Hugh Bigod1
M, b. circa 1095, d. BEF 9 MAR 1176 77
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
|
Avice De Lancaster1
F, b. 1095, d. 1149
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
|
Maud 'Matilda' le Meschines1
F, b. 1095
| Note* | | She inherited the manor of Molland, Devon from ther maternalgrandfather, Robert de Rumilly.1 |
| Marriage* | | Principal=Hugh de Mortimer1 |
| Birth* | 1095 | Normandy, France1 |
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
|
Pétronille ou Gertrude De Haute-Lorraine1
F, b. after 1095, d. 23 May 1144
| Birth* | after 1095 | 1 |
| Marriage* | 1113 | Principal=Florent II Le Gros De Hollande1 |
| Marriage* | | 1 |
| Death* | 23 May 1144 | 1 |
| Note* | | Possible remariage. Est-ce la même qui s'est remariée après son veuvage ou bien y aurait-il deux soeurs, Pétronille, issue du premier lit de Thierry II et épouse de Florent, et Gertrude, issue du second lit et épouse de Lambert ?1 |
| Citations | - [S216] G. & A. Aurejac (?), G. & A. AUREJAC, Domaine de Canals, La Bouffière, 82800 Bioule, FRANCE, E-Mail : e-mail address as submitted in GEDCOM file C:\TMGW\BACKUPS\AUREJAC4.GED and imported on 02-09-2002 at 11:42:26..
|
Walter FitzGilbert1
M, b. after 1095
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
|
Richard de Clare1
M, b. between 1095 and 1100, d. 15 April 1136
| Event-Misc* | | Richard Fitzgilbert Type: AKA1 |
| Note* | | He was the Lord of Clare, so named about 1117. He was founder of thepriory at Tonbridge. He was surprised and slain by the Welsh, nearAbergavenny on April 15, 1136. Birth year after 1095 based on thefact that his mother was born after 1080.1 |
| Birth* | between 1095 and 1100 | 1 |
| Marriage* | before 1116 | Principal=Adeliz de Adeliza1 |
| Death* | 15 April 1136 | Abergavenny, Monmouthshire, Wales1 |
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
|
Liutgart von Ravenstein1
F, b. circa 1096, d. 19 June 1145
| Citations | - [S153] Leo van de Pas, genealogy research documentation of the ancestors of Marie de France.
|
Gilbert Marshall1
M, b. circa 1096, d. before 1130
| Name Variation | | Gilbert Le Mareschal Or Marshall2 |
| Birth* | circa 1096 | of Normandy, France2 |
| Marriage* | circa 1105 | Principal=(?) De Venuz2 |
| Death* | before 1130 | 1 |
| Death | after 1155 | 2 |
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
- [S230] Unknown compiler.
|
Elizabeth (Isabel) de Beaumont1
F, b. circa 1096, d. circa 1147
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
|
(?) De Venuz1
F, b. circa 1096
| Citations | - [S230] Unknown compiler.
|
Konrad I "der Grosse" Markgraf von Meissen1
M, b. 1096, d. 5 February 1157
| Birth* | 1096 | 1 |
| Marriage* | before 1119 | Principal=Liutgart von Ravenstein1 |
| Death* | 5 February 1157 | Petersburg Abbey1 |
| Note* | | Konrad "the Great", Count of Brehna and Camburg, Markgraf of Meissen and Lausitz, Count of the Groitsch-Rochlitz, divided his lands in 1156 among his five sons and became a monk in the monastery of Petersburg near Halle where he died.1 |
| Citations | - [S153] Leo van de Pas, genealogy research documentation of the ancestors of Marie de France.
|
Maud Hanslape1
F, b. circa 1097
| Citations | - [S230] Unknown compiler.
|
Berthold IV Count v. Andechs und von Plassenburg1
M, b. circa 1100, d. 27 June 1151
| Citations | - [S153] Leo van de Pas, genealogy research documentation of the ancestors of Marie de France.
|
Constantin Ange1
M, b. circa 1100, d. after 1166
Théodora Comnène1
F, b. circa 1100
Owain Gwyned1
M, b. circa 1100, d. 1170
| Note* | | He was the Prince of North Wales1137-1170.1 |
| Name Variation | | I (?) (?)1 |
| Birth* | circa 1100 | 1 |
| Death* | 1170 | 1 |
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
|
Sybil De Neufmarche1
F, b. circa 1100, d. after 1143
| Citations | - [S230] Unknown compiler.
