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Isabel de Warenne

Female - Abt 1282


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  • Name Isabel de Warenne 
    Gender Female 
    Died Abt Nov 1282 
    Buried Marham, Norfolk, England Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Person ID I6707  Petersen-de Lanskoy
    Last Modified 27 May 2021 

    Father William de Warenne,   b. of Lewes, Sussex, England Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 27 May 1240, London, England Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Mother Maud Marshal,   d. From 27 Mar 1248 to 29 Mar 1248 
    Married Bef 13 Oct 1225 
    Family ID F2951  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

    Family Hugh d'Aubenay,   b. Abt 1214,   d. 7 May 1243  (Age ~ 29 years) 
    Married 1234 
    Last Modified 28 May 2021 
    Family ID F2958  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

  • Notes 
    • RESEARCH_NOTES:
      1. “Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families,” Douglas Richardson (2013):
      “WILLIAM D'AUBENEY, 3rd Earl of Arundel, Chief Butler of England, Privy Councillor, Judge in the King's Court, 1198, 1200, 1218, son and heir. He married MABEL OF CHESTER, daughter of Hugh, Earl of Chester, by Bertrade, daughter of Simon de Montfort, Count of Evreux, seigneur of Montfort-l'Amaury [see CHESTER 5 for her ancestry]. They had two sons, William [4th Earl of Arundel] and Hugh [5th Earl of Arundel], and four daughters, Maud, Nichole (or Colette), Cecily, and Isabel. In 1194 he was one of the Receivers of the money raised for the king's ransom. He assisted at the Coronation of King John in 1199. In 1213 he witnessed the instrument by which King John resigned the crown of England into the hands of the Pope. He served a joint envoy to treat with the Barons in 1215. He went on Crusade in 1218 and was present at the Siege of Damietta later that year. WILLIAM D'AUBENEY, 3rd Earl of Arundel, died at Cainell near Rome 1 Feb. 1220/1. His remains were conveyed to England and buried in Wymondham Priory, Norfolk.
      Placitorum in Domo Capitulari Westmonasteriensi Asservatorum Abbrevatio (1811): 30, 44. Dugdale Monasticon Anglicanum 3 (1821): 330 (sub Wymondham Monastery: "Memorandum, quod Willielmus de Albaneio, pincerna regis Henrici, fundavit ecclesiam monachorum de Wymundham. Qui quidem Willielmus habuit unum filium Willielmum, comitem Arundeliae; qui Willielmus comes habuit unum filium Willelmum, comitem Sussexiae; qui Willielmus comes habuit unum filium Willielmum, comitem Sussexiæ; qui Willielmus habuit unum fratrem Hugonem, comitem Sussexiæ; qui Hugo moriebatur sine hærede de corpore suo, et quatuor sorores fuerunt propinquiores hæredes ejus, et diviserunt totum comitatum Sussexiæ inter eas: quarum unam desponsavit dominus le Fitz Allen, et aliam dominus de Montealto, et aliam domus Robertus de Tathesale, et aliam dominus de Somerie, et advocatio ecclesiæ de Wymundeham allocata fuit domino Roberto de Tateshale, et uxori ejus, tenenda de se et hæredibus suis in puram et perpetuam elemosinam; qui quidem Robertus de Tathesale, habuit filium et hadredem Robertum de Tathesale, cujus erant tres filiae, quarum unam desponsavit dominus Johannes Orby, aliam dominus de Dryby, et tertiam dominus Thomas Caily qui habuit unum filium et hæredem, scilicet Thomam Caily, qui obiit sine hærede de corpore suo, cujus sororem duxit Rogerus de Clyfton armiger prædicti Thomæ. Iste Rogerus habuit unum filium et hæredem, scilicet, dominum Adam de Clyfton, qui habuit filium et hæredem Constantinum de Clyfton, qui gabuit filium et haeredem dominum Johannem de Clyfton, qui habuit filium et hæredem Constantinum de Clyfton, qui quidem Constantinus habuit unum filium et hæredem dominum Johannem de Clyfton, qui nunc est dominus de Wymundham."). Tierney Hist. & Antiqs. of the Castle & Town of Arundel 1 (1834): 181-185. Coll. Top. et Gen. 2 (1835): 247-249. Burke Gen. Hist. of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited & Extinct Peerages (1866): 2-3 (sub Albini, Earls of Arundel). Jour. British Arch. Assoc. (1867): 21-33. Flower Vis. of Yorkshire 1563-4 (H.S.P. 16) (1881): 176-177 (Knevet ped.: "Willielmus Dawbeny Comes Arundell nupcit Mabillam filiam et unam heredum Radulphi Comitis Cestrie et Lincolnie."). Ormerod Hist. of the County Palatine & City of Chester 1 (1882): 26-33. Doyle Official Baronage of England 1 (1886): 67 (sub Arundel). C.P. 1 (1910): 236-238,237 (chart) (sub Arundel). Farrer Early Yorkshire Charters 2 (1915): 195 (chart). Genealogist n.s. 34 (1918): 181-189 (William d'Aubeney, Earl of Arundel, styled "uncle" [avunculus] of Warin de Munchensy in 1213, he being half-brother of Warin's mother, Aveline de Clare). Farrer Honors & Knights' Fees 2 (1924): 10-11. Harvey et al. Vis. of the North 3 (Surtees Soc. 144) (1930): 152-156 (Daubeny pedigree: "Willelmus Daubeney comes de Arundell sepultus in Abbathia predicta ob. 1 lo. = [empty roundel] Mabilia filia et coh. Ranulfi co. Cestrie."). Meyer Culture of Christendom (1993): 132 (Canterbury Obituary Lists: "Kal. [Feb] [1 Feb.]. Obiit Willelmus Comes de Arundel.").
