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Hubert de Rie I



Preferred Parents:
Father: Eudes fitz Geoffrey de Ryes, b. ABT 973 in Ryes, Calvados, Normandy, France   d. ABT 1027 in Ryes, Calvados, Normandy, France
Mother: Albreda de la Haye, b. 985 in France   d. ABT 1045

Family 1: Albreda de Préaux,    b. ABT 1007 in Préaux Calvados, Duché de Normandie    d. ABT 1112 in Somme, Picardie, France
  1. Albreda de Rie, b. 1052 in Ryes, Calvados, Normandy, France     d. 1112 in Benington, Hertfordshire, England
  2. Eudo de Rie, b. 1047 in Rie, Haut Normandie, Duché de Normandie     d. BEF 28 FEB 1120 in Préaux-du-Perche, Perche en Nocé, Orne, Duché de Normandie
  3. Ralph Fitz-Hubert de Rie, b. 1045 in Rie, Haut Normandie, Duché de Normandie     d. 1086 in Derbyshire, England
Sources:
  1. Title: Hubert de Rie in Bank's The Dormant and Extinct Baronage of England, pg. 166-167 [See document in the Memories section]
    Author: Bank's The Dormant and Extinct Baronage of England, pg. 166-167
    Note: Hubert de Rie in Bank's The Dormant and Extinct Baronage of England, pg. 166-167 [See document in the Memories section]
    Page: Hubert de Rie in Bank's The Dormant and Extinct Baronage of England, pg. 166-167 [See document in the Memories section]
  2. Title: Legacy NFS Source: HUBERT DE RIE -
    Author: Complete Peerage of England, Scotland, Ireland, Great Britain, and the United Kingdom; GE Cokayne, Sutton Publishing Ltd, Page number: V:113ff{Essex}
    Note: Source Media Type: Book
    Page: Migrated from user-supplied source citation: urn:familysearch:source:2736741118
  3. Title: Adam de Rie in the Domesday Book ~https://opendomesday.org/name/adam-son-of-hubert/ [See document in the Memories section]
    Publication: Name: https://opendomesday.org/name/adam-son-of-hubert/;
    Note: Adam de Rie in the Domesday Book ~https://opendomesday.org/name/adam-son-of-hubert/ [See document in the Memories section]
    Page: Adam de Rie in the Domesday Book ~https://opendomesday.org/name/adam-son-of-hubert/ [See document in the Memories section]
  4. Title: The Rie family in The Battle Abbey Roll, Vol. 3, pgs. 71-74 [See document in the Memories section]
    Author: The Battle Abbey Roll, Vol. 3, pgs. 71-74
    Note: The Rie family in The Battle Abbey Roll, Vol. 3, pgs. 71-74 [See document in the Memories section]
    Page: The Rie family in The Battle Abbey Roll, Vol. 3, pgs. 71-74 [See document in the Memories section]
  5. Title: Valognes family in the Battle Abbey Roll, Vol. 3, pg. 257-258 [See document in the Memories section]
    Author: Battle Abbey Roll, Vol. 3, pg. 257-258
    Note: Valognes family in the Battle Abbey Roll, Vol. 3, pg. 257-258 [See document in the Memories section]
    Page: Valognes family in the Battle Abbey Roll, Vol. 3, pg. 257-258 [See document in the Memories section]
  6. Title: Open Domesday - Land of Ralph son of Hubert
    Author: Crich was a settlement in Domesday Book, in the hundred of Morleystone and the county of Derbyshire. It had a recorded population of 6 households in 1086, putting it in the smallest 40% of settlements recorded in Domesday (NB: 6 households is an estimate, since multiple places are mentioned in the same entry).
    Publication: Name: https://opendomesday.org/place/SK3554/crich/;
    Note: Land of Ralph son of Hubert Households Households: 10 villagers. 2 smallholders. Land and resources Ploughland: 1 ploughland. 1 lord's plough teams. 3 men's plough teams. Other resources: Meadow 3 acres. Woodland 3 * 1 leagues. Valuation Annual value to lord: 1 pound 10 shillings in 1086; 2 pounds in 1066. Owners Tenant-in-chief in 1086: Ralph son of Hubert. Lord in 1086: Ralph son of Hubert. Lords in 1066: Leofnoth (brother of Leofric); Leofric (brother of Leofnoth). Other information This entry mentions multiple places: Crich; Shuckstone. Phillimore reference: Derbyshire 10,11
  7. Title: Wikipedia (French) -Hubert de Ryes
    Author: François Neveux, La Normandie des ducs aux rois, Rennes, 1998 Notes et référencesFrançois Neveux, La Normandie des ducs aux rois, Rennes, 1998, p.114-115 d'après le récit de Wace J. H. Round, « The Legend of 'Eudo Dapifer' », dans The English Historical Review, vol. 37, n°145 (1922), p. 1-34. David R. Bates, « The Character and Career of Odo, Bishop of Bayeux (1049/50-1097) », dans Speculum, vol. 50, n°1 (1975), p. 1-20.
