Michael Matthew Groat PhD's Genealogical Database
Individuals: 97,713 Families: 61,838
Gedcom Last Modified: December 14, 2025 00:59:10
Adeliza de Clare
- Preferred Name: Adeliza de Clare[1] [2] [3]
- Gender: F
- Burial: ABT 1163 in St. Osyth Priory, St. Osyth, Tendring, Essex, England at LATI: N1.7999 LONG: E0.0753
- Death: 1 NOV 1163 in St Osyth Priory, Essex, England, United Kingdom at LATI: N1.7999 LONG: E0.0753
- Christening: ABT 1092 in Clare, Suffolk, England at LATI: N2.0784 LONG: E0.5832
- Birth: ABT 1093 in Risbridge, Suffolk, England, United Kingdom at LATI: N2.1621 LONG: E0.5273
- Religion: NunBET 1141 AND 1163 in St. Osyth Priory, St Osyth, Essex, England at LATI: N1.8 LONG: E0.0755
- FSID: 9CZ7-PW4
- Notes:
BIO
BIO: from http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/NORMAN%20NOBILITY.htm#_Toc160529790
ADELISA de Clare ([1090/95]-1163). The Liber Vitæ of Thorney abbey lists "…Gilebt fili[us] Ricardi, Ricard fili[us] eiu
Memorial
According to Medlands (see below) Gilbert de Clare and Isabel had only two children and Agnes fitzgilbert de Clare was NOT one of them I am therefore detaching this relationship:
GILBERT de Clare "St
=== Royal Ancestry Biography ===
“Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families,” Douglas Richardson (2013):
"Children of Richard Fitz Gilbert, by Alice of Chester...
iii. ALICE DE CLARE, married before 1151 CADWALADR AP GRUFFUDD AP CYNAN, Prince of North Wales, of Cynfael, Meirion, younger son of Gruffudd ap Cynan, by Angharad, daughter of Owain ab Edwin. They had four sons, Cunedda (or Conan), Randwlff, Gruffudd, and Richard. During his father's lifetime he accompanied his elder brother, Owain, on many predatory excursions against rival princes. In 1121 they ravaged Meirionydd, and apparently conquered it. In 1135 and 1136 they led three successful expeditions to Ceredigion, and managed to get possession of at least the northern portion of that district. In 1137 Owain succeeded, on Gruffudd ap Cynan's death, to the sovereignty of Gwynedd or North Wales. Cadwaladr appears to have found his portion in his former conquests of Meirionydd and northern Ceredigion. The intruder from Gwynedd soon became involved in feuds both with his south Welsh neighbours and with his family. In 1143 his men slew Anarawd, son of Gruffudd of South Wales, to whom Owain Gwynedd had promised his daughter in marriage. Repudiated by his brother, who sent his son Howel to ravage his share of Ceredigion and to attack his castle of Aberystwith, Cadwaladr fled to Ireland, whence he returned next year with a fleet of Irish Danes, to wreak vengeance on Owain. The fleet had already landed at the mouth of the Menai Straits when the intervention of the `goodmen' of Gwynedd reconciled the brothers. Disgusted at what they probably regarded as treachery, the Irish pirates seized and blinded Cadwaladr, and only released him on the payment of a heavy ransom of 2,000 bondmen (some of the chroniclers say cattle). Their attempt to plunder the country was successfully resisted by Owain. In 1146, however, fresh hostilities broke out between Cadwaladr and his brother's sons Howel and Cynan. They invaded Meirionydd and captured his castle of Cynvael, despite the valiant resistance of his steward, Morvran, abbot of Whitland. This disaster lost Cadwaladr Meirionydd, and so hard was he pressed that, despite his building a castle at Llanrhystyd in Ceredigion (1148), he was compelled to surrender his possessions in that district to his son, apparently in hope of a compromise; but Howel next year captured his cousin and conquered his territory, while the brothers of the murdered Anarawd profited by the dissensions of the princes of Gwynedd to conquer Ceredigion as far north as the Aeron, and soon extended their conquests into Howel's recent acquisitions. Meanwhile Cadwaladr was expelled by Owain from his last refuge in Mona. Cadwaladr now seems to have taken refuge with the English, with