      Children of Mabel of Chester, by William d'Aubeney:
      i. HUGH D'AUBENEY, Knt., 5th Earl of Arundel, Chief Butler of England, 2nd son of William d'Aubeney, 3rd Earl of Arundel, by Mabel, 2nd daughter of Hugh, Earl of Chester. He was born about 1214 (of age in 1235). He was heir in 1224 to his older brother, William d'Aubeney, 4th Earl of Arundel. He was co-heir in 1232 to his uncle, Ranulph, Earl of Chester and Lincoln. In 1233 he made fine with the king by 2500 marks to have the lands of his late brother, William d'Aubeney, Earl of Arundel, until his legal age, as well as the lands which fell to Hugh by hereditary right of the lands formerly of his uncle, Ranulph, Earl of Chester and Lincoln. He married in 1234 ISABEL DE WARENNE, daughter of William de Warenne, Knt., 6th Earl of Surrey, Warden of the Cinque Ports, by Maud, daughter of William Marshal, Knt, 4th Earl of Pembroke (or Striguil), hereditary Master Marshal [see WARENNE 8 for her ancestry]. They had no issue. In 1240 he was summoned to restore the manor of Whaddon, Buckinghamshire to the king as an escheat of the Normans. Hugh stated that he, his brother, and his father had all been given livery of the lands, but, though he quoted the terms of the original grant made to his father in 1207, Whaddon was surrendered to the king. In 1242 he accompanied the King in his expedition to Guienne. SIR HUGH D'AUBENEY, Earl of Arundel, died 7 May 1243, and was buried at Wymondham Priory, Norfolk. In 1244 his widow, Countess Isabel, sued Robert de Sheney for the third part of one carucate of land in Smisby, Derbyshire, and Ralph de Kenninghall for the third part of nine acres of land and one acre pf pasture in Kenninghall, Norfolk, and the one third part of 14 acres of land in Riddlesworth, Norfolk. The same year she also sued Thomas le Treys for the third part of one carucate of land in Atdeborough, Norfolk, William de Oddingseles for the third part of one-half carucate of land in Leeds, Yorkshire, Roger de Somery and Nichole his wife for the third part of two carucates of land in Chipping Campden, Gloucestershire, and one third part of one carucate of land in Great Tew, Oxfordshire, and Hugh le Bigod for the one third part of one carucate of land in Stoughton, Sussex. In 1249 Countess Isabel founded the Abbey of Marham, Norfolk. She presented to the church of Shenley, Buckinghamshire in 1272. In 1271 Roger de Somery was engaged in a lengthy lawsuit with her regarding the advowson of the church of Olney, Buckinghamshire; in 1273 it was noted that the patronage of the church was to remain with Roger by a concord between him and Countess Isabel. In 1277-8 Master John de Croft arraigned an assize of novel disseisin against her and others touching a tenement in Bilsham, Sussex. In 1278-9 Nigel le Got arraigned an assize of novel disseisin against her and others touching a tenement in Wymondham, Norfolk. Isabel, Countess of Arundel, died shortly before 23 Nov. 1282, and was buried at Marham, Norfolk. Blomefield Essay towards a Top. Hist. of Norfolk 1(1805): 216-218; 4 (1775): 125-128; 9 (1808): 42-59. Dugdale Monasticon Anglicanum 5 (1825): 743, 744 (charter of Isabel d'Aubeney, Countess of Arundel; charter witnessed by her brothers, Sir Roger Bigod, Earl of Norfolk, Sir Hugh Bigod, and John de Warenne). Dignity of a Peer of the Realm (1826): 389-434. Hunter South Yorkshire 1 (1828): 105 (Warenne ped.). Wainright Hist. & Top. Intro. of the Wapentake of Stafford & Tickhill (1829): 168-169, 195-196 (Warenne ped.). Dallaway Hist. of the Western Div. of Sussex 2(1) (1832): 128 (Warenne ped.). Tierney Hist. & Antiqs. of the Castle & Town of Arundel 1 (1834): 186-192. Brewer Monumenta Franciscana 1 (Rolls Ser. 4) (1858): 331, 639-640. Burke Gen. Hist. of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited & Extinct Peerages (1866): 2-3 (sub Albini, Earls of Arundel). Matthew of Paris Matthæi Parisiensis 2 (Rolls Ser. 44) (1866): 477 (sub A.D. 1243: "Anno sub eodem, nonis Maii [7 May], obiit comes Harundeliæ Hugo de Albineto, in ætate juvenili, cum jam vix metas adolescentiæ pertransisset. Et apud Wimundham, in ecclesia Sanctæ Mariæ, videlicet prioratum Sancto Albano pertinentem, est sepultus, cum patribus sins dictæ ecclesiæ patronis et fundatoribus."). Jour. British Arch. Assoc. (1867): 21-33. Matthew of Paris Chronica Majjora 5 (Rolls See. 57) (1880): 336-337 (Countess Isabel de Warenne, widow of Hugh d'Aubeney, Earl of Arundel, styled "king's kinswoman" [regis cognate]). Flower Vis. of Yorkshire 1563-4 (H.S.P. 16) (1881): 176-177 (Knevet ped.: "Hugo Comes Arundell post mortem Willielmi fratris sin non habuit exitum et sepelitur in Abathia predicta."). Annual Rpt. of the Deputy Keeper 47 (1886): 163; 48 (1887): 214. Doyle Official Baronage of England 1 (1886): 68 (sub Arundel). Maitland Bracton's Note Book 3 (1887): 280-283. Grazebrook Barons of Dudley 1 (Colls. Hist. Staffs. 