Chris & Julie Petersen's Genealogy

Geoffrey Hose

Male - 1193


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  • Name Geoffrey Hose 
    Gender Male 
    Died From 28 Sep 1192 to 28 Sep 1193 
    Person ID I6870  Petersen-de Lanskoy
    Last Modified 27 May 2021 

    Family Gundred de Warenne,   d. Bef 9 May 1225 
    Last Modified 28 May 2021 
    Family ID F3057  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

  • Notes 
    • RESEARCH_NOTES:
      1. “Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families,” Douglas Richardson (2013):
      “GUNDRED DE WARENNE. She married (1st) PETER DE VALOINES, of Dersingham, Norfolk. They had no issue. He was dead at Michaelmas 1160. His widow, Gundred, married (2nd) WILLIAM DE COURCY (or CURCY), of Stogursey, Somerset, Nuneham (in Nuneham Courtenay), Oxfordshire, etc., King's Steward, son and heir of William de Courcy, of Stogursey, Somerset, Nuneham (in Nuneham Courtenay), Oxfordshire, etc., by Avice de Rumilly, daughter of William Meschin. They had one son, William, and one daughter, Alice. In the period, 1162-71, he granted St. Andrew of Stokes a mill called Mervines Milne at Northamp'. WILLIAM DE COURCY died in 1171. His widow, Gundred, married (3rd) GEOFFREY HOSE, Sheriff of Oxfordshire, 1179-82. They had one son, Henry. He died between Michaelmas 1192 and Michaelmas 1193. In 1194 she sued the Abbot of Abingdon regarding the advowson of the church of Nuneham Courtenay, Oxfordshire. At an unknown date, she gave the Priory of St. Denis near Southampton the advowson of the church of Little Fakenham, Suffolk, which was of her maritagium. Gundred died shortly before 9 May 1225.
      Memoirs illustrative of the Hist. & Antiqs. of the County & City of York (1848): 34-48 (undated confirmation charter of William de Courcy, Steward of the King of England; charter names his mother, Avice de Rumilly). List of Sheriffs for England & Wales (PRO Lists and Indexes 9) (1898): 107. Farrer Honors & Knights' Fees 2 (1924): 103-110. Early Yorkshire Charters 7 (Yorkshire Arch. Soc. Extra Ser. 5) (1947): 4-9. Clay Early Yorkshire Charters 8 (1949): 26-35. Tremlett & Blakiston Stogursy Charters (Somerset Rec. Soc. 61) (1949): xxiv (chart), 5-6 (charter of William son of William de Coucy dated 1162-71). VCH Oxford 5 (1957): 234-249. VCH Somerset 6 (1992): 136-137.”

      2. “Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families,” Douglas Richardson (2013):
      “REYNOLD DE WARRENE, of Attlebridge and Sherborne, Norfolk, Barcombe and Plumpton, Sussex, Harthill, Yorkshire, etc., and, in right of his wife, of Wormegay, Norfolk, Sheriff of Sussex, 1170-76, younger son, of age in 1147. He married ALICE DE WORMEGAY, daughter and heiress of William de Wormegay, of Wormegay, Norfolk. They had one son, William, and three daughters, Gundred, and probably Alice (wife of Peter de Melton alias Constable), and Muriel (nun at Carrow Priory). His older brother, William de Warenne, 3rd Earl of Surrey, employed him in the administration of his Norfolk estates, and, on leaving England on crusade in 1147, left him in charge of the honour. He continued to administer the honour on behalf of William son of King Stephen, husband of his niece, Isabel, and was his principal adviser. Under the terms of the treaty between King Stephen and Henry, Duke of Normandy [future King Henry III, he was given the option of having custody of the castles of Bellencombre and Mortemer, belonging to the honour of Warenne in Normandy; he served as a witness to the king's notification of this treaty. He was present at the Council of Clarendon in 1164. In 1167 he accompanied Maud, the king's daughter, to Saxony. He served as a justice itinerant for various counties in the period, 1168-76. In 1169 he was one of the barons of the Exchequer. In 1170 he was among Becket's enemies who took a principal part in opposing the landing of the archbishop in England. At an unknown date, he gave the church of Plumpton, Sussex to the Priory of Southwark. He became a monk at Lewes Priory, Sussex sometime in the year preceding Michaelmas 1179. His wife, Alice, was living about Michaelmas 1179.
      Watson Memoirs of the Ancient Early of Warren and Surrey 1 (1782): 66-76 (undated charter of Reynold de Warenne granted with consent of his wife, Alice, and his son, William; charter names his brother, William, Earl of Warenne, and William de Wormegay, father of his wife, Alice). Foss Judges of England 1 (1848): 319-320 (biog. of Reginald de Warenne). Robertson Materials for the Hist. of Thomas Becket: Archbishop of Canterbury 1 (Rolls Ser.) (1875): 99-100 (Reynold de Warenne styled brother of Earl William [de Warenne] [frater germanus Willelmi comitis] by William of Canterbury). Warner & Ellis Facsimiles of Royal & Other Charters in the British Museum 1 (1903): #25 (charter of William, Earl of Warenne dated c.1145-6; charter witnessed by Ralph de Warenne and Reynold de Warenne), #30 (charter of Reynold de Warenne dated c.1148-9; charter witnessed by Hugh and Robert de Pierrepont). Clay Early Yorkshire Charters 8 (1949): chart opp. 1, 26-35. Tanner Fams., Friends, & Allies (2004): 297 (chart), 315 (Warenne ped.).
      Children of Reynold de Warenne, by Alice de Wormegay:
      i. WILLIAM DE WARENNE [see next].
      ii. GUNDRED DE WARENNE, married (1st) PETER DE VALOINES [see DE LA MARE 7]; (2nd) WILLIAM DE COURCY [see DE LA MARE 7]; (3rd) GEOFFREY HOSE [see DE LA MARE 7].”