- [S227] Unknown compiler.
|
Amicia De Waer1
F, b. circa 1100, d. after 1168
| Birth* | circa 1100 | Norfolk, England1 |
| Marriage* | after November 1120 | By marrying Amice, Robert acqired a large part of the Fitzosberninheritance in Normandy and England. However, being the Earl ofLeicester he did not acquire the title 'Earl of Hereford., Principal=Robert de Beaumont2 |
| Death* | after 1168 | England1 |
| Citations | - [S230] Unknown compiler.
- [S227] Unknown compiler.
|
William De Harcourt1
M, b. circa 1100, d. circa 1148
| Citations | - [S230] Unknown compiler.
|
Ranulph IV le Meschines1
M, b. 1100, d. 16 December 1153
| Event-Misc* | | Ranulph des Gernons Type: AKA1 |
| Burial* | | St Werburg, Chester, Chestershire, England1 |
| Note* | | He was the Earl of Chester, and Viscomte d'Avranches. Hedistinguished himself as a soldier both on the side of the EmpressMaud and of that of King Stephen with impartiality. He was one of thefive earls who witnessed the Charter to Salisbury granted at thenorthampton Council of Henry I on September 8, 1131. He took partagainst King Stephen in the battle of Lincoln February 2, 1141, inwhich Stephen was made prisoner. Stephen retaliated on Ranulph onAugust 29, 1146 by seizing him at court at Northampton. Ranulph wasgranted the Castle and city of Lincoln after (probably) thepacification of 1151. It is thought that he was poisoned to death byhis wife and William Peverel since he was distrusted by both sides. Wallop, p. 198: also aka 'de Gernon', also Viscount Avranches;alternate account: d. 16 dec 1153, supposedly poisoned PlantagEncy,167: 5th earl Chester, a great magnate, one of barons warring vs.Stephen. 1141 helped Angevins capture both king & castle of Lincoln,hoping to get back lands in Carlisle from Scottish king David I. 1145,switched sides; but king turned on him, accuing him of treachery &taking his castles. 1149 leading supporter of Henry II. Acc. to Ralphof Diceto, he was poisoned by William de Peverel, a Notts. baron.Henry of Huntingdon said he was 'audacious but lacking in judgement,aiming beyond his reach; whatever he begins like a man he ends like awoman.'1 |
| Birth* | 1100 | Gernon Castle, Normandy, France1 |
| Marriage* | 1141 | 1 |
| Death* | 16 December 1153 | England1 |
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
|
Gilbert de Clare1
M, b. 1100, d. 14 September 1148
| Name Variation | | Gilbert FitzGilbert |
| Note* | | He was named First Earl of Pembroke in 1138; became a baron by obtaining the estates of his paternal uncles Roger and Walter, both of whom died without offspring. When he was named Earl of Pembroke, King Stephen also gave him the rape and castle of Pevensy. When the Empress landed in 1139, Gilbert marched with the King to Arundel. At the battle of Lincoln, Feb. 2, 1140/41, he was one of those nobles who fled when the first division of Stephen's army was put to flight, but then reallied to the Queen after she recovered London in June. He waswith Stephen at the siege of Oxford in 1142 and, in 1144, invaded South Wales and captured or built (differing versions from differentsources) Carmarthen Castle. He was a benefactor to the abbey ofTintern and the priories of Lewes , Southward and St. Neots, and theTemplars. (Complete Peerage, Vol X:348-350)1 |
| Name Variation | | Gilbert de Clare1 |
| Name Variation | | Earl Gilbert de Clare of Pembroke2 |
| Birth | circa 1100 | Tunbridge, Kent, England2 |
| Birth* | 1100 | Clare, Suffolk, England1 |
| Marriage* | circa 1130 | Principal=Isabel (Elizabeth) De Beaumont2 |
| Death* | 14 September 1148 | Wales1 |
| Burial* | circa October 1148 | Tintern Abbey, Chepstow, Monmouthshire, South Wales, Wales, http://www.castlewales.com/tintern.html2 |
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
- [S230] Unknown compiler.
