Notes |
- RESEARCH_NOTES:
1. “Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families,†Douglas Richardson (2013):
“WALERAN, 4th Earl of Warwick, of Warwick, Warwickshire, 2nd son, born before 1153. He married (1st) MARGERY D'OILLY, daughter of Henry d'Oilly, of Hook Norton, Oxfordshire, by Maud, daughter of Humphrey de Bohun, of Trowbridge, Wiltshire, Steward to Kings Henry I, Stephen, and Henry II of England. They had two sons, Henry [5th Earl of Warwick] and Waleran, and one daughter, Gundred (nun at Pinley). He was heir in 1184 to his brother, William, 3rd Earl of Warwick. He was with King Henry II at Geddington, Northamptonshire in 1188. He was present at the Coronation of King Richard I at Westminster 3 Sept. 1189. In 1195 he paid 20 marks for livery of the 3rd penny of the pleas of Warwickshire. In 1196 he paid £100 to be allowed to return to England. He married (2nd) about 1196 (when he offered 100 marks for her marriage) ALICE DE HARCOURT, widow of John de Limesy, of Collyweston, Northamptonshire (died before Michaelmas 1193), and daughter and heiress of Robert de Harcourt, of Bosworth, Leicestershire, Stanton-Harcourt, Oxfordshire, etc., by Isabel, daughter and heiress of Richard de Camville. They had one daughter, Alice. In 1199 he swore fealty to King John and is said to have carried the right hand sword at his Coronation. In 1200 he sold the reversion of the manor of Knoyle (in East Knoyle), Wiltshire to Godfrey de Lucy, Bishop of Winchester. In 1202 he was called into court by the Bishop to warrant the advowson of the church of Knoyle, Wiltshire against Maud, Countess of Warwick; Waleran was discharged from appearing in court as long as his knights were in the service of the king beyond seas. He was a benefactor of the Hospital of St. Michael, Warwick, of the nuns of Pinley, Warwickshire, and those of Wroxall, Warwickshire. WALERAN, 4th Earl of Warwick, died before 13 October 1204, it is said on 24 Dec. 1203. His widow, Alice, offered 1000 marks to remain a widow and be guardian of her children by the earl in 1205-6. She was living September 1212.
Placitorum in Domo Capituleni Westmonasteriensi Asservatorum Abbrevatio (1811): 29. Baker Hist. & Antiqs. of Northampton 1 (1822-30): 414 (Mellent-Newburgh ped.). Dugdale Monasticon Anglicanum 5 (1825): 736 ("Tanner, however, observes ... there is the abstract of a deed of William Beauchamp earl of Warwick, confirming to the Nuns of Cokehill the gift which Isabel the countess his mother, William the earl her brother, and Waleran the earl her grandfather, who died 6 Joan. as Dugd. Baron. tom. i. p 71, made unto them, viz. the Church of Netelton."). Archaeologia 21 (1827): 199-200. Coll. Top. et Gen. 1 (1834): 256. Palgrave Rotuli Curia Regis 1 (1835): 376. Baildon Select Civil Pleas 1 (Selden Soc.3 ) (1890): 50. Maitland Three Rolls of the King's Court in the Reign of King Richard the First. A. D. 1194-1195 (1891): 10, 14. Bund Inqs. Post Mortem for the County of Worcester 1 (1894): vii-ix (Warwick ped.). Round Cal. Docs. Preserved in France 1 (1899): 119 (charter of Waleran, Earl of Warwick dated 1184-1204). Wrottesley Peds. from the Plea Rolls (1905): 72. C.P. 12(2) (1959): 363-364 (sub Warwick). Sanders English Baronies (1960): 93. Ellis Earldoms in Fee (1963): 216 ("Waleran, fourth Earl of Warwick, was the bearer of the right-handed sword at the coronation of King John on 27th May 1199. He had the third penny of the county. He married before 1190 Margaret, daughter of Humphrey de Bohun, and by her had a son and heir, Henry, who succeeded him on his death on 12th December 1204. Earl Waleran married as his second wife, Alice, only child of Robert de Harcourt, and by her left an only daughter, Alice II, who married William de Mauduit."). Lincolnshire Hist. & Arch. 1 (1966): 8 ("Hugh Bardolf married Amabel daughter of Gerard de Limesy and one of the three sisters and coheirs of her brother John de Limesy. John de Limesy died before Michaelmas 1193, having married Alice daughter of Robert de Harcourt, who married, secondly, Waleran earl of Warwick as his second wife."). VCH Wiltshire 11(1980): 82-103. Midland Hist. 20 (1996): 1-23. Coss Lady in Medieval England, 1000-1500 (2000): 146 ("Thomas Basset of Headington secured the wardship and marriage of the fourteen-year-old Earl Henry II de Newburgh, and married him to one of his daughters, Philippa. Alice de Harcourt, widow of Earl Waleran, had to fight for her dower in the courts, not against her step-son, but against Thomas Basset, 'who expected to get the maximum return for his outlay on the wani.ship."'). Fonge Cartulary of St Mary’s Collegiate Church, Warwick (2004). 95-96 (charter of Waleran, Earl of Warwick; charter-witnessed by his brother, Henry), 100-101 (charter of Waleran, Earl of Warwick dated 1184-1204).
