Michael Matthew Groat PhD's Genealogical Database
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William FitzPatrick
- Preferred Name: William FitzPatrick[1] [2] [3]
- Alternate Name: William FitzPatrick
- Gender: M
- http://familysearch.org/v1/TitleOfNobility: Earl
- Title+Of+Nobility: in Wiltshire, England at LATI: N1.3923 LONG: E2.0435 with note: Description: 2nd Earl of Salisbury
- Death:: 1215 in Ireland with note: Gallway
- Occupation: High Sheriff of Somerset and Dorset1194 in England
- Birth: 1154 in Salisbury, Wiltshire, England at LATI: N1.0687 LONG: E1.794
- Military+Service: 1195 with note: GEDCOM data
- http://familysearch.org/v1/TitleOfNobility: succeeded his father as Earl of Wiltshire, but was always styled Earl of Salisbury1168 with note: Foundation for Medieval Genealogy
- Burial: APR 1196 in Bradenstoke Priory, Bradenstoke, Wiltshire, England at LATI: N1.514 LONG: E1.999
- FSID: L5P2-HJH
- Death: 17 APR 1196 in Caen, Calvados, Duchy of Normandie, France at LATI: N9.184 LONG: E0.368
- MilitaryService: accompanied King Richard in the expedition into Normandy1195 with note: Wikiwand: William of Salisbury, 2nd Earl of Salisbury
- Notes:
=== Life Sketch ===
“Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families,” Douglas Richardson (2013):
“WILLIAM FITZ PATRICK, 2nd Earl of Salisbury, of Chitteme, Amesbury, Chicklade, Little Langford, North Tidworth, Somerford (in Great Somerford), and Shrewton, Wiltshire, Great Gaddesden, Hertfordshire, Edgware, Middlesex, etc., son and heir, born about 1150.
He married about 1191 ELEANOR DE VITRÉ, widow successively of William Paynel, of Drax, Yorkshire, Broughton, Lincolnshire, Wootton, Oxfordshire, etc. (died 1184), and Gilbert de Tillieres (died 1190), seigneur of Tillières-sur-Avre (Eure) in Normandy, Headley and Westcote, Surrey, West Compton, Berkshire, etc., and daughter of Robert III de Vitré, seigneur of Vitré, by Emma, daughter of Alain de Dinan [see MORTAIN 4 for her ancestry].
Her maritagium included a moierty of the manors of Ryes, Trungy, and Ducy, all in Normandy, and £20 sterling annually out of manor of Cowling, Suffolk. They had one daughter, Ela [Countess of Salisbury]. He gave the advowson of the church of Canford, Dorset with its dependent chapel of St. James at Poole, Dorset to Bradenstoke Priory, together with the chapel of St. Andrew at Chitterne, Wiltshire. His wife, Eleanor, gave the same priory the advowson of the church of Cowling, Suffolk with a rent of 40s. WILLIAM FITZ PATRICK, 2nd Earl of Salisbury, died 17 April 1196, and was buried in Bradenstoke Priory, Wiltshire.
His widow, Eleanor, married (4th) before 1198 GILBERT MALESMAINS, in right of his wife, of Great Gaddesden, Hertfordshire, Cowling, Suffolk, etc. They had no issue. In 1203 Gilbert and his wife, Eleanor, and William Fitz Martin and Finapopula his wife had an assize regarding land in Cowling, Suffolk. He was living in 1205. A royal writ of 1216 ordered that Eleanor, Countess of Salisbury, should be permitted to hold her manors of Gaddesden, Hertfordshire, Edgware, Middlesex, and Wootton, Oxfordshire in peace. In 1217 she gave a setier of oats to Mondaye Abbey in Normandy to be received annually at Trungy, and in 1218 a rent from her oven of Ryes to buy waxlights to burn every day at the mass of Holy Mary.
In 1223 Eleanor, sometime Countess of Salisbury, granted Roger de London, clerk, the assart called Le Frith in the manor of Cowling, Suffolk. In 1227 she gave 10s. money of Tours annually to Mondaye Abbey for the observation of anniversary of her daughter, Juliane de Tillieres, widow of Baldwin Rastell, to be received annually at Trungy. In 1232 she granted Roger, son of Richard de Coiling', the land called Hamstall, and other lands which his father Richard held in the vill of Cowling, Suffolk to hold for term of his life. The same year she made fine with the king by 10 marks for having seisin of her wood of Wootton, Oxfordshire.