|
Diarmait Macmurchada, King1
M, b. 1100, d. 1 May 1171
| Event-Misc | | MacDonnchada, Type: AKA (2)2 |
| Anecdote* | | The story of the Norman Conquest resembles a soap opera, pitting the wily, deceitful villain (Dermot MacMurrough) against the well meaning but hapless incompetent (Tiernan O'Rourke). MacMurrough and O'Rourke were mortal enemies. The antagonism between them dated to 1152, when O'Rourke had been humiliated by MacMurrough's abduction of O'Rourke's wife, Dervorgilla. But MacMurrough may not have been as culpable as it seemed. According to Irish folklore, it was Dervorgilla herself, then aged 44, who arranged the abduction, with MacMurrough, then aged 42, simply going along. Nevertheless, MacMurrough was hardly an innocent bystander, having eagerly accepted the invitation, and having staged a lifelike abduction, with horsemen, screaming victim, and all the trappings. O'Rourke recovered Dervorgilla the following year (1153), but he never got the revenge he wanted. The subsequent hostilities between O'Rourke and MacMurrough were played out in the context of a larger battle between Rory O'Connor and Murtaugh MacLochlain for the high kingship of Ireland. O'Rourke was allied with O'Connor, the eventual winner, while MacMurrough supported, and more importantly was protected by, MacLochlain. In 1166, finally, after a 10 year war, O'Connor defeated MacLochlain once and for all. O'Connor was magnanimous in victory. He reduced MacLochlain's petit-kingdom to a small area, and took hostages, but otherwise permitted him to live out his reign. O'Rourke had no intention of extending similar generosity to MacMurrough. He got his revenge later that same year when MacLochlain (MacMurrough's long time protector) died, and O'Rourke, along with several cohorts, forced MacMurrough to flee Ireland. But MacMurrough quickly regrouped. He sought help from Henry II, the aforementioned Norman ruler of the Angevin empire. To Henry, MacMurrough represented opportunity knocking. Henry had no enthusiasm for personally leading an expedition to Ireland -- after all, he had previously declined to do so, even after seeking and receiving the Bull Laudabiliter – but he had nothing to lose by encouraging MacMurrough. Thus Henry issued an open letter to his subjects, authorizing them to render military assistance to MacMurrough. MacMurrough then contacted one of the great Norman leaders in Wales, the legendary "Strongbow" (a.k.a. Richard FitzGilbert de Clare, the earl of Strigoil). Initially, Strongbow was reluctant, but then MacMurrough offered Strongbow his eldest daughter, Aoife (Eva), in marriage, together with the right to succeed MacMurrough as king of Leinster. Finally, Strongbow agreed to lead an army into Ireland to restore MacMurrough to power. With Strongbow on his side, MacMurrough then was also able to recruit a number of Norman and Flemish knights whose names now are common in Ireland: FitzHenry, Carew, FitzGerald, Barry, Prendergast, Fleming, Roche, Cheevers, Synott. The impatient MacMurrough returned to Ireland with a handful of Normans in 1167, but O'Connor and O'Rourke soon forced him to submit. Always the master of deceit, MacMurrough even paid O'Rourke one hundred ounces of gold as reparation for abducting Dervorgilla. But MacMurrough was not discouraged. He knew that help was on the way. The first Norman troop ships, about 600 in number, landed at Bannow Bay early in May 1169. MacMurrough and several hundred of his men promptly joined the Normans, and together they marched on Wexford. The Viking inhabitants directly confronted the invaders, expecting to find a rag-tag outfit of enthusiastic but poorly armed Irishmen. Instead they discovered a fully armed and disciplined professional army, ready for the kill. The Vikings were driven back into Wexford, and next day the town was forced to surrender. Strongbow himself now set sail for Ireland. His advance guard, ten knights and seventy archers, was led by a magnificent young soldier-warrior from the FitzGerald family, Raymond Carew, commonly called 'le Gros' ('the Fat'). Le Gros landed north of Waterford and quickly built earthen ramparts which remain even today. Almost immediately, an opposition army -- several thousand Vikings and Gaelic-Irish from Waterford and the surrounding areas -- attacked le Gros and his contingent of eighty Norman and Fleming