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Osberne, son of Osberne de Cailly, obtained the honour [barony] of Preaux (Pratella). He calls himself, in a deed of gift to "L'Abbaye de la Trinite," Queen Matilda's foundation at Caen, " Ego Osbernus de Pratellis, filius Osberni de Cailleio." From him descended the noble and distinguished family Des Preaux in France. John des Preaux was a favourite minister of Richard I. and John. His brother, Sir William des Preaux, saved the life of Richard in Palestine. Osberne de Cailly married Maud de Baudemont, and his son Roger married Petronilla de Vere.' The castle of Preaux and its barony belonged to Eudo Dapifer. It was there he died, and it is clear that his sister's son, Osberne of Cailli, really a younger son of Geffrey Mandeville of 1066, received it, the Mande- villes getting Eudo's Norman estates. This Sinclair lady's descendants are thus of high distinction. But Sinclairs have more to do with the descendants by his first wife of Geffrey, who, the pedigree says, ' came into England with the Conqueror, who gave him all the land which Aesgarus Stallere, earl in Essex, had.' He was made sheriff or viscount of Middlesex, Essex, and Hertford. He had a son by his first wife (Ethelarda, buried at Westminster, the lands of which, to the fourth part, was her husband's), William de Mandeville (Magna Villa), who got the title of earl of Esssx the first of this family. How, will appear hereafter. He simplified the paternal arms by making the coat plain and leaving out the carbuncle which Geffrey wore. This hint as to his character need not be lost, though it is possible his wife or others may have had something to do with so curious a change, recorded here.
http://homepages.rootsweb.com/~cousin/html/p437.htm#i26779 Osbern I de Cailly was a Warenne tenant in 1084 in Suffolk, England.1
Cailly is in the arrondissement of Rouen, and there can be no doubt that one or more of the family may have been in the expedition. Osbern de Cailly was apparently the holder of the fief in 1066, as his son Roger made a donation to St. Ouen in 1080. A William de Cailgi also appears in Domesday. Although by alliances with the Giffards and the Tateshalls they became of importance in England, the companion of the Conqueror has afforded no materials for a memoir. By the death of Thomas de Cailly, Baron of Buckenham (10th Edw. II.), without issue, the property passed, through his sister and heir Margaret, to the family of Clifto
Origin of Name Cailly
Origins of the Name Possibly derived from the place name Cailly in Seine-Inferieure in Normandy (medevil times); possibly derived from the place name Cayley in Winwick, Lancashire as in the early reference to Walter de Cayeley who was mentioned in the "Subsidy Rolls" for Staffordshire in 1332.
Possible patronymic derivition from Mac Caolaidhe, meaning "son of Caoladh" from the Gaelic 'caol" meaning "slender" - a common Manx surname.
William de Caly recorded in the "Curia Regis Rolls" for Norfolk in 1212; Hugh de Cailly mentioned in "Hundred Rolls" for Norfolk in 1273; Hugh de Cailly, lord of Orby, Norfolk, head of the family whence sprang the barony
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