Set As Default Person
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Name |
FITZ-ALEN, Richard |
Prefix |
Earl |
Birth |
25 Mar 1346 |
Arundel Castle, Sussex, England |
Gender |
Male |
Death |
21 Sep 1397 |
Edmonton, Middlesex, England |
Burial |
21 Sep 1397 |
Austin Friars Churchyard, London, Middlesex, England |
WAC |
22 Jan 1933 |
_TAG |
Reviewed on FS |
Headstones |
Submit Headstone Photo |
Person ID |
I32187 |
Joseph Smith Sr and Lucy Mack Smith |
Last Modified |
19 Aug 2021 |
Father |
FITZ-ALEN, Earl Richard , b. 16 Jul 1306, Arundel, Sussex, England Arundel, Sussex, Englandd. 24 Jan 1376, Arundel Castle, Sussex, England (Age 69 years) |
Mother |
PLANTAGENET, Countess Eleanor , b. 11 Sep 1318, Grosmont, Monmouthshire, Wales Grosmont, Monmouthshire, Walesd. 11 Jan 1372, Arundel, West Sussex, England (Age 53 years) |
Marriage |
5 Feb 1340 |
England |
Family ID |
F18349 |
Group Sheet | Family Chart |
Family 1 |
BOHUN, Countess Elizabeth de , b. 1347, Holme Lacey, Hertsfordshire, England Holme Lacey, Hertsfordshire, Englandd. 3 Apr 1385, Arundel, Sussex, England (Age 38 years) |
Marriage |
28 Sep 1359 |
Derbyshire, England [1] |
Notes |
- MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married 28 Sep 1365 ~SEALING_SPOUSE: Also shown as SealSp ARIZO.
|
Children |
3 sons and 5 daughters |
| 1. FITZALAN, Isabell , b. Abt 1365, Arundel, Sussex, England Arundel, Sussex, England | + | 2. FITZ-ALEN, Dutchess Elizabeth , b. 1366, Arundel Castle, Sussex, England Arundel Castle, Sussex, Englandd. 8 Jul 1425, Hoveringham, Nottingham, England (Age 59 years) | + | 3. FITZ-ALEN, Baroness Alice , b. 1378, Arundel, Sussex, England Arundel, Sussex, Englandd. 17 Mar 1416, Arundel Castle, Sussex, England (Age 38 years) | | 4. FITZALAN, William , b. Abt 1370, Arundel, Sussex, England Arundel, Sussex, Englandd. 13 Oct 1415 (Age 45 years) | | 5. FITZALAN, Margaret , b. Abt 1374, Arundel, Sussex, England Arundel, Sussex, Englandd. 3 Jul 1438, Belvoir Castle-Leicestershire-England (Age 64 years) | | 6. FITZALAN, Joan , b. Abt 1375, Abergavenny, Monmouthshire, Wales Abergavenny, Monmouthshire, Walesd. 14 Nov 1435, Hertfordshire, England (Age 60 years) | | 7. FITZALAN, Earl Thomas , b. 13 Oct 1381, Arundel, Sussex, England Arundel, Sussex, Englandd. 13 Oct 1415, Arundel, Sussex, England (Age 34 years) | | 8. FITZALAN, Richard , b. 1361, Arundel, Sussex, England Arundel, Sussex, Englandd. 1399, Arundel, Sussex, England (Age 38 years) | |
Family ID |
F5579 |
Group Sheet | Family Chart |
Last Modified |
24 Jan 2022 |
Family 2 |
MORTIMER, Countess Phillips de , b. 21 Nov 1375, Knockyn, Shropshire, England Knockyn, Shropshire, Englandd. 24 Sep 1400, Halnaker, Sussex, England (Age 24 years) |
Marriage |
15 Aug 1390 |
England |
Children |
| 1. FITZALAN, John , b. Abt 1394, Arundel, Sussex, England Arundel, Sussex, Englandd. Abt 1397, Arundel, Sussex, England (Age 3 years) | |
Family ID |
F18348 |
Group Sheet | Family Chart |
Last Modified |
24 Jan 2022 |
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Photos |
 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this item - Details withheld.
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Notes |
- Descendant of King Henry III The Ancestry of Elizabeth FitzAlan (and her sister Joan FitzAlan) First to the 9th generation After this table had been cast in nearly its present form, we became aware of the study by Carl Boyer, 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Robert1 Abell, and its companion work, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans (both Santa Clarita, California, 2001), which together trace the majority, at least, of Elizabeth FitzAlan's English ancestry. Therefore, we shall keep this page here for what it is worth, and correct any errors which come to our attention, but we have no immediate intention of extending its scope. For many Americans, Elizabeth FitzAlan, wife of (among others) Robert Goushill, is a unique gateway ancestress to European royal descent. The genealogical importance of Elizabeth Fitzalan and of the two husbands by whom she left issue was underscored by Roberts in his 1977 article "The Mowbray Connection."[1] Although her second husband, Thomas de Mowbray, afterward 1st Duke of Norfolk, was also an ancestor of many Americans, her third husband, Robert Goushill, who was not her social equal, has no known royal descent, and so any such descents from this couple must be reckoned through her. Roberts, in his 1977 article, p. 4, states that Elizabeth FitzAlan and Robert Goushill were ancestors of 41 of the 450 (later to become 500) immigrants in his study. Now Roberts, in The Royal Descents of 500 Immigrants (RD500), and Faris, in Plantagenet Ancestry of Seventeenth-Century Colonists, 2nd ed., in fact between them conspicuously identify 42 immigrants descended from this couple, whom we list in the following table.[2] But some of these may be more recent discoveries than those Roberts had in mind when writing in 1977, and it is possible that some members of the original group may be concealed under the names of families from whom they could claim "better" descents, i.e. falling closer to the main stem of the English royal family.[3] If any reader can name others, we should be glad to know. It should be noted that although we have cited Roberts's accounts wherever available, they do not always give the descent from Elizabeth FitzAlan explicitly when it is not the subject's "best" royal descent. However, some of the lines treated in Faris but not in RD500 are now treated in Roberts, The Royal Descents of 600 Immigrants (RD600) (2004). Some immigrant descendants of Elizabeth FitzAlan & Robert Goushill The descents are labelled in order of decreasing importance (so far as the contribution of Elizabeth FitzAlan to the subject's royal ancestry is concerned), in the following manner: ***** Elizabeth FitzAlan is only known royally-descended ancestor (and spouse has no known royal ancestry) **** Elizabeth FitzAlan provides the best known royal descent (and spouse has no known royal ancestry) *** Immigrant has some other equally good or better line (and spouse has no known royal ancestry) ** Immigrant's spouse has equally good line * Immigrant's spouse has better line - Seventeenth-century immigrants Citation RD500 Faris *** Robert Abell (226) 1 *** John Alston (of North Carolina) 149/ 252 *** John Alston (? of South Carolina) 252 *** William Asfordby 6 *** William Bladen 31 *** Mary Bourchier (wife of Jabez Whitaker) 46 ** Grace Chetwode (wife of Peter Bulkeley) 269/ 82 ***** James Claypoole 276/ 91 ***** Norton Claypoole 91 *** Rowland Coytemore 103 ***** Francis Dade 285 * Ralph Eddowes 238 *** Rowland Ellis 80/130 ** John Fenwick of Salem, N.J.238 ***** Thomas Gerard 255 ***** Daniel Humphrey(s) and siblings 157/ 260 * Jane Lowe [via Cavendish] 161/227 *** Henry Lowe [via Cavendish] 161/227 *** Nicholas Lowe [via Cavendish] 161/227 ***** Mary (Mainwaring) Gill (? whether immig.) 255 ***** Oliver Mainwaring 255/237 ***** Francis Moryson 262 *** John Nelson 148/253 *** Margaret Nelson (wife of Thomas Teackle) 149/253 ***** Mary Newdigate (wife of William Stephens) 262 ***** James Edward Oglethorpe 289 ** Joshua Owen 157/ 260 ** Rebecca Owen (wife of Robert Owen) 157/ 260 ***** Dr. Richard Palgrave 266 ** Thomas Rudyard 274 DEATH: Also shown as Died 27 Sep 1397 Note: We were kindly informed by Kevin Bradford, of Paducah, Kentucky, of his discovery of an improved descent for this immigrant from Edward III, which does not run through Elizabeth FitzAlan. This now appears in RD600, p. 223, and is expected to be included in the forthcoming revision of Plantagenet Ancestry.] *** Anthony Savage (? whether immigrant) 253 ***** Constant Southworth 245 ***** Thomas Southworth (bro. of Constant) 245 *** Diana Skipwith (wife of Maj. Edward Dale) 332 *** Grey Skipwith 332 ***** Edward Wingfield 281 *** Thomas Wingfield 379 ***** Amy Wyllys (wife of Maj. John Pynchon) 254/387 Eighteenth-century immigrants ***** Thomas Booth of Virginia --- 39 ** John Fenwick of South Carolina 238 ***** James Edward Oglethorpe 289 *** Capt. Thomas Owsley of Virginia 286/262 Three quarters of Elizabeth FitzAlan's entire ancestry are, in theory at least, given in W.H. Turton's The Plantagenet Ancestry, as her paternal aunt, Alice FitzAlan, and her maternal grandmother, Elizabeth Badlesmere, were each direct ancestresses of Edward IV.