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Agnes de Ferrers

Agnes de Ferrers

Female Abt 1220 -

Generations:      Standard    |    Vertical    |    Compact    |    Box    |    Text    |    Ahnentafel    |    Fan Chart    |    Media    |    PDF

Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Agnes de Ferrers was born about 1220 in Ferrers, Derbyshire, England (daughter of 4th Earl of Derby William II de Ferrers and Agnes de Meschines).

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  4th Earl of Derby William II de Ferrers was born in 1172 in Ferrers, Derbyshire, England (son of 3rd Earl of Derby William de Ferrers and Sybil de Braose); died on 22 Sep 1247.

    Notes:

    This nobleman, upon the return of King Richard from captivity, took arms in his behalf and, joining the Earl of Chester, besieged Nottingham Castle, which, after a brief resistance, surrendered. For this and other acts of fidelity, he was chosen by the king to sit with the rest of the peers in the great council held at the said castle in Nottingham in the ensuing March. Moreover, at Richard's second coronation he was one of the four that carried the canopy over the king's head. Upon the accession of King John, his lordship, with the Earls of Clare and Chester, and other great men, swore fealty to the new monarch but upon the condition that each person should have his right. His lordship was present at the coronation of King John and 7 June following, being solemnly created Earl of Derby by special charter dated at Northampton, he was girt with a sword by the king's own hands (being the first of whom in any charter that expression was used). He had also a grant of the third penny of all the pleas before the sheriff throughout the whole country whereof he was earl, to hold to him and his heirs as amply as any of his ancestors had enjoyed the same. Moreover, in consideration of 4,000 marks, he obtained another charter from the king of the manor of Higham-Ferrers, Northampton, with the hundred and park; as also of the manors of Bliseworth and Newbottle, in the same shire; which were part of the lands of his great grandfather, William Peverel of Nottingham. King John also conferred upon him a mansion-house situated in the parish of St. Margaret within the city of London, which had belonged to Isaac, a Jew, at Norwich, to hold by the service of waiting upon the king (the earl and his heirs), at all festivals yearly without any cap, but with a garland of the breadth of his little finger upon his head. These liberal marks of royal favor were felt so gratefully by the earl that in all the subsequent struggles between the king and the refractory barons, his lordship never once swerved from his allegiance, but remained true to the monarch; and loyalty to the interests of his son, King Henry III. His lordship assisted at the coronation of the new monarch and immediately after the ensuing Easter, he took part with the famous William Marshall(governor of the king and kingdom), the Earls of Chester and Albemarle, and many other great men in the siege of Mountsorell Castle in Leicestershire, then held by Henry de Braybroke and ten other stout knights. And the same year was likewise with those noble persons at raising the siege of Lincoln, which place the rebellious barons with Lewis, King of France, had invested. His lordship m. Agnes, sister and one of the co-heirs of Ranulph, Earl of Chester, by whom he had two sons, William and Thomas. He died of the gout in 1246 and his countess d. in the same year after a union, according to some authorities, of seventy-five, and by others, of fifty-five years. His lordship was s. by his elder son, William de Ferrers, 5th Earl of Derby. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 196, Ferrers, Earls of Derby]

    ----------

    There is substantial confusion over his name. See The Complete Peerage Vol. 4, p 193 for an account. Personally, I feel there could have been two brothers, William and Robert, Robert being the Earl and when he died at Acre his nephew William son of his brother William succeeded, but no documents support this theory either! In The Complete Peerage vol. XIV, p.250 it is suggested that Robert is a fabrication by Vincent, Earl of Ferrieres. [Brian Tompsett, Directory of Royal Genealogical Data]

    William married Agnes de Meschines on 2 Nov 1192. Agnes (daughter of 3rd Earl of Chester Hugh de Kevelioc, 5th Earl of Chester and Bertrade de Montfort) was born about 1174 in Chester, Cheshire, England; died on 2 Nov 1247. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Agnes de Meschines was born about 1174 in Chester, Cheshire, England (daughter of 3rd Earl of Chester Hugh de Kevelioc, 5th Earl of Chester and Bertrade de Montfort); died on 2 Nov 1247.
    Children:
    1. William de Ferrers, 5th Earl of Derby III was born in 1193 in Derby, Derbyshire, England; died before 28 Mar 1254 in Evington, Leicestershire, England; was buried on 31 Mar 1254 in Merevale Abbey. Merevale, Warwickshire, England.
    2. 1. Agnes de Ferrers was born about 1220 in Ferrers, Derbyshire, England.
    3. Sibyl de Ferrers was born on 25 Jul 1216 in Ferrers, Derbyshire, England; died in 1247.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  3rd Earl of Derby William de Ferrers was born in 1130 in Tutbury, Stafforshire, England (son of 2nd Earl of Derby Robert de Ferrers and Margaret Peverel); died on 31 Dec 1189 in Siege of Acre, Jerusalem, Palestine.