    Publication: Name: https://fr.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Hubert_de_Ryes&veaction=edit;
    Note: Hubert de Ryes est un seigneur normand qui aida en 1046 le jeune duc de Normandie Guillaume le Bâtard à se sortir d'une tentative d'assassinat. Plaque commémorant l'aide apportée par Hubert de Ryes à Guillaume Duc de Normandie à Ryes Biographie Hubert de Ryes fut un petit seigneur du Bessin, connu pour avoir accueilli dans son domaine de Ryes le futur Guillaume le Conquérant, menacé de mort par un complot de barons normands de l'ouest du duché de Normandie (1046). En effet, alors que le jeune duc normand âgé d'environ 18 ans se trouvait dans sa résidence de Valognes, un fou de sa maison vint le prévenir de l'imminence de son assassinat. Immédiatement, Guillaume s'enfuit à cheval. Évitant les grands chemins, il trouva refuge dans le village de Ryes. Le seigneur du lieu, Hubert, ordonna alors à ses trois fils d'escorter le duc jusqu'à Falaise. Les quatre hommes arrivèrent en sécurité dans la forteresse ducale ; Guillaume put mener sa contre-offensive contre les barons rebelles. La Chronique de l'Abbaye Saint-John de Colchester La Chronique de l'Abbaye Saint-John de Colchester (Chronicle of St. John's Abbey, Colchester), qui fut écrite par les moines de l'abbaye, contient de nombreuses légendes et inexactitudes sur la famille de Ryes, qui fonda l'abbaye. Descendance Grâce à l'appui ducal, les trois fils d'Hubert eurent des carrières remarquables malgré leur basse noblesse : Eudes, sénéchal des rois d'Angleterre Guillaume le Conquérant, Guillaume le Roux puis Henri Ier. Eudes avait épousé Rohaise († 1121), une fille de Richard de Clare, issue des ducs de Normandie. Robert II de Ryes, fut évêque de Sées (v. 1070-v. 1081). Adam fitz Hubert fut un commissionnaire du Domesday Book et un tenant d'Odon de Conteville, évêque de Bayeux et comte de Kent, en Angleterre.
  8. Title: Geni
    Publication: Name: https://www.geni.com/people/Hubert-de-Rie-Steward-of-Normandy/6000000001354069908?through=6000000002187962008;
  9. Title: The Rie family in the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy ~http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/enguntps.htm#_Toc21095955 [See document in the Memories section]
    Publication: Name: http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/enguntps.htm#_Toc21095955;
    Note: EUDES de Rie (-1 Mar 1120, bur Colchester). His parentage is confirmed by the History of the foundation of St John’s abbey, Colchester which names “Eudoni…major domus regiæ”, “pater…eius…Hubertus de Ria, qui internuntius et sequester inter ducem Normanniæ et regem Angliæ…”, his three brothers “Radulfus...custodia castelli et comitatus Notingehamiæ, Hubertus…turris Norwici…Adam…in Cantia”, and “Roasya uxor eius…Gilbertum comes, Rohaisæ frater”[581]. "…Eudo dapifer" witnessed the charter dated to [1072] under which William I King of England summoned knights to attend Easter at Clarendon[582]. "…Eudo de Ria fitz Hubert…Engelramn fitz Hubert [=Hilbert]…" witnessed the charter dated 14 Jul 1080 under which William I King of England confirmed the foundation of the abbey of Lessay[583]. The Chronicon Rameseiensis records the donations made by "Eudo…dapifer Regis…sororis suæ Muriellæ" dated to [1080], witnessed by "…Radulfo fratre Ilgeri, Rogero vicecomite et Osberno sororio Eudonis et Walgero filio eius…"[584]. "…Eudo, Adam brother of Eudo…Richard de Meri, Geoffrey de Sai, Robert de Oilli" witnessed the charter dated 1084 under which William I King of England confirmed a donation by Roger de Albini to Lessay Holy Trinity[585]. Domesday Book records “Eudo fitzHubert” holding Ashe in Overton Hundred in Hampshire; St Leonards in Ripplesmere Hundred in Berkshire; "Eudo the Steward" holding numerous properties in Essex, in Norfolk and in Suffolk[586]. "…Eudo dapifer, Ivo dapifer, Hanno dapifer…" witnessed the charter dated 27 Jan 1091 under which William II King of England confirmed the status of Bath abbey[587]. King William II’s grant of "manerio Deremanni quod Lefstanus frater eius habebat" to “Eudonem dapiferum meum” in an undated charter[588], dated by the Regesta Regum Anglo-Normannorum to [1093/97][589]. "Eudo dapifer" donated "the whole tithe of the forest of Tison...