Michael Matthew Groat PhD's Genealogical Database
Individuals: 97,713 Families: 61,838
Gedcom Last Modified: December 14, 2025 00:59:10
Adam FitzHerbert, Lord of Llanllowell
- Preferred Name: Adam FitzHerbert, Lord of Llanllowell[1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] [8] [9] [10] [11] [12] [13] [14]
- Alternate Name: Adam Fitz Herbert
- Alternate Name: Adam Fitzherbert
- Alternate Name: Adam Fitz Herbert Lord in Wales
- Alternate Name: Adam Fitz Herbert
- Alternate Name: Adam ap Reginald Reginald
- Alternate Name: Adam FitzHerbert Lord of Gwarindee
- Alternate Name: Adam Reginald
- Alternate Name: Adam AP Herbert
- Alternate Name: Adam ap Reginald
- Alternate Name: Adam heir of Herbert
- Alternate Name: Adam ap Herbert
- Gender: M
- LdsSealingToParents: 3 FEB 1995 with note: GEDCOM data
- Clan Name: with note: Description: The Genealogies of Glamorgan Wales Genealogical Library at Cardiff Wales national Library of Wales at Abrystwyth Wales John Pidding Jones Assertory Book Many sources, photos, stories, or documents provide evidence that this information should be changed. Many sources, photos, stories, or documents provide evidence that this information should be changed.
The Genealogies of Glamorgan Wales Genealogical Library at Cardiff Wales national Library of Wales at Abrystwyth Wales John Pidding Jones Assertory Book Many sources, photos, stories, or documents provide evidence that this information should be changed. Many sources, photos, stories, or documents provide evidence that this information should be changed.
- LdsEndowment: 2 FEB 1995 with note: GEDCOM data
- National Identification: with note: Description: 4911392
- LdsBaptism: 14 NOV 1996 with note: GEDCOM data
- Birth: 1274 in Llanllowell, Monmouthshire, Wales at LATI: N1.6851 LONG: E2.8722 with note: Standard
- Death: ABT 1345 in Beachley, Gloucestershire, England, United Kingdom at LATI: N1.6185 LONG: E2.6518 with note: Lord Llanllowel, Bettelsey, Beachley
- Alt. Birth: in Wynston, Crucornau Fawr, Monmouthshire, Wales at LATI: N1.903 LONG: E3.0202
- FSID: LDWH-XLW
- Notes:
=== Life Sketch ===
In the mid-1400's, two brothers assumed the surname Herbert; these were Sir William, Earl of Pembroke and Sir Richard of Coldbrook, sons of Sir William ap Thomas and his wife Gwladys Ddu, daughter of Sir Dafydd Gam. This was probably done at the time Sir William was named Earl of Pembroke by King Edward IV. Apparently these brothers knew their grandfather, Thomas, was the son of Gwilym ap Jenkin ap Adam but further back they were unsure. We are told King Edward IV commissioned one Hywel Lloyd and others to find the true pedigree of the Earl of Pembroke.[1] The result of that project traced Jenkin ap Adam back through a succession of men, ending with a "Lord Herbert, Duke of Cornwall son of Godwin" [2] said to have lived prior to the 1066 Norman conquest. Based on those now extant, this early attempt at a family pedigree probably looked like this[3]:
Godwin
Herbert
Henry
Herbert
Herbert
Peter
Reginald
Peter
Herbert
Adam
Jenkin
Gwilym
Thomas
Sir William==Gwladys Ddu
Sir William Sir Richard
Since the first Herbert shown in this chart was subsequently identified as a companion of William the Conqueror[4], early genealogists scoffed at the notion he could have been the son of a Saxon and Godwin was dropped from the pedigree. Soon, amended pedigrees were being cast making the second-named Herbert a base son of King Henry I[5]. That failed to convince others who said the Henry in the pedigree was the "Henry the Treasurer" found in the 1086 Domesday Book[6], but we suspect all the early generations were men called Herbert. Yet others claimed an early marriage to Emma de Blois, half-sister to King Stephen and a daughter of Adelia, a base daughter of William the Conqueror[7]. Other early marriage matches inserted in the various versions of the pedigree included Nest ferch Rhys ap Tewdwr[8], Julia daughter of Robert Corbet[9] and Lucy daughter of Milo fitz Walter[10]. It was almost certainly not Julia but Sibyl Corbet that married a Herbert. A son of the Corbet marriage would fit chronologically with Lucy and the liason with Lucy produced Peter. A public record[11] calls "Sibilla" the grandmother of "Petr fili Herbti". This section of the early Norman family probably looks like this:
1035 Herbert, Count of Vermandois
l
1085 Nest vz Rhys ==/==Herbert II===Emma de Blois 1080
l 1070 l
1105 Sybil Corbet====Herbert III St William, archbishop ob 1154
l 1100
1130 Herbert IV====Lucy dau of Milo fitzWalter 1135
l
1165 Peter fitz Herbert==Alice dau Robert FitzRoger 1175
Without spending a lot of time dissecting the charted family, the chronological time line is possible. If any of those men sired a child by the infamous Nest ferch Rhys ap Tewdwr[12] it would have to be the one called Herbert II although those pedigrees who include Nest match her with the father of the Herbert who married Lucy. (See Appendix below)
Reginald fitz Peter (son of Peter in the above chart) is said to have married Joan, daughter of William Fortibus (1190-1241) and their son, Peter fitz Reginald, died in 1323 leaving a son Herbert fitz Peter who was 48 years old at the inquisition taken in 1323....thus born in 1275. It is the marriage match claimed for Peter fitz Reginald which, we believe, was faked in order to connect this family to the later Earl of Pembroke.[13] The lady in question is Alis ferch Bleddyn Broadspear, heiress of the manors of Llanllowel and Beachley. We shall return to this lady momentarily, but first we should present a chart showing the remainder of the pedigree together with estimated birthdates which will expose the fraud:
1275 Herbert fitz Peter (birthdate on record)
l
1255 Adam
l
1290 Jenkin
l
1325 Gwilym obit 1377
l
1360 Thomas obit 1438
l
1390 Sir William ap Thomas obit 1446
We date the Adam in the above chart by his marriage, which all versions of the pedigree agree was Cristyn ferch Gwarin Ddu. This man was descended from Ynyr, king of Upper Gwent, as follows:
1030 Ynyr
1065 Meurig
1095 Ynyr Fychan
1125 Caradog
1155 Sir Gwarin
1190 Iorwerth
1230 Gwarin Ddu
1265 Cristyn========Adam 1255
While the medieval genealogists had made a number of emendations to the basic pedigree, some seeking to paper over the chronological problem by attaching Adam to Reginald instead of to his grandson, all insisted the family at the bottom of the chart descended from the one at the top. But in 1876, George T. Clark debunked the pedigree as "a forgery and a clumsy one, and its statements not to be reconciled with independent dates and records".[14] Rather than be content that the ancestry of Adam clearly was not that claimed in the pedigree, we sought to learn not only his correct ancestry but why the earlier genealogists had connected him to the old Norman family. Our journey began with two pedigrees which said the father of Adam was actually named Cynhaethwy[15] and a third pedigree which said Peter fitz Herbert had a brother named Cynhaethwy, and that man had a son named Adam[16]. Down to this point in the pedigree, all men bore common English names and married English/Norman ladies but suddenly we encounter a purely Welsh name. Further research led us to the family of Adam Gwent.[17] Among his sons were Adam Fychan and Cynhaethwy; while his pedigree did not chart the descendants of Cynhaethwy, it does identify a son of Adam Fychan who is styled "Lord of Beachley". Return now to a lady mentioned earlier: Alis ferch Bleddyn Broadspear. Most of the citations which mention Bleddyn identify him as Lord of Llanllowel and Beachley.