Ancestral Trails 2016 » HUGH d'AVRANCHES I (1047-1101)

Personal data HUGH d'AVRANCHES I 

  • He was born in the year 1047 in Avranches, Manche, Basse-Normandie, France.
  • Title: 1st Earl of Chester, Viscount of Avranches
  • Profession: on July 23, 1101 in Became a monk.
  • (Titles) in the year 1071 in Created 1st Earl of Chester.
  • (Military) in the year 1066 in Fought in the Battle of Hastings.
  • (Nickname) : "Lupus" (The Wolf), "Le Gros" (The Fat).
  • (Event) in Founded the Abbeys of St Sever, Normandy &, St Weburg, Chester.
  • (Titles) about 1082 in Succeeded to the title of Vicomte D'Avranches.
  • He died on July 27, 1101 in St Werburgh, Chester, Cheshire, he was 54 years old.Source 1
  • He is buried in the year 1101 in St Werburg, Chester, Cheshire.
  • A child of RICHARD le GOZ and EMMA de CONTEVILLE

Household of HUGH d'AVRANCHES I

He has/had a relationship with ERMENTRUDE de CLERMONT.


Child(ren):

  1. Otuel of CHESTER  1075-????
  2. MATILDA de MANTES  1071-1147 
  3. Robert d'AVRANCHES  1070-> 1093 
  4. John Belward MALPAS  1068-> 1099 
  5. Tanglust d'AVRANCHES  1075-???? 
  6. Richard d'AVRANCHES  1085-1120
  7. Lupa d'AVRANCHES  1090-????
  8. ODDONA d'AVRANCHES  ± 1086-???? 
  9. Hugh d'AVRANCHES  ± 1088-????
  10. GEVA d'AVRANCHES  1086-???? 
  11. Gilbert d'AVRANCHES  1077-????

  • The couple has common ancestors.

  • Notes about HUGH d'AVRANCHES I

    The Egerton Family is one of the most notable in Cheshire. Originating from Normandy, France and came over durng the 1066 Conquest. In the early years after the conquest they were Barons of Malpas (Malpas was one of the Palatinate Baronies created, along with Shipbrook, Kinderton and others by HUGH LUPUS the first Norman Earl of Cheshire) - the idiosyncratic descent of this barony, which found its way down and illegitimate line and was divided and sub-divided is too lengthy to relate here, suffice to say (a full account is given in Ormerod's Cheshire), that the Brereton Family in the fourteenth century were able to wrest various moieties of the Barony from their cousins and Sir William Brereton, grandson of Ellen Egerton was in possession of half the barony.
    SOURCE: www.geocites.com

    Hugh d'Avranches (c. 1047 - 27 July 1101), also known as Hugh the Fat (French: Hugues le Gros) or Hugh the Wolf (Latin: Hugo Lupus), was the second Norman earl of Chester (2nd creation) and one of the great magnates of early Norman England.

    Early life and career
    Hugh d'Avranches was born around 1047 as the son of Richard le Goz, Viscount of Avranches. His mother was previously identified as Emma de Conteville; however, C.P. Lewis, author of Hugh's entry in the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, states that the identification was made 'on the basis of unsatisfactory evidence' and that his mother is unknown.

    Hugh inherited from his father large estates, not just in the Avranchin but scattered throughout western Normandy. The Avranchin is located on the Cotentin Peninsula of northern France, just east of Mont-Saint-Michel; it is among the areas unlawfully granted under the Treaty of Saint-Clair-sur-Epte to Normandy by the Kingdom of France that had previously belonged to the Duchy of Brittany.

    Hugh became an important councillor of William, Duke of Normandy. His father contributed sixty ships to William's invasion of England, and he may have been present on Senlac Hill in 1066, although there is no evidence of this. His father remained in Normandy, both to protect the duchy and because he was ill, so Hugh may have been his representative at Hastings.

    Hugh was given the command of Tutbury Castle in Staffordshire after Duke William became William I of England. In 1071, Gerbod the Fleming, 1st Earl of Chester was taken prisoner at the Battle of Cassel in France. Taking advantage of the circumstances, the king declared his title vacant, giving Hugh the Earldom (of the second creation). The new Earl was also given palatine powers in view of Cheshire's strategic location on the Welsh Marches. On Hugh's promotion, Tutbury and its surrounding lands were passed to the Norman Knight, Henry de Ferrers, who had also fought with William at the Battle of Hastings. In 1082, Hugh succeeded to the title of Vicomte d'Avranches.

    During his lifetime, the Earl founded the Benedictine Abbeys of Sainte-Marie-et-Saint-Sever, Saint-Sever-Calvados, Normandy and St. Werburgh in Chester as well as giving land endowments to Whitby Abbey, North Yorkshire.

