Stamboom Den Hollander en Van Dueren den Hollander » Rudolf "Hugh" de Warenne II (± 1020-± 1074)

Persoonlijke gegevens Rudolf "Hugh" de Warenne II 

  • Roepnaam is Hugh.
  • Hij is geboren rond 1020 in Varenne Near Bellencombre, Seine-Inferieure, Normandy, France.
  • Hij werd gedoopt in Lord of, Mortimer, England.
  • Alternatief: Hij werd gedoopt in Lord of, Mortimer, England.
  • Alternatief: Hij werd gedoopt in Lord of, Mortimer, England.
  • Gedoopt (op 8-jarige leeftijd of later) door het priesterschapsgezag van de LDS-kerk.
  • Beroep: Norman Noble, fought at Hastings.
  • Hij is overleden rond 1074 in Varene Seine-Inferieure NormandyNormandie France.
  • Een kind van Rodulf / Ranulph I de Varennes en Béatrice de Vascoeuïl
  • Deze gegevens zijn voor het laatst bijgewerkt op 11 februari 2019.

Gezin van Rudolf "Hugh" de Warenne II

Hij had een relatie met Emma de Pont Audumer.


Kind(eren):

  1. William de Warenne  ± 1036-1088 


Notities over Rudolf "Hugh" de Warenne II

ID: I546829821
Name: Ralph DE WARREN
Given Name: Ralph
Surname: De Warren
Sex: M
Birth: Abt 998 in France
Change Date: 22 Jun 2003

Father: William DE WARREN b: Abt 950 in Normandy,France
Mother: Miss DE TORTA

Marriage1 Emma DE WARENNE
Note: _STATMARRIED
Children
William DE WARREN b: Abt 1055in Of Bellencombe,Seine Inferieure,France
Basic Life Information

William was a son of Rodulf II de Warenne and Emma and a grandnephew of duchess Gunnor, wife of duke Richard I of Normandy. The de Warenne surname derives from the castle of that name on the River Varenne, which flows through the territory William acquired in Upper Normandy in the region today called Bellencombre.

As a young man, William played a prominent role in protecting the Norman realm of the future William the Conqueror's from a major invasion by the King of France in February 1054 at the Battle of Mortemer. After this battle Roger de Mortemer forfeited most of his lands, and the duke gave them to William.

Battle of Hastings

William was one of the nobles who advised Duke William when the decision to invade England was being considered. He fought at Hastings, and afterwards received the Rape of Lewes in Sussex, and subsequently lands in twelve other shires. He built castles at Lewes (Sussex), Reigate (Surrey), Castle Acre (Norfolk) and Conisbrough in Yorkshire. By the time of the Domesday survey he was one of the wealthiest landholders in England with holdings in 12 counties.

Defending the Realm

He fought against rebels at the Isle of Ely in 1071 where he showed a special desire to hunt down Hereward the Wake who had murdered his brother the year before.

William was loyal to William II William Rufus), and it was probably in early 1088 that he was created Earl of Surrey.

Marriages and Children

He was married twice.

First, William married Gundred (Latin: Gundrada), sister of Gerbod the Fleming, Earl of Chester. The children of William and Gundred were:

William de Warenne, 2nd Earl of Surrey (d. 1138)
Edith de Warenne who married Gerard de Gournay
Reynold de Warenne, who inherited lands from his mother in Flanders and died before 1118

Second, William married a sister of Richard Gouet.