[18] The fake Herbert pedigrees show Llanllowell descending to Sir Thomas ap Adam, older brother of Jenkin ap Adam. They omit any mention of Beachley, a fact "corrected" by Joseph Morris in 1858.[19] He simply takes Sir John ap Adam Fychan (the man who did inheirit Beachley) and makes him the brother of Jenkin ap Adam and assigns Llanllowel to him. Acting on the theory that both the families we find holding those two manors c. 1300 had a common ancestor, and that ancestor was a son of Alis ferch Bleddyn, we decided to see where it might lead us if we were to identify the Cynhaethwy claimed to be a brother of Peter fitz Herbert (and father of Adam) with the man of that name cited as a son of Adam Gwent. Our result was this chart[20]:
965 Rhiwallon
l
1000 Caradog[21]
l
1030 Breichiol
l
1060 Pyll
l
1095 Meurig
l
1125 Caradog of Penrhos Bleddyn Broadspear
l l
1160 Iorwerth=================Alis
l
1190 Adam Gwent
___________________l_____________
l l
1220 Adam Fychan Cynhaethwy 1225
l l
1255 Sir John[22] Adam 1255
____________l________
Lord of Beachley l l
and Beverstone[23] Sir Thomas 1285 1290 Jenkin Lord of Llanllowell Lord of Wern Ddu[24]Iorwerth ap Caradog in this chart was steward to Hywel ap Iorwerth ap Owain Wan of Caerleon, ruler of Lower Gwent c. 1175. Adam Gwent was steward to Morgan ap Hywel c. 1210[25] Our construction is chronologically stable now that we have disconnected Jenkin ap Adam from the Norman fitz-Herbert family and placed Alis ferch Bleddyn in a marriage that produced the descendants that actually inherited her lands. Bleddyn's ancestry is nowhere given, but it is a common Welsh name and the form "Alis ferch Bleddyn" used in the pedigrees should identify him as a Welshman. Our guess is he was related to the ruling family in Caerleon, in whose realm Llanllowel is located[26] and in whose service we find Iorwerth ap Caradog the father of Adam Gwent. We can only guess as to why the 15th century Earl of Pembroke did not want his an
=== Lord of Llanlowell (Llan-Hywel) near Us ===
Lord of Llanlowell (Llan-Hywel) near Usk and of Betesley (Beachley) through inheritance from his grandmother
=== !#4568> Welsh Genealogies Ad 300-1400,-v ===
!#4568> Welsh Genealogies Ad 300-1400,-v6-p418,-v7-p470,-v12-p941 (FHL #6025561); #2105> Wales Visitation-v1-p292,293 (FHL Q942.9 D23d); !#388> Cornwall House-p210 (FHL 929.242 C815L); #1307> Montgomeryshire Collections-v5-p158* (FHL 942.94 C4mp); #1358> Robertson et Durdin-tbl98* (FHL 929.242 R545r); #1875> Wales County Annals-p776 (FHL #0832242); #3417> Herbert Pedigrees-p3 (FHL #8026552 it3-4); #4712> English Pedigrees-p124* (FHL 942.D2no); !OCC> Steward of Tir Iarll; TITLE> Lord of Llanllywel and Beachley, Gloucester (#1307);
=== BIRTH:"COAT OF ARMS-ARMS OF PEDIGREES", ===
BIRTH:"COAT OF ARMS-ARMS OF PEDIGREES", p. 114. LDS FHC microfilm #0104385. BIRTH-MARRIAGE:"WELSH GENEALOGIES AD300-1400," by Peter Clement Bartrum, published by The University of Wales Press, 1980.
=== Adam Fitz-Herbert, Lord by inheritance ===
Adam Fitz-Herbert, Lord by inheritance from his grandmother of Llanllowel and of Bettisley or Beachley. He married Christian, daughter and heir of Gwarin Dhu (the Dark or Black Lord) of Llandilo, a mansion of great magnificence near Abergavenny, where the remains still exist, with a once celebrated well; and in the church of that town is a stone figure representing a female, with the arms of Gwaryn Ddu upon it, believed to have been part of the tomb of Christian. They had two sons, Sir John ap Adam, and John Jenkin Herbert (Siencyn) ap Adam, Lord of Gwarin.
=== 1268 ===
1268
=== Some background information concerning Adam FitzHerbert and his wife Christian verch Gwarin Ddu ===
Jenkin ap Adam (John-Herbert ab Adam, alias Jenkin) was the son of Adam FitzHerbert who married Christian (Christiana) verch Gwarin Ddu. They are documented as follows.
