viernes, 7 de abril de 2023

Sancha Gómez De Saldaña Reina Consorte De León ♔★Bisabuela n°19★ Ref: QL-0960 |•••► #ESPAÑA 🏆🇪🇸★ #Genealogía #Genealogy


 19° Bisabuela/ Great Grandmother de: Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo →Sancha Gómez, Reina consorte de León is your 19th great grandmother.


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 (Linea Materna)

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Sancha Gómez, Reina consorte de León is your 19th great grandmother.of→ Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo→  Morella Álamo Borges

your mother → Belén Eloina Borges Ustáriz

her mother → Belén de Jesús Ustáriz Lecuna

her mother → Miguel María Ramón de Jesús Uztáriz y Monserrate

her father → María de Guía de Jesús de Monserrate é Ibarra

his mother → Teniente Coronel Manuel José de Monserrate y Urbina

her father → Antonieta Felicita Javiera Ignacia de Urbina y Hurtado de Mendoza

his mother → Isabel Manuela Josefa Hurtado de Mendoza y Rojas Manrique

her mother → Juana de Rojas Manrique de Mendoza

her mother → Constanza de Mendoza Mate de Luna

her mother → Fernando Mathé de Luna

her father → Estefanía Rodríguez de Ceballos, señora de Vado de las Estacas y Villalba

his mother → Ruy / Rodrigo González de Ceballos

her father → Gonzalo Díaz de Ceballos y Ordóñez

his father → María Ordóñez de Aza

his mother → Diego Ordóñez de Aza, Señor de Villamayor

her father → Ordoño Garciez de Aza

his father → García Ordóñez, conde de Nájera

his father → Ordoño Ordóñez, infante de León

his father → Ordoño el Ciego Ramírez de León, Infante de León

his father → Sancha Gómez, Reina consorte de León

his mother

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Sancha Gómez de Saldaña, Reina consorte de León MP

Spanish: Da. Sancha Gómez de Saldaña, Reina consorte de León

Gender: Female

Birth: circa 960

Spain

Death: 1035

Navarre, Pamplona, Basque

Immediate Family:

Daughter of Gómez Díaz, Conde de Saldaña y Liébana and Muniadona Fernández, condesa de Castilla

Wife of Ramiro III Flavio, rey de León

Mother of Ordoño el Ciego Ramírez de León, Infante de León

Sister of Diego Gómez de Saldaña; Urraca Gómez; García Gómez, Conde de Carrión, Saldaña y Liébana; Velasco Gómez; Sancho Gómez, Conde de Ceión and 2 others


Added by: Paul Douglas Van Dillen on April 24, 2008

Managed by: Pablo Romero (Curador) and 17 others

Curated by: Victar

 0 M

HISTORIA - history

https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sancha_G%C3%B3mez


http://genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00196656&tree=LEO


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Ramiro III Flavio, rey de León

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father


Muniadona Fernández, condesa de...

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Diego Gómez de Saldaña

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García Gómez, Conde de Carrió...

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Velasco Gómez

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Sancho Gómez, Conde de Ceión

brother


Munio Gómez

brother


Munio Gómez

brother


Don Sancho "el Velloso" de Cabrera

stepson

 


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Agregado por: Ing. Carlos Juan Felipe Urdaneta Alamo, MD.IG.


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RANGO HISTORICO


✺- 960→1 de enero:1​ en la Dinastía Zhou Posterior de China (Era de las Cinco Dinastías), llegan noticias de una alianza entre Liao y Han Posterior para invadir las tierras norteñas. El general Zhao Kuangyin es enviado para proteger la frontera. En el camino, las tropas deciden coronarle como Emperador, pues el trono estaba siendo ocupado por un infante de 7 años debido a la súbita muerte del emperador anterior. Según algunos relatos, Zhao aceptó solo por la insistencia de sus soldados→

→4 de febrero:2​ Fundación de la Dinastía Song, la cual unificará y gobernará toda China por 300 años. Zhao Kuangyin usurpa al trono de Zhou Posterior y se convierte en el Emperador Taizu de Song→

→21 de septiembre: Dunstán recibe el palio como arzobispo de Canterbury del papa Juan XII y se convierte en asesor jefe del nuevo rey de Inglaterra, Edgar el Pacífico. Reforma los monasterios e impone las reglas de San Benedicto: pobreza, castidad y obediencia para los monjes. Intenta imponer el celibato en el clero secular, sin éxito alguno. Insistió activamente que la tribu de los danos se debían integrar con los ingleses. También funda en este año la iglesia de San Dunstán en Sussex Oriental→

→8 de noviembre: Batalla de Andrassos (Montes Tauro, actual Turquía) entre el Imperio Romano Oriental y el Emirato Hamdánido. Los árabes, liderados por Sayf al-Dawla, sufren una derrota aplastante ante el general León Focas "El Joven" →

→El duque Ricardo I de Normandía se casa con Emma de Francia→

→Sancho I de León recupera el trono del Reino de León→

→El gran príncipe Sviatoslav I de Kiev realiza una campaña contra los jázaros→

→Miecislao I se convierte en príncipe de Polonia, tras la muerte de su padre. (fecha aproximada)

El reino de Aksum es destruido por invasores Beta Israel liderados por la reina Gudit→

→El palacio interno (dairi) del Palacio Heian en Kioto sufre un gran incendio, aunque luego es reconstruido.


✺- 965→1 de octubre - Juan XIII nombrado papa


✺- 970→4 de abril: inicia la construcción de la Mezquita de al-Azhar en El Cairo.

Mayo: la ciudad israelí de Ramla es tomada por los fatimíes.

23 de mayo: Pandulfo I de Benevento negocia la paz entre el Imperio Romano de Oriente (Bizancio) y el Sacro Imperio Romano Germánico. Tras esto, Otón I del Sacro Imperio acepta la soberanía de la Italia bizantina en el sur de la península.

Octubre: los fatimíes ocupan Damasco.

La Meca y Medina son capturadas por el Califato fatimí.

Vladimiro I de Kiev se convierte en Príncipe de Nóvgorod.

En el Reino de Pamplona (actual España), es entronizado Sancho Garcés II, primero en usar el título de rey de Navarra (en el 987)→

→García Fernández es nombrado conde de Castilla→

→Sviatoslav I de Kiev se alía con los pechenegos y búlgaros contra el Imperio bizantino, pero sus tropas son emboscadas y derrotadas en la Batalla de Arcadiópolis→

→Bardas Focas inicia una revuelta contra la Dinastía macedónica y se proclama Emperador en Kayseri. Su rebelión es aplastada a finales de año y Bardas es desterrado a la Isla de Quíos, donde pasará los siguientes 7 años.6

Erico el Victorioso se convierte en el primer rey de Suecia.

Nacimientos


✺- 975→La catedral de Maguncia fue comenzada por Willigis→

→Coronación del Rey Eduardo el Mártir en Inglaterra.


✺- 980→El rey Miecislao I establece el cristianismo como religión oficial de Polonia.


✺- 985→Al-Mansur saquea Barcelona el 6 de julio, tras 8 días de asedio→

→Erik el Rojo coloniza Groenlandia→

→Juan XV sucede a Juan XIV como papa.


✺- 990→En Suecia, Svend Forkbeard, rey vikingo danés funda la aldea de Lund→

→1 de enero: Rus de Kiev adopta el calendario juliano.


✺- 995→En la actual España, Sancho García es nombrado conde de Castilla.

→ En la actual España, Almanzor destruye la fortaleza y su iglesia de Santa María del Castillo de Saldaña durante una de sus campañas militares.