[and rights] in all his honour of Préaux [Pratellis]" to Saint-Amand by undated charter[590]. “Eudo dapifer domini regis” founded Colchester St John, for the souls of King Henry I, Queen Matilda “...uxore mea Roaysia”, by undated charter[591]. The History of the foundation of St John’s abbey, Colchester records the death “pridie Kal Mar 1120” of “Eudoni…major domus regiæ”, and that “Waltherius eius nepos” brought his body for burial[592]. m ROHESE, daughter of RICHARD FitzGilbert de Brionne & his wife Rohese Giffard (-7 Jan 1121, bur Le Bec, Normandy[593]). “Eudo dapifer domini regis” founded Colchester St John, for the souls of King Henry I, Queen Matilda “...uxore mea Roaysia”, by undated charter[594]. Her parentage is confirmed by the undated charter under which “Rohais uxor Eudonis dapiferi” donated “manerium de Halingberi sicut dominus meus Eudo die qua vivus et mortuus fuit illud habebat” and land which “Gelebertus frater meus” gave her, for the souls of “Eudonis dapiferi mariti mei et Gilberti fratris mei”[595], which is corroborated by the undated charter under which “Walterus filius Roberti” donated “terram de teia” to Colchester St. John, for the souls of “patris mei Roberti filii Ricardi et matris mee Matildis et...Rohaise amite mee que ecclesiam Sancti Johannis fundavit et fratrum suorum”, to Colchester St. John[596]. The History of the foundation of St John’s abbey, Colchester also names “Eudoni…major domus regiæ” and “Roasya uxor eius…Gilbertum comes, Rohaisæ frater”[597]. Other sources suggest a different parentage for Rohese. According to Guillaume de Jumièges and the Genealogia Fundatoris of Tintern Abbey, she was Rohese, widow of Richard FitzGilbert de Brionne, daughter of Gauthier Giffard & his wife Ermengarde (-after 1113, bur [Colchester]). Guillaume de Jumièges names "Galterium Giffardum primum” as father of “secundum Galterium Giffardum et filias plures” of whom “una...Rohais” married “Richardo filio comitis Gisleberti”[598]. According to the Genealogia Fundatoris of Tintern Abbey, Monmouthshire, ”Rohesia” married secondly “Eudoni dapifero Regis Normanniæ” after the death of “Ricardo filio comitis Gisleberti” and that they were both buried “tempore Henrici primi” in “castrum Clecestriæ…cœnobio in honore sancti Johannis” which Eudo constructed[599]. The Complete Peerage says that this parentage is “probably erroneous”[600]. From a chronological point of view, the connection would be tight, assuming that the death date of Richard FitzGilbert is correctly estimated to [1090] and the birth of Rohese’s granddaughter by her alleged second marriage, Beatrix, is correctly assessed at [1105]. This supposed different parentage is disproved by the three sources quoted above. Eudes & his wife had [one possible child]: i) MARGUERITE ([1080/90]-). The Genealogia Fundatoris of Tintern Abbey, Monmouthshire names “Margareta” as daughter of “Eudoni dapifero Regis Normanniæ” and “Rohesia”, adding that she married “Willielmo de Mandavill” by whom she was mother of “Gaufridi filii comitis Essexiæ et iure matris Normanniæ dapifer”[601]. According to the Complete Peerage, this genealogy is “probably erroneous” but it does not explain the basis for the doubts[602]. Marguerite’s second marriage is suggested by the charter dated [1141/42] under which Empress Matilda made various grants of property including a grant to "Willelmo filio Otuel fratri…Comitis Gaufredi"[603]. The only Ottiwell has been identified was the illegitimate son of Hugh Earl of Chester. m firstly ([1100/05]) WILLIAM de Mandeville, son of GEOFFREY de Mandeville & his first wife Adelisia --- (-[1116]). m secondly ([1116/19]) OTTIWELL, [maybe OTTIWELL FitzHugh, illegitimate son of HUGH Earl of Chester & his mistress ---] (-drowned off Barfleur, Normandy 25 Nov 1120).