A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Landed Gentry of Great Britain and Ireland states the following: "Adam Fitz Herbert, lord by inheritance from his grandmother, of Llan-Howell or Llanlowell, near Uske, and of Betesley or Beachley, who married Christian, dau. and heir of Gwarin Dee, the black Lord of Llandilo...had two sons, namely, I. John Ap Adam, knight, lord of Llanllowell, II. John-Herbert Ap Adam, alias Jenkin, lord of Gwarindee..."
A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire states: "Adam Fitzherbert, Lord, by inheritance from his grandmother, of Llanllowel, and of Bettesley or Beachley. He m. Christian, dau. and heir of Gwarin Ddu, the 'Black Lord' of Llandilo, a mansion of great magnificence near Abergavenny, afterwards designated Gwarinddu, now Wernddu, and by her had two sons, I. Sir John ap Adam, Knt., Lord of Llanllowell....II. John, alias Jenkin Herbert ap Adam, Lord of Gwarinddu."
The "Family of Herbert" in Archaeologia Cambrensis states: "Adam Fitz-Herbert, Lord of Llanllowel, and of Beachley, Co. Gloucester, who married Christiana, daughter and sole heir of Gwillim Ddu, of Wernddu, Co. Monmouth, usually called 'The Black Lord of Llandilo'. They had issue two sons, John and Jenkin."
A Genealogical and Heraldic Dictionary of the Landed gentry of Great Britain and Ireland states: "Adam Fitz-Herbert, lord, by inheritance from his grandmother, of Llan-Howell, or Llanllowell, near Uske, and of Betesley, or Beachley. He m. Christian, dau. and heir of Gwarin Dee, the Black Lord of Llandilo (his residence was afterwards called Gwarin Dee)...."
The Annuals and Antiquities of the Counties and County Families of Wales states: "Adam, son of Herbert, lord of Llanllywel and of Betesley, or Beachly, on the Severn, who m. Christian, dau. and h. of Gwaryn Ddu (the dark), lord of Llandeilo, whose residence, Gwern Ddu, was situated near Abergavenny, where the remains and name still exist, with a once celebrated well--and in the church of that town is a stone figure representing a female, with the arms of Gwaryn Ddu upon it, believed to have been part of the tomb of Christian..."
It is noted that the forms Ddu or Dhu are apparently Gaelic for black or dark, and thus it appears the designation of Black Lord or Dark Lord is nothing more than an English translation of his Welsh name. Had Christian’s father been an English gentleman, his name would perhaps have been Black or Dark, but as a Welsh gentleman, his name was Ddu (Dhu or Dee).
Adam FitzHerbert was the son of Herbert FitzPeter who was married to Margaret Walsh.
A pedigree published in Collections Historical & Archaeological Relating to Montgomeryshire, Vol. V, pages 158-159, documents the first eleven generations of the John Pidding Jones line in England and Wales following the conquest of England by William the Conqueror in 1066. An explanation of that pedigree follows. It begins with Herbert [Herbertus Camerarius]; followed by his son Henry FitzHerbert [Henrici Tresaurij]; followed by his son Herbert FitzHenry [Herbert FitzHerbert I or Herbert of Winchester]; followed by his son Herbert FitzHerbert [Herbert FitzHerbert II]; followed by his son Peter FitzHerbert; followed by his son Reginald FitzPeter; followed by his son Peter FitzReginald; followed by his son Herbert FitzPeter, Lord of Llanllowel; followed by his son Adam FitzHerbert, Lord of Llanllowel; followed in the so-called “B” line by his son Jenkin ab Adam [Jenkin ab Adam, alias Herbert]; followed by his son Gwillim ab Jenkin [Gwillim ab Jenkin, alias Herbert]; followed by his son Thomas ab Gwillim [Thomas ab Gwillim ab Jenkin, alias Herbert]. It is noted that Thomas ab Gwillim was the fourth son of Gwillim ab Jenkin. The John Pidding Jones line descends from Gwillim ab Jenkin through Howell ab Gwillim, the third son of Gwillim ab Jenkin. Thus, the pedigree does not follow the John Pidding Jones line after Gwillim ab Jenkin [son: Howell ab Gwillim], but rather the line of Thomas ab Gwillim.
