Sir Warren TRUSSELL
Sex: M
Individual Information
Birth Date: Abt 1310 - Merston, Northamptonshire, England Christening: Death: Burial: Cause of Death:
Parents
Father: Sir William TRUSSELL (Abt 1261-1317) Mother: Matilda MAINWARING (Abt 1260-After 1316)
Spouses and Children
1. *Maud ST. PHILIBERT (Abt 1323 - Bef 1419) Marriage: Bef 1341 Status: Children: 1. Maud TRUSSELL (Abt 1341-1369)
Notes
Research:
https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Trussell-44
------------
[50] Calendar of Patent Rolls, Edward II, vol. 5: 1324-1327 (1904), 214. [51] Calendar of Close Rolls, Edward III, vol. 6, 1341-1343 (1902), 84. [52] William Dugdale, The Antiquities of Warwickshire (1656), 539. [53] Calendar of Close Rolls, Edward III, vol. 8: 1346-1349 (1905), 371. [54] Calendar of Close Rolls, Edward III, vol. 8: 1346-1349 (1905), 415, 419. [55] Register of Edward, the Black Prince, Part 3, (Palatinate of Chester): 1351-1365 (1932), 481. [56] Calendar of Close Rolls, Richard II, vol. 2: 1381-1385 (1920), 610."[1]
Sir William TRUSSELL
Sex: M
Individual Information
Birth Date: Abt 1261 - Warmingham, Chseshire, England Christening: Death: 1317 - Stratford upon Avon, Warwickshire, England ( aged about 56) Burial: Cause of Death:
Spouses and Children
1. *Matilda MAINWARING (Abt 1260 - After 8 Jul 1316) Marriage: Status: Children: 1. Sir Warren TRUSSELL (Abt 1310- )
Notes
General:
Aka: Trussel
Alice UFFORD
Sex: F
Individual Information
Birth Date: Abt 1300 - England Christening: Death: Abt 1347 - ( aged about 47) Burial: Cause of Death:
Spouses and Children
1. *Thomas DE PABENHAM (unkwn - 18 Sep 1344) Marriage: Abt 1333 - England Status: Children: 1. Sir Laurence PABENHAM (Abt 1334-1399) 2. Sir William CROYSER (Abt 1315 - Abt 1351) Marriage: After 1344 - England Status:
Notes
Research:
https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Ufford-14
Agatha UNKNOWN
Sex: F
Individual Information
Birth Date: After 1018 Christening: Death: After 1068 Burial: Cause of Death:
Spouses and Children
1. *Eadweard OF WESSEX (1016 - 1057) Marriage: Status: Children: 1. Saint Margaret OF WESSEX Queen of Scots (Abt 1045-Abt 1093)
Notes
Research:
https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Unknown-59030
---
Biography
Family Origins
Agatha's precise family origins are unclear. There is no agreement in medieval sources, and modern researchers have been unable to find conclusive evidence. She may have been a member of the Hungarian royal house or closely related to a Holy Roman Emperor.[1] A full discussion appears on Stewart Baldwin's page for Agatha on the Henry Project website.[2] Charles Cawley's Medlands entry for her husband Edward the Exile also summarises various possibilities, referencing medieval chroniclers.[3]
Medieval sources variously refer to her as[3]
"daughter of Solomon King of the Magyars" - Orderic Vitalis
a niece of Emperor Henry of Germany - John of Worcester and Ailred of Rievaulx
a sister of Emperor Henry - Matthew Paris
a sister of the Queen of Hungary, implying she was of the family of Iaroslav, Grand Prince of Kiev - William of Malmesbury, Chronicle of Alberic de Trois-Fontaines, Roger of Wendover
The D manuscript of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicles describes her as a relative of the German Emperor.[4]
Other places where discussion of Agatha's origins can be found include:
her Wikipedia entry[5]
a 1962 article by Szabolcs de Vajay, cited in Wikipedia[6]
a 2002 article in The Scottish genealogist[7]
a 2003 article in Foundations, the journal of the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy[8]
three articles in the New England Historical and Genealogical Register[9][10][11]
a 1998 article in Russian History by Norman Ingham[12]
Agatha's entry in the Henry Project discusses a range of improbable theories as to her origins, in addition to the more likely possibilities that she was either connected to the family of the Holy Roman Emperor or else to the Hungarian royal family and the family of the Grand Duke of Kiev.[2]
Marriage and Children
Agatha married Edward the Exile. They had three children:
Edgar Ætheling[1][3][13]
St Margaret of Scotland who married Malcolm Canmore[1][3][13]
Cristina[1][3][13]
Edward the Exile came to England in 1057, presumably with Agatha, and died very soon after.[4]
Later Life
Agatha was alive in 1068, when she accompanied her children from England to Scotland following William the Conqueror's invasion of England.[2][3][14] Her death date is uncertain. Alison Weir in her book on Britain's Royal Families states that, possibly after her daughter Margaret's death in 1093, she became a nun at Newcastle-upon-Tyne,[15] but it is not clear what source she has for this statement, and it may well not be true: Agatha may have died well before then.