9(2)) (1888): 20. Ratcliff Hist. & Antiqs. of the Newport Pagnell Hundreds (1900): 415-416. C.P.R. 1272-1281 (1901): 30. Wrottesley Peds. from the Plea Rolls (1905): 85, 550. Year Books of Edward II 3 (Selden Soc. 20) (1905): 60-63. Martin Hist. of the Manor of Westhope (1909): 15-33. C.P. 1 (1910): 237 (chart), 238-239 (sub Arundel). Round King's Serjeants & Officers of State (1911): 140-165. Clay Extinct & Dormant Peerages (1913): 236-238 (sub Warenne). Farnham Leicestershire Medieval Pleas. (1925): 11 (ped. of Earls of Chester). VCH Buckingham 3 (1925): 435-442. Romania 55 (1929): 332-381. Harvey et al. Vis. of the North 3 (Surtees Soc. 144) (1930): 152-156 (Daubeny ped.: "Hugo comes Atundell post mortem Willelmi fratris sin non habuit exitum et sepelitur in abbathia predicta ob. 28 H. 3. = filia domini [left blank]."). C.C.R. 1268-1272 (1938): 391-392. Paget Baronage of England (1957) 12: 1-6 (sub Aubigny). C.R.R. 16 (1979): 499; 18 (1999): 151-152, 216, 222, 241, 247, 261, 310. VCH Oxford 11 (1983): 194-208. Gee Women, Art & Patronage from Henry III to Edward III: 1216-1377 (2002): 157. Morris Bigod Earls of NoRFolk in the 13th Cent. (2005): opp. 1 (chart). Henry III Fine Rolls Project (R[anulph] Earl of Chester and Lincoln styled "uncle" of Hugh d'Aubeney, brother and heir of William d'Aubeney, Earl of Arundel in a fine roll item dated 1233) (abs. of record available at www.finerollshenry3.org.uk/content/calendar/roll_033.htm1).
      ii. MAUD D'AUBENEY [see next].
      iii. NICHOLE (or COLETTE) D'AUBENEY, married ROGER DE SOMERY, Knt., of Dudley (in Sedgley), Staffordshire [see SOMERY 3].
      iv. CECILY D'AUBENEY; married ROGER DE MOHAUT, Knt., of Mold, Cheshire, Castle Rising, Norfolk, etc. [see MORLEY 6].
      v. ISABEL D'AUBENEY, married JOHN FITZ ALAN, of Clun and Oswestry, Shropshire [see FITZ ALAN 6].”

      2. “Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families,” Douglas Richardson (2013):
      “WILLIAM DE WARENNE, Knt., 6th Earl of Surrey, of Lewes, Sussex, Reigate, Surrey, Conisbrough and Sandal cm Wakefield), Yorkshire, etc., Warden of the Cinque Ports, a justiciar of England, custodian of Bamburgh and Knapp Castles, King's councillor, Warden of the Cinque Ports, 1216, Sheriff of Surrey, 1217-26, son and heir. He witnessed a charter for King Richard I at Rouen in 1197. In 1202 he had seisin of his father's lands. In 1204 he was granted a yearly fair at Wakefield, Yorkshire. In 1205 the king granted him Grantham and Stamford, Lincolnshire to compensate him for the loss of his lands in Normandy. In 1206 he owed 100 marks for an advance made to him in Poitou, and 100 marks for robes provided for him there. In 1206 he was directed to escort William the Lion, King of Scots to York. He married (1st) before 1207 MAUD D'AUBENEY, daughter of William d'Aubeney, 2nd Earl of Arundel (or Sussex), by Maud, daughter and heiress of James de St. Hilary, of Field Dalling, Norfolk [see CLIFTON 4 for her ancestry]. They had no known issue. In 1213 he witnessed King John's submission to the Pope and resignation of the crown. He was security for the king in his promise of concessions to the Barons 10 May 1215. He took part with the Barons in the seizure of London 24 May 1215, and on 15 June at Runnymede was one of those who advised the king to grant the Great Charter [Magna Carta]. His wife, Maud, died 6 Feb. 1215/6, and was buried in the chapter-house of Lewes Priory. In 1217 he took part in the naval Battle of Sandwich in which Eustace the Monk was defeated and slain. In 1220 he was appointed to meet the King of Scotland at Berwick. In 1223 he went on pilgrimages to St. James (Santiago) in Spain and to St. John. He married (2nd) before 13 October 1225 MAUD