Child of Waleran, Earl of Warwick, by Alice de Harcourt:
i. ALICE OF WARWICK, married WILLIAM MAUDUIT, of Hanslope, Buckinghamshire, Chamberlain of the Exchequer [see BEAUCHAMP 7].â€
2. “Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families,†Douglas Richardson (2013):
“WILLIAM MAUDUIT, Knt., of Hanslope and Hawridge, Buckinghamshire, Letcombe Bassett, Berkshire, Hartley Mauduit, Hampshire, Westminster, Middlesex, Barrowden, Cottesmore, and South Luffenham, Rutland, Weston Mauduit, Warwickshire, etc., hereditary Chamberlain of the Exchequer, son and heir. He married before 3 March 1215/6 ALICE OF WARWICK, daughter of Waleran, 4th Earl of Warwick, by his 2nd wife, Alice, daughter and heiress of Robert de Harcourt [see WARWICK 7 for her ancestry]. They had one son, William, Knt. [8th Earl of Warwick], and one daughter, Isabel. In 1208 King John confirmed the manor of Walton, Warwickshire to Alice and her heirs, it being previously granted her by her father for her marriage. In 1220 Robert de la Mare sued him and his wife, Alice, for two carucates of land in Walton, Warwickshire. He presented to the churches of Hanslope, Buckinghamshire, 1227, Hawridge, Buckinghamshire, 1227, 1228, and 1232, Barrowden, Rutland, 1232, and South Luffenham, Rutland, 1233 and 1234. In 1228 John de Neketone, rector, presented to the church of Cottesmore, Rutland with the consent of William Mauduit, the patron. In 1234 he acknowledged that he owed the abbot of Westminster service of 21s. 10d. from 14 tenants on his Westminster estate, in return for which arrears of the service were acquitted. In 1243-6 William and his wife, Alice, heir apparent of the Warwick estates, granted that if Margery, sister and heir of Thomas, late Earl of Warwick, died without issue that her husband John de Plessy would be earl of Warwick for life, and hold certain manors including Brailes, Claverdon, Myton, Sutton, Tamworth, and Wedgnock, Warwickshire. In 1247 he sued Robert de Wancy in a plea of wardship in Northamptonshire. In 1248 John de Plessy and Margaret his wife claimed the manor of Greetham and half the manor of Cottesmore, Rutland against William Mauduit and Alice his wife. The same year William and his wife, Alice, conveyed three acres of land in Weston Mauduit, Warwickshire to Geoffrey de Langley. In 1253 Roger de Hertewell and his wife, Isabel, quitclaimed 16 acres of land in Hanslope, Buckinghamshire to William and his wife, Alice. SIR WILLIAM MAUDUIT died shortly before 14 Feb. 1257.
