Post-Zielinski-Ginoble-Rosberg Families

Citations


Count Geoffry I of Arles

1The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Ancestral File (R), Copyright (c) 1987, June 1998, data as of 5 January 1998, Family History Library, 35 N West Temple Street, Salt Lake City, Utah 84150 USA.


Stephanie (Douce) Provence

1The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Ancestral File (R), Copyright (c) 1987, June 1998, data as of 5 January 1998, Family History Library, 35 N West Temple Street, Salt Lake City, Utah 84150 USA.


Count Bozon of Provence

1The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Ancestral File (R), Copyright (c) 1987, June 1998, data as of 5 January 1998, Family History Library, 35 N West Temple Street, Salt Lake City, Utah 84150 USA.

2The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Ancestral File (R).
Source says "Aft 13 0935 In Sep".


Constance (of Provence)

1The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Ancestral File (R), Copyright (c) 1987, June 1998, data as of 5 January 1998, Family History Library, 35 N West Temple Street, Salt Lake City, Utah 84150 USA.


Guillaume II de Sabran

1The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Ancestral File (R), Copyright (c) 1987, June 1998, data as of 5 January 1998, Family History Library, 35 N West Temple Street, Salt Lake City, Utah 84150 USA.


(Mrs. Guillaume II de Sabran)

1The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Ancestral File (R), Copyright (c) 1987, June 1998, data as of 5 January 1998, Family History Library, 35 N West Temple Street, Salt Lake City, Utah 84150 USA.


Raines (Rainon) de (Cailor) Cailar

1The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Ancestral File (R), Copyright (c) 1987, June 1998, data as of 5 January 1998, Family History Library, 35 N West Temple Street, Salt Lake City, Utah 84150 USA.


Beatrix d' Uzes

1The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Ancestral File (R), Copyright (c) 1987, June 1998, data as of 5 January 1998, Family History Library, 35 N West Temple Street, Salt Lake City, Utah 84150 USA.


Guillaume I de Sabran

1The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Ancestral File (R), Copyright (c) 1987, June 1998, data as of 5 January 1998, Family History Library, 35 N West Temple Street, Salt Lake City, Utah 84150 USA.


(Mrs. Guillaume I de Sabran)

1The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Ancestral File (R), Copyright (c) 1987, June 1998, data as of 5 January 1998, Family History Library, 35 N West Temple Street, Salt Lake City, Utah 84150 USA.


Harlevin (Herluin) de Conteville

1The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Ancestral File (R), Copyright (c) 1987, June 1998, data as of 5 January 1998, Family History Library, 35 N West Temple Street, Salt Lake City, Utah 84150 USA.


Harlette (Harlève) (Arlette) de Falaise

1The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Ancestral File (R), Copyright (c) 1987, June 1998, data as of 5 January 1998, Family History Library, 35 N West Temple Street, Salt Lake City, Utah 84150 USA.

2Web site.
Herlève de Falaise1
b. 1003
=====
Also called Harletta.2 Herlève de Falaise was daughter to a burgess of Falois in Normandy, France.2 Also called Arlette.3 She was born in 1003. She was the daughter of Fulbert de Falaise and Doda (?). She associated with Robert II "le Diable", duc de Normandie, son of Richard II "le Bon", duc de Normandie and Judith de Bretagne, circa 1023; Robert's "Danish wife."3 She married Herluin de Conteville, son of Jean de Conteville, after 1029; Her 2nd.4,5
==============
Children of Herlève de Falaise and Robert II "le Diable", duc de Normandie:
Guillaume I "le Conquérant", roi d' Angleterre+ b. bt 10 Sep 1028 - 9 Sep 1029, d. 9 Sep 1087
Maud de Normandie b. c 1030
Adelaide de Normandie+ b. 1030, d. bt 1080 - 1084