Eleanor, Countess of Salisbury, died testate shortly before 18 August 1233. ("William Earl of Salisbury took part in the ceremonial of the first coronation of the lion-hearted king, which was solemnised with great state at Westminster on 3d of Sept. 1189; he carried the verge or red, cosigned with a dove on its summit. At Richard's second coronation, which took place after his return from captivity in Germany, and which was solemnised in the cathedral of Winchester on the 18th April, 1194, this earl was one of four who supported the canopy ... In the latter year the earl of Salisbury was also constitued keeper of the king's charter or grant for licensing tournaments throughout the country ... According to the Book of Lacock, his [William's] body was buried at the priory of Bradenstoke.
His wife, who survived him for thirty-five years, was
Alianor, daughter of Robert de Vitré, of Brittany,... She was married first to William Paynell, lord of Hambie in Normandy, and of Drax in Yorkshire, whose widow she became in 1184; and she was married thirdly to Gilbert de Malesmains, who in her right held the manor of Gatesden in Hertfordshire, in the year 1205. Alianor countess of Salisbury died in Normandy, and was buried by the side of her daughter Juliana, in the abbey of St. Martin de Monte Dei, commonly called Mondaye.".
In 1212 William, Earl of Salisbury, claimed lands from Henry de Bohun and in 1215 control of the barony of Trowbridge was granted to William. A compromise was reached later in the same year when the honour was divided between the Earl of Hereford and the Earl of Salisbury. Half the barony of Trowbridge remained with the lords of Chitterne (p. 92), 112.
"In 1172 Tillières-sur-Avre (Eure) was held by Gilbert of Tillières for the service of 3 knights [R.B., ii, 631. A. reads 4 knights]. He died during the third Crusade and his heir was still under age in 1198 [Rot. Scacc., ii, 321].
This heir, Gilbert the younger, died between 1220 and 1227 since he was succeeded by his sister Juliana, who was dead in the latter year [Stapleton, II, xlvi, note]. By this time, if not before, the rights of a second sister, Joanna, the wife of Thomas Malesmains, had been recognised also, although she and her husband lived in England. The co-heirs in 1228 were Hilaria, the daughter of Juliana, and Nicholas Malesmains, the son of Joanna [Stapleton, II, xlviii]. Hilaria's husband, James of Bavelingham, did homage to the king of France for the whole honour, and tanquam antenatus, secured by judgement of the exchequer in 1234 the right of the whole auxilium exercitus, from the lands of Nicholas as well as from his own.").
BIO
BIO: from http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/ENGLISH%20NOBILITY%20MEDIEVAL1.htm#ElaSalisburydied1261 as of 5/28/2016
WILLIAM FitzPatrick (-[Normandy] 1196, bur Bradenstoke Priory). “Comes Willielmus S
=== http://www.familylore.org/index.php?title=William_FitzPatrick ===
William FitzPatrick, 2nd Earl of Salisbury
Title/Occupation:
Education:
Born: ,
Died: ,
Buried:
Mother:
Father:
Siblings:
Spouse: Eléonor de Vitré
Issue: Ela, Countess of Salisbury
=== Notes and sources to Royal Ancestry ===
Clutterbuck Hist. & Antiq. of Hereford 1(1815): 371 (Longespée-Zouch ped.). Bowles & Nichols Annals & Antiqs. of Lacock Abbey (1835): 263-267. Stapleton Magni Rotuli Scaccarii Normanniae 2 (1844): xliv-I. Memoirs illus. of the Hist. & Antiqs. of Wiltshire & the City of Salisbury (1851): 217-217
Herald & Genealogist 6 (1871): 241-253. Annual Rpt. of the Deputy Keeper 35 (1874): 31 (two charters of Eleanor de Vitrei, Countess of Salisbury, one dated 1223, the other dated 1232 witnessed by Andrew de Vitrei). Money Hist. of Newbury (1887):