[4] However, numerous corrections are required from later writings, such as G. A. Moriarty's Plantagenet manuscript, which reworks some of the same ground. All this ancestry is also expected to be covered in Neil D. Thompson and Charles M. Hansen's ongoing series in The Genealogist, "A Medieval Heritage: The Ancestry of Charles II, King of England," but so far it has only reached Elizabeth's paternal grandparents,[5] and it will presumably be quite some time before earlier generations are treated. A convenient summary of the progress is available through the Graphical Index to the Ancestry of Charles II at http://www.fmg.ac/Projects/CharlesII/. Meanwhile, satisfactory accounts of many of her ancestral lines are supplied in G.E. Cokayne and G.W. Watson, Seize Quartiers of the Kings and Queens of England (Exeter, 1896; reprinted from The Genealogist), and in the similar ancestor-tables of British rulers and their spouses included in the first volume of Gerald Paget, The Lineage and Ancestry of H.R.H. Prince Charles, Prince of Wales, particularly since generations 3 through 5 of Elizabeth FitzAlan's ancestry coincide with those of her double first cousin, Mary de Bohun, wife of Henry IV.[6] Many lines, both English and continental, are scattered through Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, currently in its 7th edition (1992). The excellent treatment of the Fitzalans' English royal descents in David Faris, Plantagenet Ancestry of Seventeenth-Century Colonists, has been followed closely. It should be noted that this chart may be made to apply equally to its subject's sister, Joan FitzAlan, wife of William de Beauchamp, who also has many American descendants: according to Faris, she and her husband were ancestors of Robert Abell, Grace Chetwode, St. Leger Codd, Edward Diggs, John Fisher, Warham Horsmanden, Anne Humphrey, Thomas Lansford, John Oxenbridge, Herbert Pelham, Katherine Saint Leger, Maria Johanna Somerset, and John West.[7] Finally, a third sister, Alice FitzAlan, may have been an ancestress of Barbara Aubrey, Elizabeth Coytemore, and Capt. William Poole.[8] The present writer is not a mediaevalist, and this page makes no claim either to authority or originality. It is simply an attempt to gather some scattered documentation into a convenient form, in the hope that others more qualified will offer correction. (To that end, we were gratified to learn that it had been mentioned in the November 2003 update to Chris Phillips' invaluable website Some notes on Medieval English Genealogy , at http://www.medievalgenealogy.org.uk/whatsnew11.shtml, which has brought it increased exposure.) Standard works such as the Dictionary of National Biography, the new Complete Peerage, Sanders' English Baronies, and the first four volumes of the original edition of Europaïsche Staamtafeln (the only ones available to us) were routinely consulted, but in the interests of brevity were not cited except in the case of a controversial point. GENERATION 1 1Elizabeth FitzAlan, b. about 1375 (aged "40 and more" at the death of her brother Thomas in 1415), d. 8 July 1425, sister and Co-heiress of Thomas FitzAlan, 7th Earl of Arundel.[9] She was of a very prominent family, being double first cousin of Mary de Bohun (d. 1394), the first wife of Henry IV, and a second cousin of this king himself. She m. (1) before Dec. 1378, William de Montagu, Knt., d. s.p., v.p. 6 Aug. 1382, son and heir apparent of the Earl of Salisbury. She m. (2) July 1384, her double-third and double-fourth cousin,[10] Thomas de Mowbray, afterward 1st Duke of Norfolk, d. 22 Sept. 1399, by whom she had four children. She m. (3) shortly before 19 Aug. 1401, Robert Goushill, Knt., of Hoveringham, County Nottingham, who d. 21 July 1403 of wounds received in the Battle of Shrewsbury, by whom she had two daughters, their father's coheiresses. On this marriage, without the king's permission, her dower lands were seized by the crown (19 Aug. 1401), but were subsequently restored before his death. Elizabeth FitzAlan and Robert Goushill were ancestors of H.M. Elizabeth, the late Queen Mother, in at least six lines.[11] She m. (4) before 18 April 1411, Gerard Usflete, Knt., whose will was proved in Feb. 1420/1.[12] She seems to have been buried with her third husband in Hoveringham church. GENERATION 2 2Richard FitzAlan III, 11th or 4th Earl of Arundel and 10th Earl of Surrey, b. 1345-47, beheaded 21 Sept. 1397 at Tower Hill, Cheapside, London, and buried in the Augustinian Church.[13] His sister, Alice, was a direct ancestress both of the brothers Edward IV and Richard III, of the latter's wife Anne of Warwick, and of Henry VII.[14] He m. (2) Philippe Mortimer, widow of John Hastings, 3rd Earl of Pembroke, and daughter of Edmund Mortimer, Earl of March, by Philippe, daughter and heiress of Lionel, Duke of Clarence (third son of King Edward III). He m. (1) (contract dated 28 Sept. 1359), 3Elizabeth de Bohun, d. 3 April 1385, and buried at Lewes, sister of Humphrey de Bohun, 7th Earl of Hereford, 6th Earl of Essex, and 2nd Earl of Northampton, father-in-law of Henry IV.[15] GENERATION 3 4Richard FitzAlan II, 10th or 3rd Earl of Arundel and 9th Earl of Surrey, Justiciar of North Wales, one of the Regents of England in 1355, b. 1313 (he came of age in 1334), d. 24 Jan. 1375/6 at Arundel, and buried at Lewes, near his wife. He was restored to his fathers honours and estates in 1330-31 (4 Edw. III). On 30 June 1347, on the death without legitimate issue of his maternal uncle, John, Earl of Surrey and Sussex, he succeeded to the estates of the Warenne family.[16] He m. (1) (marriage annulled 4 Dec. 1344) Isabel le Despenser, by whom he had issue. The Complete Peerage castigates this noble for his cynical treatment of this wife, in order whom to discard, he pursuaded the obsequious Pope Clement VI to bastardize his issue by her. His second wife was a first cousin to his first, and a papal dispensation was granted (retroactively, as it would seem) on 4 March 1344/5. In his interesting will, the earl requests burial "near to the tomb of Eleanor de Lancaster, my wife; and I desire that my tomb be no higher than hers; that no men at arms, horses, hearse, or other pomp, be used at my funeral, but only five torches
as was about the corpse of my wife, be allowed." He leaves "to Richard, my son and heir, my best coronet, and I charge him on my blessing to keep it during his life, and then to leave it to his heir, and so to remain from heir to heir, Lords of Arundel, in remembrance of me."[17] He m. (2) (as her second husband) 5 Feb. 1344/5 at Ditton, 5. Alianor of Lancaster, b. ca. 1318, d. 11 Jan. 1371/2 at Arundel, and buried at Lewes, widow (having been the second wife) of John de Beaumont, Knt., 2nd Lord Beaumont, Earl of Buchan (d. May 1342).[18] She was a second cousin of King Edward III. Her brother, Henry, Earl of Lancaster, was the maternal grandfather of King Henry IV.[19] 6 6. William de Bohun, knighted by July 1331, cr. 6th Earl of Northampton (1337), b. ca. 1312, d. 16 Sept. 1360. He m. (as her second husband) in 1335-38,7Elizabeth de Badlesmere, d. (testate) 8 June 1356, and buried in Walden Abbey, Essex, widow of Edmund de Mortimer, Lord Mortimer of Wigmore, and sister and coheiress of Giles de Badlesmere. By her first husband she was an ancestress of Edward V, the last Plantagenet king.[20] GENERATION 4 8Edmund FitzAlan, 9th or 2nd Earl of Arundel, Justice of Wales, b. 1 May 1285 in Marlborough Castle, knighted 22 May 1306, beheaded 17 Nov. 1326 at Hereford by the supporters of Queen Isabella. He was subsequently attainted, and all his estates and honours forfeited. He m. in 1305, 9Alice de Warenne, living 1330 but d. before 23 May 1338, heiress in her issue of her brother, John, Earl of Surrey and Sussex. 10Henry Plantagenet, cr. Earl of Leicester (1324), succeeded as Earl of Lancaster by 1326, b. ca. 1281 at Grosmont Castle, d. (testate) 22 Sept. 1345, and buried in Newark Abbey, Leicester, brother and heir of Thomas, 2nd Earl of Lancaster. He m. (1) between 30 Dec. 1291 and 2 March 1296/7, 11Maud de Chaorces (modern Chaworth), her father's sole heiress, b. on or about 2 Feb. 1282,[21] d. between 19 Feb. 1317 and 3 Dec. 1322, and buried at Mottisfont Priory, of which she was patron (as heir of William de Briwere, one of the founders).[22] 12Humphrey de Bohun VIII, 4th Earl of Hereford and 3rd Earl of Essex, Hereditary Constable of England, b. ca. 1276 (aged 22 at his father's death in 1298), slain 16 March 1321/2 in battle at Boroughbridge, dying testate, and buried in the church of the Friars Preachers at York.[23] He m. (as her second husband) 14 Nov. 1302 at Westminster, 13Elizabeth of England, b. 7 Aug. 1282 at Rhuddlan Castle, County Caernarvon, d. 5 May 1316 at Quendon, Essex, following childbirth, and buried at Walden Abbey, widow of Jan, Count of Holland and Zeeland. 