Hugh DE MORVILLE

Hugh DE MORVILLE

Eigenschaften

Art Wert Datum Ort Quellenangaben
Name Hugh DE MORVILLE
Beruf Lord of Cunningham, Lord of Lauderdale

Ereignisse

Art Datum Ort Quellenangaben
Tod 1162
Heirat

Ehepartner und Kinder

Heirat Ehepartner Kinder

Beatrice DE BEAUCHAMP

Notizen zu dieser Person

Hugh de Morville (died 1162) was a Norman knight who made his fortune in the service of David fitz Malcolm, Prince of the Cumbrians (1113-24) and King of Scots (1124-53).

His parentage is said by some to be unclear, but G. W. S. Barrow, in his Anglo-Norman era states:

"it seems probable that the father of William, and the first Hugh de Morville, was the Richard de Morville who witnessed charters by Richard de Redvers for Montebourg and the church of St. Mary in the castle of Néhou in the early twelfth century."[1]

On the other hand, it is though to be pretty well established that Hugh came to David's service when (and because) David held Cotentin in north France, which in turn indicates that Hugh was personally from Normandy and therefore unlikely to be son of a Morville who already had settled to England.

Hugh came from Morville in the Cotentin Peninsula, territory controlled by David since it had been given to him by King Henry I of England some time after 1106. It must have been sometimesoon after 1106 that Hugh joined David's small French household followers and military retinue. In 1113 David became Earl of Huntingdon-Northampton (by marriage) and Prince of the Cumbrians, after forcing his brother Alexander, King of Scots, to hand over territory in southern "Scotland".[2] David achieved this with his French followers[3]

David endowed Hugh with the estates of Bozeat and Whissendine from his Huntingdon earldom,[4] (which, since they are attested as his wife Beatrice's dowry, David presumably arranged by granting Hugh the wife who was herself inheriting them - this is a usual pattern of medieval rewards to lords: the reard comes in form of inheritance of a heiress whom the favored knight marries) and the baronies of Lauderdale and (perhaps later) Cunningham in Scotland.[5] During David's take-over of northern England after 1136, Hugh was also given the lordship of Appleby - essentially northern Westmorland.[6] After the death of Edward, Constable of Scotland, almost certainly in 1138 at the Battle of the Standard, Hugh was given this position.[7]

In 1150 Hugh made A further mark on the history of southern Scotland by founding Dryburgh Abbey for Premonstratensian canons regular.[8] Hugh eventually retired there as a canon, soon before his death in 1162.[9] An ancient memorial to him in the South wall is said to mark his burial-place.

Hugh married Beatrice, the heiress of Houghton Conquest, and daughter of Robert de Beauchamp, a son of Hugh de Beauchamp of Bedford. They had at least two sons and two daughters, including his successor, Richard de Morville.[4] It has been proposed that Simon de Moreville (d 1167), of Kirkoswald in Cumbria, who married Ada de Engaine, heiress of Burgh-by-Sands in Cumbria, was a son of Hugh and Beatrice. Another son, Hugh de Morville, Lord of Westmorland, was a principal player in the assassination of Thomas Becket, Archbishop of Canterbury. He subsequently fell out of favour with the king and was forfeited (1174) when the Lordship of Westmorland (which he had inherited from his father who had received it from David I) was granted to his sister, Maud, whose husband was William de Vipont. Hugh II's other sister, Joan (d.1247), married Richard, a younger son of Ralph Gernon of Bakewell, Derbyshire.[citation needed] It has been suggested that Grace, wife of the Cumbrianmagnate Sir Hubert de Vaux, of Gilslaund, was yet another daughter of Hugh and Beatrice.

Quellenangaben

1 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugh_de_Morville,_Lord_of_Cunningham_and_Lauderdale

Datenbank

Titel Ackermann-Ahnen
Beschreibung Familienforschung Europa Schwerpunkte Hessen, Niedersachsen Hugenotten + Waldenser Europäisches Mittelalter
Hochgeladen 2024-01-01 13:36:39.0
Einsender user's avatar Thomas Wolfgang Ackermann
E-Mail ackermann.fuldatal@googlemail.com
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