Richard and Charlotte Allen Cosby Ancestry » Lord of Wigmore Sir Roger de Mortimer (1158-< 1214)

Données personnelles Lord of Wigmore Sir Roger de Mortimer 

Les sources 1, 2, 3

Famille de Lord of Wigmore Sir Roger de Mortimer

(1) Il est marié avec Isabel or Millicent de Ferriers.

Ils se sont mariés apres 1190 à 1st husband 2nd wife.Source 2


Enfant(s):

  1. Ralph de Mortimer,  1195-1246 


(2) Il est marié avec Millicent de Ferrers.

Ils se sont mariés à 1st wife.Source 3


Enfant(s):

  1. Joan de Mortimer  ± 1190-1268 


Notes par Lord of Wigmore Sir Roger de Mortimer

Roger de Mortimer, d. before 19 Aug 1214, Lord Mortimer of Wigmore, co. Hereford; m. Isabel, d. before 29 Apr 1252, granted a life interest in Lechlade, co. Gloucester & Oakham, co. Rutland which her brother Henry lost at time of conquest of Normandy, daughter of Walkelin de Ferrieres, seigneur of Ferriers-Saint-Hilaire, and lord of Oakham, Rutland. [Ancestral Roots]------------ester Abbey, of Kington, St. Michael, Wilts, of Cwmhir, of Jumièges, and if Saint-Victor-en-Caux. Between 1182 and 1189 he attested at Rouen a charter of Henry II to the monks of Barbey (diocese of Bayeux). In 1191, upon a charge of conspiring with the Welsh against the King, he was forced to surrender his castles and to abjure the country for three years. In April 1194 he was in England again, and witnessed a charter of Richard I, after his second Coronation at Winchester. Roger was a strenuous Lord Marcher, and in 1195 drove the sons of Cadwallon out of Maelienydd, and restored Cwmaron Castle; but next year Rhys, Prince of South Wales, defeated a well-equipped force of cavalry and foot under Mortimer and Hugh de Say, of Richard's Castle, with much slaughter, near Radnor. He was one of the magnates who refused to serve personally in France in 1201, but his fine was remitted. On 1 April 1207 he witnessed a charter of the King at Montfort-sur-Risle, and he appears to have been with John at Bonport in July following.(b) On the loss of Normandy in 12o4. Roger adhered to John and forfeited his Norman lands. In 1205 he landed at Dieppe, and being captured by John de Rouvray, bailiff of Caux, was compelled to pay a ransom of 1,000 marks. He was in England again by June 1207, when he was directed to hand Knighton Castle to the custody of a successor; in that year his wife Isabel had a grant of Oakham for life. In 1210 some of his knights served in the King's invasion of Ireland. In 1212 he proffered 3,000 marks for the marriage of the heir of Walter de Beauchamp, to whom he married his daughter Joan. In May 1213 he was one of the sponsors for John's good faith in his reconciliation with Archbishop Langton at the command of the Pope.n DE FERRIÈRES, seigneur of Ferrières-Saint-Hilaire and lord of Oakham. He died before 19 August 1214, having, with the King's permission, resigned his lands to his son Hugh when he was taken ill, and was at buried at Wigmore. His widow Isabel married, 2ndly, Piers FITZHERBERT, of Blaen Llyfni, who died 1 June 1235. She retained her father's English lands till her death. She died before 29 April 1252, and was buried in the chapel which she had built in the court of the Hospital of St. John of Lechlade. [Complete Peerage IX:272-3, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)]n a prior wife, but Dave Utzinger states she was Milicent de Ferrers in a post to SGM.cessors, was in constant strife with the Welsh. At one time he sustained a great defeat in conjunction with Hugh de Say, but in the end he was victorious and took twelve of their principal leaders in one battle. He also enlarged considerably his territories and drove thieves and robbers from those pars. Being at one time present at the solemn anniversary of his father, he confirmed all his grants to the canons of Wigmore, adding, of his own gift, a spacious and fruitful pasture lying adjacent to the abbey, called the Treasure of Mortimer, upon which occasion, his steward remonstrating with him for parting with so valuable a treasure, he replied, "I have laid up my treasure in that field, where thieves cannot steal or dig, or moth corrupt." This Roger m. Millicent, dau. of --- Ferrers, Earl of Derby, and had issue, Hugh, his successor, and two daus., the elder m. to Stephen le Gross, the younger to Walcheline de Beauchamp. He m. 2ndly, Isabel, sister and heir of Hugh de Ferrers, of Oakham, in Rutlandshire, and of Lechelade and Lagebury in Gloucestershire. All which lands he inherited upon the death of the said Hugh de Ferrers, and by that lady he had three sons, Ralph, Robert, and Philip. He d. in 1215, and was s. by his eldest son, Hugh de Mortimer. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage Ltd, London, England, 1883, p. 383, Mortimer, Barons Mortimer, of Wigmore, Earls of March]e's (above) has them. After examining the situation, this was my reply:r de Mortimer are a different story. Burke's Dormant & Extinct Peerage, is an old source book which is full of quite a few errors, and is "low" on my list of sources. Since Ancestral Roots, which is considered to be much more accurate, states that Isabel outlived Roger and remarried a 2nd person, she would have to be the 2nd wife. In fact Millicent is not even mentioned in AR (but I have seen other sources for her).hile Ralph, son of Roger & Isabel, had a wife b. 1207 and his first child (that I have listed) is b. 1231, which means he was probably born 1195/1200.at I have examined the situation more closely.

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Ancêtres (et descendants) de Lord of Wigmore Sir Roger de Mortimer

Lord of Wigmore Sir Roger de Mortimer
1158-< 1214

(1) > 1190
(2) 

Millicent de Ferrers
± 1171-± 1190

Joan de Mortimer
± 1190-1268

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Les sources

  1. Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition, by Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., 1999, 132c-28, 262-29
  2. Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, by G. E Cokayne, Sutton Publishing Ltd, 2000, IX:272-3
  3. Newsgroup: soc.genealogy.medieval, at groups - google.com, Dave Utzinger (UTZ), 1 Jul 1998
    husband of Millicent de Ferrers
  4. Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition, by Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., 1999, 132c-28

Sur le nom de famille De Mortimer


Lors de la copie des données de cet arbre généalogique, veuillez inclure une référence à l'origine:
Richard Cosby, "Richard and Charlotte Allen Cosby Ancestry", base de données, Généalogie Online (https://www.genealogieonline.nl/richard-and-charlotte-allen-cosby-ancestry/P30305.php : consultée 17 mai 2024), "Lord of Wigmore Sir Roger de Mortimer (1158-< 1214)".