14Bartholomew de Badlesmere, of Badlesmere and Chilham Castle, Kent, cr. 1st Lord Badlesmere 1309, b. 1274-75 (aged 26 at the death of his father in 1301),[24] attainted, and hanged 14 April 1322. In 1328 he is recording as holding Hothfield, Kent, by serjeanty of Chamberlain to the Archbishop of Canterbury.[25] He m. before 20 June 1308, 15Margaret de Clare, d. late in 1333, widow of Gilbert de Unfreville, and aunt and coheiress of Thomas de Clare, Steward of the Forest of Essex. GENERATION 5 16Richard FitzAlan I, feudal Lord of Clun and Oswestry in County Salop, 8th or 1st Earl of Arundel, b. 3 Feb. 1266/7, d. 9 March 1302, and appears to have been buried in Haughmond Abbey, County Salop.[26] He was created Earl of Sussex (Arundel) in 1289. He m. probably between Nov. 1281 and Nov. 1282, 17Alasia del Vasto di Saluzzo, d. 25 Sept. 1292, and buried at Todingham Priory.[27] Her aunt, an elder Alasia del Vasto di Saluzzo, also married an Englishman, becoming the wife of Edmund de Lacy, Earl of Lincoln, in 1247. It was suggested by Wagner that the migration of these Savoyards to England was a result of the marriage in 1236 of Henry III to Éléanore de Provence, whose mother, Beatrix di Savoia, was a daughter of the ruling house,[28] and this is corroborated by Douglas Richardson's discovery that the marriage was indeed arranged by Queen Eleanor. 18William de Warenne, heir in his issue of Surrey, d. (possibly murdered) v.p. 15 Dec. 1286. His sister, Isabel, was the wife of John Baliol, King of Scotland.[29] He m. probably in June 1285, 19Joan de Vere, d. ca. 23 Nov. 1293. 20Edmund (Crouchback), Earl of Leicester, Derby, and Lancaster, b. 16 Jan. 1244/5 at London, d. 5 June 1296 at Bayonne, and buried in Westminster Abbey. He was a younger brother of King Edward I (no. 26). He m. (2) shortly before 18 Jan. 1275/6, at Paris, 21Blanche d'Artois, Regent of Navarre, d. 2 May 1302 at Paris, widow of Henri I (de Champagne), King of Navarra (d. 1274), by whom she was grandmother (maternally) of Isabel of France, wife of Edward II.[30] 22Patrick de Chaorces V (modern Chaworth), Knt., Lord of Kidwelly and Ogmore, County Carmarthen, Wales, and of Kempsford, County Gloucester, and of Harley Maduit, County Hants., b. 1253-54 (aged 25 at the death of his elder brother Pain in 1279), d. s.p.m. about 7 July 1283,[31] brother and heir of Pain de Chaorces III (d. s.p. 1279).[32] He m. (as her first husband), 23Isabel de Beauchamp, d. 1306,[33] heiress of Hartley in Hampshire, sister of William de Beauchamp, 9th Earl of Warwick.[34] She m. (2) Sir Hugh le Despenser, by whom she had further issue. 24Humphrey de Bohun VII, 3rd Earl of Hereford and 2nd Earl of Essex, Hereditary Constable of England (deprived 1297), b. about 1249 (aged "18½" in 51 Hen. III), d. 31 Dec. 1298 at Pleshey, Essex, and buried at Walden Priory, Essex. He m. 20 July 1275, 25Maud de Fiennes, predeceased her husband, and was buried at Walden Abbey aforesaid. If her Dammartin descent is correct (see below), she was second cousin to Eleanor, wife of Edward I.[35] 26Edward I (Longshanks), King of England and Duke of Aquitaine 1272, b. 17 June 1239 at Westminster, crowned 19 Aug. 1274 at Westminster, d. 7/8 July 1307 at Burgh-on-Sands, Cumberland, and buried in Westminster Abbey.[36] He m. (1) 18 Oct. 1254 at Burgos, 27Leonor de Castilla (called Eleanore by the English), Countess of Ponthieu and Montréal 1279, heiress of the Castilian claims to Gascony, b. 1240, d. 28 Nov. 1290 at Herdeby, County Lincoln, and buried in Westminster Abbey.[37] 28Gunselm (not Guncelin) de Badlesmere, feudal lord of Badlesmere, Justice of Chester, d. 1301, leaving a son Bernard, aged 26 years, as his heir.[38] 29________.[39] 30Thomas de Clare, feudal Lord of Thomond, b. ca. 1245-46, d. ca. 2 Feb. 1287. 31Julian FitzMaurice, d. 1300, her father's coheiress.[40] She is called in an inquisition "Juliana quæ fuit uxor Thomæ de Clare defuncti, filia et altera hæres
Mauritii filii Mauritii," while another taken a little later shows that she had remarried to Adam de Cretinge, referring to "Adam de Cretinge et Juliana uxor ejus (filia Mauritii filii Mauritii defuncti) quondam uxor Thomæ de Clare defuncti."[41] GENERATION 6 32John FitzAlan III, feudal Lord of Clun and Oswestry, County Salop, d. 18 March 1271/2, and buried at Haughmond Abbey, County Salop. Like his father, he never used the title of Earl of Arundel.[42] He m. (as her first husband) 1260, 33Isabel Mortimer, living 1300. 34Tomaso I del Vasto, succeeded his father as Marquis of Saluzzo in Piedmont in 1244, succeeeding as an infant, b. about 1240, d. 3 Dec. 1296. In a description of the contract of marriage of their son Manfredo dated 3 Jul 1286, Tomaso and his wife are named as "Marchese Tomaso di Saluzzo e Marchesa Alosia, padre e madre di detto Manfredo."[43] He m. in 1258, 35Aluigia del Vasto di Ceva, d. 22 Aug. 1291. 36John de Warenne, 7th Earl of Surrey 1240, b. in or after Aug. 1231, d. "about Michaelmas" (i.e. 29 Sept.) 1304 at Kennington, near London, and buried before the high altar at Lewes Priory. He m. in Aug. 1247, 37Alice de Lusignan, uterine half-sister of King Henry III, d. 9 Feb. 1255/6. 38Robert de Vere, 5th Earl of Oxford 1263, b. ca. 1240 (aged either 22 or 23 at his father's death in 1263), d. before 7 Sept. 1296, and buried at Earls Colne. He m. before 1257, 39Alice de Sanford (or Sandford), her father's heiress, d. probably 7 Sept. 1312 (certainly in 1311-12, 5 Edw. II) at Canfield, and buried at Earls Colne. It was by right of her that the Earls of Oxford were declared to be barons of Sandford (a barony which had no previous historical existence).[44] 40Henry III (of Winchester), King of England 1216, b. 1 Oct. 1207 at Winchester Castle, d. 16 Nov. 1272 at Bury St. Edmund's, and buried in Westminster Abbey. He m. 14 Jan. 1236 at Canterbury, 41Éléanore de Provence, b. after 1221 at Aix-en-Provence, d. 25 June 1291 at Amesbury.[45] Her sister, Marguerite, was paternal grandmother of Marquerite de France, second wife of Edward I.[46] 42Robert I (Le Bon), Count of Artois, b. Sept. 1216, slain 8 Feb. 1250 at Mansourah. He m. (as her first husband) 14 June 1237, 43Mahaut de Brabant, d. 29 Sept. 1288, sister of Henri III, Duke of Brabant, maternal grandfather of Marguerite de France, second wife of Edward I.[47] 44Patrick de Chaorces IV (modern Chaworth), of Stoke, County Northampton, and feudal Lord of Kempsford, County Gloucester, b. after 1216 (he was a minor in 23 Hen. III, i.e. 1238-39), d. 1257-58.[48] 45Hawise de Londres, heiress of Kidwelly, County Carmarthen, Wales, d. in 1273-74 (2 Edw. I), leaving her son, Pain de Chaorces (III), "of full age," her heir.[49] 46William de Beauchamp, 1st Earl of Warwick 1268, b. ca. 1234-38 (age reported as 26-30 in 1268), d. (testate) in June 1298 at Elmley, County Worcester, and buried 22 June following in the priory of the Friars Minor, Worcester. 47Maud FitzJohn, d. April 1301, and buried 7 May following with her husband; widow of Sir Geoffrey de Furnivalle, of Sheffield, Yorkshire, etc., and sister and coheiress of Richard FitzJohn, Lord FitzJohn (d. 1297). 48Humphrey de Bohun VI, d. v.p. 27 Oct. 1265 as a prisoner at Beeston Castle, County Chester, after having been captured at the battle of Evesham on 4 Aug. of that year, and buried in Combermere Abbey. He m. (1) by 15 Feb. 1247/8, 49Eleanor de Briouze, her father's coheiress, d. well before 1265, and buried at Llanthony Priory, near Gloucester.[50] 50Enguerrand (or Ingelram) de Fiennes II, Seigneur de Fiennes in Guisnes (Pas-de-Callais), Baron de Tingry and of Ruminghen, Lord of Wendover in County Buckingham, d. 1267. He m. in 1245, 51Isabeau (not Agnès) de Condé.[51] 52 = 40 53 = 41 54Fernando III (El Santo), King of Castilla, Toledo, and Extremadura 1217, King of León and Galicia 1230, King of Córdoba by conquest 1236, Conqueror of Sevilla (1248), canonized 1671, b. July/Aug. 1201 at Monte de Valparaíso, proclaimed King of Castile on the abdication of his mother, d. 30 May 1252 at Sevilla, and buried there in the Cathedral of Santa María, canonized 15 Feb. 1671 by Pope Clement X. He m. (2) (as her first husband) 1237, before 20 Nov., at Burgos, 55Jeanne de Dammartin, Countess of Aumale on the death of her father 1239, Countess of Ponthieu and Montreuil on the death of her mother in 1251, b. ca. 1220, d. 16 March 1278/9 at Abbeville, and buried in the monastery of Valoires, having m. (2) Jean de Nesle, Heer van Falvy.