72-79 (Salisbury ped.). Baildon Select Civil Pleas 1 (SeIden Soc.3 ) (1890): 60. Birch Cat. Seals in the British Museum 2 (1892): 402 (seal of Eleanor de Vitré, Countess of Salisbury dated 1222 - Pointed oval. In long dress, head-dress and cloak. Standing, turned slightly to the left, on a platform. In the right hand a fleur-de-lis. The left hand lifted before the breast. In the field on the right a quatrefoll. Legend: [SIGIL]LVM : ALIENOR [CO]MTISSE DE SALESBIR..). Broussillon LaMaison de Laval 1 (1895): 271-314. Bull. de la Commission historique et archéologique de la Mayenne 2nd Set. 11 (1895): 168-209. Round Cal. of Docs. Preserved in France 1 (1899): 537-538. C.C.R. 1231-1234 (1905): 97, 99, 150, 247, 249, 286, 370. VCH Hertford 2 (1908): 201-207. Clay Early Yorkshire Charters 6 (1939): 21-24. VCH Wiltshire 3 (1956): 275-288; 13 (1987): 105-114; 14 (1991): 194-204; 15 (1995): 13-55, 153-163, 178-183, 242-252. Paget English Baronies (1957): 432:1. Sanders English Baronies (1960): 91
=== CONFLICT: Ancestral File 4.13 (States W ===
CONFLICT: Ancestral File 4.13 (States William DEVERAUX not FITZ PATRICK)William de Evereux , 2nd Earl of Salisbury, bore the golden sceptre with the dove on the head of it at the coron ation of King Richard I; but the next year, when the king became a prisoner in Almaine, his l ordship was one of these who adhered to John, Earl of Moreton. In the 6th Richard I [1195], t he earl was with the king in the expedition then made into Normandy and, upon his return to E ngland, was one of his great council assembled at Nottingham. At the send coronation of Richa rd, in the same year, the Earl of Salisbury was one of the four earls who supported the canop y of state. His lordship m. Alianore de Vitrei, dau. of Tirrel de Mainers, and left, at his d ecease, an only dau. and heiress, Ela. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Ex tinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, England, 1883, p. 167, d'Evereux, Earls of Sal isbury]
*******
=== {{British Isles 742-1499}} ===
{{British Isles 742-1499}}
He received the third penny of Wiltshire in 1168, and remained loyal during the rebellion of the King's sons 1173-74. He was sheriff of Wiltshire 1189-90 and 1191-96. He bore the sceptre with the dove at Richard's coronation 3 Sep 1189, and appears to have been in close attendance to that monarch until he left Dover for Normandy 12 Dec. He served as sheriff of Dorset and Somerset in 1194, and upon Richard's return from captivity, he attended the Great Council at Nottingham in March andwas present at Richard's second coronation at Winchester 27 April. (Ref: Geneajourney.com)
== Sources ==
* '''Royal Ancestry by Douglas Richardson Vol. III. page 597'''
* Geneajourney.com
* Source: S3349418663 Repository: [[#R3349413998]] Title: Ancestry Family Trees Publication: Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: The Generations Network. Original data: FamilyTree files submitted by Ancestry members. Note: This information comes from 1 or more individual Ancestry Family Tree files. This source citation points you to a current version of those files. Note: The owners of these tree files may have removed or changed information sincethis source citation was created. Page: Ancestry Family Trees Note: Data: Text: http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=7122234&pid=2653
* Source: S3349486546 Repository: [[#R3349413998]] Title: Millennium File Author: Heritage Consulting Publication: Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: The Generations Network, Inc., 2003.Original data - Heritage Consulting. The Millennium File. Salt Lake City, UT, USA: Heritage Consulting.Original data: Heritage Consulting. The Millennium File. Salt Lake City, UT, USA Note:
== 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.
=== == Biography == ===
== Biography ==
: Name: William /MARTIN/, of Cemmaes & Combe
: Birth: ABT 1145
: Death: ABT 1209
:Note: Ancestor of Haute Wyatt, of Phebe Bisby (Frances Brooks) and ofJane Norton Vincent (Otho M Otte).
== Sources ==
No sources.
== Acknowledgments ==*This person was created through the import of Acrossthepond.ged on 21February 2011.*This person was created on 08 April 2011 through the import of HOWE(1).ged.*Thank you to [[Wall-573 | Katherine Wall]] for creating FitzMartin-43on 22 Sep 13.
