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Aline de Pipard
- Preferred Name: Aline de Pipard[1] [2] [3] [4] [5]
- Gender: F
- Burial: in Royal Wootton Bassett Cemetery, Wootton Bassett, Wiltshire Unitary Authority, Wiltshire, England at LATI: N1.5416 LONG: E1.8986
- Birth: in Wootton Bassett, Wiltshire, England at LATI: N1.5427 LONG: E1.902
- FSID: MJBV-Z4S
- Title (Nobility): with note: Description: Heiress of Wooton Basset
- Death: ABT 1166 in Wootton Bassett, Wiltshire, England at LATI: N1.5427 LONG: E1.902
- Notes:
=== Life Sketch ===
“Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families,” Douglas Richardson (2013):
“JOHN FITZ GILBERT (also known as JOHN THE MARSHAL), of Cherhill, Great Bedwyn, Marlborough, Rockley, Tidworth, and Wexcombe (in Great Bedwyn), Wiltshire, Newbury, Berkshire, Nettlecombe, Somerset, etc., hereditary Master Marshal of England, son and heir, was of age in 1130. He married (1st) before 1130 ALINE PIPARD, daughter and heiress of Walter Pipard. They had two sons, Gilbert and Walter. In 1130 he accounted for his father's lands, and for the land and daughter of Walter Pipard. He was a loyal and trusted royal official and attested to at least twelve acts of King Henry I between 1129-35. He was with King Henry I in Normandy in 1130, and probably soon afterwards in England. About 1130 the king granted him Borough of Great Bedwyn, Wiltshire, which consisted of the tenements of 25 burgesses, and the lordship in demesne of Stock, Wexcombe, and Wilton and of what became West Bedwyn and Little Bedwyn manors. In 1137 he accompanied King Stephen on his expedition to Normandy. He took possession and fortified the Castles of Ludgershall and Marlborough, Wiltshire in 1138. In 1140 he held Marlborough, Wiltshire for King Stephen, and captured Robert Fitz Hubert who had taken the royal castle of Devizes. About 1141 he repudiated his wife, Aline; she subsequently married Stephen de Gay.* He married (2nd) SIBYL OF SALISBURY, daughter of Walter of Salisbury (also known as Walter Fitz Edward), of Chitterne, Wiltshire, Great Gaddesden, Hertfordshire, North Aston, Oxfordshire, etc., hereditary Sheriff of Wiltshire, by Sibyl, daughter of Patrick de Chaources (or Sourches) [see LONGESPÉE 2 for her ancestry]. Her maritagium included the manor of Mildenhall, Wiltshire. They had four sons, John [Marshal of England], William, Knt. [3rd Earl of Pembroke and Strigull, Lord of Leinster, Marshal of England], Anselm, and Henry [Archdeacon of Stafford, Dean of York, Bishop of Exeter], and two daughters, Maud and ___. He deserted to the Empress in 1141 and supported the Angevin cause thenceforth until 1154. He witnessed at least four charters of the Empress, and there are two writs addressed to him in Wiltshire by her. He also witnessed five charters of Duke Henry in Normandy. In 1141 he was cut off and surrounded in Wherwell Abbey, Hampshire, but escaped with the loss of an eye and other wounds. In 1142 he was with the Empress at Oxford, and two years later at Devizes. In 1144 he was raiding the surrounding country from Marlborough Castle and oppressing the clergy. He was with Maud's son, Henry, at Devizes in 1149 and 1153. In 1152 Newbury Castle was defended by his constable against King Stephen. On the accession of King Henry II in 1154, he was granted Marlbrough Castle and manors of Cherhill and Wexcombe, Wiltshire by the king. In 1155-6 he granted to the Templars all his land at Temple Rockley, Wiltshire which he held of his brother-in-law, Patrick, Earl of Salisbury free and clear of secular service. He had to surrender Marlborough Castle to the king in 1158. He is probably the "John Fitz Gilbert" who witnessed a charter of William de Chesney dated c.1159-63. He was present at the Council of Clarendon in 1164; soon afterwards he sued Thomas Becket for part of his manor of Pagham, Sussex. He was a benefactor of Troarn Abbey, to which he gave land and a house in Winchester, Hampshire. JOHN FITZ GILBERT died shortly before Michaelmas 1165. His wife, Sibyl, died 3 June, year unknown. In 1175-6 part of a fine due to the crown from his heirs was remitted in reimbursements for repairs done to Marlborough Castle.