soldiers. Incredibly, le Gros and his vastly outnumbered troops prevailed. Behind the ramparts, le Gros had concealed a herd of cattle, which he suddenly stampeded into the oncoming troops, trampling the front rank of the attackers. In all the confusion, le Gros and his force routed the remaining natives, seventy of whom were captured alive. As a message to Waterford, the prisoners' limbs were broken, their heads severed, and their bodies thrown over the cliffs. Now Strongbow and his army of about two hundred knights and a thousand other troops joined le Gros, and two days later, they attacked Waterford. Twice the Normans were beaten off, but eventually le Gros breached the walls at a weak point, and captured Waterford. Now MacMurrough's daughter, Aoife, came to Waterford, where she married Strongbow. A celebrated fresco in the British House of Commons depicts the wedding ceremony occurring at the close of the battle, against a background of burning buildings and dead Irishmen. The fresco is a classic example of artistic license, since Aoife did not arrive until several days after the battle. But the artist captured brilliantly the essential elements of the pact which MacMurrough had made with Strongbow two years earlier in Wales. Strongbow and MacMurrough now set their sights on taking Dublin, which was a semi-independent Viking kingdom. With the wily MacMurrough leading the way, the Normans evaded an ambush laid by O'Connor and O'Rourke and arrived unscathed at the city walls. The Vikings were inclined to surrender, but while negotiations were still ongoing, le Gros and Milo de Cogan led their troops through a breach in the city walls and routed the city's ineffectual defenders. Asgall, the Viking-Irish King of Dublin, managed to escape with some of his Viking followers. As they sailed away, Asgall vowed to return and retake Dublin. MacMurrough became deathly ill in April 1171, and while Strongbow was visiting him, Asgall, who had been forced to flee only nine months earlier, made good on his vow to return. He brought with him a fleet of ships carrying about a thousand Vikings, who mounted a fierce assault on Strongbow's Dublin. But even without Strongbow to lead them, the Normans prevailed. Asgall, who was taken prisoner, was tried, convicted and beheaded in the hall of what formerly had been his own palace in Dublin.3 |
| Name Variation | | King Diarmat MacMurrough , Of Leinster2 |
| Note* | | From Encylcopedia Britannica Online article titled: 'DermotMacmurrough:' 'Irish Diarmaid Macmurchada...Irish king of Leinster whose appeal tothe English for help in settling an internal dispute led to theAnglo-Norman invasion and conquest of Ireland by England. 'After succeeding to the throne of his father, Enna, in 1126, Dermotfaced a number of rivals who disputed his claim to the kingship. Heestablished his authority by killing or blinding 17 rebel chieftainsof northern Leinster in 1141. In 1153 he abducted the wife of TiernanO'Ruark, king of Breifne (modern counties of Leitrim and Cavan). 'A bitter feud ensued, and in 1166 Dermot was driven from Ireland.King Henry II of England then granted the exiled ruler permission toenlist the aid of several Anglo-Norman lords of south Wales, notablyRichard de Clare, 2nd earl of Pembroke. Returning to Leinster in 1167with an advance party of Anglo-Normans, Dermot established a footholdthere. Pembroke arrived in August 1170, and Dermot then helped theinvaders capture Dublin. Dermot married his daughter Eva to Pembroke,and at Dermot's death Pembroke succeeded as ruler of Leinster.'1 |
| Birth* | 1100 | 1 |
| Birth | 1110 | Ireland2 |
| Marriage* | circa 1130 | Principal=Mor ingen Muirchertaig O'Toole1 |
| Death* | 1 May 1171 | Ferns, County Wexford, Ireland4,1 |
| Death | 1191 | 2 |
Baldwin Fitzgilbert1
M, b. after 1100, d. 1154
| Note* | | He was the Lord of Bourne, Deeping and Skellingthorpe in Lincolnshireand founder of Bourne Abbey. Birth year after 1095 based on the factthat his mother was born after 1080.1 |
| Birth* | after 1100 | Lincolnshire, England1 |
| Death* | 1154 | 1 |
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
|
Matilda 'Maud' (?)1
F, b. between 7 February 1101 and 1102, d. 10 September 1169
| Burial* | | Bec Abbey, Le Bec-Hellouin, Eure, France1 |
