Michael Matthew Groat PhD's Genealogical Database
Individuals: 97,713 Families: 61,838
Gedcom Last Modified: December 14, 2025 00:59:10
Hugh de Hastings
- Preferred Name: Hugh de Hastings[1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] [8]
- Gender: M
- FSID: L1GR-DC7
- Death: BEF 1152 with note: USER: Heather1,012: "The United Kingdom didn't exist before 1801, SO STOP ADDING IT!"
- Burial: 1152 in Fillongley, Warwickshire, England at LATI: N2.482 LONG: E1.588
- Birth: ABT 1098 in Barwell, Leicestershire, England at LATI: N2.5711 LONG: E1.3443 with note: USER: Heather1,012: "The United Kingdom didn't exist before 1801, SO STOP ADDING IT!"
- Notes:
=== Life Sketch ===
HUGH de Hastings (-1163 or before).
Dugdale’s Baronage names Hugh as son and heir of William de Hastings[736]. Eyton names Hugh as brother of Ralph de Hastings[737]. The 1130 Pipe Roll records "Hugo de Hasting" in Leicestershire after his marriage to "nepte Rob de Flamenvilla"[738]. Lord of Fillongley, Warwickshire.
m (before 1130) ERNEBURGA, daughter of --- [de Flamville] & his wife ---.
The 1130 Pipe Roll records "Hugo de Hasting" in Leicestershire after his marriage to "nepte Rob de Flamenvilla"[739]. Dugdale’s Baronage records Erneburga as daughter of “Hugh Flamenvill” but he cites no primary source on which this information is based[740]. The inspeximus dated 10 May 1398, quoted below under Richard son of her son William, records her donation of Barwell church to Polesworth convent. As noted below, the wording of the extract could imply that Erneburga survived her son William.
Hugh & his wife had two children:
i) WILLIAM [II] de Hastings (-1182 or before). A charter of Henry II King of England confirmed to "William de Hastings" his paternal and maternal heritage, naming "William de Hastings grandfather, Hugh de Hastings father…Erneburga de Flamville mother"[741]. A charter of Henry II King of England dated to [1165/66] confirmed to "William de Hastyngs dispensatori" the "dapiferatum" of St Edmund’s which had belonged to "Ralph patruus"[742].
ii) THOMAS de Hastings . The Chronicle of Jocelin of Brakelond records that 1 Apr 1182 "Thomas de Hastings" brought “Henry his nephew...not yet a knight” to Bury and for him “demanded the office of steward”, according to his hereditary right, which was not accepted[743]. "Henricus de Hastinges filius Willelmi de Hastinges" confirmed land at Odstone, Leicestershire to "Maheo de Charun filio Willelmi de Charun", by charter dated to the late 12th century, witnessed by "Thomas de Hastinges, Willelmo de Hastinges, Hogone de Nouilla, Ricardo de Hastinges…Gilleberto de Hastinges, Milone de Hastinges…Hugone de Hastinges…"[744].
Memorial
The Hastings coat of arms was one of the first created. Its romantic origin centers on an ancestor of Emma de Hastings -- Hugh de Hastings of Barawell. He received Barawell upon marriage to Erneburga
=== 1 _FSFTID 9Z89-P1H ===
1 _FSFTID 9Z89-P1H
=== 1 _FSFTID 9Z8R-LRX ===
1 _FSFTID 9Z8R-LRX
=== 1 _FSFTID 9ZZT-BV8 ===
1 _FSFTID 9ZZT-BV8
=== 1 _FSFTID 9Z8W-66B ===
1 _FSFTID 9Z8W-66B
=== 1 _FSFTID M1K1-TR3 ===
1 _FSFTID M1K1-TR3
=== sld. 29Jun1940 ===
sld. 29Jun1940
=== {{British Isles 742-1499}}He appears in ===
{{British Isles 742-1499}}He appears in a Pipe Roll, 1130, where as Hugh de Hastings, he was excused from danegeld in Leics., Bucks., Warws., and Middlesex on the lands of Robert de Flamville, his wife's uncle.
