Mother of William Longespee

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(Mother Ida)
(Mother Ida)
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==Mother Ida==
 
==Mother Ida==
Vera London, ''Cartulary of Bradenstoke Priory'' (Wiltshire Rec. Soc. 35) (1979): 143, 188, includes two charters in which Earl William Longespée specifically names his mother, Countess Ida.  Also
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Vera London, ''Cartulary of Bradenstoke Priory'' (Wiltshire Rec. Soc. 35) (1979): 143, 188, includes two charters in which Earl William Longespée specifically names his mother, Countess Ida.
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<blockquote>In 1982 Charles Evans published a notice drawing attention to the
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Bradenstoke data (TG 3 [1982], 265-66), inviting further work on it
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(saying he could not do so himself), and suggesting Ida, countess of
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Boulogne, as the most compelling candidate. - Nathaniel Taylor in a thread on soc.genealogy.medieval</blockquote>
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<blockquote>In 1993 Gary Roberts published a statement that Mr. Richardson had
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'identified' William's mother as Ida, wife of Roger Bigod, earl of
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Norfolk; according to Roberts Mr. Richardson was shortly going to
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publish a 'monograph' (i.e. an article) substantiating the
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identificationThat article was never published. - Nathaniel Taylor in a thread on soc.genealogy.medieval</blockquote>
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See also [http://groups.google.com/group/soc.genealogy.medieval/msg/03e49a9c305eadf
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5?dmode=source this thread].
  
 
<blockquote>Mark Morris, ''The Bigod Earls of Norfolk in the 13th Century'' (2005): 2, cites a royal inquest dated 1275, in which jurors affirmed that Earl Roger le Bigod had received the manors of Acle, Halvergate, and South Walsham, Norfolk from King Henry II, in marriage with his wife, Ida de Tony [see Rotuli Hundredorum 1 (1812): 504, 537].  Morris shows that Earl Roger le Bigod received these manors by writ of the king, he  
 
<blockquote>Mark Morris, ''The Bigod Earls of Norfolk in the 13th Century'' (2005): 2, cites a royal inquest dated 1275, in which jurors affirmed that Earl Roger le Bigod had received the manors of Acle, Halvergate, and South Walsham, Norfolk from King Henry II, in marriage with his wife, Ida de Tony [see Rotuli Hundredorum 1 (1812): 504, 537].  Morris shows that Earl Roger le Bigod received these manors by writ of the king, he  

Revision as of 20:29, 31 January 2008

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