Hij heeft/had een relatie met Alda de Tibetot (wife of Henry).
Kind(eren):
Henry de Tibetot1
b. ca. 1187, d. 1249-50
Henry de Tibetot was born ca. 1187. (1216/17) In the 1st Henry III, had a grant in conjunction with Thomas Botterel, being in arms for the king, of the possessions lying in the counties of York and Lincoln, of Adam Painel, who fought on the other side.1 He died in 1249-50. He died in the 24th Henry III.1
Family
Child Sir Robert de Tibetot Knight+ b. ca. 1247, d. 1297-981
Citations
C.B., LL.D., Ulster King of Arms Sir Bernard Burke, B:xP, p. 532.
The Tiptoft name seems originally to have been Tibetot, or Tybetot, and the line goes back to Henry de Tibetot, living in the reign of King Henry III. His son, Robert, was Governor of several great castles, among them Nottingham, and, as the King's Lieutenant in Wales, won important victories against the Welsh. He md. Eve, the dau. of Pain de Chaworth, and their son, Sir Pain de Tybetot, also called Tiptoft, was a Knight, and was summoned to Parliament as a Baron. His wife was Agnes, dau. of William, Baron de Ros of Hemlake. The line goes down thence through Sir John, Knight and Baron, then Sir Pain de Tybetot, and another Sir John, who held several high offices, among them those of Treasurer of the Royal Household, Seneschal of Aquitaine, and Treasurer of Normandy. His second wife was Joyce Charlton.
Source: The Journal of American History, (New York, 1912), p. 58.
The name 'Tiptot' occurs on the Battle Abbey Roll of Norman Knights who came to England with the Conqueror, and some members of the same family were still living in Normandy in the fifteenth century, when 'Thomas Tybetot domiinus de Tybetot, miles' is found in the list of Frenchmen who served under John Duke of Bedfor during his campaign against the King of France. By the thirteenth century the family was generally known as Tibetot, and in 1216 we find Henry de Tibetot receiving a grant of lands in Lincolnshire; it was this Henry's son, Robert de Tibetot, who first brought the family into prominence. Robert succeeded to his father's lands in 1250, and lived a long and active life up till the year 1298. He accompanied Prince Edward (afterwards Edward I) to Palestine, and so won considerable royal favor; his first appointment was to the Governorship of Porchester Castle, and in 1281 he was made Justice of South Wales and Governor of Cardigan and Carmerthen Castles. In Wales Robert made himself unpopular by forcibly introducing 'English customs', which the Welsh resented, and in 1287 they rebelled under the leadership of Rhys ap Mereduc. However, Robert de Tibetot showed real resourcefulness and vigor in putting down the revolt; he captured the rebels' chief castle and took Rhys himself as prisoner. Rhys was sent to York, where he was duly hanged, and the revolt was soon ended. In his handling of the situation and in his severity, Robert foreshadowed the behavior of his descendant in Ireland nearly two centuries later.
Source: Mitchell, R. J., John Tiptoft (1437 - 1470), (London, New York and Toronto, 1938), p. 3.
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Alda de Tibetot (wife of Henry) |
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