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Facts and Events
Research Notes
Information for which verification is needed
- Name = Beatrice de Gand, Countess de Ghisnes. Proof needed.
- Name = Beatrix de Gand. Proof needed.
- Name = Beatrix Ghent. Proof needed.
- Name = Beatrice Castellan de Grand. Proof needed.
- Name = Béatrix de Gand. Proof needed.
- Birth = abt 1040, Normandie, France, possibly Bourboucy. Proof needed.
- Birth = 6 Feb 1040, Bourbonnais, Aquitaine, France. Proof needed.
- Death = 1100, Tower of London, London, England. Proof needed.
- Death = 12 Jul 1119, Y, Somme, Picardie, France. Proof needed.
References
- Grave Recorded, in Find A Grave.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 Cokayne, George Edward, and Vicary Gibbs; et al. The complete peerage of England, Scotland, Ireland, Great Britain and the United Kingdom, extant, extinct, or dormant [2nd ed.]. (London: St. Catherine Press, 1910-59)
10:195.
... [Aubrey I de Vere] m. Beatrice,(d) whose parentage is unknown. * (d) Colne Cart., no. 1; Chron. Mon. de Abingdon, vol. ii, pp. 55-59. In 1086 the wife of Aubrey de Vere (unnamed) held land in Essex of the Bishop of Bayeux and was accused of a small encroachment on the King's land in that county (Domesday Book, vol. ii, ff. 24, 101). ...
... [Aubrey I de Vere] was bur., with his wife, in the church there [Colne Priory].(f) * (f) He had assumed the monastic habit there before his death (Idem, vol. ii, p 60). His grandson confirmed a gift of his father: "pro anima patris mei qui ibi requiescit et pro anima avi mei ibidem similiter requiescentis qui et ipsam ecclesiam fundavit" (Colne Cart., no. 48). Aubrey's youngest son William was bur. under the same tomb (now perished), on which was placed a Latin epitaph commemorating father and son (Weever, Ancient Funerall Monuments, p. 614).
- ↑ Aubrey de Vere I, in Wikipedia: The Free Encyclopedia
last accessed Aug 2016.
... Aubrey I was married by 1086. As his spouse's name is recorded as Beatrice in 1104 and Beatrice is named as the mother of his eldest son, she was almost certainly his wife in 1086.[6] Beatrice attended the formal ceremony for the founding of Earl's Colne Priory. Besides sons Geoffrey, Aubrey II, and William mentioned above, the couple's children included Roger and Robert.[7] ... * [6] Regesta Regum Anglo-Normannorum II, p. 100, no. 981 * [7] Cokayne, Complete Peerage vol. 10, p. 194. One or more daughters have been suggested but the evidence cited is tenuous at best. ...
- Weis, Frederick Lewis; Walter Lee Sheppard; and David Faris. Ancestral roots of certain American colonists, who came to America before 1700: the lineage of Alfred the Great, Charlemagne, Malcolm of Scotland, Robert the Strong, and some of their descendants. (Baltimore, Maryland: Genealogical Pub. Co., 7th Edition c1992)
246d-25.
[Note of Caution: calls her "Beatrix Vere, Countess of Oxford" but it was their grandson, Aubrey III, who was the first Earl of Oxford, so the title "Countess of Oxford" did not exist yet for this Beatrice. Aubrey III also married a Beatrice, so that is likely the cause of the confusion.]
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 Great Britain. Sovereign. Regesta regum anglo-normannorum, 1066-1154
2:100.
981. 1111 [Mar. 25-Aug. 4] Reading Notification by Henry I generally addressed: Granting to St. Mary of Abingdon and St. Andrew of the daughter church of Colne, the gifts of Aubrey de Vere and his wife, Beatrice, and their son Aubrey and his brothers and their men, made to that church, including the churches of St. Andrew, Colne, and Dovercourt [Essex], [Castle] Camps [Cambs], [Great] Bentley and Beauchamp [Walter] [Essex]. ...
- Grave Recorded, in Find A Grave.
[Note of Caution: no photos and dates appear to be in error. States, According to the book "The itinerary of John Leland the antiquary: In nine volumes, Volume 6", she is buried here with her husband.]
- Leland, John, and Thomas Hearne. The itinerary of John Leland in or about the years 1535-1543, parts I to XI. (Great Britain: Printed at the Theater for J. Fletcher and J. Pote, 1744)
6:37.
... Albery de Ver Erle of Genney. Beatrice his Wife Sifter to King William Conquerour. This Albery buildid Colne Priory of Blak Monkes yn Effax [Essex], and there with his Wife is buryed. ...
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