[52] 56(Badlesmere) 60Richard de Clare, 8th or 5th Earl of Gloucester (but more generally known as Earl of Clare) and 6th Earl of Hertford, b. 4 Aug. 1222, d. 15 July 1262 at Waltham, near Canterbury, Kent, and buried (finally) at Tewkesbury. He m. (2) on or before 25 Jan. 1237/8, 61Maud de Lacy, living 1287, but d. before 10 March 1288/9. 62Maurice FitzMaurice FitzGerald, granted Athlone Castle and the shrievalty of Connaught 1259, Lord of Offaly, Justiciar of Ireland 1272-3, b. 1238 (?), d. 1286. He m. (2) Emeline Longspée, who is often (but erroneously) named as the mother of his daughter Julian (no. 31).[53] He m. (1) (as her third husband) shortly before 28 Oct. 1259, 63Maud de Prendergast, her father's coheiress, b. about 1242, widow successively of David Fitz Maurice (d. 1249) and of Maurice de Rochford (d. 1258). Her sister, Mary de Prendergast, wife of Sir John de Cogan, was a direct ancestress of King Edward IV.[54] GENERATION 7 64John FitzAlan II, feudal Lord of Clun and Oswestry, County Salop, b. 1223 (came of age in 1244), d. 1267, between October (when he made his will) and 10 Nov. In right of his mother, he obtained possession of the Castle of Arundel in 1244, yet was never known as Earl of Arundel, and indeed possesed only a one-quarter right in the earldom. He m. (as her first husband), 65Maud le Boteler, d. 27 Nov. 1283. 66Roger Mortimer III, feudal Lord of Wigmore, Knt., b. 1226 (he attained his majority in 1247), d. shortly before 30 Oct. 1282 at Kingsland, County Hereford, and buried at Wigmore.[55] He m. in 1247, 67Maud de Briouze, her father's coheiress, and sister of Eleanor de Briouze (no. 49) above, d. shortly before 23 March 1300/1. 68Manfredo III del Vasto, Marquis of Saluzzo about 1215 (not 1212), succeeding as a child, b. about 1204, d. 1244.[56] He m. (as her first husband) in 1233, 69Beatrice di Savoia, said to have been b. 1223, d. 10 May 1257 or 1258, probably 1258. She was m. (2) in 1248-49, at his father's instigation, to Manfredi von Hohenstaufen, King of Naples and Sicily, the 14-year-old natural son of the Emperor Friedrich II, by whom she had further issue. 70Giorgio I del Vasto, Marquis of Ceva (and Clavesana?), d. 1268. 71 (?) Menzia Elisa de Este.[57] 72William de Warenne, 6th Earl of Surrey 1202, d. 1240. He m. (2) (as her second husband) in 1225, between Feb. and 13 Oct. 1225 (and thus within eight months of the death of her first husband), 73Maud Marshal, d. 27 March 1248, widow of Hugh Bigod, Earl of Norfolk (d. Feb. 1224/5), and senior coheiress of her brother Anselm, Earl of Pembroke (d. 1245).[58] 74Hugues X (le Brun) de Lusignan, Sire de Lusignan, Count of La Marche 1219, b. by 1190, living Aug. 1248, said to have d. 1249, and buried in the Abbey of Valence near Couhé. He m. in April or May 1220, 75Isabel d'Angoulême, her father's heiress, d. 24 Aug. 1246 at Fontévrault, Maine-en-Loire, Pays de la Loire, France, widow of John I, King of England (no. 80).[59] 76Hugh de Vere, 4th Earl of Oxford, Hereditary Master Chamberlain of England, b. ca. 1210, knighted 1233, d. before 23 Dec. 1263, and buried at Earls Colne. He m. after 11 Feb. 1222/3, 77Hawise de Quincy, survived her husband, dying 3 Feb. (year unknown), and buried at Earls Colne. 78Gilbert de Sanford (or Sandford), Hereditary Queen's Chamberlain, lord by serjeanty of Great Hormead and Nuthamstead (in Barkway), County Herts, and of Fingrith, Margaretting, and Woolverston (in Chigwell), Essex, d. 1248. At the coronation of Queen Eleanor in 1236, Gilbert de Sanford stated that (in the words of Round) "of ancient right from his predecessors, he ought to be the Queen's Chamberlain and to have the custody that say of her chamber and her door, which right he obtained."[60] Although his wife Lorette (le Zouche?) is often named as the mother of his daughter Alice (no. 39), this seems unlikely for, as noted by Douglas Richardson, Lorette conveyed her maritagium to a niece.[61] 79________. 80John I (Lackland), Count of Mortain, King of England 1199, b. 24 Dec. 1167 at Oxford, d. 19 Oct. 1216. He m. (2) (as her first husband) 24 Aug. 1200 at Bordeaux, 81Isabelle d'Angoulême (= 75) 82Raimond-Bérenger V, Count of Provence and Forcalquier 1209, b. 1197-98, d. 19 Aug. 1245 at Aix, aged 47 years, and buried there in the Church of the Knights of St. John. He is mentioned in Dante's Divina CommedÏa ("Paradiso," canto vi): "Four daughters, and each a queen, had Raymond Berenger" ("Quattro figlie ebbe, e ciascuna reina, Ramondo Beringhiere
"). These were Marguerite, wife of Louis IX of France; Éléanore, wife of Henry III of England; Sanchia, wife of Richard, King of the Romans, and Béatrix, wife of Charles of Sicily. He m. in Dec. 1220, 83Beatrix di Savoia, d. 1265 or 1266. Matthew Paris praised her fruitfulness, comparing her to Niobe. 84Louis VIII (Le Lion), King of France 1223, b. 5 Sept. 1187 at Paris, d. 8 Nov. 1226 at Montpensier-en-Auvergne, and buried in the Royal Abbey of St.-Denis. He m. 23 May 1200 in the Abbey of Port-Mort near Pont-Audemer, in Normandy, 85Blanca de Castilla, Regent of France 1226-36 (during the minority of her son Louis IX) and 1248-52 (while her husband was absent during the crusades), b. 4 March 1188 at Palencia, d. 27 Nov. 1252 at Paris, and buried in the Abbey of Montbuisson.[62] 86Hendrik II, Duke of Brabant 1235, b. ca. 1207, d. 1 Feb. 1247/8. He m. (1) 9 Feb. 1212, 87Maria von Hohenstaufen, b. 1201, d. 1235 (day not recorded). 88Pain de Chaorces II (modern Chaworth), b. probably before 1198 (he is recorded, seemingly as an adult, in 2 Hen. III, i.e. 1217-18), d. 1237.[63] 89Gundred de la Ferté, heiress of Horsley, County Derby. 90Thomas de Londres (or London), lord of Kidwelly, d. before 1221.[64] 91________. 92William de Beauchamp IV, feudal Lord of Elmley and Salwarpe, County Worcester, d. between 7 Jan. 1268 (when he made his will) and 9 May 1269 (when it was proved, at Worcester). He and his wife were grandparents of the first Lord Beauchamp of Kidderminster, and probably great-grandparents of the first Lord Beauchamp of Bletsoe.[65] 93Isabel Mauduit, probably d. before 8 Jan. 1267/8, sister and in her issue heiress of William Mauduit, Earl of Warwick (d. 1268).[66] 94John FitzGeoffrey, Knt., of Shere, Surrey, and Fambridge, Essex, etc., Justiciar of Ireland 1245-56, d. 23 Nov. 1258. He was ancestor, with his wife, of the FitzJohns, Lords FitzJohn. He m. before 11 April 1234 (when the castle and manor of Ewas were assigned to her as dower), 95Isabel le Bigod, widow of Gilbert de Lacy, of Ewyas Lacy (now Longtown, in the parish of Clodock), County Hereford (d. 1230).[67] 96Humphrey de Bohun V, 2nd Earl of Hereford and 1st Earl of Essex 1220, Constable of England, Marshall of the Royal Household 1236, d. 24 Sept. 1275, and buried by the high altar at Llanthony Priory, near Gloucester. He m. (1) 97Maud de Lusignan d'Eu, d. 14 Aug. 1241, and buried at Llanthony Priory, near Gloucester.[68] 98William de Briouze, of Brecknock, feudal Lord of Abergavenny 1228, hanged 2 May 1230 by order of his stepmother's father, Llewelyn, Prince of North Wales. 99Eva Marshal, coheiress in her issue of her father, and sister of Maud Marshal (no. 73) above, d. before 1246. 100Guillaume de Fiennes I, Seigneur de Fiennes in Guines (Pas-de-Callais), Baron de Tingry, Sheriff of Somerset, crusader, d. 1241 in the Holy Land. He m. (2) about 1203, Agnès de Dammartin, sister of no. 110, but AR7, line 152, states that it is "uncertain whether [his son Enguerrand (our no. 50) was a] child of Agnes or of William's earlier wife." 102Nicolas I de Condé, Seigneur de Condé and Fontaines, d. by 1230, brother of Geoffroi de Condé, Bishop and Count of Cambray.[69] He m. (as her first husband), 103Isabeau de Morialmé, Dame de Morialmé in Hainault, living 1249, who m. (2) in 1230, Robert VII, Lord of Dendermonde, Sire de Béthune, by whom she had further issue.[70] 108Alfonso IX de Castilla, King of León and Gallicia 1188, b. 15 Aug. 1171 at Zamora, d. 24 Sept. 1230 at Villanueva, and buried in the chapel of San Lorenzo, in the Cathedral Santiago el Mayor at Santiago de Compostella. He m. (2) (as her second husband) in early December 1197 at Valladolid, but separated in 1204 on grounds of relationship within the canonically prohited degrees (her father being his first cousin), 109Berengueria, heiress of Castilla, Toledo, and Extremadura 1217 (which rights she immediately ceded to her son Fernando), b. Aug. 1180 (?) at Burgos, d. 8 Nov. 1246 at Las Huelgas, near Burgos, and buried there in the Cisterican monastery of Santa María la Real, widow of Konrad of Suabia, Duke of Rothenburg, son of Emperor Friedrich I Barbarossa. After her separation from King Alfonso she became a nun at Las Huelgas. 