(* Note: Aline Pipard and her 2nd husband, Stephen de Gay, were the parents of Philip de Gay, of Northbrook (in Kirklinton), Oxfordshire, and Wootton Basset, Broadtown (in Cliffe Pipard), and Compton Basset, Wiltshire. He married Cecily ___. They had two daughters, Cecily and Aline (wife of Alan Basset, Knt.). Philip de Gay died shortly before 3 July 1190, when the king made a division of his lands between his two daughters. His widow, Cecily, was in the king's gift in 1194-5. Three Rolls of the King's Court in the Reign of King Richard the First A.D. 1194-1195 (Pubs. Pipe Roll Soc. 14) (1891): 89 (sub Blakingaue Hundred: "Sedzilia q' fu[it] vxor Philipp de Gay in donocoe d[omi]ni RexWotton [terra sua] ...."). Vincent et al. Acta of Henry II & Richard I (List & Index Soc. Special Ser. 21) (1986): 204. BIHR 72 (1999): 323-333. National Archives, E 42/314 (available at www.catalogue.nationalarchives.gov.uk/search.asp).)
Dugdale Monasticon Anglicanum 5 (1825): 266 (Obit. of Tintern Abbey: "Sibilla comitissa mater Willielmi comitis de Penbroke [obiit] die iijtio. Junii."). Coll Top. et Gen.. 2 (1835): 163-166. Hardy Rotuli Chartarum in Turri Londinensi Asservati 1(1) (1837): 46-47. East Anglian 3 (1869): 30-32. Eyton Court, Household & Itinerary of Henry II (1878). Round Geoffrey de Mandeville (1892): 82, 125, 129-132, 171, 180-183 (William the Chancellor styled "brother" [fratre] of John Fitz Gilbert), 234, 314, 409, 416. Round Commune of London (1899): 305-306. Norgate Minority of Henry the Third (1912): 150-151. CRR 1 (1922): 424. Painter William Marshal Knight-Errant, Baron & Regent of England (1933). Foster Registrum Antiquissimum of the Cathedral Church of Lincoln 3 (Lincoln Rec. Soc. 29) (1935): 239-240 (charter of William de Chesney dated c.1159-63). Leys Sandford Cartulary 2 (Oxfordshire Rec. Soc. 22) (1941): 179 (charter of John Marshal dated 1155-6). C.P. 10 (1945): 526 footnote c (sub Pipard), Appendix G, 91-99 (sub Rise of the Marshal). Mason Beauchamp Cartulary Charters (Pipe Roll Soc. n.s. 43) (1980): 190 ("An estate worth 22l. blanch was held in Cherhill Wiltshire], in tetris datis by John Marshall between 1556 and Michaelmas 1164 (Red Book of the Exchequer (Rolls ser., 3 vols., 1896), II, 664; P.R.S. VII, 14), Robert Fitz Peter held it between Michaelmas 1165 and Michaelmas 1185 (P.R.S. VIII, 56; P.R.S. XXXV, 189). At Michaelmas 1187 it was held in terris datis by Geoffrey Fitz Peter (P.R.S. XXX VII, 173)"). Duby William Marshal The Flower of Chivalry (1985). Green Government of England Under Henry I (1989): 248-249 (biog. of John Marshal). Crouch "Robert of Gloucester: Mother & Sexual Politics in Norman Oxfordshire," BIHR 72 (1999): 323-333. VCH Wiltshire 16 (1999): 3-7, 8-49. Stacy Surveys of the Estates of Glasonbury Abbey, c. 1135-1201 (Recs. of Social & Econ. Hist. 33) (2001): 244, footnote 8. Holden & Gregory Hist. of William Marshal (2002). White Restoration & Reform, 1153-1165 (2004): 115-116 ("Although he had been deprived of Marlborough in 1157, John Marshal continued to hold two other former royal manors in Wiltshire until he died in the mid-1160s; Henry II then 'restored and confirmed' one of John's sons in the office of marshal, and in the holdings on both sides of the Channel 'which he ought to hold' but the allowances for terrae datae came to an end. One of the manors, Wexcombe, was entered in the 1165 pipe roll as land 'quern Johannes marescallus habuit'; the other was recorded in the same roll as having passed to Robert fitz Peter (PR/1H, 56). John Marshal was recorded against terra data in Marlborough in 1156 and 1157; we lack details of the allowances in 1155 (PR2H, 47; PR3H, 77). Alan de Neville was named as holder of Marlborough in subsequent years (PR4H, 116, etc.). For John's activities as castellan of Marlborough, see Gesta Steph., 106, 168, 218; Hist. Nov., 44; JW, 62-3."). Online reference: http://72.14.207.104/search?q=cache:90C6iSJHG38J:ads.ands.ac.uk/catalogue.
