Genealogie Wylie » Sibyl Corbet [Wikibio connect] (± 1092-> 1157)

Persoonlijke gegevens Sibyl Corbet [Wikibio connect] 

Bronnen 1, 2

Gezin van Sibyl Corbet [Wikibio connect]

(1) Zij is getrouwd met Henry I "Beauclerc" King of England.

Zij zijn getrouwd mistress, no marriage te mistress, no marriage.


Kind(eren):

  1. Sibylla FitzHenry  ± 1104-1122
  2. Reynold de Dunstanville  ± 1110-1175 


(2) Zij had een relatie met Herbert I FitzHerbert.


Kind(eren):

  1. Rohese FitzHerbert  ± 1115-> 1176 
  2. Herbert II FitzHerbert  ± 1125-< 1204 


Notities over Sibyl Corbet [Wikibio connect]

=========
WIKIPEDIA
=========
Source above, includes portraits, paintings, maps and other
items not below; and working links and updates, is
Lady Sybilla Corbet of Alcester with no page issued yet, but see
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sybilla_of_Normandy and
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexander_I_of_Scotland wikibios for mother and husband

WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia

Sybilla of Normandy

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sybilla of Normandy
Queen consort of Scotland
Tenurec. 1107–1122
Bornc. 1092
Domfront, Normandy
Died12 or 13 July 1122
Kenmore, Scotland
BurialDunfermline Abbey
SpouseAlexander I of Scotland
DynastyNorman
FatherHenry I of England
MotherLady Sybilla Corbet of Alcester
Sybilla of Normandy (c. 1092 – 12 or 13 July 1122) was Queen of Scotland as the wife of Alexander I.

Sybilla was the first child of Henry I of England and his mistress, Lady Sybilla Corbet of Alcester (b. 1077 in Alcester, Warwickshire, d. after 1157). Her maternal grandfather was Robert Corbet of Alcester, part of the Corbet family. She was born circa 1092 in Domfront, Normandy.

Around 1107, Sybilla married Alexander I, King of Scots. The marriage was childless. The marriage ceremony may have occurred as early as 1107, or as at late as 1114.[1]

William of Malmesbury's account attacks Sybilla, but the evidence argues that Alexander and Sybilla were a devoted but childless couple and Sybilla was of noteworthy piety.[2] Sybilla died in unrecorded circumstances at Eilean nam Ban (Kenmore on Loch Tay) in July 1122 and was buried at Dunfermline Abbey. Alexander did not remarry and Walter Bower wrote that he planned an Augustinian Priory at the Eilean nam Ban dedicated to Sybilla's memory, and he may have taken steps to have her venerated.

References
Oram, p. 65; a date around 1114 would place the marriage at about the same time as that of David and Maud of Huntingdon.
Duncan, p. 65; Oram, p. 71.
Scottish royalty
Preceded by
Ethelreda of Northumbria
Queens consort of Scotland
c. 1107–1122Succeeded by
Maud, Countess of Huntingdon
vte
Scottish royal consorts
Gruoch (c. 1040 – 1057)Ingibiorg Finnsdottir (1058–1069)Margaret of Wessex (1070–1093)Ethelreda of Northumbria (1093–1094)Sybilla of Normandy (1107–1122)Maud of Northumbria (1124–1130)Ermengarde de Beaumont (1186–1214)Joan of England (1221–1238)Marie de Coucy (1239–1249)Margaret of England (1251–1275)Yolande de Dreux (1285–1286)Elizabeth de Burgh (1306–1327)Joan of the Tower (1329–1362)Margaret Drummond (1364–1369)Euphemia de Ross (1371–1386)Anabella Drummond (1390–1401)Joan Beaufort (1424–1437)Mary of Guelders (1449–1460)Margaret of Denmark (1469–1486)Margaret Tudor (1503–1513)Madeleine of Valois (1537)Mary of Guise (1538–1542)Francis II of France (1558–1560)Henry, Duke of Albany (1565–1567)James, Earl of Bothwell (1567)Anne of Denmark (1589–1619)Henrietta Maria (1625–1649)Catherine of Braganza (1662–1685)Mary of Modena (1685–1688)George of Denmark (1702–1707)
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Categories: Scottish royal consorts1090s births1122 deathsHouse of DunkeldIllegitimate children of Henry I of EnglandHouse of NormandyPeople from Orne12th-century Scottish people12th-century Scottish women12th-century Norman womenDaughters of kingsScottish royalty stubsFrench nobility stubs
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Sibyl (or Adela or Lucia) Corbet, living 1157, daughter and coheir of Robert Corbet, mistress of Henry I, lady of Alcester, co. Warwick and of Pontesbury and Woodcote, co. Salop (by Henry I she was mother of ReginaldFitz Roy, Earl of Cornwall). [Ancestral Roots]