Concerning the father of Hugh, and indeed the connection of Hugh and his son William to the dispensatorship to the King and the dapifership under the Abbot of Bury, the only source is a much-cited royal charterreported p.574 of William Dugdale's Baronage, published in 1675 and 1676. Dugdale cites the collection of Robert Glover Somerset Herald, which is today dispersed between many collections. It described the inheritances of the grandson named William, confirmed by Henry II. Dugdalegave exceptional sourcing notes for his or any time, with even parts of sentences referenced to notes in the margins. Following is the opening passage of Dugdale's Hastings entry here. :The first of this Family of whom I find mention, is William de Hastings, Stewarda to King Henry the First. Which Office he heldb by Serjeantie, in respect of his Tenure of the Mannor of Ashele, in Com. Norff. viz. by the Service of taking charge of the Naperie (id est, the Table-clothes and Linen) at the Solemn Coronations ofthe Kings of this Realm.:To whom succeeded Hugh his Son and Heir. Which Hugh obtain'd, by the Giftc of that King, all the Lands of Robert de Flamenvill, with Erneburgh Daughter of Hugh Flamenvill, Niece to the same Robert.:This Hugh had Issued William his Son and Heir, Stewarde also to King Henry the Second; from whom he obtain'd a Confirmationf of all the Lands which William de Hastings his Grandfather (Steward to Keing Henry the First) and Hugh his Father had enjoy'd in the time of that King. As also ofg all the Lands which Robert de Limesi Bishop of Coventre, by the Consent of the Chapter, and Appropriation of King Henry the First, gave to the before-specified Robert de Flamenvill; viz. Burbache, Barewell, and Birdingburie, with their Appurtenances, viz. Scetescleve (now Sketchley) and Eston (now Aston-Flamvill) and Stapelton. Likewiseh his Houses in Coventre, with one Burgess there, and one Croft in Wilie, to hold by the Service of two Knights Fees, as freely as King Henry the First gave them to Hugh de Hastings, his Father, with Erneburgh Daughter of the said Hugh de Flamenvill.
All of the superscript references except for "b" say "Ex Coll. Gl. S."(from the collection of Glover Somerset). (Note "b" mentions Testa deNevill and the Close Rolls of 15 R 2. So it refers to later generations where there are records of the naperie duties.) The Glover charter or charters therefore apparently named the grandfather William de Hastings and were clear he was a steward to King Henry the First, or at least that is the easiest way to interpret this one bit of evidence we have.
Eyton, Clark and Moriarty all mention this charter described by Dugdale, not making it clear if they saw it directly, but all of them understand this grandson William to be the same one who was the King's dispensator, and dapifer to Bury. (Moriarty, in his description, explicitlysays that the charter specifies that it concerns the "dapifer" of Henry II.) Keats-Rohan never mentions this charter, and quite strikinglyshe distinguishes two contemporaries who are normally considered to be one person: "Willelm filius Hugonis de Hastings" and "Willelm de Hastings dispensator" (DD both p.507). The latter she makes the son of William fitz Robert de Hastings of Little Easton.
