News:
  First Name:  Last Name:
Log In
Advanced Search
Surnames
What's New
Most Wanted
Albums
All Media
Cemeteries
Places
Notes
Dates and Anniversaries
Calendar
Reports
Sources
Repositories
DNA Tests
Statistics
Change Language
Bookmarks
Contact Us
Register for a User Account

Emma de Conteville

Emma de Conteville

Female 1043 -

Generations:      Standard    |    Compact    |    Vertical    |    Text    |    Register    |    Tables    |    PDF

Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Emma de ContevilleEmma de Conteville was born in 1043 in Conteville, France.

    Emma married Viscount of Avranches Richard le GozAvranches, Normandy, France. Richard (son of Lord of Heismes Thurstan le Goz) was born about 1025 in Avranches, Normandy, France; died in 1066. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 2. Margaret d'Avranches  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1054 in Avranches, Normandy, France; died in 1136 in Chester, Cheshire, England; was buried in Chester, Cheshire, England.
    2. 3. Earl of Chester Hugh "Lupus" d'Avranches  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1050 in Normandy, France; died on 27 Jul 1101 in St Werburg's Abbey, Chester, Cheshire, England.


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Margaret d'AvranchesMargaret d'Avranches Descendancy chart to this point (1.Emma1) was born about 1054 in Avranches, Normandy, France; died in 1136 in Chester, Cheshire, England; was buried in Chester, Cheshire, England.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Name: Margaret le Goz
    • Name: Maud Lupus

    Margaret married Ranulf "Le Meschin" de Briquessart, Viscount of Bessin about 1069 in Normandy, France. Ranulf (son of Ranulf "The Rich" de Briquessart, Vicomte De Bessin and Alix De Normandy) was born in 1050 in Caen, Calvados, Basse-Normandie, France; died in Jan 1129 in Chester, Cheshire, England; was buried in Chester, Cheshire, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 4. Ranulf le Meschin, 3rd Earl of Chester  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 26 Jun 1070 in Livry, Calvados, Basse-Normandie, France; died on 29 Jan 1128 in Chester, Cheshire, England; was buried in St Werburgh, Chester, Cheshire, England.

    Margaret married Lord of Sudeley Harold d'Ewyas about 1084. Harold (son of Earl of Hereford Ralph de Sudeley and Getha Clopa) was born about 1055 in Sudeley Castle, Gloucestershire, England; died after 1115. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 5. Robert I FitzHarold d'Ewyas  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1085 in of Sudley Castle, Gloucestershire, England; died after 1147 in Ewyas Harold, Herefordshire, England.
    2. 6. Lord of Sudeley and Toddington John de Sudeley  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1087 in Toddington, Gloucestershire, England; died after 1140 in Sudeley Castle, Gloucestershire, England.

  2. 3.  Earl of Chester Hugh "Lupus" d'AvranchesEarl of Chester Hugh "Lupus" d'Avranches Descendancy chart to this point (1.Emma1) was born about 1050 in Normandy, France; died on 27 Jul 1101 in St Werburg's Abbey, Chester, Cheshire, England.

    Notes:

    HUGH D'AVRANCHES, EARL OF CHESTER

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

    Here is a personage who, under the more popular name of Hugh Lupus, is perhaps almost as well known as the Conqueror himself.

    Wace in his "Roman de Rou," speaks only of his father Richard: "D'Avrancin i fu Richarz."