MARSHAL, widow of Hugh le Bigod, 5th Earl of Norfolk, hereditary Steward of the Household (died shortly before 18 Feb. 1224/5) [see BIGOD 7], and eldest daughter of William Marshal, Knt., 4th Earl of Pembroke (or Striguil), hereditary Master Marshal, by Isabel, daughter of Richard Fitz Gilbert (nicknamed Strongbow), 2nd Earl of Pembroke (or Striguil) [see MARSHAL 3 for her ancestry]. They had one son, John, Knt. [7th Earl of Surrey], and one daughter, Isabel. In May 1225 Maud granted land in Stockton, Norfolk to her son, Ralph le Bigod. In 1226-7 Mary daughter of William de Newmarch, of Cateby, Yorkshire, granted to Maud Bigot, countess of Warenne and Norfolk, the hermitage of St. Margaret's, Cateby on the Don, with land in Eadmunde croft, and common of pasture for the cattle of the hermitage, rendering yearly to the grantor at Easter white gloves. In 1227 he joined the Earl of Cornwall at Stamford in his revolt against the king, but at Christmas was with the king at York. In 1229 he was about the make a voyage on the king's service. He was heir in 1234 to his sister, Isabel de Warenne, widow of Gilbert de l'Aigle. In 1236 he acted as Butler at the Coronation of Queen Eleanor of Provence, in place of his son-in-law, Hugh, Earl of Arundel. In 1238 he was cited to appear before Robert Grosseteste, Bishop of Lincoln, because mass has been celebrated in the earl's hall at Grantham, Lincolnshire. SIR WILLIAM DE WARENNE, 6th Earl of Surrey, died testate in London 27 May 1240, and was buried in the priory church of Lewes, Sussex. In the period, 1240-6 his widow, Maud, granted a tenement in Thorne, Yorkshire to Richard de Otley her chaplain. In 1241 she granted Sir Adam de Newmarch and his heirs a water-course and ditch in Balne, Yorkshire from Flaxcleyker to the Dike to be 8 feet wide and 4 feet deep. In the period, 1241-5, she granted land in Stockton, Norfolk to her son, Ralph le Bigod. Maud was co-heiress in 1245 to her brother, Anselm Marshal, Earl of Pembroke, by which she inherited the marshalcy of England and honour of Chepstow, Monmouthshire. In 1246-8 she confirmed the union of Kilkenny Abbey with Duiske Abbey. In 1246-8 she granted three silver marks of annual rent to St. George's Nunnery, Thetford, Norfolk. Maud, Marshal of England, Countess of Norfolk and Warenne, died 27 (or 29) March 1248.
      Anselme Hist. de la Maison Royale de France 6 (1730): 26-28 (sub Bastards of Anjou). Watson Mems. of the Earls. of Warren & Surrey & Their Descs. (1782). Blomefield Essay towards a Top. Hist. of Norfolk 2 (1805): 95-102. Dugdale Monasticon Anglicanum 4 (1823): 475, 478 (charter of Maud, Marshal of England, Countess of Norfolk and Warenne); 5 (1825): 266 (Obit. of Tintern Abbey: "Matilda Comitissa Warennæ obiit xxix. die Martii."), 743-744. Hunter South Yorkshire 1 (1828): 105 (Warenne ped.). Wainright Hist. & Top. Intro. of the Wapentake of Stafford & Tickhill (1829): 165-170, 195-196 (Warenne ped.). Burke Dict. of the Peerages... Extinct, Dormant & in Abeyance (1831): 555-558. Dallaway Hist. of the Western Div. of Sussex 2(1) (1832): 128 (Warenne ped.). Gentleman's Mag. n.s. 24 (1845): 584. Lipscomb Hist. & Antiqs. of Buckingham 1 (1847): 200-201 (Clare ped.). Scrope Hist. of Castle Combe (1852): 19, 36-37 [alleges Maud Marshal married (3rd) Walter de Dunstanville, Baron of Castle Combe, Wiltshire]. Sussex Arch. Colls. 6 (1853): 107-128 ([Alice], Countess of Eu, styled "niece" [neptis] by William de Warenne in letter dated pre-1227). Luard Roberti Grosseteste Episcopi Quondam Lincolniensis (Rolls Ser. 25) (1861): 171-173. Matthew of Paris Matthæi Parisiensis, Monachi Sancti Albam; Historici Anglorum 3 (Rolls Ser. 44) (1869): 280 (sub A.D. 1240: "Obiit eodem die, viio. kalendas Junii [26 May], inditus comes Waranniae Willelmus. Qui de stirpe regia extitit procreatus; filius namque fuit Hamelini, filii regis Henrici."). Procs. Soc. of Antiqs. of London 2nd Ser. 6 (1876): 133-135 (charter of William, Earl Warenne). Clark Earls, Earldom, & Castle of Pembroke (1880): 69-75. Flower Vis. of Yorkshire 1563-4 (H.S.P. 16) (1881): 336-338 (Warren ped.: William Erl Waren son of Hamelyn. = Mawde doughter to William Bygot, Earl of Norfolk & Marshall of England."). Genealogist 7 (1883): 74. Doyle Official Baronage of England 2 (1886): 576 (sub Norfolk); 3 (1886): 