==Children==*That Hugh and Erneburga had a son named William is clear for example from a Patent Roll inspeximus of Richard II which states tells us thatErneburga made a grant as the mother of William de Hastings, and withthe assent of Richard his son. *A son named Richard is added by Dugdale, citing the above Patent Rollentry, although it apparently concerns a grandson. Many genealogists follow him in making this Richard the son of Hugo, not William. Dugdale refers to him as the rector of Barwell. Did Dugdale read the patent roll differently or know of other records? G. A. Moriarty speculates that this Richard might have even been the one who became master of theTemplars in England but there seems little evidence for that.*That they had a son named Thomas is derived from the fact that William's apparent son, Henry, was represented to the Abbot of Bury by an uncle named Thomas de Hastings. As Eyton mentions (p.138), the "genealogists" say this uncle, mentioned by Jocelin of Brakelond, was the ancestor of the Earls of Huntingdon.[Clark [https://archive.org/stream/archaeologicalj02unkngoog#page/n174/mode/2up has him] another generation further back, as a brother to Ralph and Hugh, but also [https://archive.org/stream/archaeologicalj02unkngoog#page/n294/mode/2up/search/hastings admits] to doubts about this.] The heir of Thomas, Hugh, was in his prime already in the 1190s and so the timing works well. (Furthermore this means Thomas named his heir after his father, which was a common habit.)*Gilbert de Hastings, found in these times in Thorpe Morieux in Sufffolk, and also the name of one of the Hastings who was delegated to operate the dapifership in Bury (in charters from 1182 until later in the 1180s, and also mentioned by Jocelin), is presumably a younger brotherof William and Thomas. This place is often listed as simply Thorpe, and under Lancaster, because it was part of the Honour of Lancaster. See Farrer's Lancashire Feudal aids (p.28), Lancashire Pipe Rolls, especially p.145, Red Book of the Exchequer Vol.I p.141, p.479, p.590. In his place, after about 1210, we find Margerie de Hastings, perhaps his widow (Red Book p.570, Testa de Nevill p.224 ).*Another possible son could be John de Hastings, because it appears that as overlord, Hugh de Hastings the son of Thomas had a man of this name, not William or Thomas. A charter exists showing that Henry son ofJohn de Hastig' granted Gissing to Hugh son of Thomas de Hastig', as John had previously granted to Thomas. This Thomas son of Hugh must bethe ancestor of the Earls of Huntingdon. Gissing was a land that had been held by the hereditary dapifer of Bury.
== Sources ==
*Clark, G. T. C. (1869), "The Rise and Race of Hastings" (in 3 parts),Archaeological Journal, Vol. 26. [https://archive.org/stream/archaeologicalj02unkngoog archive.org link]*Eyton, R. W. (1857), Antiquities of Shropshire, Vol. 5. [http://books.google.be/books?id=uEpNAAAAMAAJ google books link]*Moriarty, G. A. (1942), "The origin of the Hastings", New England Historical Genealogical Register, Vol.96.
*http://users.skynet.be/lancaster/Hastings%20of%20the%2012th%20century.html
* http://www.geneajourney.com/hastings.html#alicehstng* Phillips, Weber, Kirk and Staggs Families of the Pacific Northwest, by Jim Weber, on Rootsweb.com
* Ancestry.com family trees
== Acknowledgements ==This page has been edited according to [http://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Acknowledgements Style Standards] adopted January 2014. Descriptions ofimported gedcoms for this profile are under the Changes tab.
=== Ancestral File Number: 9HFV-HT ===
Ancestral File Number: 9HFV-HT
=== 1 _FSFTID 9ZCB-L1P ===
1 _FSFTID 9ZCB-L1P
=== From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 J ===
From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996. From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996.
=== 1 _FSFTID KHYN-LT2 ===
1 _FSFTID KHYN-LT2
=== !Son and heir; ===
!Son and heir;
=== From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 ===
From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996. From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996.
=== Knights Geneology ===
http://knight-france.com/geneal/names/3335.htm
=== Sir ===
Sir
=== 1 _FSFTID 9ZHC-5LF ===
1 _FSFTID 9ZHC-5LF
=== Ancestral File Number: 9GTH-13 ===
Ancestral File Number: 9GTH-13
=== !Ancestral File 1993 ===
!Ancestral File 1993
=== (21) dead ===
(21) dead
=== 1 _FSFTID 9ZH2-YCH ===
1 _FSFTID 9ZH2-YCH
=== All details for this living person have ===
All details for this living person have been suppressed.
=== [G675.ged] Source: GEC VI: 151- ===
[G675.ged] Source: GEC VI: 151-
=== SORLEY'S PEDIGREES (GS NUMBER Q929.242 S ===
SORLEY'S PEDIGREES (GS NUMBER Q929.242 SO68) P.39;
=== dead ===
dead
=== From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 J ===
From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996.