    But it is generally contended that Richard was not in the battle, and that it was Hugh, his son, who accompanied William to Hastings. The authors of "Les Recherches sur le Domesday," to whom we are so deeply indebted for information on these points, hesitate to endorse the opinion of Mons. le Prévost upon these grounds, -- that Richard was living ass late as 1082, when he appears as a witness to a charter of Roger de Montgomeri, in favour of St. Stephen's at Caen, to which also his son, Earl Hugh, is a subscriber. Their observations only point, however, to the probability of Richard, who in 1066 was Seigneur or Vicomte of Avranches, having been in the Norman army of invasion, as he survived the event some sixteen years; at the same time they deny that there is any proof that his son Hugh was in the battle, and assert, without stating on what authority, that Hugh only joined the Conqueror in England after the victory at Senlac, when he rendered the new King most important services by his valour and ability in the establishment of William on the throne, and contributed greatly towards the reduction of the Welsh to obedience. That there is authority for their assertion appears from the cartulary of the Abbey of Whitby, quoted by Dugdale in his "Monasticon," (Mon. Ang. vol. i, p. 72) where we read distinctly that Hugh Earl of Chester and William de Percy came into England with William the Conqueror in 1067: "Anno Domini millesimo sexagesimo septimo," and that the King gave Whitby to Hugo, which Hugo afterwards gave to William de Percy, the founder of the abbey there.

    We have here, therefore, a parallel case to that of Roger de Montgomeri (Vide vol i, p. 181), and must similarly treat it as an open question.

    The descent of Richard, surnamed Goz, Le Gotz, or Le Gois, from Ansfrid the Dane, the first who bore that surname, has been more or less correctly recorded, but in "Les Recherches" it will be found critically examined and carried up to Rongwald, or Raungwaldar, Earl of Maere and the Orcades in the days of Harold Harfager, or the Fair-haired; which said Rongwald was the father of Hrolf, or Rollo, the first Duke of Normandy. Rongwald, like the majority of his countrymen and kinsmen, had several children by a favourite slave, whom he had married "more Danico," and Hrolf Turstain, th.e son of one of them, having followed his uncle Rollo into Normandy, managed to secure the hand of Gerlotte de Blois, daughter of Thibaut Count of Blois and Chartres, which seems to have been the foundation of this branch of the great Norse family in Normandy, and the stock from which descended the Lords of Briquebec, of Bec-Crispin, of Montfort-sur-Risle, and others who figure as companions of the Conqueror.

    The third son of Gerlotte was Ansfrid the Dane, the first Vicomte of the Hiemois, and father of Ansfrid the second, surnamed Goz, above mentioned, whose son Turstain (Thurstan, or Toustain) Goz was the great favouritc of Robert Duke of Normandy, the father of the Conqueror, and accompanied him to the Holy Land, and was intrusted to bring back the relics the Duke had obtained from the Patriarch of Jerusalem to present to the Abbey of Cerisi, which he had founded. Revolting against the young Duke William in 1041 (Vide vol. i, p. 21), Turstain was exiled, and his lands confiscated and given by the Duke to his mother, Herleve, wife of Herluin de Conteville.

    Richard Goz, Vicomte d'Avranches, or more properly of the Avranchin, was one of the sons of the aforesaid Turstain, by his wife Judith de Montanolier, and appears not only to have avoided being implicated in the rebellion of his father, but obtained his pardon and restoration to the Vicomté of the Hiemois, to which at his death he succeeded, and to havee strengthened his position at court by securing the hand of Emma de Conteville, one of the daughters of Herluin and Herleve, and half-sister of his sovereign. By this fortunate marriage he naturally recovered the lands forfeited by his father and bestowed on his mother-in-law, and acquired also much property in the Avranchin, of which he obtained the Vicomté, in addition to that of the Hiemois..

    There was every reason, therefore, that he should follow his three brothers-in-law in the expedition to England, if not prevented by illness or imperative circumstances. He must have been their senior by some twenty years, but still scarcely past the prime of life, and his son Hugh a stripling under age, as his mother, if even older than her brothers Odo and Robert, could not have been born before 1030, and if married at sixteen, her son in 1066 would not be more than nineteen at the utmost. Mr. Freeman, who places the marriage of Herleve with Herluin after the death of Duke Robert in 1035, would reduce this calculation by at least six years, rendering the presence of her grandson Hugh at Senlac more than problematical. It is at any rate clear that he must have been a very young man at the time of the Conquest. That "he came into England with William the Conqueror," as stated by Dugdale, does not prove that he was in the army at Hastings, and is reconcilable with the assertion in the "Recherches," that he joined him after the Conquest, corroborated by the cartulary of Whitby, before mentioned; very probably coming with him in the winter of 1067, and in company with Roger de Montgomeri, respecting whose first appearance in England the same diversity of opinion exists, and it might be his assistance in suppressing the rebellion in the West and other parts of the kingdom that gained him the favour of the King, and ultimately the Earldom of Chester, at that time enjoyed by Gherbod the Fleming, brother of Gundrada. The gift of Whitby, in Yorkshire, to Hugh, which he soon afterwards gave to William de Percy, would seem to show that he had been employed against the rebels beyond the Humber in 1068.