whom, if we may believe a late authority, his marriage with a lady of the house of Clare had already connected him (Powel, History of Cambria, p. 232, ed. 1584). The death of Stephen put an end to the long period of Welsh freedom under which Cadwaladr had grown up. In 1156 he was temporarily granted an estate at Ness, Shropshire worth £7 a year. In 1157 Henry II's first expedition to Wales, though by no means a brilliant success, was able to effect Cadwaladr's restoration to his old dominions. Despite his blindness, Cadwaladr had not lost his energy. In 1158 he joined the marcher lords and his nephews in an expedition against Rhys ap Gruffudd of South Wales. In 1165 Cadwaladr took part in the general resistance to Henry II's third expedition to Wales. In 1169 the death of Owain Gwynedd probably weakened his position. In March 1172 Cadwaladr himself died, and was buried in the same tomb as Owain, before the high altar of Bangor Cathedral (Gir. Cambr. It. Camb. in Op. (Rolls ed.), iii. 133). In 1156 he was temporarily granted an estate at Ness, Shropshire worth £7 a year. He died in 1172, and was buried before the high altar of Bangor Cathedral. Wynn Hist. of the Gnydir Fam. (1827): 20. Price Hanes Cymru (1942): 549 (charter of Cadwalader brother of Owain to Haughmond Abbey). Dwnn Heraldic Vis. of Wales 2 (1846): 17 ("Kynneda a Rickart a Randiolff, meibion oeddynt hwy y Gydwaladr ab Grh ab Kynan o Adles vh larll Kaer y mam hwyntey."). Lipscomb Hist. & Antiqs. of Buckingham 1 (1847): 200-201 (Clare ped). Burke Gen. & heraldic Dictionary of the landed Gentry of Great Britain 1 (1852): 743. Arch. Cambrensis 3rd Ser. 6 (1860): 332 (charter of Cadwaladr brother of Owain; charter witnessed by Aliz de Clare his wife); 4th Ser. 6 (1875): 117. Eyton Antiqs. of Shropshire 10 (1860): 256-257 ("In 1151, says the Welsh Chronicle, `Cadwalader, the brother of Prince Owen, escaped out of his Nephew Howes prison and subdued part of the Ile of Mein, or Anglesey, to himselfe; but his brother Owen sent an armie against him, and chased him thence, who fled to England for succour to his wife's friends, for she was the daughter of Gilbert Earl of Clare.' Between 1151 and 1152 Ranulf, Earl of Chester ... confirmed the Monks of Shrewsbury in the possession of all their lands between the Ribble and the Mersey. 'The Earl's Charter is dated at Chester, and attested as follows. - Testibus, Comite de Clara, et Cadwaladro ... The Earl of Clare here alluded to, was Gilbert. He was Nephew of Earl Ranulph himself, and, in the year 1146, had been given up to Stephen as a hostage for his Uncle's good faith and allegiance. His flight from Stephen's Court is recorded by the Chroniclers. It is evident that he took refuge with his Uncle. He died, in 1151 without issue, and was succeeded by his brother Roger. This fact, as well as a comparison of dates and ages, will show that Cadwalader's wife, Alice, was a Sister of Earl Gilbert and a daughter of Earl Richard de Clare, and, finally, a niece of Ranulph, Earl of Chester. For a time he [Cadwallader] remained in alliance with the English, as when, in 1159, he assisted the Earls of Clare and of Bristol to relieve Carmarthen, then besieged by Prince Rese of South Wales. He was also a munificent Benefactor to Haughmond Abbey. In 1165 he is found leagued with Owen Gwyneth against the English, and probably retained that adverse position till his death in 1172."). Nicholas Annals & Antiqs. of the Counties & County Fams. of Wales 1 (1872): 43; foll. 442. Lloyd Hist. of the Princes, the Lords Marcher & the Ancient Nobility of of Powys Fadog 1(1881): 96, 107, 151; 4 (1884): 323, 341; 5 (1885): 367. D.N .B. 3 (1908): 642-643 (biog. of Cadwaladr). Lloyd Hist. of Wales 2 (1911): 76, 93-101, 315, 317. Fryde Handbook of British Chron. (1996): 50. Maund Gruffierld ap Cynan (1996). Jour. Medieval Military Hist. 2 (2004): 58. Pryce Acts of Welsh rulers, 1120-1283 (2005): 330-331. Hosier Henry II (2007): 54.