=== The manor of GREAT GADDESDEN was bequeat ===
The manor of GREAT GADDESDEN was bequeathed by will to Saint AlbansAbbey by Ethelgifu, a noble matron, between 942 and 946. (fn. 4) Theabbey leased the manor for lives, and Wlwen appears to have held it inthis way at the time of the death of Edward the Confessor. (fn. 5)William the Conqueror seems to have ignored this arrangement andgranted the manor to Edward of Salisbury, sheriff of Wiltshire, whoheld it in 1086. (fn. 6) His son or grandson Walter was living in 1136and 1142, and left a son and heir, Patrick of Salisbury, who wascreated about 1149 earl of Salisbury or earl of Wiltshire, (fn. 7) andwas slain while returning from a pilgrimage to Galicia in Spain. Hewas succeeded by his son William of Salisbury, or FitzPatrick, whodied in 1196, and was succeeded by his only daughter Ela (fn. 8) orIsabella, who married William Longespee, an illegitimate son of HenryII who in right of his wife became earl of Salisbury.
4 Matt. Paris, Chron. Maj. (Rolls Ser.), vi, 13; and Cott. MSS. NeroD. 7, fol. 90.
5 V.C.H. Herts. i, 291 and 329-30.
6 Ibid.
7 G.E.C. Complete Peerage.
8 Rot. Lit. Claus. (Rec. Com.), 284.
From: 'Parishes: Great Gaddesden', A History of the County ofHertford: volume 2 (1908), pp. 201-207. URL:http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=43270. Dateaccessed: 23 October 2008.
=== !Pedigree Chart from information from hi ===
!Pedigree Chart from information from hired researcher for family org.; "Royal Ancestors of Some American Families" Chart 343 from New England Historical & Genealogical Register
=== Styled also Fitz Patrick, he was Earl of ===
Styled also Fitz Patrick, he was Earl of Wiltshire, but was always styled Earl of Salisbury. He received the third penny of Wiltshire in 1168, and remained loyal during the rebellion of the King's sons 1173-74. He was sheriff of Wiltshire 1189-90 and 1191-96. He bore the sceptre with the dove at Richard's coronation 3 Sep 1189, and appears to have been in close attendance to that monarch until he left Dover for Normandy 12 Dec. He served as sheriff of Dorset and Somerset in 1194, and upon Richard's return from captivity, he attended the Great Council at Nottingham in March and was present at Richard's second coronation at Winchester 27 Apr. His widow, Eleanor (previously the widow of Gilbert Crispin and William Paynel), married, 4thly, Gilbert de Malesmains.
Sir William Fitz Patrick [d], Earl of Salisbury, Sheriff of Wiltshire, b abt 1150, of Salisbury, Wiltshire, England, d 17 Apr 1196. He md Eleanor de Vitre abt 1184, daughter of Robert de Vitre and Emma de Dinan.
=== Biography ===
“Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families,” Douglas Richardson (2013):
“PATRICK OF SALISBURY (otherwise known as PATRICK FITZ WALTER), of Chitterne, Alton Barnes, Amesbury, Chicklade, Little Langford, Mildenhall, North Tidworth, Rockley (in Preshute), Shrewton, Somerford (in Great Somerford), Tollard (in Tollard Royal), and Wilcot, Wiltshire, Great Gaddesden, Hertfordshire, Edgware, Middlesex, North Aston, Oxfordshire, etc., hereditary Sheriff of Wiltshire, Steward of the Household to Empress Maud, 2nd but 1st surviving son and heir, born as early as 1121 (of age in 1142). He married (1st) MAUD ___. They had no known issue. He was created Earl of Salisbury (or Wiltshire) about 1143; he occurs once as Earl of Wiltshire in the period, 1141-50. He witnessed a charter of Henry d'Oilly in the period, 1144-47. Sometime before 1148 he witnessed a charter of Roger Fitz Humphrey to the Templars. He married (2nd) probably in or before 1152 ELA (or ALA) OF PONTHIEU, widow of William de