→ En el año 992, el Viernes Santo había coincidido con la fecha de la Anunciación de María, y se corrió el rumor de que en ese día había nacido el Anticristo, y por lo tanto el fin del mundo sucedería antes de los tres años


✺- 1000→1 de enero: según un mito historiográfico, en esta fecha amplios sectores de la población europea creyeron que este día sucedería el fin del mundo (apocalipsis milenarista) al cumplirse los mil años del nacimiento de Jesucristo, por lo cual se produjeron disturbios y hubo masivas peregrinaciones hacia Jerusalén para poder morir en Tierra Santa. Actualmente se sabe que no sucedieron tales hechos, cuyo relato se remonta al Renacimiento, siendo popularizado por los historiadores del siglo xix.

11 de marzo: en Polonia se celebra el Congreso de Gniezno, uno de los eventos más relevantes de la historia de ese país→

→29 de julio: en las Peñas de Cervera de Burgos, el caudillo musulmán Almanzor vence a la coalición cristiana (navarros, leoneses y castellanos) al mando de Sancho García y de García Gómez, en la batalla de Cervera→

→9 u 11 de septiembre: Batalla de Svolder. Expansión danés en el norte de Noruega→

→25 de diciembre: El Reino de Hungría se forma a partir del antiguo Principado de Hungría con la coronación de Esteban I→

→Los siguientes eventos son solo aproximaciones:


En Noruega, se funda la ciudad de Oslo (fecha tradicional; el aniversario N° 1000 se celebró en el año 2000)→

→Escandinavia, Islandia y Hungría son convertidas al cristianismo→

→En Noruega, los hermanastros Eiríkr Hákonarson y Sveinn Hákonarson son nombrados corregentes→

→Leif Erikson llega a América, llamándola Vinland, Helluland y Markland→

→En China se inventa la pólvora→

→En la actual Bangladés (al este de la India) se funda la ciudad de Daca (actual capital del país)→

→Ferdousí (935-1020) escribe Shāhnāmé (El libro de los reyes). Este cuenta la historia y mitología de Irán desde la creación del mundo hasta el siglo VII→

→El mercado árabe de esclavos comienza a ser un factor importante en la formación de los reinos sajelianos, una franja de mil km de ancho entre el océano Atlántico y el mar Rojo→

→En la región andina comienza un retroceso de las culturas Wari y Tiwanaku, mientras se desarrollan las de Chachapoyas y los chimúes→

→La migración túrquica llega a Europa Occidental, con mucha de su población convertida al islam→

→En Mesoamérica, termina el Período Clásico de los mayas con el abandono de las grandes ciudades del Petén como Palenque y Tikal. Chichén Itzá y Uxmal comienzan su actividad constructora. Mitla, principal ciudad zapoteca, Cholula y Tula florecen.


✺- 1005→Kazán, fundación de la ciudad→

→Malcolm II sucede a Kenneth III como rey de Escocia→

→Pomerania se subleva contra la iglesia→

→Schaffhausen empieza a acuñar sus propias monedas.


✺- 1010→Europa

Destrucción de Medina Azahara, a las afueras de Córdoba→

→Restauración de Hisham II en el Califato Omeya de Córdoba, sucediendo a Muhammad II al-Mahdi→

→Fundación de la ciudad de Yaroslavl→

Asia

Se establece en Vietnam la Dinastía Lý y la capital se desplaza a Hanói→

→El poeta persa Ferdousí termina de escribir Shahnameh→

América

El explorador vikingo Thorfinn Karlsefni funda un asentamiento en Norteamérica (fecha aproximada)→

África

La superficie del río Nilo se congela.1​


✺- 1015→Agosto: Canuto II de Dinamarca invade Inglaterra→

→Los Berserkers son prohibidos en Noruega→

→Olaf Haraldsson se convierte en rey de Noruega→

→Sviatopolk sucede a Vladimir como príncipe de Kiev.


✺- 1020→febrero-marzo:1​ en el Califato fatimí (Egipto), los nativos de Fustat se enfrentan a una coalición turco-berebere. Los esclavos negros prenden fuego la ciudad por tres días. Este evento es parte de una serie de rebeliones que debilitan severamente la autoridad de los fatimís→

→15 de abril: un terremoto devasta Roma durante las festividades del Viernes Santo. Una agrupación de judíos es acusada como causante del desastre, por lo que son condenados a muerte por el papa Benedicto VIII.2​

15 de junio: las fuerzas del Imperio romano de Oriente dirigidas por Basilio Boioanes toman Troia (Italia)→

→17 de junio: el papa Benedicto VIII se reúne con Enrique II del Sacro Imperio en Bamberg y le pide ayuda para recuperar el control del sur de Italia.3​

1 de septiembre: Mahmud de Gazni envía a su hijo para conquistar Ġawr, que cae al cabo de una semana.4​

Roberto II de Francia funda la ciudad de Saint-Germain-en-Laye→

→Hovhannes-Smbat III asciende al trono de la Armenia Bagrátida→

→Inicia la construcción del Castillo de Habsburgo.


✺- 1025→Se funda el Monasterio de Montserrat, que hoy alberga unos 4000 monjes→

→Constantino VIII es nombrado emperador del Imperio bizantino→

→Miecislao II, es nombrado rey de Polonia.


✺- 1030→Fundación de Tartu en Estonia→

→Fundación de Kaunas en Lituania→

→Georgia y emir de Tiflis se enfrentan a Shaddadids→

→Fin del Califato


✺- 1035→Nace el Reino de Aragón, por la unión de los condados de Aragón, Sobrarbe y Ribagorza en la figura de Ramiro I→

→Comienzo del reinado de Fernando I de León

División del reino de Pamplona



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Agregado por: Ing. Carlos Juan Felipe Urdaneta Alamo, MD.IG.


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Honfroi seigneur de Vieilles ★Bisabuelo n°26★ Ref: SV-0980 |•••► #FRANCIA 🇫🇷🏆 #Genealogía #Genealogy


 26 ° Bisabuelo/ Great Grandfather de: Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo →Honfroi, seigneur de Vieilles is your 26th great grandfather.


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 (Linea Materna)

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Honfroi, seigneur de Vieilles is your 26th great grandfather.of→ Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo→  Morella Álamo Borges

your mother → Belén Eloina Borges Ustáriz

her mother → Belén de Jesús Ustáriz Lecuna

her mother → Miguel María Ramón de Jesús Uztáriz y Monserrate

her father → María de Guía de Jesús de Monserrate é Ibarra

his mother → María Manuela Ibarra y Galindo

her mother → Andres Eugenio Rafael Ibarra é Ibarra

her father → Juan Julián de Ibarra y Herrera

his father → Antonia Nicolasa Sarmiento de Herrera y Loaisa

his mother → Juan Sarmiento de Herrera y Fernández Pacheco, Alférez Mayor

her father → Agustín Sarmiento de Herrera y Rojas

his father → Diego Sarmiento de Rojas y Ayala

his father → Iseo de León y Pérez de Mungía

his mother → Elvira Pérez de Munguía y Bethencourt

her mother → Margarita de Bethencourt Perdomo

her mother → Jean d'Ariette Prud'homme

her father → Regnault de Bettencourt

his father → Jean III de Bettencourt

his father → Isabeau de Clermont

his mother → Isabeau d' Harcourt

her mother → Jean I d' Harcourt

her father → Richard d' Harcourt

his father → Jeanne de Beaumont, Dame de Meulan

his mother → Robert II de Beaumont, Comte de Meulan

her father → Waleran IV de Beaumont, Comte de Meulan, 1st Earl of Worcester

his father → Robert de Beaumont-le-Roger, Comte de Meulan, 1st Earl of Leicester

his father → Roger de Beaumont, Seigneur de Portaudemer

his father → Honfroi, seigneur de Vieilles

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Honfroi de Beaumont-le-Roger (de Vieilles), Seigneur de Vieilles et Pont Audemer  MP

Gender: Male 

Birth: 980

Pont-Audemer, Eure, Haute-Normandie, France 

Death: September 28, 1044 (63-64)

