“Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families,” Douglas Richardson (2013): edfordshire, Gainer and Cantley, Norfolk, Mapledurham, Oxfordshire, etc., benefactor of Bellosane, Clairruissel and Fécamp Abbeys and the Priory of St. Laurent en Lions, Normandy, and Missenden Abbey, Buckinghamshire, younger but eldest surviving son and heir by his father's 2nd marriage, born say 1150-55 (adult by 1180). He married before 1193 JULIANE DE DAMMARTIN, daughter of Aubrey (or Alberic) II, Count of Dammartin, by Mahaut (or Mathilde), daughter of Renaud II, Count of Clermont-en-Beauvaisis [see DAMMARTIN 3 for her ancestry]. They had two sons, Gerard and Hugh, and one daughter, Millicent. In 1190 he was granted the manor of Houghton Regis, Bedfordshire. In 1191 he accompanied King Richard I on the 3rd Crusade. At the capture of Acre, he commanded 100 knights. In 1193, he swung over temporarily to King Philip's side and his manors of Houghton and Bledlow were taken. In 1184 Louis de Gournay, on Hugh's behalf, was pardoned £40 by the king on the Norman Pipe Rolls. In 1198 he granted the five churches of Caistor [on Sea] and the church of Cantley to the collegiate church of St. Hildevert, Gournay. The same year he made an exchange with the monks of Bec Hellouin in Normandy, by which the manor of Bledlow, Buckinghamshire passed to that alien abbey. In 1202 the manor of Wendover, Buckinghamshire was re-granted to him. In 1202 he joined the French side and Wendover was granted to Ralph de Tilley. In 1205 he gave Bucilly Abbey with the consent of his wife and children 5 muids of white wine and 20 sols laonnais which he had of 100 cens annually at Nouvion-le-Comte at laSaint-Remy. In 1206 he was pardoned at the instance of Otto the Emperor, and permitted to return to England. Sometime in the period, c.1206-14, he granted Missenden Abbey various tracts of land, including land in Peterley, Pirenor, and Hughenden. In 1210 he paid a fine of 700 marks that he might hold Wendover, Buckinghamshire, without being disseised thereof, unless by judgment in the king's courts. He was Sheriff of Buckinghamshire and Bedfordshire in 1214, being then "weighed down with sickness." HUGH DE GOURNAY died 25 October 1214 at Rouen in Normandy "after donning the garb of a Templar and discarding it by apostasy." f Gournay 1 (1848): 22 (chart), 128-183, esp. 145-149 (Letter of Juliane de Cantelowe, wife of Robert de Tregoz, in Vitis Calthorpiana, Harl. 970, British Library "Cest escrow Dame Julian Tresgooze enuoya St. Thomas de Hereford son frere a son request, guar il desire a scauor la descent dont il fuit venue … Apres ceo Sir Hugh de Gornaye le filz espousa la soer le count Renaud de Boloyng ... Et le dit Count Renaud auait quater soers de pere et de mere. Le quart soer q' fuit nostre ayles out a nosme Julian, q' fuit marrye a Hugh de Gornay le fits, nostre ayle."). Delisle & Pussy Mémoires et Notes de M. Auguste Le Prevost pour servir à l’Histoire du Département de l’Eure 1 (1862): 431. Barthélemy Cartulaire de l'Abbaye de Bucilly (1881): 128 (charter of Hugh, seigneur of Gournay dated 1205). List of Sheriffs for England & Wales (PRO Lists and Indexes 9) (1898): 1. VCH Buckingham 2 (1908): 247-253. Bedfordshire Hist. Rec. Soc. 7 (1922): 153-157; 19 (1937): charts fol. pg. 99. Oxfordshire Rec. Soc. 7 (1925): 7-15. Jenkins Cartulary of Missenden Abbey 1 (1938): 164-165 (charter of Hugh de Gournay dated c.1206-14; charter names his parents, Hugh and Milicent, and his wife, Juliane), 188, 208-209, 2411 245; 3 (1962): 13-16. Chibnall Select Docs. of the English Lands of the Abbey of Bec (Camden 3rd Ser. 73) (1951): 7-8. Paget (1957), 266: 1-4 (sub Gurnay). Winter Descs. of Charlemagne (800-1400) (1987): XIII.496, XIII.599. Schwennicke Europäische Stammtafeln 3 (1989): 649 (no daughter Juliane attributed to Aubri II de Dammartin). Harper-Bill English Episcopal Acta VI: Norwich 1070-1214 (1990): 181-182. Moss Pipe Rolls of the Exchequer of Normandy (Pubs. Pipe Rolls Soc. n.s. 53) (2004): 84. Power Norman Frontier in the 12th & Early 13th Cents. (2004): 355-357. Bedfordshire Hist. Rec. Soc. 19 (1937): 85 ("... in administering Houghton, he seems to have had trouble with Dunstable priory, whose chronicler records his death with some satisfaction. The acceptedaccount of the pedigree assigns as wife to my Hugh IV a Juliana de Dammartin. Her marriage to a member of the Gournay family is supported by an early charter of Hugh de Gournay, for the souls of his father ..."). oucester [see CANTELOWE 4]; (2nd) WILLIAM DE CANTELOWE, Knt., of Eaton Bray, Bedfordshire [see CANTELOWE 4].”
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