Warenne, 3rd Earl of Surrey (died 19 Jan. 1147/8) [see WARENNE 6], and daughter of Guillaume III Talvas, Count of Ponthieu and Alencon, by Ela, daughter of Eudes I Borel, Duke of Burgundy. They had four sons, William [2nd Earl of Salisbury], Patrick [Canon of Bradenstoke], Philip [Canon of Bradenstoke] and Roger. In 1153 he witnessed the treaty between King Stephen and Henry, Duke of Normandy [future King Henry II]. After the accession of King Henry II, he continued to act as Sheriff and was frequently at Court. He witnessed a charter of his brother-in-law, John Marshal, to the Templars in 1155-6. At an unknown date, he gave Bradenstoke Priory the church of Wilcot, with its dependent chapel at Draycot Fitz Payne, as well as a portion of the manor of Wilcot, Wiltshire. He also exchanged the property in Wilsford, Wiltshire given by his father, for the rest of the manor of Wilcot, Wiltshire, and also gave a salt pit in Canford, Dorset. His wife, Countess Ela, gave the same priory land and rents in Hatherop, Gloucestershire worth 100s. yearly. In 1167 he accompanied King Henry II to Poitou, where the king assigned him to protect his queen, Eleanor of Aquitaine. PATRICK, Earl of Salisbury was slain about 7 April 1168 by Poitevin nobles while riding near the castle of Lusigan in Poitou with Queen Eleanor. He was buried in the Abbey of St.-Hilaire in Poitiers. Queen Eleanor and her son, Richard, subsequently founded an anniversary at St.-Hilaire for their salvation and for the soul of Earl Patrick "who died in our service." His widow, Ela, Countess of Salisbury, died 10 Dec. 1174.
Recueil des Historiens des Gaules et de la France 16 (1813): 588-590 (letter of John of Salisbury to Master Girard Pulcelle dated 1168 states "Comes Patricius à rebellibus Pictavis occisus est."). Clutterbuck Hist. & Antiq. of Hertford 1 (1815): 371 (Longespée-Zouch ped.). Guizot Hist. des Ducs de Normandie par Guillaume de Jumiège (1826): 299 ("Guillaume Talvas Ce dernier eut deux fils et deux filles de son épouse Alix, qui avait eté mariée auparavant au duc de Bourgogne. Son fils ainé, Gui … L'une de ses filles fut mariée à Joel, fils de Gauthier de Mayenne, qui eut de ce mariage plusieurs fils. L'autre filla épousa Guillaume de Warenne, comte de Surrey."). Gentleman's Mag. 103 (1833): 402. Ellis Original Letters Ill. of English Hist. 3.1 Ser. 1 (1846): 23-25 (letter of Thomas Becket to Ala, Countess of Warenne dated 1162-74) (Mr. Ellis, the editor, cites Reg. Priorat. Lewes. fol. 107 b. for death date of Ela, Countess of Surrey: "Domina Ala Comitissa Surregiæ, filia Comitis de Belesme et uxor Willielmi tertii. Obiit quarto Idus Decembris Anno gratin Millesimo et anno xxvito post virum suum. Ubi sepulta est nescitur."). Memoirs illus. of the Hist. & Antiqs. of Wiltshire & the City of Salisbury (1851): 216-217 ("Patrick of Salisbury was a witness to king Stephen's treaty with Henry duke of Normandy, in the year 1153. Having taken part with the empress Maud in her struggle with Stephen, he was by her advanced to the dignity of Earl of Salisbury, and he occurs under that designation in the year 1165. Being lieutenant of Aquitaine for king Henry II., he went in pilgrimage to the shrine of Saint Iago in Gallicia; and on his way back was slain by Guy de Lusignan on the 27th March, 1168. His body was interred in the church of St. Hilary in Poictiers ... Patrick earl of Salisbury is supposed to have had two wives. Of one no more is known, except that "the soul of Matilda the countess, my wife" is recommended to the prayers of the canons of Bradenstoke in his charter to that priory. It is not improbable that his son Patrick, who