    Notes:

    William de Ferrers, 3rd Earl of Derby, rebelled against Henry II and marching at the head of the Leicestershire men (19th Henry II) upon Nottingham, then kept for the king by Reginald de Luci, got possession of the town which he sacked, putting the greater part of the inhabitants to the sword and taking the rest prisoners. He was soon afterwards, however, reduced to submission and obliged to surrender to the crown his castles in Tutbury and Duffield, which were demolished by order of the king. His lordship m. Sibilla, dau. of William de Braose, Lord of Abergavenny and Brecknock, by whom he had issue. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p.196, Ferrers, Earls of Derby]

    ----------

    There is substantial confusion over his name. See The Complete Peerage Vol. 4, p 193 for an account. Personally, I feel there could have been two brothers, William and Robert, Robert being the Earl and when he died at Acre his nephew William [son of his brother William] succeeded, but no documents support this theory! In The Complete Peerage vol. XIV, p. 250 it is suggested that Robert is a fabrication by Vincent, Earl of Ferrieres. [Brian Tompsett, Directory of Royal Genealogical Data, http://www.dcs.hull.ac.uk/cgi-bin/gedlkup/n=royal?royal04492]

    William married Sybil de Braose about 1167 in Sussex, England. Sybil (daughter of 1st Baron of Gwentland William de Braose and Heiress of Brecon Bertha FitzMiles de Gloucester) was born in 1147 in Bramber, Sussex, England; died after 5 Feb 1227 in England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Sybil de Braose was born in 1147 in Bramber, Sussex, England (daughter of 1st Baron of Gwentland William de Braose and Heiress of Brecon Bertha FitzMiles de Gloucester); died after 5 Feb 1227 in England.
    Children:
    1. Millicent de Ferrers was born about 1060 in Wigmore, Herfordshire, England; died before 10 Mar 1087/88.
    2. Gather de Ferrers was born in 1168 in Chartley, Staffordshire, England; died on 4 Sep 1201 in France.
    3. 2. 4th Earl of Derby William II de Ferrers was born in 1172 in Ferrers, Derbyshire, England; died on 22 Sep 1247.
    4. Petronella de Ferrers was born about 1175 in Ferrers, Derbyshire, England.

  3. 6.  3rd Earl of Chester Hugh de Kevelioc, 5th Earl of Chester was born in 1147 in Kevelioc, Monmouthshire, Wales (son of 2nd Earl of Chester Ranulph de Gernon and Maud FitzRobert de Caen); died on 30 Jun 1181 in Leek, Staffordshire, England; was buried in St. Werburgs, Chester, Cheshire, England.

    Notes:

    This nobleman, Hugh (Keveliok), 3rd Earl of Chester, joined in the rebellion of the Earl of Lancaster and the King of Scots against King Henry II, and in support of that monarch's son, Prince Henry's pretensions to the crown. In which proceeding he was taken prisoner with the Earl of Leicester at Alnwick, but obtained his freedom soon afterwards upon the king's reconciliation with the young prince. Again, however, hoisting the standard of revolt both in England and Normandy, with as little success, he was again seized and then detained a prisoner for some years. He eventually, however, obtained his liberty and restoration of his lands when public tranquility became completely reestablished some time about the 23rd year of the king's reign. His lordship m. Bertred, dau. of Simon, Earl of Evereux, in Normandy, and had issue, I. Ranulph, his successor; I. Maud, m. to David, Earl of Huntingdon, brother of William, King of Scotland, and had one son and four daus., viz., 1. John, surnamed le Scot, who s. to the Earldom of Chester, d. s. p. 7 June, 1237; 1. Margaret, m. to Alan de Galloway, and had a dau., Devorguilla, m. to John de Baliol, and was mother of John de Baliol, declared King of Scotland in the reign of Edward I; 2. Isabel, m. to Robert de Brus, and was mother of Robert de Brus, who contended for the crown of Scotland, temp. Edward I; 3. Maud, d. unm.; Ada, m. to Henry de Hastings, one of the competitors for the Scottish crown, temp. Edward I; II. Mabill, m. to William de Albini, Earl of Arundel; III. Agnes, m. to William de Ferrers, Earl of Derby; IV. Hawise, m. to Robert, son of Sayer de Quincy, Earl of Winchester.