Death

William died shortly after becoming Earl of Surrey from wounds he received while helping suppress the rebellion of 1088. At the time of his death, it has been estimated that his wealth was equivalent to £73.9 billion in today's money.
wikipedia
[From "The Origins of Some Anglo-Norman Families"]For this identification see Mr. Loyd's paper 'The Origin of the Family of Warenne' in Yorkshire Arch. Journal, vol. xxxi, pp. 97-113. The hamlet of Varenne lies on the river Varenne c. 2 miles S of Arques and c. 13 miles N of Bellencombre. The latter place, arr. Dieppe, cant. Bellencombre, where there was a castle, became the caput of the Warenne honour in Normandy.
[1494] WSHNGT.ASC file (Geo Washington Ahnentafel) # 4360424 = 230244
1st son and heir, is known only from his subscriptions to two charters of his father for the Holy Trinity of Rouen. As his father's lands near Rouen and in the pays de Caux did not pass to his son William or William's descendants, it is likely that Rodulf succeeded to them on his father's death; he married Emma, whose parentage is unknown. [Complete Peerage XII/1:493, XIV:603, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)]
[From "The Origins of Some Anglo-Norman Families"] For this identification see Mr. Loyd's paper 'The Origin of the Family of Warenne' in Yorkshire Arch. Journal, vol. xxxi, pp. 97-113. The hamlet of Varenne lies on the river Varenne c. 2 miles S of Arques and c. 13 miles N of Bellencombre. The latter place, arr. Dieppe, cant. Bellencombre, where there was a castle, became the caput of the Warenne honour in Normandy.
Curt Hofemann, (XXXXX@XXXX.XXX), provided the following additional information on Rodulf, in a post-em:
K.S.B. Keats-Rohan "Poppa of Bayeux and her Family":
1027-35: first occurrence of Ralph de Warenne in a charter for Saint-Amand [p22]
c1050: grant of land in Vascoeuil by Ralph de Warenne and wife Beatrice; charter mentions Ralph's brother Godfrey and was attested by Gotmund miles abbatis. Dateable to c1050 by a reference to Roger de Beaumont as Vicomte of Rouen [p22]
1050's: well known charters of early 1050s by which Ralph de Warenne and his wife Beatrice were associated with the lands of Roger fitz Bishop Hugh of Coutances and his sons. [p23]
Research note: K-R p22 contradicts CP (& Holloway & Wagner) by stating Rodulph/Ralph died before Beatrice. Beatrice is listed as living 1053 (CP XII/1:492 & ES III:698) & dead before 1059 (CP XII/1:492, K-R p22, Moriarty p184, Wagner p46]. K-R states a grant "made by widow Beatrice" to Preaux of land near Dozule, Eure was "dated during the time of William son of Count Robert, suggesting that William had not yet begun the series of military achievements that enabled him to be detached from his father in such references, i.e. before c1054-60". To do: check CP's source of the 1074 grant. Also is the term "widow" K-R's or stated in the grant of the land near Dozule?... Curt
RODULF DE WARENNE, 1st son and heir, is known only from his subscriptions to two charters of his father for the Holy Trinity of Rouen. As his father's lands near Rouen and in the pays de Caux did not pass to his son William or William's descendants, it is likely that Rodulf succeeded to them on his father's death; he married Emma, whose parentage is unknown. [Complete Peerage XII/1:493, XIV:603, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)]
[From "The Origins of Some Anglo-Norman Families"]
For this identification see Mr. Loyd's paper 'The Origin of the Family of Warenne' in Yorkshire Arch. Journal, vol. xxxi, pp. 97-113. The hamlet of Varenne lies on the river Varenne c. 2 miles S of Arques and c. 13 miles N of Bellencombre. The latter place, arr. Dieppe, cant. Bellencombre, where there was a castle, became the caput of the Warenne honour in Normandy.
Curt Hofemann, (XXXXX@XXXX.XXX), provided the following additional information on Rodulf, in a post-em:
.S.B. Keats-Rohan "Poppa of Bayeux and her Family":
1027-35: first occurrence of Ralph de Warenne in a charter for Saint-Amand [p22]
c1050: grant of land in Vascoeuil by Ralph de Warenne and wife Beatrice; charter mentions Ralph's brother Godfrey and was attested by Gotmund miles abbatis. Dateable to c1050 by a reference to Roger de Beaumont as Vicomte of Rouen [p22]
1050's: well known charters of early 1050s by which Ralph de Warenne and his wife Beatrice were associated with the lands of Roger fitz Bishop Hugh of Coutances and his sons. [p23]
Research note: K-R p22 contradicts CP (& Holloway & Wagner) by stating Rodulph/Ralph died before Beatrice. Beatrice is listed as living 1053 (CP XII/1:492 & ES III:698) & dead before 1059 (CP XII/1:492, K-R p22, Moriarty p184, Wagner p46]. K-R states a grant "made by widow Beatrice" to Preaux of land near Dozule, Eure was "dated during the time of William son of Count Robert, suggesting that William had not yet begun the series of military achievements that enabled him to be detached from his father in such references, i.e. before c1054-60". To do: check CP's source of the 1074 grant. Also is the term "widow" K-R's or stated in the grant of the land near Dozule?... Curt
GIVN Rudolf
SURN von Warren
REPO @REPO80@
TITL World Family Tree Vol. 11, Ed. 1
AUTH Brøderbund Software, Inc.
PUBL Release date: July 1, 1997
ABBR World Family Tree Vol. 11, Ed. 1
Customer pedigree.
Source Media Type: Family Archive CD
PAGE Tree #0163
DATA
TEXT Date of Import: 18 Dez 1998
REPO @REPO80@
TITL World Family Tree Vol. 11, Ed. 1
AUTH Brøderbund Software, Inc.
PUBL Release date: July 1, 1997
ABBR World Family Tree Vol. 11, Ed. 1
Customer pedigree.
Source Media Type: Family Archive CD
PAGE Tree #0163
DATA
TEXT Date of Import: 18 Dez 1998
REPO @REPO80@
TITL World Family Tree Vol. 11, Ed. 1
AUTH Brøderbund Software, Inc.
PUBL Release date: July 1, 1997
ABBR World Family Tree Vol. 11, Ed. 1
Customer pedigree.
Source Media Type: Family Archive CD
PAGE Tree #0163
DATA
TEXT Date of Import: 18 Dez 1998
DATE 9 SEP 2000
TIME 13:17:45
{geni:about_me} Rudolf II de Warenne, son of Rudolf I of Warenne, was a Norman aristocrat and progenitor of the Earl of Surrey family line.

