Genealogie Wylie » Sir Robert de Tibetot , of Nettlestead (1228-1298)

Persoonlijke gegevens Sir Robert de Tibetot , of Nettlestead 

Bronnen 1, 2
  • Ook bekend als Robert /Tybotot/.
  • Hij is geboren in het jaar 1228 in Wymondham, Melton Mowbray, Leicestershire, England.Bron 1
  • Hij is overleden op 22 mei 1298 in Nettlestead, Bosmere, Suffolk, England, hij was toen 70 jaar oud.Bron 1
  • Een kind van John 2nd Baron de Tibetot en Margaret de Badlesmere
  • Deze gegevens zijn voor het laatst bijgewerkt op 10 april 2023.

Gezin van Sir Robert de Tibetot , of Nettlestead

Waarschuwing Let op: Partner (Margaret Deincourt) is 116 jaar jonger.

(1) Hij is getrouwd met Eve de Chaworth.

Zij zijn getrouwd voor 18 oktober 1269.Bron 1


Kind(eren):

  1. Hawise de Tibetot  > 1265-< 1345 
  2. Ada Tibetot  ± 1283-< 1324 


(2) Hij is getrouwd met Margaret Deincourt.

Zij zijn getrouwd voor 5 juni 1348 te 1st husband.Bronnen 3, 4, 5, 6


Kind(eren):

  1. Elizabeth de Tibetot  ± 1371-< 1424 
  2. Margaret Tibetot  ± 1366-> 1431 


Notities over Sir Robert de Tibetot , of Nettlestead

ROBERT TYBOTOT, son and heir, born 1228 (d), did homage and on 23 January1249/50 was given seisin of his lands in Essex. On 3 May 1254 he wasgranted protection to go to Gascony, but is not further mentioned until13 May 1260, when he was granted a rent in Eston, near Grantham, by theLord Edward, who also gave him, 10 May 1263, all the manor ofNettlestead, Suffolk. In April 1262 he was ordered to return Shopland tothe heir of Baldwin de Ostewic and he witnessed a deed of John de Burgo,4 July following. During the conflict between the Crown and Simon deMontfort Robert Tybotot was a staunch supporter of the Lord Edward. Afterthe defeat of the King at Lewes on 14 May 1264, he was among thosesupporters of the Crown who held Bristol against the Earl of Leicester.His name appears, in July 1264, among those who were said to be coming toaid the King, he joined in a raid to rescue the Lord Edward fromimprisonment in Wallingford Castle and in September 1264 he and otherswere ordered to surrender control of the castles of Marlborough andLudgershall. In December 1264 Simon de Montfort and the Earl ofGloucester led an army against Bristol, but when the town surrenderedRobert and his associates were allowed to establish themselves inSalisbury Castle, and the Earl of Leicester was forced to compromise withthe garrison of Salisbury. In February 1264/5 Robert Tybotot and acompanion were granted safe conduct to come to the King's household, andin the following March Robert and other persons were granted protection,provided that they did not join the King or the Lord Edward unlessrequested to do so by the King's Council which was controlled by Simon deMontfort. During the period of unrest after the battle of Evesham, 4August 1265, Robert seized many lands which were later restored to theirrightful tenants. However, when peace was finally restored hisfaithfulness to the Crown was rewarded. In October 1265 he was given thehouse of Philip le Taylur in the City of London, in the following monthhe became lord of Carbrooke, Norfolk, and in January and August 1266 themanors of Allesley and Fillongley, co. Warwick, Carlton Castle andCaenby, Lincs, passed under his control. Constable of Porchester Castle,November 1265 to April 1266. He was granted timber in 1267, receivedrights of free warren on his demesne lands, March 1268/9, and obtainedcontrol of Kingsbury, co. Warwick, October 1269. In February 1269/70 hebecame guardian of the lands of Geoffrey Lutterel in place of the £30annual rent which he had been receiving from Bristol; and the manor ofStreethall, Essex, also passed to his control. On 13 July 1270 he wasamong those who were granted protection for 4 years to accompany the LordEdward on the Crusade, arrangements were made for the care of his heirsif he should die and attorneys were appointed to act during his absence.When he returned, the Archbishop of Canterbury was ordered by the Pope,29 April 1273, to pay him 600 silver marks towards his Crusade expenses.In January 1274/5 he was appointed Constable of Nottingham Castle andKeeper of the forest of Bestwood, offices which he held until his death,and in September 1279 he became Keeper of the town of Nottingham. KingEdward granted him many favours. In May 1275 he became guardian of thelands and heirs of John de Moese, and in September of the lands of Lucyde Meinill; he was granted the marriage of the heir of John de Mohun,July 1279, and obtained possession of the manors of Langar and Barnston,Notts, in 1285. He was named in October 1275 to supervise the collectionof the fifteenth in Norfolk and Suffolk; was one of the Keepers of theBishopric of Norwich in 1278; and in July 1279 he was ordered to enquirein Norfolk and Suffolk concerning those who were spreading evil rumoursabout the King. He was one of the keymen of the conquest andadministration of Wales. In November 1276 he attended the Council whichdecided to declare war against Llewelyn; and in November 1277 he was oneof the English representatives to negotiate the peace of Conway, to swearto the English observance of the peace and to conduct Llewelyn to meetEdward at Rhuddlan. He was summoned for service in Wales in 1277 and1282; was at Westminster, September 1278, when Alexander, King ofScotland, did homage to Edward I; and was at Acton Burnell, Salop,Michaelmas 1283, when the Statute of Acton Burnell was promulgated. From8 June 1281 till his death he was guardian of the King's lands andcastles in West Wales and Justice of West Wales. He was nearly capturedin March 1282, when the castles of Llandovery and Carreg Cennen, co.Carmarthen, fell to the Welsh. In the same month he was appointed captainof West Wales, but on 10 April 1282 he was placed under the command ofthe Earl of Gloucester there and in March 1283 he was ordered to serveagainst the Welsh in Merionethshire. The rebellion of Rhys ap Maredudd ofDryslwyn and Dinefwr in 1287-88 was crushed by Robert, who capturedNewcastle Emlyn in January 1287/8. After the rebellion Maredudd apRichard ap Maredudd of Elfed appeared before him to submit to the King.In June 1288 or 1289 Robert resisted the attempt of the Earl of Pembroketo seize the commote of Ystlwyf and in 1292 he granted the commote ofMallaen and Kylsaen to the sons of Madoc ap Arandor. Although there is noevidence of him being summoned to Parliament, he was present in plenoparliamento on 29 May 1290, when consent was given for the levy of anaid, and he was ad parliamentum to which the men of Yarmouth complainedin the same year. In 1291 he was one of the mainperners for the Earl ofHereford in the dispute with the Earl of Gloucester and he was summonedfor service against the Scots, 1291 and 1297. He attended the meeting atBerwick-on-Tweed, October 1292, to decide the claims of Bruce or Balliolto the Scottish throne, was at Tuggrall, Northumberland, Decemberfollowing, when the Great Seal passed to the care of John de Langton, andwitnessed the homage, of Balliol to Edward I at Newcastle-on-Tyne, 26December 1292. In June 1294 he was granted protection to proceed with theKing to Gascony and mustered at Portsmouth, August following. During theexpedition he was director of finance and one of the councillors of Johnof Brittany, King's Lieutenant in Gascony. He acted with John de St.John, Seneschal of Gascony, on diplomatic missions and was appointed toconduct negotiations with the King of Castile. In 1295 he just managed toescape from the town of Risonces, when it was captured by the French, andhe remained in royal service in southern France until the end of 1297.

