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Parent
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Biological Child
Parent
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Parent
Biological Child
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Parent
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Parent
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Biological Child
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Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
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Parent
Parent
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Parent
Parent
Biological Child
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Parent
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Biological Child
(a child)
(two children)
(a child)
(six children)
(three children)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(two children)
(a child)
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(a child)
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(two children)
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(a child)
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(a child)
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(a child)
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1156
Aufrica
of
Scotland
Sources: 1. Abbrev: GEDCOM File : mwballard.ged Title: Mark Willis Ballard, GEDCOM File : mwballard.ged Note: 6928 N. Lakewood Avenue 773-743-6663 mwballard52@yahoo.com
1169 - 1197
Beatrice
De
Saye
28
28
0985
Gerald
de
Flaitel
Sources: 1. Abbrev: Pullen010502.FTW Title: Pullen010502.FTW Note: Call number: Text: Date of Import: Jan 5, 2002 Title: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition, by Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., 1999 Page: 184-1
1003
Herleva
D'Evereaux
0970 - 1034
Ansfred
Unfroi
le Goz
64
64
1030 - 1092
Hugh
de
Grentemesnil
62
62
1035 - 1091
Adeliza
de
Beaumont
56
56
1070
Agnes
de
Grentemesnil
1072
Rohese
de
Grentemesnil
1070
Robert
de
Courcy
1005 - 1059
Yves
Ivo de
Beaumont
54
54
1008 - 1099
Judith
Adela de
Gournay
91
91
1040 - 1091
Beatrix
de
Beaumont
51
51
0975 - 1022
Ivan
Bellomontensis
47
47
0980 - 1039
Gisele
Chevreuse
59
59
D. 1035
Yves
Bellomontensis
Yves
of
Ham
Gisela
Fouchard
of
Ham
Ivo
0985 - 1074
Hugh
de
Gournay
89
89
0960
Hugh
de
Gournay
0940
Hugh
de
Gournay
1115 - 1144
William
de
Say
29
29
# Note: It has been suggested that the family derived its name from Sai, about two miles SE of Argentin in Normandy, though there is no substantial evidence for this. Certainly William de Say, possibly a Norman, married by 1098 Agnes, daughter of Hugh de Grentmesnil. # Note: But the known pedigree originates with another William de Say, granted his (probably dead) father's lands in a charter of the Empress Maud between Christmas 1141 and June 1142; joined his brother-in-law Geoffrey de Mandeville, 1st Earl of Essex of the 1140 creation, in rebellion against Stephen 1144; married Beatrice (died 19 April 1197 or some year before it), daughter of William de Mandeville, sister of 1st Earl of Essex and divorced wife of Hugh Talebot, and was allegedly killed in an attack on Burwell Castle, Cambs, along with his brother-in-law, 1st Earl of Essex Aug 1144, though he may well have died later. [Burke's Peerage] # Note: Note: Magna Charta Sureties has Geoffrey de Mandeville dead 14 Sep 1144. Also note that I have this William as a grandson of William de Say & Agnes de Grentmesnil. # Note: William de Say, son of William de Say, and grandson of William de Say, who came into England with the Conqueror. He m. Beatrix, the divorced wife of Hugh Talbot, and dau. of Geoffrey de Mandeville, Earl of Essex, sister of Godfrey, and aunt, and eventually heiress of William de Mandeville, Earls of Essex, by whom he had issue, William and Geoffrey. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 476, Saye, or Say, Barons Saye] # Note: "William de Say I is chiefly known as an associate of Geoffrey de Mandeville, 1st Earl of Essex, in his last revolt, with Hugh Bigod, against Stephen in 1144. In the 2nd charter of the Empress Maud to the Earl, issued between Christmas 1141 and the end of June 1142, William was given a special grant of his father's lands. According to Henry of Huntingdon, he was killed with the Earl in Aug. 1144 when, after occupying Ramsey Abbey, they were attacking Stephen's fort at Burwell, Cambs. but there is evidence that William surv. the Earl. He m. Beatrice, divorced wife of Hugh Talebot, sister of Earl Geoffrey above named, and da. of William de Mandeville." (CP XI-464-5)
1135 - 1214