    In 1071, Gherbod Earl of Chester being summoned to Flanders by those to whom he had intrusted the management of his hereditary domains, whatever they were, obtained from King William leave to make a short visit to that country; but while there his evil fortune led him into a snare, and falling into the hands of his enemies, he was thrown into a dungeon, "where he endured," says Orderic, "the sufferings of a long captivity, cut off from all the blessings of life." Whether he ended his days in that dungeon Orderic does not tell us. A little more information respecting this Gherbod and his sister would be a great boon to us. At present, what we hear about them is so vague that it looks absolutely suspicious.

    In consequence of this "evil fortune" which befell Gherbod, the King, continues Orderic, gave the earldom of Chester to Hugh d'Avranches, son of Richard, surnamed Goz, who, in concert with Robert de Rhuddlan and Robert de Malpas, and other fierce knights, made great slaughter amongst the Welsh.

    Hugh was in fact a Count Palatine, and had the county of Chester granted to him to hold as freely by the sword as the King held the kingdom by the crown. He was all but a king himself, and had a court, and barons, and officers, such as became a sovereign prince.

    We hear but little of him during the remainder of the reign of William the Conqueror, but in the rebellion against Rufus, in 1096, he stood loyally by his sovereign; he is charged, however, with having barbarously blinded and mutilated his brother-in-law, William Comte d'Eu, who had been made prisoner in that abortive uprising. In the same year he is also accused of committing great cruelties upon the Welsh in the Isle of Anglesea, which he ravaged in conjunction with Hugh de Montgomeri, Earl of Shrewsbury, who lost his life at that period in resisting the landing of the Norwegians nnder Magnus III, King of Norway. The Norse poet tells us the Earl of Shrewsbury was so completely enveloped in armour that nothing could be seen of his person but one eye. "King Magnus let fly an arrow at him, as also did a Heligoland man who stood beside the King. They both shot at once. The one shaft struck the nose-guard of the helmet, and bent it on one side, the other arrow hit the Earl in the eye and passed through his head, and this arrow was found to be the King's."

    Giraldus Cambrensis gives a similar account, adding some few details, such as the derisive exclamation of Magnus, "Leit loupe! " -- "Let him leap!" as the Earl sprang from the saddle when struck, and fell dead into the sea.

    As this Earl of Shrewsbury was called by the Welsh "Goch," or "the Red," from the colour of his hair, so was Hugh Earl of Chester called "Vras," or "the Fat." His popular name of Lupus, or "the Wolf," is not to be traced to his own times, and Dugdale observes that it was an addition in after ages for the sake of distinction; about the same time, I presume, that the heralds invented the coat of arms for him -- "Azure, a wolf's head, erased, argent " -- suggested, probably, by the name, which, if indeed of contemporary antiquity, might have been given him for his gluttony, a vice to which Orderic says he was greatly addicted. "This Hugh," he tells us, "was not merely liberal, but prodigal; not satisfied with being surrounded by his own retainers, he kept an army on foot. He set no bounds either to his generosity or his rapacity. He continually wasted even his own domains, and gave more encouragement to those who attended him in hawking and hunting than to the cultivators of the soil or the votaries of Heaven. He indulged in gluttony to such a degree that he could scarcely walk. He abandoned himself immoderately to carnal pleasures, and had a numerous progeny of illegitimate children of both sexes, but they have been almost all carried off by one misfortune or another."

