Aubrey De Vere1
M, b. circa 1110, d. 26 December 1194
| Note* | | He was the 1st Earl of Oxford.1 |
| Birth* | circa 1110 | 1 |
| Marriage* | circa 1130 | 1 |
| Death* | 26 December 1194 | 1 |
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
|
Alberic de Mello Count of Dammartin1
M, b. circa 1110
| Citations | - [S228] CaryAnn Hess (?), CaryAnn Hess, 24743 Sunday Drive, Moreno Valley, CA 92557 as submitted in GEDCOM file C:\TMGW\BACKUPS\DEDAMM~1.GED and imported on 04-04-2002 at 10:25:47..
|
Clemence de Bar-le-duc Countess of Clermont1
F, b. 1110, d. after January 1182
| Citations | - [S228] CaryAnn Hess (?), CaryAnn Hess, 24743 Sunday Drive, Moreno Valley, CA 92557 as submitted in GEDCOM file C:\TMGW\BACKUPS\DEDAMM~1.GED and imported on 04-04-2002 at 10:25:47..
- [S227] Unknown compiler.
|
ALFONSO I HENRIQUES of Portugal1
M, b. 25 July 1110, d. 6 December 1185
| Note* | | From Encyclopedia Britannica Online, article titled 'Alfonso I:' 'also called Afonso Henriques, byname AFONSO THE CONQUEROR, PortugueseAFONSO O CONQUISTADOR, the first king of Portugal (1139-85), who conqueredSantarâem and Lisbon from the Muslims (1147) and secured Portugueseindependence from Leon (1139). 'Alfonso VI, emperor of Leon, had granted the county of Portugal toAfonso's father, Henry of Burgundy, who successfully defended itagainst the Muslims (1095-1112). Henry married Alfonso VI'sillegitimate daughter, Teresa, who governed Portugal from the time ofher husband's death (1112) until her son Afonso came of age. Sherefused to cede her power to Afonso, but his party prevailed in theBattle of Säao Mamede, near Guimaräaes (1128). Though at first obligedas a vassal to submit to his cousin Alfonso VII of Leon, Afonsoassumed the title of king in 1139. 'By victory in the Battle of Ourique (1139) he was able to imposetribute on his Muslim neighbours; and in 1147 he further capturedSantarâem and, availing himself of the services of passing crusaders,successfully laid siege to Lisbon. He carried his frontiers beyond theTagus River, annexing Beja in 1162 and âEvora in 1165; in attackingBadajoz, he was taken prisoner but then released. He married Mafaldaof Savoy and associated his son, Sancho I, with his power. By the timeof his death he had created a stable and independent monarchy.'1 |
| Birth* | 25 July 1110 | Portugal1 |
| Marriage* | 1146 | Principal=Matilda de MAURIENNE1 |
| Death* | 6 December 1185 | Portugal1 |
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
|
Aveline (?)1
F, b. 1112
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
|
Blanche de Navarre1
F, b. after 1113, d. 12 August 1156
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
|
Geoffrey 'The Fair' Plantagenet1
M, b. 24 August 1113, d. 11 September 1151
| Note* | | Geoffrey was also known as 'The Plantagenet' and more commonly as'Plantagenet, Geoffrey V the Fair, Count of Anjou and Maine'. He wasDuke of Normandy 1144-1150 abdicating ca 1151. The Plantagenet surname was originally a nickname, of the Englishroyal house of Anjou or the Angevin dynasty, founded by Geoffrey V,Count of Anjou (1113-51), husband of Matilda (1102-67), daughter ofKing Henry I of England. The name is derived from the Latin planta('sprig') and genistae ('broom plant'), in reference to the sprig thatGeoffrey always wore in his cap. Burke says the marriage was 3 Apr1127. The name Plantagenet, according to Rapin, came from when Fulkthe Great, being stung from remorse for some wicked action, in orderto atone for it, went a pilgrimage to Jerusalem, and was scourgedbefore the Holy Sepulchre with broom twigs. Reigning from 1154 to 1485, the Plantagenet kings, in the main line ofdescent, were Henry II, Richard I, John, Henry III, Edward I, EdwardII, Edward III, and Richard II; through the house of Lancaster, HenryIV, Henry V, and Henry VI; and through the house of York, Edward IV,Edward V, and Richard III. Geoffrey was the Count of Anjou and Maine. From EncyclopediaBritannica Online, article entitled Geoffrey IV: 'Also called GEOFFREY PLANTAGENET, byname GEOFFREY THE FAIR, FrenchGEOFFROI PLANTAGENET, OR GEOFFROI LE BEL, count of Anjou (1131-51),Maine, and Touraine and ancestor of the Plantagenet kings of Englandthrough his marriage, in June 1128, to Matilda, daughter of Henry I ofEngland. On Henry's death (1135), Geoffrey claimed the duchy ofNormandy; he finally conquered it in 1144 and ruled there as dukeuntil he gave it