Normandel, Orne, Basse-Normandie, France 

Place of Burial: l’Abbaye Saint-Pierre de Préaux, Lisieux, near Pont-Audemer, Eure, Haute-Normandie, France

Immediate Family:

Son of Thorold, seigneur de Pont-Audemer and Wevia de Crépon

Husband of Gervaise Pont-Audemer d'Harcourt de Veules; Auberee de la Haye, Dame de Brothoune and Nevia Sveynsdatter

Father of Robert I d'Umfreville; William Paynel, Sheriff of Lincolnshire; Robert de Vieilles, Seigneur; William de Vieilles; Dunelme de Vieilles and 2 others

Brother of Herbrand de Pont-Audemer; Richard de Harcourt; Gilbert de Harcourt; Emma de Pont-Audemer and Turquetil (Thurketill) de Neufmarché 


Added by: "Skip" Bremer on June 10, 2007

Managed by: Margaret (C) and 162 others

Curated by: Pam Wilson (on hiatus)

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Aboutedit | history

Please see Medland's 7 Sep 2022 update: Normandy Nobility: Arques, Aumâle, Caux, Rouen, EU: "Seigneurs de Pont-Audemer, Seigneur de Vieilles." — Note: Cawley and his cohorts prefer that people not copy and paste entire swaths of information. Instead, visit the website, read the information there, and consider donating to FMG's efforts.

TORF, son of ---. m ---. One child:

1. THOROLD [Turold] de Pont-Audemer ... m WEWA, sister of GUNNORA... Two Children:


1. HONFROI de Vieilles: m AUBREY... Four children:


i) ROGER...

ii) ROBERT...

iii) GUILLAUME...

iv) DUNELME...


2. [ROGER]...


–––––––––––––––––––––


fr.Wikipédia (Auto-translated French):


"...In 1033, Onfroy de Vieilles, lord of Beaumont and Pont-Audemer, decided to rebuild the monastery plundered by the Normans. From 1035, monastic life resumed with the arrival of six monks from Fontenelle under the direction of Abbot Eimard. In 1040, Aubrée, wife of Onfroy, established a monastery of nuns at Saint-Michel-de-Préaux dedicated to Saint Léger.... At the end of his life, Onfroy de Vieilles took the monastic habit and ended his days at the abbey, as did his son Roger de Beaumont in 1094. They were buried there." — fr.Wikipédia "Abbaye Saint-Pierre de Préaux".


Wikipedia Vitals

fr.Wikipédia, Onfroi de Vielles, dernière modification 28 juillet 2022.

en.Wikipedia Humphrey de Vielles, updated 15 July 2022.

"Humphrey de Vieilles[1] (died c. 1050) was the first holder of the "grand honneur" of Beaumont-le-Roger, one of the most important groups of domains in eastern Normandy[2].... He was married to Albreda or Alberée de la Haye Auberie.


"His early life and origins are the subject of much discussion. As reported by later Norman chronicler Robert of Torigni, he was the son of Thorold de Pont-Audemer and grandson of a Torf, from whose name derived that of the village of Tourville-sur-Pont-Audemer.[3] Humphrey's mother, according to Robert of Torigni, was Duvelina, sister of Gunnor, concubine of Richard I, Duke of Normandy....."


[For more biographical information, please click one of the above links.]


Family and Descendants

"His known children by his wife Albreda or Alberée de la Haye were:


1. Robert, the elder, assassinated by Roger de Clères[6] after 1066 and buried at the abbey of Saint-Pierre de Préaux;[7]

2. Roger de Beaumont, known as le Barbe († 1094), who succeeded his father.

3. Henri de Beaumont fights Roger de Toesny with his brother Roger, sent by his father in 1040.[8]

4. Dunelma (perhaps a corrupted form of Duvelina, the name of her grandmother) sister of Roger of Beaumont and mother of a daughter who was a nun at Saint-Léger de Préaux


One other possible child: Guillaume de Beaumont, Monk at the abbey of Saint-Pierre de Préaux"


Notes and references

Vieilles is the name of a former village, now merged with Beaumont-le-Roger

Pierre Bauduin, La première Normandie (Xe-XIe siècles), Presses Universitaires de Caen, 2004, p.216-217. Among the other grands honneurs of the Pays d'Ouche, were those of Breteuil and of Conches

William of Jumièges reports that this Turolf was the brother of Turquetil, the first lord of Harcourt, and the uncle of Ansketil de Harcourt. The archaeologist Jacques Le Maho supports Torf's identification with Turstin

Veronica Gazeau, Monachisme et aristocratie au XIe siècle : l'exemple de la famille de Beaumont,, PhD thesis, University of Caen, 1986-1987 (dactyl.), p.67-73. The abbot of Bernay, Raoul, parent of Humphrey, would have entrusted to him between 1027 and 1040, part of the heritage of his monastery. Like other lords of the beginning of the 11th century, like the family of Bellême, he increased the family's power by recovering or winning of ecclesiastical lands

Orderic Vitalis, History of Normandy, Éd. Guizot, 1826, vol. III, livre VIII, p. 373. Charpillon et Caresme, Dictionnaire historique des communes de l'Eure, vol I, 1879, art. Beaumont-le-Roger

Sources

i) (French) Pierre Bauduin, La première Normandie (Xe-XIe siècles), Presses Universitaires de Caen, 2004

ii) (French) Véronique Gazeau, Monachisme et aristocratie au XIe siècle : l'exemple de la famille de Beaumont, doctoral thesis, Université de Caen, 1986-1987 (dactyl.)

iii) Seigneurs de Beaumont-le-Roger on Medieval Lands


______________________


Bernard the Dane

?


└─>Torf le Riche, seigneur de Pont-Audemer (born c. 910)


└─>Turold de Pont-Audemer (c. 940)

└─>Onfroi de Vieilles called de Harcourt (c. 975)

└─>Roger de Beaumont (le Barbu) († 1094)

├─>Robert de Beaumont (1050 – 1118)

│ │

│ ├─>Galéran IV de Meulan (1104 – 1166)

│ │ └─> earls of Worcester branch

│ │

│ └─>Robert II de Beaumont (1104 – 1168)

│ └─> earls of Leicester branch

└─>Henri de Beaumont called de NeufBourg (1046 – 1123)

└─> earls of Warwick branch



Generation Three

5. HUMPHREY3 DE VEULLES (Tourade de PONTAUDEMER2, Torf1),


son of (2) Tourade2 and Eva (de CREPON) PONTAUDEMER,


was born circa 980[100], and was buried in Preaux Abbey, Ponteaudemer, Normandy, France.


He married circa 1005, AUBEREE DE LA HAYE, who died circa 1045[100]. [68, 27, 103, 113]


Children: 12 i. ROBERT4 DE BEAUMONT, b. circa 1005.


+ 13 ii. COUNT ROGER DE BEAUMONT of Ponteaudemer, b. circa 1022, d. in 1094; m. (ZN-2) COUNTESS ADELIZA DE MEULENT circa 1040.


