de Gournay, Gundreda
1095 - 1130 (35 years)1. de Gournay, Gundreda was born in 1095 in Aubigny, Calvados, Basse-Normandie, France; died in 1130 in Aubigny, Calvados, Basse-Normandie, France; was buried in 1130 in Byland Abbey, Yorkshire, England. Other Events and Attributes:
- FSID: LHC4-HMW
Notes:
BIO: from http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/NORMAN%20NOBILITY.htm#GerardGournaydied1099
GUNDRED de Gournay (-after 1155). She is named as second wife of Nigel d'Aubigny by Orderic Vitalis, who also specifies that she was the sister of Hugues de Gournay[749]. m (Jun 1118) as his second wife, NELE d'Aubigny, son of ROGER d'Aubigny & his wife Amice --- (-21 or 26 Nov 1129).Gundreda married de Daubeney, Baron Nigel between 8 Jun and 7 Jul 1118 in Caister-on-Sea, Norfolk, England. Nigel was born in 1070 in Thirsk Castle, Thirlby, Yorkshire, England; died on 21 Nov 1129 in Thirsk, Yorkshire, England; was buried after 21 Nov 1129 in Bec Abbey, Le Bech, Corrèze, Limousin, France. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]
Children:
- 2. de Mowbray, Lord Roger was born in 1120 in Masham, Yorkshire, England; died in 1188 in Tyre, Lebanon.
Generation: 2
2. de Mowbray, Lord Roger (1.Gundreda1) was born in 1120 in Masham, Yorkshire, England; died in 1188 in Tyre, Lebanon. Other Events and Attributes:
- Appointments / Titles: Lord of Mowbray
Notes:
Roger de Mowbray
Born c. 1120
Died 1188 Tyre, Lebanon
Title Lord of Montbray
Nationality English
Wars and battles
Battle of the Standard
Battle of Lincoln (1141)
Second Crusade
Revolt of 1173–74
Battle of Hattin
Parents Nigel d'Aubigny and Gundreda de Gournay
Roger de Mowbray (Lord of Montbray)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Roger de Mowbray (c. 1120–1188) was an English noble,
described by Horace Round as
a great lord with a hundred knight's fees, was
captured with King Stephen at the Battle of
Lincoln (1141), joined the rebellion against
Henry II (1173), founded abbeys, and went on
crusade.[2]
Contents
1 Family and early life
2 Career under Stephen
3 Career under Henry II
4 Legacy
5 References
6 See also
Family and early life
Roger was the son of Nigel d'Aubigny by his second wife,
Gundreda de Gournay.[3]
On his father's death in 1129 he became a ward of the
crown.[4] Based at Thirsk with his mother, on reaching his
majority in 1138, he took his paternal grandmother's surname of Mowbray and title to the lands awarded to his
father by Henry I both in Normandy including Montbray, as well as the substantial holdings in Yorkshire and
around Melton.[2]
Career under Stephen
Soon after, in 1138, he participated in the Battle of the Standard against the Scots and, according to Aelred of
Rievaulx, acquitted himself honourably.[4]
Thereafter, Roger's military fortunes were mixed. Whilst acknowledged as a competent and prodigious fighter,
he generally found himself on the losing side in his subsequent engagements. During the anarchic reign of King
Stephen he was captured with Stephen at the battle of Lincoln in 1141.[4]
Soon after his release, Roger married Alice de Gant (d. c. 1181), daughter of Walter de Gant and widow of
Ilbert de Lacy, and by whom he had two sons, Nigel and Robert.[5] Roger also had at least one daughter,
donating his lands at Granville to the Abbeye des Dames in Caen when she became a nun there.[4]
In 1147, he was one of the few English nobles to join Louis VII of France on the Second Crusade.[2] He gained
further acclaim, according to John of Hexham, defeating a Muslim leader in single combat.[5]
Career under Henry II
Roger supported the Revolt of 1173–74 against Henry II and fought with his sons, Nigel and Robert, but they
were defeated at Kinardferry, Kirkby Malzeard and Thirsk.[4]
Roger left for the Holy Land again in 1186, but encountered further misfortune being captured at the Battle of
Hattin in 1187.[3] His ransom was met by the Templars, but he died soon after and, according to some accounts,
was buried at Tyre in Palestine. There is, however, some controversy surrounding his death and burial and final
resting-place.[2][6]
Legacy
Mowbray was a significant benefactor and supporter of several religious institutions in Yorkshire including
Fountains Abbey.[3][2] With his mother he sheltered the monks of Calder, fleeing before the Scots in 1138, and
supported their establishment at Byland Abbey in 1143. Later, in 1147, he facilitated their relocation to
Coxwold.