Baker Hist. & Antiqs. of Northampton 1 (1822-30): 414 (Mellent-Newburgh ped.); 2 (1836-41): 129 (Mauduit ped.). Archaeologia 21(1827): 199-200. Coll. Top. et Gen. 1 (1834): 256. Roberts Excerpta è rotulis finium in Turri Londinensi asservatis, Hertrico Tertio rege, AD 1216-1272 1 (1835): 87, 135, 405. Hardy Rotuli Chartarum in Turri Londinensi arservati 1(1) (1837): 183. Banks Baronies in Fees 1 (1844): 310-311 (sub Mauduit). Herald & Genealogist 7 (1873): 385-394. Bund Inqs. Post Mortem for the County of Worcester 1 (1894): vii-ix (Warwick ped.). Ratcliff Hist. & Antiqs. of the Newport Pagnell Hundreds (1900): 108-112. Wrottesley Peds.from the Plea Rolls (1905): 72. Phillimore Rotuli Hugonis de Welles Episcopi Lincolniensis 1209-1235 2 (Lincoln Rec. Soc. 6) (1913): 69-71, 74, 89, 92, 144, 170, 175, 232, 267. VCH Buckingham 3 (1925): 367-369. Stokes et al. Warwickshire Feet of Fines 1 (Dugdale Soc. 11) (1932): 113, 139-140. VCH Rutland 2 (1935): 134-138, 170-175. Pubs. Bedfordshire Hist. Rec. Soc. 21(1939): 133. VCH Warwick 5 (1949): 17-26, 198-202. C.R.R. 9 (1952): 331. Coss Langley Cartulary (1980): xiii, 125-126 (charter of William Mauduit and Alice his wife dated c.20 Jan. 1248). Mason Beauchamp Cartulary Charters (Pipe Roll Soc. n.s. 43) (1980): lix (Mauduit ped.), 121, 134-135, 140-143. Dryburgh Cal. of Fine Rolls of the Reign of Henry III 2 (2008): 62-63.â€
3. “Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families,†Douglas Richardson (2013):
“WILLIAM DE BEAUCHAMP, Knt., of Elmley, Acton Beauchamp, Comberton, Naunton Beauchamp, Salwarpe, Stoulton, and Wadborough (in Pershore), Worcestershire, Hanslope and Hawridge, Buckinghamshire, etc., Keeper of the Forest of Dean, 1270, Captain of cos. Chester and Lancaster, 1276, Constable of St. Briavels and Rockingham Castles, Steward of the Forest between Oxford and Stamford, son and heir, born about 1238 /12 (aged 26 and 30 in 1268). He married before 1270 MAUD FITZ JOHN, widow of Gerard de Furnival, Knt., of Sheffield, Yorkshire, Worksop, Nottinghamshire, etc. (died shortly before 18 October 1261), and daughter of John Fitz Geoffrey, Knt., of Shere, Surrey, Fambridge, Essex, etc., Justiciar of Ireland, Justice of the Forest south of Trent, by Isabel, daughter of Hugh le Bigod, Earl of Norfolk [see VERDUN 8 for her ancestry]. They had two sons, John and Guy, Knt. [10th Earl of Warwick] and three daughters, Isabel, Anne (nun at Shouldham), and Amy (nun at Shouldham). He was heir in 1268 to his uncle, William Mauduit, 8th Earl of Warwick, by which he inherited the Earldom of Warwick, the office of Chamberlain of the Exchequer, and the baronies of Warwick, Warwickshire and Hanslope, Buckinghamshire. He served as a pledge to Robert de Ferrets, late Earl of Derby, in 1269. In 1270 and 1274 he was appointed a commissioner to treat with Llywelyn about certain incidents on the Welsh border. In 1274-5 Simon de Beauchamp and Pemel his wife arraigned an assize of mort d'ancestor against him and others touching rent in Hanslope, Buckinghamshire. In the same period, Anastasia de Hamslap arraigned an assize of novel disseisin against him and others touching a tenement in Hanslope, Buckinghamshire. In 1276-7 he arraigned an assize of darrein presentment