See also the "Revised History of John Pidding Jones and Margaret Lee Jones" (published 2015 by Michael Norman Grimshaw, Ph.D.), pages 57-58.
=== T Jones: History of Brecknockshire P. 3 ===
T Jones: History of Brecknockshire P. 394 where he is called Adam Herbert J Williams: Llyfr Baglan P. 80
=== Lord of Llanlowell (Llan-Hywel) near Us ===
Lord of Llanlowell (Llan-Hywel) near Usk and of Betesley (Beachley) through inheritance from his grandmother WFT v2 4154 dd WFT dd dp
=== Please read these alert notes before making changes to Adam FitzHerbert. ===
Please read these alert notes before making changes to Adam FitzHerbert.
=== !#4568-v12-p942,943; ===
!#4568-v12-p942,943;
=== Adam, son of Herbert, lord of llanllywel ===
Adam, son of Herbert, lord of llanllywel and of Betesley, or Beachly, on the Severn, who m. Christian, dau and h of Gwaryn Ddu (the Dark), lord of Llandeilo, whose residence, Gwern Ddu, was sitmacted near Abergavenny, where the remains and name still exist, with a once celebrated well - and in the church of that twon is a stone figure representing a female, with the arms of Gwaryn Ddu upon it, believed to have been part of the tomb of Christian. [Annals and Antiquities of Wales II:776]
_____________________________
Adam discarded the Fitz-Herbert and wrote his name Adam ap Reginald. Adam married Christian, daughter of 'the great Welshman," Gwarin Des of Gwern Ddu. Burke says, "Gwarin Dhu (Black Lord) of Gwarnddu or Gwernddu lived in great magnificence at Abergavenny."
Adam and Christian had three sons. The one that inherited the English property was knighted as Sir Thomas Herbert. The older one was, of course, Lord of Lan-Howel. The younger one was Jenkin ap Adam, Lord of Gwernddu and lived at Abergavenny (title and property from mother). [Genealogies of Virginia Families III:110]
_____________________________
Adam FitzHerbert, Lord, by inheritance from his grandmother, of llanllowe, and of Bettwicy or Beachley. He m. Christian, dau. and heir of Gwarin Ddu, the "Black Lord" of Llandilo, a mansion of great magnificence near Abergavenny, afterwards designated Gwarinddu, now Wernddu, and by her had two sons. [Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, & Extinct Peerages 271]
______________________________
Note: It is unclear as to why he chose to be Adam ap Reginald, Adam ap Cynhaethwy, or Adam ap Reginald Cynhaethwy. Many sourced histories show that his father was named Herbert. He may have adopted the name of his great-grandfather because he was the first fuedal lord of the FitzHerberts to have holdings in Wales. This has caused a great deal of confusion as to his lineage. Burke's Peerage & Bartrum have his ancestry to Godwin and it is interesting to note that Alice verch Bletin (or Bleddin) Broadspeare, no matter who the souce, always falls in the lineage as paternal grandmother. The supposition has been made that Adam was trying to become "Welsh" and loose his Norman heritage at a time when the Welsh were in a great deal of upheaval. If this were the case, it has caused a great deal of misalignment of the lineage. What does seem to hold true about the lineage of Adam here is that (1) the Herbert's of Wales enjoyed a great deal of power under the English reign as well as (2) the FitzHerbert's who descended out of Herbert of Winchester - suggesting some sort of a tie, (3) the name itself, which in this lineage connection stopped with Adam, yet again appears as the surname of William, Earl of Pembroke, again suggesting a tie, (4) Herbert is not a name that is a name common to the Welsh or Britains - it is more common to the Normans.
