Godfrey Count of Eu & Brionne

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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Godfrey Count of Eu & Brionne (son of Richard, Duke of Normandy I of Normandy).

    Notes:

    [dunbar_tree.FTW]

    From "A Baronial Family in Medieval England: The Clares, 1217-1314", by Michael Altschul, Baltimore, The Johns Hopkins press, 1965.
    The Clares came to England with the Conqueror. Like many other great families which settled in England after the Conquest, they were related to the dukes of Normandy and had established themselves as important members of the Norman feudal
    aristocracy in the late tenth and early eleventh centuries. The origin of the family can be traced to Godfrey, eldest of the illegitimate children of Duke Richard I (the Fearless), the Conqueror's great-grandfather. While the Duke granted Godfrey
    Brionne, he did not make him a count. Godfrey's comital title derives from the grant of the county of Eu made to him after 996 by his half-brother, Duke Richard II. After Godfrey's death, Eu was given to William, another of Duke Richard I's bastard
    sons, and Gilbert, Godfrey's son, was left with only the lordship of Brionne. However, under Duke Robert I, father of William the Conqueror, Gilbert assumed the title of count of Brionne while not relinquishing his claim to Eu. When Count William of Eu
    died shortly before 1040, Gilbert assumed the land and title, but he was assassinated in 1040 and his young sons, Richard and Baldwin, were forced to flee Normandy, finding safety at the court of Baldwin V, Count of Flanders. When William the Conqueror
    married Count Baldwin's daughter, he restored Gilbert's sons to Normandy, although he did not invest them with either Brionne or Eu or a comital title. William granted the lordships of Bienfaite and Orbec to Richard fitz Gilbert, and Le Sap and Meules
    to Baldwin. While Gilbert's descendants later pressed a claim for Brionne, it was never restored.
    Richard and Baldwin fitz Gilbert took part in the Norman conquest of England, and both assumed important positions in the Conqueror's reign. Baldwin was made guardian of Exeter in 1068, and appears in the Domesday Book as sheriff of Devon, lord of
    Okehampton and numerous other estates in Devon, Dorset, and Somerset. His sons William and Richard were also sheriffs of Devon and participated in the abortive Norman penetration of Carmarthen in the early twelfth century.
    However, the lasting position of the family in England must be credited to Baldwin's brother, Richard fitz Gilbert I. He was regent of England jointly with William de Warenne during the Conqueror's absence in 1075, and he served in various other
    important capacities for the King. King William rewarded his cousin well, granting him one of the largest fiefs in the territorial settlement. The lordship centered on Clare (obviously the origin of the Clare family name), Suffolk, which had been an
    important stronghold in Anglo-Saxon times. The bulk of Richard fitz Gilbert's estates lay in Suffolk, Essex, Surrey, and Kent, but comprised holdings in various other counties in the southern and eastern parts of the kingdom as well. In addition, King
    William arranged for Richard's marriage to Rohese, sister of Walter Giffard, later Earl of Buckingham, and her dowry, consisting of lands in Huntingdon and Hertford, became absorbed in the family inheritance.
    After Richard's death, his extensive properties in Normandy and England were divided between his two eldest sons. The Norman fiefs of Bienfaite and Orbec passed to Roger, while Gilbert, inherited the English honors of Clare and Tonbridge.
    - the players -
    Richard I, Duke of Normandy, died 996
    :
    Godfrey of Brionne and Eu died ca 1015
    :
    Gilbert, count of Brionne died 1040
    :
    -Richard fitz Gilbert (1035-1090) = Rohese de Giffard
    :
    Roger d.s.p. 1130
    Gilbert fitz Richard I(ca1066-1117 ) = Adeliz daughter of Hugh Claremont
    Walter d.s.p.1138
    Richard, abbot of Ely 1100
    Robert d.1136
    Adelice = Walter Tirel
    Rohese = Eudo Dapifer
    -Baldwin fitz Gilbert died 1095
    :
    William d.s.p. 1096
    Robert d.s.p.1101
    Richard d.s.p.1137
    While Gilbert fitz Richard I found himself at odds with the Conqueror's successor, William Rufus, he and other members of the family enjoyed great favor with Rufus' successor King Henry I. Some have suggested that Henry's largesse was due to the fact
    that Walter Tirel, husband of Richard's daughter Adelize, shot the arrow which slew Rufus. Proof of this is lacking, but with certainty the wealth and position of the Clare family increased rapidly during Henry's reign. One of Rohese Giffards brothers
    (Walter) was made Earl of Buckingham and another Bishop of Winchester. Gilbert fitz Richard's brothers were also rewarded: Richard, a monk at Bec, was made abbot of Ely in 1100; Robert was granted the forfeited manors of Ralph Baynard in East Anglia;
    Walter, who founded Tintern Abbey in 1131, was given the great lordship of Netherwent with the castle of Striguil in the southern march, territories previously held by Roger, son of William fitz Osborn, Earl of Hereford, who had forfeited them in 1075.
    In 1110 Gilbert was granted the lordship of Ceredigion (Cardigan) in southwestern Wales, and immediately embarked upon an intensive campaign to subjagate the area.
    - the players -