Research Notes
Agatha and Edward the Exile have previously been shown on WikiTree as parents of Aethlreda, whose profile is unsourced. There is no good source for their having a child of this name and she has been detached. It is not at all clear who Aethlreda's profile is meant to represent, and her existence is uncertain.
Sources
? 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, entry by M K Lawson for 'Edward Ætheling [called Edward the Exile]', print and online 2004
? 2.0 2.1 2.2 Baldwin, Stewart. "The Henry Project', entry for 'Agatha', accessed 19 May 2021
? 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 Charles Cawley. EDWARD ([1016/17-London 19 Apr 1057], entry (under his father Edmund Ironside) in "Medieval Lands" database (accessed 17 May 2021)
? 4.0 4.1 Michael Swanton (translator and editor). The Anglo-Saxon Chronicles, revised edition, Phoenix Press, 2000, pp. 187-188
? [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agatha_(wife_of_Edward_the_Exile) Wikipedia: Agatha (wife of Edward the Exile)
? Szabolcs de Vajay. Agatha, Mother of St. Margaret, Queen of Scotland, Duquesne Review, vol. 7, no. 2 (Spring 1962), pp. 71-80
? Gregory M S Lauder-Frost. Agatha - The Ancestry Dispute in The Scottish Genealogist, Edinburgh, Sept 2002, vol.xlix no.3, p.71-2 [not seen by Michael Cayley when he revised this biography in May 2021]
? William Humphreys. Agatha, Mother of St Margaret: the Slavic versus Slalian Solutions - a Critical Overview in 'Foundations' (Journal of the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy), Vol. 1(1), 2003, pp. 31-43, web
? David Faris and Douglas Richardson. The Origin of Agatha -The Debate Continues: The Parents of Agatha, Wife of Edward The Exile, New England Historical and Genealogical Register, vol.152
? René Jetté. Is the Mystery of the Origins of Agatha, Wife of Edward the Exile, Finally Solved?, New England Historical and Genealogical Register, vol. 150 (October 1996), pp. 417-432
? G Andrews Moriarty. Agatha, wife of the Atheling Eadward, New England Historical and Genealogical Register, vol. 106 (1952), pp. 52-60
? Norman W. Ingham. Has a missing daughter of Iaroslav Mudryi been found?, Russian History 25 (1998): 231-270
? 13.0 13.1 13.2 The Henry Project, entry for Eadweard "the Exile"
? Michael Swanton, The Anglo-Saxon Chronicles, p. 201
? Alison Weir. Britain's Royal Families, new Pimlico edition, Vintage Books, 2008, p. 28
Baldwin, Stewart. The Henry Project: The Ancestors of King Henry II of England, entry for Agatha: Wife of Eadweard the Exile, accessed 19 May 2021
Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, entry by M K Lawson for 'Edward Ætheling [called Edward the Exile]', print and online 2004
Wikipedia: Agatha (wife of Edward the Exile)
Alice UNKNOWN
Sex: F
Individual Information
Birth Date: Abt 1312 - England Christening: Death: Abt 1375 - Kennington, Kent, England ( aged about 63) Burial: Cause of Death:
Spouses and Children
1. *John BELKNAP (Abt 1305 - After 1367) Marriage: unknwn Status: Children: 1. Sir Robert BELKNAP (Abt 1330-1401)
Notes
Research:
https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/UNKNOWN-45182
Note I added the 'abt' portion to Alice's dates - as I wasn't clear on how we could have dates but not names listed in the source material. (ST)
Avice UNKNOWN
Sex: F
Individual Information
Birth Date: Abt 1110 Christening: Death: Burial: Cause of Death:
Spouses and Children
1. *Sir Robert DE STAFFORD (Abt 1107 - Abt 1185) Marriage: Unkown Status: Children: 1. Millicent DE STAFFORD (Abt 1157-Bef 1225)
Notes
Research:
https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Unknown-134530
Beatrice UNKNOWN
Sex: F
Individual Information
Birth Date: Bef 1066 - Normandie Christening: Death: Bef 1112 - England Burial: Cause of Death:
Spouses and Children
1. *Aubrey DE VERE I ( - 1 Sep 1112) Marriage: Bef 1086 Status: Children: 1. Aubrey DE VERE II (Abt 1087-1141)
Notes
Research:
https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Unknown-670312
---
Biography