Roger made a generous donation of two carucates of land (c.240 acres), a house and two mills to the Order of
Saint Lazarus, headquartered at Burton St Lazarus Hospital in Leicestershire, after his return from the crusades
in 1150.[7] His cousin William d'Aubigny, 1st Earl of Arundel and his wife Adeliza, the widow of King Henry
I, had been amongst the earliest patrons of the order and, when combined with Roger's experiences in the Holy
Land, may have encouraged his charity.[8] His family continued to support the Order for many generations and
the Mowbrays lion rampant coat of arms was adopted by the Hospital of Burton St Lazars alongside their more
usual green cross.[1][9]
He also supported the Knights Templar and gave them land in Warwickshire where they founded Temple
Balsall.[7]
In total, Roger is credited with assisting the establishment of thirty-five churches.[2]
References
1. Burke, Bernard (1884). Burkes General Armoury. London: Burkes.
2. One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in thpeu blic domain: Round, John
Horace (1911). "Mowbray" (https://archive.org/stream/encyclopaediabri18chisrich#page/948/mode/1up. )In Chisholm,
Hugh. Encyclopædia Britannica. 18 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 948.
3. "Roger de Mowbray" (http://cistercians.shef.ac.uk/people/roger_de_mowbra.yphp). Cistercians in Yorkshire Project.
Retrieved 23 February 2013.
4. Tait 1891.
5. "Mowbray, Sir Roger (I) de". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press.
doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/19458 (https://doi.org/10.1093%2Fref%3Aodnb%2F19458) . (Subscription or UK public library
membership (https://global.oup.com/oxforddnb/info/freeodnb/libraries/) required.)
6. "The mystery of the Mowbray grave "(http://cistercians.shef.ac.uk/byland/history/app5.php. )Cistercians in Yorkshire
Project. Retrieved 23 February 2013.
7. Nichols, John (1795). The History and Antiquities of the County of Leiceste.r Leicester: John Nichols.
8. Marcombe, David (2003).L eper Knights. Woodbridge: Boydell Press. p. 34.I SBN 1-84383-067-1.
9. Bourne, Terry; Marcombe, David, eds. (1987).T he Burton Lazars Cartulary: A Medieval Leicestershier Estate.
Nottingham: University of Nottingham.
Attribution
Tait, James (1891). "Mowbray, Roger de". In Stephen, Leslie; Lee, Sidney. Dictionary of National
Biography. 25. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
See also
House of Mowbray
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?
title=Roger_de_Mowbray_(Lord_of_Montbray)&oldid=785857895"
Categories: Christians of the Second Crusade People of The Anarchy 1120 births 1188 deaths
12th-century English people Feudal barons of Mowbray
This page was last edited on 15 June 2017, at 20:25.
Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License; additional terms may apply. By using this site, you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc., a non-profit organization.Family/Spouse: de Gaunt, Lady Alice. Alice was born in 1120 in Lincolnshire, England; died in 1176 in Norfolk, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]
Children:
- 3. de Mowbray, Lord Nigel was born in 1146 in Isle of Axholme, Lincolnshire, England; died in 1191 in Acre, Yerushalayim, Israel; was buried in 1191 in Atlantic Ocean.
Generation: 3
3. de Mowbray, Lord Nigel (2.Roger2, 1.Gundreda1) was born in 1146 in Isle of Axholme, Lincolnshire, England; died in 1191 in Acre, Yerushalayim, Israel; was buried in 1191 in Atlantic Ocean. Other Events and Attributes:
- Appointments / Titles: 5th Baron Thirsk
- Appointments / Titles: Baron of Mowbray
- FSID: LZP5-FM1
- Military: Between 8 Jan 1189 and 7 Jan 1190; Crusade with King Richard
- Military: Between 8 Jan 1190 and 7 Jan 1191, Israel
Notes:
Nigel Or Nele De Mowbray
prefix: (Of Thirsk)
Birth: 1145 in Axholme, Lincolnshire, England
Death: 1191 in Acre, Palestine
Note:
Went on a crusade with King Richard in 1189. [Magna Chart a Sureties]
Like his father, was a crusader, and died on his pilgrimage, 1192-3. [Magna Charta Barons, p . 116]
Born about 1115, lived most of his life in his father's shadow and so little is known about him. He took over his father's huge estates in England and Normandy and in 1189 attended the coronation of Richard I (Lionheart). In 1191 he set off for Palestine but died on the journey and was buried at sea.