Geoffrey
de
Say
79
79
1094
Geoffrey
de
Say
1099
Hawise
de
Clare
1065
William
de
Say
Title: Burke's Peerage & Baronetage, 106th Edition, Charles Mosley Editor-in-Chief, 1999 Page: 2555
1035 - 1098
Robert
de
Say
63
63
# Note: Say, Sai, of Shropshire. # Note: Sai: Orne, arr. and cant. Argentan. # Note: Picot, who was a substantial under-tenant of Earl Roger of Montgomery at Clun and elsewhere in Shropshire, is shown by the devolution of his lands to have been Picot de Say. Robert, Abbot of St-Martin de Sees granted the privilege of burial to Robert and Henry their sons; and in return Picot (as he is henceforth called) and his wife gave to the abbey "edificium matris Picot cum virgulto quod habebat juxta ecclesiam sancte Marie de Vrou" and confirmed a third of the church of Sai which Osmelinus de Sayo gave at the same time, giving also meadow land in the meadows "de Juvigneio"; the charter is subscribed by Earl Roger, Picot and his wife and two sons. "Vrou" is clearly Urou, the next parish to Sai, and Juvigni the parish immediately south of Sai. An agreement was made on 17 May 1086 in the court of Robert de Belleme between Picot de Saio and Droco de Coimis as to the dower which Droco's brother William had given to Adeloia his wife, who had been remarried to Picot. This is further evidence of Picot's tenure under the house of Montgomery-Belleme, and suggests that the charter to St-Martin de Sees was considerably later than 1060, the date to which it has been assigned. [Origins of Some Anglo-Norman Families] Title: The Origins of Some Anglo-Norman Families, by Lewis C Loyd, 1999 Page: 96
1035
Adeloia
1058 - 1094
Robert
FitzPicot
de Say
36
36
King William sought aggressive types for the office of sheriff whoseambitions were consisten t with his. Those willing to squeeze the peasantsto their maximum were the best qualified i n William's eyes. He institutedthe practice of selling the office to the highest bidder. Thi s broughtforth evil men willing to pay exorbitant prices for the office and thenwilling to d o whatever it took to recoup their investment. . . No onespoke out for the peasantry becaus e their only representative to the kingwas the very sheriffs embezzling them. The most notori ous was Picot,Sheriff of Cambridgeshire. . . . Monks describe him as: "a hungry lion, a prowling wolf, a crafty fox, a filthy swine, a dogwithout shame, who stuffe d his belly like an insatiable beast as thoughthe whole country were a single corpse." Note: I assume that the above quote refers to Robert Fitz Picot, since hewas in Camberidgeshi re at the time of William the Conqueror. King William sought aggressive types for the office of sheriff whoseambitions were consisten t with his. Those willing to squeeze the peasantsto their maximum were the best qualified i n William's eyes. He institutedthe practice of selling the office to the highest bidder. Thi s broughtforth evil men willing to pay exorbitant prices for the office and thenwilling to d o whatever it took to recoup their investment. . . No onespoke out for the peasantry becaus e their only representative to the kingwas the very sheriffs embezzling them. The most notori ous was Picot,Sheriff of Cambridgeshire. . . . Monks describe him as: "a hungry lion, a prowling wolf, a crafty fox, a filthy swine, a dogwithout shame, who stuffe d his belly like an insatiable beast as thoughthe whole country were a single corpse." Note: I assume that the above quote refers to Robert Fitz Picot, since hewas in Camberidgeshi re at the time of William the Conqueror.
