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Hugh de Montfort

Hugh de Montfort

Male Abt 1026 -

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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Hugh de MontfortHugh de Montfort was born about 1026.

    Notes:

    The Conqueror and His Companions
    by J.R. Planché, Somerset Herald. London: Tinsley Brothers, 1874..

    second of that name, and son of Hugh "with the Beard," Lord of Montfort-sur-RisIe, near Brionne, was the companion of the Conqueror at Hastings. His father, with whom he has been often confounded, fell in mortal combat, with Walkelin de Ferrers, who received his death-wound at the same time, during the days of anarchy which followed the succession of the boy William to the Duchy of Normandy.

    We hear first of his son Hugh H. as one of the commanders of the Norman forces at the famous battle of Mortemer already spoken of, but of which more will be told in the memoir of its lord, and next in the list of those who furnished contingents to the fleet and army of the great expedition, wherein we find him set down as a contributor of fifty ships and sixty knights. ["Ab Hugone de Montfort L naves et LX milites."] In the battle he and the Seigneur de Vieuxpont gallantly rescued William Malet, who had his horse killed under him, and would have been slain himself but for their timely aid. They lost many of their people, but succeeded in protecting Malet, and mounting him on a fresh horse. [Rom. de Rou] Hugh de Montfort is supposed to be one of the four named by Bishop Guy as the mutilators of the body of Harold at the close of the conflict; I need only here repeat my utter disbelief in an improbable statement supported by no other contemporary writer.

    For his services he received (before the completion of Domesclay) sixteen manors in Essex, fifty-one in Suffolk, nineteen in Norfolk, and twenty-eight in Kent, in addition to a large proportion of Romney Marsh, and was one of the barons intrusted by the Conqueror witli the administration of justice throughout England, under Bishop Odo and William Fitz Osbern in 1067; and by the Bishop himself, Hugh de Montfort was made Governor of the Castle of Dover, the chief fortress in Odo's own earldom, and the key of the kingdom. His absence on other duties with the Bishop south of the Thames was taken advantage of by the Kentish malcontents, and led to the assault of the castle by the Count of Boulogne, the failure of which has been already related.

    The monk of Jumièges informs us that he was twice married, but namess neither of his wives; one, however, appears by his account (Lib. vii. ch. 38) to have been a daughter of Richard de Bellofago (Beaufoe), by a daughter of the Count of lvri, and was therefore niece of John, Archbishop of Rouen, of Hugh, Bishop of Bayeux, and of the wife of Osbern de Crépon. By the first we are told he had two sons, Hugh andd Robert, and by the second, a daughter named Alice, eventually heir to her brothers, both of whom died without issue, and who became the wife of Gilbert de Gant, son of Baldwin VI Count of Flanders, and consequently nephew of Queen Matilda.

    The date of the death of Hugh II, who became a monk in the Abbey of Bec, is not known, but if the holder in Domesday, he must of course have been living in 1085, his father having been slain some forty-eight or forty-nine years, previously. He might probably, therefore, be a young man at the battle of Mortemer in 1054, between forty and fifty at the time of the Conquest, and under seventy if he survived the accession of Rufus. His second son Robert was Commander-in-Chief of the Norman army in Maine in 1099, and on his joining the Crusaders under Bohemund, in 1107, received a hearty welcome and a high rank in the army in consequence, as Orderic speaks of his being " hereditary Marshal of Normandy." ["Strator Normanici exercitus hereditario jure."]

    If this be not a mistake, his elder brother must have been dead at the former date. At all events his father, Hugh II, is styled "the Constable" by Orderic in his enumeration of the personages present in the battle of Senlac.