Children of Herlève de Falaise and Herluin de Conteville:
Odo, Bishop of Bayeux b. c 1030, d. 1097
Emma de Conteville+ b. c 1030?
Robert, comte de Mortaigne+ b. c 1031, d. 8 Dec 1090

1 K.S.B. Keats-Rohan, Domesday People, A Prosopography of Persons Occuring in English Documents, 1066-1166, Volume I. Domesday Book (Woodbridge, Suffolk, England: The Boydell Press, 1999), Robert Comes De Moritonie. Hereinafter cited as Domesday People.
2 Harleian Society, "The Genealogy of the Earls of Chester," in The Visitation of Cheshire in the Year 1580, F.S.A. John Paul Rylands, editor. (London: Harleian Society, 1882). Hereinafter cited as "Visitiation Cheshire 1580: Chester Earls".
3 Norman Davies, The Isles, a History (25 Eccleston Place, London: MacMillan, 1999), p. 1106. Hereinafter cited as Davies, N..
4 Harleian Society, "Visitiation Cheshire 1580: Chester Earls", is wrong when stating "first husband".
5 Revised by others later George Edward Cokayne The Complete Peerage of England, Scotland, Ireland, Great Britain, and the United Kingdom, Extant, Extinct, or Dormant, I-XIII (in 6) (Thrupp, Stroud, Gloucestershire, GL5 2BU: Sutton Publishing Limited, 2000), XII/1, App. K, pg. 31. Hereinafter cited as CP.
(http://homepages.rootsweb.com/~cousin/html/p74.htm#i5008).


Bishop Odo de Conteville

1The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Ancestral File (R), Copyright (c) 1987, June 1998, data as of 5 January 1998, Family History Library, 35 N West Temple Street, Salt Lake City, Utah 84150 USA.

2Web site.
Odo, Bishop of Bayeux
b. circa 1030, d. 1097, #7534
Pedigree
Also called Odo of Bayeux.1 Odo, Bishop of Bayeux was born circa 1030 in Normandy, France.2 He was the son of Herluin de Conteville and Herlève de Falaise.3 Bishop of Bayeux in Normandy, France, between October 1049 and 23 April 1050.4 He became Bishop of Bayeux between October 1049 and 23 April 1050.4 He was portrayed in the battle scene on the Bayeux Tapestry, he is the 13th of 20 men known with certainty to have fought with William the Conqueror on 14 October 1066 in the Battle of Hastings, England.5 He was created Earl of Kent by his maternal brother, William the Conqueror, in 1067.6 1st Earl of Kent between 1067 and 1088.7 He was arrested in 1082.1 He had holdings in 22 counties, some still under his name, in 1086.1 He was in prison in 1086 in Rouen, Normandy, France.1 He rebelled against William Rufus, defeated, he fled to Normandy in 1088.1 He died in 1097. He died on the First Crusade.8,1

[S643] The Domesday Book Website, online http://www.domesdaybook.co.uk/book.html. Hereinafter cited as e.Domesday.
[S215] Revised by others later George Edward Cokayne The Complete Peerage of England, Scotland, Ireland, Great Britain, and the United Kingdom, Extant, Extinct, or Dormant, I-XIII (in 6) (Thrupp, Stroud, Gloucestershire, GL5 2BU: Sutton Publishing Limited, 2000), XII/1, App. K, pg. 32. Hereinafter cited as CP.
[S603] C.B., LL.D., Ulster King of Arms Sir Bernard Burke, compiler, A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire (Baltimore, Maryland: Genealogical Publishing Co., 1996), pg. 88. Hereinafter cited as B:xP.
[S215] Revised by others later George Edward Cokayne CP, XII/1, App. K, pg. 31.
[S215] Revised by others later George Edward Cokayne CP, XII/1, App. L, pg. 47-48.
[S217] Transcribed by Colin Hinson, The English Peerage (to 1790) or, a view of the Ancient and Present State of the English Nobility (genuki: UK & Ireland Genealogical Information Service, 1790). Hereinafter cited as English Peerage (to 1790).
[S215] Revised by others later George Edward Cokayne CP, VII:124.
[S418] Christopher Tyerman, Who's Who in Early Medieval England (1066-1272) (Suite 34, Charing Cross Road, London WC2H 0DH: Shepheard-Walwyn Publishers Ltd., 1996), pg. 23 - Odo of Bayeux. Hereinafter cited as WW Early Medieval.
(http://homepages.rootsweb.com/~cousin/html/p116.htm#i7534).