11. JOSCELINE3 DE PONTAUDEMER (Tourade2, Torf1), daughter of (2) Tourade2 and Eva (de CREPON) PONTAUDEMER, was born between 964 and 980, and died between 994 and 1090. She married in 994, (AAL-3) HUGUES DE MONTGOMERY[31], son of (AAL-2) Roger MONTGOMERY. [31]


Child: See (AAL-3) Hugues de MONTGOMERY


http://armidalesoftware.com/issue/full/Thaler_238_main.html#N11

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Humphrey de Vielles

Born: 980, Pont Audemer, Eure, Beaumont, Normandy, France

Died: 28 Sep 1044, Preaux, Normandy, France

Buried: Preaux, Normandy, France


Father: Thorold De PONTAUDEMAR

Mother: Wevia De CREPON

Married: Aubrey De La HAIE


Children:

1. Roger De BEAUMONT (b. 1022) (m. Adeline De Meulan)

2. Robert De BEAUMONT

3. William De BEAUMONT


http://www.geni.com/profile/edit_about_me/6000000003232499792


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Nevia Sveynsdatter

wife


Auberee de la Haye, Dame de Brot...

wife


Robert de Vieilles, Seigneur

son


William de Vieilles

son


Dunelme de Vieilles

daughter


Roger de Beaumont, Seigneur de P...

son


Albreda de Harcourt

daughter


Gervaise Pont-Audemer d'Harcourt...

wife


William Paynel, Sheriff of Linco...

son


Robert I d'Umfreville

son


Wevia de Crépon

mother


Thorold, seigneur de Pont-Audemer

father

 


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Agregado por: Ing. Carlos Juan Felipe Urdaneta Alamo, MD.IG.


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Roger de Beaumont, Seigneur de Portaudemer ★Bisabuelo n°25★ Ref: SP-1022 |•••► #FRANCIA 🇫🇷🏆 #Genealogía #Genealogy


 25 ° Bisabuelo/ Great Grandfather de: Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo →Roger de Beaumont, Seigneur de Portaudemer is your 25th great grandfather.


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 (Linea Materna)

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Roger de Beaumont, Seigneur de Portaudemer is your 25th great grandfather.of→ Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo→  Morella Álamo Borges

your mother → Belén Eloina Borges Ustáriz

her mother → Belén de Jesús Ustáriz Lecuna

her mother → Miguel María Ramón de Jesús Uztáriz y Monserrate

her father → María de Guía de Jesús de Monserrate é Ibarra

his mother → María Manuela Ibarra y Galindo

her mother → Andres Eugenio Rafael Ibarra é Ibarra

her father → Juan Julián de Ibarra y Herrera

his father → Antonia Nicolasa Sarmiento de Herrera y Loaisa

his mother → Juan Sarmiento de Herrera y Fernández Pacheco, Alférez Mayor

her father → Agustín Sarmiento de Herrera y Rojas

his father → Diego Sarmiento de Rojas y Ayala

his father → Iseo de León y Pérez de Mungía

his mother → Elvira Pérez de Munguía y Bethencourt

her mother → Margarita de Bethencourt Perdomo

her mother → Jean d'Ariette Prud'homme

her father → Regnault de Bettencourt

his father → Jean III de Bettencourt

his father → Isabeau de Clermont

his mother → Isabeau d' Harcourt

her mother → Jean I d' Harcourt

her father → Richard d' Harcourt

his father → Jeanne de Beaumont, Dame de Meulan

his mother → Robert II de Beaumont, Comte de Meulan

her father → Waleran IV de Beaumont, Comte de Meulan, 1st Earl of Worcester

his father → Robert de Beaumont-le-Roger, Comte de Meulan, 1st Earl of Leicester

his father → Roger de Beaumont, Seigneur de Portaudemer

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Roger de Beaumont, comte de Meulan  MP

Gender: Male 

Birth: October 16, 1022

Pont-Audemer, Haute-Normandie, France 

Death: November 29, 1094 (72)

Abey Preaux, Les Préaux, Eure, Normandy, France 

Place of Burial: Abbey, Preaux, Normandy, France

Immediate Family:

Son of Honfroi, seigneur de Vieilles and Auberee de la Haye, Dame de Brothoune

Husband of Adeline, de Meulan

Father of Henry de Newberg de Beaumont, 1st Earl of Warwick; Robert de Beaumont-le-Roger, Comte de Meulan, 1st Earl of Leicester and Aubreye de Beaumont, Abess de St Léger-de-Préaux, later of Eton

Brother of Robert de Vieilles, Seigneur; William de Vieilles; Dunelme de Vieilles and Albreda de Harcourt

Half brother of Robert I d'Umfreville and William Paynel, Sheriff of Lincolnshire 


Added by: "Skip" Bremer on June 10, 2007

Managed by: Margaret (C) and 201 others

Curated by: Terry Jackson (Switzer)

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Roger de Beaumont, Seigneur de Portaudemer in GenealogieOnline Family Tree Index


Roger de Beaumont, Seigneur de Portaudemer in GenealogieOnline Family Tree Index


Roger de Beaumont, Seigneur de Portaudemer in GenealogieOnline Family Tree Index


Roger de Beaumont, Seigneur de Portaudemer in GenealogieOnline Family Tree Index


Roger de Beaumont, Seigneur de Portaudemer in GenealogieOnline Family Tree Index


Roger de Beaumont, Seigneur de Portaudemer in GenealogieOnline Family Tree Index


Roger de Beaumont, Seigneur de Portaudemer in GenealogieOnline Family Tree Index


Roger de Beaumont, Seigneur de Portaudemer in GenealogieOnline Family Tree Index


Roger de Beaumont, Seigneur de Portaudemer in GenealogieOnline Family Tree Index


Roger de Beaumont, Seigneur de Portaudemer in GenealogieOnline Family Tree Index

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Aboutedit | history

Roger de Beaumont http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roger_de_Beaumont


Roger de Beaumont (le Barbu) http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roger_de_Beaumont_%28le_Barbu%29


Roger de Beaumont-le-Roger (c. 1015 – 29 November 1094) was son of Humphrey de Vielles (himself a great-nephew of the Duchess Gunnora of Normandy) and his wife Albreda de la Haye Auberie. Roger de Beaumont, Lord of Beaumont-le-Roger and Pont-Audemer, Viscount of Hiesmes, was thus a second cousin once removed of the Conqueror.


Roger was nicknamed Barbatus or La Barbe because he wore a moustache and beard while the Normans usually were clean shaven. This peculiarity is recognized in the thirty-second panel of the Bayeux Tapestry where he is depicted sitting at a feast with Duke William on his left hand, Odo, brother of William and Bishop of Bayeux, in the centre.


Planché tells us that "he was the noblest, the wealthiest, and the most valiant seigneur of Normandy, and the greatest and most trusted friend of the Danish family." There is an explanation for this - as an older cousin who had never rebelled against the young Duke, he was part of the kinship group of noblemen that William relied upon in governing Normandy and fighting off frequent rebellion and invasions. The historian Frank McLynn notes that William relied on relatives descended via his mother (namely his half-brothers and brothers-in-law) and on relatives descended from the Duchess Gunnora's sisters, since his own paternal kin had proved unreliable.


Wace, the 12th century historian, says that "at the time of the invasion of England, Roger was summoned to the great council at Lillebonne, on account of his wisdom; but that he did not join in the expedition as he was too far advanced in years." Although Roger could not fight, he did not hesitate in contributing his share of the cost, for he provided at his own expense sixty vessels for the conveyance of the troops across the channel. Furthermore, his eldest son and heir fought bravely at Hastings as noted in several contemporary records. As a result, Roger's elder sons were awarded rich lands in England, and both eventually were made English earls by the sons of the Conqueror.


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roger_de_Beaumont


(Numerous Geni managers have Roger's birth as 1022, but this Wiki article state c1015. Please delete this comment if resolved. Arthur Jackson)


Birth Date 1049 or 1020


Roger de Beaumont


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


Roger de Beaumont-le-Roger (c. 1015 – 29 November 1094) was son of Humphrey de Vielles (himself a great-nephew of the Duchess Gunnora of Normandy) and his wife Albreda de la Haye Auberie. Roger de Beaumont, Lord of Beaumont-le-Roger and Pont-Audemer, Viscount of Hiesmes, was thus a second cousin once removed of the Conqueror.


Life


Roger was nicknamed Barbatus or La Barbe because he wore a moustache and beard while the Normans usually were clean shaven. This peculiarity is recognized in the forty-first panel of the Bayeux Tapestry where he is depicted sitting at a feast with Duke William on his left hand, Odo, brother of William and Bishop of Bayeux, in the centre.