    Gilbert fitz Richard I (ca1066-1117)=Adeliz d/o Hugh Claremont
    :
    Richard fitz Gilbert II (ante 1100-1136)=Adelize de Chester
    Gilbert b. 1100
    Baldwin d. 1154
    Hervey
    Walter
    Margaret=William de Montifichet
    Alice=Aubrey de Vere
    Rohese=Baderon de Monmouth
    After Gilbert fitz Richard I died in 1117, his children continued to profit from royal generosity and favorable connections. His daughters were all married to important barons; William de Montfichet, Lord of Stansted in Essex, the marcher Lord Baderon
    de Monmouth, and Aubrey de Vere, Lord of Hedingham in Essex and father of the first Vere Earl of Oxford. Of the five sons, little is known of two: Hervey, whom King Stephen sent on an expedition to Cardigan abt 1140, and Walter, who participated in the
    Second Crusade of 1147. Baldwin established himself as an important member of the lesser baronage by obtaining the Lincolnshire barony of Bourne through marriage. Richard fitz Gilbert II, the eldest and heir, was allowed to marry Adeliz, sister of
    Ranulf des Gernons, Earl of Chester, thus acquiring lands in Lincoln and Northampton as her marriage portion. He tried to consolidate the gains made by his father in Cardigan, but was killed in an ambush in 1136 and the lordship was soon recovered by
    the Welsh.
    Of Gilbert fitz Richard I' sons, Gilbert was the only one to achieve any great prominence, being the founder of the great cadet branch of the family and the father of one of the most famous men in English history. Gilbert fitz Gilbert de Clare was
    high in the favor of Henry I, perhaps because his wife Isabell, daughter of Robert de Beaumont, Count of Meulan and Earl of Leicester, was one of Henry's favorite mistresses. When Gilbert's uncle Roger died without heirs, Henry granted Gilbert the
    lordships of Bienfaite and Orbec in Normandy. When another uncle, Walter, Lord of Netherwent in South Wales, died without issue in 1138, King Richard? gave Gilbert this lordship in addition to the lordship of Pembroke, which had been forfeited by
    Arnulf of Montgomery in 1102. Gilbert was also created Earl of Pembroke in 1138. At his death in 1148, he was succeeded by his son Richard fitz Gilbert, aka "Strongbow" who led the Norman invasion of Ireland and obtained the great lordship of Leinster
    in 1171.
    Thus, in just two generations, the cadet branch of the Clares became one of the most important families in England. Strongbow was Earl of Pembroke, Lord of Netherwent, and Lord of Leinster being the most powerful of the marcher and Anglo-Irish
    magnates under King Henry II. Strongbow d. in 1176 and son Gilbert d. abt. 1185, ending the male line. In 1189, the inheritance passed to Strongbow's daughter Isabel and her husband, William Marshal.
    Meanwhile, the senior side prospered. After Richard fitz Gilbert II died in 1136, Clare, Tonbridge, and other estates passed to the eldest son Gilbert fitz Richard II, who was created Earl of Hertford by King Stephen. Gilbert died probably unmarried
    in 1152, when his younger brother Roger inherited the estates and comital title. Roger resumed the the campaign against the Welsh in Cardigan where, after 8 years, he was defeated in 1165. However, Roger did add some lands and nine knights' fees
    through his marriage to Maud, daughter and heir of the Norfolk baron James de St. Hillary. Roger died in 1173 and his widow, Maud, conveyed the remainder of the inheritance to her next husband, William de Aubigny, Earl of Arundel. The Clare estates
    along with the earldom passed to Roger's son, Richard, who for the next 4 decades until he died in 1217, was the head of the great house of CLARE, adding immensely to the wealth, prestige, and landed endowment of his line.
    Roger's son Richard, hereinafter Richard de CLARE acquired half of the former honor of Giffard in 1189 when King Richard I, in need of money for the Third Crusade, agreed to divide the Giffard estates between Richard de CLARE and his cousin Isabel,
    Strongbow's daughter based on their claims of descendancy to Rohese Giffard. Richard de CLARE obtained Long Crendon in Buckingham, the caput of the Giffard honor in England, associated manors in Buckingham, Cambridge, and Bedfordshire, and 43 knights'
    fees, in addition to some former Giffard lands in Normandy. When Richard de CLARE's mother Maud died in 1195, he obtained the honor of St. Hilary. Maud's 2nd husband, William de Aubigny, Earl of Arundel, who had held St. Hilary jure uxoris, d. in 1193,
    and despite the fact he had a son and heir, the honor reverted to Maud and after her death escheated to the crown. Richard de CLARE offered 360 and acquired it. The honor later became absorbed into the honor of CLARE and lost its separate identity.
    Richard de CLARE's most important act, however, was his marriage to Amicia, 2nd daughter and eventual sole heir to William Earl of Gloucester. The Gloucester inheritance included the earldom and honor of Gloucester with over 260 knights' fees in
    England, along with the important marcher lordships of Glamorgan and Gwynllwg. It was not easy though!! William died 1183, leaving 3 daughters. The eldest, Mabel, married Amaury de Montfort, Count of Evreux, while the second, Amicia married Richard de
    CLARE. King Henry II meanwhile arranged the marriage of the youngest Isabel, to his son John, Count of Mortain, in 1189. When John became King in 1199, he divorced Isabel to marry Isabelle of Angoul