| Note* | | Matilda is the Latin form of Maud, and the name of the only survivinglegitimate child of King Henry I. She was born in 1101, generally itis said at Winchester, but recent research indicates that she wasactually born at the Royal Palace in Sutton Courtenay (Berkshire). In something of a political coup for her father, Matilda was betrothedto the German Emperor, Henry V, when she was only eight. They weremarried on 7th January 1114. She was twelve and he was thirty-two.Unfortunately there were no children and on the Emperor's death in1125, Matilda was recalled to her father's court. Matilda's only legitimate brother had been killed in the disastrousWreck of the White Ship in late 1120 and she was now her father's onlyhope for the continuation of his dynasty. The barons swore allegianceto the young Princess and promised to make her queen after herfather's death. She herself needed heirs though and in April 1127,Matilda found herself obliged to marry Prince Geoffrey of Anjou andMaine (the future Geoffrey V, Count of those Regions). He wasthirteen, she twenty-three. It is thought that the two never got on.However, despite this unhappy situation they had had three sons infour years. Being absent in Anjou at the time of her father's death on 1stDecember 1135, possibly due to pregnancy, Matilda was not in much of aposition to take up the throne which had been promised her and shequickly lost out to her fast-moving cousin, Stephen. With her husband,she attempted to take Normandy. With encouragement from supporters inEngland though, it was not long before Matilda invaded her rightfulEnglish domain and so began a long-standing Civil War from thepowerbase of her half-brother, Robert of Gloucester, in the WestCountry. After three years of armed struggle, she at last gained the upper handat the Battle of Lincoln, in February 1141, where King Stephen wascaptured. However, despite being declared Queen or 'Lady of theEnglish' at Winchester and winning over Stephen's brother, Henry ofBlois, the powerful Bishop of Winchester, Matilda alienated thecitizens of London with her arrogant manner. She failed to secure hercoronation and the Londoners joined a renewed push from Stephen'sQueen and laid siege to the Empress in Winchester. She managed toescape to the West, but while commanding her rearguard, her brotherwas captured by the enemy. Matilda was obliged to swap Stephen for Robert on 1st November 1141.Thus the King soon reimposed his Royal authority. In 1148, after thedeath of her half-brother, Matilda finally returned to Normandy,leaving her son, who, in 1154, would become Henry II, to fight on inEngland. She died at Rouen on 10th September 1169 and was buried inFontevrault Abbey, though some of her entrails may possibly have beenlater interred in her father's foundation at Reading Abbey. She was the Empress of Germany. From Encyclopedia Britannica Online,article entitled Matilda: 'Her brother's [William the Aetheling] death in 1120 made her HenryI's sole legitimate heir, and in 1127 he compelled the baronage toaccept her as his successor, though a woman ruler was equallyunprecedented for the kingdom of England and the duchy of Normandy.The Angevin marriage was unpopular and flouted the barons'stipulation that she should not be married out of England withouttheir consent. The birth of her eldest son, Henry, in 1133 gave hopeof silencing this opposition, but he was only two when Henry I died(1135), and a rapid coup brought to the English throne Stephen ofBlois, son of William I the Conqueror's daughter Adela. Though thechurch and the majority of the baronage supported Stephen, Matilda'sclaims were powerfully upheld in England by her half brother Robert ofGloucester and her uncle King David I of Scotland. Matilda and Robertlanded at Arundel in September 1139, and she was for a short whilebesieged in the castle. But Stephen soon allowed her to join herbrother, who had gone to the west country, where she had much support;after a stay at Bristol, she settled at Gloucester. 'She came nearest to success in the summer of 1141, after Stephen hadbeen captured at Lincoln in February. Elected 'lady of the English' bya clerical council at Winchester in April, she entered London in June;but her arrogance and tactless demands for money provoked the citizensto chase her away to Oxford before she could be crowned queen. Herforces were routed at Winchester in September 1141, and thereafter shemaintained a steadily weakening resistance in the west country. Herwell-known escape from Oxford Castle over the frozen River Thames tookplace in December 1142. 'Normandy had been in her husband's possession since 1144, and sheretired there in 1148, remaining near Rouen to watch over theinterests to her eldest son, who became duke of Normandy in 1150 andKing Henry II of England in 1154. She spent the remainder of her lifein Normandy exercising a steadying influence over Henry II'scontinental dominions.'1 |
