Richard FITZ ROY

Male - Bef 1246


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Richard FITZ ROY (son of John 'Lackland' King Of ENGLAND and Joan Of WALES); died before 24 Jun 1246.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Name: Richard De Chilham
    • Name: Richard De Dover

    Notes:

    Richard was a captain in his father's army during the revolt of the barons; also called Richard de Dover or Richard de Chilham.
    His mother was the sister of William, Earl of Warenne; m. abt 1214 Rohese, an heiress, daughter of "the Lord of Dover and baron of Chilham."

    He had a daughter: Isabel (d. July 7, 1276) m. abt July 12, 1247 Maurice de Berkeley (b. 1218; d. april 4, 1281), 6th Lord Berkeley, who may be call Maurice the Resolute."

    Family/Spouse: Rohese Of DOVER. Rohese died before 11 Feb 1261. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. Lorette DE DOVER
    2. Isabel FITZ ROY died on 07 Jul 1276.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  John 'Lackland' King Of ENGLAND was born on 24 Dec 1167 in Beaumont Palace, Oxford, England (son of Henry II 'Curtmantle' King Of ENGLAND and Eleanor Of AQUITAINE); died on 18 Oct 1216 in Newark Castle, Newark, Nottinghamshire, England; was buried in Worcester Cathedral.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Also Known As: John Plantagenet
    • Fact: Between 1199 and 1216, King of England
    • Crowned: 27 May 1199, Westminster Abbey

    Notes:

    [Hulett FTW from MC Scott.FTW]

    http://www.dcs.hull.ac.uk/cgi-bin/gedlkup/n=royal?royal01364
    Reigned 1199-1216. Signed Magna Carta in 1215 at Runnymede. His reign saw renewal of war with Phillip II Augustus of France to whom he has lost several continental possesions including Normandy by 1205. He came into conflict with his Barons and was forced to Sign the Magna Carta. His later repudiation of the charter led to the first barons war 1215-17 during which John died. Burke says he was born in 1160. King of Ireland 1177, Count of Mortain 1189, Earl of Gloucester.Called Lackland because by the time he was born, his older brothers' inheritances had been decided, and there was little left for him (Warren, King John, pg 28). Barber, The Devil's Crown, pg 53 states: that "no provision was made for John, who, born nine years after the last son's birth, was too young to be considered in an age when infant mortality was very high."