He married, some time before 18 October 1269, Eve (b), and died atNettlestead, 22 May 1298, aged about 70. Eve died shortly before 30August 1300. [Complete Peerage XII/2:89-93, (transcribed by DaveUtzinger)]

(d) The date of Robert's birth is estimated on the assumption that he didhomage when he reached his majority. Robert's guardian had been WilliamTurbert. In 1242 he was said to hold Wymondham and Edmondthorpe of theEarl of Derby.

[b] When Robert was making arrangements to join the Crusade, provisionwas made, 12 July 1270, for the care of his heirs should he die. Dugdale,Baronage, Vol. ii, p. 38, says that Eve was daughter of Payn de Chaworth,but he gives no proof. Payn was a close associate of Robert during thewars against Simon de Montfort, he was with Robert in the Crusade and thename Payn was borne by Roberts 2nd son. Payn was, however, aged only 13or 14 in 1258 and died s.p. or s.p.s. before 20 September 1279, when hisbrother Patrick was his heir. Assuming a Chaworth marriage, it seemslikely that Eve was Payn's sister and daughter of Patrick Chaworth by hiswife Hawise de Londres. In a pedigree of Tybotot in Thoroton's Notts,Vol. i. pp. 203-04, Robert's wife is called Eve, daughter of P . . . deChaworth. In the Visitation of Notts, Harlein Society, p. 124, Eve,daughter of Patrick and sister of Payn and Patrick Chaworth, Lords ofKidwclly, appears as the wife of Sir John (sic) Tiptofte. Payn himselfmentions his sister Eve in a grant made by him, Trin. 1270, to the monksof Blanchland, in South Wales. In April 1283 Robert made a grant toMottisfont Priory, Hants, of which the Chaworth family held patronage.The grant is sealed with the arms a saltire lozengy, legend 'S. Robertide Tibotot'. He bore silver, a saltire engrailed gules.

------------------------------

Robert de Tibetot, who in the 50th of Henry III, 1266, was made Governorof the Castle of Porchester, and having attended Prince Edward to theHoly Land, was in high favour after he had ascended the throne as EdwardI, being then constituted Governor of Nottingham Castle, Justice of SouthWales, and Governor of the castles of Carmarthen and Cardigan. In the13th of the same reign, 1285, he had a grant from the son of Gerard deRodes to himself, his wife and his son, in fee of the manors of Langarand Berneston, in Nottinghamshire. In the 20th of Edward I, being theKing's Lieutenant for Wales, he fought and defeated Rees ap Meredith, ina great battle wherein 4000 Welshmen were slain and Rees himself, havingbeen made a prisoner, was conveyed to York and there executed. Robert deTibetot was subsequently in the wars of Gascony and Scotland.

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Voorouders (en nakomelingen) van Robert de Tibetot

Agnes de Ros
1285-< 1328
Margaret de Clare
± 1282-± 1333

Robert de Tibetot
1228-1298

(1) < 1269

Eve de Chaworth
± 1250-< 1300

Hawise de Tibetot
> 1265-< 1345
Ada Tibetot
± 1283-< 1324
(2) < 1348
Elizabeth de Tibetot
± 1371-< 1424
Margaret Tibetot
± 1366-> 1431

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Bronnen

  1. Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, by G. E Cokayne, Sutton Publishing Lt, XII/2:89-93
  2. Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999, 2-5, 49-4
  3. Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition, by Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., 65a-35
    before Trinity (8th Sunday after Easter), 1348
  4. Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, by G. E Cokayne, Sutton Publishing Lt, XII/2:97-98
    bef. Jun 1348
  5. Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999, 74-8
    no date, 1st husband
  6. Magna Carta Ancestry, by Douglas Richardson, 2005, Genealogical Publishing Co., 822

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Over de familienaam Tibetot

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  • Bekijk in het Wie (onder)zoekt wie? register wie de familienaam Tibetot (onder)zoekt.

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