470-471 (sub Surrey). Desc. Cat. Ancient Deeds 1(1890): 35, 38; 3 (1900): 137; 5 (1906): 97. Birch Cat. Seals in the British Museum 2(1892): 378 (seal of Maud Marshal, wife of William de Warenne, dated 1241-1245 - Obverse. Pointed oval. Standing, wearing a long dress and cloak, between two elegantly designed scrolls of foliage. Legend wanting. Reverse. A shield of arms: chequy [WARENNE]. Remainder of the design and legend wanting). Moore Cartularium Monasterii Sancti Johannis Baptiste de Colecestria 1(1897): 172-173 (charter of William, Earl Warenne dated c.1215). List of Sheriffs for England & Wales (PRO Lists and Indexes 9) (1898): 88. Salzman Hist. of the Parish of Hailsham (1901): 214. Salzman Feet of Fines Rel. Sussex 1 (Sussex Rec. Soc. 2) (1902): 79, 90-91, 93-94, 95-96. Warren Hist. & Gen. of the Warren Fam. (1902). Wrottesley Peds. from the Plea Rolls (1905): 519-520, 526. C.P.R. 1232-1247 (1906): 267. VCH Norfolk 2 (1906): 354-356. D.N.B. 20 (1909): 832-835 (biog. of William de Warenne). VCH Hampshire 4 (1911): 51-56. VCH Surrey 3 (1911): 61-69, 141-150. C.P. 4 (1916) Appendix H, 670 (chart); 9 (1935): 589-590 (sub Norfolk); 10 (1945): 364, footnote a (sub Pembroke); 12(1) (1953): 500-503 (sub Surrey). Clay Extinct & Dormant Peerages (1913): 236-238 (sub Warenne) Rye Some New Facts as to the Life of St. Thomas à Becket (1924): 63. VCH Berkshire 4 (1924): 178-183. Rpt. on the MSS of Lord de Lysle & DudIey 1 (Hist. MSS Comm. 77) (1925): 70-71. Curia Regis Rolls 5 (1931): 33-34 (suit dated 1207: "... Et sciendum quad comes [Roger Bigod] quod quidam recognitores sunt homines comitis War[enne]’, qui duxit filiam comitis Arund[el]’."). Foster Registrum Antiquissimum of the Cathedral Church of Lincoln 1 (1931) (Lincoln Rec. Soc. 27) (1931): 131-133; 3 (Lincoln Rec. Soc. 29) (1935): 216-218. Salzman Chartulary of the Priory of St. Pancras of Lewes 2 (Sussex Rec. Soc. 40) (1934): 19-21. Edwards Cal. Ancient Corr. Concerning Wales (Board of Celtic Studies, Hist. & Law 2) (1935): 29. Gibbs Early Charters of the Cathedral Church of St. Paul (Camden Soc. 3rd Ser. 58) (1939): 36-39. Early Yorkshire Charters 8 (1949): chart facing 1, 1-26, 47-51, 233-234. VCH Sussex 4 (1953): 160-165, 183; 7 (1940): 69-73. Paget Baronage of England (1957) 64: 1-2 (sub Bigod). Sanders English Baronies (1960): 28, 110-111, 129. Tremlett et al. Rolls of Arms Henry III (H.S.P. 113-4) (1967): 65 (arms of William, Earl of Warenne: Checky azure and or). Ancient Deeds - Ser. A 2 (List & Index Soc. 152) (1978): 50. VCH Somerset 4 (1978): 38-52. Harper-Bill Stoke by Clare Cartulary 1 (Suffolk Charters 4) (1982): 41 (charter of William de Warenne). Ellis Cat. Seals in the P.R.O. 2 (1981): 112 (seal of William de Warenne, Earl of Surrey dated 13th Cent. - Obverse. On horseback, galloping to right. He wears chain mail, long surcoat and flat-topped helmet, and holds a drawn sword and a shield with arms: cheeky. Reverse. A shield of arms: cheeky.). Brown Sibton Abbey Cartularies 1 (Suffolk Charters 7) (1985): 25, 58, 96; 2 (Suffolk Charters 8) (1986): 284-285 (charter of Hugh Bigod, Earl of Norfolk dated 1221-1225; charter named his wife, Countess Maud). Cooper Oxfordshire Eyre 1241 (Oxfordshire Rec. Soc. 56) (1989): 71. Morris Bigod Earls of Norfolk in the 13th Cent. (2005): opp. 1 (chart), 213 (list of charters of Maud Marshal). National Archives, E 40/339 (grant by [Ada]m de Reinevil to Maud Bigote, Countess of Warenne, of the homage and service of Agnes, daughter of Jordan de la Felede (i.e., 5 solidates of rent per annum), Richard son of Elyas, Humfrey, son of Robert Palmer, William, son of Robert Palmer (i.e., 2 solidates of rent and two sticks of eels per annum), William de Marisco [Marsh] and Constance de Reinevill, for tenements they held of him in Bramwich and Braint hund(des), the services (which are all expressed in solidates and denariates) being due at Whitsunday and the feast of St. Martin, and the eels at Mid-Lent; also all his water called ‘Brainthunddesmere' and the tight of fishing therein, and all right he has in the water of Don; paying yearly a pair of gloves or 1d. at Easter, and saving to him and his heirs the scutage of the said tenements when it falls due. For this grant the Countess has paid 100s.) (available at www.catalogue.nationalarchives.gov.uk/search.asp).