    Name:
    John of England (Lackland), brother and heir, youngest son, was born at Oxford on 24 Dec 1167. His father's attempt to provide territory in France for him provoked rebellion by is older brothers. His father granted him the lordship of Ireland in 1177, and arranged his succession to the earldom of Gloucester. His father's continued favour to him contributed to the rebellion of John's older brother Richard I, though at the end of Henry's reign John deserted his father to support Richard who, on accession as King in 1189, made John Comte de Mortagne in Normandy. John was married for the first tine at Marlebridge on 29 Aug 1189 to Isabel of Gloucester, Countess of Gloucester, youngest daughter and co-heiress of William FitzRobert, Earl of Gloucester, by Hawise, daughter of Robert de Beaumont, 2nd Earl of Leicester. Henry had arranged the marriage before his death, but it was delayed because Baldwin, Archbishop of Canterbury, had forbidden it on account of consanguinity (the were both great-grandchildren of King Henry I). On appeal to Rome the papal legate in England annulled the Archbishop's interdict. John became Earl of Gloucester 'jure uxoris'. Richard, who was childless, acknowledged that his successor as King of England was his and John's nephew Arthur, son of their deceased brother Geoffrey. While Richard was on crusade John broke his promise not to enter England during Richard's absence and, on learning of Richard's imprisonment in Germany, attempted, though unsuccessfully, to seize control of England. On Richard's return John was banished and disinherited though he was pardoned and recognized as heir when Arthur fell into the hands of the king of France, Philippe II. On the death of Richard in 1199, John took the Throne, and was crowned King of England on Ascension Day 27 May 1199. In 1199, through the Archbishop of Bordeaux and the Bishops of Poitier and Saintonge, and after a ten-year childless marriage, John obtained a divorce from his wife on the grounds of consanguinity. This enraged the Roman Curia as presuming to dissolve what had been joined by their authority. He intervened in the politics of his county of Poitou, and in trying to settle the quarrel between the rival families of Lusignan and Angouleme, was married for the second time at Bordeaux on 24 Aug 1200 to Isabelle D'Angouleme, daughter and heiress of Aymer Taillefer, Comte d'Angouleme, by Alice, daughter of Pierre de France, Seigneur de Courtenay. She was born in 1188, and had been betrothed to Hugues IX de Lusignan, Cote de La Marche. She was crowned on 8 Oct 1200. War with France followed John's refusal to appear before Philippe II concerning the grievance of the Lusignans. At first John was successful in defending his Frence lands, capturing his nephew Arthur (who died in custody), but in 1204 lost Normandy, Anjou, Maine and Touraine to the French king. For the next ten years John resided almost permanently in England (the first such Angevin king) and attempted to restore his finances for further warfare in France by determined taxation and exploitation of his feudal prerogatives (later the basis for the charge of tyranny). When he insisted on his, rather the Pope's right to nominate the Archbishop of Canterbury, Pope Innocent III in 1208 imposed an Interdict on England suspending all religious services, and excommunicating King John. After five years of amassing the revenues of vacant or appropriated sees and abbeys, John agreed to become a vassal to the Pope for an annual tribute of one thousand marks, with absolution from excommunication and the lifting of the Interdict. John continued his fight with the French, now with the Pope as his ally, but attempts finally collapsed with the defeat of his continental allies at Bouvines in 1214. An alliance of barons took advantage of this defeat to launch a rebellion which was successful in forcing John to a comprehensive and humiliating Magna Charta ensuring the feudal rights of the barons and the reinstatement of English law, signed at Runnymede on 19 June 1215. John soon repudiated the charter and civil war resumed. John of England, King of England, died suddenly in the midst of campaigning at Newark on 19 Oct 1216, and was buried at Worcester Cathedral where his effigy is to be seen on his tomb.

    John's loss of the French dominions, his disputes with Rome, and a high level of taxation had the English nobility up in arms against him. In 1215 they forced the King to sign the Magna Carta, guaranteeing their rights in relation to those of the crown. This led to civil war, which only ended with John's death.

    Despite his problems with France and the English barons, recent historical research suggests that John was a keen administrator, a good general, an astute diplomat, and a hard-working and intelligent ruler with a strong sense of justice.

    John married Joan Of WALES. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Joan Of WALES
    Children:
    1. Joan Princess Of WALES was born well before 1200; died between 30 Mar 1236 and 02 Feb 1237.
    2. 1. Richard FITZ ROY died before 24 Jun 1246.
    3. Oliver Prince Of WALES died in 1219 in Damietta; was buried in Westminster Abbey.
    4. Geoffrey Prince Of WALES died in 1205.
    5. Osbert Giffard Of WALES
    6. John Prince Of WALES
    7. Henry Prince Of WALES


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Henry II 'Curtmantle' King Of ENGLAND was born on 05 Mar 1133 in Le Mans, Sarthe, France (son of Geoffrey V Plantagenet 'the fair' D'ANJOU and Maud 'the Empress Maud' Of ENGLAND); died on 06 Jul 1189 in Chinon, Indre-et-Loire, France; was buried in Fontevrault Abbey, Fontevrault, Maine-Et-Liore, France.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Also Known As: Henry II Curt mantel Plantagenet
    • Fact: Count of Maine and Anjou
    • Fact: Reigned until 1189
    • Name: Henry Of Anjou
    • Name: II Henry
    • Birth: 25 Mar 1133
    • Fact: Between 1154 and 1189, King of England
    • Crowned: 19 Dec 1154, Westminster Abbey

    Notes:

    Henry was crowned December 19, 1154 at Westminster Abbey. He was called Curtmantle because of the short capes he preferred over the stylish longer capes.