against William Murdak' touching the advowson of the church of Compton Murdak, Warwickshire. He presented to the chapel of St. Peter's in the Castle of Worcester, Worcestershire in 1276, and to the churches of Barrowden, Rutland, 1280, 1297, South Luffenham, Rutland, 1291, Hanslope, Buckinghamshire, 1293 or 1296, and Spelsbury, Oxfordshire, 1296. In 1278 he leased the manor of Brailes, Warwickshire to Richard de Mundeville and his wife, Maud, for their lives. He was summoned for service against the Welsh, 1277-94, against the Scots, 1296-8, and beyond seas, 1297. In the period, 1279-80, the Abbot of Evesham arraigned an assize of novel disseisin against William de Beauchamp, Earl of Warwick, and others touching a tenement in Chedworth, Gloucestershire. In the same period, John de Braham and another arraigned an assize of novel disseisin against William de Beauchamp, Earl of Warwick, and others touching a tenement in Cottesmore, Rutland. In 1280-1 he and his wife, Maud, arraigned an assize of novel disseisin against Roger FizWyot and others touching common of pasture in Sheffield, Yorkshire. In 1280-1 he and his wife, Maud, arraigned an assize of novel disseisin against Thomas de Furnival and others touching a tenement in Sheffield, Yorkshire. In 1280-1 Emeric le Despenser arraigned an assize of novel disseisin against William de Beauchamp, Earl of Warwick and others regarding a fosse destroyed in Oldberrow, Warwickshire. He took part in the Siege and capture of Dryslwyn, Carmarthenshire in 1282. He was summoned to the assembly at Shrewsbury in 1283. In 1284 he obtained a grant of free warren in Barrowden, lMorcott, nd South Luffenham, Rutland. He had license to fortify his manor house at Hanslope, Buckinghamshire 10 June 1292. In 1293 he obtained a grant of a weekly market and an annual fair at Hanslope, Buckinghamshire. He defeated the Welsh at Maes Moydog, Montgomeryshire 5 March 1294/5. The following year, he was one of the leaders of the force which defeated the Scots at Dunbar 27 April 1296. During the king's absence in Flanders in 1297-8, he was a member of Prince Edward's council. His wife, Maud, was co-heiress in 1297 to her brother, Richard Fitz John, Knt., Lord Fitz John, by which she inherited the manors of Cherhill, Wiltshire, Potterspury, Northamptonshire, and Quarrendon, Buckinghamshire, and townships in the cantred of the Isles in Thomond in Ireland. He was with the English army which was defeated at Battle of Stirling in Scotland in 1297. In 1298 he was granted a weekly market and a yearly fair at his manor of Hanslope, Buckinghamshire. At an unknown date, he confirmed to the nuns of Cokehill, Worcestershire the church of Nettleton, which gift was previously made to the nuns by his mother, Isabel; her brother, Earl William, and her grandfather, Earl Waleran. SIR WILLIAM DE BEAUCHAMP, 9th Earl of Warwick, died at Elmley, Worcestershire 5 (or 9) June 1298, and was buried at Friars Minor, Worcester 22 June 1298. He left a will dated 3 May or 14 Sept. 1297. In 1299 his widow, Maud, presented her nephew, Nicholas Boteler, clerk, to the church of Wickwar, Gloucestershire. Maud, Countess of Warwick, died 16 (or 18) April 1301, and was buried at Friars Minor, Worcester 7 May 1301.