    A few words in conclusion respecting the accusation of Guy, Bishop of Amiens. That prelate was almoner to the Duchess Matilda, and accompanied her to this kingdom in 1068. He therefore had special opportunities of picking up the reports of the day; but he was not like his brother Bishops of Bayeux and Coutances, actually present at Senlac, and his poem being composed before his journey to England, must therefore have been written from hearsay only. The continuator of William of Jumièges,,, whooooo mentions his poem, and calls him "a respectable author," dddoeees not back his opinion by adopting the Bishop's account of the death of Harold. Neither does Orderic Vital, who was, nevertheless, acquainted with the poem, and says it was an epic in imitation of Virgil and Papinius, describing the battle of Senlac, blaming and accusing Harold, and highly praising and exalting William. A MS. of the 12th century, discovered by Dr. Pertz in the Royal Library at Brussels, is supposed, from its general character, to be the poem in question, the initials L. W. in the second line being interpreted to signify " Wido to Lanfranc." Mr. Petrie, who has published this poem in his "Monumenta Historica Britannica," observes that it is not improbable that Guy was the writer, but Sir Thomas Duffus Hardy, in his Descriptive Catalogue of Materials relating to the History of Great Britain (vol. i. p. 671), appears less impressed with its authenticity. Without, however, raising that question, 1 have shown the probability that Count Eustace de Boulogne was put hors de combat before the fall of Harold, that there is no evidence whatever of a noble heir of Ponthieu being present in the battle, even if he were in existence at that period, and that no other historian corroborates the poet's assertion.

    The story appears to me to be a sensational version of the account given by Benoît de St.-More, who says that Harold fell pierced byy three lances, and his skull cloven to his cars by a dozen swords ÇC itself an evident exaggeration of the plain fact as related by Henry of Huntingdon, which is, that twenty of the bravest knights pledged their troth to each other that they would cut through the English troops and capture the royal ensign. In this attack the greater part were slain, but the remainder, hewing away with their swords, readied and seized the standard. Meanwhile a shower of arrows fell round King Harold, and he himself was pierced in the eye. A crowd of horsemen now burst in, and the King, already wounded, was slain. Cut down in the furious charge with the gallant few who stood their ground beside him, perhaps even undistinguished by his slayers themselves, who in the hasty and general slaughter could not possibly have found time or opportunity to indulge in such wanton barbarity. The English heavy-armed Housecarls fought to the death long after the fall of their King. To have cut off the head of Harold, to have scattered his entrails, the perpetrators must have dismounted, and assuredly had never mounted again.

    Could any combatant in the Norman host have been identified as having inflicted a mortal wound on the heroic King of the English, his name would have been as notorious as that of the Conqueror himself. Honest Master Wace acknowledges that he never heard who slew him, only that he was found dead amongst the dead. Walter Giffard and Hugh de Montfort, or some other Hugh, may have been amongst thic twenty who bound themselves to capture the standard; and even that honour has not been appropriated to any individual, but their complicity in the disgraceful acts attributed to them is to me incredible. The "lie circumstantial" is always accompanied by the names, and the Bishop of Amiens, if he really did write the song of the battle of Hastings, has not proved an exception to the rule of scandal mongers in general.

    Family/Spouse: Alice de Beauffoe. Alice (daughter of Richard de Beauffoe and Emma de Bayeaux) was born in 1033 in Normandy, France. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 2. Alice de Montfort  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1052 in Montfort-sur-Risle, France.


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Alice de MontfortAlice de Montfort Descendancy chart to this point (1.Hugh1) was born about 1052 in Montfort-sur-Risle, France.

    Alice married Lord Folkingham Gilbert de Gant, Lord of Folkingham about 1070 in Folkingham, Lincolnshire, England. Gilbert (son of Lord Alost Ralph de Gant and Gisele de Luxembourg) was born about 1048 in Aalst, Oost-Vlaanderen, Belgium; died in 1094 in Bardney,Folkingham, Lincolnshire, England; was buried in Bardney, Lincolnshire, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 3. Earl Lincoln Walter de Gaunt  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1092 in Folkingham, Lincolnshire, England; died in 1139.
    2. 4. Felia de Gaunt  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1070 in Folkingham, Lincolnshire, England.
    3. 5. Henry de Gaunt  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1072 in Folkingham, Lincolnshire, England.
    4. 6. Ralph de Gaunt  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1074 in Folkingham, Lincolnshire, England.
    5. 7. Emma de Gant  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1076 in Folkingham, Lincolnshire, England; died in 1135.
    6. 8. Hugh de Gaunt de Montfort  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1078 in Folkingham, Lincolnshire, England.
    7. 9. Geoffrey de Gaunt  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1080 in Folkingham, Lincolnshire, England.
    8. 10. Matilda de Gaunt  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1082 in Folkingham, Lincolnshire, England.
    9. 11. Maud of Chester Robert de Gaunt  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1084 in Folkingham, Lincolnshire, England; died in 1153.
    10. 12. Gilbert de Gaunt  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1086 in Folkingham, Lincolnshire, England; died before 1094.
    11. 13. Alice de Gaunt  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1088 in Folkingham, Lincolnshire, England.