1000
Robert
FitzPicot
de Say
1045 - 1086
William
de
Say
41
41
Picot, who was a substantial under-tenant of Earl Roger of Montgomery at Clun and elsewhere in Shropshire, is shown by the devolution of his lands to have been Picot de Say. Robert, Abbot of St-Martin de Sees granted the privilege of burial to Robert and Henry their sons; and in return Picot (as he is henceforth called) and his wife gave to the abbey "edificium matris Picot cum virgulto quod habebat juxta ecclesiam sancte Marie de Vrou" and confirmed a third of the church of Sai which Osmelinus de Sayo gave at the same time, giving also meadow land in the meadows "de Juvigneio"; the charter is subscribed by Earl Roger, Picot and his wife and two sons. "Vrou" is clearly Urou, the next parish to Sai, and Juvigni the parish immediately south of Sai. An agreement was made on 17 May 1086 in the court of Robert de Belleme between Picot de Saio and Droco de Coimis as to the dower which Droco's brother William had given to Adeloia his wife, who had been remarried to Picot. This is further evidence of Picot's tenure under the house of Montgomery-Belleme, and suggests that the charter to St-Martin de Sees was considerably later than 1060, the date to which it has been assigned. [Origins of Some Anglo-Norman Families]
1030
Saher
de
Say
1066
Dougall
de
Seton
0920
Renaud
de
Gournay
# Note: Title: The Origins of Some Anglo-Norman Families, by Lewis C Loyd, 1999 Page: 47 Text: location only - no dates
0900
Hugh
de
Gournay
1032 - 1104
Agnes
de
Beaumont
72
72
1040
Gerard
de
Gournay
Baron of Yarmouth Gerard de Gournay, Baron of Yarmouth, was a grand Seigncur. He married Edith, daughter of William, Earl of Varenne in France, and 1st Earl of Warren and Surrey, in England, so created by William, the Conqueror, with whom he came to England in 1066. They had five children: Hugues III, Gautier, Anseau, Gonnor and Gundred. He went on the First Crusade and died on the way home on the 8th of May, 1097. Edith, who had accompanied him, was taken back to Normandy by Drogon, a Chevallier and friend of Gerard, who after married her, and they had a son. Drogon had rich manoirs of his own, but Henry I, of England, under pretense of danger to Gerard's children, put senechals in all their manoirs, took their fortresses, and took Gerard's children to himself. Of the above children their daughter, Gundred de Gournay, married Nigel d'Albini, and Gonner. (Kin of Mellcene Thurman Smith, page 469)
1142 - 1177
William
De
Saye
35
35
1000 - 1098
Basilie
Basita
Flaitel
98
98
1105 - 1177
Beatrix
de
Mandeville
72
72
0907
Ansfred
Rollosson
1045 - 1084
Amice
de
Grentemesnil
39
39
sister of Robert de Mowbray, Earl of Northumberland, A sister of Bishop Geoffrey de Montbray, was mother by Roger d'Aubigny (of Aubigny in the Cotentin) of two sons, Nigel and William, who were ardent supporters of Henry I, and were rewarded by him with great estates in England. William was made king's butler, and was father of William d'Aubigny (de Albini), first earl of Arundel; Nigel was rewarded with the escheated fief of Geoffrey de la Guerche, of which Melton (Mowbray) was the head, and with forfeited lands in Yorkshire. Nigel married, by dispensation, the wife of his cousin, the imprisoned earl, but afterwards divorced her, and by another wife was father of a son Roger, who took the name of Mowbray. (Wikipedia)
1143 - 1214
William
of
Scotland
71
71