      Children of William de Warenne, Knt., by Maud Marshal:
      i. JOHN DE WARENNE, Knt., 7th Earl of Surrey [see next].
      ii. ISABEL DE WARENNE, married HUGH D'AUBENEY, Knt., 5th Earl of Arundel, Chief Butler of England [see CLIFTON 5.i].”

      2. “Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families,” Douglas Richardson (2013):
      “HUGH LE BIGOD, 5th Earl of Norfolk, hereditary Steward of the Household, hereditary Warden of Romford Forest, son and heir. He married probably before Lent 1207 MAUD MARSHAL, eldest daughter of William Marshal, Knt., 4th Earl of Pembroke (or Strigoil), hereditary Master Marshal, by Isabel, daughter of Richard Fitz Gilbert (nicknamed "Strongbow"), 2nd Earl of Pembroke (or Strigoil) [see MARSHAL 3 for her ancestry]. They had four sons, Roger, Knt. [6th Earl of Norfolk], Hugh, Knt., Ralph, Knt., and possibly William, and one daughter, Isabel. In 1215 he and his father joined the confederacy of the barons against the king. Both father and son were selected to be one of the twenty-five barons elected to guarantee the observance of Magna Carta, signed by King John 15 June 1215. In consequence, Hugh and his father were among the barons excommunicated by Pope Innocent III 16 Dec. 1215. He made homage for the Earldom of Norfolk 2 August 1221. In the period, 1221-5, he granted the homage and service of Hervey the baker and the tenement he held in Heveningharn, Suffolk to Sibton Abbey, Suffolk. In the same period, he granted the manor of Stockton, Norfolk to Hamo Lenveise. In the same period, he granted land in Mettingham, Suffolk to John Fitz Augustine. HUGH LE BIGOD, 5th Earl of Norfolk, died between 11 Feb. and 18 Feb. 1224/5. In May 1225 his widow, Maud, granted land in Stockton, Norfolk to her son, Ralph le Bigod. Maud married (2nd) before 13 October 1225 (as his 2nd wife) WILLIAM DE WARENNE, 6th Earl of Surrey [see WARENNE 8], son and heir of Hamelin, 5th Earl of Surrey, Vicomte of Touraine, by Isabel, daughter and heiress of William de Warenne, 3rd Earl of Surrey [see WARENNE 7 for his ancestry]. They had one son, John, Knt. [7th Earl of Surrey], and one daughter, Isabel. In 1226-7 Mary daughter of William de Newmarch, of Cateby, Yorkshire, granted to Maud Bigot, countess of Warenne and Norfolk, the hermitage of St. Margaret's, Cateby on the Don, with land in Eadrnunde croft, and common of pasture for the cattle of the hermitage, rendering yearly to the grantor at Easter white gloves. In 1227 he joined the Earl of Cornwall at Stamford in his revolt against the king, but at Christmas was with the king at York. In 1229 he was about the make a voyage on the king's service. He was heir in 1234 to his sister, Isabel de Warenne, widow of Gilbert de l'Aigle. In 1236 he acted as Butler at the Coronation of Queen Eleanor of Provence, in place of his son-in-law, Hugh, Earl of Arundel. In 1238 he was cited to appear before Robert Grosseteste, Bishop of Lincoln, because mass has been celebrated in the earl's hall at Grantham, Lincolnshire. SIR WILLIAM DE WARENNE, 6th Earl of Surrey, died testate in London 27 May 1240, and was buried in the priory church of Lewes, Sussex. In the period, 1240-6 his widow, Maud, granted a tenement in Thorne, Yorkshire to Richard de Otley her chaplain. In 1241 she granted Sir Adam de Newmarch and his heirs a water-course and ditch in Balne, Yorkshire from Flaxcleyker to the Dike to be 8 feet wide and 4 feet deep. In the period, 1241-5, she granted land in Stockton, Norfolk to her son, Ralph le Bigod. Maud was co-heiress in 1245 to her brother, Anselm Marshal, 9th Earl of Pembroke, by which she inherited the marshalcy of England and honour of Chepstow, Monmouthshire. In 1246-8 she confirmed the union of Kilkenny Abbey with Duiske Abbey. In 1246-8 she granted three silver marks of annual rent to St. George's Nunnery, Thetford, Norfolk. Maud, Marshal of England, Countess of Norfolk and Warenne, died 27 (or 29) March 1248.