=== MARRIED ANN SPENCER ===
MARRIED ANN SPENCER
=== Date and Location are generated ===
Date and Location are generated
=== Name Suffix: Sir Knight Ancestral ===
Name Suffix: Sir Knight Ancestral File Number: 9GTH-13
=== !Plantagenet Ancestry of Seventeenth-Cen ===
!Plantagenet Ancestry of Seventeenth-Century Colonists The Descent from the Later Plantagenet Kings of England, Henry III, Edward I, Edward II, and Edward III, of Emigrants from England and Waltes to the North American Colonies before 1701 by David Faris First Edition
=== Life Sketch ===
HUGH de Hastings (-1163 or before).
Dugdale’s Baronage names Hugh as son and heir of William de Hastings[736]. Eyton names Hugh as brother of Ralph de Hastings[737]. The 1130 Pipe Roll records "Hugo de Hasting" in Leicestershire after his marriage to "nepte Rob de Flamenvilla"[738]. Lord of Fillongley, Warwickshire.
m (before 1130) ERNEBURGA, daughter of --- [de Flamville] & his wife ---.
The 1130 Pipe Roll records "Hugo de Hasting" in Leicestershire after his marriage to "nepte Rob de Flamenvilla"[739]. Dugdale’s Baronage records Erneburga as daughter of “Hugh Flamenvill” but he cites no primary source on which this information is based[740]. The inspeximus dated 10 May 1398, quoted below under Richard son of her son William, records her donation of Barwell church to Polesworth convent. As noted below, the wording of the extract could imply that Erneburga survived her son William.
Hugh & his wife had two children:
i) WILLIAM [II] de Hastings (-1182 or before). A charter of Henry II King of England confirmed to "William de Hastings" his paternal and maternal heritage, naming "William de Hastings grandfather, Hugh de Hastings father…Erneburga de Flamville mother"[741]. A charter of Henry II King of England dated to [1165/66] confirmed to "William de Hastyngs dispensatori" the "dapiferatum" of St Edmund’s which had belonged to "Ralph patruus"[742].
ii) THOMAS de Hastings . The Chronicle of Jocelin of Brakelond records that 1 Apr 1182 "Thomas de Hastings" brought “Henry his nephew...not yet a knight” to Bury and for him “demanded the office of steward”, according to his hereditary right, which was not accepted[743]. "Henricus de Hastinges filius Willelmi de Hastinges" confirmed land at Odstone, Leicestershire to "Maheo de Charun filio Willelmi de Charun", by charter dated to the late 12th century, witnessed by "Thomas de Hastinges, Willelmo de Hastinges, Hogone de Nouilla, Ricardo de Hastinges…Gilleberto de Hastinges, Milone de Hastinges…Hugone de Hastinges…"[744].
Memorial
The Hastings coat of arms was one of the first created. Its romantic origin centers on an ancestor of Emma de Hastings -- Hugh de Hastings of Barawell. He received Barawell upon marriage to Erneburga
=== !Ancestral File 1993 ===
!Ancestral File 1993
=== sld. 29Jun1940 ===
sld. 29Jun1940
=== 1 _FSFTID 9ZCB-L1P ===
1 _FSFTID 9ZCB-L1P
=== 1 _FSFTID KHYN-LT2 ===
1 _FSFTID KHYN-LT2
=== (21) dead ===
(21) dead
=== From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 J ===
From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996.
=== Knights Geneology ===
http://knight-france.com/geneal/names/3335.htm
=== From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 ===
From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996. From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996.
=== 1 _FSFTID 9ZHC-5LF ===
1 _FSFTID 9ZHC-5LF
=== Ancestral File Number: 9GTH-13 ===
Ancestral File Number: 9GTH-13
=== 1 _FSFTID 9Z8W-66B ===
1 _FSFTID 9Z8W-66B
=== 1 _FSFTID M1K1-TR3 ===
1 _FSFTID M1K1-TR3
=== Sir ===
Sir
=== 1 _FSFTID 9Z8R-LRX ===
1 _FSFTID 9Z8R-LRX
=== [G675.ged] Source: GEC VI: 151- ===
[G675.ged] Source: GEC VI: 151-
=== !Son and heir; ===
!Son and heir;
=== 1 _FSFTID 9Z89-P1H ===
1 _FSFTID 9Z89-P1H
=== 1 _FSFTID 9ZZT-BV8 ===
1 _FSFTID 9ZZT-BV8
=== {{British Isles 742-1499}}He appears in ===
{{British Isles 742-1499}}He appears in a Pipe Roll, 1130, where as Hugh de Hastings, he was excused from danegeld in Leics., Bucks., Warws., and Middlesex on the lands of Robert de Flamville, his wife's uncle.
