Michael Matthew Groat PhD's Genealogical Database
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Gedcom Last Modified: December 14, 2025 00:59:10
Hugh Fitzbaldric de Skipwith
- Preferred Name: Hugh Fitzbaldric de Skipwith
- Gender: M
- http://familysearch.org/v1/TitleOfNobility: Viscount of Yorkshire
- http://familysearch.org/v1/TitleOfNobility: Lord of Cottingham
- Occupation: Sheriff of YorkshireBET 1069 AND 1080
- FSID: GDTX-41X
- Death: ABT 1086 in Cottingham, Yorkshire, England at LATI: N3.7824 LONG: E0.4143
- Birth: ABT 1045 in Cottingham, Yorkshire, England at LATI: N3.7824 LONG: E0.4143
- Notes:
=== Life Sketch ===
Hugh fitzBaldric (sometimes Hugh FitzBaldric or Hugh fitz Baldric) was a Norman nobleman and royal official in England after the Norman Conquest of England.
Hugh first appears in the historical record around 1067 when he was the witness to a charter of Gerold de Roumara.
Hugh held the office of Sheriff of Yorkshire from 1069 to around 1080, succeeding William Malet in that office.
Hugh had lands in Yorkshire and Lincolnshire, and was listed in Domesday Book as a tenant-in-chief. Hugh's tenure of the estate at Cottingham in Yorkshire is considered to mean that he was a feudal baron. Katharine Keats-Rohan states that Hugh lost his lands after the conclusion of Domesday Book in 1086, likely for supporting Robert Curthose as king against William Rufus after the death of William the Conqueror. But I. J. Sanders states that Hugh's lands were divided after his death and does not mention any forfeiture of the lands.
One of Hugh's holdings included the village of Bossall in the hundred of Bulford (now in the Ryedale district of North Yorkshire). In 1086, there were 19 residents and a priest, as well as a church, in the small community. This property produced an annual income of "3 pounds in 1086; 2 pounds 10 shillings in 1066".
It is possible that the Hugh fitz Baldric that was a witness on a charter of Robert Curthose's in 1089 is the same person as the former sheriff.
Domesday Book records that Walter de Rivere and Guy of Croan were son-in-laws of Hugh.
Hugh gave some of his English lands to Préaux Abbey in Normandy and St Mary's Abbey in York. Hugh was memorialized in the liber vitae of Thorney Abbey.
Preferred Parents:
Father: Baldric de Lascelles, b. 1015 in Lascella, Falaise, Calvados, Basse-Normandie, France d. ABT 1070 in Skipwith Castle, Skipwith, East Yorkshire, England
Mother: Balderic of Saxony,
Family 1: Emma Lascelles, b. ABT 1050 in Saint-Jean-De-Liversay, Charente-Maritime, Poitou-Charentes, France
- Isabella Fitz Baldric, b. ABT 1080 in Skipwith, Yorkshire, England d. 1112 in Burton, Lincolnshire, England
- Erneburge FitzBaldric Lady of Skipwith, b. ABT 1080 in Cottingham, East Riding, Yorkshire, England d. ABT 1140 in Estuteville Ecales, Normandy, France
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