(Daughter) de Conteville

1The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Ancestral File (R), Copyright (c) 1987, June 1998, data as of 5 January 1998, Family History Library, 35 N West Temple Street, Salt Lake City, Utah 84150 USA.


Mathilde de Conteville

1The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Ancestral File (R), Copyright (c) 1987, June 1998, data as of 5 January 1998, Family History Library, 35 N West Temple Street, Salt Lake City, Utah 84150 USA.


Muriel de Conteville

1The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Ancestral File (R), Copyright (c) 1987, June 1998, data as of 5 January 1998, Family History Library, 35 N West Temple Street, Salt Lake City, Utah 84150 USA.


Jean de Conteville

1The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Ancestral File (R), Copyright (c) 1987, June 1998, data as of 5 January 1998, Family History Library, 35 N West Temple Street, Salt Lake City, Utah 84150 USA.


(Mrs. Jean de Conteville)

1The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Ancestral File (R), Copyright (c) 1987, June 1998, data as of 5 January 1998, Family History Library, 35 N West Temple Street, Salt Lake City, Utah 84150 USA.


Comte Robert de (Mortaigne) Mortagne

1The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Ancestral File (R), Copyright (c) 1987, June 1998, data as of 5 January 1998, Family History Library, 35 N West Temple Street, Salt Lake City, Utah 84150 USA.

2Web site.
Robert, comte de Mortaigne1,2
b. circa 1031, d. 8 December 1090
Pedigree
Robert, comte de Mortaigne was a Norman. He was son of Herluin de Conteville and Harlève, mother of William the Conqueror; full brother of Odo of Bayeux.3,4 He was born circa 1031. The 2nd son.4,5,6 He was the son of Herluin de Conteville and Herlève de Falaise.3,4 He was granted the county of Mortain by his brother William between 1048 and 1050.3,4 His work in the Mortaigne region was of critical importance in achieving harmony both with west Normans and their eastern counterparts, and between Normans and Bretons.3 Vicomte of Conteville before 1055.5 He was appointed by his half-brother, William, duke of Normandy, as count of Mortain in 1055 in Normandy, France.5 Count of Mortain in Normandy, France, in 1055.5,4 He married Matildis de Montgomery, daughter of Roger de Montgomery, Earl of Shrewsbury and Mabille de Bellême, comtesse d'Alençon; His 1st.7,8,9 He joined his half-brother, William the Conqueror, in the invasion of England, and was one of the few known to have fought at Hastings on 14 October 1066 in Hastings, England.7,8 He was portrayed in the Bayeux Tapestry, he is the 17th of 20 men known with certainty to have fought with William the Conqueror on 14 October 1066 in the Battle of Hastings, England.10 He was in command of the chivalry of Côtentin at Hastings on 14 October 1066.8 He was created Earl of Cornwall by his maternal brother, William the Conqueror, in 1067.11 He was given one of the important defensive Rapes of Sussex at Pevensey where he built a castle.7 Earl of Cornwall in France, between 1067 and 1095.11 He received extensive holdings throughout the country, with a notable predominance in the south-west, where some of his holdings in Cornwall came to him as a result the withdrawal of Count Brien of Brittany, brother of Alan Rufus, in 1069/70.7 He married Almodis (?) before 1086; His 2nd.7,8 He was the largest landholder in the country after the King, with holdings in nineteen counties in 1086 in England.12 Lord of Pevensey Rape in Sussex, England, in 1086.12 He was the virtual Earl of Cornwall, which fief included Honour of Berkhamsted with castle there, in 1086.12 He rebelled against the King, but was later pardoned, in 1088.12 He died on 8 December 1090.8 Robert, comte de Mortaigne was buried in the Abbey of Grestain.8