Concerning the father of Hugh, and indeed the connection of Hugh and his son William to the dispensatorship to the King and the dapifership under the Abbot of Bury, the only source is a much-cited royal charterreported p.574 of William Dugdale's Baronage, published in 1675 and 1676. Dugdale cites the collection of Robert Glover Somerset Herald, which is today dispersed between many collections. It described the inheritances of the grandson named William, confirmed by Henry II. Dugdalegave exceptional sourcing notes for his or any time, with even parts of sentences referenced to notes in the margins. Following is the opening passage of Dugdale's Hastings entry here. :The first of this Family of whom I find mention, is William de Hastings, Stewarda to King Henry the First. Which Office he heldb by Serjeantie, in respect of his Tenure of the Mannor of Ashele, in Com. Norff. viz. by the Service of taking charge of the Naperie (id est, the Table-clothes and Linen) at the Solemn Coronations ofthe Kings of this Realm.:To whom succeeded Hugh his Son and Heir. Which Hugh obtain'd, by the Giftc of that King, all the Lands of Robert de Flamenvill, with Erneburgh Daughter of Hugh Flamenvill, Niece to the same Robert.:This Hugh had Issued William his Son and Heir, Stewarde also to King Henry the Second; from whom he obtain'd a Confirmationf of all the Lands which William de Hastings his Grandfather (Steward to Keing Henry the First) and Hugh his Father had enjoy'd in the time of that King. As also ofg all the Lands which Robert de Limesi Bishop of Coventre, by the Consent of the Chapter, and Appropriation of King Henry the First, gave to the before-specified Robert de Flamenvill; viz. Burbache, Barewell, and Birdingburie, with their Appurtenances, viz. Scetescleve (now Sketchley) and Eston (now Aston-Flamvill) and Stapelton. Likewiseh his Houses in Coventre, with one Burgess there, and one Croft in Wilie, to hold by the Service of two Knights Fees, as freely as King Henry the First gave them to Hugh de Hastings, his Father, with Erneburgh Daughter of the said Hugh de Flamenvill.
All of the superscript references except for "b" say "Ex Coll. Gl. S."(from the collection of Glover Somerset). (Note "b" mentions Testa deNevill and the Close Rolls of 15 R 2. So it refers to later generations where there are records of the naperie duties.) The Glover charter or charters therefore apparently named the grandfather William de Hastings and were clear he was a steward to King Henry the First, or at least that is the easiest way to interpret this one bit of evidence we have.
Eyton, Clark and Moriarty all mention this charter described by Dugdale, not making it clear if they saw it directly, but all of them understand this grandson William to be the same one who was the King's dispensator, and dapifer to Bury. (Moriarty, in his description, explicitlysays that the charter specifies that it concerns the "dapifer" of Henry II.) Keats-Rohan never mentions this charter, and quite strikinglyshe distinguishes two contemporaries who are normally considered to be one person: "Willelm filius Hugonis de Hastings" and "Willelm de Hastings dispensator" (DD both p.507). The latter she makes the son of William fitz Robert de Hastings of Little Easton.