Rawlinson Hist. & Antiqs. of the City, and Cathedral-Church of Hereford (1717): Addenda, 15 (Kalendar of Obits: "V Id. Junius [9 June]. Obitus Domini Willielmi de Bello Campo, Comitis Warwick, qui dedit jus sui patronatus quod habebat in Ecclesia de Leydeneya, Decano 8c Capitulo hujus Ecclesie."). Edmondson Hist. & Genealogical Acount of the Noble Fam. of Greville (1766): 26-56. Hutchinson Hist. & Antiqs. of the County Palatine of Durham 3 (1794): chart foll. 228 (Beauchamp ped.). Clutterbuck Hist. & Antiqs. of Hertford 1(1815): 293 (chart), 353-360 (chart). Montmorency-Morres Genealogical Memoir of the Fam. of Montmorency (1817): xxxii-xxxvi. Hunter Hallamshire (1819): 30 41. Dugdale Monasticon Anglicanum 5 (1825): 736 ("Tanner, however, observes .... there is the abstract of a deed of William Beauchamp earl of Warwick, confirming to the Nuns of Cokehill the gift which Isabel the countess his mother, William the earl her brother, and Waleran the earl her grandfather, who died 6 Joan. as Dugd. Baron, tom. i. p 71, made unto them, viz. the Church of Netelton."). Holland Hist., Antiqs., & Desc. of the Town & Parish of Worksop (1826): 17-56. Nicolas Testamenta Vetusta 1 (1826): 52 (will of William de Beauchamp, Earl of Warwick). Archaeologia 21 (1827): 199-200. White Hist., Gazeteer, & Directory of Nottinghamshire (1832): 458. Coll. Top. et Gen. 1 (1834): 256. Baker Hist. & Antiqs. of Northampton 2 (1836-41): 218-219 (Beauchamp ped.). Banks Baronies in Fees 1 (1844): 310-311 (sub Mauduit). Eastwood Hist. of the Parish of Ecclesfield (1862): 59-77. Sheahan Hist. & Topog. of Buckinghamshire (1862): 539-540. Roberts Calendarium Genealogicum 1 (1865): 130-131. Burke Gen. Hist. of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited & Extinct Peerages (1866): 225 (sub Fumival). Luard Annales Monastici 4 (Rolls Ser. 36) (1869): 537 (Annals of Worcester sub A.D. 1298 - "Willelmus de Bello Campo comes Warewike graviter infirmatus, in absentia omnium amicorum per consilium fratris Johannis de Olneye condidit testamentum; qui avertit voluntatem ejus, ne cum prxdecessoribus sins in cathedrali ecclesia Wygornix, sed inter fratres Minores sibi eligerat sepulturam; qui quinto idus Junii [9 June] obiit."), 549 (Annals of Worcester sub A.D. 1300- "Nonis Maii [7 May] annuente archiepiscopo, Wydo comes Warewyk sepelivit matrem suam in ecclesia fratrum Minorum Wygorniæ juxta comitem patrem suum."). Notes & Queries 4th Ser. 3 (1869): 484-485 (Fitz Peter ped.). Jour. British Arch. Assoc. 30 (1874): 237-277. Tegg Wills of their Own (1876): 5-6 (will of William de Beauchamp, Earl of Warwick). Annual Rpt. of the Deputy Keeper 44 (1883): 124; 45 (1885): 89, 104, 142, 254; 46 (1886): 142; 47 (1886): 379; 49 (1888): 39, 49; 50 (1889): 173, 202. Doyle Official Baronage of England 3 (1886): 577-578 (sub Warwick). Genealogist n.s. 10 (1893): 213; n.s. 13 (1896): 36-37. Bund Inqs. Post Mortem for the County of Worcester 1 (1894): (Warwick ped.), 59-65; 2 (1909): xxii. C.Ch. R. 2 (1898): 428. List of Sheriffs for England & Wales (PRO Lists and Indexes 9) (1898): 157. Giffard Episc. Reg. Diocese of Worcester, Reg. of Bishop Godfrey Giffard 1 (Worcester Hist. Soc. 15) (1902): cclxi; 2(3) (1900): 266 ([William de Beauchamp], Earl of Warwick, styled "kinsman and friend" by Godfrey Giffard, Bishop of Worcester), 498, 529. Ratcliff Hist. & Antiqs. of the Newport Pagnell Hundreds (1900): 108-112. Cal. IPM 1 (1904): 212-214. Wrottesley Peds. from the Plea Rolls (1905): 72, 137-138. Bloom English Seals (1906): 165-166. D.N.B. 13 (1909): 83-84 (biog. of William Mauduit, Earl of Warwick). VCH Nottingham 2 (1910): 125-129. VCH Worcester 3 (1913): 339, 341-342 (Beauchamp arms: Gules, a fesse between six crosslets or). C.P. 4 (1916): 265; 5 (1926): 437 (chart), 439-441 (sub FitzJohn); 12(2) (1959): 368-370 (sub Warwick). Kingsford Stonor Letters & Papers 1290-1483 1 (Camden 3rd Ser. 29) (1919): 4. VCH Buckingham 3 (1925): 6-7, 367-369; 4 (1927): 348-362. Corbridge Reg. of Thomas of Corbridge 1 (Surtees Soc. 138) (1925): 55-56. VCH Rutland 2 (1935): 134-138, 170-171. English