============
Children of Robert, comte de Mortaigne and Matildis de Montgomery:
Emma de Mortaigne+ d. 1080
Agnes de Mortaigne+ b. c 1059?
Denise de Mortaigne b. c 1061?
William, 2nd Earl Mortaigne of Cornwall+ b. b 1084, d. a 1140

1 With additions and corrections by Walter Lee Sheppard, Jr. and assisted by David Faris Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America before 1700 (Baltimore, Maryland: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc., 1992), 185-1. Hereinafter cited as Weis: AR 7th ed..
2 Christopher Tyerman, Who's Who in Early Medieval England (1066-1272) (Suite 34, Charing Cross Road, London WC2H 0DH: Shepheard-Walwyn Publishers Ltd., 1996), pg. 25-26 - Robert of Mortain. Hereinafter cited as WW Early Medieval.
3 K.S.B. Keats-Rohan, Domesday People, A Prosopography of Persons Occuring in English Documents, 1066-1166, Volume I. Domesday Book (Woodbridge, Suffolk, England: The Boydell Press, 1999), Robert Comes De Moritonie, pg. 371. Hereinafter cited as Domesday People.
4 Revised by others later George Edward Cokayne The Complete Peerage of England, Scotland, Ireland, Great Britain, and the United Kingdom, Extant, Extinct, or Dormant, I-XIII (in 6) (Thrupp, Stroud, Gloucestershire, GL5 2BU: Sutton Publishing Limited, 2000), III:427. Hereinafter cited as CP.
5 Christopher Tyerman, WW Early Medieval, pg. 25 - Robert of Mortain.
6 Revised by others later George Edward Cokayne CP, XII/1, App. K, pg. 32.
7 K.S.B. Keats-Rohan, Domesday People, Robert Comes De Moritonie, pg. 372.
8 Revised by others later George Edward Cokayne CP, III:428.
9 K.S.B. Keats-Rohan, Domesday Descendants, A Prosopography of Persons Occuring in English Documents, 1066-1166, Volume II. Pipe Rolls to Cartae Baronum (Woodbridge, Suffolk, England: The Boydell Press, 2002), pg. 598. Hereinafter cited as Domesday Descendants.
10 Revised by others later George Edward Cokayne CP, XII/1, App. L, pg. 47-48.
11 Transcribed by Colin Hinson, The English Peerage (to 1790) or, a view of the Ancient and Present State of the English Nobility (genuki: UK & Ireland Genealogical Information Service, 1790). Hereinafter cited as English Peerage (to 1790).
12 The Domesday Book Website, online (http://www.domesdaybook.co.uk/book.html). Hereinafter cited as e.Domesday.

(http://homepages.rootsweb.com/~cousin/html/p128.htm).

3Web site.
ROBERT, COMTE DE MORTAIN AND EARL OF CORNWALL
The Conqueror and His Companions
by J.R. Planché, Somerset Herald. London: Tinsley Brothers, 1874.