He m. Mabel de Clare about 1170 and the union produced four known sons:
1. William, his successor
2. Philip, ancest or of the Scottish Mowbrays of Barnbougle
3. Robert
4. Roger, ancestor of the Mowbrays of Kirklington
Father: Roger D'aubigny De Mowbray b: Abt 1120 in Cainhoe, Bedfordshire, England
Mother: Alice De Gaunt b: Abt 1118 in Folkingham, Lincolnshire, England
Marriage 1 Mabel De Clare b: 1156 in Clare, Suffolk, England
Married: 1170 in England
Children
William De Mowbray b: 1172 in Thirsk And Slingsby, England
Philip Moubray b: Abt 1175
Roger William De Mowbray b: Abt 1180 in Yorkshire , England
-----
Roger II de Mowbray* (Mowbray), III
Birth 1218 Thirsk, North Riding Yorkshire, England
Death: Died October 18, 1263 in Pontefract, Yorkshire, , England
Immediate Family:
Son of William de Mowbray Baron of Thirsk; Avice (Agnes) Avice d'Aubigny and Avice de Mowbray
Husband of Maud (Matilda) (de Mowbray le Strange) and NN wife of Roger de Mowbray
Father of Elizabeth D Aubigny de Mowbray; Joan de Mowbray; Roger de Mowbray, 1st Baron Mowbray and Johannes de Mowbray
Brother of William de Mowbray and Nigel Mowbray
Occupation:Knt., of Thirsk, Yorkshire
Roger I de Mowbray (d'Aubigny), of Masham
Birth circa 1119 Masham, Bedale, North Riding Yorkshire, England
Death: Died 1188 in Palestine, Holy Land
Cause of death: Killed during the Third Crusade; taken prisoner at Battle of Hattin 4 July 1187, ransomed y the Templars but died in Palestine or en route home; Place of Burial: Sures
Immediate Family:
Son of Nele or Niel (Nigel) d'Aubigny, Lord of Mowbray and Gundred de Gournay
Husband of Alice de Gant
Father of Nele (Nigel) de Mowbray; Robert de Mowbray and N.N. de Mowbray
Brother of Hamon d'Aubigny, [possible son of Nigel and Gundred d'Aubigny] and Robert d'Aubigny, [son of Henry and Cecilia]
----Nigel married de Clare, Mabel in 1167 in Lincolnshire, England. Mabel was born in 1148 in Banstead, Surrey, England; died in 1203 in Lincolnshire, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]
Children:
- 4. de Mowbray, Lord William was born in 1173 in Thirsk Castle, Thirlby, Yorkshire, England; died in Nov 1266 in Epworth, Lincolnshire, England; was buried in 1223 in Coxwold, Yorkshire, England.
Generation: 4
4. de Mowbray, Lord William (3.Nigel3, 2.Roger2, 1.Gundreda1) was born in 1173 in Thirsk Castle, Thirlby, Yorkshire, England; died in Nov 1266 in Epworth, Lincolnshire, England; was buried in 1223 in Coxwold, Yorkshire, England. Other Events and Attributes:
- Appointments / Titles: 4th Baron Mowbray
- Appointments / Titles: 4th Baron of Axholme
- Appointments / Titles: 4th Baron of Axholme
- Appointments / Titles: 6th Baron of Thirsk
- Appointments / Titles: 6th Baron of Thirsk
- Appointments / Titles: Baron of Mowbray
- Appointments / Titles: Baron of Mowbray
- FSID: LH34-JDZ
- Occupation: Knight
- Military: Between 8 Jan 1193 and 7 Jan 1194; Crusades
Notes:
William de Mowbray
6th Baron of Thirsk
4th Baron Mowbray
Predecessor Nigel de Mowbray II, 5th Baron of Thirsk
Successor Roger de Mowbray II, 7th Baron of Thirsk
Issue
Nigel de Mowbrey III
Roger de Mowbrey II
Titles and styles
6th Baron of Thirsk
4th Baron Mowbray
Family Mowbray
Father Nigel de Mowbray II, 5th Baron Thirsk
Mother Mabel de Clare
Born 1173 Thirsk Castle, Thirsk, Yorkshire, Kingdom of England
Died 1224 Isle of Axholme, Epworth, Lincolnshire, Kingdom of England
Occupation Peerage of England
William de Mowbray
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
William de Mowbray, 6th Baron of Thirsk, 4th Baron
Mowbray (c. 1173–c. 1224) was an Norman Lord and
English noble who was one of the twenty five executors of
the Magna Carta. He was described as being as small as a
dwarf but very generous and valiant.[1]
Contents
1 Family and early life
2 Career under Richard I
3 Career under John
4 Career under Henry III
5 Benefactor, marriage and succession
6 References
7 See also
Family and early life
William was the eldest of the one daughter and three or four
sons of Nigel de Mowbray, by Mabel, thought to be
daughter of William de Patri, and grandson of Roger de
Mowbray.[2]
Career under Richard I
William appears to have been in the company of Richard I
in Speyer, Germany, on 20 November 1193 during
Richard's period of captivity on his return from Palestine.[3]
In 1194 he had livery of his lands. paying a relief of £100.