Child of Alice de Clare, by Cadwaladr:
a. CONAN AP CADWALADR. Ward Women of the English Nobility & Gentry 1066-1500 (1995): 42; 93-94 (charter of Maud, wife of Roger earl of Clare dated 1152-73; charter witnessed by Richard brother of the earl and Conan nephew of the earl)."
=== !DEATH: from The Visitations of the Coun ===
!DEATH: from The Visitations of the County of Devon, p.243 !BURIAL: from The Visitations of the County of Devon, p.243 !DEATH: from The Visitations of the County of Devon, p.243 !BURIAL: from The Visitations of the County of Devon, p.243 !DEATH: from The Visitations of the County of Devon, p.243 !BURIAL: from The Visitations of the County of Devon, p.243 !DEATH: from The Visitations of the County of Devon, p.243 !BURIAL: from The Visitations of the County of Devon, p.243 !DEATH: from The Visitations of the County of Devon, p.243 !BURIAL: from The Visitations of the County of Devon, p.243 !DEATH: from The Visitations of the County of Devon, p.243 !BURIAL: from The Visitations of the County of Devon, p.243 !DEATH: from The Visitations of the County of Devon, p.243 !BURIAL: from The Visitations of the County of Devon, p.243
=== J P Yeatman: The History of the House of ===
J P Yeatman: The History of the House of Arundel pp 106, 154
=== Sources: Kraentzler 1137; A Baronial Fam ===
Sources: Kraentzler 1137; A Baronial Family...The Clares; A. Roots161-24. [Not listed by Norr as Adeliza.] Baronial: Alice, married William de Percy. Roots: Adeliza de Tonbridge, daughter of Richard Fitz Gilbert(246B-25). [Same as Alice de Clare, RIN 5004, her "sister"? Have found norecord that lists two husbands for a Adeliza/Alice.] SOURCES: 1. Bartrum, Peter C., _Welsh Genealogies, A.D. 300-1400_, "Gruffydd apCynan 2" page 444. 2. Bye, Arthur Edwin, _Magna Charta, King John, and the Barons_. Shemarried Prince Cadwaladr, brother of Owain Gwynedd.
=== !Ancestral Roots by Weis, Seventh Editio ===
!Ancestral Roots by Weis, Seventh Edition L 246D-25
=== 1a. Source: "Complete Peerage", 2d Ed, ===
1a. Source: "Complete Peerage", 2d Ed, v4, p317; "Devon & Cornwall Notes & Queries", v25, p124. 1b. "Ancestry of Roger Ludlow", by Seversmith, p. 2,432. 2. "Adelise, 'Vice-comitissa', amita of Ranulf Avenel the younger. She died without issue." (source 1b).
=== Sources: Norr, p47; AF. Norr:Alice de Cl ===
Sources: Norr, p47; AF. Norr:Alice de Clare, born about 1118. Married Cadwaladr. [Same as Adeliza de Clare, RIN 10284, her "sister"? Have found norecord that lists two husbands for an Alice/Adeliza.] SOURCES: 1. Bartrum, Peter C., _Welsh Genealogies, A.D. 300-1400_, "Gruffydd apCynan 2" page 444. 2. Bye, Arthur Edwin, _Magna Charta, King John, and the Barons_. Shemarried Prince Cadwaladr, brother of Owain Gwynedd.