Generation: 3

  1. 3.  Earl Lincoln Walter de GauntEarl Lincoln Walter de Gaunt Descendancy chart to this point (2.Alice2, 1.Hugh1) was born about 1092 in Folkingham, Lincolnshire, England; died in 1139.

    Walter married Matilda (Maud) de Brittany about 1116 in Folkingham, Lincolnshire, England. Matilda (daughter of I Stephen de Brittany and Hawise) was born about 1086 in Brittany, France. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 14. Alice de Gaunt  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1117 in Folkingham, Lincolnshire, England.
    2. 15. Earl of Lincoln Gilbert de Gand  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1120 in Folkingham, Lincolnshire, England; died in 1156.
    3. 16. Maud of Chester Robert de Gaunt  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1122 in Folkingham, Lincolnshire, England; died in 1191.
    4. 17. de Gaunt  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1124 in Folkingham, Lincolnshire, England.
    5. 18. Agnes de Gaunt  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1128 in Folkingham, Lincolnshire, England.
    6. 19. Geoffrey de Gaunt  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1130 in Folkingham, Lincolnshire, England.

  2. 4.  Felia de GauntFelia de Gaunt Descendancy chart to this point (2.Alice2, 1.Hugh1) was born about 1070 in Folkingham, Lincolnshire, England.

    Notes:

    AFN 9HQJ-F2:

    Family/Spouse: Ivo Grentemaisnel. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  3. 5.  Henry de GauntHenry de Gaunt Descendancy chart to this point (2.Alice2, 1.Hugh1) was born about 1072 in Folkingham, Lincolnshire, England.

  4. 6.  Ralph de GauntRalph de Gaunt Descendancy chart to this point (2.Alice2, 1.Hugh1) was born about 1074 in Folkingham, Lincolnshire, England.

  5. 7.  Emma de GantEmma de Gant Descendancy chart to this point (2.Alice2, 1.Hugh1) was born about 1076 in Folkingham, Lincolnshire, England; died in 1135.

    Family/Spouse: 2nd Baron Percy Alan de Percy. Alan (son of 1st Baron Percy William de Percy and Emma de Porte) was born in 1069 in Perci-en-Auge, Low Normandy, France; died in 1135; was buried in Whitby, North Riding, Yorkshire, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 20. 3rd Baron Percy William de Percy  Descendancy chart to this point died about 1150.

  6. 8.  Hugh de Gaunt de MontfortHugh de Gaunt de Montfort Descendancy chart to this point (2.Alice2, 1.Hugh1) was born about 1078 in Folkingham, Lincolnshire, England.

    Family/Spouse: Adeline de Meulent. Adeline was born about 1080. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  7. 9.  Geoffrey de GauntGeoffrey de Gaunt Descendancy chart to this point (2.Alice2, 1.Hugh1) was born about 1080 in Folkingham, Lincolnshire, England.

  8. 10.  Matilda de GauntMatilda de Gaunt Descendancy chart to this point (2.Alice2, 1.Hugh1) was born about 1082 in Folkingham, Lincolnshire, England.

    Family/Spouse: Robert de Latham. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  9. 11.  Maud of Chester Robert de GauntMaud of Chester Robert de Gaunt Descendancy chart to this point (2.Alice2, 1.Hugh1) was born about 1084 in Folkingham, Lincolnshire, England; died in 1153.

    Notes:

    242-p277:
    244-1-p440:
    505-v5-p484:
    550-v2-p303:
    758-v5-p123:
    809-v1-p229:
    1976-p106:
    3123-p31(e2-f1)

    Robert married Alice Pagnel about 1108 in Folkingham, Lincolnshire, England. Alice was born about 1087 in Lincolnshire, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 21. Alice de Gaunt  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1109 in Folkingham, Lincolnshire, England.

    Robert married Gunnora de Gourey about 1112 in Folkingham, Lincolnshire, England. Gunnora was born about 1094 in Lincolnshire, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 22. Gilbert de Gaunt  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1112 in Folkingham, Lincolnshire, England.