    With all this he displayed that curious veneration for the Church common to his age, which so ill accorded with the constant violation of its most divine precepts. He founded the Abbey of St. Sever in Normandy, and was a great benefactor to those of Bec and Ouche (St. Evroult) in that duchy, and also to the Abbey of Whitby in Yorkshire, and in 1092 restored the ancient Abbey of St. Werburgh at Chester, and endowed it with ample possessions, substituting Benedictine monks in lieu of the secular canons who had previously occupied it; Richard, a monk of Bec, being brought over by Abbot Anselm, the Earl's confessor and afterwards the great Archbishop of Canterbury, to be the first abbot of the new community.

    Being seized with a fatal illness, this pious profligate assumed the monastic habit in the Abbey of St. Werburgh, and three days after being shorn a monk died therein, 6th kalends of August (July 27), 1101.

    By his Countess Ermentrude, daughter of Hugh Comte de Clermont, in Beauvoisis, and Margaret de Rouci, his wife, he had one son, Richard, seven years of age at the time of his father's death, who succeeded him in the earldom, married Matilda de Blois, daughter of Stephen, Count of Blois, by Adela, daughter of William the Conqueror, and perished with his young wife in the fatal wreck of the White Ship in 1119, leaving no issue.

    Hugh married Countess Of Chester Ermentrude de Clermont about 1088 in of France. Ermentrude (daughter of Count of Clermont Hugh de Clermont and Margaret de Roucy) was born about 1066 in Clermont, Beauvais, Oise, France. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 7. Earl of Chester Richard d'Avranches  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1094; died on 25 Nov 1120 in Drowned in wreck of the White Ship near Barfleur, Manche, France.
    2. 8. Geva d'Avranches  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1076 in of Chestershire, England.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Ranulf le Meschin, 3rd Earl of ChesterRanulf le Meschin, 3rd Earl of Chester Descendancy chart to this point (2.Margaret2, 1.Emma1) was born on 26 Jun 1070 in Livry, Calvados, Basse-Normandie, France; died on 29 Jan 1128 in Chester, Cheshire, England; was buried in St Werburgh, Chester, Cheshire, England.

    Notes:

    Ranulf or Randle de Meschines, surnamed de Bricasard, Viscount Bayeux, in Normandy, (son of Ralph de Meschines, by Maud, his wife, co-heir of her brother, Hugh Lupus, the celebrated Earl of Chester), was given by King Henry I the Earldom of Chester, at the decease of his 1st cousin, Richard de Abrincis, 2nd Earl of Chester, of that family, without issue. By some historians, this nobleman is styled Earl of Carlisle, from residing in that city; and they further state that he came over in the train of the Conqueror, assisted in the subjugation of England, and shared, of course, in the spoil of conquest. He was lord of Cumberland and Carlisle, by descent from his father, but having enfeoffed his two brothers, William, of Coupland, and Geffrey, of Gillesland, in a large portion thereof, he exchanged the Earldom of Cumberland for that of Chester, on condition that those whom he had settled there should hold their lands of the king, in capite. His lordship m. Lucia, widow of Roger de Romara, Earl of Lincoln, and dau. of Algar, the Saxon, Earl of Mercia, and had issue, Ranulph, his successor; William, styled Earl of Cambridge, but of his issue nothing in known; Adeliza, m. to Richard FitzGilbert, ancestor of the old Earls of Clare; and Agnes, m. to Robert de Grentemaisnil. The earl d. in 1128 and was s. by his elder son, Ranulph de Meschines. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 365, Meschines, Earls of Chester]