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

The following additional info was supplied by Curt Hofemann,curt_hofemann AT yahoo.com:

no evidence to prove that Henry I married Sibyl [Ref: Sheppard Apr65 p96]

It is because of Henry I's personal propensities that we knowsomething of two Corbet women who occur in the records of this period. Ofhis numerous mistresses Sibyl Corbet, elder daughter of Robert fitzCorbet of Longden, must have been a favourite since she bore four,possibly five, of Henry's illegitimate children. [Ref: CP XI Appendix D]

She had a younger sister Alice. Where, when and how the liaison beganbetween Henry and Sibyl is a mystery. He had already had children byvarious mistresses: among the oldest must have been Juliane, who marriedEustace de Pacy lord of Breteuil in 1103, and rebelled against herfather; and Robert, born of an unknown woman of Caen, who was createdearl of Gloucester by his father in 1122. [Ref Corbet citing: CP V:683:the suggestion that he was the son of Sibyl Corbet is probably correct]

The known children by Sibyl Corbet were Rainaud de Dunstanville, hisbrother William and sisters Gundred and Rohese; it is also possible, butnot certain, that Sibyl was the mother of the king's illegitimatedaughter Sibyl who was married to Alexander after he became king of theScots in 1107. [Ref: Corbet citing: A.C. Lawrie, Early Scottish Charters,Glasgow 1905:charter XXXVI to Scone Priory, Alexander I, c. 1120,witnessed by Queen Sibyl and her brother William; she died 12 June 1122on an island in Loch Tay to which Alexander granted charter XLVII, tocanons of Scone]

Note 1: Sheppard = Walter Lee Sheppard, Royal Bye-Blows II: TheIllegitimate Royal Offspring from Edward III To Queen Anne, NEHGR vol 21,1967.

Note 2: Corbet = The Corbett Study Group,http://website.lineone.net/~corbett_group/First/people.htm
specifically: The Anglo Norman Corbets by Barbara Coulton.

Regards,
Curt

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

The following material was excerpted from The Corbet Study Group, J.C.Nobel, online at
http://website.lineone.net/~corbett_group/First/people.htm:

The Anglo Norman Corbets by Barbara Coulton

Prominent at Matilda's 'court' were several connections of the Corbetfamily through Sibyl and her sister Alice. Sibyl had married Herbert fitzHerbert, a son of the chamberlain of Henry I; Alice married a kinsman ofBrien fitz Count, of Wallingford, one of the empress's main supporters:he was William Boterel of Botreaux. Sibyl's son Herbert fitzHerbertmarried Lucy, daughter of Miles earl of Hereford. . . .

We do not know when or where Sibyl and her sister Alice died, but thereis an odd footnote to their history in an old account of Asthall churchin Oxfordshire. "On the north side of the church ... is the effigy of afemale figure recumbent, on a stone coffin, situated within an elegantly Gothic arch. It is said to contain the remains of Alice Corbett, concubine to King Henry I., the daughter of Sir Robert Corbett of Warwickshire." So a memory lingered, though confused.

Note: Was this "confused" effigy of Sibyl rather than Alice? Or wasAlice also a mistress of Henry I?

