Il est marié avec Godhaut de Beleme.
Ils se sont mariés.
Enfant(s):
Hamo Dentatus is your 31st great grandfather.
You
‰ ᆒ Geneva Allene Welborn
your mother ·Üí Alice Elmyra Smith
her mother ·Üí Nellie Mary Henley
her mother ·Üí John Merrit Wooldridge
her father ·Üí Merritt Wooldridge
his father ·Üí Chesley Wooldridge
his father ·Üí Edward Wooldridge, Jr.
his father ·Üí Mary Wooldridge
his mother ·Üí Mary Martha Flournoy
her mother ·Üí Jane Gower
her mother ·Üí Marian Mary Hatcher
her mother ·Üí Capt. Christopher Newport, Admiral of Virginia
her father ·Üí Dorothy Jane Newport
his mother ·Üí Alice Hatton
her mother ·Üí Alice Saunders
her mother ·Üí Alice Brokesby
her mother ·Üí John Shirley, Esq.
her father ·Üí Ralph Shirley
his father ·Üí Joan Shirley
his mother ·Üí Sir Thomas Basset, Kt.
her father ·Üí Sir John Basset
his father ·Üí John Basset, Sr.
his father ·Üí Lady Joan de Grey, of Wilton & Ruthyn
his mother ·Üí Anne de Ferrers
her mother ·Üí Anne le Despenser
her mother ·Üí Aline Aliva Bassett, Countess of Norfolk, Baroness of Wycombe
her mother ·Üí Phillip Bassett, Knight, Justiciar of England
her father ·Üí Aliva or Aline de Gay
his mother ·Üí Philip FitzRobert de Gay, Castellan of Cricklade
her father ·Üí Maud de Creully, Dame de Creuilly
his mother ·Üí Robert FitzHamon, Sieur de Creully, Lord of Gloucester & Glamorgan
her father ·Üí Hamon Dapifer Sheriff of Kent
his father ·Üí Hamo Dentatus
his father
https://www.geni.com/people/Hamo-Dentatus/6000000003649784642
Hamon "Dentatus" de Crâ®vecoeur
Gender:
Male
Birth:
circa 1023
France
Death:
1047 (20-28)
Val-â®s-Dunes, Normandie, France
Place of Burial:
Creully, Calvadore, Lower-Normandy, France
Immediate Family:
Son of Mauger, Count of Corbeil and N.N. Coeur en Augâ©
Husband of Godhaut De Beleme and Hawise (Elizabeth) FitzHammon
Father of Hamon Dapifer Sheriff of Kent and Robert de Crevecoeur
Half brother of William, count of Corbeil; Waldonius, count of Saint-Clair and Renaud de Corbeil
Haimo Dentatus (?)1
d. circa 1047
Haimo Dentatus (?)|d. c 1047|p342.htm#i24887|Richard de Cruelly||p220.htm#i24888||||||||||||||||
Father Richard de Cruelly2
Haimo Dentatus (?) was the son of Richard de Cruelly.2 Haimo Dentatus (?) died circa 1047.2
Family
Child
* Sheriff of Kent Haimo dapifer+ b. c 1045?2,1
Citations
1. [S1278] K.S.B. Keats-Rohan, Domesday Descendants, pg. 902.
2. [S682] D.S.O. Lt.-Col. W. H. Turton, Turton, pg. 94.
http://www.thepeerage.com/p21146.htm#i211456
Hamo Denatus (?) died in 1047 at Val-â®s-Dunes, slain.1
Child of Hamo Denatus (?)
Hamon 'the Sheriff' (?)+1
Citations
[S6] G.E. Cokayne; with Vicary Gibbs, H.A. Doubleday, Geoffrey H. White, Duncan Warrand and Lord Howard de Walden, editors, The Complete Peerage of England, Scotland, Ireland, Great Britain and the United Kingdom, Extant, Extinct or Dormant, new ed., 13 volumes in 14 (1910-1959; reprint in 6 volumes, Gloucester, U.K.: Alan Sutton Publishing, 2000), volume V, page 683. Hereinafter cited as The Complete Peerage.
Haimo was the Sheriff of Kent.
See "My Lines"
( http://homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~cousin/html/p220.htm#i24886 )
from Compiler: R. B. Stewart, Evans, GA
( http://homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~cousin/html/index.htm )
Baron of Creully Lord of Thorigny Sheriff
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hamon_Dentatus
http://sinclair.quarterman.org/history/med/morevalesdunes.html
http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/NORMAN%20NOBILITY.htm#_ftnref3439
HAMON "Dentatus" . Vicomte. "ဦAymonis vicecomitisဦ" witnessed the charter dated to [1030] under which Robert II Duke of Normandy donated "in comitatu Abrincatensi villamဦSancti Johannis" to the abbey of Mont-Saint-Michel[3439]. "ဦHaimonis vicecomitisဦ" witnessed the charter dated to [1047 or before] under which Guillaume II Duke of Normandy confirmed the donation by "AdelelmiဦBeatricis uxor eiusဦRotberti filius eius" to the abbey of Mont-Saint-Michel[3440]. Guillaume de Poitou records that "Haimonem agnomine Dentatum" supported "Guido filius Burgundionum comitis" in his rebellion, dated to [1047][3441].