    Ranulf married Lucy de Taillebois in 1098 in Normandy, France. Lucy (daughter of Earl of Anjou, 1st Baron of Kendal, Earl of Holland in Lincolnshire Ivo (Ives) de Taillebois and of Mercia Lucia) was born on 23 May 1074 in Spalding, Lincolnshire, England; died on 28 Jun 1144 in Chester, Cheshire, England; was buried in Chester, Cheshire, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 9. Alice de Meschines  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1094 in Gernons Castle, Normandy, France; died in 1154.
    2. 10. 2nd Earl of Chester Ranulph de Gernon  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1099 in Guernon Castle, Normandy, France; died on 16 Dec 1153 in Chester, Cheshire, England; was buried in St Werburgh, Chester, Cheshire, England.
    3. 11. Earl of Cambridge William de Meschines  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1096 in Gernons Castle, Normandy, France; died about 1132 in of Egremont, Cumberland, England.
    4. 12. de Meschines  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1102 in of Chester, Cheshire, England.
    5. 13. Hugh de Kevelioc  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1090 in Chester, Cheshire, England; died in 1120 in England.

  2. 5.  Robert I FitzHarold d'EwyasRobert I FitzHarold d'Ewyas Descendancy chart to this point (2.Margaret2, 1.Emma1) was born about 1085 in of Sudley Castle, Gloucestershire, England; died after 1147 in Ewyas Harold, Herefordshire, England.

    Robert married Sybil about 1145. Sybil was born about 1101 in of Sudley, Gloucestershire, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 14. Baron of Ewyas Harold Robert II d'Ewyas  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1146 in Ewyas Harold, Herefordshire, England; died in 1198.

  3. 6.  Lord of Sudeley and Toddington John de SudeleyLord of Sudeley and Toddington John de Sudeley Descendancy chart to this point (2.Margaret2, 1.Emma1) was born about 1087 in Toddington, Gloucestershire, England; died after 1140 in Sudeley Castle, Gloucestershire, England.

    Notes:

    John, the elder son, assumed his surname from Sudeley, the chief seat which he inherited, becoming John de Sudeley. He m. Grace, dau. and heir of Henry de Traci, feudal Lord of Barnstaple, and had issue, Ralph and William. He was s. by his elder son. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 520, Sudeley, Barons Sudeley]


  4. 7.  Earl of Chester Richard d'AvranchesEarl of Chester Richard d'Avranches Descendancy chart to this point (3.Hugh2, 1.Emma1) was born about 1094; died on 25 Nov 1120 in Drowned in wreck of the White Ship near Barfleur, Manche, France.

    Family/Spouse: Matilda (Maud) de Blois. Matilda (daughter of Count of Blois Stephen Henry II (Etienne Henri) "The Sage" and Adela (Adelle)) was born in 1086; died on 25 Nov 1120 in Drowned in wreck of the White Ship near Barfleur, Manche, France. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  5. 8.  Geva d'AvranchesGeva d'Avranches Descendancy chart to this point (3.Hugh2, 1.Emma1) was born about 1076 in of Chestershire, England.

    Geva married Baron Blaye Geoffrey de Ridel about 1096 in of Witering, Northamptonshire, England. Geoffrey was born about 1075 in of Witering, Northamptonshire, England; died on 25 Nov 1120 in Northamptonshire, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 15. Matilda de Ridel  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1097 in of Witering, Northamptonshire, England; died in 1139.


Generation: 4

  1. 9.  Alice de MeschinesAlice de Meschines Descendancy chart to this point (4.Ranulf3, 2.Margaret2, 1.Emma1) was born about 1094 in Gernons Castle, Normandy, France; died in 1154.

    Alice married Lord of Tonbridge Lord of Cardigan Richard FitzGilbert de Clare about 1115. Richard (son of Earl Hertford Gilbert FitzRichard de Clare and Adeliza (Alice) de Clermont) was born in 1090 in Clare, Suffolk, England; died on 15 Apr 1136 in Slain by Welsh near Abergavenny, Monmouthshire, Wales; was buried in Tonbridge, Kent, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 16. Earl of Hertford Roger de Clare  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1116 in Tunbridge Castle, Kent, England; died in 1173 in Oxfordshire, England; was buried in Eynsham Priory, Oxfordshire, England.
    2. 17. Earl of Hertford Gilbert FitzRichard de Clare  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1115; died in 1153.
    3. 18. Adeliza (Alice) de Clare  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1121 in Tonbridge, Kent, England; died after 1148 in Tonbridge, Kent, England.
    4. 19. Rohese de Clare  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1124 in Tunbridge Castle, Kent, England; died after 1175.