to his son, Henry (later King Henry II of England) in1150. Geoffrey was popular with the Normans, but he had to suppress arebellion of malcontent Angevin nobles. After a short war with LouisVII of France, Geoffrey signed a treaty (August 1151) by which hesurrendered the whole of Norman Vexin (the border area betweenNormandy and ãIle-de-France) to Louis.' Weis (Line 1-24) lists Geoffrey as Geoffrey V, not Geoffrey IV. From Encyclopedia Britannica Online, article entitled Geoffrey IV: 'Also called GEOFFREY PLANTAGENET, byname GEOFFREY THE FAIR, FrenchGEOFFROI PLANTAGENET, OR GEOFFROI LE BEL, count of Anjou (1131-51),Maine, and Touraine and ancestor of the Plantagenet kings of Englandthrough his marriage, in June 1128, to Matilda, daughter of Henry I ofEngland. On Henry's death (1135), Geoffrey claimed the duchy ofNormandy; he finally conquered it in 1144 and ruled there as dukeuntil he gave it to his son, Henry (later King Henry II of England) in1150. Geoffrey was popular with the Normans, but he had to suppress arebellion of malcontent Angevin nobles. After a short war with LouisVII of France, Geoffrey signed a treaty (August 1151) by which hesurrendered the whole of Norman Vexin (the border area betweenNormandy and ãIle-de-France) to Louis.' Weis (Line 1-24) lists Geoffrey as Geoffrey V, not Geoffrey IV.1 |
| Name Variation | | Iv (?) (?)1 |
| Birth* | 24 August 1113 | Rouen, Seine-Maritime, France1 |
| 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=Matilda 'Maud' (?)2,1 |
| Burial* | September 1151 | St. Julian's Church, Le Mans, Maine, France1 |
| Death* | 11 September 1151 | Chãateau-du-Loir, Le Mans, Maine, France, Some sources believed that he died on the 7th of September.3,1 |
Thierry VI De Hollande1
M, b. circa 1114, d. 5 August 1157
| Birth* | circa 1114 | 1 |
| Occupation* | | Comte1 |
| Marriage* | before 1137 | Principal=Sophie De Rheineke1 |
| Death* | 5 August 1157 | 1 |
| Note* | | Profession : Comte de Hollande de 1121 à 1157. Il part en Croisade en 1139.1 |
| 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..
|
Henry de Briwere1
M, b. circa 1114
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
- [S230] Unknown compiler.
|
Sybil (?)1
F, b. circa 1114, d. 1165
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
|
Mor ingen Muirchertaig O'Toole1
F, b. circa 1114, d. 1164
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
- [S230] Unknown compiler.
|
Hugh de Lusignan1
M, b. 1114, d. 1172
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
|
Gilbert de Clare1
F, b. before 1115, d. 1152
| Note* | | Created Earl of Hertford before 1142, did not marry.1 |
| Birth* | before 1115 | 1 |
| Death* | 1152 | 1 |
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
|
Henry of Scotland1,2
M, b. 1115, d. 12 June 1152
| Citations | - [S208] John P. DuLong, Roland-Yves Gagné, Gail F. Moreau, Joseph A. Dubé René Jetté, Table d'ascendance Baillon, tableau 12.
- [S211] BORRI, online http://www.ma-genealogie.org/borri/index.html.
- [S1] Edward Fairchild (?), Edward Fairchild, 4320 Washtenaw Ave, Ann Arbor, MI 48108-1008, 734-971-2709 as submitted in GEDCOM file C:\TMGW\BACKUPS\FAIRCE7.GED and imported on 03-27-2002 at 23:35:12..
- [S177] Alison Weir, Britain's Royal Families, 192.
|
Margaret Peverell1
F, b. 1115, d. UNKNOWN
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
|
Roger de Clare1
M, b. 1115, d. 1173
| Note* | | Roger, 3rd Earl of Hertford, also bore the title of Earl of Clare, butHornby observes that this meant only Earl at Clare, for his Earldomwas certainly at Hertford. In 3rd of Henry II this nobleman, havingobtained permission from the King to own all the lands in Wales thathe could win, marched into Caerdigan and captured and fortified thecastles there. This Earl, who, from his munificence to the church andhis numerous acts of piety, was called the 'Good Earl of Hertford.'Earl of Hertford 1153-1173. In 1164 he assisted with theConstitutions of Clarendon. Because of his munificence to the Churchand his acts of piety, he was called 'good Earl of Hertford.'1 |
| Name Variation | | Iii (?) (?)1 |
| Marriage* | | Principal=Maud de St. Hilary1 |
| Birth* | 1115 | Tunbridge Castle, Kent, England1 |
| Death* | 1173 | Oxfordshire, England1 |
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
|
Sophie De Rheineke1
F, b. after 1115, d. 26 February 1176
| 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..