=== !Weis "M C Sureties", line 154-1. Alice ===
!Weis "M C Sureties", line 154-1. Alice de Clare, d. c. 1163; m. Aubrey de Vere II; b. prob. bef. 1090, slain in London, 15 May 1141, of Great Addington and Drayton, Sheriff of London and Middlesex, Justice and Master Chamberlain of Enagland, 1133.
=== Missing Generation ===
According to Wikipedia Richard did have a daughter Adelisa but she married Walter Tirel. Meanwhile his son Gilbert fitz Richard married Alice of Clairmont https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gilbert_Fitz_Richard
and had a girl named Adelize/Alice de Clare, d. 1163, m. (ca. 1105), Aubrey II de Vere
which better fits the timeline.
BIO
BIO: from http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/NORMAN%20NOBILITY.htm#_Toc160529790
ADELISA de Clare ([1090/95]-1163). The Liber Vitæ of Thorney abbey lists "…Gilebt fili[us] Ricardi, Ricard fili[us] eiu
Memorial
According to Medlands (see below) Gilbert de Clare and Isabel had only two children and Agnes fitzgilbert de Clare was NOT one of them I am therefore detaching this relationship:
GILBERT de Clare "St
=== !DEATH: from The Visitations of the Coun ===
!DEATH: from The Visitations of the County of Devon, p.243 !BURIAL: from The Visitations of the County of Devon, p.243 !DEATH: from The Visitations of the County of Devon, p.243 !BURIAL: from The Visitations of the County of Devon, p.243 !DEATH: from The Visitations of the County of Devon, p.243 !BURIAL: from The Visitations of the County of Devon, p.243 !DEATH: from The Visitations of the County of Devon, p.243 !BURIAL: from The Visitations of the County of Devon, p.243 !DEATH: from The Visitations of the County of Devon, p.243 !BURIAL: from The Visitations of the County of Devon, p.243 !DEATH: from The Visitations of the County of Devon, p.243 !BURIAL: from The Visitations of the County of Devon, p.243 !DEATH: from The Visitations of the County of Devon, p.243 !BURIAL: from The Visitations of the County of Devon, p.243
=== J P Yeatman: The History of the House of ===
J P Yeatman: The History of the House of Arundel pp 106, 154
=== !Weis "M C Sureties", line 154-1. Alice ===
!Weis "M C Sureties", line 154-1. Alice de Clare, d. c. 1163; m. Aubrey de Vere II; b. prob. bef. 1090, slain in London, 15 May 1141, of Great Addington and Drayton, Sheriff of London and Middlesex, Justice and Master Chamberlain of Enagland, 1133.
=== !Ancestral Roots by Weis, Seventh Editio ===
!Ancestral Roots by Weis, Seventh Edition L 246D-25
=== Missing Generation ===
According to Wikipedia Richard did have a daughter Adelisa but she married Walter Tirel. Meanwhile his son Gilbert fitz Richard married Alice of Clairmont https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gilbert_Fitz_Richard
and had a girl named Adelize/Alice de Clare, d. 1163, m. (ca. 1105), Aubrey II de Vere
which better fits the timeline.
=== Royal Ancestry Biography ===
“Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families,” Douglas Richardson (2013):
"Children of Richard Fitz Gilbert, by Alice of Chester...