=== D: I11702 _UID: 0981E1C79FB79E4CA4DE2F1A ===
D: I11702 _UID: 0981E1C79FB79E4CA4DE2F1AFB59C484D982 Change Date: 22 Jul 2002 at 01:00:00
=== !#4569-v6-p878; ===
!#4569-v6-p878;
=== !#4568-v10-p756; Mochnant Uwch Rhaeader; ===
!#4568-v10-p756; Mochnant Uwch Rhaeader;
=== !#4568-v10-p760; ===
!#4568-v10-p760;
=== !#4568-v9-p642; ===
!#4568-v9-p642;
Preferred Parents:
Father: Herbert FitzPeter, Lord of Llanlowell, b. 1265 in Kevendyglwydd, Monouthshire, Wales d. 18 NOV 1322
Mother: Margaret Walsh, b. 1265 in Llanllowell, Monmouthshire, Wales
Family 1: Christian verch Gwarin Ddu , b. 1277 in Monmouthshire, Wales d. 1365 in Wales
- m. 1300 in Hertford, Hertfordshire, England
- Jenkin ap Adam of Gwarinddu , b. ABT 1295 in Wales d. 1344 in Monmouthshire, Wales
Sources:
- Title: Legacy NFS Source: Adam FitzHerbert -
Author: Kin of Mellcene Thurman Smith {GenealogyLibrary.com}, Page number: see note for Peter de Vermandois
Page: Migrated from user-supplied source citation: urn:familysearch:source:2736742379
- Title: Legacy NFS Source: Adam FitzHerbert -
Author: Burke's Peerage & Baronetage, 106th Edition, Charles Mosley {1999}, Page number: 2306
Note: Source Media Type: Book
Page: Migrated from user-supplied source citation: urn:familysearch:source:2736742367
- Title: Pedigree of the family of Herbert of Vermandois (Herbertus Camerarius) in Collections Historical & Archaeological Relating to Montgomeryshire, Vol. V, pages 158-159
Author: Pedigree of the family of Herbert of Vermandois (Herbertus Camerarius) in Collections Historical & Archaeological Relating to Montgomeryshire, Vol. V, pages 158-159
Publication: Name: https://www.familysearch.org/photos/artifacts/165477844;
Note: Pedigree of the family of Herbert of Vermandois (Herbertus Camerarius) in Collections Historical & Archaeological Relating to Montgomeryshire, Vol. V, pages 158-159
Page: Pedigree of the family of Herbert of Vermandois (Herbertus Camerarius) in Collections Historical & Archaeological Relating to Montgomeryshire, Vol. V, pages 158-159
- Title: Herbert FitzPeter in A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire, pg. 271
Author: Herbert FitzPeter in A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire, pg. 271
Publication: Name: https://www.familysearch.org/photos/artifacts/165811363;
Note: Herbert FitzPeter in A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire, pg. 271
Page: Herbert FitzPeter in A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire, pg. 271
- Title: Legacy NFS Source: Adam FitzHerbert -
Author: Annals and Antiquities of the Counties and County Families of Wales; Dr Thomas Nicholas {1875}, Page number: II:776
Page: Migrated from user-supplied source citation: urn:familysearch:source:2736742382
- Title: Adam FitzHerbert and Christiana in Archaeologia Cambrensis, Third Series, No. XIII, January 1858, pg. 28
Author: Adam FitzHerbert and Christiana in Archaeologia Cambrensis, Third Series, No. XIII, January 1858, pg. 28
Publication: Name: https://www.familysearch.org/photos/artifacts/165659682;
Note: Adam FitzHerbert and Christiana in Archaeologia Cambrensis, Third Series, No. XIII, January 1858, pg. 28
Page: Adam FitzHerbert and Christiana in Archaeologia Cambrensis, Third Series, No. XIII, January 1858, pg. 28
- Title: Herbert the Chamberlain (Herbertus Camerarius), in A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Landed Gentry of Great Britain and Ireland, Vol. 1, pg. 613 [but missing the generation of Henry the Treasurer)
Author: Herbert the Chamberlain (Herbertus Camerarius), in A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Landed Gentry of Great Britain and Ireland, Vol. 1, pg. 613 [but missing the generation of Henry the Treasurer).