Beatrice's family origins are unknown.[1] She was old enough to be recorded as holding lands in her own right in the Domesday Book, completed in 1086, suggesting she was of age then, and that she was therefore born no later than 1065: her birth date may well have been earlier, and one Domesday Book entry explicitly refers to her acquiring one of her estates at an earlier date. Two of these estates were held from Odo de Bayeux,[2] and it is likely that she was born in Normandy. K S B Keats-Rohan suggests that she was "very probably" from a family of the Cotentin peninsula in Normandy,[3] but there is no clear evidence for this and the suggestion is probably best regarded as speculation.
Domesday Book entries on the Open Domesday website refer to her as "Aubrey de Vere's Wife". The Domesday Book lists her holding four small estates in the same area of Essex, at:[2]
Little Maplestead, as tenant-in-chief of William the Conqueror: land worth 3 shillings a year, enfeoffed to Theobald
Pebmarsh, as tenant-in-chief of William the Conqueror: land worth 3 shillings a year, enfeoffed to Theobald
Aldham, as tenant of Odo de Bayeux: land worth £3 a year in 1086, and £1 10s when Beatrice acquired it
Napsted, in the Hundred of Hinckford as tenant of Odo de Bayeux: land worth £1 1s a year
Beatrice married Aubrey de Vere: the Domesday Book entries for her indicates that they were married by 1086.[2] Her first name is confirmed by:
a deed no later than 1107 in which, when he was near death, her son Geoffrey gave a church at Kensington, Middlesex to the abbey of Abingdon with the consent of his parents Aubrey and Beatrice and his brothers, and Aubrey and Beatrice's subsequent confirmation of this gift for the soul of Geoffrey[4]
records of the foundation by Beatrice and her husband of the priory of Earls Colne, Essex[3][4]
a record of 1111 in which Henry I confirmed gifts to the abbey of Abingdon and the priory of Earls Colne made by "Aubrey de Vere and his wife, Beatrice, and their son Aubrey and his brothers and their men"[4][5]
Beatrice and her husband had the following children:
Geoffrey,[3] their oldest son and heir apparent, who died in his parents' lifetime: the deathbed gift by him to the Abbey of Abingdon, made no later than 1207,[4] suggests that he was of age by then, and so born by 1086
Aubrey,[1][3][6] who became heir on his brother Geoffrey's death[4]
Roger[3][4][7]
Robert[3][4][7]
William,[3] their youngest son, who died soon after his father and was buried at the priory of Earls Colne[4][7]
possibly a daughter, called Aethelaise/Alice on WikiTree, whose granddaughter Maud (daughter of Richard de Camville) held land at Hildersham, Cambridgeshire in 1185, which the Domesday Book records as held by Beatrice's husband in 1086[7][8]
Beatrice's marriage place, and the birthplaces of her children, are not known. K S B Keats-Rohan suggests tentatively that her husband, who had Breton links, may have spent much of his time before 1100 in Brittany, where he is believed to have attested one charter.[3] Cokayne states that during the reign of William the Conqueror he established vineyards on some of his English estates.[7]
Beatrice's death date is also not known. She clearly survived her son Geoffrey who died no later than 1107. Her husband became a monk of the priory of Earls Colne before his death in 1112,[1][4] and it is likely she died before he did so. They were both buried in the church of the priory of Earls Colne.[1]
Research Notes
Domesday Book
K S B Keats-Rohan, in her entry in Domesday People for "Uxor Alberici de Ver", says that Beatrice also held land from Geoffrey, Bishop of Coutances.[9] She lists four Domesday Book references, and the four identified above name Beatrice as either tenant-in-chief of William the Conqueror or tenant of Odo de Bayeux. It is possible there is a confusion with Beatrice's husband , who was a tenant of Geoffrey.[10]
Inscription in Earls Colne Priory
Weever's Ancient Funeral Monuments (1631) states that an inscription in Earls Colne Priory, Essex read: "Here lyeth Aulbert de Vere, the first erle of Guines, the son of Alphonsus de Vere, the whych Aulbery was the fownder of this place and Bettrys his wyf sister of king Wylliam the conqueror."[11] No reliance should be placed on this: it is a much later inscription, as the language makes clear; it is not known who was the father of Beatrice's husband; he was not "Earl of Guines"; and William the Conqueror had no known sister called Beatrice. Assuming the inscription is genuine, it will reflect de Veres of a later period seeking to lay claim to a more distinguished ancestry than they really had.