110Simon de Dammartin, Count of Aumale, Count of Ponthieu and Montreuil, d. 21 Sept. 1239. He m. (as her first husband) before Sept. 1208, 111Marie de Bellême, Countess of Ponthieu and Montreuil, her father's only child and sole heiress, d. Sept. 1250. 120Gilbert de Clare, 7th or 4th Earl of Gloucester, probably b. ca. 1180, d. (testate) 25 Oct. 1230 near Penros, in Bretagne, and buried at Tewkesbury. He m. (as her first husband) 9 Oct. 1217, 121Isabel Marshal, d. 17 Jan. 1239/40 at Berkhampstead, of jaundice, and buried at Beaulieu, County Hants, having m. (2) Richard, Earl of Cornwall, second son of King John. She was a sister to Maud Marshal (no. 73) and Eva Marshal (no. 99) above. 122John de Lacy, Constable of Chester, Earl of Lincoln jure uxoris 1232, b. ca. 1192, d. 22 July 1240, and buried near his father in the monks' choir at Stanlaw. He m. (2) (as her first husband) before 21 June 1221, 123Margaret de Quincy, heiress of Lincoln and Bolingbroke in right of her mother, d. probably in March 1266, and buried near her father in the church of the Hospitallers at Clerkenwell. 124Maurice (The Friar) FitzGerald, Lord of Lea, Justiciar of Ireland 1232, 2nd Baron of Offaly 1245, Commissioner of the Treasury and Councillor, 1250, laid the foundations of Sligo Castle, b. ca. 1190-94, knighted in July 1217, d. 1257 at the Monastery of Youghal, which he had founded, and buried there. 125 (?) Julian ____.[71] Turton's statement that she was Juliana de Cogan, daughter of Sir John de Cogan and Marie de Prendergast, is impossible.[72] 126Gerald de Prendergast, of Beauvoir (or Carrigaline) and of Ballacha in Orrery, County Cork, Ireland, d. 1251. 127Maud FitzWalter. GENERATION 8 128John FitzAlan, feudal Lord of Clun and Oswestry, County Salop, d. 1240, heir to his brother William III FitzAlan, who d. s.p. around Easter 1215.[73] He m. (1) 129Isabel d'Aubigny, d. by 1240, sister and in her issue coheiress of William d'Aubigny, Earl of Arundel. 130Theobald le Botiller, by some styled 2nd Baron Butler (in the Peerage of Ireland), Lord Justice of Ireland 1247, b. 1199-1200 (aged 6 years in 1206), d. 19 July 1230 in Poitou, and buried in the Abbey of Arklow.[74] His eldest son by his second wife, known as John de Verdun, was the ancestors of the barons Verdun. He m. (2) shortly after 4 Sept. 1225, 131Rohese de Verdun, d. before 22 Feb. 1246/7, buried in the Priory of Grace Dieu Monastery, in Belson, County Leicester (which she had founded); said to have been her father's sole heiress; she was heiress of Alton, etc.[75] 132Ralph Mortimer II, feudal Lord of Wigmore, County Herts, d. 6 Aug. 1246, and buried at Wigmore. He m. in 1230, 133Gwladus (Ddu [The Dark-Eyed]) ferch Llywelyn ab Iorwerth, of Gwynedd, d. 1251 at Windsor, widow of Reynold de Briouze (no. 196), feudal Lord of Abergavenny.[76] 134 = 98 135 = 99 136Bonifazio del Vasto, Marquis of Saluzzo, b. say 1182, succeeded his father in 1215, d. 1218. He m. 24 Aug. 1202, 137Maria de Lacon-Gunale, living 1215. 138Amadeo IV di Savoia, Duke of Savoy 1233, b. about 1197, d. in June or July 1253 at the Castle of Montmélian, aged 56 years. He m. (1) between late 1216 and 1222, probably in 1217-18,[77] 139Marguerite (or Anne?) de Bourgogne d'Albon, b. 1192 (?), d. 1243. 140Guglielmo II del Vasto, Marquis of Ceva and Clavesana, succeeded his father in 1197, d. 1219. 141____ del Vasto di Saluzzo. 142 (?) Alberto [i.e. Adalbert?] di Este.[78] 143________. 144Hamelin (Plantagenêt), Viscount of Touraine, 5th Earl of Surrey jure uxoris 1164, d. 7 May 1202, illegitimate half-brother of King Henry II. He m. in 1164, probably in April, 145Isabel de Warenne, heiress of Surrey, b. about 1137, d. living April 1203 but d. probably soon afterwards, possibly on 12 June 1203, and buried in the Chapter House at Lewes, the childless widow of William of Blois, 4th Earl of Surrey jure uxoris. 146William Marshal, 4th Earl of Pembroke and Striguil jure uxoris, Regent of England during the minority of Henry III from 29 Oct. 1216 until his own death; b. probably in 1146, knighted 1173, d. 14 May 1219 at Caversham, near Reading, and buried in the Temple Church, London. "In his younger days he was regarded as a model of chivalry; in his maturity and old age, unswerving loyalty was his most notable characteristic" (Complete Peerage). He m. Aug. 1189 at London, 147Isabel de Clare, Countess of Pembroke suo jure 1185, d. 1220 (day not recorded), and buried at Tintern Abbey. 148Hugues IX (le Brun) de Lusignan, Sire de Lusignan, Count of La Marche 1199, d. 1219 in the conquest of Damietta. He was the elder brother of Amaury de Lusignan, King of Cyprus and Jerusalem, and of Guy de Lusignan, King of Jerusalem. He m. in 1194, Mathilde d'Angoulême, heiress and Co -ruler of Angoulême 1181-. Some older works make her the mother of Hugues X (our no. 74),[79] and we followed this account in an earlier version of these notes, but it is impossible given the chronology, and would have made Hugues X and his wife related within the prohibited degree (she being this Mathilde's first cousin). He m. (2) before 1190, 149Agathe de Preuilly. 150Adémar III Taillefer, Count of Angoulême 1181 with his brother Guillaume and their niece Mathilde (daughter and heiress of their elder brother Wulgrin III), b. ca. 1137, d. in or shortly after 1218, and buried in the Abbey of La Couronne. He m. (as her first husband) 1186, 151Alix/Adelheid de Courtenay, b. ca. 1160, d. 1218, former wife (divorced on account of consanguinity) of Guillaume I, Count of Joigny, and sister of Peter II (de Courtenay), Emperor of the East. 152Robert de Vere, 3rd Earl of Oxford 1214, Hereditary Master Chamberlain of England, b. probably after 1164, d. before 25 Oct. 1221, and buried at Hatfield Priory. 153Isabel de Bolebec, d. 3 Feb. 1245, and buried in the church of the preaching friars at Oxford (which she had founded), (childless?) widow of Henry de Nonant, lord of Totnes, sister of Walter de Bolebec, and coheiress (and eventual sole heiress) to her niece Isabel, Countess of Oxford. 154Saher de Quincy III or IV, recognized as 1st Earl of Winchester by 1207, but forfeited his lands in 1215 for participating in the baronial opposition to King John; d. 3 Nov. 1219 in the siege of Damietta, and buried at Acre.[80] 155Margaret FitzPernel, d. probably 12 Jan. 1234/5, sister and coheiress of Robert FitzPernel, Earl of Leicester (d. 1204). 156 (almost certainly) John de Sanford (or Sandford), who in 1212 held by serjeanty the lands in Essex which were inherited by Gilbert de Sanford.[81] 157________. 160Henry II (Courtemanche [Court-mantle]), King of England, Duke of Normandy and Maine, and Count of Anjou 1154, b. 5 March 1133 at Le Mans, d. 6 July 1189 at Chinon in Normany, and buried in the Abbey of Fontévrault, Maine-en-Loire, Pays de la Loire, France.[82] He m. (as her second husband) 18 May 1152 at Bordeaux (or Poitiers?), 161Alienor d'Aquitaine, Duchess of Aquitaine suo jure, b. ca. 1124 (aged 13 at her first marriage in 1137)[83] at Nieul-sur-l'Autize in Vendée, d. 31 March 1204 at Fontévrault-l'Abbaye, Maine-en-Loire, Pays de la Loire, France, the divorced wife of Louis VII (no. 336), King of France, by whom she had issue.[84] 164Alfonso II, Count of Provence 1185, d. in late Feb. 1209 at Palermo. He m. July 1193, 165Garsende II de Sabran-Forcalquier, Countess of Focalquierm, which she inherited in right of her mother, becamse a nun in the Abbey of La Celle in 1222; b. ca. 1180, d. ca. 1242. 166Tomaso I, Count of Savoy 1188, b. 20 May 1177 at the castle of Charbonnières, Savoy, d. 1 March 1233 at Aosta, and buried there in the Cathedral Church. He m. (2) in May 1195, 167Béatrice-Marguerite de Genève, d. 8 April 1257.[85] 168Philippe II (Auguste), King of France 1180, participated in third crusade, b. 21 Aug. 1165, d. 14 July 1223. His elder half-sister Marguerite was the wife of Henry "The Young King,", crowned during his father's lifetime, eldest son of Henry II of England.[86] He m. (1) 28 April 1180, 169Isabelle de Hainaut, titular Countess of Artois, b. April 1170, d. 15 March 1190. 170Alfonso VIII (El Noble), Lord of Gascony 1204, King of Castilla, Toldeo, and Extremadura 1158, b. 11 Nov. 1155 at Soria, d. during the night of 5-6 Oct. 1214 at Gutiérre Múñoz, a village of Arévalo, and buried in the Cistercian monastery of Santa María la Real (called del las Huelgas) near Burgos, which his wife had founded in 1158. He m. early Sept. 1180, 171Eleanor of England, b. 13 Oct. 1162 at Domfront, Normandy, d. 25 Oct. 1214 at Burgos, and buried with her husband. 172Hendrik I, Duke of Brabant, d. 5 Sept. 1235. He m. (1) 1179, 173Mathilde de Boulogne, d. ca. 1210-11. 