Hist. Rev. 58 (1943): 51-78 (St. Edmundsbury Chronicle, 1296-1301: "Interea obiit dominus Willelmus de Bello Campo comes Warwyci."). VCH Warwick 4 (1947): 230-245; 5 (1949): 17-26. Year Books of Edward II 10 (Selden Soc. 63) (1947): 196-208. Paget Baronage of England (1957) 39: 1-13 (sub Beauchamp of Elmley), 220: 1. Sanders English Baronies (1960): 51, 76, 94. Ancient Deeds - Ser. B 2 (List & Index Soc. 101) (1974): B.6295, B.6697, B.8616. Mason Beauchamp Cartulary Charters (Pipe Roll Soc. n.s. 43) (1980): xxiii-xxiv, lviij (Beauchamp ped.). Ellis Cat. Seals in the P.R.O. 2 (1981): 7 (seal of William de Beauchamp, Earl of Warwick dated 1296 - A shield of arms: a fesse between six crosses crosslet. Above and on either side, an elongated leopard. Legend: S'.WILL[I :DE :BEL]LO CAMPO.COMITIS D'WARWIK:). Rolls & Reg. of Bishop Oliver Sutton 1280-1299 8 (Lincoln Rec. Soc. 76) (1986): 146, 164, 193-194. VCH Gloucester 5 (1996): 413-415.
Children of William de Beauchamp, Knt., by Maud Fitz John:
i. GUY DE BEAUCHAMP, Knt., 10th Earl of Warwick [see next].
ii. ISABEL DE BEAUCHAMP, married (1st) PATRICK DE CHAWORTH, Knt., of Kidwelly, Carmarthenshire, Wales [see CHAWORTH 7); (2nd) HUGH LE DESPENSER, Knt., Earl of Winchester [see DESPENSER 10].â€
4. “Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families,†Douglas Richardson (2013):
“GUNDRED DE WARENNE, married (1st) before 1130 ROGER, 2nd Earl of Warwick, son and heir of Henry de Beaumont, 1st Earl of Warwick, by Margaret, daughter of Geoffrey, Count of Perche. He was probably a minor in 1119. They had three sons, William [3rd Earl of Warwick] Waleran [4th Earl of Warwick], and Henry, and three daughters, Gundred (wife of Hugh le Bigod, Earl of Norfolk and Roger de Glanville), Margaret, and Agnes (wife of Geoffrey de Clinton the younger). He joined his parents, Henry and Margaret, in an undated grant of property to Warwick St. Mary. He succeeded to the earldom in 1123, before Easter, presumably when he came of age. He completed the foundation of the collegiate church of St. Mary and All Saints, Warwick c.1123. He attested charters of King Henry I, the two latest in 1131. After the accession of King Stephen, he was at the Easter court in 1136 at Westminster. He witnessed the king's charter of liberties at Oxford in April 1136. Following the Battle of Lincoln in 1141, he joined the Empress Maud of his own free will. He served with her at the Siege of Winchester in 1141, but early in 1142 he was with King Stephen at Stamford. At an unknown date he allowed Warwick Castle to be garrisoned by Stephen's troops. In 1153 he was with the king when he heard that the garrison had been tricked by Henry's knights and the Castle surrendered. He founded the Templars' House and St. Michael's Hospital, both in Warwick, and completed the foundation of Warwick Priory. ROGER, 2nd Earl of Warwick, died in 1153. In the Pipe Roll of 5 Henry II [1158-9], his widow, Gundred, had remission granted of the scutage upon 20 knights' fees which she no doubt held in dower. She married (2nd) (as his 2nd wife) WILLIAM DE LANCASTER (also known as WILLIAM FITZ GILBERT), of Kendal, Westmorland, Lamplugh, Muncaster, and Workington, Cumberland, Garstang, Ulverston, Warton, and Wyresdale, Lancashire, etc., son and heir of Gilbert, by his wife, Godith. In the period, 1150-5, Roger de Mowbray granted him all his land of Lonsdale, Kendal, and Horton in Ribblesdale. In the period, 1153-60, he was granted lands in Gastang, Ulverston, and Warton, Lancashire by William, Count of Boulogne and Mortain. In the period, 1153-6, he and his wife, Gundred, and his son and heir, William, granted the canons of St. Mary de Pré, Leicester the manor and church of Cockerham, Lancashire. In the period, 1156-60, he added common of pasture throughout his fee in Lonsdale and Amoundemess. His wife, Gundred, Countess of Warwick, was living in 1166. WILLIAM DE LANCASTER died before Michaelmas 1170, when Richard de Morville proferred 200 marks for a writ to sue for lands which he claimed in marriage with Avice his wife, daughter of the said William.