occurs in another Bradenstoke charter, was the son of the countess Matilda. Earl Patrick's second wife was Ela, the widow of William earl Warren, who died in 1148 ... This Ela was the daughter of William Talvais comte of Ponthieu, by Helen, daughter of Odo duke of Burgundy. She died on the 10th Dec. 1174, having had issue, by her second marriage, William earl of Salisbury, and two or three younger sons, whose names alone are known from the monastic charters of Bradenstoke, Stanley, and Southwark."). Herald & Genealogist 6 (1871): 241-253. Money Hist. of Newbury (1887): 72-79 (Salisbury ped.). Salter Eynsham Cartulary 1 (Oxford Hist. Soc. 49) (1907): 75 ("The earliest mention of Patrick, as an Earl, hitherto known is in a deed of 1149 (`Geoffrey de Mandeville,' by Mr. J.H. Round, p. 271."). VCH Hertford 2 (1908): 201-207. Leys Sandford Cartulary 2 (Oxfordshire Rec. Soc. 22) (1941): 179 (charter of John Marshal), 228. Clay Early Yorkshire Charters 8 (1949): 12-13. C.P. 11 (1949): 375-377 (sub Salisbury); 12(1) (1953): 496-497 (sub Surrey). VCH Wiltshire 3 (1956): 275-288; 5 (1957): 44-71; 6 (1962): 213-221; 10 (1975): 8-13, 190-204; 12 (1983): 125-138, 160-184; 13 (1987): 79-88, 105-114; 14 (1991): 194-204; 15 (1995): 13-55, 153-163, 178-183, 242-252. Sanders English Baronies (1960): 112. Davis King Stephen (1967): 140 ("Patrick, Earl of Salisbury, was the son of Walter of Salisbury (d. 1147) who was possibly sheriff in the early years of Stephen's reign (Reg. iii. 684) and whose own father, Edward of Salisbury, had certainly been sheriff under William the Conqueror. Patrick was made earl at some date between 1141 and 1147. He was not an earl in Reg. iii. 839, but is so styled in a charter of Henry d'Oilly given betore the death of Earl Robert of Gloucester (31 October 1147) (Salter, Eynsham Carlidary, i. 75 (no. 71), Oxford Hist. Soc. xlix, 1906-7). His normal style was Earl of Salisbury, but in a charter of Henry fitz empress (1144-50) he was styled Earl of Wiltshire (Reg. iii. 704), and it may be assumed that, as in the case of Arundel-Chichester-Sussex, the titles were interchangeable."). VCH Middlesex 4 (1971): 155-157. VCH Oxford ll (1983): 6-21. Stacy Surveys of the Estates of Glasonbury Abbey, c. 1135-1201 (Recs. of Social & Econ. Hist. 33) (2001): 244 footnote 8,247 footnote 1. Thomas English & the Normans (2003): 121. Power Norman Frontier in the 12th & Early 13th Cents. (2004): 520 (Talvas ped). Stacy Charters & Custumals of Shaftesbury Abbey, 1089-1216 (2006): 67.
Children of Patrick, Earl of Salisbury, by Ela (or Ala) of Ponthieu:
i. WILLIAM FITZ PATRICK, 2nd Earl of Salisbury [see next].
ii. PATRICK OF SALISBURY, Canon of Bradenstoke. VCH Wiltshire 3 (1956): 275-288.
iii. PHILIP OF SALISBURY, Canon of Bradenstoke. Desc. Cat. Ancient Deeds 2 (1894): 73 (Countess Isabel [de Warenne] and her [half] brother, Philip, occur as witnesses to a charter of 0., prior of St Pancras, Lewes). VCH Wiltshire 3 (1956): 275-288.
iv. ROGER OF SALISBURY, living c.1140-55. Jackson Words, Names, & Hist.: Selected Papers Cecily Clark (1995): 330 ("Rogerus 'filius comitis de salesberi’").”
=== Earl of Wiltshire, styled as Earl of Sal ===
Earl of Wiltshire, styled as Earl of Salisbury. He remained loyalduring the rebellion of the King's sons, 1173-74. Sheriff of Wilts1189-90 and 1191-96, he attended Richard's Coronation September 3,1189 and was apparently in close attendance upon the King until thelatter left Dover for Normandy on December 12. He was sheriff ofDorset and Somerset during 1194, attended the Great Council atNottingham in March 1194 and the KIng's 2nd Coronation at Winchesteron April 17, 1194.