      Placitorum in Domo Capitulari Westmonasteriensi Asservatorum Abbrevatio (1811): 56. Clutterbuck Hist. & Antiqs. of Hertford 2 (1821): 510-511 (Marshal-Bigod ped.). Dugdale Monasticon Anglicanum 4 (1823): 475, 478 (charter of Maud, Marshal of England, Countess of Norfolk and Warenne); 5 (1825): 266 (Obit. of Tintern Abbey: "Matilda Comitissa Warennæ obiit xxix. die Martii."). Lipscomb Hist. & Antiqs. of Buckingham 1(1847): 200-201 (Clare ped.). Jour. British Arch. Assoc. (1865): 91-103. Luard Annales Monastici 2 (Rolls Ser. 36) (1865): 300 (Annals of Waverley sub A.D. 1225: "Obiit Hugo Bigot comes Norfolchiæ."). Burke Gen. Hist. of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited & Extinct Peerages (1866): 53 (sub Bigod). Matthew of Paris Chronica Majora 2 (Rolls Ser. 57) (1874): 604-605, 642-644. Clark Earls, Earldom, & Castle of Pembroke (1880): 69-75. Marsh Annals of Chepstow Castle (1883): 110-132. Doyle Official Baronage of England 2 (1886): 576 (sub Norfolk); 3 (1886): 470-471 (sub Surrey). Desc. Cat. Ancient Deeds 1 (1890): 35, 38; 3 (1900): 137; 5 (1906): 97. Birch Cat. Seals in the British Museum 2 (1892): 378 (seal of Maud Marshal, wife of William de Warenne, dated 1241-5 - Obverse. Pointed oval. Standing, wearing a long dress and cloak, between two elegantly designed scrolls of foliage. Legend wanting. Reverse. A shield of arms: chequy [WARENNE]. Remainder of the design and legend wanting). Moore Cartularium Monasterii Sancti Johannis Baptiste de Colecestria 1 (1897): 172-173 (charter of William, Earl Warenne dated c.1215). VCH Norfolk 2(1906): 354-356. VCH Hampshim 4 (1911): 51-56. VCH Hertford 3 (1912): 232-240. Procs. Royal Irish Academy 35 (1918-20): 79-80 (undated charter of Maud, Marshal of England, Countess of Norfolk and Warenne; charter witnessed by her sons, Hugh le Bigod and Ralph le Bigod). Thompson Liber Vita Ecclesia Dunelmenis (Surtees Soc. 136) (1923): fo. 63b. VCH Berkshire 4 (1924): 178-183. Edwards Cal. Ancient Corr. Concerning Wales (Board of Celtic Studies, Hist. & Law 2) (1935): 29. C.P. 9 (1936): 589-590 (sub Norfolk); 10 (1945): 364, footnote a (sub Pembroke). Clay Early Yorkshire Charters 8 (1949): 24-26. VCH Sussex 4 (1953): 160-165, 183. Paget Baronage of England (1957) 64: 1-2 (sub Bigod); 65: 1-2 (sub Bigod of Settrington). Sanders English Baronies (1960): 47. Cheney Letters of Pope Innocent III 1198-1216 (1967): 172. VCH Somerset 4 (1978): 38-52. Brown Sibton Abbey Cartularies 1 (Suffolk Chatters?) (1985): 25, 58, 96; 2 (Suffolk Charters 8) (1986): 284-285 (charter of Hugh Bigod, Earl of Norfolk dated 1221-1225; charter names his wife, Countess Maud). Harper-Bill Dodnash Priory Charters (Suffolk Rec. Soc. 16) (1998): 83-86, 111. Morris Bigod Earls of Norfolk in the 1311 Cent (2005): opp. 1 (chart), 2-3, 212-213 (list of charters of Hugh le Bigod), 213 (list of charters of Maud Marshal). National Archives, E 40/339 (grant by [Ada]m de Reinevil to Maud Bigote, Countess of Warenne, of the homage and service of Agnes, daughter of Jordan de la Felede (i.e., 5 solidates of rent per annum), Richard son of Elyas, Humfrey, son of Robert Palmer, William, son of Robert Palmer (i.e., 2 solidates of rent and two sticks of eels per annum), William de Marisco [Marsh] and Constance de Reinevill, for tenements they held of him in Bramwich and Braint hund(des); also all his water called 'Brainthunddesmere' and the right of fishing therein, and all right he has in the water of Don; paying yearly a pair of gloves or Id. at Easter, and saving to him and his heirs the scutage of the said tenements when it falls due.) (available at www.catalogue.nationalarchives.gov.uk/search.asp).
