Ancestral Trails 2016 » Rabel de TANCREVILLE (1099-1140)

Persoonlijke gegevens Rabel de TANCREVILLE 

  • Hij is geboren in het jaar 1099 in Tancreville, Le Havre, Seine-Maritime, France.
  • Titel: Chamberlain of Normandy
  • Hij is overleden in het jaar 1140 in Tancreville, Le Havre, Seine-Maritime, France, hij was toen 41 jaar oud.
  • Een kind van GUILLAUME de TANCREVILLE en MAUD d'ARQUES

Gezin van Rabel de TANCREVILLE

Hij is getrouwd met Theophania de PENTHIEVRE.

Zij zijn getrouwd in het jaar 1122 te Tancreville, Le Havre, Seine-Maritime, France, hij was toen 23 jaar oud.


Kind(eren):



Notities over Rabel de TANCREVILLE

Rabel de Tancarville remained the only chief chamberlain of Normandy and England until King Henri I of England created a separate hereditary office for England in 1135 and entrusted it to Aubrey (II) de Vere and His heirs.

Rabel de Tancarville (about 1090-after 1137), son of William. He inherited the office of chamberlain of Normandy from his father. However, there is no evidence that he held this office during the reign of Henry I of England. Orderic Vital mentions that he disembarks from the Blanche-Nef just before he leaves because he realizes there are too many people on board. He thus escapes the disastrous shipwreck (1120).

After Norman barons failed to entrust the duchy to Count Thibaut IV of Blois, Rabel fortifies his powerful castles, seizes the ducal fortress near Lillebonne, and refuses to recognize Stephen of England for an unknown reason. In 1137, Étienne landed in the west of Normandy, resolved to fight with Rabel, the leader of the Norman dissidents. He moved quickly towards the east, and took possession of the outpost of the seigniory of Tancarville without taking too much of it from Mezidon. He then recovers the fortress of Lillebonne, then seizes the castle of Villiers. Rabel decides that it is preferable to submit quickly and is received at court. He seems to have been confirmed by Étienne in his duties as chamberlain of Normandy. In 1127/1128 he replaced the secular canons at Sainte-Barbe-en-Auge by regular canons from Eu. In 1148, he was given the establishment of the commandery of Bretteville.
SOURCE: Wikipedia

The 1130 Pipe Roll records "Rabeli de Tancvilla" in Wiltshire ... Rabel de Tancarville, who was Henry I's chief chamberlain in Normandy never recognized Stephen, and opposed him as soon as he landed in Normandy.

Rabel de Tancarville, who as shown above, was known to have been Henry I's chief chamberlain in Normandy, was opposed to Stephen from the beginning of the reign, but does not figure in any of the empress's charters. This is presumably because he remained in Normandy and died in 1140, before the Angevins had won control of the duchy.

Bruton Hundred
By 1212 the hundred comprised the Tancarville fee of Bruton, Honeywick (in Pitcombe), Milton (Clevedon), Pitcombe with Cole, Redlynch, Witham, and Yarlington. In 1225 Discove, Woolston (in North Cadbury), and the vill of West Bruton were named in addition.

Bruton hundred was presumably a Crown possession as part of the royal estate of Bruton in 1066 and 1086. Before 1133 it had passed as part of a fee either to William de Tancarville I (d. 1129) or to his son Rabel (d. 1140), hereditary chamberlains of England and Normandy. William de Tancarville II succeeded his father Rable as lord in Bruton and was still alive in 1177. William was followed by his son Ralph, but thereafter the family ceased to have an interest.

Between 1135 and 1154 Alexander de Cauntelo, a principal tenant on the Tancarville fee, granted the hundred, with the market and other land, to the new priory at Bruton in return for a fee farm of 2 marks. The fee farm was transferred to the Crown on the forfeiture of the Cauntelo interest between 1199 and 1208.

Gloucester: Volume 8 Parishes: Beckford
"Henry I granted Beckford to William de Tancarville. During William's lifetime it was held by his son Ravel (Rabel) the chamberlain, who claimed to hold not at farm but freely in demesne. When c. 1128 Ravel granted Beckford to the canons of Ste. Barbe-en-Auge, the king after some delay confirmed the grant in free alms. Ste. Barbe's right to the manor was subsequently disputed. During the Anarchy William de Beauchamp, who claimed Beckford 'in time of war . . . by hereditary right', twice evicted the canons from Beckford. After papal intervention William de Beauchamp was forced to make restitution of damages and later released all claim to the manor. Under Henry II the yearly farm of £30 was claimed from Beckford manor because, as the canons alleged, at the time of the grant to William the chamberlain the king's roll had been negligently left unaltered. The claim apparently lapsed, for from 1158 the sheriff deducted the £30 from the farm of the county, and before 1162 the king confirmed Beckford to Ste. Barbe in free alms. The sheriff's deduction was challenged on the grounds that the £30 had never been part of the farm, and not until 1179 was it allowed. Between 1185 and 1189 Henry II again confirmed Ravel's grant of Beckford to Ste. Barbe." (Ref: British History Online)

Sources
↑ Orderic, (ed. Le Prevost), v. 81
↑ Robert of Torigni in Chronicles (R.S.), iv. 132.
↑ Regesta regum Anglo-Normannorum, 1066-1154, Vol. III, p. xxxi - Vol III
↑ Book of Fees i. 80.
↑ S.R.S. xi, pp. 52-4.
↑ V.C.H. Som. i. 436.
↑ Complete Peerage, x, app. pp. 48-50. Rabel was displaced as chamberlain in England in 1133.
↑ Cartae Antiquae (P.R.S. N.S. xvii 143; V.C.H. Warws. iii. 36
↑ S.R.S. viii, p. 5; V.C.H. Warws. iii. 36.
↑ S.R.S. viii, pp. 3, 99-101; Plac. de Quo Warr. (Rec. Com.), 701.
↑ Plac. de Quo Warr. (Rec. Com.), 701; S.R.S. viii, pp. 101-2; Pipe R. 1208 (P.R.S. N.S. xxiii), 111; Red Bk. Exch. (Rolls Ser.), ii. 548.
Medieval Lands - SEIGNEURS de TANCARVILLE
Parishes: Beckford', A History of the County of Gloucester: volume 8 (1968), pp. 250-262. URL: http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=66410&strquery=tancarville. (BHO)
Essai historique et descriptif sur l'église de l'abbaye de Saint-Georges-de ... by Achille Deville
Jacques Le Maho, Nicolas Wasylyszyn, Saint-Georges de Boscherville, 2000 ans, 1998, p. 12.
Wiltshire, England Pipe Rolls
Histoire du château et des sires de Tancarville" by Achille Deville, N. Périaux, 1834 - Histoire de Tancarville
SOURCE: https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Tancarville-21

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Voorouders (en nakomelingen) van Rabel de TANCREVILLE

AVICE STIGAND
1052-????
MAUD d'ARQUES
1075-????

Rabel de TANCREVILLE
1099-1140

1122

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Patti Lee Salter, "Ancestral Trails 2016", database, Genealogie Online (https://www.genealogieonline.nl/ancestral-trails-2016/I103395.php : benaderd 7 oktober 2024), "Rabel de TANCREVILLE (1099-1140)".