=== Signed the Magna Carta ===
Signed the Magna Carta
=== SORLEY'S PEDIGREES (GS NUMBER Q929.242 S ===
SORLEY'S PEDIGREES (GS NUMBER Q929.242 SO68) P.48;
=== !William Marshal Court, Career and Chiva ===
!William Marshal Court, Career and Chivalry in the Angevin Empire 1147-1219 by David Crouch p221; !#21-v11-p378;
=== !NOTES: Earl of Salisbury !SOURCES: Ro ===
!NOTES: Earl of Salisbury !SOURCES: Royal Ancestors of Magna Carta Barons; by Collins, pgs. 104 & 209 NOTES: First Husband of wife
=== THE PLANTAGENET ANCESTRY (GS NUMBER Q940 ===
THE PLANTAGENET ANCESTRY (GS NUMBER Q940 D2T) P.96, 112, 119, 120, 126; SORLEY'S PEDIGREES (GS NUMBER Q929.242 SO68) P.21, 22, 26, 38; DICTIONARY OF NATIONAL BIOGRAPHY, VOL 34 P.115 THRU 119; KINGS OF ENGLANDP.114 THRU 118; GEORGE'S GENEALOGICAL TABLES, TAB 3; HISTORY OF THE COUNTY OF NORTHAMPTONSHIRE, VOL 1 P.694; ANCESTRAL FILE, LDS GENEALOGICAL SOCIETY;
=== THE COMPLETE PEERAGE OF ENGLAND (Second ===
THE COMPLETE PEERAGE OF ENGLAND (Second Edition); by George Edward COKAYNE; Volume XI, Pages 377 - 379; and Volume XII (1), Pages 497 - 498. VICTORIA COUNTY HISTORIES, LANCASTERSHIRE; Volume I, Page 312. DUDLEY PEDIGREE, Heralds College, 28 January 1937. THE GENEALOGIST'S MAGAZINE; published by Society of Genealogists, London, England; Volume XIV, Pages 361 - 368. BOSTON EVENING TRANSCRIPT; by D. L. J. (1927); Note 2257, Part XIII.
=== ANCESTRAL ROOTS, by F. L. Weis, 7th Ed., ===
ANCESTRAL ROOTS, by F. L. Weis, 7th Ed., Line 108 #27, pg. 101: Wm. Fitz Patrick, b. c1150, d. 17 Apr 1196, Earl of Salisbury; m. c1190, Eleanor de Vitre, dau. of Robert de Vitre and Emma de Dinan, dau of Alan de Dinan. (CP XI 377-379, XII (1) 497-8; VCH LANC. I 312).
=== Findagrave Biography ===
William Fitzpatrick
Photo added by Audrey DeCamp Hoffman
William Fitzpatrick
Birth 1154
Salisbury, Wiltshire Unitary Authority, Wiltshire, England
Death 17 Apr 1196 (aged 41–42)
Caen, Departement du Calvados, Basse-Normandie, France
Burial
Bradenstoke Priory
Bradenstoke, Wiltshire Unitary Authority, Wiltshire, England
Memorial ID 88886184 · View Source
Memorial
Photos 1
Flowers 43
William of Salisbury, 2nd Earl of Salisbury was an Anglo-Norman peer. Though he is generally known as such, his proper title was Earl of Wiltshire, which title was conferred on his father by the Empress Maud around 1143. He was also called William FitzPatrick. He was the son and heir of Patrick of Salisbury, Earl of Wiltshire, styled Earl of Salisbury, and of Ela Talvas. He married Eleanor de Vitré, daughter of Robert III de Vitré of Tilliers and Emma de Dinan about 1190. He died without male issue. Their only daughter and heiress, was Ela of Salisbury, 3rd Countess of Salisbury who married William Longespée, 3rd Earl of Salisbury, who was half-brother to the king. He bore the golden sceptre with the dove at the first coronation of King Richard I on 3 Sep 1189. At the second coronation of Richard, the Earl of Salisbury was one of the four earls who supported the canopy of state. William FitzPatrick died in 1196 at Normandy, and is buried at Bradenstoke Priory.
(Bio by William Fitzpatrick's 22nd great granddaughter Audrey DeCamp Hoffmen)
Thank you forever to Audrey DeCamp Hoffman for creating this memorial for my/our ancestor and transferring it to my care.