    The earl had another dau., whose legitimacy is questionable, namely, Amicia, * m. to Ralph de Mesnilwarin, justice of Chester, "a person," says Dugdale, "of very ancient family," from which union the Mainwarings, of Over Peover, in the co. Chester, derive. Dugdale considers Amicia to be a dau. of the earl by a former wife. But Sir Peter Leicester, in his Antiquities of Chester, totally denies her legitimacy. "I cannot but mislike," says he, "the boldness and ignorance of that herald who gave to Mainwaring (late of Peover), the elder, the quartering of the Earl of Chester's arms; for if he ought of right to quarter that coat, then must the be descended from a co-heir to the Earl of Chester; but he was not; for the co-heirs of Earl Hugh married four of the greatest peers in the kingdom."

    The earl d. at Leeke, in Staffordshire, in 1181, and was s. by his only son, Ranulph, surnamed Blundevil (or rather Blandevil) from the place of his birth, the town of Album Monasterium, modern Oswestry, in Powys), as 4th Earl of Chester.

    * Upon the question of this lady's legitimacy there was a long paper war between Sir Peter Leicester and Sir Thomas Mainwaring---and eventually the matter was referred to the judges, of whose decision Wood says, "a tan assize held at Chester, 1675, the controversy was decided by the justices itinerant, who, as I have heard, adjudged the right of the matter to Mainwaring." [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, pp. 365-6, Meschines, Earls of Chester]

    Hugh married Bertrade de Montfort in 1169 in Montfort-sur-Risle, Eure, Normandy, France. Bertrade (daughter of Count d'Evereux Simon III de Montfort and Amicia (Maud) de Beaumont) was born in 1155 in Montfort-sur-Risle, Eure, Normandy, France; died on 12 Jul 1189 in Evreux, Eure, Normandy, France. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 7.  Bertrade de Montfort was born in 1155 in Montfort-sur-Risle, Eure, Normandy, France (daughter of Count d'Evereux Simon III de Montfort and Amicia (Maud) de Beaumont); died on 12 Jul 1189 in Evreux, Eure, Normandy, France.
    Children:
    1. Mabel de Meschines was born about 1172 in Chester, Cheshire, England; died before 1232 in Chester, Cheshire, England.
    2. Hawise de Kevelioc was born in 1180 in Chester, Cheshire, England; died on 6 Jun 1243 in Chester, Cheshire, England.
    3. Maude "of Chester" de Kevelioc was born in 1171 in Chester, Chestershire, England; died on 6 Jan 1233.
    4. 4th Earl of Chester Ranulph de Blundeville was born about 1172 in Oswestry, Shropshire, England; died in 1232; was buried in St. Werburgs, Chester, Cheshire, England.
    5. 3. Agnes de Meschines was born about 1174 in Chester, Cheshire, England; died on 2 Nov 1247.
    6. Beatrix de Meschines was born about 1170 in Kevelioc, Monmouthshire, Wales.
    7. Helga de Meschines was born about 1173 in Kevelioc, Monmouthshire, Wales.
    8. Amicia de Meschines was born about 1177 in Kevelioc, Merionethshire, Wales; died in Chester, Cheshire, England.


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  2nd Earl of Derby Robert de Ferrers was born in 1100 in Ferrers, Derbyshire, England (son of 1st Earl of Derby Robert de Ferrers and Hawise de Vitre); died in 1160 in Merevale, Warwickshire, England; was buried .

    Notes:

    Robert de Ferrers, 2nd Earl of Derby, in the 12th Henry II, upon levying the aid for marrying the king's daughter, certified the knights' fees then in his possession to be in number seventy-nine for which he paid the sum of 68 marks. This nobleman was also a liberal benefactor to the church. His lordship was buried at the Abbey of Meervale, Warwick, one of the religious houses which he had founded, wrapped in an ox's hide according to his desire. His lordship m. Margaret, dau. And heiress of William Peverel, of Nottingham, by whom he had issue. He was s. by his son, William de Ferrers, 3rd Earl of Derby. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 196, Ferrers, Earls of Derby]

    Robert married Margaret Peverel in 1135. Margaret (daughter of William "The Younger" Peverel and Avice de Lancaster) was born in 1114 in Nottingham, Nottinghamshire, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 9.  Margaret Peverel was born in 1114 in Nottingham, Nottinghamshire, England (daughter of William "The Younger" Peverel and Avice de Lancaster).
    Children:
    1. 4. 3rd Earl of Derby William de Ferrers was born in 1130 in Tutbury, Stafforshire, England; died on 31 Dec 1189 in Siege of Acre, Jerusalem, Palestine.