  10. 12.  Gilbert de GauntGilbert de Gaunt Descendancy chart to this point (2.Alice2, 1.Hugh1) was born about 1086 in Folkingham, Lincolnshire, England; died before 1094.

  11. 13.  Alice de GauntAlice de Gaunt Descendancy chart to this point (2.Alice2, 1.Hugh1) was born about 1088 in Folkingham, Lincolnshire, England.


Generation: 4

  1. 14.  Alice de GauntAlice de Gaunt Descendancy chart to this point (3.Walter3, 2.Alice2, 1.Hugh1) was born about 1117 in Folkingham, Lincolnshire, England.

  2. 15.  Earl of Lincoln Gilbert de GandEarl of Lincoln Gilbert de Gand Descendancy chart to this point (3.Walter3, 2.Alice2, 1.Hugh1) was born about 1120 in Folkingham, Lincolnshire, England; died in 1156.

    Gilbert married Rohese de Clare about 1145 in Folkingham, Lincolnshire, England. Rohese (daughter of Lord of Tonbridge Lord of Cardigan Richard FitzGilbert de Clare and Alice de Meschines) was born about 1124 in Tunbridge Castle, Kent, England; died after 1175. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 23. Alice de Gand  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1146 in Folkingham, Lincolnshire, England; died in 1185; was buried in Bridlington.
    2. 24. Gunnora de Gand  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1148 in Folkingham, Lincolnshire, England.

  3. 16.  Maud of Chester Robert de GauntMaud of Chester Robert de Gaunt Descendancy chart to this point (3.Walter3, 2.Alice2, 1.Hugh1) was born about 1122 in Folkingham, Lincolnshire, England; died in 1191.

    Robert married Gunnora d'Aubigny about 1158 in Folkingham, Lincolnshire, England. Gunnora was born about 1134 in Belvoir, Leicestershire, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 25. William de Gaunt  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1160 in Belvoir, Leicestershire, England.
    2. 26. Stephen de Gaunt  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1166 in Folkingham, Lincolnshire, England.
    3. 27. Maurice de Gaunt  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1174 in Folkingham, Lincolnshire, England.
    4. 28. Earl Lincoln Gilbert de Gaunt  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1180 in Folkingham, Lincolnshire, England; died before 22 Jan 1241/42.

  4. 17.  de Gauntde Gaunt Descendancy chart to this point (3.Walter3, 2.Alice2, 1.Hugh1) was born about 1124 in Folkingham, Lincolnshire, England.

  5. 18.  Agnes de GauntAgnes de Gaunt Descendancy chart to this point (3.Walter3, 2.Alice2, 1.Hugh1) was born about 1128 in Folkingham, Lincolnshire, England.

    Family/Spouse: Earl Somerset William de Mohun. William (son of Lord Dunster William de Mohun and Adeliz) was born about 1128; died before 1155. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 29. Lord Dunster William de Mohun  Descendancy chart to this point was born in Dunster, Somerset, England; died in 1176.

  6. 19.  Geoffrey de GauntGeoffrey de Gaunt Descendancy chart to this point (3.Walter3, 2.Alice2, 1.Hugh1) was born about 1130 in Folkingham, Lincolnshire, England.

  7. 20.  3rd Baron Percy William de Percy3rd Baron Percy William de Percy Descendancy chart to this point (7.Emma3, 2.Alice2, 1.Hugh1) died about 1150.

    Family/Spouse: Alice de Ros. Alice (daughter of Everard de Ros and Rose) was born about 1090 in Alnwick, Northumberland, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 30. 4th Baron Percy William de Percy  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1112 in Topcliffe, North Riding, Yorkshire, England; died in Apr 1175 in Salley Abbey, Craven, Yorkshire, England.

  8. 21.  Alice de GauntAlice de Gaunt Descendancy chart to this point (11.Robert3, 2.Alice2, 1.Hugh1) was born about 1109 in Folkingham, Lincolnshire, England.

    Family/Spouse: Robert FitzHarding. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  9. 22.  Gilbert de GauntGilbert de Gaunt Descendancy chart to this point (11.Robert3, 2.Alice2, 1.Hugh1) was born about 1112 in Folkingham, Lincolnshire, England.