    Name:
    He became Duc de Normandie et du Maine, and Comte d'Anjou by inheritance from his mother and father. By his marriage to Eleanore of Aquitaine, Henry acquired the duchy of Aquitaine together with Gascony, Poitou and Auvergne. By the Treaty of Winchester in 1153 Henry was recognised as King Stephen's heir. He reached England on 8 Dec 1154, and crowned King of England on 19 Dec 1154, with direct rule over England and southern Wales, and a claim to the overlordship of northern Wales. His domain of England, Wales, and the French lands acquired from inheritance and marriage (ruled as separate components), was termed the 'Angevin empire' (as his father was Cote d'Anjou). The overlord of his French lands, the king of France, had directed control of a much smaller domain than henry himself. In 1171 Henry annexed Ireland though controlling the eastern part only. He had little difficulty in curbing the disorder of Stephen's reign and restoring the royal authority. He encouraged the development of juries of presentment of local men in the investigation of crimes, and trial of those accused by royal justices. His writs to sheriffs improved the disposition of claims over possession of property and benefices thereby discouraging local self-help violent ejection and usurpation. By relying on financial and legal experts and a permanent court at Westminster he fostered the establishment of those two professions and the replacement of Roman law by English common law. Henry's reassertion of the king's rights over the church, in particular that clerics were subject to his courts and not solely to ecclesiastical courts, led to the quarrel with his former chancellor Thomas Becket, who, as Archbishop of Canterbury, was murdered in his cathedral at Henry's instigation in 1170. Henry spent much of his reign in France, upholding his authority in his numerous lordships and attempting to extend his rule. There he encountered the hostility of the French kings, who encouraged the grievances of his quarrelsome sons. Henry II of England, King of England, died at Chinon in Normandy on 8 July 1189 in the midst of a rebellion by his sons. They were buried at Fontevralt Abbey in Anjou, where their tomb effigies may be seen.

    The Plantagenets
    1154-1399

    The surname of this remarkable family derives from the nickname borne of Geoffrey, Count of Anjou, between 1129 and 1251. Geoffrey, the father of Henry II, wore a spring of flowering broom (Planta genista) as his personal badge.

    The first Plantagenet king of England was Henry II, and he is generally regarded as the greatest of them. Thirteen more kings followed him in a dynasty that ruled for 331 years, although for the last 86 years, rival families within the dynasty struggling to seize the crown took the names of Lancaster and York, even though all were Plantagenets. for much of this long period, the kings were involved in costly and largely unproductive wars with France and Scotland, and in power struggles with the over-mighty barons at home. As a dynasty, the Plantagenets made their greatest contribution in the development of English law, especially the unique Common Law, and by sponsoring a splendid architectural heritage.

    Henry's succession in 1154 made him lord of a vast empire, and he was equipped with all the intellectual and physical qualities to rule it well. Henry began by destroying the castles built by rebellious barons during Stephen's reign, and then set about regulating the power of the Church. Although the latter years of his reign were plagues by family revolts, his vast empire was still intact when he died in 1189.

    When Henry I became King of England in 1154 he was already Count of Anjou and of Touraine, andDuke of Normandy and of Aquitaine. As such, he was lord of an empire that stretched from the Cheviot Hills down to the Pyrenees, his territories in France exceeding even those of the French king. Known as the Angevin Empire (because the country of Anjou lay at its heart), this vast domain was held together by diplomacy and force of arms, and remained intact up to the death of Richard I in 1199.