      Children of Hugh le Bigod, by Maud Marshal:
      i. ROGER LE BIGOD, Knt., 6th Earl of Norfolk, hereditary Steward of the Household, hereditary Warden of Romford Forest, Chief Justice Itinerant in cos. Essex and Hertford, 1234, Marshal of England, 1246 (in right of his mother), Warden of the Town and Castle of Tulac, 1249, Warden of the Coast of Norfolk and Suffolk, 1257, Privy Councillor, 1258, Joint Guardian of England, 1259, Constable of Colchester and Orford Castles, son and heir, born about 1209. He may have been the unnamed son of Hugh le Bigod who was held hostage by King John during the civil war of 1215-17, and whose capture perhaps occurred when Framlingham was surrendered to royalist forces in March 1216. He married at Alnwick, Northumberland 1 June 1225 ISABEL OF SCOTLAND, daughter of William the Lion, King of Scots, by Ermengarde, daughter of Richard de Beaumont, Vicomte of Beaumont [see SCOTLAND 4 for her ancestry]. They had no issue. While still under age, he entered into his inheritance in 1228. He was knighted by King Henry III at Gloucester in 1233. He unsuccessfully disputed Simon de Montfort's claim to the Stewardship at the Coronation of Queen Eleanor. In 1242 he served the king in the early part of the disastrous campaign in Poitou. In 1245 he was chief of the English delegation to the Council of Lyons, and chief of the plenipotentiarires to treat of peace between the Emperor and the Pope. The same year he repudiated his wife, nominally on the ground of consanguinity. He was compelled by ecclesiastical sentence to take her back in 1253. The king confirmed his mother's commission of the marshalcy to him in 1246. In 1253 he witnessed a sentence of excommunication and anathema against violators of the liberties of the church and of the realm. In 1254 he brought over the king's message to the Grand Council for a supply of money. In 1257 he was member of an abortive embassy to France to demand certain rights. In 1258 he served as one of the ambassadors to attend the conference at Cambray. His wife, Isabel, appears to have been living in Gloucestershire in October 1263. Her exact date of death is unknown, but she was buried in the Black Friars, London. In 1270 he wrote the king asking him to allow Roger, son of his brother Hugh, to be his attorney as Marshal. SIR ROGER LE BIGOD, 6th Earl of Norfolk, died 3 (or 4) July 1270, and was buried 10 July at Thetford, Norfolk. Clutterbuck Hist. & Antiqs. of Hertford 2 (1821): 510-511 (Marshal-Bigod ped.). Dugdale Monasticon Anglicanum 4 (1823): 478; 5 (1825): 744 (charter of Isabel d'Aubeney, Countess of Arundel; charter witnessed by her brothers, Sir Roger Bigod, Earl of Norfolk, Sir Hugh Bigod, and John de Warenne). Norfolk Arch. 4 (1855): 92 (seal of Roger le Bigod, Earl of Norfolk). Jour. British Arch. Assoc. (1865): 91-103. Burke Gen. Hist. of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited & Extinct Peerages (1866): 53 (sub Bigod). Luard Annales Monastici 4 (Rolls Ser. 36) (1869): 235 (Annals of Oseney sub A.D. 1270- "Eodem anno obiit quinto nonas Julii [3 July] Rogerus Bigod marescallus Angliæ."). Marsh Annals of Chepstow Castle (1883): 110-132. Doyle Official Baronage of England 2 (1886): 577 (sub Norfolk). Birch Cat. Seals in the British Museum 2 (1892): 250 (seal of Roger le Bigod, Earl of Norfolk dated 1232-1234 - Obverse. To the right. In armour: hauberk of mail, surcoat, flat-topped helmet with vizor down, sword, shield of arms: a cross, in base, a lion passant. Reverse. A smaller counterseal. A shield of arms: a cross [BIGOD]. Legend: SECRETVM • ROGERI • COMMS • NORFOLCHIE.), 250-251 (seal of Roger le Bigod, as Marshal of England dated 1255- To the right. In armour: hauberk of mail, surcoat, flat-topped helmet with vizor down, A shield of arms. Horse caparisoned. Arms: a cross [BIGOD]. Legend: SECR • R • COMITIS • [NOR]F’ • MAR' • ANGLIE. Beaded borders.). C.Ch.R 1 (1903): 72. Dunbar Scottish Kings (1906): 76-86. D.N.B. 2 (1908): 487-488 (biog. of Roger Bigod). VCH Hampshire 4(1911): 51-56. VCH Berkshire 4(1924): 178-183. C.P. 9 (1936): 590-593 (sub Bigod). Paget Baronage of England (1957) 64: 1-2 (sub Bigod). Ross Cartulary of Cirencester Abbey 1 (1964): 68-69. Tremlett et al. Rolls of Arms Henry III (H.S.P. 113-4) (1967): 38 (Matthew Paris shields - arms of Roger le Bigod: Or, a cross gules), 116 (Glover's Roll - arms of Roger le Bigod: "or ove une croix de gales). Clanchy Civil Pleas of the Wiltshire Eyre 1249 (Wiltshire Rec. Soc. 26) (1971): 120. Clanchy Roll & Writ of the Berkshire Eyre of 1248 (Selden Soc. 90) (1973): 199. Brown Sibton Abbey Cartularies 1 (Suffolk Charters 7) (1985): 31, 51, 85; 2 (Suffolk Charters 8) (1986): 275-276, 307-308, 313-315; 3 (Suffolk Charters 9) (1987): 84-85, 220. Fryde Handbook of British Chron. (1986): 58. Curia Regis Rolls 18 (1999): 130-131, 275, 291, 329, 338; 19 (2002): 25-26, 29, 77, 86, 217, 296, 307, 384, 395-396, 413. Burke's Landed Gentry of Great Britain (2001): lxiii-lxv (sub Scottish Royal Lineage). Morris Bigod Earls of Norfolk in the 131h Cent. (2005): opp. 1 (chart), 3-3.
      ii. HUGH LE BIGOD, Knt. [see next].
      iii. RALPH LE BIGOD, Knt., of Settrington, Yorkshire, married BERTHA DE FERRERS [see ASKE 8; FURNIVAL 8].
      iv. RICHARD LE BIGOD, clerk. Auvray Registres de Grégoire IX 2 (1907): 93 (indulgence dated 1235 for Richard, clerk, "nepoti nobilium virorum [filiorum] marescalli Anglie, comitis Pambroch, et ... comitis Norfulcie germano").
      v. ISABEL LE BIGOD, married (1st) GILBERT DE LACY, of Ewyas Lacy, Herefordshire [see VERDUN 3]; (2nd) JOHN FITZ GEOFFREY, Knt., of Shere, Surrey [see VERDUN 3].”