    Alice married Lord of Appleby Robert de Condet after 1136. Robert (son of Lord Wickhambreux Osbert de Condet and Adelaide de Chesney) was born about 1108 in Thorngate Castle, Lincoln, Lincolnshire, England; died about 1141. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 20. Lord Coventry Roger de Condet  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1138 in Thorngate Castle, Lincoln, Lincolnshire, England; died in of Coventry and Glentham, Lincolnshire, England.
    2. 21. Isabel de Condet  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1140 in Thorngate Castle, Lincoln, Lincolnshire, England.
    3. 22. Isobel Aquillion  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1142 in of Thurrock, Essex, England.

  2. 10.  2nd Earl of Chester Ranulph de Gernon2nd Earl of Chester Ranulph de Gernon Descendancy chart to this point (4.Ranulf3, 2.Margaret2, 1.Emma1) was born in 1099 in Guernon Castle, Normandy, France; 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]

    Children:
    1. 23. 3rd Earl of Chester Hugh de Kevelioc, 5th Earl of Chester  Descendancy chart to this point 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. 24. Johanna de Gernon  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1140 in Chester, Cheshire, England.
    3. 25. Alice de Meschines  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1142 in Chester, Cheshire, England.

  3. 11.  Earl of Cambridge William de MeschinesEarl of Cambridge William de Meschines Descendancy chart to this point (4.Ranulf3, 2.Margaret2, 1.Emma1) was born in 1096 in Gernons Castle, Normandy, France; died about 1132 in of Egremont, Cumberland, England.

    Family/Spouse: Cecily de Romilly. Cecily (daughter of Robert de Romilly and Murel) was born about 1100 in of Normandy; died in 1151. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 26. Maud de Meschines  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1120 in Gernons Castle, Normandy, France; died after 1190 in Skipton in Craven, England.
    2. 27. Alice de Meschines  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1115.
    3. 28. Avice de Meschines  Descendancy chart to this point

  4. 12.  de Meschinesde Meschines Descendancy chart to this point (4.Ranulf3, 2.Margaret2, 1.Emma1) was born about 1102 in of Chester, Cheshire, England.

  5. 13.  Hugh de KeveliocHugh de Kevelioc Descendancy chart to this point (4.Ranulf3, 2.Margaret2, 1.Emma1) was born in 1090 in Chester, Cheshire, England; died in 1120 in England.

    Family/Spouse: Unknown. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 29. Tanghurst de Kevelioc  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1120 in Chester, Cheshire, England; died in 1159 in England.

  6. 14.  Baron of Ewyas Harold Robert II d'EwyasBaron of Ewyas Harold Robert II d'Ewyas Descendancy chart to this point (5.Robert3, 2.Margaret2, 1.Emma1) was born about 1146 in Ewyas Harold, Herefordshire, England; died in 1198.

    Robert married Petronilla Scudamore about 1175. Petronilla (daughter of Godfrey de Scudamore and Matilda Giffard) was born about 1145 in Kentchurch, Hereford, Herefordshire, England; died after 1204. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 30. Sibyl d'Ewyas  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1165 in Ewyas Harold, Herefordshire, England; died in 1236 in Ewyas Harold, Herefordshire, England.
    2. 31. Robert d'Ewyas  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1190 in Ewyas Harold, Herefordshire, England.

  7. 15.  Matilda de RidelMatilda de Ridel Descendancy chart to this point (8.Geva3, 3.Hugh2, 1.Emma1) was born about 1097 in of Witering, Northamptonshire, England; died in 1139.

    Matilda married Richard Basset about 1126 in Newbold, Nottinghamshire, England. Richard (son of Lord Colston Ralph Basset and Alice de Buci) was born about 1088 in of Drayton Basset Stafordshire, Engand; died in 1144. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 32. Geoffrey Basset  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1128 in Drayton, Staffordshire, England; died on 21 Aug 1189.