==Children==*That Hugh and Erneburga had a son named William is clear for example from a Patent Roll inspeximus of Richard II which states tells us thatErneburga made a grant as the mother of William de Hastings, and withthe assent of Richard his son. *A son named Richard is added by Dugdale, citing the above Patent Rollentry, although it apparently concerns a grandson. Many genealogists follow him in making this Richard the son of Hugo, not William. Dugdale refers to him as the rector of Barwell. Did Dugdale read the patent roll differently or know of other records? G. A. Moriarty speculates that this Richard might have even been the one who became master of theTemplars in England but there seems little evidence for that.*That they had a son named Thomas is derived from the fact that William's apparent son, Henry, was represented to the Abbot of Bury by an uncle named Thomas de Hastings. As Eyton mentions (p.138), the "genealogists" say this uncle, mentioned by Jocelin of Brakelond, was the ancestor of the Earls of Huntingdon.[Clark [https://archive.org/stream/archaeologicalj02unkngoog#page/n174/mode/2up has him] another generation further back, as a brother to Ralph and Hugh, but also [https://archive.org/stream/archaeologicalj02unkngoog#page/n294/mode/2up/search/hastings admits] to doubts about this.] The heir of Thomas, Hugh, was in his prime already in the 1190s and so the timing works well. (Furthermore this means Thomas named his heir after his father, which was a common habit.)*Gilbert de Hastings, found in these times in Thorpe Morieux in Sufffolk, and also the name of one of the Hastings who was delegated to operate the dapifership in Bury (in charters from 1182 until later in the 1180s, and also mentioned by Jocelin), is presumably a younger brotherof William and Thomas. This place is often listed as simply Thorpe, and under Lancaster, because it was part of the Honour of Lancaster. See Farrer's Lancashire Feudal aids (p.28), Lancashire Pipe Rolls, especially p.145, Red Book of the Exchequer Vol.I p.141, p.479, p.590. In his place, after about 1210, we find Margerie de Hastings, perhaps his widow (Red Book p.570, Testa de Nevill p.224 ).*Another possible son could be John de Hastings, because it appears that as overlord, Hugh de Hastings the son of Thomas had a man of this name, not William or Thomas. A charter exists showing that Henry son ofJohn de Hastig' granted Gissing to Hugh son of Thomas de Hastig', as John had previously granted to Thomas. This Thomas son of Hugh must bethe ancestor of the Earls of Huntingdon. Gissing was a land that had been held by the hereditary dapifer of Bury.
== Sources ==
*Clark, G. T. C. (1869), "The Rise and Race of Hastings" (in 3 parts),Archaeological Journal, Vol. 26. [https://archive.org/stream/archaeologicalj02unkngoog archive.org link]*Eyton, R. W. (1857), Antiquities of Shropshire, Vol. 5. [http://books.google.be/books?id=uEpNAAAAMAAJ google books link]*Moriarty, G. A. (1942), "The origin of the Hastings", New England Historical Genealogical Register, Vol.96.
*http://users.skynet.be/lancaster/Hastings%20of%20the%2012th%20century.html
* http://www.geneajourney.com/hastings.html#alicehstng* Phillips, Weber, Kirk and Staggs Families of the Pacific Northwest, by Jim Weber, on Rootsweb.com
* Ancestry.com family trees
== Acknowledgements ==This page has been edited according to [http://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Acknowledgements Style Standards] adopted January 2014. Descriptions ofimported gedcoms for this profile are under the Changes tab.
=== All details for this living person have ===
All details for this living person have been suppressed.
=== Ancestral File Number: 9HFV-HT ===
Ancestral File Number: 9HFV-HT
=== From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 J ===
From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996. From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996.