Children of John Fitz Gilbert (otherwise John Marshal), by Aline Pipard:
i. GILBERT MARSHAL (also known as GILBERT FITZ JOHN), son and heir by his father's 1st marriage. In the period, 1152-54, he reached agreement with his step-father and mother, Stephen and Aline de Gay, regarding Aline's inheritance. He witnessed his father's charter to Templars in 1155-6. In 1165 he succeeded to part of his father's lands, but died at Salisbury without issue before Michaelmas 1166. Leys Sandford Cartulary 2 (Oxfordshire Rec. Soc. 22) (1941): 179. C.P. 10 (1945): Appendix G, 91-99 (sub Rise of the Marshal). Keats-Rohan Domesday People (1999): 214.
Children of John Fitz Gilbert (otherwise John Marshal), by Sibyl de Salisbury:
i. JOHN MARSHAL, of Great Bedwyn and Wexcombe (in Great Bedwyn), Wiltshire, Speen, Berkshire, Bosham, Sussex, Inkberrow and Upleden, Worcestershire, etc., King's Marshal, Sheriff of Yorkshire, 1189-90, Sheriff of Sussex, 1191-3, 3rd but 1st surviving son, and 1st son by his father's 2nd marriage, probably born in 1144 or 1145. He married JOAN DE PORT, daughter of Adam de Port, by his 1st wife, Mabel [?de Orval]. They had no issue. By his mistress, Alice de Coleville),* he had one illegitimate son, John, Knt., and three daughters, Alice (or Amice), Juliane, and Sibyl. He succeeded to part of his father's lands in 1165, and in 1166 he succeeded to the lands of his half-brother, Gilbert Fitz John, with the office of Master Marshal. In 1170 he was with Henry the Young King at Winchester. In 1171-2 he was sent to Ireland in charge of the treasure amounting to £333.6.8. Sometime in the period, 1185-94, he gave the church of Cheddar, Somerset to Bradenstoke Priory, Wiltshire for his soul and the souls of his father, brethren, and relatives at rest there. He acted as Marshal at the Coronation of King Richard I in 1189, where he carried the Gold Spurs. The same year the king confirmed him in the manor of Wexcombe (in Great Bedwyn), Wiltshire. He was appointed custodian and receiver of all escheats in England. He was acting as a judge in cos. Oxford and Berks in 1192. JOHN MARSHAL was killed in March 1194, while defending Marlborough Castle, Wiltshire for John, Count of Mortain [afterwards King John]. His corpse was brought to Cirencester, Gloucestershire, where there was a funeral service in the church. The body was subse
=== THE PLANTAGENET ANCESTRY (GS NUMBER Q940 ===
THE PLANTAGENET ANCESTRY (GS NUMBER Q940 D2T) P.114; SORLEY'S PEDIGREES (GS NUMBER Q929.242 SO68) P.22; ANCESTRAL FILE LDS GENEALOGICAL SOCIETY;
=== The following is a post by Linda (lindas ===
The following is a post by Linda (lindas4@aol.com) to soc.genealogy.medieval concerning Aline's first marriage (and apparent divorce) to John Marshal.