Robert, Comte de Mortain and Earl of Cornwall, the exact date of whose birth is as much a question as that of Odo, who, if his age at the time of his death be correctly stated, must have been the elder of the two; but, whether or not, there was probably not more than a year or so's difference between them. Our first knowledge of him is obained from the fact of his being made Comte de Mortain in the Cotentin (not to be confounded with Mortagne in La Manche), by his uterine brother, Duke William, on the banishment of William the Warling, son of Malger, and grandson of Duke Richard the First, on suspicion of treason — for it really amounted to nothing more — the wily tyrant availing himself of an opportunity to advance, under a pretence of justice, another of his mother's family. This was just previous to Duke William's visit to England in 1051, and Robert, I conclude, might at that period have been nearly of full age, being born, as I take it, circa 1031.
In 1054, on the invasion of Normandy by Henry, King of France, we find him joining the army of William, with his knights and retainers; but he was not in the battle of Mortemer, being in the Duke's division, and consequently had no opportunity of distinguishing himself.
We next hear of him at the council called by William on receiving the tidings of Harold's assumption of the crown of England, and subsequently at the great meeting at Lillebonne, when he promised to contribute to the invading fleet no less than one hundred and twenty vessels, according to the curious Latin record published by Taylor; [A Roberto de Mortoleio, c. et xx.] an enormous number, but the size has to be taken into consideration, and the list may be held to include boats of every description.
In the great battle of Senlac, Wace tells us he never went far from the Duke, and commanded the chivalry of the Cotentin, but he is not conspicuously delineated in that portion of the Bayeux Tapestry. His share of the spoil is said to have been the greatest. He was created Earl of Cornwall, in which county alone he possessed two hundred and forty-eight manors at the time of the compilation of Domesday; fifty-four in Sussex, besides the borough of Pevensey; seventy-five in Devonshire, forty-nine in Dorsetshire, twenty-nine in Buckinghamshire, thirteen in Hertfordshire, ten in Suffolk, ninety-nine in Northumberland, one hundred and ninety-six in Yorkshire, and twenty-four in other counties, amounting altogether to seven hundred and ninety-seven, with two castles in his county of Cornwall, one at Dunhever and the other af Tremeton.
In 1069, the Earl of Cornwall and Robert Comte d'Eu were left by King William in Lindsey to watch the Danes who had landed at the mouth of the Humber and invested York, but alarmed at the approach of the Royal forces retreated to the opposite shore, and took shelter in the fens. Availing themselves of the opportunity afforded them by a festival at which the disaffected inhabitants liad invited the invaders to be present, the two Earls fell upon them unexpectedly, and pursued them with great slaughter to their very ships. We hear little of him from that period till we find him beside the death-bed of the elder William, supplicating for the pardon and release of his brother Odo, which the King, with great reluctance, at length conceded to the urgent and incessant entreaties of the Earl and his friends. "My brother Odo," said the dying monarch, " is a man not to be trusted—ambitious, given to fleshly desires, and of enormous cruelty. There is no doubt that if he is released he will disturb the whole country, and be the ruin of thousands." The petitioners pledging themselves for the Bishop's reformation, the King yielded from mere weariness, observing, " It is against my own judgment that I permit my brother to be liberated, for be assured that he will cause the death or the grievous injury of many persons."
He was too true a prophet. His son Rufus had scarcely ascended the throne when the pestilent priest commenced, as we have seen, to sow dissensions amongst his subjects, and succeeded in involving the generous brother, to whom he was indebted for his freedom, in a conspiracy to depose the nephew who had restored him the possessions he had deservedly forfeited. Imposing on the duller nature, and working on the affection of Robert, he beguiled him into a rash attempt to hold his Castle of Pevensey against the King, which failing might have cost the Earl his life or liberty, and the confiscation of all his estates. The Red King, however, made a judicious distinction between his uncles, banishing for ever the arch-traitor Odo, and accepting the submission of Robert, allowed him to return to his allegiance. This event occurred in 1088, and after that time his name disappears from the pages of our historians.
Brooke, in his Catalogue of Nobility, says, witliout citing any earlier writers, " This Robert was slain in Northumberland in the year 1087." Vincent, in his "Discoverie," points out the error of the date, but is silent respecting the account of the death, which he certainly would not have been if he could have contradicted it. Dugdale was equally ignorant on the subject. "When he departed this world, I do not find," he tell us; "but if he lived after King William Rufus so fatally lost his life by the glance of an arrow in New Forest from the bow of Walter Tyrrell, then was it," he continues, "unto him that this strange apparition happened, which I shall here speak of;" and then he relates the story told by Matthew Paris, how that, at the very hour the King was killed, the Earl of Cornwall, being hunting in a wood at some distance, and left alone by his attendants, was met by a huge black goat bearing Rufus all black and naked with a wound in his breast. The Earl adjured the goat by the Holy Trinity to tell him whom it was he carried, and was answered, "I am carrying your King to judgment. Yea, that tyrant William Rufus, for I am an evil spirit, and the revenger of his malice which he bore to the Church of God, and it was I that did cause his slaughter, the proto-martyr of England, St. Alban, commanding me so-to-do, who complained to God of him for his grievous oppressions in this Isle of Britain which he first hallowed — all which the Earl related soon after to his followers." What a pity the goat did not reveal the name of the individual he had caused to do the slaughter!