    married on Yes, date unknown. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. Crispin, Ct. of Eu Et Brionne Giselbert

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Richard, Duke of Normandy I of Normandy (son of Longsword, Duke of Normandy William and Sprota); died in 996.
    Children:
    1. 1. Godfrey Count of Eu & Brionne
    2. Mauger Count of Corbiel


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Longsword, Duke of Normandy William (son of Rollo Duke of Normandy and Valois, Lady Poppa de); died on 17 Dec 943.

    Notes:

    [dunbar_tree.FTW]

    For William and his ancestry see "Falaise Roll...," M. Jackson Crispin and
    Leonce Macary (London: Butler & Tanner, 1938, Table IV at end of volume).
    He was murdered on the island of Picquigny in the Somme.

    William married Sprota on Yes, date unknown. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Sprota

    Notes:

    [dunbar_tree.FTW]

    {See comments for ID3241.}

    Children:
    1. 2. Richard, Duke of Normandy I of Normandy died in 996.


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  Rollo Duke of Normandy was born in 846 in Norway (son of Rogenwald Count of Maer and Hildir, Dau. of RolfNefio); died in 931 in Rouen, France.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Baptism: 912, Rouen Cathedral

    Notes:

    [dunbar_tree.FTW]

    Rollo (Robert) was first Duke of Normandy about 911, and abdicated in 927. He was baptised in
    912 in the Cathedral of Rouen. A correspondent on Prodigy states he was born about 870 in
    Maer, Norway, died 927-32. "Ancestral Roots..." (Balt., 1992) 121E-18: "Ganger Rolf, 'the
    Viking' (or Rollo), banished from Norway to the Hebrides ca. 876, 890 participated in Viking
    attack on Bayeux, where Count Berenger of Bayeux was killed, and his dau. Poppa captured and
    taken, 886, by Rollo (now called Count of Rouen) as his 'Danish' wife. Under Treaty of St.
    Claire, 911, rec'd the Duchy of Normandy from Charles III, 'the Simple'; d. ca. 927 (Isenburg
    says 931), bur. Notre Dame, Rouen." "The Normans in European History," Charles Homer Haskins
    (NY: Frederick Ungar Pub. Co., 1959), p. 28: Rollo was granted Normandy in 911 by King Charles
    the Simple of the Franks. Rollo "...was known in the North as Hrolf the Ganger, because he
    was so huge that no horse could carry him and he must needs gang afoot. A pirate at home, he
    was driven into exile by the anger of King Harold, whereupon he followed his trade in the
    Western Isles and in Gaul, and rose to be a great Jarl among his people."

    married Valois, Lady Poppa de on Yes, date unknown. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 9.  Valois, Lady Poppa de (daughter of Valois, Count of Bayeux Pepin de Senlis de Count).

    Notes:

    [dunbar_tree.FTW]

    {See discussion in "Ancestral Roots..." (Balt., 1992) 121E-18.}

    Children:
    1. 4. Longsword, Duke of Normandy William died on 17 Dec 943.