Planché tells us that "he was the noblest, the wealthiest, and the most valiant seigneur of Normandy, and the greatest and most trusted friend of the Danish family." There is an explanation for this - as an older cousin who had never rebelled against the young Duke, he was part of the kinship group of noblemen that William relied upon in governing Normandy and fighting off frequent rebellion and invasions. The historian Frank McLynn notes that William relied on relatives descended via his mother (namely his half-brothers and brothers-in-law) and on relatives descended from the Duchess Gunnora's sisters, since his own paternal kin had proved unreliable.


Wace, the 12th century historian, says that "at the time of the invasion of England, Roger was summoned to the great council at Lillebonne, on account of his wisdom; but that he did not join in the expedition as he was too far advanced in years." Although Roger could not fight, he did not hesitate in contributing his share of the cost, for he provided at his own expense sixty vessels for the conveyance of the troops across the channel. Furthermore, his eldest son and heir fought bravely at Hastings as noted in several contemporary records. As a result, Roger's elder sons were awarded rich lands in England, and both eventually were made English earls by the sons of the Conqueror.


Family and children


He married circa 1048 or earlier Adeline of Meulan (ca. 1014-1020 - 1081), daughter of Waleran III, Count de Meulan and Oda de Conteville, and sister and heiress of a childless Count of Meulan. Meulan eventually passed to their elder son who became Count of Meulan in 1081. Their surviving children were:


Robert de Beaumont, 1st Earl of Leicester, Count of Meulan (b ca 1049 - 1118) who succeeded his father in the major part of his lands, and who fought in his first battle at Hastings.


Henry de Beaumont, 1st Earl of Warwick, overshadowed by his elder brother, but who established a more enduring line of Beaumont earls at Warwick Castle.


William de Beaumont (not mentioned in most sources).


Alberee de Beaumont, Abbess of Eton.


Roger de Beaumont in Literature


Roger de Beaumont appears as a minor character (the overlord of the secondary hero) in Georgette Heyer's historical novel The Conqueror. His family appears little in the book, but reference is made to Roger's wife and daughters and his eldest son.


External links


Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America Before 1700 by Frederick Lewis Weis, Lines: 50-24, 151-24.


Beaumont genealogy , to be used with caution (check soc.genealogy.medieval)


The Conqueror and His Companions: Robert de Beaumont (link now broken)


Sources


Edward T. Beaumont, J.P. The Beaumonts in History. A.D. 850-1850. Oxford.


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


Roger de Beaumont-le-Roger (c. 1015 – 29 November 1094) was son of Humphrey de Vielles (himself a great-nephew of the Duchess Gunnora of Normandy) and his wife Albreda de la Haye Auberie. Roger de Beaumont, Lord of Beaumont-le-Roger and Pont-Audemer, Viscount of Hiesmes, was thus a second cousin once removed of the Conqueror.


Life


Roger was nicknamed Barbatus or La Barbe because he wore a moustache and beard while the Normans usually were clean shaven. This peculiarity is recognized in the thirty-second panel of the Bayeux Tapestry where he is depicted sitting at a feast with Duke William on his left hand, Odo, brother of William and Bishop of Bayeux, in the centre.


Planché tells us that "he was the noblest, the wealthiest, and the most valiant seigneur of Normandy, and the greatest and most trusted friend of the Danish family." There is an explanation for this - as an older cousin who had never rebelled against the young Duke, he was part of the kinship group of noblemen that William relied upon in governing Normandy and fighting off frequent rebellion and invasions. The historian Frank McLynn notes that William relied on relatives descended via his mother (namely his half-brothers and brothers-in-law) and on relatives descended from the Duchess Gunnora's sisters, since his own paternal kin had proved unreliable.


Wace, the 12th century historian, says that "at the time of the invasion of England, Roger was summoned to the great council at Lillebonne, on account of his wisdom; but that he did not join in the expedition as he was too far advanced in years." Although Roger could not fight, he did not hesitate in contributing his share of the cost, for he provided at his own expense sixty vessels for the conveyance of the troops across the channel. Furthermore, his eldest son and heir fought bravely at Hastings as noted in several contemporary records. As a result, Roger's elder sons were awarded rich lands in England, and both eventually were made English earls by the sons of the Conqueror.


Family and children


He married circa 1048 or earlier Adeline of Meulan (ca. 1014-1020 - 1081), daughter of Waleran III, Count de Meulan and Oda de Conteville, and sister and heiress of a childless Count of Meulan. Meulan eventually passed to their elder son who became Count of Meulan in 1081. Their surviving children were:


Robert de Beaumont, 1st Earl of Leicester, Count of Meulan (b ca 1049 - 1118) who succeeded his father in the major part of his lands, and who fought in his first battle at Hastings.


Henry de Beaumont, 1st Earl of Warwick, overshadowed by his elder brother, but who established a more enduring line of Beaumont earls at Warwick Castle.


William de Beaumont (not mentioned in most sources).


Alberee de Beaumont, Abbess of Eton.


Roger de Beaumont in Literature


Roger de Beaumont appears as a minor character (the overlord of the secondary hero) in Georgette Heyer's historical novel The Conqueror. His family appears little in the book, but reference is made to Roger's wife and daughters and his eldest son.


External links


Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America Before 1700 by Frederick Lewis Weis, Lines: 50-24, 151-24.


Beaumont genealogy , to be used with caution (check soc.genealogy.medieval)


The Conqueror and His Companions: Robert de Beaumont (link now broken)


Sources


Edward T. Beaumont, J.P. The Beaumonts in History. A.D. 850-1850. Oxford.


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


Roger de Beaumont-le-Roger (c. 1015 – 29 November 1094) was son of Humphrey de Vielles (himself a great-nephew of the Duchess Gunnora of Normandy) and his wife Albreda de la Haye Auberie. Roger de Beaumont, Lord of Beaumont-le-Roger and Pont-Audemer, Viscount of Hiesmes, was thus a second cousin once removed of the Conqueror.


He married circa 1048 or earlier Adeline of Meulan (ca. 1014-1020 - 1081), daughter of Waleran III, Count de Meulan and Oda de Conteville, and sister and heiress of a childless Count of Meulan. Meulan eventually passed to their elder son who became Count of Meulan in 1081. Their surviving children were:


1. Robert de Beaumont, 1st Earl of Leicester, Count of Meulan (b ca 1049 - 1118) who succeeded his father in the major part of his lands, and who fought in his first battle at Hastings.

2. Henry de Beaumont, 1st Earl of Warwick, overshadowed by his elder brother, but who established a more enduring line of Beaumont earls at Warwick Castle.

3. William de Beaumont (not mentioned in most sources).

4. Alberee de Beaumont, Abbess of Eton.


Roger de Beaumont-le-Roger (c. 1015 – 29 November 1094) was son of Humphrey de Vielles (himself a great-nephew of the Duchess Gunnora of Normandy) and his wife Albreda de la Haye Auberie. Roger de Beaumont, Lord of Beaumont-le-Roger and Pont-Audemer, Viscount of Hiesmes, was thus a second cousin once removed of the Conqueror.


He married circa 1048 or earlier Adeline of Meulan (ca. 1014-1020 - 1081), daughter of Waleran III, Count de Meulan and Oda de Conteville, and sister and heiress of a childless Count of Meulan. Meulan eventually passed to their elder son who became Count of Meulan in 1081. Their surviving children were:


Robert de Beaumont, 1st Earl of Leicester, Count of Meulan (b ca 1049 - 1118) who succeeded his father in the major part of his lands, and who fought in his first battle at Hastings.


Henry de Beaumont, 1st Earl of Warwick, overshadowed by his elder brother, but who established a more enduring line of Beaumont earls at Warwick Castle.