He is known only from his subscriptions to two charters of his father for the Holy Trinity of Rouen. As his fathers lands near Rouen and in the Pays de Caux did not pass to his son William or William's descendants, it is likely that Rodulf succeeded to them on his father's death.

The Family of Warenne originated from near Normandy, France. The de Warenne surname derives from the castle of that name on the Varenne River, which flows through the territory William acquired in Upper Normandy.

[edit] Family

He married Emma in or before 1059 - both were still living in 1074, and had several children.

* Rudolf III de Warenne - who inherited most of the family lands in Normandy.

* William de Warenne, 1st Earl of Surrey - who fought with William the Conqueror at the Battle of Hastings and was reward with vast land holdings as the Earl of Surrey.

* Frederick de Warenne - who was killed by Hereward the Wake. He is listed in the Domesday book holding lands in Cambridgeshire and Norfolk. (Domesday, ff.196, ii.465b, 170b, 172b). Another source lists Frederick as the brother of William's wife, Gundred [1].

References

1. ^ Orderic Vitalis Vol II, P 219

* K.S.B. Keats-Rohan, Nottingham Med. Studies, vol. 37, 1993, pp. 21-4.

* Cartography of Ste Trinité Abbey - cf. vol. 12, part 1, p. 492, notes h and i, citing Cart. Ste Trinité, nos xxix and xxxv.

* Corrections to Early British Genealogy

* Warren Family History Project

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

# ID: I27461

# Name: Rodulph II DE WARENNE

# Sex: M

# Change Date: 5 AUG 1997

Father: Ralph (or Rodulf) DE WARENNE b: ABT 0988 in Normandy, France

Mother: Beatrix DE VASCOEUIL

Marriage 1 Emma b: ABT 1020 in Normandy, France

Children

1. Has No Children Rodulph III DE WARENNE

2. Has Children William DE WARENNE Earl of Warenne Y b: ABT 1055 in Bellencombe, Seine-Inferieure, France

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

Rudolf II de Warenne, son of Rudolf I of Warenne, was a Norman aristocrat and progenitor of the Earl of Surrey family line.

He married Emma in or before 1059 - both were still living in 1074, and had several children.

* Rudolf III de Warenne - who inherited most of the family lands in Normandy.

* William de Warenne, 1st Earl of Surrey - who fought with William the Conqueror at the Battle of Hastings and was reward with vast land holdings as the Earl of Surrey.

* Frederick de Warenne - who was killed by Hereward the Wake. He is listed in the Domesday book holding lands in Cambridgeshire and Norfolk. (Domesday, ff.196, ii.465b, 170b, 172b). Another source lists Frederick as the brother of William's wife, Gundred [1].

References

1. ^ Orderic Vitalis Vol II, P 219

* K.S.B. Keats-Rohan, Nottingham Med. Studies, vol. 37, 1993, pp. 21-4.

* Cartography of Ste Trinité Abbey - cf. vol. 12, part 1, p. 492, notes h and i, citing Cart. Ste Trinité, nos xxix and xxxv.