iii. ALICE DE CLARE, married before 1151 CADWALADR AP GRUFFUDD AP CYNAN, Prince of North Wales, of Cynfael, Meirion, younger son of Gruffudd ap Cynan, by Angharad, daughter of Owain ab Edwin. They had four sons, Cunedda (or Conan), Randwlff, Gruffudd, and Richard. During his father's lifetime he accompanied his elder brother, Owain, on many predatory excursions against rival princes. In 1121 they ravaged Meirionydd, and apparently conquered it. In 1135 and 1136 they led three successful expeditions to Ceredigion, and managed to get possession of at least the northern portion of that district. In 1137 Owain succeeded, on Gruffudd ap Cynan's death, to the sovereignty of Gwynedd or North Wales. Cadwaladr appears to have found his portion in his former conquests of Meirionydd and northern Ceredigion. The intruder from Gwynedd soon became involved in feuds both with his south Welsh neighbours and with his family. In 1143 his men slew Anarawd, son of Gruffudd of South Wales, to whom Owain Gwynedd had promised his daughter in marriage. Repudiated by his brother, who sent his son Howel to ravage his share of Ceredigion and to attack his castle of Aberystwith, Cadwaladr fled to Ireland, whence he returned next year with a fleet of Irish Danes, to wreak vengeance on Owain. The fleet had already landed at the mouth of the Menai Straits when the intervention of the `goodmen' of Gwynedd reconciled the brothers. Disgusted at what they probably regarded as treachery, the Irish pirates seized and blinded Cadwaladr, and only released him on the payment of a heavy ransom of 2,000 bondmen (some of the chroniclers say cattle). Their attempt to plunder the country was successfully resisted by Owain. In 1146, however, fresh hostilities broke out between Cadwaladr and his brother's sons Howel and Cynan. They invaded Meirionydd and captured his castle of Cynvael, despite the valiant resistance of his steward, Morvran, abbot of Whitland. This disaster lost Cadwaladr Meirionydd, and so hard was he pressed that, despite his building a castle at Llanrhystyd in Ceredigion (1148), he was compelled to surrender his possessions in that district to his son, apparently in hope of a compromise; but Howel next year captured his cousin and conquered his territory, while the brothers of the murdered Anarawd profited by the dissensions of the princes of Gwynedd to conquer Ceredigion as far north as the Aeron, and soon extended their conquests into Howel's recent acquisitions. Meanwhile Cadwaladr was expelled by Owain from his last refuge in Mona. Cadwaladr now seems to have taken refuge with the English, with whom, if we may believe a late authority, his marriage with a lady of the house of Clare had already connected him (Powel, History of Cambria, p. 232, ed. 1584). The death of Stephen put an end to the long period of Welsh freedom under which Cadwaladr had grown up. In 1156 he was temporarily granted an estate at Ness, Shropshire worth £7 a year. In 1157 Henry II's first expedition to Wales, though by no means a brilliant success, was able to effect Cadwaladr's restoration to his old dominions. Despite his blindness, Cadwaladr had not lost his energy. In 1158 he joined the marcher lords and his nephews in an expedition against Rhys ap Gruffudd of South Wales. In 1165 Cadwaladr took part in the general resistance to Henry II's third expedition to Wales. In 1169 the death of Owain Gwynedd probably weakened his position. In March 1172 Cadwaladr himself died, and was buried in the same tomb as Owain, before the high altar of Bangor Cathedral (Gir. Cambr. It. Camb. in Op. (Rolls ed.), iii. 133). In 1156 he was temporarily granted an estate at Ness, Shropshire worth £7 a year. He died in 1172, and was buried before the high altar of Bangor Cathedral. Wynn Hist. of the Gnydir Fam. (1827): 20. Price Hanes Cymru (1942): 549 (charter of Cadwalader brother of