William de Beaumont (not mentioned in most sources).


Alberee de Beaumont, Abbess of Eton.


Roger de Beaumont


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


This article is about a French nobleman. For bishop of St Andrews, see Roger de Beaumont (bishop).


Roger de Beaumont-le-Roger (c. 1015 – 29 November 1094) was son of Humphrey de Vielles (himself a great-nephew of the Duchess Gunnora of Normandy) and his wife Albreda de la Haye Auberie. Roger de Beaumont, Lord of Beaumont-le-Roger and Pont-Audemer, Viscount of Hiesmes, was thus a second cousin once removed of the Conqueror.


Life


Roger was nicknamed Barbatus or La Barbe because he wore a moustache and beard while the Normans usually were clean shaven. This peculiarity is recognized in the thirty-second panel of the Bayeux Tapestry where he is depicted sitting at a feast with Duke William on his left hand, Odo, brother of William and Bishop of Bayeux, in the centre.


Planché tells us that "he was the noblest, the wealthiest, and the most valiant seigneur of Normandy, and the greatest and most trusted friend of the Danish family." There is an explanation for this - as an older cousin who had never rebelled against the young Duke, he was part of the kinship group of noblemen that William relied upon in governing Normandy and fighting off frequent rebellion and invasions. The historian Frank McLynn notes that William relied on relatives descended via his mother (namely his half-brothers and brothers-in-law) and on relatives descended from the Duchess Gunnora's sisters, since his own paternal kin had proved unreliable.


Wace, the 12th century historian, says that "at the time of the invasion of England, Roger was summoned to the great council at Lillebonne, on account of his wisdom; but that he did not join in the expedition as he was too far advanced in years." Although Roger could not fight, he did not hesitate in contributing his share of the cost, for he provided at his own expense sixty vessels for the conveyance of the troops across the channel. Furthermore, his eldest son and heir fought bravely at Hastings as noted in several contemporary records. As a result, Roger's elder sons were awarded rich lands in England, and both eventually were made English earls by the sons of the Conqueror.


[edit]Family and children


He married circa 1048 or earlier Adeline of Meulan (ca. 1014-1020 - 1081), daughter of Waleran III, Count de Meulan and Oda de Conteville, and sister and heiress of a childless Count of Meulan. Meulan eventually passed to their elder son who became Count of Meulan in 1081. Their surviving children were:


Robert de Beaumont, 1st Earl of Leicester, Count of Meulan (b ca 1049 - 1118) who succeeded his father in the major part of his lands, and who fought in his first battle at Hastings.


Henry de Beaumont, 1st Earl of Warwick, overshadowed by his elder brother, but who established a more enduring line of Beaumont earls at Warwick Castle.


William de Beaumont (not mentioned in most sources).


Alberee de Beaumont, Abbess of Eton.


[edit]Roger de Beaumont in Literature


Roger de Beaumont appears as a minor character (the overlord of the secondary hero) in Georgette Heyer's historical novel The Conqueror. His family appears little in the book, but reference is made to Roger's wife and daughters and his eldest son.


http://www.thepeerage.com/p381.htm#i3810


Roger de Beaumont, Seigneur de Portaudemer


M, #3810, d. 29 November 1094


Last Edited=12 Jun 2009


Roger de Beaumont, Seigneur de Portaudemer was the son of Humphrey de Vieilles, Seigneur de Vielles et Pont-Audemer and Aubreye (?).1 He died on 29 November 1094.

Roger de Beaumont, Seigneur de Portaudemer was also known as Roger de Bellomont, Earl of Mellent.2 He gained the title of Seigneur de Portaudemer.

Child of Roger de Beaumont, Seigneur de Portaudemer


Anice (?)3


Children of Roger de Beaumont, Seigneur de Portaudemer and Adeline de Meulan


Henry de Newburgh, 1st Earl of Warwick+2 d. 1123


Robert de Meulan, 1st Earl of Leicester+ b. c 1046, d. 5 Jun 1118


Citations


[S6] G.E. Cokayne; with Vicary Gibbs, H.A. Doubleday, Geoffrey H. White, Duncan Warrand and Lord Howard de Walden, editors, The Complete Peerage of England, Scotland, Ireland, Great Britain and the United Kingdom, Extant, Extinct or Dormant, new ed., 13 volumes in 14 (1910-1959; reprint in 6 volumes, Gloucester, U.K.: Alan Sutton Publishing, 2000), volume VII, page 521. Hereinafter cited as The Complete Peerage.


[S22] Sir Bernard Burke, C.B. LL.D., A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire, new edition (1883; reprint, Baltimore, Maryland: Genealogical Publishing Company, 1978), page 399. Hereinafter cited as Burkes Extinct Peerage.


[S6] Cokayne, and others, The Complete Peerage, volume III, page 167.


Le Barbu


Roger de Beaumont-le-Roger (c. 1015 – 29 November 1094) was son of Humphrey de Vielles (himself a great-nephew of the Duchess Gunnora of Normandy) and his wife Albreda de la Haye Auberie. Roger de Beaumont, Lord of Beaumont-le-Roger and Pont-Audemer, Viscount of Hiesmes, was thus a second cousin once removed of the Conqueror.


Life


Roger was nicknamed Barbatus or La Barbe because he wore a moustache and beard while the Normans usually were clean shaven. This peculiarity is recognized in the thirty-second panel of the Bayeux Tapestry where he is depicted sitting at a feast with Duke William on his left hand, Odo, brother of William and Bishop of Bayeux, in the centre.


Planché tells us that "he was the noblest, the wealthiest, and the most valiant seigneur of Normandy, and the greatest and most trusted friend of the Danish family." There is an explanation for this - as an older cousin who had never rebelled against the young Duke, he was part of the kinship group of noblemen that William relied upon in governing Normandy and fighting off frequent rebellion and invasions. The historian Frank McLynn notes that William relied on relatives descended via his mother (namely his half-brothers and brothers-in-law) and on relatives descended from the Duchess Gunnora's sisters, since his own paternal kin had proved unreliable.


Wace, the 12th century historian, says that "at the time of the invasion of England, Roger was summoned to the great council at Lillebonne, on account of his wisdom; but that he did not join in the expedition as he was too far advanced in years." Although Roger could not fight, he did not hesitate in contributing his share of the cost, for he provided at his own expense sixty vessels for the conveyance of the troops across the channel. Furthermore, his eldest son and heir fought bravely at Hastings as noted in several contemporary records. As a result, Roger's elder sons were awarded rich lands in England, and both eventually were made English earls by the sons of the Conqueror.


Family and children


He married circa 1048 or earlier Adeline of Meulan (ca. 1014-1020 - 1081), daughter of Waleran III, Count de Meulan and Oda de Conteville, and sister and heiress of a childless Count of Meulan. Meulan eventually passed to their elder son who became Count of Meulan in 1081. Their surviving children were:


1. Robert de Beaumont, 1st Earl of Leicester, Count of Meulan (b ca 1049 - 1118) who succeeded his father in the major part of his lands, and who fought in his first battle at Hastings.

2. Henry de Beaumont, 1st Earl of Warwick, overshadowed by his elder brother, but who established a more enduring line of Beaumont earls at Warwick Castle.

3. William de Beaumont (not mentioned in most sources).

4. Alberee de Beaumont, Abbess of Eton.

Roger de Beaumont in Literature


Roger de Beaumont appears as a minor character (the overlord of the secondary hero) in Georgette Heyer's historical novel The Conqueror. His family appears little in the book, but reference is made to Roger's wife and daughters and his eldest son.


Note:


CHARLEMAGNE, Holy Roman EMPEROR is the 8th great-grandfather of Roger DeBEAUMONT Count.