    In 1164 Henry se out various Church reforms in the Constitutions of Clarendon. These included the proposal that the clergy or others associated with the Church, if charged with a criminal offence, should be tried in the civil courts, and tat no appeal could be made to rome without the Kings consent. Despite fierce opposition from the Church, these reforms were adopted. The King quarreled with Thomas a Becket, the Archbishop of Canterbury, over the new laws and, although the two men were reconciled, they again quarreled in 1170. In exasperation, henry cried out: 'Will not someone rid me of this turbulent priest?' Four of Henry's knights responded to the King's outburst and set off for Canterbury, where they pursued the archbishop into his cathedral and murdered him in front of the altar.

    Henry married Eleanor Of AQUITAINE on 18 May 1152 in Bordeaux, France. Eleanor (daughter of William X Duke Of AQUITAINE and Eleanor DE CHATELLERAULT) was born about 1122 in Chateau De Belin, Bordeaux, Aquitaine; died on 31 Mar 1204 in Poiters, Poitou, Aquitaine; was buried in Abbeye De Fontevrault, Fontevrault, France. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Eleanor Of AQUITAINE was born about 1122 in Chateau De Belin, Bordeaux, Aquitaine (daughter of William X Duke Of AQUITAINE and Eleanor DE CHATELLERAULT); died on 31 Mar 1204 in Poiters, Poitou, Aquitaine; was buried in Abbeye De Fontevrault, Fontevrault, France.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Also Known As: Eleanor Of Aquitaine
    • Name: Eleanor Aquatine
    • Crowned: Between 17 and 19 Dec 1154, Queen of England at Westminster Abbey
    • Crowned: 25 Dec 1137, Queen of France at Bourges

    Notes:

    Eleanor was crowned with her husband on December 19, 1154 at Westminster Abbey.

    Children:
    1. William Of ENGLAND was born on 17 Aug 1152 in Normandy,Le Mans, France; died in Apr 1156 in Wallingford Castle, Wallingford, Berkshire, England; was buried in Reading Abbey.
    2. Henry Of ENGLAND was born on 28 Feb 1155 in Bermandsey Palace, London, England; died on 11 Jun 1183 in Chateau De Mortel, Turenne, Aquitaine; was buried in Rouen, Normandie.
    3. Matilda Of ENGLAND was born in 1156 in London, Middlesex, England; died on 28 Jun 1189 in Brunswick, Germany; was buried in St. Blasius, Braunschweig, Germany.
    4. Richard I 'Coeur de Loin' King Of ENGLAND was born on 08 Sep 1157 in Oxford, England; died on 06 Apr 1199 in Chalus, France; was buried on 08 Apr 1199 in Fontevrault Abbey, Fontevrault, Maine-Et-Loire, France.
    5. Geoffrey Of ENGLAND was born on 23 Sep 1158 in England; died on 19 Aug 1186 in Killed - in Tournament in Paris; was buried in Notre Dame Cathedral.
    6. Alianor Of ENGLAND was born on 13 Oct 1162 in Domfront, Normandie; died on 31 Oct 1214 in Las Huelgas, Burgos, Burgos, Spain; was buried in Monastery of Las Huelgas.
    7. Joan Of ENGLAND was born in Oct 1165 in Angers, France; died on 04 Sep 1199 in Rouen, Normandie; was buried in Fontevrault Abbey, Fontevrault, Maine-Et-Loire, France.
    8. 2. John 'Lackland' King Of ENGLAND was born on 24 Dec 1167 in Beaumont Palace, Oxford, England; died on 18 Oct 1216 in Newark Castle, Newark, Nottinghamshire, England; was buried in Worcester Cathedral.


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  Geoffrey V Plantagenet 'the fair' D'ANJOU was born on 24 Aug 1113 in Anjou, France (son of Foulques V 'the Young" D'ANJOU and Ermengarde DE MAINE); died on 07 Sep 1151 in Chateau-du-Loir; was buried in Le Mans Cathedral.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Name: 1129, Comte d'Anjou
    • Fact: 1144, Duke of Normandy

    Notes:

    He was called Geoffrey Plantagenet because of the sprig of broom or planta genista which he was said to have worn in his hat. His son, Henry II, became the first of the Plantagenet kings.
    He was also known as Count of Anjou and Maine and Touraine, Duke of Normandy.