=== Name Suffix: Sir Knight Ancestral ===
Name Suffix: Sir Knight Ancestral File Number: 9GTH-13
=== 1 _FSFTID 9ZH2-YCH ===
1 _FSFTID 9ZH2-YCH
=== Date and Location are generated ===
Date and Location are generated
=== !Plantagenet Ancestry of Seventeenth-Cen ===
!Plantagenet Ancestry of Seventeenth-Century Colonists The Descent from the Later Plantagenet Kings of England, Henry III, Edward I, Edward II, and Edward III, of Emigrants from England and Waltes to the North American Colonies before 1701 by David Faris First Edition
=== MARRIED ANN SPENCER ===
MARRIED ANN SPENCER
=== SORLEY'S PEDIGREES (GS NUMBER Q929.242 S ===
SORLEY'S PEDIGREES (GS NUMBER Q929.242 SO68) P.39;
=== dead ===
dead
Preferred Parents:
Father: William de Hastings, b. ABT 1085 in Hastings, Sussex, England d. ABT 1110 in Hastings, Sussex, England
Mother: Hawise FitzWindsor, b. ABT 1072 in Hastings, Sussex, England d. ABT 1135 in Hastings, Sussex, England, United Kingdom
Family 1: Erneburga de Flamville, b. ABT 1103 in Leicestershire, England d. ABT 1164 in Fillongley, Warwickshire, England
- m. 31 AUG 1129 in of Aston-Flamville, Leicestershire, England
- m. 1129 in Aston Flamville, Leicestershire, England
- Thomas de Hastings, b. ABT 1133 in Fillongley, Warwickshire, England d. ABT 1182
- William de Hastings, b. 1134 in Fillongley, Warwick, England d. 1195 in Fillongley, Warwickshire, England, United Kingdom
- William de Hastings, b. ABT 1130 d. ABT 1165
Sources:
- Title: https://fmg.ac/component/content/article?id=60:descendants-301-600
Publication: Name: https://fmg.ac/component/content/article?id=60:descendants-301-600;
- Title: Legacy NFS Source: Hugh Hastings - birth-name: Hugh Lord De Hastings
Author: OneWorldTreeSM, www.ancestry.com, null
Note: birth-name: Hugh Lord De Hastings
Source Medium: Ancestry.com
birth: 1098; Fillongley, Warwickshire, England
Source Medium: Ancestry.com
death: 1152; England
Source Medium: Ancestry.com
Page: Migrated from user-supplied source citation: urn:familysearch:source:3244281720
- Title: Legacy NFS Source: Hugh Hastings -
Author: AFN
Page: Migrated from user-supplied source citation: urn:familysearch:source:3244698971
- Title: Legacy NFS Source: Hugh de Hastings Lord of Fillongley -
Author: Stirnet.com, Peter Barns-Graham, Chairman, Name: http://www.stirnet.com;, Page number: Hastings01
Note: Peter Barns-Graham, Chairman, Stirnet.com (http://www.stirnet.com).
Page: Migrated from user-supplied source citation: urn:familysearch:source:3246398939
- Title: Legacy NFS Source: Hugh Hastings -
Author: Ancestral File (R), The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Copyright (c) 1987, June 1998, data as of 5 January 1998, Family History Library, 35 N West Temple Street, Salt Lake City, Utah 84150 USA
Page: Migrated from user-supplied source citation: urn:familysearch:source:3244467264
- Title: Hugh de Hastings, "Find A Grave Index"
Author: "Find A Grave Index," database, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:Q2DJ-Z9KP : 12 December 2022), Hugh de Hastings, ; Burial, Fillongley, North Warwickshire Borough, Warwickshire, England, St Mary & All Saints Churchyard; citing record ID 172546739, Find a Grave, http://www.findagrave.com.
Publication: Name: https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:Q2DJ-Z9KP;
- Title: https://fmg.ac/component/content/article?id=60:descendants-301-600
Publication: Name: https://fmg.ac/component/content/article?id=60:descendants-301-600;
- Title: Web: Netherlands, GenealogieOnline Trees Index, 1000-2015
Publication: Name: http://search.ancestry.com/collections/9289/records/31290025;
Page: WEB Netherlands
Master Index
| Pedigree Chart
| Descendency Chart
Please send genealogical corrections, additions, or comments to Michael Matthew Groat PhD
Created by GIMMWebService Version 1.0.3 (Program Information), Copyright 2023 © Michael Groat
(Web design layout and pedigree indentation subroutine) Copyright 1996 © Randy Winch (gumby@edge.net) and Tim Doyle (tdoyle@doit.com)
(Internal GEDCOM data structures and GEDCOM file parsing) Copyright 2014-2021 © Giulio Genovese (giulio.genovese@gmail.com)
Like the program that you see? Any support is appreciated!