William I (Wm. the Lion, Wm. Leo, Wm. Dunkeld and Wm. Canmore, I), king of Scotland (r. 1165-1214), was born in 1143. He succeeded Malcolm IV. William is believed to be the founder of Arbroath Abbey where the Declaration of Arbroath was later drawn up. He was known as the Lion because of his flag, or standard, a red lion rampant on a yellow background. This went on to become the Royal standard of Scotland and is still used today by the British Monarch when in Scotland. William also arranged the Auld Alliance, the first treaty for mutual self defence between nations. The treaty was agreed by Scotland, France, and Norway. Although Norway never took much part in it, it played some part in Franco-Scottish affairs until 1746. William also inherited the title of Earl of Northumbria in 1152. However he was forced to give up this title to King Henry II of England in 1157. This caused trouble after William became king, since he spent a lot of effort trying to regain Northumbria. In 1174 during a raid in support of the revolt by Henry's wife and sons, William was captured by Henry's troops and taken in chains to Northampton, and then transferred to Falaise in Normandy. Henry then sent an army to Scotland and occupied it. As ransom and to regain his kingdom, William had to acknowledge Henry as his feudal superior and agree to pay for the cost of the English army's occupation of Scotland by taxing the Scots. This he did by signing the Treaty of Falaise. He was then allowed to return to Scotland. The Treaty of Falaise remained in force for the next fifteen years. At the end of that time the new English king, Richard the Lionheart, agreed to terminate it in return for 10,000 silver marks. Richard needed the money to take part in the Third Crusade. William died in Stirling on the 4th December 1214 and was buried in Arbroath Abbey. He was succeeded by his son, Alexander II. William the Lion (1143-1214), king of Scotland (1165-1214). He was a grandson of King David I and the brother of Malcolm IV, whom he succeeded. After a quarrel with King Henry II of England, William concluded an alliance between Scotland and France in 1168. In 1173, with King Louis VII of France, he aided Henry's sons in their unsuccessful rebellion against their father. William invaded Northumberland, and the next year, while raiding the countryside near Alnwick, he was captured by the English, who took him to Normandy (Normandie). He was able to obtain his freedom only by assenting to the Treaty of Falaise, which acknowledged Henry as overlord of Scotland. In 1188 William secured a papal bull guaranteeing the independence of the Scottish church from that of England, and in 1189 Henry's son Richard, who had succeeded him as king, annulled the Treaty of Falaise, surrendering all claims to suzerainty over Scotland in return for a large payment. William was succeeded by his son, Alexander II. © 1993-2003 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. Sources: 1. Abbrev: GEDCOM File : mwballard.ged Title: Mark Willis Ballard, GEDCOM File : mwballard.ged Note: 6928 N. Lakewood Avenue 773-743-6663 mwballard52@yahoo.com
1064 - 1118
Ivo de
Grantmesnil
54
54
1064 - 1118
Ives
de
Grentemesnil
54
54
0990 - 1039
Robert
de
Grentmesnil
49
49
1007
Hawise
d'Eschafour
1024
Robert
de
Grentmesnil
1032
Adeliza
de
Grentmesnil
1034
Arnold
de
Grentmesnil
0960
Gervase
le
Breton
0968 - 1020
Giroie
le Goz
52
52
0972
Gisela
Bertrand
de Montfort
1002
Arnoul
Giroie
d'Eschafour
1004
Herembergh
Giroie
d'Eschafour
1006
Guillaume
Giroie
d'Eschafour
1008
Fulk
Giroie
d'Eschafour
1010
Robert
Giroie de
Saint Cyneri
1012
Emma
d'Eschafour
1014
Ralph
Giroie
d'Eschafour
1016
Hugh
Giroie
d'Eschafour
1018
Adelaide
d'Eschafour
1020
Giroie
d'Eschafour
0935 - 0978
Toustien
le Goz
43
43
0945
Judith
de
Montanolier
0928 - 0997
Touissant
de
Briquibec
69
69
0930
Juliane
Murdac
0960
Adeline
de
Montfort
0971
Thurstan
de
Montfort
0975
Hugh
de
Montfort
1052
Robert
de
Grentmesnil
1014
Agnes
Ermentrude
Flaitel
1038
Picot
de
Say
0983
Picot
de
Say
1130 - 1192
Guy
de
Chevreuse
62
62
0880 - 0910
Eudes
de
Gournay
30
30
0960
Girard
Flaitel
0910 - 1032
Helloe
of
Beulac
122
122
0900
Geoffrey
Murdac
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