| Birth* | between 7 February 1101 and 1102 | Winchester, Hampshire, England2,3,1 |
| Marriage* | 22 May 1128 | Le Mans Cathedral, Anjou, France, It is possible that they could have been married in 1127. AfterGeoffrey Plantagenet's death, Matilda was married to Henry V Emperorof the Holy Roman Empire., Principal=Geoffrey 'The Fair' Plantagenet4,1 |
| Death* | 10 September 1169 | Notre Dame, Rouen, Seine-Maritime, France, It is possible that she may have died in 1167.1 |
Euphamia (?)1
F, b. July 1101
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
|
William the Atheling1
M, b. before 5 August 1103, d. 25 November 1120
| Note* | | Duke of Normandy, 1120. From University of Hull,http://www.dcs.hull.ac.uk/cgi-bin/gedlkup/n=royal?royal01394: 'When the white ship was wrecked on the deadly rock a boat was launcedand William, the King's [William I Beauclerc] only legitimate son,was rowed to safety. The cries ofhis half-sister the Countess ofPerche induced him to return to the wreckwhere they sank together.This was considered by some to be punishment for Henry's sins of lustin having so many illegitimate offspring. '1 |
| Birth* | before 5 August 1103 | Winchester, Hampshire, England1 |
| Marriage* | June 1119 | France, Principal=Isabella (Matilda) (?)1 |
| Death* | 25 November 1120 | English Channel1 |
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
|
William De Braose1
M, b. circa 1104, d. circa 1192
| Occupation* | | 2 |
| Note* | | He was Lord Of Brambar. OF BRECKNOCK, ABERGAVENNEY AND GOWR 1ST BARON OF GWENTLAND SOURCE--ANCESTRAL ROOTS OF CERTAIN AMERICAN COLONISTS WHO CAME TOAMERICA BEFORE 1700, SEVENTH EDITION, COPYRIGHT 1995, PAGE 152 FirstBaron of Gwentland; Sheriff of Herefordshire, 1174-1192.1 |
| Name Variation | | Baron William De Braose Of Gwentland2 |
| Birth* | circa 1104 | Bramber, Sussex, England1 |
| Birth | circa 1126 | Brecknock, Abergavenney and Gowr, Wales, England2 |
| Marriage* | 1150 | Herefordshire, England, Principal=Bertha FitzMiles1 |
| Death* | circa 1192 | England3,1 |
Robert de Beaumont1
M, b. 1104, d. 5 April 1168
| Burial* | | St. Marys de Pre, Leicester, England1 |
| Occupation* | | 2nd Earl of Leicester2 |
| Name Variation | | Earl Robert 'le Bossu' De Beaumont Of Leicester2 |
| Note* | | Robert, and his twin brother Waleran, were brought up in the court ofHenry I. See The Complete Peerage, Vol VII, p. 526-530, for anextensive biography. He was the 2nd Earl of Leicester.1 |
| Birth* | 1104 | Normandy, France2 |
| Marriage* | after November 1120 | By marrying Amice, Robert acqired a large part of the Fitzosberninheritance in Normandy and England. However, being the Earl ofLeicester he did not acquire the title 'Earl of Hereford., Principal=Amicia De Waer1 |
| Death* | 5 April 1168 | Leicester, Leicestershire, England2 |
| Family | Amicia De Waer b. circa 1100, d. after 1168 |
| Marriage* | after November 1120 | By marrying Amice, Robert acqired a large part of the Fitzosberninheritance in Normandy and England. However, being the Earl ofLeicester he did not acquire the title 'Earl of Hereford., Principal=Amicia De Waer1 |
| Child | 1. | Isabel De Beaumont+ b. c 1122, d. a 11532 |
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
- [S230] Unknown compiler.
|
Waleran de Beaumont1
M, b. 1104, d. 10 April 1141
| Note* | | He was the Earl of Worcester, and Count of Meulan. Waleran, and histwin brother, Robert, were brought up in the court of Henry I. See The Complete Peerage, Vol VII, p. 526-530, for furtherinformation.1 |
| Birth* | 1104 | Meulan, Normandy, France1 |
| Marriage* | circa 1141 | 1 |
| Death* | 10 April 1141 | Normandie, France1 |
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
|
Alan de Dunstanville, lord of Burpham1
M, b. 1104, d. 1156
| Citations | - [S231] Unknown author, GEDCOM File C:\TMGW\BACKUPS\ISABEL~1.GED imported on 04-06-2002 at 22:22:48..