Roger de Beaumont; Seigneur (feudal Lord) of Beaumont, Pontaudemer,Brionne and Vatteville, Normandy; married Adeline, sister of Hugh Countof Meulan and daughter by his 1st wife of Waleran Count ofMeulan.[Burke's Peerage]

---------------------------------------

The well-known Roger de Beaumont held Sturminster Marshal, Dorset, in1086; it descended to the counts of Meulan through Roger's eldest son,Robert count of Meulan. That Roger took his name from Beaumont is a partofthe general history of Normandy. It follows that Roger's descendants,the counts of Meulan, the Earls of Leicester, and the Earls of Warwick,all derive from Beaumont-le-Roger. [The Origins of Some Anglo-NormanFamilies]

Roger was one of the most powerful noblemen of his era. He furnishedsixty warships for William the Conqueror's invasion fleet, but remainedbehind to govern Normandy in William's absence. In later life, he becamea monk.



Roger de Beaumont-le-Roger (c. 1015 – 29 November 1094) was son of Humphrey de Vielles (himself a great-nephew of the Duchess Gunnora of Normandy) and his wife Albreda de la Haye Auberie. Roger de Beaumont, Lord of Beaumont-le-Roger and Pont-Audemer, Viscount of Hiesmes, was thus a second cousin once removed of the Conqueror.

He married circa 1048 or earlier Adeline of Meulan (ca. 1014-1020 - 1081), daughter of Waleran III, Count de Meulan and Oda de Conteville, and sister and heiress of a childless Count of Meulan. Meulan eventually passed to their elder son who became Count of Meulan in 1081. Their surviving children were:


Robert de Beaumont, 1st Earl of Leicester, Count of Meulan (b ca 1049 - 1118) who succeeded his father in the major part of his lands, and who fought in his first battle at Hastings.


Henry de Beaumont, 1st Earl of Warwick, overshadowed by his elder brother, but who established a more enduring line of Beaumont earls at Warwick Castle.


William de Beaumont (not mentioned in most sources).


Alberee de Beaumont, Abbess of Eton.



ROGER DE BEAUMONT; SIRE, (Count de Meullant): was born about 1010 of Pont Audemer, Normandy, France and succeeded to the family estates in Normandy, as Sire du Ponteaudemer, Seigneur de Veulles, Préaux, Torville, and du Ponteaitorf, and Seigneur de Beaumont (or Bellomont), by which last name he came to be generally described. By his marriage he greatly increased the possessions and prestige of the family, and he rose to be one of the most powerful feudal noblemen of his age in Normandy. When William the Conqueror invaded England in 1066, Roger de Beaumont furnished sixty armed vessels for the fleet and was left in charge of the government of Normandy when the Conqueror started on the expedition. There is some debate as to whether Roger accompanied William and was at the Battle of Hastings in 1066 and afterwards was sent back to govern Normandy. He munificently endowed the Abbey of Préaux, of which late in life he became a monk; and he died in 1094 at advanced age and was buried in this monastery, the Abbey de Préaux, Ponteaudemer, Normandy. He married in Ponteaudemer, Normandy about 1040, ADELINE DE MEULLANT born 1014 of Pontaudemer, Normandy, France and daughter of and eventually sole heiress of Waleran, Comte de Meullant, a great feudal nobleman of France. Adeline died in 1081.

Children: Abbot William, Abbess Albrede, Earl Robert, Earl Henry (c.1045)

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------


Earl of Meulan Roger Beaumont Roger was born in 1022 in Pontaudemer, Normandy, France.1 Roger's father was Seigneur de Beaumont Humphrey de Harcourt and his mother was Nevia Snendsdatter. His paternal grandparents were Tourude de Harcourt and Senfrie (Eva) de Crepon; his maternal grandparents were King Sveyn (Forkbeard) Haraldsson of Denmark I and Gunhild of Poland. He was an only child. He died at the age of 72 on November 29th, 1094 in St. Pierre, Point Audemer, Normandy.1


Ancestor Pedigree Chart


Lived 1022 - 29 Nov 1094


son Earl of Warwick Henry de Beaumont 1045 - 20 Jun 1123


son 1st Earl of Leicester Robert de Beaumont I 1046 - 05 Jun 1118


Click here for details of Roger's family with Adeline de Meulan



Roger de Beaumont (c. 1015 – 29 November 1094), feudal lord (French: seigneur) of Beaumont-le-Roger and of Pont-Audemer in Normandy, was a powerful Norman nobleman and close advisor to William the Conqueror


He was a son of Humphrey de Vieilles (who was a great-nephew of the Duchess Gunnora of Normandy) by his wife Albreda de la Haye Auberie. Roger de Beaumont was thus a second cousin once removed of William the Conqueror. His Norman feudal lordship had its caput and castle at Beaumont-le-Roger, a settlement situated on the upper reaches of the River Risle, in Normandy, about 46 km SW of Rouen, the capital of the Duchy. He was also feudal lord of Pont-Audemer, a settlement built around the first bridge to cross the River Risle upstream of its estuary, shared with the River Seine.


Physical appearance[edit]


Roger was nicknamed La Barbe (Latinised to Barbatus) (i.e. "The Bearded") because he wore a moustache and beard while the Normans usually were clean shaven. This peculiarity is believed to be recognized in the thirty-second panel of the Bayeux Tapestry where he is depicted sitting at a feast near Hastings, well before the battle, at the right hand of Duke William, who in turn was seated at the right hand of his brother Bishop Odo of Bayeux, who is shown blessing the food at a feast.


Career[edit]


Planché described him as "the noblest, the wealthiest, and the most valiant seigneur of Normandy, and the greatest and most trusted friend of the Danish (i.e. Norman) family". The explanation for his exalted position appears to be that as an older cousin who had never rebelled against the young Duke, he was part of the kinship group of noblemen that William relied upon in governing Normandy and fighting-off frequent rebellion and invasions. The historian Frank McLynn observed that William relied heavily on relatives on his mother's side, namely his half-brothers Bishop Odo and Robert, and brothers-in-law, and on relatives descended from the Duchess Gunnora's sisters, since his own paternal kin had proved unreliable.


Wace, the 12th century historian, wrote that: "At the time of the invasion of England, Roger was summoned to the great council at Lillebonne, on account of his wisdom; but he did not join in the expedition as he was too far advanced in years". Although Roger could not fight, he did not hesitate in contributing a large share of the cost, and provided at his own expense sixty vessels for the conveyance of the troops across the channel. Furthermore, his eldest son and heir fought bravely at Hastings as noted in several contemporary records. As a result, Roger's elder sons were rewarded generously with lands in England, and both eventually were made English earls by the sons of the Conqueror. Wace's statement may therefore cast doubt on the possibility of Roger being depicted in the Bayeux Tapestry feasting at Hastings. However it is possible that he crossed the Channel so he could continue to act as a valued member of the Duke's council, perhaps giving advice on military tactics, yet stayed well behind the line of battle at headquarters.


Marriage & progeny[edit]


He married circa 1048 or earlier Adeline of Meulan (c. 1014-1020 - 8 April 1081), who was buried at the Abbaye du Bec, the daughter of Waleran III, Count de Meulan by Oda de Conteville, and sister and heiress of a childless Count of Meulan. Meulan eventually passed to their elder son who became Count of Meulan in 1081. Their surviving children were: Robert de Beaumont, 1st Earl of Leicester, Count of Meulan (c.1049-1118), the eldest son and heir. He succeeded his father in the major part of his lands, and was one of the few proven Companions of William the Conqueror who fought at the Battle of Hastings in 1066. Henry de Beaumont, 1st Earl of Warwick (c.1050-1119). He was overshadowed by his elder brother, but was granted by his father one of his lesser lordships in Normandy, the lordship of Le Neubourg, about 12 km NE of Beaumont-le-Roger, from which his own family adopted the surname Anglicised to "de Newburgh". He established a more enduring line of Beaumont earls than his elder brother, Earls of Warwick seated at Warwick Castle. William de Beaumont (not mentioned in most sources). Alberée de Beaumont (died 1112), Abbess of Eton.