  3. 10.  1st Baron of Gwentland William de Braose was born in 1112 in Abergavenny, Monmouthshire, Wales (son of Sir Baron Philip de Braose and Aenor de Toteneis); died before 1193 in Weobley, Herefordshire, England.

    Notes:

    William was very fortunate in his marriage to Berta. All of her brothers died young without heirs, so she brought a number of important lordships to the de Braoses in 1166. These included Brecon and Abergavenny. William became Sheriff of Hereford in 1174. His interest in Sussex was maintained as he confirmed the grants of his father and grandfather for the maintenance of Sele Priory and extended St Mary's, Shoreham. See St Mary's, Shoreham, Sussex. William m. Berta, dau. of Milo de Gloucester, Earl of Hereford, and co-heir of her brother, William, Earl of Hereford, by whom he acquired Brecknock, with other extensive territorial possessions. He had two sons, William and Reginald, and was s. by the elder. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 72, Braose, Baron Braose, of Gower]

    William married Heiress of Brecon Bertha FitzMiles de Gloucester about 1150 in England. Bertha (daughter of Earl of Hereford Miles Fitzwalter and Sybil de Neufmarche) was born about 1130 in Gloucester, Gloucestershire, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 11.  Heiress of Brecon Bertha FitzMiles de Gloucester was born about 1130 in Gloucester, Gloucestershire, England (daughter of Earl of Hereford Miles Fitzwalter and Sybil de Neufmarche).
    Children:
    1. Bertha de Braose was born in 1151 in Bramber, Sussex, England.
    2. 5. Sybil de Braose was born in 1147 in Bramber, Sussex, England; died after 5 Feb 1227 in England.
    3. 4th Lord of Bramber William III de Braose was born about 1149 in Bramber Castle, Sussex, England; died on 9 Aug 1211 in Corbeil, Marne, France; was buried on 10 Aug 1211.
    4. Matilda (Maud) de Braose was born about 1146 in Bramber, Sussex, England.

  5. 12.  2nd Earl of Chester Ranulph de Gernon was born in 1099 in Guernon Castle, Normandy, France (son of Ranulf le Meschin, 3rd Earl of Chester and Lucy de Taillebois); died on 16 Dec 1153 in Chester, Cheshire, England; was buried in St Werburgh, Chester, Cheshire, England.

    Notes:

    Ranulph de Meschines (surnamed de Gernons, from being born in Gernon Castle, in Normandy), Earl of Chester. This nobleman, who was a leading military character, took an active part with the Empress Maud, and the young Prince Henry, against King Stephen, in the early part of the contest, and having defeated the king and made him prisoner at the battle of Lincoln, committed him to the castle of Bristol. He subsequently, however, sided with the king, and finally, distrusted by all, died under excommunication in 1155, supposed to have been poisoned by William Peverell, Lord of Nottingham, who being suspected of the crime, is said to have turned monk to avoid its punishment. The earl m. Maud, dau. of Robert, surnamed the Consul, Earl of Gloucester, natural son of King Henry I, and had issue, Hugh, his successor, named Keveliok, from the place of his birth, in Merionethshire; Richard; Beatrix, m. to Ralph de Malpas. His lordship was s. by his elder son, Hugh (Keveliok), 3rd Earl of Chester. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 365, Meschines, Earls of Chester]