Thank you for all the references! After reading your note, I found an interesting writeup regarding Aline's first marriage. Citing a piece by Painter called "William Marshal, Knight Errant, Baron, and Regent of England", the author notes that John FitzGilbert Marshall, first husband of Aline Picard "willingly gave up his wife to make peace with the Earl of Salisbury". Given that John married Sybil de Salisbury in 1146, I guess that was the method he used to cement his new friendship with the earl.
Based on the date of John's second marriage, I assume Aline remarried (Stephen Gay) in the same year, or afterwards. This does make me wonder about the birthdate I have for Aline de Gai. It would seem that her father, Philip, would have to have been born in 1147 or later, and every birthdate I have seen for daughter Aline is between 1154 and 1160. Unless these folks were very precocious, it would seem that there is a date off here somewhere.
Note: in terms of the dates, I have a slightly earlier marriage (1142 .vs. 1146) date for John & Sybil; apparently the divorce was "by 1141", on the grounds of consanguinity (too close of kinship, the closeness required for grounds ranged between 4th cousins and 14th cousins depending on the period), which was a common excuse for such divorces, so that John could marry Sybil, according to another posting to soc.genealogy.medieval by Richard Borthwick on 21 June 1999.
=== Royal Ancestry Biography ===
“Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families,” Douglas Richardson (2013):
“JOHN FITZ GILBERT (also known as JOHN THE MARSHAL), of Cherhill, Great Bedwyn, Marlborough, Rockley, Tidworth, and Wexcombe (in Great Bedwyn), Wiltshire, Newbury, Berkshire, Nettlecombe, Somerset, etc., hereditary Master Marshal of England, son and heir, was of age in 1130. He married (1st) before 1130 ALINE PIPARD, daughter and heiress of Walter Pipard. They had two sons, Gilbert and Walter. In 1130 he accounted for his father's lands, and for the land and daughter of Walter Pipard. He was a loyal and trusted royal official and attested to at least twelve acts of King Henry I between 1129-35. He was with King Henry I in Normandy in 1130, and probably soon afterwards in England. About 1130 the king granted him Borough of Great Bedwyn, Wiltshire, which consisted of the tenements of 25 burgesses, and the lordship in demesne of Stock, Wexcombe, and Wilton and of what became West Bedwyn and Little Bedwyn manors. In 1137 he accompanied King Stephen on his expedition to Normandy. He took possession and fortified the Castles of Ludgershall and Marlborough, Wiltshire in 1138. In 1140 he held Marlborough, Wiltshire for King Stephen, and captured Robert Fitz Hubert who had taken the royal castle of Devizes. About 1141 he repudiated his wife, Aline; she subsequently married Stephen de Gay.* He married (2nd) SIBYL OF SALISBURY, daughter of Walter of Salisbury (also known as Walter Fitz Edward), of Chitterne, Wiltshire, Great Gaddesden, Hertfordshire, North Aston, Oxfordshire, etc., hereditary Sheriff of Wiltshire, by Sibyl, daughter of Patrick de Chaources (or Sourches) [see LONGESPÉE 2 for her ancestry]. Her maritagium included the manor of Mildenhall, Wiltshire. They had four sons, John [Marshal of England], William, Knt. [3rd Earl of Pembroke and Strigull, Lord of Leinster, Marshal of England], Anselm, and Henry [Archdeacon of Stafford, Dean of York, Bishop of Exeter], and two daughters, Maud and ___. He deserted to the Empress in 1141 and supported the Angevin cause thenceforth until 1154. He witnessed at least four charters of the Empress, and there are two writs addressed to him in Wiltshire by her. He also witnessed five charters of Duke Henry in Normandy. In 1141 he was cut off and surrounded in Wherwell Abbey, Hampshire, but escaped with the loss of an eye and other wounds. In 1142 he was with the Empress at Oxford, and two years later at Devizes. In 1144 he was raiding the surrounding country from Marlborough Castle and oppressing the clergy. He was with Maud's son, Henry, at Devizes in 1149 and 1153. In 1152 Newbury Castle was defended by his constable against King Stephen. On the accession of King Henry II in 1154, he was granted Marlbrough Castle and manors of Cherhill and Wexcombe, Wiltshire by the king. In 1155-6 he granted to the Templars all his land at Temple Rockley, Wiltshire which he held of his brother-in-law, Patrick, Earl of Salisbury free and clear of secular service. He had to surrender Marlborough Castle to the king in 1158. He is probably the "John Fitz Gilbert" who witnessed a charter of William de Chesney dated c.1159-63. He was present at the Council of Clarendon in 1164; soon afterwards he sued Thomas Becket for part of his manor of Pagham, Sussex. He was a benefactor of Troarn Abbey, to which he gave land and a house in Winchester, Hampshire. JOHN FITZ GILBERT died shortly before Michaelmas 1165. His wife, Sibyl, died 3 June, year unknown. In 1175-6 part of a fine due to the crown from his heirs was remitted in reimbursements for repairs done to Marlborough Castle.
