Ancestry of King Edward III and Queen Philippa (Salt Lake City: Mormon Pioneer Genealogy Society, 1985.), p. 163, Family History Library, 929.242 P694m.
0920
Matilde
of
Westfriesland
Martin
de
Vitre
0960 - 1020
Meen
de
Fougeres
60
60
1058 - 1080
Emma
of
Mortain
22
22
Sources: 1. Title: Ancestry Family Trees Publication: Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: The Generations Network. Original data: Family Tree files submitted by Ancestry members. Note: This information comes from 1 or more individual Ancestry Family Tree files. This source citation points you to a current version of those files. Note: The owners of these tree files may have removed or changed information since this source citation was created. Page: Ancestry Family Trees Note: Text: http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=856564&pid=-993399750
0960 - 1047
Renaud
de
Creil
87
87
1193 - 1254
William
de
Ferrers
61
61
# Note: William de Ferrers, buried 31 Mar 1254, Earl of Derby. [Magna Charta Sureties, line 88-3] # Note: # Note: ------------------------------------- # Note: # Note: William de Ferrers, 7th Earl of Derby, upon doing homage in the 32nd Henry III [c. 1248], had livery of Chartley Castle and the other lands of his mother's inheritance; and the same year he sat in the parliament held in London wherein the king made so stout an answer to the demands of his impetuous barons. His lordship m. 1st, Sibel, one of the daus. and co-heirs of William Mareschal, Earl of Pembroke, by whom he had seven daus., viz., Agnes, m. to William de Vesci; Isabel m. 1st to Gilbert Basset, of Wycombe, and 2ndly, to Reginald de Mohun; Maud, m. 1st to William de Kymes; 2ndly to William de Vyvon, and 3rdly, to Emerick de Rupel Carnardi; Sibil m. 1st to John de Vipont, 2ndly to Franco de Mohun; Joane m. to William Aguillon, and 2ndly to John de Mohun; Agatha m. to Hugh Mortimer of Chelmersh; Eleanor m. 1st to William de Vallibus, 2ndly to Roger de Quincy, Earl of Winton, and 3rdly to Roger de Leybourne, but had no issue. The earl m. 2ndly Margaret, one of the daus. and co-heirs of Roger de Quincy, Earl of Winchester, and had issue: Robert, his successor; William, upon whom his mother conferred the lordship of Groby, co. Leicester; Joan, m. Thomas, Lord Berkeley; and Agnes, m. to Robert de Muscegros, Lord of Deerhurst. # Note: # Note: His lordship, who from his youth had been a martyr to the gout, and in consequence obliged to he drawn from place to place in a chariot, lost his life by being thrown through the heedlessness of his driver over the bridge at St. Neots, co. Huntingdon, in 1254. He was survived by his eldest son, Robert de Ferrers, 6th Earl of Derby. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 197, Ferrers, Earls of Derby] # Note: # Note: Title: The Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999 # Note: Page: 57-4, 88-3, 102-3, 149-2, 149a-2, 59a-3 # Note: Title: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition, by Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., 1999 # Note: Page: 57-29, 189-4 # Note: Title: Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, by G. E Cokayne, Sutton Publishing Ltd, 2000 # Note: Page: XII/2:278 # Note: Title: Ancestral Roots
~1206
Yvette
de
Ferrers
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