Family Tree Welborn » Other Otho Dominus de Stanwell (± 1006-± 1056)

Personal data Other Otho Dominus de Stanwell 

  • He was born about October 5, 1006 in Surrey, England.
  • He died about 1056 in Staines, Middlesex, England.
  • This information was last updated on November 21, 2018.

Household of Other Otho Dominus de Stanwell


Child(ren):



Notes about Other Otho Dominus de Stanwell


Duke Otho Dominus de Stanwell is your 27th great grandfather.
You
¬â€  ·Üí Henry Marvin Welborn
your father ·Üí Henry Marvin Welborn, Sr.
his father ·Üí Calhoun H Welborn
his father ·Üí Sarah Elizabeth Welborn
his mother ·Üí Benjamin Franklin Dykes
her father ·Üí William Dykes, Sr.
his father ·Üí George Dykes, Sr.
his father ·Üí Edward George Dykes
his father ·Üí Edward Dykes
his father ·Üí Thomas Dykes
his father ·Üí Edward Dykes
his father ·Üí Thomas Dykes
his father ·Üí Leonard Dykes
his father ·Üí Isabelle Dykes
his mother ·Üí Mary Pennington
her mother ·Üí Mary Hudleston
her mother ·Üí Sir Henry Fenwick
her father ·Üí Margaret de Percy
his mother ·Üí Margaret de Neville, Baroness de Ros
her mother ·Üí Ralph de Neville, 2nd Baron Neville de Raby
her father ·Üí Euphemia FitzRobert de Clavering
his mother ·Üí Robert de Clavering, 5th Baron of Warkworth & Clavering
her father ·Üí Roger FitzJohn of Warkworth
his father ·Üí John Fitzrobert de Stokes, 3d Baron Warkworth, Surety of the Magna Carta
his father ·Üí Margaret de Chesney
his mother ·Üí William de Chesney, Sheriff of Norfolk & Suffolk
her father ·Üí Robert FitzWalter, of Windsor, Sheriff Of Norfolk
his father ·Üí Walter FitzOtho, Castellan of Windsor
his father ·Üí Duke Otho Dominus de Stanwell
his father

Other Dominus de Stanwell is your 28th great grandfather.
You
¬â€  ·Üí Marvin "Toad" Henry Welborn, Jr.
your father ·Üí Heny Marvin Welborn, Sr.
his father ·Üí Calhoun H. Welborn
his father ·Üí Sarah Elizabeth Dikes
his mother ·Üí Benjamin Franklin Dykes, II
her father ·Üí William Dykes, Sr.
his father ·Üí George Dykes, Sr.
his father ·Üí Edward George Dykes
his father ·Üí Edward Dykes
his father ·Üí Thomas Dykes
his father ·Üí Edward Dykes
his father ·Üí Thomas Dykes
his father ·Üí Leonard Dykes
his father ·Üí Isabelle Dykes
his mother ·Üí Mary Pennington
her mother ·Üí Mary Hudleston
her mother ·Üí Sir Henry Fenwick
her father ·Üí Margaret de Percy
his mother ·Üí Sir Henry Percy, 1st Earl of Northumberland
her father ·Üí Henry de Percy, 3rd Baron Percy
his father ·Üí Idonea de Clifford, Baronness Percy
his mother ·Üí Matilda (Maud) de Clare
her mother ·Üí Juliane FitzMaurice
her mother ·Üí Maurice FitzMaurice FitzGerald, 3rd Lord of Offaly, Justiciar of Ireland
her father ·Üí Maurice FitzGerald, 2nd Lord of Offaly
his father ·Üí Gerald FitzMaurice, 1st Lord of Offaly
his father ·Üí Maurice FitzGerald, Lord of Lanstephan
his father ·Üí Gerald FitzWalter Constable of Pembroke
his father ·Üí Walter FitzOtho, Castellan of Windsor
his father ·Üí Other Dominus de Stanwell
his father

https://www.geni.com/people/Other-de-Stanwell/6000000006906543433

Other Dominus de Stanwell
Gender:
Male
Birth:
circa October 5, 1006
Surrey, England, United Kingdom
Death:
circa 1056 (41-57)
Staines, Middlesex, England UK
Immediate Family:
Son of Gherard Gheradini and Sancia de la Cerda
Husband of Lady Otho de Windsor
Father of Walter FitzOtho, Castellan of Windsor