(* Note: Aline Pipard and her 2nd husband, Stephen de Gay, were the parents of Philip de Gay, of Northbrook (in Kirklinton), Oxfordshire, and Wootton Basset, Broadtown (in Cliffe Pipard), and Compton Basset, Wiltshire. He married Cecily ___. They had two daughters, Cecily and Aline (wife of Alan Basset, Knt.). Philip de Gay died shortly before 3 July 1190, when the king made a division of his lands between his two daughters. His widow, Cecily, was in the king's gift in 1194-5. Three Rolls of the King's Court in the Reign of King Richard the First A.D. 1194-1195 (Pubs. Pipe Roll Soc. 14) (1891): 89 (sub Blakingaue Hundred: "Sedzilia q' fu[it] vxor Philipp de Gay in donocoe d[omi]ni RexWotton [terra sua] ...."). Vincent et al. Acta of Henry II & Richard I (List & Index Soc. Special Ser. 21) (1986): 204. BIHR 72 (1999): 323-333. National Archives, E 42/314 (available at www.catalogue.nationalarchives.gov.uk/search.asp).)
Dugdale Monasticon Anglicanum 5 (1825): 266 (Obit. of Tintern Abbey: "Sibilla comitissa mater Willielmi comitis de Penbroke [obiit] die iijtio. Junii."). Coll Top. et Gen.. 2 (1835): 163-166. Hardy Rotuli Chartarum in Turri Londinensi Asservati 1(1) (1837): 46-47. East Anglian 3 (1869): 30-32. Eyton Court, Household & Itinerary of Henry II (1878). Round Geoffrey de Mandeville (1892): 82, 125, 129-132, 171, 180-183 (William the Chancellor styled "brother" [fratre] of John Fitz Gilbert), 234, 314, 409, 416. Round Commune of London (1899): 305-306. Norgate Minority of Henry the Third (1912): 150-151. CRR 1 (1922): 424. Painter William Marshal Knight-Errant, Baron & Regent of England (1933). Foster Registrum Antiquissimum of the Cathedral Church of Lincoln 3 (Lincoln Rec. Soc. 29) (1935): 239-240 (charter of William de Chesney dated c.1159-63). Leys Sandford Cartulary 2 (Oxfordshire Rec. Soc. 22) (1941): 179 (charter of John Marshal dated 1155-6). C.P. 10 (1945): 526 footnote c (sub Pipard), Appendix G, 91-99 (sub Rise of the Marshal). Mason Beauchamp Cartulary Charters (Pipe Roll Soc. n.s. 43) (1980): 190 ("An estate worth 22l. blanch was held in Cherhill Wiltshire], in tetris datis by John Marshall between 1556 and Michaelmas 1164 (Red Book of the Exchequer (Rolls ser., 3 vols., 1896), II, 664; P.R.S. VII, 14), Robert Fitz Peter held it between Michaelmas 1165 and Michaelmas 1185 (P.R.S. VIII, 56; P.R.S. XXXV, 189). At Michaelmas 1187 it was held in terris datis by Geoffrey Fitz Peter (P.R.S. XXX VII, 173)"). Duby William Marshal The Flower of Chivalry (1985). Green Government of England Under Henry I (1989): 248-249 (biog. of John Marshal). Crouch "Robert of Gloucester: Mother & Sexual Politics in Norman Oxfordshire," BIHR 72 (1999): 323-333. VCH Wiltshire 16 (1999): 3-7, 8-49. Stacy Surveys of the Estates of Glasonbury Abbey, c. 1135-1201 (Recs. of Social & Econ. Hist. 33) (2001): 244, footnote 8. Holden & Gregory Hist. of William Marshal (2002). White Restoration & Reform, 1153-1165 (2004): 115-116 ("Although he had been deprived of Marlborough in 1157, John Marshal continued to hold two other former royal manors in Wiltshire until he died in the mid-1160s; Henry II then 'restored and confirmed' one of John's sons in the office of marshal, and in the holdings on both sides of the Channel 'which he ought to hold' but