    Page: The Rie family in the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy ~http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/enguntps.htm#_Toc21095955 [See document in the Memories section]
  10. Title: Some entries concerning the Rie family in British History Online ~www.british-history.ac.uk [See document in the Memories section]
    Publication: Name: http://www.british-history.ac.uk;
    Note: Some entries concerning the Rie family in British History Online ~www.british-history.ac.uk [See document in the Memories section]
    Page: Some entries concerning the Rie family in British History Online ~www.british-history.ac.uk [See document in the Memories section]
  11. Title: The Rie family in Dugdale’s The Baronage of England, pg. 109-110 [See document in the Memories section]
    Author: Dugdale’s The Baronage of England, pg. 109-110
    Note: The Rie family in Dugdale’s The Baronage of England, pg. 109-110 [See document in the Memories section]
    Page: The Rie family in Dugdale’s The Baronage of England, pg. 109-110 [See document in the Memories section]
  12. Title: Finding our Past: rootsweb
    Author: Sources 1 "The Battle Abbey Roll, with some account of the Norman Lineages" (Medieval Mosaic Ltd, 2006).
    Publication: Name: https://freepages.rootsweb.com/~dearbornboutwell/genealogy/fam6555.html;
    Note: Family of Hubert + of RIE and Albreda + of PREAUX Husband: Hubert + of RIE (1017-1086) Wife: Albreda + of PREAUX (1022-1102) Children: Hubert of RIE (1038-1120) Ralph + FITZHUBERT (1045-1086) Eudo DAPIFER (1047-1120) Alberta + of RIE (1052-1112) Adam of RIE (c. 1056- ) Husband: Hubert + of RIE Name: Hubert + of RIE1 Sex: Male Father: Eudes + FITZGEOFFREY (1005-1027) Mother: Albreda of PREUX (1005-1102) Birth 1017 Bayeux, Calvados, Duché de Normandie Death 1086 (age 68-69) Duché de Normandie Wife: Albreda + of PREAUX Name: Albreda + of PREAUX Sex: Female Father: Walter GIFFARD (c. 1000- ) Mother: - Birth 1022 Duché de Normandie Death 1102 (age 79-80) Somme, Picardie, France Child 1: Hubert of RIE Name: Hubert of RIE Sex: Male Birth 1038 Normandel, Orne, Basse-Normandy, Duché de Normandie Death 1120 (age 81-82) Duché de Normandie Child 2: Ralph + FITZHUBERT Name: Ralph + FITZHUBERT Sex: Male Spouse: Matilda + DERBYSHIRE (1050- ) Birth 5 Apr 1045 Ryes Castle, Bayeaux, Calvados, Basse-Duché de Normandie Death 6 Aug 1086 (age 41) Derby, Derbyshire, England Child 3: Eudo DAPIFER Name: Eudo DAPIFER Sex: Male Birth 1047 Death 1120 (age 72-73) Child 4: Alberta + of RIE Name: Alberta + of RIE Sex: Female Spouse: Piers + of VALOINES (1033-1087) Birth 1052 Ryes Bayeux, Calvados, Duché de Normandie Death 1112 (age 59-60) England Child 5: Adam of RIE Name: Adam of RIE Sex: Male Birth 1056 (est) Note on Husband: Hubert + of RIE from Rye, three leagues north of Bayeux. "Geoffrey de Rie was living c. 980. His son Odo Fitz Geoffrey gave half the church of Rie to Fescamp Abbey, which was confirmed 1027 by Richard II. of Normandy (Neustria Pia, 218)."—The Norman People. It was Hubert de Rie, who, in 1047, saved the life of the young Duke of Normandy—the future Conqueror of England—when flying from the conspirators of the Cotentin. He had made his escape by night from Valognes, without armour or attendants, and "dared not," says Wace, "turn towards Bayeux, for he knew not whom to trust, so he took the way which passes between Bayeux and the sea. And as he rode through Rie before the sun rose, Hubert de Rie stood at his gate, between the church and his castle, and saw William pass in disorder, and that his horse was all in a sweat. 'How is it that you travel so, fair sire?' said he. 'Hubert,' said William, 'dare I tell you?' Then Hubert said, 'Of a truth,' most surely! say on boldly!'—'I will have no secrets with you; my enemies follow seeking me, and menace my life. I know that they have sworn my death.' Then Hubert led him into his hostel, and gave him his good horse, and called forth his three sons. 