* Corrections to Early British Genealogy

* Warren Family History Project

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

Ralph DE WARENNE

* Father: Rudolf DE WARENNE

* Mother: Beatrice DE VASCOEUIL

* Birth: 1030, Normandy, France

* Death: 1074

* Partnership with: Emma in BELLECOMBE

o Child: William DE WARENNE Birth: 1050, Bellecombe, France

o Child: Rodulf DE WARENNE Birth: 1053

Ancestors of Ralph DE WARENNE

/-Hugh 'Bishop of Countance' DE MORTIMER

/-Rudolf DE WARENNE

| | /-Herfastus 'the Dane' DE CREPON

| -Gunnora DE CREPON

Ralph DE WARENNE

| /-Tesselin DE ROUEN

-Beatrice DE VASCOEUIL

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

Rudolf II de Warenne, son of Rudolf I of Warenne, was a Norman aristocrat and progenitor of the Earl of Surrey family line.

He is known only from his subscriptions to two charters of his father for the Holy Trinity of Rouen. As his fathers lands near Rouen and in the Pays de Caux did not pass to his son William or William's descendants, it is likely that Rodulf succeeded to them on his father's death.

The Family of Warenne originated from near Normandy, France. The de Warenne surname derives from the castle of that name on the Varenne River, which flows through the territory William acquired in Upper Normandy.

Family

He married Emma in or before 1059 - both were still living in 1074, and had several children.

Rudolf III de Warenne - who inherited most of the family lands in Normandy.

William de Warenne, 1st Earl of Surrey - who fought with William the Conqueror at the Battle of Hastings and was reward with vast land holdings as the Earl of Surrey.

Frederick de Warenne - who was killed by Hereward the Wake. He is listed in the Domesday book holding lands in Cambridgeshire and Norfolk. (Domesday, ff.196, ii.465b, 170b, 172b). Another source lists Frederick as the brother of William's wife, Gundred.

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

Rudolf II de Warenne, son of Rudolf I of Warenne, was a Norman aristocrat and progenitor of the Earl of Surrey family line.

He is known only from his subscriptions to two charters of his father for the Holy Trinity of Rouen. As his fathers lands near Rouen and in the Pays de Caux did not pass to his son William or William's descendants, it is likely that Rodulf succeeded to them on his father's death.

The Family of Warenne originated from near Normandy, France. The de Warenne surname derives from the castle of that name on the River Varenne, which flows through the territory William acquired in Upper Normandy.

He married Emma in or before 1059 - both were still living in 1074, and had several children.

Rudolf III de Warenne - who inherited most of the family lands in Normandy.

William de Warenne, 1st Earl of Surrey - who fought with William the Conqueror at the Battle of Hastings and was reward with vast land holdings as the Earl of Surrey.

Frederick de Warenne - who was killed by Hereward the Wake. He is listed in the Domesday book holding lands in Cambridgeshire and Norfolk. (Domesday, ff.196, ii.465b, 170b, 172b). Another source lists Frederick as the brother of William's wife, Gundred

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

Rudolf II de Warenne, son of Rudolf I of Warenne, was a Norman aristocrat and progenitor of the Earl of Surrey family line.

He is known only from his subscriptions to two charters of his father for the Holy Trinity of Rouen. As his fathers lands near Rouen and in the Pays de Caux did not pass to his son William or William's descendants, it is likely that Rodulf succeeded to them on his father's death.

The Family of Warenne originated from near Normandy, France. The de Warenne surname derives from the castle of that name on the Varenne River, which flows through the territory William acquired in Upper Normandy.

Family

He married Emma in or before 1059 - both were still living in 1074, and had several children.

Rudolf III de Warenne - who inherited most of the family lands in Normandy.

William de Warenne, 1st Earl of Surrey - who fought with William the Conqueror at the Battle of Hastings and was reward with vast land holdings as the Earl of Surrey.

Frederick de Warenne - who was killed by Hereward the Wake. He is listed in the Domesday book holding lands in Cambridgeshire and Norfolk. (Domesday, ff.196, ii.465b, 170b, 172b). Another source lists Frederick as the brother of William's wife, Gundred

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

http://thepeerage.com/p449.htm#i4486

Rudolph de Warenne

M, #4486, d. after 1074

Last Edited=18 Sep 2002

Rudolph de Warenne died after 1074.

Child of Rudolph de Warenne and Beatrice (?)