|
Julliana De Vere1
F, b. circa 1116, d. 1163
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
|
Emma De Langetot1
F, b. 1116, d. after 1134
| 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.
|
Countess Gundred De Warren1
F, b. circa 1117, d. after 1166
| Citations | - [S230] Unknown compiler.
|
William Mauduit1
M, b. circa 1118, d. 1170
| Citations | - [S230] Unknown compiler.
|
Margaret de Beaumont1
F, b. 1118
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
|
Ada de Warenne1
F, b. after 1118, d. 1178
| Name Variation | | Ada de Warenne , Countess of Huntingdon3 |
| Name Variation | | Ada de Varennes4,1 |
| Birth | circa 1104 | Huntingdon, Huntingdon, England3 |
| Note* | | Earl of Warren and 2nd Earl of Surrey. Fought at Tenchefrai, 1106, for Henry I5 |
| Birth* | after 1118 | Europe4,1 |
| Marriage | 1139 | Principal=Henry of Scotland4,1 |
| Death* | 1178 | 4,1 |
| Citations | - [S208] John P. DuLong, Roland-Yves Gagné, Gail F. Moreau, Joseph A. Dubé René Jetté, Table d'ascendance Baillon, tableau 12.
- [S153] Leo van de Pas, genealogy research documentation of the ancestors of Marie de France.
- [S1] Edward Fairchild (?), Edward Fairchild, 4320 Washtenaw Ave, Ann Arbor, MI 48108-1008, 734-971-2709 as submitted in GEDCOM file C:\TMGW\BACKUPS\FAIRCE7.GED and imported on 03-27-2002 at 23:35:12..
- [S211] BORRI, online http://www.ma-genealogie.org/borri/index.html.
- [S212] Robin Penner's Genealogy Database, online http://www.altenberg.com/eric/Docs/Genealogy/index.html, http://www.altenberg.com/eric/Docs/Genealogy/fg05/fg05_372.html.
|
Earl Roger De Newburgh , Of Warwick1
M, b. circa 1119, d. 12 June 1153
| Citations | - [S230] Unknown compiler.
|
(?) Walton1
F, b. circa 1120
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
- [S230] Unknown compiler.
|
Isabel De Saint Liz1
F, b. circa 1120
| Citations | - [S230] Unknown compiler.
|
Louis VII roi de France1
M, b. 1120, d. 18 September 1180
| Birth* | 1120 | France1,2 |
| Occupation* | between 1137 and 1180 | roi de France |
| Marriage* | 13 October 1160 | Principal=Adèle de Blois de Champagne1 |
| Death* | 18 September 1180 | Paris, Ile-de-France, France |
| Burial* | September 1180 | Abbaye Barbeaux, Melun, France2 |
| Note* | | In 1131, at the age of eleven, he was anointed as his father's successor; and when his father died in 1137 he became sole ruler of France. In the same year he married Eleanore de Poitou, Duchess of Aquitaine, so extending the Capetingian lands to the Pyrenees. He continued his father's program of appointing trustworthy people of lower origin to the administration of his government, thus improving the prestige of the monarchy. From 1141 to 1143 he was involved in a fruitless conflict with Thibaut, Count of Champagne, and the papacy. After this period his relations with the popes improved to such an extent that he supported Pope Alexander II against Frederick Barbarossa and even allowed the pope refuge in France. However, the main threats to his kingdom came from Geoffrey, Count of Anjou, and later from Geoffrey's son, the future Henry II, King of England. When Louis VII went on crusade, he took his wife with him. However, on their return he divorced her, the grounds officially being consanguinity, but the reasons were her rumoured affairs. Almost immediately she married King Henry II of England, taking Aquitaine with her. Louis VII then married Constance of Castile and, when she died, he married Alix de Champagne who became the mother of his son and heir, the future King Philippe II August. Louis VII might have defeated King Henry II had he made a concerted attack instead of the half-hearted attacks on Normandy, while at the same time France was spared attacks from the Anglo-Normans because of their internal quarrels. He also benefited from the long-standing quarrel between Henry II and Thomas Becket, Archbishop of Canterbury, and a revolt of Henry's sons. @ M k EAlix de Blois-Champagne F E(1140-1206), Page 2. F King Louis VII of France was in urgent need of a son and heir as his first two wives, Eleonore de Poitou and Constance of Castile, had made him the father of only four girls. And so, on 13 November 1160, only a month after the death of his second wife, he married Alix de Blois. In 1165 she became the mother of a son, Philippe II August, later to be followed by two more daughters. In 1180, Louis VII died, making the 15-year-old Philippe II king of an area little larger than the Ile de France. Perhaps this was the reason why he took some of his mother's castles, causing a quarrel. However, these disagreements were settled and, when Philippe II went on crusade (1190-1191), she acted as his Regent.3 |
| Citations | - [S55] SGCF, Memoires de la Societe Genealogique Canadienne Francaise, 48(3): pp190-216.