Death & burial[edit]


He was buried at Les Préaux.


Roger de Beaumont in literature[edit]


Roger de Beaumont appears as a minor character (the overlord of the secondary hero) in Georgette Heyer's historical novel The Conqueror. His family appears little in the book, but reference is made to Roger's wife and daughters and his eldest son.


Sources[edit]


Portal icon Normandy portal Edward T. Beaumont, J.P. The Beaumonts in History. A.D. 850-1850. Oxford. J.R. Planché. The Conqueror and His Companions. London: Tinsley Brothers, 1874.


External links[edit] Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America Before 1700 by Frederick Lewis Weis, Lines: 50-24, 151-24.


Bearded Norman nobleman depicted in the Bayeux Tapestry (c.1066), possibly representing Roger de Beaumont (died 1094). The figure is seated at the right hand of Duke William of Normandy, who himself occupies the place of honour at the ceremony of the blessing of the food at Hastings by Bishop Odo, well before the time of the battle


ET HIC EPISCOPUS CIBU(M) ET POTU(M) BENEDICIT ("And here the bishop blesses the food and drink"). The feast at Hastings, after which a castle was ordered to be built, following which battle was joined. Roger de Beaumont is possibly depicted as the bearded figure, see detail above. Bayeux Tapestry


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roger_de_Beaumont


Roger de Beaumont From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia This article is about a Norman nobleman. For his grandson, see Roger de Beaumont, 2nd Earl of Warwick. For his great great grandson the bishop of St Andrews, see Roger de Beaumont (bishop).


Bearded Norman nobleman depicted in the Bayeux Tapestry (c.1066), possibly representing Roger de Beaumont (died 1094). The figure is seated at the right hand of Duke William of Normandy, who himself occupies the place of honour at the ceremony of the blessing of the food at Hastings by Bishop Odo, well before the time of the battle


ET HIC EPISCOPUS CIBU(M) ET POTU(M) BENEDICIT ("And here the bishop blesses the food and drink"). The feast at Hastings, after which a castle was ordered to be built, following which battle was joined. Roger de Beaumont is possibly depicted as the bearded figure, see detail above. Bayeux Tapestry Roger de Beaumont (c. 1015 – 29 November 1094), feudal lord (French: seigneur) of Beaumont-le-Roger and of Pont-Audemer in Normandy, was a powerful Norman nobleman and close advisor to William the Conqueror.


Contents [hide] 1 Origins 2 Physical appearance 3 Career 4 Marriage & progeny 5 Death & burial 6 Roger de Beaumont in literature 7 Sources 8 External links Origins[edit] He was a son of Humphrey de Vieilles (who was a great-nephew of the Duchess Gunnora of Normandy) by his wife Albreda de la Haye Auberie. Roger de Beaumont was thus a second cousin once removed of William the Conqueror. His Norman feudal lordship had its caput and castle at Beaumont-le-Roger, a settlement situated on the upper reaches of the River Risle, in Normandy, about 46 km SW of Rouen, the capital of the Duchy. He was also feudal lord of Pont-Audemer, a settlement built around the first bridge to cross the River Risle upstream of its estuary, shared with the River Seine.


Physical appearance[edit] Roger was nicknamed La Barbe (Latinised to Barbatus) (i.e. "The Bearded") because he wore a moustache and beard while the Normans usually were clean shaven. This peculiarity is believed to be recognized in the thirty-second panel of the Bayeux Tapestry where he is depicted sitting at a feast near Hastings, well before the battle, at the right hand of Duke William, who in turn was seated at the right hand of his brother Bishop Odo of Bayeux, who is shown blessing the food at a feast.


Career[edit] Planché described him as "the noblest, the wealthiest, and the most valiant seigneur of Normandy, and the greatest and most trusted friend of the Danish (i.e. Norman) family". The explanation for his exalted position appears to be that as an older cousin who had never rebelled against the young Duke, he was part of the kinship group of noblemen that William relied upon in governing Normandy and fighting-off frequent rebellion and invasions. The historian Frank McLynn observed that William relied heavily on relatives on his mother's side, namely his half-brothers Bishop Odo and Robert, and brothers-in-law, and on relatives descended from the Duchess Gunnora's sisters, since his own paternal kin had proved unreliable.


Wace, the 12th century historian, wrote that: "At the time of the invasion of England, Roger was summoned to the great council at Lillebonne, on account of his wisdom; but he did not join in the expedition as he was too far advanced in years". Although Roger could not fight, he did not hesitate in contributing a large share of the cost, and provided at his own expense sixty vessels for the conveyance of the troops across the channel. Furthermore, his eldest son and heir fought bravely at Hastings as noted in several contemporary records. As a result, Roger's elder sons were rewarded generously with lands in England, and both eventually were made English earls by the sons of the Conqueror. Wace's statement may therefore cast doubt on the possibility of Roger being depicted in the Bayeux Tapestry feasting at Hastings. However it is possible that he crossed the Channel so he could continue to act as a valued member of the Duke's council, perhaps giving advice on military tactics, yet stayed well behind the line of battle at headquarters.


Marriage & progeny[edit] He married circa 1048 or earlier Adeline of Meulan (c. 1014-1020 - 8 April 1081), who was buried at the Abbaye du Bec, the daughter of Waleran III, Count de Meulan by Oda de Conteville, and sister and heiress of a childless Count of Meulan. Meulan eventually passed to their elder son who became Count of Meulan in 1081. Their surviving children were:


Robert de Beaumont, 1st Earl of Leicester, Count of Meulan (c.1049-1118), the eldest son and heir. He succeeded his father in the major part of his lands, and was one of the few proven Companions of William the Conqueror who fought at the Battle of Hastings in 1066. Henry de Beaumont, 1st Earl of Warwick (c.1050-1119). He was overshadowed by his elder brother, but was granted by his father one of his lesser lordships in Normandy, the lordship of Le Neubourg, about 12 km NE of Beaumont-le-Roger, from which his own family adopted the surname Anglicised to "de Newburgh". He established a more enduring line of Beaumont earls than his elder brother, Earls of Warwick seated at Warwick Castle. William de Beaumont (not mentioned in most sources). Alberée de Beaumont (died 1112), Abbess of Eton. Death & burial[edit] He was buried at Les Préaux.


Roger de Beaumont in literature[edit] Roger de Beaumont appears as a minor character (the overlord of the secondary hero) in Georgette Heyer's historical novel The Conqueror. His family appears little in the book, but reference is made to Roger's wife and daughters and his eldest son.


Sources[edit] Portal icon Normandy portal Edward T. Beaumont, J.P. The Beaumonts in History. A.D. 850-1850. Oxford. J.R. Planché. The Conqueror and His Companions. London: Tinsley Brothers, 1874. External links[edit] Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America Before 1700 by Frederick Lewis Weis, Lines: 50-24, 151-24. Beaumont genealogy, to be used with caution (check soc.genealogy.medieval) The Conqueror and His Companions: Robert de Beaumont Categories: 1015 births1094 deathsAnglo-NormansNormans


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Adeline, de Meulan

wife


Henry de Newberg de Beaumont, 1s...

son


Robert de Beaumont-le-Roger, Com...

son


Aubreye de Beaumont, Abess de St...

daughter


Honfroi, seigneur de Vieilles

father


Auberee de la Haye, Dame de Brot...

mother


Robert de Vieilles, Seigneur

brother


William de Vieilles

brother


Dunelme de Vieilles

sister


Albreda de Harcourt

sister


William de Mauduit, I

stepson


Gunfrid de Mauduit

stepson


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Agregado por: Ing. Carlos Juan Felipe Urdaneta Alamo, MD.IG.


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