174Philipp von Hohenstaufen, King of Germany, b. 1176, d. 23 June 1208. He m. (as her first husband) 25 May 1197, 175Eirene Angelina, b. 1172, d. 27 Aug. 1208, widow of Ruggiero, Duke of Apulia (d. 1193), and sister of Alexios IV, Eastern Emperor. 176Patrick de Chaorces III (modern Chaworth), d. 1199 (?), feudal lord of Kempsford, in Gloucestershire.[87] 177 (?) Werberg ____.[88] 178William de la Ferté, of Meredon, Wilts., d. 1216. He m. (as her first husband), 179Margery de Briwere, living 1233, sister and coheiress of William de Briwere II (d. 1233).[89] 180(de Londres/London) 184William de Beauchamp III, feudal Lord of Salwarpe, County Worcester, and of Bedford, b. ca. 1184, d. 1262.[90] He m. (1) 185Isabel de Mortimer.[91] 186William Mauduit III, feudal Lord of Hanslope, County Bucks, and Hartley Mauduit, County Hants, d. 1257.[92] 187Alice de Newburgh, living in the first quarter of 1246/7, but d. before 25 Feb. 1262/3, aunt of the half-blood, and in her issue heiress, of Margaret, Countess of Warwick (d. 1253).[93] 188Geoffrey FitzPiers, Justiciar of England 1198, Earl of Essex 1199, d. 14 Oct. 1213, and buried in Shouldham Priory, which he founded. He m. (2) between Mary 1204 and 29 May 1205, 189Aveline de Clare, d. between 22 Nov. 1220 and 4 June 1225, widow of William de Munchanesy, of Swanscombe, Kent, etc. (who d. shortly before 7 May 1204). 190Hugh le Bigod, 3rd Earl of Norfolk 1221, d. 1225. He m. (as her first husband) probably before Lent 1207, 191Maud Marshal (= 73). 192Henry de Bohun, created 1st Earl of Hereford 1200, Constable of England, b. probably after 1165 (a minor at the death of his father ca. 1187), d. 1 June 1220 on pilgrimage to the Holy Land, and buried in the chapter house of Llanthony Priory, near Gloucester. He m. (as her first husband), 193Maud FitzGeoffrey de Mandeville, Countess of Essex suo jure, d. 27 Aug. 1236, sister and heiress of William de Mandeville, Earl of Essex (d. 1227). 194Raoul II de Lusignan, called d'Exoudun, Sire of Mello, of Sivray, and of Chisay (or Chisé) in Poitou, ruled the County of Eu in conjunction with his wife, d. 1219, between 28 April and 17 May, at Melle in Poitou (and not in the Holy Land as sometimes stated), and was buried in the Priory of Fontblanche at Exoudun, which he had founded.[94] 195Alix d'Eu, d. between 13 and 15 May 1246 at La Mothe-Saint-Héray in Poitou, and buried (probably) in the Priory of Fontblanche at Exoudun, Lady of Hastings, sister and heiress of Raoul I, Count of Eu.[95] 196Reynold de Briouze, feudal Lord of Abergavenny 1216, d. between 5 May 1227 and 9 June 1228. He m. (2) in 1215, Gwladus Ddu (no. 133), daughter of Llywelyn ab Iorwerth, of Gwynedd. He m. (1) before 1215, 197Grecia de Briwere, coheiress in her issue of her father, d. 1223. 198 = 146 199 = 147 200Ingelran/Enguerrand de Fiennes I, Seigneur de Fiennes in Guines (Pas-de-Callais), crusader, d. 1218 (?). He m. by 1180, 201Sibylle de Boulogne de Tingry, Dame de Tingry. 204Roger de Condé, Seigneur de Condé and de Fontaines. 205Alix de Mons. 206Arnold de Morialmé, Seigneur de Bailleul and Morialmé in Hainault, etc., "one of the heads of the Liege army with Thierry, Sire de Rochefort, and Hugues de Florines who in 1223 gained a signal victory against the Duke of Brabant" (Sellers). 207________. 216Fernando II de Castilla, King of León, Galicia, and Extremadura 1157, b. 1137, d. 21 Jan. 1188 at Benavente, and buried in the chapel of San Lorenzo, in the cathedral of Santiago el Mayor at Santiago de Compostela. He m. (1) May/June 1165 without papal dispensation, and separated in 1175 for relationship within the canonically prohibited degrees (they being scond cousins), 217Urraca of Portugal, b. ca. 1150, d. 16 Oct. 1188, and buried in the Monastery of San Juan Bautista of the Knights of St. John, at Bamba, where she had become a nun following the dissolution of her marriage. 218 = 170 219 = 171 220Alberic II de Dammartin, Seigneur de Lillebonne, Count of Dammartin, d. 19/20 Sept. 1200 in exile at London. 221Mahaut ____.[96] 222Guillaume III Talvas de Bellême, Count of Ponthieu and of Montreuil 1191, b. about 1178, d. 4 Oct. 1221. He m. 20 Aug. 1195, 223Alix de France, b. ca. 1170, living 1218, full sister of Philippe II Auguste, King of France.[97] 240Richard de Clare, Earl of Hertford (but more generally known as Earl of Clare) 1173, d. 1217, between 30 Oct. and 28 Nov. He was a brother of Aveline de Clare (no. 189) above. He m., but apparently separated from by 1200, 241Amicie of Gloucester, coheiress, and eventual sole heir, of her father; heiress of Gloucester, said to have d. 1 Jan. 1224/5. 242 = 146 243 = 147 244Roger de Lacy, Constable of Chester, feudal Lord of Pontefract 1194 (which was ceeded to him during her lifetime by his paternal grandmother, Aubrey de Lisours), d. 1211. He took the name Lacy from his father's mother's mother.[98] 245Maud de Clare.[99] 246Robert de Quincy, d. v.p. 1217 at London, heir apparent to his father,[100] and brother of Hawise de Quincy (no. 77 above). 247Hawise de Kyvelioc, Countess of Lincoln and feudal Baroness of Bolingbroke suo jure Oct. to Nov. 1232, having been resigned the earldom by her brother Ranulph, Earl of Chester (who subsequently d. s.p. in 1232). She in turn almost immediately afterward resigned the earldom to her son-in-law, John de Lacy (no. 122). She d. between 6 June 1241 and 3 March 1242/3. Her sister, Maud, was the wife of David of Scotland, Earl of Huntingdon, and ancestress of all the post-1292 rulers of Scotland. 248Gerald FitzGerald, Baron of Offaly jure uxoris, b. probably by 1150, d. shortly before 1203/4.[101] He m. (as her first husband), 249Eva de Bermingham, heiress of Offaly, d. between June 1223 and Dec. 1226.[102] 252Philip de Prendergast 253Maud de Quincy 254Theobald FitzWalter, b. 1160, d. 1205. 255Maud le Vavasour, b. 1187, d. 1226. GENERATION 9 256William FitzAlan II, feudal lord of Oswestry, and of Clun jure uxoris, both in County Salop, probably b. ca. 1154 (he apparently came of age in 1175), succeeded to the paternal estate in 1160, d. 1210.[103] He m. 257____ de Lacy, sister of Walter de Lacy. 258William d'Aubigny IV, Earl of Arundel, Justiciar of England, b. after 1173, d. shortly before 30 March 1221 at Cainell, near Rome, returning from a crusade, and buried at Wymondham Priory.[104] 259Mabel le Meschin, coheiress, in her issue, of her brother Ranulph "de Blundeville," Earl of Chester. 260Theobald FitzWalter le Botiller, by some styled 1st Baron Butler (in the Peerage of Ireland), d. between 4 Aug. 1205 and 14 Feb. 1205/6, and buried at Wotheny Abbey, County Limerick, which he founded. He m. shortly before 1200, 261Maud le Vavasour, heiress of Edlington, Newborough, etc., in County York., who m. (2) in 1207, Fulk FitzWarin. 262Nicholas de Verdun, lord of Alton, County Stafford, d. 1205.[105] 263________. 264Roger Mortimer II, feudal lord of Wigmore, County Hereford, d. before 19 Aug. 1214. 265Isabel de Ferrers, d. before 29 April 1252. 266Llywelyn (Fawr [The Great]) ab Iorwerth, Prince of North Wales, b. 1173, d. 11 April 1240 at Aberconwy, and buried in the abbey there. Although he was married to Joan Plantagenet, natural daughter of King John, modern scholars are nearly unanymous in believing that the mother of his daughter Gwladus (no. 133) was his concubine Tangwystl, below.[106] 267 (probably) Tangwystl ferch Llywarch Goch, d. by 1205. 272Manfredo II, Marquis of Saluzzo, b. ca. 1155, d. 22 April 1215. He m. in June 1182, 273Alasia di Monferrato, d. 22 July 1202. 274Comita II de Lacon-Gunale, Justiciar (Giudice) of Torres in Sardegna (Sardinia) in 1198, b. say 1160, d. 1218.[107] He m. (1) (as her second husband), 275Sinispella de Lacon-Serra, d. by 1205, widow of Ugo-Poncio de Cervera, Viscount of Bas (d. 1185). 276 = 166 277 = 167 278Hugues III, Duke of Bourgogne 1162, d. 25 Aug. 1192. He m. (2) 12 Sept. 1183, 279Béatrix d'Albon, Dauphine of Viennois, d. 1228. 280Guglielmo I del Vasto, Marquis of Ceva and Clavesana, d. 1197. 281____ di Vento. 288Geoffroi V (Martel or Plantagenêt), Count of Anjou and Maine, b. 24 Aug. 1113, d. 7 Sept. 1151 at Château-du-Loir, and buried in the Cathedral Church of St. Julien at Le Mans; his enamel funerary plaque survives in the Tessé museum at Le Mans.[108] 289(an unknown mistress) 290William de Warenne III, 3rd Earl of Surrey 1138, crusader, d. s.p.m. 19 Jan. 1147/8. His sister, Ada, was the wife of Henry of Scotland, Earl of Huntingdon, and mother of Kings Malcolm IV and William "The Lion."[109] He m. (as her first husband) 291Ala de Montgomery, said to have d. 4 Oct. 1174, who m. (2) Patrick de Salisbury, 1st Earl of Wiltshire or Salisbury. 