Spoiler alert:
Otho (recte: Other) was the common ancestor of the FitzGeralds and Windsors. If I'm not mistaken, he was Lord of Stanwell (or else, his holdings are unknown). It was his son Walter Fitz Other who served as Castellan of Windsor, and established the connection there. "Domesday does not state that his lands have been held by his father, but, on the contrary, proves them to have belonged to forfeited Englishmen."
[DISCUSSION ON PARENTAGE - PRO AND CON]
PROBABLY CORRECT: The genealogy to a Gheradini family origin is very likely true. English kings did indeed recruit many continental knights and warriors for the conquest of Ireland, who were given noble seats as their reward. In our modern era we see written record of one of the brothers Maurizio Gheradini as a knight in the invasion. However this genealogy was incorrectly placed in doubt because they thought an Irish priest would not know, but those in Florence would know. Why would those in Florence know the history of their ancient kinsmen who left for Ireland a 500 years earlier? It is the Irish priest who would know about those ex-pat Florentines in Ireland, as they had the records of births, death, marriages and history-- not the Florentines. The priest was was more likely correct, the Italian nay-sayers incorrect. How would they know? Yet, there are records of FitzGeralds corresponding with Florentines indicating this ancient connection. There are many noble families of Ireland who descend from warriors who participated in the invasion of Ireland. Another one was William le Hore who supported Strongbow and was given the seat of Pole Hore as his reward. "Le Hore" can be taken to mean "the outsider". He was a Saxon knight who helped in the invasion, certainly not Irish. The noble families of Ireland are packed with outsiders who helped in the invasion, that is why the Irish rebelled against them for centuries. They aren't irish in origin. The noble families of Ireland were largely English and other outsiders. Yet, people today assume that irish noble families have all Irish origin. No, they do not. Again, that is why the Irish rebelled against these Irish noble houses-- they were not Irish in origin in many cases. Furthermore, the Gheradini did indeed exist in Florence before it was a republic. The Gheradini lost power when it was made into a republic. The Victorians were vehemently prejudiced against all things Irish but loved all things Florentine. Thus they sneered that a Gheradini lineage could not be in Ireland. They said Gheradino was not a Cosimo, because that was the term used during the republican era. However, before Florence was a republic, of course they had local noblemen: effectively dukes, counts, barons, whatever language you wish to use, such as the Gheradini who were local pre-republican noblemen of Florence. The Geradini represent the pre-republican era before the word "Cosimo" was adopted. However the Gheradini were effectively the equivalent role as the Florentines "Cosimos" before the Medici adopted the term Cosimo for the ruler of Florence.
PROBABLY INCORRECT: Unfortunately, Other's descent from the Gherardini was claimed a fantasy, debunked by a Victorian writer. In one version of the story, he was a son of Otho di Gherardini, grandson of Gerald Dias Lopez, and great grandson of Lopez of Florence. His supposed wife Sancha de la Cerda is also a fantasy.
"The story given above is traced to an Irish priest 'called Maurice, who was of the family of the Gherardini settled in that is island,' and who, passing through Florence in1413, claimed the local Gherardini as his kinsmen."
http://www.geraldini.com/new/fitzgerald_uk_1.asp