Owain to Haughmond Abbey). Dwnn Heraldic Vis. of Wales 2 (1846): 17 ("Kynneda a Rickart a Randiolff, meibion oeddynt hwy y Gydwaladr ab Grh ab Kynan o Adles vh larll Kaer y mam hwyntey."). Lipscomb Hist. & Antiqs. of Buckingham 1 (1847): 200-201 (Clare ped). Burke Gen. & heraldic Dictionary of the landed Gentry of Great Britain 1 (1852): 743. Arch. Cambrensis 3rd Ser. 6 (1860): 332 (charter of Cadwaladr brother of Owain; charter witnessed by Aliz de Clare his wife); 4th Ser. 6 (1875): 117. Eyton Antiqs. of Shropshire 10 (1860): 256-257 ("In 1151, says the Welsh Chronicle, `Cadwalader, the brother of Prince Owen, escaped out of his Nephew Howes prison and subdued part of the Ile of Mein, or Anglesey, to himselfe; but his brother Owen sent an armie against him, and chased him thence, who fled to England for succour to his wife's friends, for she was the daughter of Gilbert Earl of Clare.' Between 1151 and 1152 Ranulf, Earl of Chester ... confirmed the Monks of Shrewsbury in the possession of all their lands between the Ribble and the Mersey. 'The Earl's Charter is dated at Chester, and attested as follows. - Testibus, Comite de Clara, et Cadwaladro ... The Earl of Clare here alluded to, was Gilbert. He was Nephew of Earl Ranulph himself, and, in the year 1146, had been given up to Stephen as a hostage for his Uncle's good faith and allegiance. His flight from Stephen's Court is recorded by the Chroniclers. It is evident that he took refuge with his Uncle. He died, in 1151 without issue, and was succeeded by his brother Roger. This fact, as well as a comparison of dates and ages, will show that Cadwalader's wife, Alice, was a Sister of Earl Gilbert and a daughter of Earl Richard de Clare, and, finally, a niece of Ranulph, Earl of Chester. For a time he [Cadwallader] remained in alliance with the English, as when, in 1159, he assisted the Earls of Clare and of Bristol to relieve Carmarthen, then besieged by Prince Rese of South Wales. He was also a munificent Benefactor to Haughmond Abbey. In 1165 he is found leagued with Owen Gwyneth against the English, and probably retained that adverse position till his death in 1172."). Nicholas Annals & Antiqs. of the Counties & County Fams. of Wales 1 (1872): 43; foll. 442. Lloyd Hist. of the Princes, the Lords Marcher & the Ancient Nobility of of Powys Fadog 1(1881): 96, 107, 151; 4 (1884): 323, 341; 5 (1885): 367. D.N .B. 3 (1908): 642-643 (biog. of Cadwaladr). Lloyd Hist. of Wales 2 (1911): 76, 93-101, 315, 317. Fryde Handbook of British Chron. (1996): 50. Maund Gruffierld ap Cynan (1996). Jour. Medieval Military Hist. 2 (2004): 58. Pryce Acts of Welsh rulers, 1120-1283 (2005): 330-331. Hosier Henry II (2007): 54.
Child of Alice de Clare, by Cadwaladr:
a. CONAN AP CADWALADR. Ward Women of the English Nobility & Gentry 1066-1500 (1995): 42; 93-94 (charter of Maud, wife of Roger earl of Clare dated 1152-73; charter witnessed by Richard brother of the earl and Conan nephew of the earl)."
=== Sources: Kraentzler 1137; A Baronial Fam ===
Sources: Kraentzler 1137; A Baronial Family...The Clares; A. Roots161-24. [Not listed by Norr as Adeliza.] Baronial: Alice, married William de Percy. Roots: Adeliza de Tonbridge, daughter of Richard Fitz Gilbert(246B-25). [Same as Alice de Clare, RIN 5004, her "sister"? Have found norecord that lists two husbands for a Adeliza/Alice.] SOURCES: 1. Bartrum, Peter C., _Welsh Genealogies, A.D. 300-1400_, "Gruffydd apCynan 2" page 444. 2. Bye, Arthur Edwin, _Magna Charta, King John, and the Barons_. Shemarried Prince Cadwaladr, brother of Owain Gwynedd.
=== 1a. Source: "Complete Peerage", 2d Ed, ===
1a. Source: "Complete Peerage", 2d Ed, v4, p317; "Devon & Cornwall Notes & Queries", v25, p124. 1b. "Ancestry of Roger Ludlow", by Seversmith, p. 2,432. 2. "Adelise, 'Vice-comitissa', amita of Ranulf Avenel the younger. She died without issue." (source 1b).