    ----------

    Ranulf II de Gernons, 4th Earl of Chester, VICOMTE (Viscount) DEBAYEUX, VICOMTE D'AVRANCHES, Ranulf also spelled RANDULF, or RALPH (b. c. 1100--d. Dec. 16, 1153), a key participant in the English civil war (from 1139) between King Stephen and the Holy Roman empress Matilda (also a claimant to the throne of England). Ranulf, nicknamed 'aux Gernons' (i.e. moustaches), played a prominent and vacillating part in the civil war of Stephen's reign, his actions, in common with most of his peers, springing from personal grievances rather than dynastic loyalty or principle. Ranulf's father, Ranulf I, had been granted the earldom of Chester in 1121 after his maternal uncle had drowned in the White Ship disaster (1120) but, in return, had been compelled to surrender Cumberland and his patrimony of Carlisle. The restoration of these lost estates was the mainspring of much of Ranulf II's political life. Inheriting the Chester earldom in 1129, he initially supported Stephen as king after 1135. However, successive treaties between Stephen and King David of Scotland in 1136 and 1139 gave the Scots large tracts of land in Cumberland coveted by Ranulf who reacted by seizing the town and besieging the castle. Ranulf now allied with the Empress Matilda in defeating the king at Lincoln in February 1141, capturing and briefly imprisoning Stephen. Ranulf's association with the Angevin party was cemented by his marriage in 1141 to the daughter of Robert of Gloucester. Later (1149) he transferred his allegiance to the king in return for a grant of the city and castle of Lincoln. Coventry received its original charter from him. However, his territorial ambitions were no closer realization as the king of Scots was also a close ally of Matilda. In 1145, Ranulf was reconciled to Stephen. However, there was no love lost between Ranulf and the king's entourage, many of whom had suffered at his hands. In August, 1146, at Northampton, Ranulf was suddenly arrested and put in chains when he refused the king's demand to restore all lands he had taken. He was only released when he surrendered all former royal property, including Lincoln. Stephen's arrest of Ranulf was a public relations disaster. He had broken his oath of reconciliation of 1145 and his own promise of protection, thus deterring any more defections from the Angevin faction. Stephen had breached a central tenet of effective medieval rule, that of being a good -- i.e. fair -- lord. Ranulf joined Henry FitzEmpress and was reconciled with David of Scotland who, in return for the lavish grant to Ranulf of most of Lancashire, retained Carlisle. But Ranulf was never a party man. His priorities remained centered on his own territorial and dynastic advantage, as shown by his 'conventio' with a leading royalist baron Robert of Leicester (1149/53). Under this treaty, the two magnates , independently of their rival liege-lords Stephen and Henry FitzEmpress, agreed to limit any hostilities forced between them by their masters and to protect their respective tenurial positions. Ranulf's career, notorious for his arrest in 1146, is more significant as evidence that the drama of high politics was played against a dense background of baronial competition for rights, lands, and inheritances which took precedence over any claims of royalty. [Encyclopedia Britannica CD'97, RANULF DE GERNONS, 4TH EARL OF CHESTER]

    Ranulph married Maud FitzRobert de Caen about 1141 in Gloucestershire, England. Maud (daughter of 1st Earl of Gloucester Robert de Caen and Maud FitzHamon) was born in 1117 in Gloucestershire, England; died on 29 Jul 1189 in Chester, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  6. 13.  Maud FitzRobert de Caen was born in 1117 in Gloucestershire, England (daughter of 1st Earl of Gloucester Robert de Caen and Maud FitzHamon); died on 29 Jul 1189 in Chester, England.
    Children:
    1. 6. 3rd Earl of Chester Hugh de Kevelioc, 5th Earl of Chester was born in 1147 in Kevelioc, Monmouthshire, Wales; died on 30 Jun 1181 in Leek, Staffordshire, England; was buried in St. Werburgs, Chester, Cheshire, England.
    2. Johanna de Gernon was born about 1140 in Chester, Cheshire, England.
    3. Alice de Meschines was born about 1142 in Chester, Cheshire, England.

  7. 14.  Count d'Evereux Simon III de Montfort was born about 1117 in Montfort-l'Amaury, Yvelines, Île-de-France, France (son of Count Evereux Amaury, Seigneur de Montfort III and Countess de Rochefort Agnes de Garlende); died on 13 Mar 1181 in Denonville, Eure-et-Loir, Centre, France; was buried in Evreux, l'Eure, Haute-Normandie, France.

    Notes:

    Birth:
    Montfort-l'Amaury Castle

    Simon married Amicia (Maud) de Beaumont about 1150. Amicia was born in 1150 in Monmouth Castle, Monmouthshire, Wales; died on 3 Sep 1215. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  8. 15.  Amicia (Maud) de Beaumont was born in 1150 in Monmouth Castle, Monmouthshire, Wales; died on 3 Sep 1215.

    Notes:

    Possibly sister of William MALET, rather than daughter

    Children:
    1. 7. Bertrade de Montfort was born in 1155 in Montfort-sur-Risle, Eure, Normandy, France; died on 12 Jul 1189 in Evreux, Eure, Normandy, France.
    2. Count of Toulouse, Earl of Leicester, Viscount of Carcassonne, Duke of Narbonne Simon de Montfort, 5th Earl of Leicester IV was born in 1170 in Montfort-l'Amaury Castle, Ile-de-France, France; died on 27 Jun 1216 in Toulouse, Haute-Garonne, Midi-Pyrénées, France; was buried in Monastery of Haute-Bruyère, France.
    3. Comte d'Evereux Amaury V de Montfort was born about 1151 in Evereux, Eure, Normandy, France; died in 1191 in Evereux, Eure, Normandy, France.
    4. Guy de Montfort was born about 1160 in Montfort-sur-Risle, Eure, Normandy, France; died on 31 Jan 1228/29 in Battle of Vareilles, Ariege, Foix, France.