This absurd story, one of the many circulated at the time of the King's death, and tolerably well proving a guilty foreknowledge, is only quoted here as bearing on the question of the decease of Robert Earl of Cornwall, for the narrator does not distinguish the Earl by his baptismal name, and therefore leaves it uncertain whether he is alluding to Robert or to his son William, who had undoubtedly succeeded to the earldom of Mortain and Cornwall before 1103, as in that year he had left England for Normandy, and was in open rebellion against Henry I, whom he hated from childhood, and by whom he was consequently deprived of his titles and estates for treason.
In the absence at present of any reliable information, I am inclined to believe that Robert's death preceded that of his brother Odo, as the monk of Malmesbury tells us that, "not content with the two earldoms of Mortain in Normandy and Cornwall in England, his son William demanded from King Henry the earldom of Kent which his uncle Odo had held, and petulantly declared that he would not put on his robe or mantle till the inheritance he derived from his uncle should be restored to him," a terrible threat, which must have alarmed the King amazingly.
Without presuming to fix on an exact date, I consider then that Robert Earl of Cornwall died between the years 1089 and 1097; and if there be any foundation whatever for Brooke's statement, that he was slain in Northumberland, it is possible that he was there with his nephew King William on the occasion of Robert de Mowbray's rebellion in 1095. It is not the less remarkable, however, that the death of so important and wealthy a personage should have occurred without its being recorded by a single historian.
Robert Earl of Cornwall had taken to wife previously to the Conquest, but at what period we are ignorant, Matilda, daughter of Roger de Montgomeri, Earl of Shrewsbury, and by her left one son, William, of whom I have just spoken, and three daughters — Agnes, first offered in marriage to William de Grentmesnil, but afterwards the wife of André de Vitry, Denise, married in 1078 to Guy, 3rd Sire de La Val, of whom more hereafter; and Emma, wife of William Count of Toulouse.
Of the three sons of Herleve, William, Odo, and Robert, the latter alone appears to have possessed some kindly feeling. He is described by William of Malmesbury as a man of a heavy, sluggish disposition, but no foul crimes are laid to his charge. He had evidently the courage of his race, and his conduct as a commander is unassociated with any act of cruelty. Scandal has not been busy with his name as a husband. No discords are known to have disturbed his domestic felicity. With the exception of the one occasion when ensnared by the artful representations of Odo, he had joined in the rebellion against Rufus, no trace is seen of his having been involved in any of the revolts and conspiracies which were continually convulsing both Normandy and England, and his fidelity to the elder William was never for an instant shaken. We have seen him beside the death-bed of that William, pleading urgently for the pardon of their worthless brother, and pledging himself generously but rashly to his reformation; and the distinction made by the second William between his two uncles upon their surrender at Pevensey, shows that he believed in the contrition of Robert, and thoroughly estimated the amount of dependence he could place upon the word or oath of the faithless, treacherous, turbulent Odo.
He was a great benefactor to the Abbey of Grestain in Normandy, which had been founded by bis father, Herluin de Conteville, and his appropriation of the possessions which belonged to the Priory of St. Petroc at Bodmin, in Cornwall, founded by King Ethelstan, appears to be justified by the fact that they had been taken from the Priory, and were illegally enjoyed by canons secular. By a charter to the monks of St. Michael in Peril of the Sea, on the coast of Normandy, giving to them and their successors in pure alms for ever the monastery of St. Michael on the Mount in Cornwall, and which must have been executed before 1083, as the name of Queen Matilda occurs amongst the witnesses, we learn that the standard of that saint had been carried before him in battle, and may fairly conclude that it was in the decisive one at Senlac. This charter appears to have been subsequently confirmed by him in 1085 at Pevensey. [Mr. Freeman appears to have mistaken this date for the original one of the Charter, and consequently demurs to its authenticity; but it is clear from the names of the witnesses that it must have been executed in Normandy, and the note appended to it in the Monasticon refers merely to a confirmation some years afterwards, -- "Firmata atque roboratur est hæc carta anno millesimo octagesimo quinto apud Pevensel," in Robert's own castle.]
Meagre as are the materials which we are enabled at present to scrape together for a memoir of Robert Earl of Cornwall, his character stands out in honorable distinction from those of his brothers, neither surrounded by the "guilty glory" of the King, nor blackened by the baseness of the Bishop.
Photocopy of the text was provided this site by Fred L. Curry.