    Name:
    On Henry's death in 1135, he claimed the duchy of Normandie, conquering it in 1144. He held the duchy, with that of Anjou, until granting them to his son Henry.

    Geoffrey married Maud 'the Empress Maud' Of ENGLAND on 22 May 1127 in Le Mans. Maud (daughter of Henry I "Beauclerc" King Of ENGLAND and Matilda Of SCOTLAND) was born on 7 Feb 1102 in Winchester, England; died on 10 Sep 1167 in Notre Dame, France; was buried in Abbey Of Bec. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 9.  Maud 'the Empress Maud' Of ENGLAND was born on 7 Feb 1102 in Winchester, England (daughter of Henry I "Beauclerc" King Of ENGLAND and Matilda Of SCOTLAND); died on 10 Sep 1167 in Notre Dame, France; was buried in Abbey Of Bec.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Fact: Matilda and Henry V had no issues.
    • Fact: Empress of Germany
    • Crowned: 07 Jan 1114

    Notes:

    Excerpt from Blood Royal: Her remains were reinterred in 1282 before the high altar; during the revolution, her grave was detroyed. According to the "Dictionary of National Biography", the church and tomb were destroyed by fire in 1263; when it was restored in 1282, her remains were found, 'wrapped in an ox-hide." Her new tomb was stripped of its decorations by the English in 1421; a brass plate marking her grave in 1684 was lost in 1793; and the church was demolished in 1841. In 1846, her lead coffin was rediscovered and moved to the cathedral church of Rouen.

    Children:
    1. 4. Henry II 'Curtmantle' King Of ENGLAND was born on 05 Mar 1133 in Le Mans, Sarthe, France; died on 06 Jul 1189 in Chinon, Indre-et-Loire, France; was buried in Fontevrault Abbey, Fontevrault, Maine-Et-Liore, France.
    2. Geoffrey MARTEL was born between 01 Mar and 01 Jun 1134 in Rouen, Seine-Maritime, France; died in 1158 in Nantes, Loire-Atlantique, France; was buried in Nantes.
    3. William PLANTAGENET was born on 21 Jul 1136 in Argentan, Orne, France; died in 1164 in Rouen, Seine-Maritime, France; was buried in Notre Dame, Rouen, Seine-Maritime, France.
    4. Emma PLANTAGENET was born about 1138 in Normandy, France.

  3. 10.  William X Duke Of AQUITAINE was born in 1099 in Aquitaine (son of William IX Of AQUITAINE and Philippa Of TOULOUSE); died on 09 Apr 1137 in France.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Name: William VIII of Poitou
    • Fact: 1126-1137, Count of Aquitaine, Count of Poitou

    William married Eleanor DE CHATELLERAULT in 1121. Eleanor (daughter of Aimeri I Viscount Of CHATELLERAULT and Dangereuse De L'Isle BOUCHARD) was born about 1105 in Chatellerault, Poitou, Aquitaine; died after Mar 1130. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 11.  Eleanor DE CHATELLERAULT was born about 1105 in Chatellerault, Poitou, Aquitaine (daughter of Aimeri I Viscount Of CHATELLERAULT and Dangereuse De L'Isle BOUCHARD); died after Mar 1130.
    Children:
    1. 5. Eleanor Of AQUITAINE was born about 1122 in Chateau De Belin, Bordeaux, Aquitaine; died on 31 Mar 1204 in Poiters, Poitou, Aquitaine; was buried in Abbeye De Fontevrault, Fontevrault, France.
    2. William Of AQUINTAINE was born about 1124 in Aquitaine; died before 09 Apr 1137.
    3. Petronilla Of AQUINTAINE was born about 1126 in Aquitaine; died after 24 Oct 1153.