the allowances for terrae datae came to an end. One of the manors, Wexcombe, was entered in the 1165 pipe roll as land 'quern Johannes marescallus habuit'; the other was recorded in the same roll as having passed to Robert fitz Peter (PR/1H, 56). John Marshal was recorded against terra data in Marlborough in 1156 and 1157; we lack details of the allowances in 1155 (PR2H, 47; PR3H, 77). Alan de Neville was named as holder of Marlborough in subsequent years (PR4H, 116, etc.). For John's activities as castellan of Marlborough, see Gesta Steph., 106, 168, 218; Hist. Nov., 44; JW, 62-3."). Online reference: http://72.14.207.104/search?q=cache:90C6iSJHG38J:ads.ands.ac.uk/catalogue.
Children of John Fitz Gilbert (otherwise John Marshal), by Aline Pipard:
i. GILBERT MARSHAL (also known as GILBERT FITZ JOHN), son and heir by his father's 1st marriage. In the period, 1152-54, he reached agreement with his step-father and mother, Stephen and Aline de Gay, regarding Aline's inheritance. He witnessed his father's charter to Templars in 1155-6. In 1165 he succeeded to part of his father's lands, but died at Salisbury without issue before Michaelmas 1166. Leys Sandford Cartulary 2 (Oxfordshire Rec. Soc. 22) (1941): 179. C.P. 10 (1945): Appendix G, 91-99 (sub Rise of the Marshal). Keats-Rohan Domesday People (1999): 214.
Children of John Fitz Gilbert (otherwise John Marshal), by Sibyl de Salisbury:
i. JOHN MARSHAL, of Great Bedwyn and Wexcombe (in Great Bedwyn), Wiltshire, Speen, Berkshire, Bosham, Sussex, Inkberrow and Upleden, Worcestershire, etc., King's Marshal, Sheriff of Yorkshire, 1189-90, Sheriff of Sussex, 1191-3, 3rd but 1st surviving son, and 1st son by his father's 2nd marriage, probably born in 1144 or 1145. He married JOAN DE PORT, daughter of Adam de Port, by his 1st wife, Mabel [?de Orval]. They had no issue. By his mistress, Alice de Coleville),* he had one illegitimate son, John, Knt., and three daughters, Alice (or Amice), Juliane, and Sibyl. He succeeded to part of his father's lands in 1165, and in 1166 he succeeded to the lands of his half-brother, Gilbert Fitz John, with the office of Master Marshal. In 1170 he was with Henry the Young King at Winchester. In 1171-2 he was sent to Ireland in charge of the treasure amounting to £333.6.8. Sometime in the period, 1185-94, he gave the church of Cheddar, Somerset to Bradenstoke Priory, Wiltshire for his soul and the souls of his father, brethren, and relatives at rest there. He acted as Marshal at the Coronation of King Richard I in 1189, where he carried the Gold Spurs. The same year the king confirmed him in the manor of Wexcombe (in Great Bedwyn), Wiltshire. He was appointed custodian and receiver of all escheats in England. He was acting as a judge in cos. Oxford and Berks in 1192. JOHN MARSHAL was killed in March 1194, while defending Marlborough Castle, Wiltshire for John, Count of Mortain [afterwards King John]. His corpse was brought to Cirencester, Gloucestershire, where there was a funeral service in the church. The body was subse
=== Sources: Painter; Norr. First wife of Jo ===
Sources: Painter; Norr. First wife of John Marshall. Norr calls her only Aline. Painter givesno first name, but says she was the daughter and heiress of Walter Pipard, aminor Wiltshire landholder.
