Notes |
- Guiburge de Mondoubleau, called 'Wilburga, da. of Pain de Mundubleil' (Sanders p. 125 note 2,
citing Dunstable Cartulary, B.H.R.S. x, 304-6)
“Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families,” Douglas Richardson (2013):
“PATRICK (or PATRICE) DE CHAOURCES (or DE SOURCHES), of Kempsford, Gloucestershire, son and heir. He married WIBURGE (or GUIBURGE, GUIBOURGE) They had two sons, Pain (or Payen) [de Mondoubleau] and Hugh (or Hugues). In 1130 he granted to St. Peter's, Gloucester the mill of Horcote, near Kempsford, Gloucestershire. At an unknown date he and his son, Pain, granted the monks of la Couture their right to the patronage of the churches of Brillon, Bemay, and Saint-Mars-sous-Ballon. PATRICK DE CHAOURCES was deceased before 1149. About 1149 Wilburge, and her son, Pain, founded Tironneau Abbey (commune de Saint-Aignan, canton de Marolles-les-Braux).
Pesche Dictionnaire topographique, historique et statistique de la Sarthe 6 (1842): 224-226. Gueranger Essai historique sur l'Abbaye de Solesmes (1846): 23 ("En 1147, Patrice de Sourches et Guiburge sa mere [fonda l'abbaye] de Tironneau."). Herald & Genealogist 6 (1871): 241-253. Cartulaire des Abbeyes de Saint-Pierre de la Couture et de Saint-Pierre de Solesmes (1881): 42 (charter of Patrick de Sourches and his son, Pain). Inventaire-Sommaire des Archives Départementales antérieures 1790: Sarthe 3 (1881): 414 ("Abbaye de Tironneau. XIIe siècle. Chartes … que les religieux avaient payé a Guiburge de Cadurcis (Chaourses) 25 sols, et a Massile, son fils aine, 5 sols, pour que l'un et l'autre ratifiassent cette donation comme seigneurs suzerains …”). Duc des Cars Le Chateau de Sourches au Maine & ses Seigneurs (1887).
Money Hist. of Newbury (1887): 72-79 (Chaworth ped). Genealogist n.s. 5 (1889): 209-212 ("Patrick de Cadurcis (I) had a son of the same name, who had apparently succeeded him prior to 1130, when he appears, from the Cartulary of St. Peter's, Gloucester, to have added the mill of Horcote, near Kempsford, to the donations which his grandfather, Arnulph de Hesding, had made to that Abbey. This Patrick (II), however, seems, from the Pipe Roll of 31 Hen. I, to have had his lands seized by the King, and there is some reason to suppose that they were never restored to him. Not improbably he succeeded to the headship of the family in France, and, dying there, left sons too young to assert a claim to their English heritage, which, during the confusion of the Civil war, came into the hands of the other descendants of Arnulph de Hesding of Domesday."). Province du Maine 5 (1897): 179-180. Bull. de la Société Archéologique, Scientifique & Littéraire du Vendomois 43 (1904): 100-104 ("Geoffroy de Brulon … ce personnage tenait ce lieu de sa mere N... de Mondoubleau, file probablement de Payen de Mondoubleau et mariée avant 1167 a Payen de Sourches qui devint seigneur de Brulon par le fait même de son mariage."). Pubs. of Bedfordshire Hist. Rec. Soc. 7 (1923): 165-167; 10 (1926): 304-306 ("Patric II de Chaworth hardly appears in records, and probably died young and in his father's lifetime. With his son Payn he confirmed to la Couture three churches in Maine; there is also a notification possibly granted by him. His wife Wiburga seems to have long survivived him."). Boussard Le Comte d'Anjou sous Henri Plantegenet & ses Fils (1151-1204) (1938): 55-57. Sanders English Baronies (1960): 125. Keats-Rohan Domesday Descendants (2002): 391-392.”
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