See also

Family of Henry + of BEAUMONT and Margaret + of PERCHE

Husband: Henry + of BEAUMONT (1046-1119)
Wife: Margaret + of PERCHE (1067-1156)
Children: Henry of BEAUMONT (1093- )
Geoffrey of BEAUMONT (1096- )
Robert of BEAUMONT (1101- )
Rotrode of BEAUMONT (1101- )
Roger + of NEWBURG (1102-1153)
Richard of BEAUMONT (1104- )
Margery of BEAUMONT (1106- )
Agnes of BEAUMONT (1108- )
Marriage 1092 England

Husband: Henry + of BEAUMONT

Name: Henry + of BEAUMONT
Sex: Male
Father: Roger + of BEAUMONT (1022-1094)
Mother: Adeliza +of MEULAN (1014-1081)
Birth 1046 Pont-Audemer, Haute-Normandie, France
Occupation Earl of Warwick
Title Earl of Warwick
Death 20 Jun 1119 (age 72-73) Abbey of St. Peter of Les Preaux

Wife: Margaret + of PERCHE

Name: Margaret + of PERCHE
Sex: Female
Father: Geoffrey + (1043- )
Mother: Beatrice + of MONTDIDIER (1044-1129)
Birth 1067 Normandy, France
Death 1156 (age 88-89)

Child 1: Henry of BEAUMONT

Name: Henry of BEAUMONT
Sex: Male
Birth 1093

Child 2: Geoffrey of BEAUMONT

Name: Geoffrey of BEAUMONT
Sex: Male
Birth 1096 Warwick, Warwickshire, England

Child 3: Robert of BEAUMONT

Name: Robert of BEAUMONT
Sex: Male
Birth 1101

Child 4: Rotrode of BEAUMONT

Name: Rotrode of BEAUMONT
Sex: Female
Birth 1101

Child 5: Roger + of NEWBURG

Name: Roger + of NEWBURG
Sex: Male
Spouse 1: Gundred + of WARENNE (c. 1105- )
Birth 1102 Warwick, Warwickshire, England
Occupation Earl of Warwick
Title Earl of Warwick
Death 12 Jun 1153 (age 50-51) Warwick, Warwickshire, England

Child 6: Richard of BEAUMONT

Name: Richard of BEAUMONT
Sex: Male
Birth 1104

Child 7: Margery of BEAUMONT

Name: Margery of BEAUMONT
Sex: Female
Birth 1106

Child 8: Agnes of BEAUMONT

Name: Agnes of BEAUMONT
Sex: Female
Birth 1108

Note on Husband: Henry + of BEAUMONT

Henry de Beaumont, 1st Earl of Warwick (died 20 June 1119) was a Norman nobleman. Henry was the younger son of Roger de Beaumont and Adeline of Meulan, daughter of Waleran I, Count of Meulan. He was given by his father the modest lordship of Le Neubourg, in central Normandy. In due course he acquired a much greater holding in England, when, in reward for help in suppressing the Rebellion of 1088, William II of England made him Earl of Warwick. The lands of the earldom were put together from several sources. The bulk was provided by the majority of the lands in Warwickshire and elsewhere recorded as those of his elder brother Robert, Count of Meulan in the Domesday Survey of 1086. He also received large royal estates in Rutland and Sutton forest. The complicated arrangement to endow his earldom is unprecedented, and must have been the result of a three way arrangement between his father, his brother and the king.

 

Henry was said by Orderic Vitalis, the Norman monk historian, to have been with the Conqueror on his 1068 campaign in the Midlands, when he was supposedly given charge of Warwick Castle, but there is no supporting evidence for this late source. Little is in fact known of his career before 1088. However he took a leading role in reconciling the Conqueror with his eldest son Robert Curthose in 1081 and he stood high in the Conqueror's favour. In 1088 he was a royal agent in the arrest and trial of the traitorous bishop of Durham William de Saint-Calais. Henry became the companion and friend of Henry I, and when in 1100 a division took place amongst the barons who had gathered together in the aftermath of the king's sudden death to choose a successor to William II, it was mainly owing to his advice that Henry was selected and when in the following year most of the barons were openly or secretly disloyal and favoured the attempt of Duke Robert to gain the Crown, he and his brother were amongst the few that remained faithful to the King.

 

He acquired the lordship of Gower in Wales around 1107 from the favour of King Henry and built a castle at Swansea, which was unsuccessfully attacked by the Welsh in 1113; he also captured the Gower Peninsula in south west Glamorgan. He or his barons built other castles at Penrhys, Llanrhidian and Swansea in 1120, together with the others at Oystermouth and Loughor, the only remains of the latter are a mound and a keep.[1][2][2]

 

He entered the abbey of St Peter of Les Preaux before his death and died as a monk there on 20 June 1119. An eighteenth-century woodcut of his tomb in the chapter house, with those of his brother and father beside him, survives, though the abbey is long ruined

 

[edit] Family and childrenHe married before 1100 Margaret, daughter of Geoffrey II of Perche and Beatrix of Montdidier, and had children:

 

1.Roger de Beaumont, 2nd Earl of Warwick, who succeeded him as earl;

2.Robert de Neubourg, who inherited Henry's Norman lands, and was Steward of Normandy, dying in 1159.

3.Rotrou (died 27 November 1183), who was Bishop of Évreux and then Archbishop of Rouen, and who was Chief Justiciar and Steward of Normandy.

4.Geoffrey de Neubourg.

5.Henry de Neubourg, otherwise known as Henry of Gower, who reconquered the family's Welsh estates in around 1136, holding the lordship of Gower throughout the reign of King Stephen.

[edit] Notes