Beatrice de Bourbourg, who inherited the county of Guînes, married Aubrey de Vere, grandson of the Beatrice of this profile.[12][13]
Pedigree on de Vere Society website
Beatrice is shown in a de Vere pedigree on the de Vere Society website as being "Beatrice de Gand".[14] Gand is the French name for Ghent. Beatrice has previously been shown on WikiTree as daughter of a Henry de Ghent and Sibilla (Manasses) de Ghent, whose profiles have been merged, respectively, into those of Henri de Bourbourg and Sybille de Guînes, the parents of Beatrice de Bourbourg. There is no evidence of any "de Gand" or "de Ghent" origins for the Beatrice of this profile.
Sources
? 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 G E Cokayne. Complete Peerage, revised edition, Vol. X, St Catherine Press, 1945, pp. 193-195, entry for her husband, viewable on Familysearch (image pages 205-207)
? 2.0 2.1 2.2 Open Domesday website, page for Aubrey de Vere's wife, accessed 11 July 2024
? 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 3.6 3.7 K S B Keats-Rohan. Domesday People, a Prosopography of Persons occurring in English Documents 1066-1166, I, Domesday Book, The Boydell Press, 1999, pp. 131-132, entry for 'Alberic de Ver'
? 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 4.5 4.6 4.7 4.8 John Hudson (editor and translator). Historia Ecclesie Abbendonensis [The History of the Church of Abingdon], Vol. II, Oxford University Press, 2002, pp. 82-91 and 162-163, available on short-term loan from Internet Archive
? Charles Johnson and H A Cronne (eds.). Regesta Regum Anglo-Normannorum, 1066-1154, Vol. 2, Oxford University Press, 1956, p. 100, entry 981, Internet Archive
? Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, entry by RaGena C DeAragon for 'Vere, Aubrey de (d. 1141)', print and online 2004, revised online 2007 ($)
? 7.0 7.1 7.2 7.3 7.4 G E Cokayne. Complete Peerage, revised edition, Vol. X, Appendix J, pp. 111-112, viewable on Familysearch (image pages 971-972)
? Open Domesday website, page for Hildersham, accessed 11 July 2024
? K S B Keats-Rohan. Domesday People, p. 440
? See for instance Open Domesday website, page for Wadenhoe, Northamptonshire, accessed 11 July 2024
? John Weever. Ancient Funerals Monuments, Thomas Harper, 1631, p. 614, Internet Archive
? Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, entry by David Crouch for 'Vere, Aubrey de, count of Guînes and earl of Oxford (d. 1194)', print and online 2004, revised online 2007 ($)
? G E Cokayne. Complete Peerage, Vol. X, pp. 199-207, viewable on Familysearch (image pages 211-219)
? Pedigree of the de Vere family, Earls of Oxford, de Vere Society website, accessed 11 July 2024
See also:
Richard Sharpe and David X Carpenter (both Faculty of History, University of Oxford). Charters of William II and Henry I Project, Colne Priory, PDF, accessed 11 July 2024
Dictionary of National Biography, 1885-1900, Vol. 58, pp. 220-221, entry by John Horace Round for 'VERE, AUBREY de (d. 1141)', Wikisource
Wikipedia: Aubrey de Vere I
Ealdgyth UNKNOWN of Mercia
Sex: F
Individual Information
Birth Date: Abt 990 Christening: Death: Unknown Burial: Cause of Death:
Spouses and Children
1. *Eadmund OF WESSEX King of England (Bef 990 - 30 Nov 1016) Marriage: Aug 105 - Malmsbury, Wiltshire Status: Children: 1. Eadweard OF WESSEX (1016-1057) 2. Sigeferth OF MERCIA (Unknown - 1015) Marriage: 105 Status:
Notes
General:
Ealdgyth (Ældgyth) "Aldgitha" of Mercia formerly [surname unknown]Research:
https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Unknown-381585
---
Biography
Ældgyth's parents and birthdate are unknown.[1][2] See Research Notes below for discussion of her name.