'Fair sons,' said he, 'muntez! muntez! Behold your lord; conduct him till ye have lodged him in Falaise. This way ye shall pass; it will be ill for you to touch upon any town.' So Hubert taught them well the ways and turnings; and his sons understood all rightly, and followed his instructions exactly. They crossed all the country, passed Folpendant at the ford, and lodged William at Falaise. If he were in bad plight, what matters so that he got safe? "Hubert remained standing on his bridge: he looked out over valley and over hill, and listened anxiously for news, when they who were pursuing William came spurring by. They called him on one side, and conjured him with fair words to tell if he had seen the Bastard, and whither and by what road he was gone. And he said to them, 'He passed this way, and is not far off; you will have him soon: but wait, I will lead you myself, for I should like to give him the first blow. By my faith I pledge you my word that if I find him, I will strike him the first blow if I can.' But Hubert only led them out of the way till he had no fear for William, who was gone by another route. So when he had talked to them enough of this thing and that, he returned back to his hostel."—Roman de Rou. From Falaise, the young Duke, well out of reach of his pursuers, went to seek and obtain the succour of the King of France, and returned to win the decisive victory of Val-es-dunes. He never forgot the man who had done him so signal a service,[28] and Hubert de Rie remained through life his friend and counsellor. When Edward the Confessor, shortly before his end, sent over a messenger to Normandy, requesting that some trustworthy envoy might go to him on the Duke's behalf, a great council was called together by William, to consider the choice of a representative. But the assembled nobles, one and all, hung back. They would not undertake the embassy to England. "They remembered what had been done at Guilford" (the massacre of the Norman companions of the son of Ethelred) "and refused to visit the barbarous people." Then Hubert de Rie stepped forward, volunteered to take upon himself the risk and the responsibility, and, "praised by all and rewarded by the Duke," set forth on his mission with a great train, picked men on splendidly trapped horses, equipped with all the pomp the Norman court could furnish. He was well received by Edward, who presented him with some lands in Esce (Ashe in Hampshire): and returned to Normandy with "the promise of the kingdom, and the tokens confirming the promise:" a two-handled sword of which the hilt enclosed the relics of certain saints, a hunter's horn of gold, and a great stag's head. For this second important service, the grateful Duke promised him the office of Dapifer: but, soon after the Conquest, disturbances broke out in Cennomania which Hubert, "prompt of hand and good at council," was sent over to quell, and we do not hear of him again in England. He was then an old man, and must have died before 1086, as his sons only are entered in Domesday. There were four: Ralph, Hubert, Adam, and Eudo, all of them magnificently endowed by the Conqueror
  13. Title: Ralphe de Rie in the Domesday Book ~https://opendomesday.org/name/ralph-son-of-hubert/ [See document in the Memories section]
    Publication: Name: https://opendomesday.org/name/ralph-son-of-hubert/;
    Note: Ralphe de Rie in the Domesday Book ~https://opendomesday.org/name/ralph-son-of-hubert/ [See document in the Memories section]
    Page: Ralphe de Rie in the Domesday Book ~https://opendomesday.org/name/ralph-son-of-hubert/ [See document in the Memories section]
  14. Title: Eudo de Rie, Dapifer, in The History and Antiquities of the County of Essex, pg. 139-141 [See document in the Memories section]
    Author: The History and Antiquities of the County of Essex, pg. 139-141
    Note: Eudo de Rie, Dapifer, in The History and Antiquities of the County of Essex, pg. 139-141 [See document in the Memories section]
    Page: Eudo de Rie, Dapifer, in The History and Antiquities of the County of Essex, pg. 139-141 [See document in the Memories section]
  15. Title: Wikitree - Rie
    Author: ↑ Loyd, Origins of Some Anglo-Norman Families, p.40 ↑ Wace, English translation of Roman de Rou, p.13ff. ↑ Keats-Rohan, Domesday People, p.123. ↑ G. Herbert Fowler (1913) , Publications of the Bedfordshire historical record society, p.67. See also: "Royal Ancestry" 2013, Douglas Richardson Vol. IV. 559 Whitham Tree on RootsWeb - Hubert de Rie Cites mainly 19th-century sources.