=== Sources: Norr, p47; AF. Norr:Alice de Cl ===
Sources: Norr, p47; AF. Norr:Alice de Clare, born about 1118. Married Cadwaladr. [Same as Adeliza de Clare, RIN 10284, her "sister"? Have found norecord that lists two husbands for an Alice/Adeliza.] SOURCES: 1. Bartrum, Peter C., _Welsh Genealogies, A.D. 300-1400_, "Gruffydd apCynan 2" page 444. 2. Bye, Arthur Edwin, _Magna Charta, King John, and the Barons_. Shemarried Prince Cadwaladr, brother of Owain Gwynedd.
Preferred Parents:
Father: Gilbert FitzRichard, b. 21 SEP 1065 in Tunbridge, Kent, England d. 15 APR 1115 in Clare, Suffolk, England, United Kingdom
Family 1: Alberic de Vere II, b. ABT 1080 in Castle Hedingham, Essex, England d. 15 MAY 1141 in London, England
- m. BEF 1108 in Suffolk, England
- Robert de Vere Lord of Twywell, b. 1124 in Drayton, Northamptonshire, England d. 26 DEC 1194 in Twywell, Northamptonshire, England
- Adelisa de Vere, b. 1125 in Castle Hedingham, Essex, England d. AFT 1185 in Warkworth, Alnwick, Northumberland, England
- Aubrey de Vere 1st Earl of Oxford, b. ABT 1110 d. 26 DEC 1194 in Oxford, Oxfordshire, England
- Juliane de Vere, b. ABT 1116 in Castle Hedingham, Essex, England d. 26 DEC 1194 in Thetford, Norfolk, England
- Rohese de Vere, b. 22 JUN 1110 in Castle Hedingham, Essex, England d. 21 OCT 1166 in Chicksands, Bedfordshire, England
- ALICE OF ESSEX, b. ABT 1125 in Castle Hedingham, Essex, England d. ABT 1187 in Warwick Castle, Northumberland, England
- Felice de Vere, b. ABT 1108 in Oxford, Oxfordshire, England d. ABT 1185 in Warkworth, Northumberland, England, United Kingdom
Family 2: Alberic le Vere, b. 15 MAY 1141
- Rohesia de Vere, b. ABT 1103 d. AFT 21 OCT 1166
- Aubrey de Vere 1st Earl of Oxford, b. ABT 1110 d. 26 DEC 1194 in Oxford, Oxfordshire, England
- Juliana de Vere,
Sources:
- Title: Adeliza de Clare de Vere, "Find A Grave Index"
Author: "Find A Grave Index," database, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:QV2K-PPQC : 6 August 2020), Adeliza de Clare de Vere, ; Burial, St Osyth, Tendring District, Essex, England, St Osyths Priory; citing record ID 74171052, Find a Grave, http://www.findagrave.com.
Publication: Name: https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:QV2K-PPQC;
Page: Ancestry
- Title: Wikipedia: Alice de Clare or Adelize de Tonbridge m. Sir William Percy
Author: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Fitz_Gilbert_de_Clare
Publication: Name: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Fitz_Gilbert_de_Clare;
Note: Alice de Clare (Adelize de Tonbridge), m. (1) about 1133, Sir William de Percy, Lord of Topcliffe, son of Alan de Percy and Emma de Gant; (2) Cadwaladr ap Gruffydd, brother of Owain Gwynedd
Alice's parents, Richard married Alice, sister of Ranulf de Gernon, 4th Earl of Chester,
- Title: Gilbert de Clare & Clermont in Family Group Records Collection, Archives Section, 1942-1969; https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-99QT-PRH?cc=2060211&wc=WWF8-FQZ%3A352086301%2C352529301
Author: "Family Group Records Collection, Archives Section, 1942-1969," images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-99QT-PRH?cc=2060211&wc=WWF8-FQZ%3A352086301%2C352529301 : 20 May 2014), D > Decker, Frank C. (1883) - Decson, John (1563) > image 397 of 1183; The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, compiler, Family History Library, Salt Lake City, Utah.
Publication: Name: https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-99QT-PRH;
Note: Gilbert de Clare (1054-1117) married Adeliza de Clermont and had children according to research before 1943
Page: Names, dates, locations, and relationships match research with some variations due to available sources
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