He was immediately called upon to pay a sum nearly as
large as his share of the scutage levied towards Richard's
ransom, for the payment of which he was one of the
hostages.[4] William was later a witness to Richard's treaty
with Baldwin of Flanders in 1197.[3]
Career under John
In 1215 Mowbray was prominent with other north-country barons in opposing King John. He was appointed
one of the twenty-five executors of the Magna Carta, and as such was specially named among those
excommunicated by Pope Innocent III. His youngest brother, Roger, has sometimes been reckoned as one of
the twenty-five, apparently by confusion with, or as a substitute for, Roger de Mumbezon. Roger died without
heirs about 1218, and William received his lands.[4][5]
Career under Henry III
In the First Barons' War, Mowbray supported Louis. Mowbray was taken prisoner in the Battle of Lincoln
(1217), and his estates bestowed upon William Marshal the younger; but he redeemed them by the surrender of
the lordship of Bensted in Surrey to Hubert de Burgh, before the general restoration in September of that
year.[4]
In January 1221, Mowbray assisted Hubert in driving his former co-executor, William of Aumâle, from his last
stronghold at Bytham in Lincolnshire.[4]
Benefactor, marriage and succession
William de Mowbray founded the chapel of St. Nicholas, with a chantry, at Thirsk, and was a benefactor of his
grandfather's foundations at Furness Abbey and Newburgh, where, on his death in Axholme about 1224, he was
buried.[4][3]
He married Avice, a daughter of William d'Aubigny, 3rd Earl of Arundel, of the elder branch of the d'Aubignys.
By her he had two sons, Nigel and Roger. The ‘Progenies Moubraiorum’ makes Nigel predecease his father,
and Nicolas and Courthope accept this date; but Dugdale adduces documentary evidence showing that he had
livery of his lands in 1223, and did not die (at Nantes) until 1228. As Nigel left no issue by his wife Mathilda or
Maud, daughter of Roger de Camvile, he was succeeded as sixth baron by his brother Roger II, who only came
of age in 1240, and died in 1266. This Roger's son, Roger III, was seventh baron (1266-1298) and father of
John I de Mowbray, eighth baron.[4]
There has been some speculation that de Mowbray was the inspiration for the character of Tyrion Lannister in
Game of Thrones.
References
1. Michel, Francique, ed. (1840). Histoire des Ducs de Normandie et des Rois d'Angleterre (https://archive.org/stream/histo
iredesducsd00michuoft#page/145/mode/1up )(in French). Paris. p. 145." Guillaumes de Moubray, qui estoit autresi petis
comme uns nains; mais moult estoit lagres et vaillans."
2. Tait, James; Thomas, Hugh M. "William de Mowbray". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford
University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/19461 (https://doi.org/10.1093%2Fref%3Aodnb%2F19461) . (Subscription or UK
public library membership (https://global.oup.com/oxforddnb/info/freeodnb/libraries/) required.)
3. Richardson, Douglas. Magna Carta Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Familie (shttps://books.google.com/bo
oks?id=8JcbV309c5UC&pg=RA2-PA198&lpg=RA2-PA198&dq=William+de+Mowbray&source=bl&ots=kunFLVIUd
2&sig=W65_Hc8l921NLLGrvw5VHQLyLKk&hl=en&sa=X&ei=BgNGUdWAJfKR0QXEvIDoDQ&ved=0CC0Q6AE
wADgU#v=onepage&q=William%20de%20Mowbray&f=false) (2 ed.). p. 198. ISBN 978-0806317595.
4. Tait 1894.
5. Browning, Charles H. (1898). The Magna Charta Barons and Their American Descendants (https://books.google.com/b
ooks?id=LsYJ_YB8dpwC&lpg=PA114). p. 114. ISBN 0806300558. LCCN 73077634 (https://lccn.loc.gov/73077634).
reprinted 1969
Attribution
This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Tait, James (1894). "Mowbray,
William de". In Lee, Sidney. Dictionary of National Biography. 39. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
See also
House of Mowbray
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=William_de_Mowbray&oldid=785858035"
Categories: 1173 births 1224 deaths 12th-century English people 13th-century English people
Magna Carta barons Released from excommunication Feudal barons of Mowbray
This page was last edited on 15 June 2017, at 20:26. Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License; additional terms may apply. By using this site, you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc., a non-profit organization.Family/Spouse: d'Aubigny, Avice. Avice was born in 1173 in Arundel, Sussex, England; died between 8 Mar and 7 Apr 1224 in Isle of Axholme, Lincolnshire, England; was buried in 1224 in Barrow-In-Furness, Lancashire, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]
Children:
- 5. de Mowbray, Roger II was born in 1221 in Thirsk, Yorkshire, England; died in Nov 1266 in Pontefract, Yorkshire, England; was buried in Blackfriars (demolished), Pontefract, Yorkshire, England.