Dominus Otho of the Normans; Otho Geraldino Baron of Windsor (Baron of Eng, ca., 1057)
--- Otterus (Othoer) Baron of Gherardini, Lord in Tuscany. Otterus was "an Italian Baron of the Gherardini of Florence, Lord in Tuscany, went from Florence into Normandy and then to England and Wales about 1000.
---Otho was so powerful that his favor with the King was greatly resented by the native Norman nobles. He possessed three lordships in Surrey, three in Buckinghamshire, two in Berkshire, four in Middlesex, nine in Wiltshire, two in Hampshire, three in Dorset, and one in Somerset. With him, the family name was changed to Geraldini.
A Norman who came to England with Edward. His Father was a Florentine.
Father: Gherardini, Gherardo
Child 1: FitzOther, Walter, of Windsor, Keeper of the Forrest. ¬â€ Walter FitzOtho, William the Conqueror's Constable for Windsor Castle, then a strategic military fortress, and the King's Keeper of the Forests of Berkshire. ¬â€ Walter ¬â€ is recorded in the Domesday Book as tenant-in-chief of lands in Berkshire, Buckinghamshire, Hampshire, and Middlesex
=============
Was living in the time of Edward the Confessor in 1042, was descended from the Dukes of Tuscany.
=============
BIOGRAPHY of the family of Gerardini of Tuscanny. Came to England and Wales at the time of Edward the Confessor.
Gerald was the ancestor the the Fitzgeralds, Fitzmaurices, Carews, Redmonds and Keatings of Ireland, among others. Otho was so powerful that his favor with the King was greatly resented by the native Norman nobles. He possessed three lordships in Surrey, Three in Buckinghamshire, Two in Berkshire, Four in Middlesex, nine in Wiltshire, Two in Hampshire, three in Dorset, and one in Somerset. With him, the family name was changed to Geraldini. Otho's son, Walter FitzOtho Geraldini, was treated as a fellow countryman by the Normans after the conquest of England in 1066. He succeeded to all of Otho's estates and his name is shown in the Domesday Book of 1087 that listed all the landholders in England. Windsor Castle, a great gray pile overlooking the Thames, had just been built amid the forests of Berkshire, and Walter was appointed it's first castellan, as well as warden of the forest. He was, it is clear, one of the most Norman of the Normans--a race renowned for it's adaptability, no less than for it's valor and ferocity.
About Windsor Castle & Berkshire, England
Windsor Castle continued as a baronage for Otho's descendants for centuries, until it passed out of existence due to lack of male heirs in the direct line. An interesting footnote is the story of how the current English Royal Family, the House of Windsor, took their name from this vacated baronage. During the First World War, there was enormous anti-german sentiment in England and the King wanted to distance himself from the German House of Hanover, their name at the time. Since the Gherardini family can be traced as the founders of the House of Hanover, it was very convenient that Gerald deWinsor, baron of England, was related both to the English Royal Family and the Florentine Gheradinis, hence the House of Hanover. This provided justification ( after much research ) for the German House of Hanover to become the more politically correct English HOuse of Windsor, which they remain to this day.
WINDSOR CASTLE, WINDSOR, BERKSHIRE, ENGLAND. ¬â€ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Windsor,_Berkshire Windsor is on the Berkshire side of the River Thames and Eton is on the Buckinghamshire side. Windsor is an affluent suburban town and unparished area in the Royal Borough of Windsor and Maidenhead in Berkshire, England. It is widely known as the site of Windsor Castle, one of the official residences of the British Royal Family.
The repeated investment in the castle brought London merchants (goldsmiths, vintners, spicers and mercers) to the town and provided much employment for townsmen. The development of the castle under Edward III (1350·Äì68), for example, was the largest secular building project in England of the Middle Ages, and many Windsor people worked in the castle on this building project. Henry III, a hundred years earlier, had spent more on Windsor Castle than on any other royal building project, save the rebuilding of Westminster Abbey.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Berkshire The Royal county of Berkshire ¬â€ is one of the oldest in England. It may date from the 840s, the probable period of the unification of "Sunningum" (East Berkshire) and "Ashdown" (the Berkshire Downs, probably including the Kennet Valley). The county is first mentioned by name in 860. According to Asser, it takes its name from a large forest of box trees that was called Bearroc (believed, in turn, to be a Celtic word meaning "hilly").¬â€ 
Links
http://www.grantonline.com/grant-family-genealogy/Normans-in-Ireland/1-preamble_to_the_norman_invasion_.htm
¬â€ http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=gsreid&id=P224301968
Fitz Otho: Otho, living in the time of Edward the Confessor, 1042-65. (Genesis of the White Family, 1920, Emma Siggins White, page 7). Descended from the Dukes of Tuscany. This family deduces its line from a common ancestor with the noble and potent house of Geraldines, or Fitz Geralds of Ireland, and the Gerards and Carews of England. The Carews are one of the few now remaining families who can trace their descent without interruption from the anglo-Saxon period of English history. Otho, or Other, a rich and powerful lord in the time of King Alfred, descended from the dukes of Tuscany, a baron of England, according to Sir William dugdale, in the 16th year of KING EDWARD THE CONFESSOR. Start of viking influence in Welsh names.

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Ancestors (and descendant) of Other Otho Dominus de Stanwell

Other Otho Dominus de Stanwell
± 1006-± 1056



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About the surname Dominus de Stanwell


When copying data from this family tree, please include a reference to the origin:
Marvin Loyd Welborn, "Family Tree Welborn", database, Genealogy Online (https://www.genealogieonline.nl/family-tree-welborn/I34696.php : accessed May 31, 2024), "Other Otho Dominus de Stanwell (± 1006-± 1056)".