292John (FitzGilbert) le Marshal, d. 1165, before Michaelmas (i.e. 29 Sept.), at Salisbury. He m. (2) by 1146, 293Sibylle de Salisbury, sister of Patrick de Salisbury, 1st Earl of Wiltshire. 294Richard (Strongbow) FitzGilbert de Clare, Earl of Pembroke 1148 or 1149, b. 1130, d. probably 20 April 1176, at Dublin, and buried there in Holy Trinity (Christ Church) Cathedral. 295Aoife MacMurrough, living 1186, de facto heiress of her father (although she had brothers who left issue). 296Hugues VIII (le Vieux) de Lusignan, Seigneur de Lusignan 1151, went on crusades in 1163, taken prisoner at the battle of Harenc in 1165, and presumed to have d. shortly thereafter. He m. in 1140-41, 297Bourgogne de Rançon, Dame de Fontenay, d. 11 April 1169. 298Pierre II Montrabel, Baron de Preuilly, Seigneur de La Roche-Posay, d. 1204 (?). He m. in 1175, 299Aénor de Maul����on, living 1204. 300Guillaume Taillefer IV, Count of Angoulême 1140, d. 7 Aug. 1178 at Messina on his way to the Holy Land. He m. (2) (as her third husband) 1150, 301Marguerite de Turenne, living 1201, widow of Adémar IV, Viscount of Limoges, and former wife (separate on account of consanguinity) of Ebles III, Viscount of Ventadour. 302Pierre I de France, Seigneur de Courtenay jure uxoris, crusader, b. ca. 1125-26, d. ca. 1180-83 (by 25 March 1183), younger brother of Louis VII (no. 336), King of France. He m. after 1150, 303Isabel/Élisabeth de Courtenay, Dame de Courtenay, b. ca. 1135, d. 14 Sept., after 1205. 304Aubrey de Vere III, 1st Earl of Oxford 1142, b. probably ca. 1110, d. 26 Dec. 1194, and buried at Colne. He m. (3) in 1162 or 1163, 305Agnes de Essex, b. 1151 or 1152, survived her husband, and buried beside him at an unknown date. 306Hugh (II) FitzWalter de Bolebec, feudal lord of Whitchurch, County Bucks., founder of Woburn Abbey, d. 1165.[110] 307________ 308Robert de Quincy, accompanied King Richard I to the Holy Land in 1190, d. before Michaelmas (i.e. 29 Sept.) 1197.[111] His first wife, from whom he was "apparently separated" (CP), was Orable, d. before 30 June 1203, daughter and de facto heiress of Nes of Mar, son of William, lord of Leuchars; she seems to have m. (2) Gilchrist, 3rd Earl of Mar. CP makes her the mother of his son Saher (no. 154).[112] However, according to Domesday Descendants, Saher's mother was his second wife Hawise, and the correctness of this statement is strongly suggested both by Saher's inheritance of Hawise's dower lands,[113] and by his naming of a daughter Hawise (no. 77). Robert de Quincy m. (2) 309 (?) Hawise, Countess of Lincoln, daughter of Hugh II, Earl of Chester.[114] 310Robert (ès Blanchemains), 3rd Earl of Leicester, Steward of England and of Normandy, crusader, d. in 1190 at Durazzo, on return from Jerusalem. 311Pernel de Grandmesnil, d. 1 April 1212, heiress of the honor of Grandmesnil. According to the Complete Peerage, s.v. Leicester, she was "great-granddaughter of Hugh de Grandmesnil, the Domesday tenant, but her parentage has not been discovered." 312(Sanford) 320Geoffroi V Plantagenêt (also called Martel) (= 288). He m. (as her second husband) 22 May 1127 at Rouen, and/or 3 April 1127 at Le Mans, 321Maud of England, heiress of England, known as "The Empress" after her first marriage, b. 7 Feb. 1102 at Winchester, d. 10 Sept. 1167 at the Priory of the Pré de Rouen, and buried in the Abbey of Bec, widow of Emperor Heinrich V (d. 1125), by whom she had not issue. 322Guillaume VIII or X, Duke of Aquitaine, b. 1099 at Toulouse, d. 9 April 1137 at Saint Jacques-de-Compostelle, Galicia, Spain, and buried there in the Metropolitan Church. He m. (1) 1121, 323Alienor de Châtellerault, b. 1103 at Châtellerault, in Vienne, d. after March 1130, but probably before 1137, and buried in the Abbey of St. Vincent at Niuil-sur-l'Autise. 328Alfonso II Ramón (le Chaste), King of Aragón, Count of Barcelona, Cerdagne, and Besalu; Count and Marquis of Provence 1162, b. May 1152, d. 25 April 1196 at Perpignan, and buried in the Abbey of Poblet in Catalonia. He m. (2) 18 Jan. 1174/5, 329Sancha de Castilla, b. 21 July 1154, d. Nov. 1208 as a nun in the Abbey of Xixena in Aragón. 330Reinier I de Sabran, Seigneur de Castellar, d. 1224. He m. (1) 331Garsende de Forcalquier, heiress of Forcalquier. 332Umberto III (le Saint) de Savoie, Count of Savoy, b. 1 Aug. 1136 at Vigliana, d. 4 March 1188/9 (?) at Chambéry, and buried in the Cistercian Abbey of Haute-Combe in Savoy. He m. (4) ca. 1175, 333Béatrix de Maçon, d. 1230, before 8 April.[115] 334 (probably) Guillaume I, Count of Geneva, d. 25 July 1195, and buried in the monastery of Ste. Catherine-sur-Annecy.[116] 335 (probably) Beatrix [de Faucigny?],[117] buried with her husband. 336Louis VII (Le Jeune), King of France, b. 1120, d. 18 Sept. 1180. He m. (3) 13 Nov. 1160 at Paris, 337Alix/AdËle de Champagne, d. 4 Oct. 1206 at Paris, and buried in the Abbey of Pontigny in Bourgogne. 338Baudouin V (le Courageux), Count of Hainaut 1171, b. 1150, d. in late Dec. 1195 at Mons. He m. (as her second husband) (contract April 1169), 339Marguerite of Flanders, b. 1145, d. 15 Nov. 1194 at Bruges, and buried at Saint-Donatien, widow of Raoul II, Count of Vermandois. 340Sancho III (El Deseado), King of Nájera by 1149, King of Castilla and Toledo 1157, b. 1134, d. 31 Aug. 1158 at Toldeo, and buried there in the Cathedral of Santa María. He m. 30 Jan. 1150/1 at Calahorra, 341Blanca de Navarra, b. ca. 1137, d. 12 Aug. 1156, and buried at Nájera, in the Cathedral of Santa María la Real. 342 = 160 343 = 161 344Godefroi III de Brabant, Duke of Lower Lorraine and Count of Louvain 1142, d. 10 Aug. 1190. He m. (1) 1155, 345Margarete von Limburg, d. 1172. 346Matthieu de Lorraine, Count of Boulogne jure uxoris, slain 25 July 1173 at Driencourt. He m. (1) before 1160, but divorced in 1169-70, 347Mary of England, Countess of Mortagne and Boulogne, b. ca. 1136, d. 1182 at St. Austrebert, and buried there. 348Friedrich III (Barbarossa) von Hohenstaufen, Duke of Swabia 1147, Count of Bourgogne jure uxoris 1148, King of Germany 1152, Holy Roman Emperor 1155, b. 1122, d. 10 June 1190. He m. (2) 10/16 June 1156, 349Béatrix I de Bourgogne, Countess of Bourgogne 1148, b. 1143-45, d. 15 Nov. 1184, her parents' only daughter and sole heiress. 350Isaakios II Angelos, Emperor of the East 1185-95, 1203-04, b. ca. 1155, d. in late Jan. or in Feb. of 1204.[118] He m. (1) 351________, d. by 1185. 352Payn de Chaorces I (modern Chaworth), feudal lord of Kempsford, in Gloucestershire, succeeding his father before 1155, d. 1170. 353________. 356(de la Ferté) 358William de Briwere, feudal lord of Petworth, Sussex, of Torre, Devonshire, and of Horsley, Derbyshire; Sheriff of Devon 1179-1209, d. 1226. 359Beatrix de Vaux 368William FitzGeoffrey, b. ca. 1158, d. by 1221. 369Olive de Beachamp, heiress of Eaton. 370(Mortimer). 371 ________. 372Robert Mauduit, feudal Lord of Hanslope, County Bucks (and of Hartley Mauduit, County Hants?), succeeding his father in 1195; d. 1222. He m. in 3 John (i.e. 1201-02), 373Isabel Basset, coheiress of Thurstan Basset. 374Waleran de Newburgh, 4th Earl of Warwick 1184, d. possibly 23 Dec. 1203, and certainly before 13 Oct. 1204.[119] He m. (2) ca. 1196, 375Alice de Harcourt, living in Sept. 1212, widow of John de Limesy, lord of Cavendish, Suffolk. 376Piers de Lutegareshale, 377Maud ____, who m. (2) Hugh de Boclande. 378Roger (The Good) de Clare, Earl of Clare or of Hertford, d. 1173. 379Maud de St. Hillary. 380Roger le Bigod, 2nd Earl of Norfolk 1189, d. in 1221, before 2 Aug. 381Ida ____, of unknown parentage. She was also the mistress of Henry II, King of England (504), to whom she bore a son. 384Humphrid de Bohun IV, lord of Trowbridge, Wiltshire, and Hereditary Constable of England by 1165, d. ca. 1187.[120] He m. before Easter 1171, 385Margaret of Scotland, b. after 1139, d. 1201, and buried at Sawtrey Abbey, widow of Conan (le Petit), Duke of Britanny and Earl of Richmond. 386Geoffrey FitzPiers, Earl of Essex. 387Beatrix de Say, d. by 1197. 388 = 296 389 = 297 390Henry d'Eu, Count of Eu, Lord of Hastings, d. 16 or 17 March 1183, and buried in the Abbey of Foucarmont. He m. (as her first husband) 391Mahaut de Warenne, d. in or after 1212, "and buried, it is said in the Abbey of Foucarmont, but, perhaps, in that of Valmont" (CP), who m. (2) Henry d'Estouteville, of Eckington, County Derby, etc., Seigneur de Valmont and Rames in Normandy. 392William III de Briouze, Lord of Briouze, Bramber, Brecon, Over Gwent, etc., d. 9 Aug. 1211 at Corbeil, near Paris, and buried the following day in the Abbey of St. Victor at Paris. "In consequence of his well-known quarrel with King John, his lands were forfeited in 1208, and his wife and first son starved to death in the dungeons of Corfe (or of Windsor) in 1210."[121] 393Maud de St. Valery, Lady of "La Haie," d. 1210. 394 = 358 395 = 359 400Eustace II de Fiennes "the Old," Seigneur de Fiennes in Guines (Pas-de-Callais), founder of the Abbey of Beaulieu in the diocese of Therouanne, Boullonois.[122] The chronicler Lambert of Ardres, in his History of the Counts of Guines, writes (our translation): "Eustacius, known as the Old, had [three] sons [including]: Eustacius