Publication: Name: https://www.familysearch.org/photos/artifacts/165545565;
Note: Herbert the Chamberlain (Herbertus Camerarius), in A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Landed Gentry of Great Britain and Ireland, Vol. 1, pg. 613 [but missing the generation of Henry the Treasurer).
Page: Herbert the Chamberlain (Herbertus Camerarius), in A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Landed Gentry of Great Britain and Ireland, Vol. 1, pg. 613 [but missing the generation of Henry the Treasurer).
- Title: Family of Herbert from Annals and Antiquities, vol. II, pg. 776-777 [See document in the Memories section]
Author: Family of Herbert from Annals and Antiquities, vol. II, pg. 776-777 [See document in the Memories section]
Note: Family of Herbert from Annals and Antiquities, vol. II, pg. 776-777 [See document in the Memories section]
Page: Family of Herbert from Annals and Antiquities, vol. II, pg. 776-777 [See document in the Memories section]
- Title: Herbert the Chamberlain (Herbertus Camerarius) in History of Monmouthshire, pgs. 116-118
Author: Herbert the Chamberlain (Herbertus Camerarius) in History of Monmouthshire, pgs. 116-118
Publication: Name: https://www.familysearch.org/photos/artifacts/165484712;
Note: Herbert the Chamberlain (Herbertus Camerarius) in History of Monmouthshire, pgs. 116-118
Page: Herbert the Chamberlain (Herbertus Camerarius) in History of Monmouthshire, pgs. 116-118
- Title: Legacy NFS Source: Adam Ap Reginald - birth-name: Adam Ap Reginald
Author: Public Member Trees, Ancestry.com, Name: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc.;, www.ancestry.com, null, Page number: Database online.
Note: birth-name: Adam Ap Reginald
birth-name: Adam Ap Reginald
aka-name: Adam ApReginald
birth: 1275; Llanllowell, Monmouthshire, England
death: 1307; Monmouthshire, England
death: 1307; Monmouthshire, England
death: 1307; Monmouthshire, England
birth: 1275; Hertfordshire, England
birth: 1275; Hertfordshire, England
birth: 1275; Hertfordshire, England
death: 1307; Monmouthshire, Wales
Page: Migrated from user-supplied source citation: urn:familysearch:source:3247285388
- Title: Legacy NFS Source: Adam FitzHerbert -
Author: Genealogies of Virginia Families, Virginia Magazine of History, Baltimore {1981}, Page number: III:110
Note: Source Media Type: Book
Page: Migrated from user-supplied source citation: urn:familysearch:source:2736742406
- Title: Peter FitzReginald and Alice in Archaeologia Cambrensis, Third Series, No. XIII, January 1858, pgs. 27-28
Author: Peter FitzReginald and Alice in Archaeologia Cambrensis, Third Series, No. XIII, January 1858, pgs. 27-28
Publication: Name: https://www.familysearch.org/photos/artifacts/165606796;
Note: Peter FitzReginald and Alice in Archaeologia Cambrensis, Third Series, No. XIII, January 1858, pgs. 27-28
Page: Peter FitzReginald and Alice in Archaeologia Cambrensis, Third Series, No. XIII, January 1858, pgs. 27-28
- Title: Legacy NFS Source: Adam FitzHerbert -
Author: A Genealogical and Heraldic Dictionary of the Landed Gentry of Great Britain and Ireland. London, England: Hurst and Blac, Page number: 146
Note: Source Media Type: Book
Page: Migrated from user-supplied source citation: urn:familysearch:source:2736742602
- Title: Peter FitzReginald in A Genealogical and Heraldic Dictionary of the Landed Gentry of Great Britian and Ireland, pg. 659
Author: Peter FitzReginald in A Genelogical and Heraldic Dictionary of the Landed Gentry of Great Britian and Ireland, pg. 659
Publication: Name: https://www.familysearch.org/photos/artifacts/165716547;
Note: Peter FitzReginald in A Genelogical and Heraldic Dictionary of the Landed Gentry of Great Britian and Ireland, pg. 659
Page: Peter FitzReginald in A Genelogical and Heraldic Dictionary of the Landed Gentry of Great Britian and Ireland, pg. 659
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