- [S143] Www.dcs.hull.ac.uk, online www.dcs.hull.ac.uk.
- [S153] Leo van de Pas, genealogy research documentation of the ancestors of Marie de France.
|
Hugh De Lacy1
M, b. 1120, d. 1186
| Note* | | Hugh was employed in the conquest of Ireland, and for his servicesthere obtained from Henry II the whole county of Meath. He wassubsequently constituted Governor of Dublin, and Justice of Ireland.But incurring the displeasure of his royal master by marrying, withoutlicense, the daughter of the King of Connaught, he was divested, in1181, of the custody of the metropolis of Dublin. In four years he wasmurdered by one Malvo Miadaich, in revenge for the severity with whichhe had treated the workmen employed by him in erecting the Castle ofLurhedy. He left issue Walter, his successor, Hugh, Constable ofIreland, and a daughter, Elayne.1 |
| Birth* | 1120 | Ewias Lacy, Herefordshire, England1 |
| Marriage* | circa 1155 | Principal=Rohesia De Clare1 |
| Death* | 1186 | 1 |
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
|
Ralph de Toeni1
M, b. 1120, d. 1162
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
|
Burgundia De Rancon1
F, b. 1120
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
|
Walter de Cantilupe1
M, b. 1120
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
|
William de Warenne1
M, b. 1121, d. 1148
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
|
Eleanore (?)1
F, b. 1121, d. 31 March 1204
| Burial* | | Abbaye De Fontevrault, près de Saumur, Maine-et-Loire, Pay-de-la-Loire, France1 |
| Note* | | From Encyclopedia Britannica Online, article titled Eleanor ofAquitaine: 'also called ELEANOR OF GUYENNE, French âELâEONORE, OR ALIâENOR,D'AQUITAINE, OR DEGUYENNE, queen consort of both Louis VII of France(in 1137-52) and Henry II of England (in 1152-1204) and mother ofRichard I the Lion-Heart and John of England. She was perhaps the mostpowerful woman in 12th-century Europe. 'She died in 1204 at the monastery at Fontevrault, Anjou, where shehad retired after the campaign at Mirebeau. Her contribution toEngland extended beyond her own lifetime; after the loss of Normandy(1204), it was her own ancestral lands and not the old Normanterritories that remained loyal to England. She has been misjudged bymany French historians who have noted only her youthful frivolity,ignoring the tenacity, political wisdom, and energy that characterizedthe years of her maturity. 'She was beautiful and just, imposing andmodest, humble and elegant'; and, as the nuns of Fontevrault wrote intheir necrology: a queen 'who surpassed almost all the queens of theworld.'ELEANOR OF AQUITAINE (1122-1204) was one of the most importantrulers of Medieval Europe. Many noblewomen in the Middle Ages were well-educated. but Eleanor hadthe chance to use her education at a time when European politics wasdominated by men. When she was just fifteen, Eleanor's father died, and she inheritedAquitaine. the largest kingdom in France. That same year she marriedKing Louis VII and became Queen of France. Although still a teenager,Eleanor was an impressive figure--beautiful, very well-educated, andfearlessly independent. When Louis went off on the Crusades, she went with him, travelingthousands of miles, much of it through hostile lands. But Eleanor and Louis had no male heir, and tensions developed betweenthem. The Pope granted them a divorce when Eleanor was twenty-nine.Within months. Eleanor married Henry Plantagent, her ex-husband's mainrival. Two years later Henry became King of England--and Eleanor was aqueen again. However, Henry soon fell in love with another woman, and Eleanor leftEngland to set up her own court in Aquitaine, which she still ruled.Troubadours from all over France flocked to her palace at Poitiers,where Eleanor acted as patron of the arts. Many of the ideas ofchivalry that we associate with the Middle Ages were developed inEleanor's court.. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Some say King Lewis carried her into the Holy Land, where shecarried herself not very holily, but led a licentious life; and, whichis the worst kind of licentiousness, in carnal familiarity with aTurk.1 |
| Birth* | 1121 | Chcateau De Belin, Bordeaux, Aquitaine, Some sources states that she was born in 1123.1 |
| Marriage* | 18 May 1152 | Bordeaux, Gironde, Aquitaine, France, They may have been married on the 11th of May., Principal=Henry Plantagenet2,1 |
| Death* | 31 March 1204 | Mirabell Castle, Fontevrault l'Ab, Maine-et-Loire, France, Some sources states that she died on April 1, 1204.3,1 |
Berthold V Count v.Andechs & Krain Markgraf v.Istrien1
M, b. circa 1122, d. 14 November 1188
| Birth* | circa 1122 | 1 |
| Marriage* | 1152 | Principal=Hedwig v. Bavaria1 |
| Death* | 14 November 1188 | 1 |
| Citations | - [S153] Leo van de Pas, genealogy research documentation of the ancestors of Marie de France.