, who was married with Margaret, daughter of Arnold, Count of Guines, who rests in the Lord having left no issue of his seed; [and] Ingelram, who was married with a noblewoman of Tingry, Sibilla, sister of William Faramus, and by her engendered Willelmus, Thomas, and Eustacius, and daughters
."[123] The consistency of the chronology is suggested by the fact that the same work shows the said William Faramus of Tingry as having married Beatrix, sister of his wife's sister-in-law Marguerite de Guines.[124] It will be seen from this account that it was not he but his son of the same name who married Marguerite de Guines.[125] 401 (?) Anne de Dreux, according to Turton,[126] although she is not named by Lambert of Ardres, and Anselme gives her name as unknown.[127] 402Faramus/Pharamus de Boulogne, Seigneur de Tingry. 403Mathilde ____. 408(Condé) 410Gossuin III de Mons, Châtelain de Mons, Sire de Baudour. 411Beatrix de Rumigny. 412(Morialmé) 432Alfonso VII (El Bueno), King of Galicia 1111, King of Castilla, León, and Toledo 1112, King of Zaragoza 1134, Emperor of Spain 1135, b. 1 March 1105 at Galicia, d. 21 Aug. 1157 at Fresneda, near the Puerto de Muradal in the Sierra Morena range, and buried at Toledo, in the Cathedral of Santa Marí. He m. (1) Nov. 1128 at Saldaña, 433Berengaria de Barcelona, b. ca. 1114, d. Jan. 1149 at Palencia, and buried in the cathedral of Santiago el Mayor at Santiago de Compostela. 434Affonso I Henriques (O Conquistador), King of Portugal 1143-1185, b. July 1110 at Guimarãens, d. 6 Dec. 1185 at Coimbra, and buried with his wife. He m. in 1146, 435Mafalda di Savoia, d. 4 Dec. 1157 at Coimbra, and buried there in the Church of Santa Cruz. 440Alberic I de Dammartin, Count of Dammartin, living 1162. He m. (as her second husband) 441 (?) Clémence de Bar, widow of Renaud II, Count of Clermont en Beauvoisis; she m. (3) Thibaut III, Seigneur de Nanteuil-Haudouin in Valois. 444Jean I, Count of Ponthieu and Montreuil 1147 (succeeding as an infant), d. 1191 in the siege of Acre; his corpse was returned to France and buried in the Abbey of Saint-Josse-aux-Bois in Ponthieu. He m. (3) 445Béatrix de St.-Pol, living 1190. 446 = 336 447 = 337 480 = 378 481 = 379 482William FitzRobert, Earl of Gloucester, d. s.p.m.s. 1183. 483Hawise de Beaumont-le-Roger. 488John FitzRobert, Constable of Chester, d. v.m. 11 Oct. 1190 at Tyre, while on crusade, having founded Stanlaw Abbey in County Chester.[128] 489Alice de Vere.[129] 490(Clare) 492 = 154 493 = 155 494Hugh de Kyvelioc, Earl de Chester. 495Bertrade de Montfort, d. 1227. 496Maurice FitzGerald, Dapifer of St. David's in Wales and Baron of the Naas in Ireland, d. 1177. 497Alice de Montgomery 498Robert de Bermingham, Baron of Offaly 499________ 504Maurice de Prendergast 505________ 506Robert de Quincy, b. 1145, d. 1172. 507Basilea de Clare, b. 1158, d. 1203. 508Hervey FitzWalter 509Maude de Valoines 510Sir Robert le Vavasour 511Julian de Ros N O T E S _1. Gary Boyd Roberts, "The Mowbray Connection," The Connecticut Nutmegger, vol. 10, no. 1 (June 1977): 3-12, in which he describes his enormous unpublished project to trace their ancestors and descendants. See also, respecting this project, the same author's The Royal Descents of 500 Immigrants (1993), pp. xvii-xxi. 2. In Roberts, see especially p. xix. In Faris, lines deriving from Elizabeth FitzAlan and Robert Goushill begin at pp. 38, 90, 101, 145, 152, 167, 212, 258, 259, 261, 264, 323, 326, 356, 357, 377, and 386, and in most cases footnotes draw attention to all colonial immigrants in each group of descent, but there are a few slips in this respect. _3. When Roberts was writing in 1977, he may have been including in his total two immigrants, William Fairfax, of Virginia, and Mary Launce, wife of the Rev. John Sherman, of Massachusetts, whom he had named as Goushill descendants in his unpublished manuscript The Mowbray Connection (our copy of which is dated 1966). However, the treatments of these two immigrants in RD500 (pp. 43 & 176, respectively), and in Faris, do not reveal obvious Goushill descents, and it would require some effort to examine their ancestries in sufficient detail to verify the statement. Mary Launce's ancestry is treated with greater fullness in RD600, pp. 217, 370, etc., but still without revealing any obvious Goushill descent. _4. Turton, pp. 97, 72. Other strains of Elizabeth FitzAlan's ancestry can also be found in this work, notably in pp. 25 (Fiennes) and 49 (Briouze). Indeed, apart from some of the ancestry deriving from one great-great-great-grandfather, Humphrey de Bohun VI (ancestor no. 48), Elizabeth FitzAlan's earlier ancestry (generation 7 and back) is completely subsumed in that of Elizabeth, heiress of the Plantagenets. 5. See The Genealogist, 12 (1998): 254. 6. Paget, 1:79. 7. Faris, p. 145. 8. Faris, pp. 290-94. 9. Her descent from Edward I is given in Charles M. Hansen, "the descent of James1 Claypoole of Philadelphia from Edward I," TAG 67 (1992): 97-107, at pp. 98-100; Roberts, p. 238, etc., and can also be readily assembled from Faris, 2nd ed., pp. 33-34, 144-45. 10. As pointed out by Roberts, they were each great-great-grandchildren of Edward I, and also of his brother, Edmund "Crouchback," Earl of Lancaster. 11. Paget, 2: 401, 406, 418, 419, 447, 450. 12. Faris, Plantagenet Ancestry of Sevententh-Century Colonists, 2nd ed., pp. 143-45. 13. For his ancestry see Turton, p. 97. His descent from Henry III is shown in Faris, 2nd ed., 143-45. 14. Paget, 1:79, 78, 84, 87, 88. 15. Faris, Plantagenet Ancestry of Sevententh-Century Colonists, 2nd ed., pp. 33-34, which traces her descent from Edward I. 16. Sir Charles Clay, Early Yorkshire Families (Yorkshire Archaeological Society Record Series, vol. 135, 1973), 100. 17. Nicholas Harris Nicolas, Testamenta Vetusta; being illustrations from wills, of manners, customs, &c.
from the reign of Henry the Second to the accession of Queen Elizabeth (London, 1826), 94-96. 18. Faris, Plantagenet Ancestry of Sevententh-Century Colonists, 2nd ed., pp. 202-03. 19. Paget, 1:78. 20. Consequently, her ancestry is traced in Turton, p. 72. 21. The inquisition post mortem of her father, taken in 1283, states that she turned 1 year old on the preceding feast of the Purification of the Virgin Mary (ad festum Purificationis Beatæ Mariæ Virginis proximo), i.e. 2 Feb. 1283, while that of her mother, taken in 1306, makes her 24 years old; see Calendarium Genealogicum Henry III and Edward I, ed. Charles Roberts, 2 vols. (London, 1865), 1:330-31, 2:706. 22. AR7, line 72; Carl Boyer, Medieval English Ancestors of Robert Abell, 54-55. 23. Boyer, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans, 33-36. 24. Calendarium Genealogicum Henry III and Edward I, ed. Charles Roberts, 2:607. 25. CP 1:371-2; J. Horace Round, The King's Serjeants and Officers of State, with their Coronation Services (London, 1911), 113 n. 3; Sanders, English Baronies, 111-12. 26. CP 1:241 states that he was "buried with his ancestors." See also Douglas Richardson, posting to the Internet newsgroup soc.gen.medieval, dated 16 Feb. 2002 . 27. See L(indsay) L. Brook et al., Genealogie medioevali di Sardegna (Cagliari & Sassari, Sardegna, 1984), 108-9, 271-81, and the extensive and well-sourced ahnentafel for her submitted by Richard Borthwick to soc.gen.medieval, 26 Jan. 1999 . 28. Anthony Richard Wagner, English Genealogy, 2nd ed. (Oxford, 1972), 249, 246. 29. Paget, 1:180, gives a five-generation ancestor table for
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- [S64] The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, International Genealogical Index.
Richard Of Arundel FITZALAN; Male; Death: JUL 1397; Father: Richard FITZ ALAN; Mother: Eleanor PLANTAGENET; Spouse: Elizabeth BOHUN; Marriage: 28 SEP 1359 Contract; No source information is available.
Record submitted after 1991 by a member of the LDS Church.
Search performed using PAF Insight on 27 Nov 2004
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