Baker Hist. & Antiqs. of Northampton 1 (1822-30): 414 (Mellent-Newburgh ped.). Archaeologia 21 (1827): 199-200. Dugdale Monasticon Anglicanum 6(3) (1830): 1326 (charter of Henry, Earl of Warwick, his wife, Margaret, and their son, Roger), 1326-1327 (various charters of Roger, Earl of Warwick, two of which are witnessed by his wife, Countess Gundred, and his brothers, Geoffrey and Henry). Bund Inqs. Post Mortem for the County of Worcester 1 (1894): vii-ix (Warwick ped.). Farrer Chartulary of Cockersand Abbey 1(2) (Chetham Soc. n.s. 39) (1898): 178-179, 305-308. Farrer Lancashire Pipe Rolls & Early Lancashire Charters (1902): 18-19, 75, 297, 305, 307-308, 361, 389-391 (charter of Roger de Mowbray to William son of Gilbert de Lancaster dated 1150-5), 391-392 (charter of William de Lancaster I dated 1153-6), 392-394 (charter of William de Lancaster I dated 1156-60). Ragg Charters of St. Peter's Hospital, York (Trans. Cumberland & Westmorland Antiq. & Arch. Soc. n.s. 9) (1909): 237-239 (Ketel [Fitz Eldred] styled "uncle" in charter of William de Lancaster and his son, William, to the brethren of St. Peter of York). Cambridge Law Jour. 10 (1948): 84-103 (author identifies Gundred, wife of Hugh le Bigod, Earl of Norfolk, and Roger de Glanville, as "probably the daughter of Roger, Earl of Warwick."). Clay Early Yorkshire Charters 8 (1949): 7-12. C.P. 12(2) (1959): 361-362 (sub Warwick). Sanders English Baronies (1960): 93. Bull Institute Hist. Research 55 (1982): 113-124. Caenegem English Lawsuits from William I to Richard I 1 (Selden Soc. 106) (1990): 205 (charter of Roger, Earl of Warwick, dated 1122-5). Midland Hist. 20 (1996): 1-23. Haskins Soc. Jour. 13 (2004): 50 (Geoffrey de Newburgh witnessed several charters of Roger, Earl of Warwick, as "Geoffrey, the earl's brother."). Fonge Cartulary of St Mary’s Collegiate Church, Warwick (2004): 11-12 (charter of Henry, Consul [i.e. Earl] of Warwick, his wife Margaret, and their son, Roger dated 1115-19), 12-13 (confirmation charter of Roger, Earl of Warwick dated 1119-53), 13-14 (charter of Roger, Earl of Warwick dated 1119-23), 15-16 (charter of Roger, Earl of Warwick dated 1119-53), 19-20 (charter of Roger, Earl of Warwick dated 1119-53), 20-22 (charter of Roger, Earl of Warwick dated 1123-53), 22-23 (charter of Roger, Consul [i.e. Earl of Warwick dated ?1123). Power Norman Frontier in the 12th & Early 13th Cents. (2004): 511-512 (Neubourg ped.). Tanner Fams., Friends, & Allies (2004): 297 (chart), 314 (Beaumont ped.), 315 (Warenne ped.).â€
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