    Publication: Name: https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Rie-20;
    Note: Hubert was lord of a Norman barony based around Rye, which is close to the English channel at Bayeux. (Modern postcode 14400.)[1] He was mentioned by the romance writer Wace in his Roman de Rou, for helping the young King William with the help of his four un-named sons.[2] He does not name the sons. The best-known one in English history is Eudo, the dapifer. He was the founder of St. John's Abbey in Colchester, Essex Co., England. Hubert was the son of Baron Eudes (Odo) de Rie. Keats-Rohan lists his children as follows:[3] Eudo dapifer. Adam fitz Hubert, a tenant of Bishop Odo in Kent, whose heir was Eudo. Humphrey Robert, the bishop of Sées Muriel, wife of Osbern "perhaps" Ralph fitz Hubert who held Crick in Derbyshire in 1086 (based upon his byname, which means his father's name was Hubert) quote? Hubert joined his liege lord, William the Duke of Normandy, at the conquest of England in 1066 with all 4 of his sons. After a few years, the Conqueror named him the Royal "Intendant" or Steward of Normandy and sent him back to France to manage his, William's, interests there and put down any attempts to usurp his ducal throne while he was consolidating his power in England. Baron Hubert, by now at least 60 years old, obeyed. He never returned to England. His sons were magnificently rewarded by King William, in England. quote? The eldest, Ralph, generally called FitzHubert, was named castellan of Nottingham and held lands in Leicester, Stafford, Nottingham, and Lincoln, but the head of his great barony was in Derby in which he possessed the whole estates of a rich [dispossessed] Saxon named Levenot, comprising 36 manors. His male line died out with his grandson, Hubert, who left 2 daughters, in about the third year of the reign of Henry III... quote? Hubert died before 1086 in Normandy, France. The Domesday Book of 1086 in England mentions his four sons but not Baron Hubert, indicating he had died by then.
  16. Title: Charter for Hubert de Rie in the Liber Niger, Vol. 1, pg. 289 [See document in the Memories section]
    Author: Liber Niger, Vol. 1, pg. 289
    Note: Charter for Hubert de Rie in the Liber Niger, Vol. 1, pg. 289 [See document in the Memories section]
    Page: Charter for Hubert de Rie in the Liber Niger, Vol. 1, pg. 289 [See document in the Memories section]
  17. Title: Foundation for Medieval Genealogy -The Family of Rie
    Publication: Name: https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/enguntps.htm#_Toc112738893;
    Note: This family presumably originated in Ryes, which lies just south of Arromanches-les-Bains on the Normandy coast, and about 5 kilometres north-east of Bayeux, in the present-day French département of Calvados, arrondissement Bayeux, canton Ryes. The reconstruction of the early generations is based mainly on the history of the foundation of St John’s abbey, Colchester, the reliability of which was discussed by Round[674], supplemented by various charter information quoted below. 1. HUBERT [I] de Rie . He is named as the father of the children shown below in the History of the foundation of St John’s abbey, Colchester, quoted below. The reliability of this narrative was discussed by Round[675]. No source has yet been identified which names Hubert in his own capacity. m -- -. The name of Hubert’s wife is not known. Hubert [I] & his wife had six children: a) EUDES de Rie (-1 Mar 1120, bur Colchester). b) RAOUL . c) HUBERT [II] (-before 1127). d) ADAM (-after 1 Mar 1120). e) ROBERT (-1082). f) [MATILDA . g) MURIEL . 2. [-sibling of Hubert-- .] m ---. One child: a) ROGER . "…Rogerius nepos Huberti de Ria…" witnessed a charter dated to [1070/80] which records that "Hubertus Ribola et Garsendis uxore eius" wrongly made claims to "ecclesia Sancte Marie de Curte Dominica"[712].
  18. Title: Keats Rohan, Doomsday Book -Family of Hubert of Ryes
    Author: Keats - Rohan Doomsday book
    Note: Barlow william rufus book pg 188 , Bates character and career of odo Bishop of Bayeux pg 11
  19. Title: Legacy NFS Source: HUBERT DE RIE -
    Author: The Plantagenet Ancestry, by William Henry Turton {1968}, Page number: 106
    Note: Source Media Type: Book
    Page: Migrated from user-supplied source citation: urn:familysearch:source:2736742370
  20. Title: Hubert de Rie in The Norman People, pg. 387 [See document in the Memories section]
    Author: The Norman People, pg. 387
    Note: Hubert de Rie in The Norman People, pg. 387 [See document in the Memories section]
    Page: Hubert de Rie in The Norman People, pg. 387 [See document in the Memories section]
  21. Title: House of names- Ryse History, Family Crest & Coats of Arms
    Publication: Name: https://www.houseofnames.com/ryse-family-crest;

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