လMaugerမs second son was Hamon, nicknamed Dentatus, from having been born, it is said, with teeth. He is styled Earl of Corbeil, and in several of the old French historians the seigneuries of Thorigny, Granville, Breuilly, Creuilly, Bercy and Maisy are assigned to himဦ. Corbeil sur Seine was situated between Paris and Fontainbleau and contained two Collegiate Churches founded by Hamon the first Earlဦ. When Dennis Granville, Dean of Durham, went into exile for his faithful adherence to the cause of his royal master, James II, he lived for some time at Corbeil and discovered the tomb of his great ancestor, which he described as very magnificent, and bearing the same arms as were then borne by his family. Thorigny was a fortified town upon the borders of Bayeux and Coutance. Creuilly was near Caen, and the castle, a construction of different ages, still exists and is now converted into a dwelling house. Maisy is described as လle commune littoral du Bessin.ဝ Bruilly or Bercy are unknown, the names not being found in any of the maps of France or Normandy, whilst the little Norman sea-port of Granville is of course still extant and well-known. Its situation on the coast between Avranches and Coutances is singular; it is built in steps or terraces under a rocky promontory projecting into the sea, surmounted by its ancient fort whose presence restricts many of the buildings from rising above one story in height. Previously to the bombardment of the British at the end of the seventeenth century, the Granville arms existed on one of the citadel gatesဦ.[1]
·ÄúLittle or nothing is known of the life of Hamon Dentatus, but the old historians state that he and his brother Guillerin took part in the rebellion of the principal Norman barons against the young Duke William·Äôs ascension on the ground of his illegitimacy, and that both were slain in the celebrated Battle of the Valley of the Dunes. In a note of Robert Wace·Äôs quaint poetry, ·ÄúLe Roman de Rou et des Ducs de Normandie,·Äù it is stated that Hamon fell valiantly attacking the King of France, who had come to the assistance of the young Duke. His body was taken to Essay and there interred before the door of the Church. He had married Hadwise or Avoye (in some English pedigrees she is called Elizabeth d·ÄôAvoye) the widow of Hugh the Great, Duke of France, sister to the Emperor Otho, and daughter of Henry l·ÄôOiseleur. By her Hamon left three sons, namely, Robert Fitzhamon; Richard called, as was customary, de Granville, after one of his father·Äôs Lordships, and Hamon.[2]
Sources
·Üë Roger Granville, The History of the Granville Family (1895), pp. 15-16. ·Üë Roger Granville, The History of the Granville Family (1895), p. 17.
http://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/9/93/Normandie-124.jpg
Maugerမs second son was Hamon, nicknamed Dentatus, from having been born, it is said, with teeth. He is styled Earl of Corbeil, and in several of the old French historians the seigneuries of Thorigny, Granville, Breuilly, Creuilly, Bercy and Maisy are assigned to himဦ. Corbeil sur Seine was situated between Paris and Fontainbleau and contained two Collegiate Churches founded by Hamon the first Earlဦ. When Dennis Granville, Dean of Durham, went into exile for his faithful adherence to the cause of his royal master, James II, he lived for some time at Corbeil and discovered the tomb of his great ancestor, which he described as very magnificent, and bearing the same arms as were then borne by his family. Thorigny was a fortified town upon the borders of Bayeux and Coutance. Creuilly was near Caen, and the castle, a construction of different ages, still exists and is now converted into a dwelling house. Maisy is described as လle commune littoral du Bessin.ဝ Bruilly or Bercy are unknown, the names not being found in any of the maps of France or Normandy, whilst the little Norman sea-port of Granville is of course still extant and well-known. Its situation on the coast between Avranches and Coutances is singular; it is built in steps or terraces under a rocky promontory projecting into the sea, surmounted by its ancient fort whose presence restricts many of the buildings from rising above one story in height. Previously to the bombardment of the British at the end of the seventeenth century, the Granville arms existed on one of the citadel gatesဦ.[1]
·ÄúLittle or nothing is known of the life of Hamon Dentatus, but the old historians state that he and his brother Guillerin took part in the rebellion of the principal Norman barons against the young Duke William·Äôs ascension on the ground of his illegitimacy, and that both were slain in the celebrated Battle of the Valley of the Dunes. In a note of Robert Wace·Äôs quaint poetry, ·ÄúLe Roman de Rou et des Ducs de Normandie,·Äù it is stated that Hamon fell valiantly attacking the King of France, who had come to the assistance of the young Duke. His body was taken to Essay and there interred before the door of the Church. He had married Hadwise or Avoye (in some English pedigrees she is called Elizabeth d·ÄôAvoye) the widow of Hugh the Great, Duke of France, sister to the Emperor Otho, and daughter of Henry l·ÄôOiseleur. By her Hamon left three sons, namely, Robert Fitzhamon; Richard called, as was customary, de Granville, after one of his father·Äôs Lordships, and Hamon.[2]
Sources
1.·Üë Roger Granville, The History of the Granville Family (1895), pp. 15-16. 2.·Üë Roger Granville, The History of the Granville Family (1895), p. 17.
Hamon "Dentatus" de Crâ®vecoeur | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Godhaut de Beleme |
Les données affichées n'ont aucune source.