Preferred Parents:
Father: Walter de Pipard, b. ABT 1080 in Bassett, Hampshire, England, United Kingdom d. ABT 1135 in Wiltshire, England, United Kingdom
Mother: Unknown, b. ABT 1082 in Wiltshire, England
Family 1: John Fitz Gilbert Marshal of Roskey, b. 26 NOV 1105 in Pembrokeshire, Wales d. 29 SEP 1165 in Rockley, Wiltshire, England
- John Marshall II, b. ABT 1144 in shire, Pembroke, Pembrokeshire, Wales, United Kingdom d. ABT MAR 1194 in Bradenstoke, England
- Gilbert FitzJohn Marshall, b. ABT 1138 in Pembroke, Pembrokeshire, Wales d. BEF 29 SEP 1166 in Salisbury, Wiltshire, England
- William Marshall, b. ABT 1146 d. 14 May 1219. 73 yrs old in Caversham Manor, Caversham, Berkshire, England
Family 2: Stephen de Gai of Northbrook, b. ABT 1105 in Wiltshire, England, United Kingdom d. 1154 in Wooton Basset, Wiltshire, England
- m. 1141 in Wiltshire, England
Sources:
- Title: Aline Pipard Marshal, "Find A Grave Index"
Author: "Find A Grave Index," database, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:6V7H-T4GN : 13 December 2022), Aline Pipard Marshal, ; Burial, Wootton Bassett, Wiltshire Unitary Authority, Wiltshire, England, Royal Wootton Bassett Cemetery; citing record ID 245583768, Find a Grave, http://www.findagrave.com.
Publication: Name: https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:6V7H-T4GN;
- Title: Aline Pipard, Wife of John FitzGilbert, Marshall of the Horses, Wikipedia
Publication: Name: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Marshal_(Marshal_of_England);
- Title: Burke's Landed Gentry
Author: "Burke's Landed Gentry", Burke, John, 1787-1848. (Main) Burke, Bernard, Sir, 1814-1892, joint author. (Added), (Baltimore:MD, Clearfield Publishing Co., 1891-1895, reprinted 1997), Orange - Family History Library, 674 S. Yorba Street, Orange, CA 92869-5042 U.S.A., Orange - Family History Library, 674 S. Yorba Street~~Orange~~CA~~92869-5042~~U.S.A., (714) 997-7710
Page: Migrated from user-supplied source citation: urn:familysearch:source:2030202753
- Title: Aline Pipard Marshal, "Find A Grave Index"
Author: "Find A Grave Index," database, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:6V7H-T4GN : 13 December 2022), Aline Pipard Marshal, ; Burial, Wootton Bassett, Wiltshire Unitary Authority, Wiltshire, England, Royal Wootton Bassett Cemetery; citing record ID 245583768, Find a Grave, http://www.findagrave.com.
Publication: Name: https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:6V7H-T4GN;
- Title: Ridpath's history of the World
Author: "Ridpath's history of the world; being an account of the principal events in the career of the human race from the beginn, Ridpath, John Clark, 1840-1900., 13 Feb 2001, Central Los Angeles Public Library, 630 W. Fifth Street, Los Angeles, CA 90071 U.S.A., Central Los Angeles Public Library, 630 W. Fifth Street~~Los Angeles~~CA~~90071~~U.S.A., (213) 228-7069 (fax)
Note: Paging 9 v. fronts. (v. 1,3,5,7,9) illus., plates (part col.) maps, charts. 27cm. Contents I. Egypt. Chaldaea. Assyria. Media. Babylonia. Persia.-II. Parthia. Greece. Macedonia.-III. Rome: the kingdom, the republic, the empire.-IV. Barbarian ascendanc
Page: Migrated from user-supplied source citation: urn:familysearch:source:2030202752
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