Ældgyth married twice. Her first husband was Sigeferth,[2] who was murdered, along with his brother Morcar, in 1015.[3]
Æthelred the Unready subsequently arranged for Ældgyth to be held at Malmesbury. His son Edmund Ironside secured the lands of Sigeferth and Morcar, and, against the wishes of his father Æthelred, made Ældgyth his wife.[4] Ældgyth and Edmund had two children, who may have been twins given the dates of the marriage and Edmund Ironside's death:[5]
Edmund[2][6][5][7]
Edward[2][6][5][7][8]
Edmund Ironside died in 1016.[6] There is no record of Ældgyth after that.[5]
Research Notes
Name and Origins
There are no contemporary sources for Ældgyth's name. According to the Henry Project entry for Ældgyth,[2] there is some doubt about her name, the entry stating that
her brother-in-law Morcar had a wife of the same name according to the will of Wulfric (Wulfric Spott): this is confirmed by a translation in Volume I of English Historical Documents;[9]
the name was uncommon, making it unlikely that the two brothers Sigeferth and Morcar would have wives of the same name: it was actually quite a common female name for Anglo-Saxon women of this period, with a variety of spellings.
Simeon of Durham names her as "Algitha".[10] John of Worcester, in the Chronicle formerly attributed to Florence of Worcester, calls her "Aldgith" in Joseph Stevenson's translation.[11]
P H Sawyer, an expert on Anglo-Saxon charters, believed that both Sigeferth and Morcar had wives called Ealdgyth.[12]
An unsourced pedigree drawn up in the 19th century alleges that her name was Edelfleda and that she was the daughter of Edwin, Earl of Mercia.[13] There is no good evidence for this: Edwin has previously been shown as her father but has been detached.
According to the 12th-century chronicler Geoffrey Gaimar, Edmund Ironside married a sister of a Welsh king.[2] There is no good source for this.
Alleged Third Marriage
The same 19th century pedigree alleges that, after the death of Edmund Ironside, she married Grono ap Owain and that they had children Edwin and Howel.[13] Again there is no good source. Grono has previously been shown on WikiTree as a husband of Ældgyth, and Edwin as a child: they have been detached. There is discussion of Edwin's family on the Ancient Wales Studies website.[14]
Sources
? Charles Cawley. EADMUND, son of ÆTHELRED II, entry in "Medieval Lands" database, accessed 15 May 2021
? 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 Stewart Baldwin. 'Ealdgyth (Aldgitha) Wife of Eadmund Ironside, king of England', 2010, The Henry Project, accessed 15 May 2021
? Charles Cawley. Sigeferth, entry in "Medieval Lands" database, accessed 15 May 2021
? Michael Swanton, The Anglo-Saxon Chronicles, pp. 145-153
? 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 Charles Cawley. EADMUND, son of ÆTHELRED II, entry in "Medieval Lands" database (accessed 15 May 2021)
? 6.0 6.1 6.2 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, entry by M K Lawson for 'Edmund II [known as Edmund Ironside]', print and online 2004
? 7.0 7.1 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, entry by M K Lawson for 'Edward Ætheling [called Edward the Exile]', print and online 2004
? Michael Swanton, The Anglo-Saxon Chronicles, pp. 187-188
? Dorothy Whitelock (ed.). English Historical Documents, Vol. I, c. 500-1042, 2nd edition, 1979, pp. 587-588
? Joseph Stevenson (trans. and ed.). The Church Historians of England, Vol. III, part II, The Historical Works of Simeon of Durham, Seeleys, 1855, p. 521, Internet Archive
? Joseph Stevenson (trans. and ed.). The Church Historians of England, Vol. II, part I, The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle and the Chronicle of Florence of Worcester, Seeleys, 1853, p. 263, Internet Archive