- [S232] Unknown author, Constance.-Walter.le.Blount.ancestors.ged.
|
Alfonso Raimundez1
M, b. between 1 March 1104 and 1105, d. 21 August 1157
| Event-Misc* | | Pierre-Raimund Type: AKA1 |
| Note* | | From Encyclopedia Britannica Online, article titled 'Alfonso VI:' 'byname ALFONSO THE EMPEROR, Spanish ALFONSO EL EMPERADOR, king ofLeon and Castile from 1126 to 1157, son of Raymond of Burgundy and thegrandson of Alfonso VI, whose imperial title he assumed. Though hisreign saw the apogee of the imperial idea in medieval Spain and thoughhe won notable victories against the Moors, he remains a somewhat hazyfigure. 'His childhood was complicated by the struggle between his motherUrraca and her second husband, Alfonso I of Aragon, for control ofCastile and Leon. Only on Urraca's death (1126) did his stepfatherfinally relinquish his claims. Alfonso was then formally accepted asemperor by the kings of Aragon and Pamplona (Navarre), by the count ofBarcelona, and by various Hispano-Moorish rulers. His capture ofAlmerâia (1147) from the Moors won him renown, as did other victories,but in the end these led to little expansion of territory. Almerâia was lost again in 1157 and Câordobaremained in his hands for only three years. In 1146 a new invasion ofNorth African fanatics, the Almohads, began. Alfonso now alliedhimself with the Almoravids and devoted the rest of his life to aseries of campaigns to check Almohad expansion in southern Spain. 'Despite the importance of the imperial idea at this time, peninsularfractionalist tendencies were by no means dormant. Alfonso was unableto prevent the establishment of Portugal as an independent kingdom(1140) and, in his will, he himself divided his realm, as was theSpanish custom, between his two sons, Sancho III of Castile andFerdinand II of Leon. This act finally destroyed the concept of empire in medieval Spain.'1 |
| Birth* | between 1 March 1104 and 1105 | Burgos, Spain1 |
| Marriage* | 1128 | Saldana, Spain, Principal=Berenguela Berenger1 |
| Death* | 21 August 1157 | Fresneda, Castile2,1 |
Mathilde von Kärten1
F, b. circa 1105, d. 1160
| Citations | - [S153] Leo van de Pas, genealogy research documentation of the ancestors of Marie de France.
- [S208] John P. DuLong, Roland-Yves Gagné, Gail F. Moreau, Joseph A. Dubé René Jetté, Table d'ascendance Baillon.
|
Otto IV Pfalzgraf von Bayern1
M, b. circa 1105, d. 4 March 1156
| Citations | - [S153] Leo van de Pas, genealogy research documentation of the ancestors of Marie de France.
- [S18] Interview, Assumption or calculation, various.
|
Isabel (Elizabeth) De Beaumont1
F, b. circa 1105, d. after 1172
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
- [S230] Unknown compiler.
|
Henry Fitzhenry1
M, b. circa 1105, d. 1157
| Marriage* | | 1 |
| Note* | | Held lands in Barberth and Pebidiog in South Wales, as well as inIreland. Killed in the English attack on Anglesea in 1157.1 |
| Birth* | circa 1105 | 1 |
| Death* | 1157 | 1 |
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
|
Agnes Hue Ambroise1
F, b. circa 1105, d. after 1153
| Citations | - [S230] Unknown compiler.
|
William De Beauchamp I1
M, b. circa 1105, d. circa 1170
| Citations | - [S230] Unknown compiler.
|
Beatrix de Mandeville1
F, b. 1105, d. 1197
| Marriage* | | 1 |
| Birth* | 1105 | 1 |
| Marriage | 1131 | 1 |
| Death* | 1197 | 1 |
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
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James de St. Hilary1
M, b. 1107, d. 1154
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
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Berenguela Berenger1
F, b. 1108, d. between 3 February 1148 and 1149
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
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Liutgarde vonSulzbach1
F, b. circa 1109
| Citations | - [S208] John P. DuLong, Roland-Yves Gagné, Gail F. Moreau, Joseph A. Dubé René Jetté, Table d'ascendance Baillon.