Maude de Montgomery

1The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Ancestral File (R), Copyright (c) 1987, June 1998, data as of 5 January 1998, Family History Library, 35 N West Temple Street, Salt Lake City, Utah 84150 USA.


Roger de Montgomery

1The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Ancestral File (R), Copyright (c) 1987, June 1998, data as of 5 January 1998, Family History Library, 35 N West Temple Street, Salt Lake City, Utah 84150 USA.


Mabel Talvas

1The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Ancestral File (R), Copyright (c) 1987, June 1998, data as of 5 January 1998, Family History Library, 35 N West Temple Street, Salt Lake City, Utah 84150 USA.

2The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Ancestral File (R).
Source says "Bures Castle", which could be any of several places. Seek confirmation.
(See http://www.bures.me.uk/mountbures/Motte.htm).


Robert II de Alencon

1The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Ancestral File (R), Copyright (c) 1987, June 1998, data as of 5 January 1998, Family History Library, 35 N West Temple Street, Salt Lake City, Utah 84150 USA.


Robert Montgomery

1The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Ancestral File (R), Copyright (c) 1987, June 1998, data as of 5 January 1998, Family History Library, 35 N West Temple Street, Salt Lake City, Utah 84150 USA.


Hugues de Montgomery

1The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Ancestral File (R), Copyright (c) 1987, June 1998, data as of 5 January 1998, Family History Library, 35 N West Temple Street, Salt Lake City, Utah 84150 USA.


Phillip Montgomery

1The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Ancestral File (R), Copyright (c) 1987, June 1998, data as of 5 January 1998, Family History Library, 35 N West Temple Street, Salt Lake City, Utah 84150 USA.


Emma Montgomery

1The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Ancestral File (R), Copyright (c) 1987, June 1998, data as of 5 January 1998, Family History Library, 35 N West Temple Street, Salt Lake City, Utah 84150 USA.


Mabel Montgomery

1The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Ancestral File (R), Copyright (c) 1987, June 1998, data as of 5 January 1998, Family History Library, 35 N West Temple Street, Salt Lake City, Utah 84150 USA.


Count Guillaume IV of Toulouse

1The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Ancestral File (R), Copyright (c) 1987, June 1998, data as of 5 January 1998, Family History Library, 35 N West Temple Street, Salt Lake City, Utah 84150 USA.


Emma de (Mortaigne) Mortagne

1The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Ancestral File (R), Copyright (c) 1987, June 1998, data as of 5 January 1998, Family History Library, 35 N West Temple Street, Salt Lake City, Utah 84150 USA.