See also

Family of Gospatric II + of DUNBAR and Sybil + MOREL

Husband: Gospatric II + of DUNBAR (1062-1138)
Wife: Sybil + MOREL (1070- )
Children: Juliana + of DUNBAR (1115- )
Gospatrick III (c. 1118- )
Adam (c. 1121- )
Edward (c. 1124- )
Edgar (1127- )

Husband: Gospatric II + of DUNBAR

Name: Gospatric II + of DUNBAR
Sex: Male
Father: Gospatric + (1040-1074)
Mother: Aethelreda + (1042-1074)
Birth 1062 Dunbar, East Lothian, Scotland
Death 22 Aug 1138 (age 75-76) Scotland

Wife: Sybil + MOREL

Name: Sybil + MOREL
Sex: Female
Father: -
Mother: -
Birth 1070 Dunbar, East Lothian, Scotland

Child 1: Juliana + of DUNBAR

Name: Juliana + of DUNBAR
Sex: Female
Spouse: Ralph + of MERLAY (1115- )
Birth 1115

Child 2: Gospatrick III

Name: Gospatrick III
Sex: Male
Birth 1118 (est)

Child 3: Adam

Name: Adam
Sex: Male
Birth 1121 (est)

Child 4: Edward

Name: Edward
Sex: Male
Birth 1124 (est)

Child 5: Edgar

Name: Edgar
Sex: Male
Birth 1127

Note on Husband: Gospatric II + of DUNBAR

Gospatric II (died 1138)[1] was Earl of Lothian or Earl of Dunbar in the early 12th century.

 

He was the son of Gospatric I, sometime Earl of Northumbria (d. after 1073). In the earliest sources, occurring at dates between 1120 and 1134 he is not styled "earl", but the "brother of Dolfin", the latter style being used in his own seal.

 

Later accounts say that he was granted lands by king Máel Coluim III, although it is possible that he received them from his father, while his brother Dolfin received much of Cumberland. As Gospatric held lands from both King David I of Scotland and King Henry I of England it is impossible to label him either "English" or "Scottish".

 

Gospatric enjoyed the benefits of the renewed prominence given to native Englishmen in the reign of Henry I. He and his children obtained many lands in England proper, and he himself gained jurisdiction over some northern English legal duties. He appears to have attained the status of "earl" by the year 1134, when that style first appears in documentary sources.

 

Earl Gospatric, described as "the chief leader of the men of Lothian" was killed at the Battle of the Standard, being "struck by an arrow, he fell".[2]

 

He had four sons, Gospatric III (his successor), Adam, Edward, and Edgar.