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Godefroy II duc de Brabant1
M, b. circa 1109
| Citations | - [S208] John P. DuLong, Roland-Yves Gagné, Gail F. Moreau, Joseph A. Dubé René Jetté, Table d'ascendance Baillon.
- [S209] Nobility BMD data, Nobility of the Holy Roman Empire.
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Melisande D'Edesse (?)1
F, b. circa 1109
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
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Isabella (Matilda) (?)1
F, b. circa 1109, d. 1154
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
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Maud De Braose1
F, b. circa 1109
| Citations | - [S230] Unknown compiler.
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Humphrey III De Bohun1
M, b. 1109, d. 6 April 1187
| Note* | | Humphrey was Steward and Sewer to King Henry I. This feudal lordmarried Margery, daughter of Milo de Gloucester, Earl of Hereford,Lord High Constable of England, last Lord Hereford of that family. Shewas co-heir with her sister Mabel. At the instigation of which Milo heespoused the cause of the Empress Maud and her son, afterwards HenryII, against the King Stephen, and so faithfully maintained hisallegiance that the Empress, by her especial charter, granted him theoffice of steward and sewer, both in Normandy and England. In the 20thof Henry II this Humphrey accompanied Richard de Lacy, Justice ofEngland, into Scotland with a powerful army to waste that country, andwas one of the witnesses to the accord made by William, King of Scots,and King Henry as to the subjection of that kingdom to the crown ofEngland. Humphrey, third Baron de Bohon (1109-87) succeeded his father Humphreythe great in 1129 and became involved in the struggle for the throneof England on the death of Henry I in 1134. When King Henry II becameking, Sir Humphrey became Steward of Henry II's household and waslater named hereditary Constable of England, a position previouslyheld by his father-in-law and then by his brother-in-law. Humphrey, in1138, had married Margaret, daughter of Miles of Gloucester, Earl ofHereford and High Constable of England. When Miles sons died heirless,Henry II gave the title of High Constable to Miles' son-in-law,Humphrey, 3rd Baron de Bohon. Humphrey and Margaret of Gloucester hadfive sons, Humphrey, Richard, John, Miles and Robert. King Henry II (1154-89) had many difficulties during his reign,including numerous revolts led by his sons. Humphrey (1109-87) thethird Baron de Bohon, and his eldest son, Sir Humphrey (1141-83)usually known as the Young Earl of Hereford, remained loyal to HenryII throughout his reign. Sir John de Bohon, the third son, was a veryclose friend and supporter of Henry II's 4th son Geoffrey as long asGeoffrey lived. Sir Robert de Bohon, the youngest son, was a veryclose friend of Prince Henry; Henry II's second son and heir. Sir Robert le Bon died in 1183, four years before his father BaronHumphrey de Bohon's death. Consequently, when Humphrey the third Barondied in 1187, he was succeeded by his 12 year old grandson, Henry(1176-1220) as fourth Baron de Bohon. Upon coming of age, Henry wasknighted and made High Constable of England and held manor houses andcastles at Caldicot, Haresfield, Oaksey and Walden in addition to themain Hereford holdings.1 |
| Marriage* | | Wales ?, England ?, Principal=Eleanor de Braose1 |
| Marriage* | | Principal=Margaret Fitzwalter1 |
| Birth* | 1109 | Hereford, Kimbolton, Hertford, England1 |
| Burial* | 1187 | 1 |
| Death* | 6 April 1187 | 1 |
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
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Rohese De Vere1
F, b. 1109, d. 1166
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
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FARAMUS of Boulogne1
M, b. before 1110, d. between 1183 and 1184
| Note* | | In charge of Dover Castle and of the Honour of Peverel of dover in1157-58; held lands at Eaton, Bedford, and Wendover in Buckshire.1 |
| Birth* | before 1110 | 2,1 |
| Death* | between 1183 and 1184 | 1 |
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
- [S221] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 158A-25.
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Goswin II Ct v. Heinsberg1
M, b. circa 1110, d. 1170
| Birth* | circa 1110 | 1 |
| Birth | before 1128 | 2,3 |
| Marriage* | circa 1130 | Pr |