Hij is getrouwd met Maud (Matilda) de la Mare.
Zij zijn getrouwd rond 1260.Bron 1
Kind(eren):
Charlemagne Descendant many times over!
All descendants of Queen of England Eleanor of Aquitaine are in triple figures just through her paths.
All descendants of King Louis VII of France, Eleanor's first husband are likewise in triple figures
through his paths alone.
This individual is not such a descendant by standard documentation, including here of one of
these individuals, or both.
This Charlemagne descendant is documented on this one extended family site as among others a
1st-2nd-3rd-4th-5th-6th-7th-8th-9th-
10th-11th-12th-13th-14th-15th-16th-17th-18th-19th-
20th-21st-22nd-23rd-24th-25th-26th-27th-28th-29th-
30th-31st-32nd-33rd-34th-35th-36th-37th-38th-39th
40th-41st-42nd-43rd-44th-45th-46th-47th-48th-49th-50th great grandchild repeatedly so many times each uniquely
as to at least be into the triple figures as such a multi-ancestral path descendant of ,
Charlemagne, first Holy Roman Emperor [HRE]---coronation on 25 December 800 in Rome---
with HREs so created and so serving until August 6, 1806, when the Empire was disbanded.
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Contents list above are live links at source as follows by clicking into wikibio
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None included from any of the original researchers unless shown below
PIERS DE MONTFORT, son and heir. In 1260 he was staying beyond the seas.In April 1264, he was captured at Northampton and imprisoned for a shorttime in Windsor Castle with his father and brother Robert. In June he hadcustody of Rockingham Castle for a few days; and it was probably he, andnot his father, who was forbidden to take part in a tournament atDunstable in February 1264/5. He fought at Evesham for Simon de Montfort,4 August, and was wounded and taken prisoner. Having "appeased the King'sindignation and rancour of mind," he was on 28 June 1267 pardoned for alltrespasses at the time of the disturbance in the kingdom, and herecovered part of his father's lands. In 1268 he gave the advowson ofPonteland, Northumberland, which his father had bought, to his friendWalter de Merton for his newly founded college at Oxford; and in thisyear a grant of £50 per annum was renewed to him. In February 1271/2 hehad protection for going on a pilgrimage to Santiago, and he went againin January 1274/5. In Nov. 1276 he was one of the magnates at a Councilat Westminster concerned with Llewelyn and Welsh affairs, and in Februaryfollowing was going to Wales in the King's service. He was going beyondthe seas in January 1277/8, and again in 1281. He gave the manor ofGreetham to the Bishop of Durham for a hospital for the sick and poor. In1280 he granted to Queen Eleanor the marriage of his eldest son John. Amarket and fair at Uppingham were granted to him in June 1281. In April1282 he was summoned to serve in person against the Welsh.
He married, circa 1260, Maud, daughter and heir of Matthew, son of HenryDE LA MARE, with whom he had Ashtead in Surrey. He died before 4 March1286/7. [Complete Peerage IX:127, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)]
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Peter de Montfort participated in his father's treasons and was takenprisoner at the battle of Evesham, but being allowed the benefit of theDictum of Kenilworth, he was restored to his paternal inheritance -- andafterwards enjoyed the favour of King Edward I, in whose Welsh wars hetook a very active part. He d. in 1287, leaving a dau. Elizabeth (who m.1st, William, son and heir of Simon de Montacute, and 2ndly, Sir Thomasde Furnival), and a son and heir, John de Montfort, who was the next yearsummoned to parliament as a baron. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant,Forfeited and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage Ltd, London, England,1883, p. 377, Montfort, Barons Montfort]
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Maud (Matilda) de la Mare |