William I de Warenne, 1st Earl of Surrey+ d. 24 Jun 1088

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

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rodulf_II_de_Warenne
--------------------
Rudolf II de Warenne, son of Rudolf I of Warenne, was a Norman aristocrat and progenitor of the Earl of Surrey family line.

He is known only from his subscriptions to two charters of his father for the Holy Trinity of Rouen. As his fathers lands near Rouen and in the Pays de Caux did not pass to his son William or William's descendants, it is likely that Rodulf succeeded to them on his father's death.

The Family of Warenne originated from near Normandy, France. The de Warenne surname derives from the castle of that name on the River Varenne, which flows through the territory William acquired in Upper Normandy.

He married Emma in or before 1059 - both were still living in 1074, and had several children.

Rudolf III de Warenne - who inherited most of the family lands in Normandy.

William de Warenne, 1st Earl of Surrey - who fought with William the Conqueror at the Battle of Hastings and was reward with vast land holdings as the Earl of Surrey.

Frederick de Warenne - who was killed by Hereward the Wake. He is listed in the Domesday book holding lands in Cambridgeshire and Norfolk. (Domesday, ff.196, ii.465b, 170b, 172b). Another source lists Frederick as the brother of William's wife, Gundred
Ancestral File Number: FLGX-8C
OR "RALPH""RODOLPHUS"; SIRE DE GARENNE/WARENNE
warenn
http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=image&guid=67d6efdc-b0f9-4bf4-8ec7-2033d4a2672e&tid=10145763&pid=-346929491
warenn
http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=image&guid=67d6efdc-b0f9-4bf4-8ec7-2033d4a2672e&tid=10145763&pid=-346929491
[From "The Origins of Some Anglo-Norman Families"]For this identification see Mr. Loyd's paper 'The Origin of the Family of Warenne' in Yorkshire Arch. Journal, vol. xxxi, pp. 97-113. The hamlet of Varenne lies on the river Varenne c. 2 miles S of Arques and c. 13 miles N of Bellencombre. The latter place, arr. Dieppe, cant. Bellencombre, where there was a castle, became the caput of the Warenne honour in Normandy.

[From "The Origins of Some Anglo-Norman Families"]For this identification see Mr. Loyd's paper 'The Origin of the Family of Warenne' in Yorkshire Arch. Journal, vol. xxxi, pp. 97-113. The hamlet of Varenne lies on the river Varenne c. 2 miles S of Arques and c. 13 miles N of Bellencombre. The latter place, arr. Dieppe, cant. Bellencombre, where there was a castle, became the caput of the Warenne honour in Normandy.
Rudolf II de Warenne, son of Rudolf I of Warenne, was a Norman aristocrat and progenitor of the Earl of Surrey family line.

He is known only from his subscriptions to two charters of his father for the Holy Trinity of Rouen. As his fathers lands near Rouen and in the Pays de Caux did not pass to his son William or William's descendants, it is likely that Rodulf succeeded to them on his father's death.

The Family of Warenne originated from near Normandy, France. The de Warenne surname derives from the castle of that name on the Varenne River, which flows through the territory William acquired in Upper Normandy.

Family
He married Emma in or before 1059 - both were still living in 1074, and had several children.

Rudolf III de Warenne - who inherited most of the family lands in Normandy.
William de Warenne, 1st Earl of Surrey - who fought with William the Conqueror at the Battle of Hastings and was reward with vast land holdings as the Earl of Surrey.
Frederick de Warenne - who was killed by Hereward the Wake. He is listed in the Domesday book holding lands in Cambridgeshire and Norfolk. (Domesday, ff.196, ii.465b, 170b, 172b). Another source lists Frederick as the brother of William's wife, Gundred [1].

References
^ Orderic Vitalis Vol II, P 219
K.S.B. Keats-Rohan, Nottingham Med. Studies, vol. 37, 1993, pp. 21-4.
Cartography of Ste Trinité Abbey - cf. vol. 12, part 1, p. 492, notes h and i, citing Cart. Ste Trinité, nos xxix and xxxv.
Corrections to Early British Genealogy
Warren Family History Project

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Voorouders (en nakomelingen) van Rudolf de Warenne

Emma de Torta
± 975-1022
Tesselin de Vascoeuil
± 970-± 1021
Tesselin de Vascoeuil

Rudolf de Warenne
± 1020-± 1074

Rudolf de Warenne


William de Warenne
± 1036-1088
William de Warenne

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