|
Isabel De Beaumont1
F, b. circa 1122, d. after 1153
| Citations | - [S230] Unknown compiler.
|
Richard De Bohun1
M, b. 1123
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
|
Adela (Ela) Talvaise1
F, b. circa 1124, d. 4 December 1174
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
|
Hedwig v. Bavaria1
F, b. circa 1125, d. 1174
| Citations | - [S153] Leo van de Pas, genealogy research documentation of the ancestors of Marie de France.
|
Matilda de MAURIENNE1
F, b. circa 1125, d. 4 November 1157
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
|
Ivo De Harcourt1
M, b. circa 1125, d. 1180
| Citations | - [S230] Unknown compiler.
|
Roger de Mortimer1
M, b. 1125, d. 19 August 1214
| Note* | | This feudal lord, like his predecessors, was in constant strife withthe Welsh. He married 1st Millicent Ferrers, daughter of Robert, 4thEarl of Derby; 2nd, Isabel Ferrers, sister of Hugh of Oakham inRutlandshire. He inherited all of Hugh's lands and by his 2nd wife hadRalph, Robert and Philip. He died in 1215 and was succeeded by hiseldest son, Hugh, son of his first wife, who died 1227, and was inturn succeeded by his half brother Ralph de Mortimer. He was the Lord Of Wigmore. Lord Mortimer of Wigmore, Herefordshire.Based upon a charge made in 1191 that he was conspiring with the Welshagainst the King, he was forced to surrender his castles and to'abjure' his country for three years. In April 1194 he was back inEngland again, and witnessed a charter of Richard I after his secondCoronation at Winchester. In 1195 he droves the sons of Cadwallon outof Maelienydd and restored Cwmaron Castle, but in the following yearRhys, Prince of South Wales defeated the cavalry of Roger and Hugh deSay, the battle resulting in much slaughter near Radnor. Rogerforfeited his lands in Normandy when Normandy was lost in 1204. Afterlanding at Dieppe in 1205 he was captured and campelled to par aransom of 1,000 marks. Some of his knights served in the 1210invasion of Ireland. (Complete Peerage, Vol. IX, p. 273)1 |
| Marriage* | | Principal=Isabell De Ferrers1 |
| Birth* | 1125 | 1 |
| Death* | 19 August 1214 | 1 |
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
|
Philip De Braose1
M, b. circa 1126
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
|
William Giffard1
M, b. circa 1126
| Note* | | Chancellor.1 |
| Birth* | circa 1126 | 2 |
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
- [S18] Interview, Assumption or calculation, various.
|
John Marshall1
M, b. 1126, d. 1165
Millicent Stanton or De Rethel1
F, b. circa 1127, d. after 1155
| Citations | - [S230] Unknown compiler.
|
Richard De Camville1
M, b. circa 1127, d. 1176
| Citations | - [S230] Unknown compiler.
|
Sibyl de Salisbury1
F, b. 1127, d. 3 June 1147
Maud de Mortimer1
F, b. 1129
| Citations | - [S227] Unknown compiler.
|
Bernard Saint Valerie1
M, b. 1129, d. 1190
| Name Variation | | Bernard de St. Valery2 |
| Birth* | 1129 | 1 |
| Death* | 1190 | 1 |
| Citations | - [S230] Unknown compiler.
- [S227] Unknown compiler.
|
Andronic Ange1
M, b. circa 1130
| Citations | - [S208] John P. DuLong, Roland-Yves Gagné, Gail F. Moreau, Joseph A. Dubé René Jetté, Table d'ascendance Baillon, tableau 13.
|