Family Members
Parents
Photo
Patrick d' Evereux
1122–1168
Photo
Ela Talvas FitzWalter
1118–1174
Spouse
Eleanor de Vitre d'Evereux
1157–1233
Half Siblings
Photo
Isabella De Warenne
1136–1199
Children
Photo
Ela fitzPatrick d'Evereux Longspee
1187–1261
Flowers • 43
=== !NAME: William Fitz Patrick d-Evreux ===
!NAME: William Fitz Patrick d-Evreux
=== Name Suffix: Earl O Salisbury Ance ===
Name Suffix: Earl O Salisbury Ancestral File Number: 99T1-DP !"Royal Ancestors" by Michel Call, 1989, Chart # 11343.
=== Earl of Salisbury ===
Earl of Salisbury
=== !BIRTH-DEATH: The Plantagenet Connection ===
!BIRTH-DEATH: The Plantagenet Connection April, 1994 Earl of Salisbury
=== Held the Manors OF Blagdon And Dartingto ===
Held the Manors OF Blagdon And Dartington. In 1209 had lettersofprotection while staying in Wales.
=== Sources: Norr; A. Roots 108; Falaise Ro ===
Sources: Norr; A. Roots 108; Falaise Roll, page 3. Roots: William Fitz Patrick , born about 1150, died 17 April 1196, Earl of Salisbury. Norr: William FitzP atrick d'Evreux.
=== Sir Bernard Burke's Dormant & Extinct Pe ===
Sir Bernard Burke's Dormant & Extinct Peerage p.167;
=== !#21> Complete Peerage-v11-p377-379*, (F ===
!#21> Complete Peerage-v11-p377-379*, (FHL 942 D22cok); !KIN> s & h by 2nd wife; `TITLE> Earl of Wiltshire;
=== !William Fitz Patrick, b. ca. 1150, d. 1 ===
!William Fitz Patrick, b. ca. 1150, d. 17 Apr. 1196, Earl of Salisbury; m. c. 1190, Eleanor de Vitre, dau. of robert de Vitre and Emma de Dinan, dau. of Alan de Dinan. ["Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists" Seventh Edition, line 108-27.]
Preferred Parents:
Mother: Adellia Fitzwalter, b. 1118 in France d. 10 OCT 1174 in Bradenstoke, Wiltshire, England
Family 2: Eleanor de Vitré, b. 1158 in Vitré, Ille-Et-Vilaine, Bretagne, France d. AUG 1233 in Dorking, Mole Valley District, Surrey, England
- Elizabeth Devereux, b. ABT 1170 in Sutton on Trent, Nottinghamshire, England, United Kingdom d. ABT 1200 in Sutton on Trent, Nottinghamshire, England
- Ela de Salisbury, b. ABT 1187 in Amesbury, Wiltshire, England, United Kingdom d. 24 AUG 1261 in Chippenham, Wiltshire, England, United Kingdom
Family 3: Isabel Martin FitzWilliam, d. 1281 in Combe Martin, Devon, England, United Kingdom
- m. 1195 in Devon, England
Sources:
- Title: Ancestral Roots Of Certain American Colonists Who Came To America Before 1700
Author: Weiss, Frederick Lewis, additions by Walter Lee Shippard, Jr., Ancestral Roots Of Certain American Colonists Who Came To America Before 1700, Edition 7, Genealogical Publishing Company, Baltimore, 1992, p.101.
Note: Source Media Type: Book.
[PFT:AQ]
[S:Titl] Ancestral Roots Of Certain American Colonists Who Came To America Before 1700
[S:Auth] Weiss, Frederick Lewis, additions by Walter Lee Shippard, Jr.
[S:AbbrA]
[S:Publ] Edition 7, Genealogical Publishing Company, Baltimore, 1992
[S:Note] Source Media Type: Book
[Page] 101
[/PFT]
- Title: Geni
Publication: Name: https://www.geni.com/people/William-FitzPatrick-2nd-Earl-of-Salisbury/6000000006906697401;
- Title: William Fitzpatrick, "Find A Grave Index"
Author: "Find A Grave Index," database, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:QVLW-M624 : 12 June 2020), William Fitzpatrick, 1196; Burial, , ; citing record ID , Find a Grave, http://www.findagrave.com.
Publication: Name: https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:QVLW-M624;
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