? Pedigree in The Charters of Burton Abbey, Oxford University Press/British Academy, 1989, as used by Hubert Grills in The Life and Times of Godwine Earl of Wessex, Anglo-Saxon Books, 2009, p. 35, genealogical chart for the family of Sigeferth and Morcar
? 13.0 13.1 Pedigree of Owen Llunllo and Bettwys etc, in Miscellanea Genealogica et Heraldica, 2nd series, Vol. II, Mitchell and Hughes, 1888,p. 365, Google Books
? Darrell Wolcott. The Ancestry of Edwin of Tegeingl, Ancient Wales Studies website, accessed 15 May 2021
Baldwin, Stewart. 'Ealdgyth (Aldgitha) Wife of Eadmund Ironside, king of England', 2010, the Henry Project, accessed 15 May 2021
Wikipedia: Ealdgyth (floruit 1015\endash 1016)
Elisabeth UNKNOWN
Sex: F
Individual Information
Birth Date: Bef 1015 - France Christening: Death: Bef 1097 - France Burial: Cause of Death:
Spouses and Children
1. *Robert DE CHÂTEAU-DU-LOIRE (Abt 1015 - Bef 1067) Marriage: Unknown Status: Children: 1. Gervais DE CHÂTEAU-DU-LOIRE (Abt 1030-1095)
Notes
Research:
https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Unknown-621985
---
Biography
Elisabeth was the wife of Robert de Château-du-Loir, but her own family name is unknown.[1]
She and Robert are mentioned as the parents of Gervaise II, Seigneur (Lord) de Château-du-Loir in a document dated to circa 1067, but she is presumably the mother of three others, who are either named as the sons of Robert, or brothers of Gervaise.[2]
Children
Gervaise II, succeeded his uncle Gervaise I as Lord of Château-du-Loir;
Adam de Château-du-Loir, died circa 1095;
Gervaise (the younger) de Château-du-Loir, died after circa 1085 as canon of Saint-Martin d'Angers;
Robert de Château-du-Loir, mentioned 1067-68.
Death
Elisabeth is still alive in a charter dated to circa 1095, but referred to as deceased in a charter dated to circa 1097.[3]
Sources
? Baldwin, Stewart, 'Elisabeth (wife of Robert de Château-du-Loir)' in The Henry Project: The Ancestors of King Henry II of England, n.d., hosted online by American Society of Genealogists, (https://fasg.org/projects/henryproject/data/eliza000.htm : accessed 18 October 2022).
? Baldwin, Stewart, 'Robert "Brochard" de Château-du-Loir' n.d., in The Henry Project: The ancestors of Henry II king of England, hosted online by American Society of Genealogists (https://fasg.org : accessed 18 October 2022).
? Cartulaire de Château-du-Loir, edited by Eugène Vallée (Le Mans: Archives Historiques du Maine 6, 1905). Digital image, Gallica,
Éremburge UNKNOWN
Sex: F
Individual Information
Birth Date: 1030 - Montrieul, Pas De Calais, Picardie, France Christening: Death: 10 May 1100 - Maine, Charente, Poitou-Charentes, Francemap ( at age 70) Burial: Cause of Death:
Parents
Father: Mother: Mathilde (Abt 1095- )
Spouses and Children
1. *Gervais DE CHÂTEAU-DU-LOIRE (Abt 1030 - 1095) Marriage: Unknown Status: Children: 1. Mathilde DE CHÂTEAU-DU-LOIRE (1055-1109)
Notes
Research:
https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Unknown-298581
---
Biography
"Éremburge appeared with her husband Gervaise in a charter of 1067-1068 [Cart. Château-du-Loir, 13-17], and with her husband and mother Mathilde in a charter of 1086×1095 [Cart. Château-du-Loir, 29]. She was deceased prior to a charter of 1095×1097, where Gervais appears with his second wife Gersende [Cart. Château-du-Loir, 32]."[1]
Her father is unknown. Her mother is only named in one charter.
Sources
? http://sbaldw.home.mindspring.com/hproject/prov/eremb001.htm
Henry Project. (Shows only Gervase as husband.)
Table of Contents | Surnames | Name List
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