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Voorouders (en nakomelingen) van Sibyl Corbet

Hugh le Corbet
± 1025-1086
mot
????-
Robert Corbet
± 1052-± 1130

Sibyl Corbet
± 1092-> 1157

(1) 
Sibylla FitzHenry
± 1104-1122
(2) 

Herbert I FitzHerbert
± 1087-< 1155

Rohese FitzHerbert
± 1115-> 1176

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Bronnen

  1. Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition, by Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., 262-27, 121-26
    line 121=mother of Reginald
  2. Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, by G. E Cokayne, Sutton Publishing Lt, III:429
  3. Jim Weber , via http://worldconnect.rootsweb.ancestry.co..., september 2008
    ID: I03619 Sibyl Corbet no evidence to prove that Henry I married Sibyl [Ref: Sheppard Apr65 p96] It is because of Henry I's personal propensities that we know something of two Corbet women who occur in the records of this period. Of his numerous mistresses Sibyl Corbet, elder daughter of Robert fitz Corbet of Longden, must have been a favourite since she bore four, possibly five, of Henry's illegitimate children. [Ref: CP XI Appendix D] She had a younger sister Alice. Where, when and how the liaison began between Henry and Sibyl is a mystery. He had already had children by various mistresses: among the oldest must have been Juliane, who married Eustace de Pacy lord of Breteuil in 1103, and rebelled against her father; and Robert, born of an unknown woman of Caen, who was created earl of Gloucester by his father in 1122. [Ref Corbet citing: CP V:683: the suggestion that he was the son of Sibyl Corbet is probably correct] The known children by Sibyl Corbet were Rainaud de Dunstanville, his brother William and sisters Gundred and Rohese; it is also possible, but not certain, that Sibyl was the mother of the king's illegitimate daughter Sibyl who was married to Alexander after he became king of the Scots in 1107. [Ref: Corbet citing: A.C. Lawrie, Early Scottish Charters, Glasgow 1905:charter XXXVI to Scone Priory, Alexander I, c. 1120, witnessed by Queen Sibyl and her brother William; she died 12 June 1122 on an island in Loch Tay to which Alexander granted charter XLVII, to canons of Scone] Note 1: Sheppard = Walter Lee Sheppard, Royal Bye-Blows II: The Illegitimate Royal Offspring from Edward III To Queen Anne, NEHGR vol 21, 1967. Note 2: Corbet = The Corbett Study Group, http://website.lineone.net/~corbett_group/First/people.htm specifically: The Anglo Norman Corbets by Barbara Coulton. Regards, Curt
  4. Jim Weber presents The Phillips, Weber, Kirk, & Staggs families of the Pacific Northwest, Jim Weber, via http://worldconnect.rootsweb.ancestry.co..., september 2008
    ID: I03619 Sibyl Corbet no evidence to prove that Henry I married Sibyl [Ref: Sheppard Apr65 p96] It is because of Henry I's personal propensities that we know something of two Corbet women who occur in the records of this period. Of his numerous mistresses Sibyl Corbet, elder daughter of Robert fitz Corbet of Longden, must have been a favourite since she bore four, possibly five, of Henry's illegitimate children. [Ref: CP XI Appendix D] She had a younger sister Alice. Where, when and how the liaison began between Henry and Sibyl is a mystery. He had already had children by various mistresses: among the oldest must have been Juliane, who married Eustace de Pacy lord of Breteuil in 1103, and rebelled against her father; and Robert, born of an unknown woman of Caen, who was created earl of Gloucester by his father in 1122. [Ref Corbet citing: CP V:683: the suggestion that he was the son of Sibyl Corbet is probably correct] The known children by Sibyl Corbet were Rainaud de Dunstanville, his brother William and sisters Gundred and Rohese; it is also possible, but not certain, that Sibyl was the mother of the king's illegitimate daughter Sibyl who was married to Alexander after he became king of the Scots in 1107. [Ref: Corbet citing: A.C. Lawrie, Early Scottish Charters, Glasgow 1905:charter XXXVI to Scone Priory, Alexander I, c. 1120, witnessed by Queen Sibyl and her brother William; she died 12 June 1122 on an island in Loch Tay to which Alexander granted charter XLVII, to canons of Scone] Note 1: Sheppard = Walter Lee Sheppard, Royal Bye-Blows II: The Illegitimate Royal Offspring from Edward III To Queen Anne, NEHGR vol 21, 1967. Note 2: Corbet = The Corbett Study Group, http://website.lineone.net/~corbett_group/First/people.htm specifically: The Anglo Norman Corbets by Barbara Coulton. Regards, Curt
  5. Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition, by Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., 262-27

Over de familienaam Corbet

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