    Hugh remained loyal to King William II during the rebellion of 1088. He later served Henry I as one of his principal councillors at the royal court.

    Wales
    Hugh spent much of his time fighting with his neighbours in Wales. Together with his cousin Robert of Rhuddlan he subdued a good part of northern Wales. Initially Robert of Rhuddlan held north-east Wales as a vassal of Hugh. However, in 1081 Gruffudd ap Cynan, King of Gwynedd was captured by treachery[citation needed] at a meeting near Corwen. Gruffudd was imprisoned by Earl Hugh in his castle at Chester, but it was Robert who took over his kingdom, holding it directly from the king. When Robert was killed by a Welsh raiding party in 1093 Hugh took over these lands, becoming ruler of most of North Wales, but he lost Anglesey and much of the rest of Gwynedd in the Welsh revolt of 1094, led by Gruffudd ap Cynan, who had escaped from captivity.

    Norwegian invasion
    In the summer of 1098 Hugh joined forces with Hugh of Montgomery, 2nd Earl of Shrewsbury, in an attempt to recover his losses in Gwynedd. Gruffudd ap Cynan retreated to Anglesey, but then was forced to flee to Ireland when a fleet he had hired from the Danish settlement in Ireland changed sides. The situation was changed by the arrival of a Norwegian fleet under the command of King Magnus III of Norway, also known as Magnus Barefoot, who attacked the Norman forces near the eastern end of the Menai Straits. Earl Hugh of Shrewsbury was killed by an arrow said to have been shot by Magnus himself. The Normans were obliged to evacuate Anglesey, and the following year Gruffydd returned from Ireland to take possession again. Hugh apparently made an agreement with him and did not again try to recover these lands.

    Marriage, death and succession
    Hugh, due to his gluttony, became so fat that he could hardly walk, earning him the nickname of le Gros (the Fat). He would also earn the nickname Lupus (Wolf) for his savage ferocity against the Welsh.

    Hugh d'Avranches married Ermentrude of Claremont, daughter of Hugh I, Count of Clermont-en-Beauvaisis. Hugh and Ermentrude had at least seven children:

    Richard d'Avranches, 2nd Earl of Chester, who died in the White Ship disaster of 1120
    Matilda d'Avranches
    Maud d'Avranches
    Robert FitzHugh I
    Hugh (Lupus) d'Avranches II
    Helga de Kevelioc
    Geva d'Avranches, married to Royal Justice Geoffrey Ridel, who died in the White Ship disaster of 1120. Geva survived her husband and later founded the monastic house of Canwell Priory in Staffordshire. There is some question as to Geva's legitimacy.

    Hugh is credited as siring children to many mistresses. His allegedly illegitimate children include:

    Robert d'Avranche
    Ottiwel (Otuel) d'Avranches, governor and tutor to King Henry's sons, married to Marguerite, daughter of Eudo Dapifer, steward to William the Conqueror and Henry I. They had one son William. Ottiwel died in the wreck of the White Ship.
    Giofu d'Avranches
    Robert D'Avranche
    Fitzhugh, Baron Malpas (unverified).

    He received many of the local manors held by Edwin the last Saxon Earl of Mercia (d. 1071). Edwin was the grandson of Leofric, Earl of Mercia. Leofric had been a holder of the Saxon title "Earl of Chester".

    Hugh fell ill and became a monk in July 1101. He died four days later and was buried in the cemetery of St. Werburgh. He was succeeded as Earl of Chester by his son Richard, who married Matilda of Blois, a granddaughter of William the Conqueror. Both Richard and Matilda died in the White Ship disaster (1120), and Hugh was then succeeded by his nephew Ranulph le Meschin, Earl of Chester, son of his sister Margaret by her husband Ranulf de Briquessart, Viscount of the Bessin. His nephew also removed his remains and had them reburied in the Chapter House of Chester Abbey.
    SOURCE: Wikipedia - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugh_d%27Avranches,_Earl_of_Chester

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Sources

  1. The Complete Peerage, Cokayne
    Ranulf, Vicomte de Bayeux gained the title of Vicomte de Bayeux[Normandy], or 'de la Bessin', of which Bayeux is the capital

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Source: Wikipedia


About the surname D'AVRANCHES


When copying data from this family tree, please include a reference to the origin:
Patti Lee Salter, "Ancestral Trails 2016", database, Genealogy Online (https://www.genealogieonline.nl/ancestral-trails-2016/I126128.php : accessed May 7, 2024), "HUGH d'AVRANCHES I (1047-1101)".