See also

Family of Humphrey + of BOHUN and Margaret +

Husband: Humphrey + of BOHUN (1050-bef1113)
Wife: Margaret + (1060- )
Children: Robert (c. 1075- )
Richard (c. 1077- )
Humphrey I + of BOHUN (1080- )

Husband: Humphrey + of BOHUN

Name: Humphrey + of BOHUN
Sex: Male
Father: Richard + of MERI (1020-1068)
Mother: Billeheude + of SAINT SAUVEUR (1040-1060)
Birth 1050 St. Georges de Bohun, Manche, Basse-Normandy, France
Death bef 1113 (age 62-63) Tatterford, Norfolk, England

Wife: Margaret +

Name: Margaret +
Sex: Female
Father: -
Mother: -
Birth 1060

Child 1: Robert

Name: Robert
Sex: Male
Birth 1075 (est)

Child 2: Richard

Name: Richard
Sex: Male
Birth 1077 (est)

Child 3: Humphrey I + of BOHUN

Name: Humphrey I + of BOHUN
Sex: Male
Spouse: Maud + of EVEREUX (1090- )
Birth 1080 Gloucester, Gloucestershire, England

Note on Husband: Humphrey + of BOHUN

Humphrey with the Beard (died before 1113) was a Norman soldier and landed aristocrat, the earliest known member of the Bohun family who took part in the Norman conquest of England as one of the original companions at Hastings.[1]

 

Humphrey may have been a relative of William the Conqueror, probably through one of Humphrey's marriages. He was married three times, as his donation of a plow and garden to the nuns of Abbaye Saint-Amand at Rouen states, but the names of his wives are unknown. This donation is witnessed by William as comes (count), indicating that he had not yet succeeded to the throne of England and was still only Duke of Normandy. This suggests that Humphrey was advanced in age by 1066, which corroborates the description of him given at line 13,583 of the Roman de Rou of Wace: De Bohun le Vieil Onfrei ("from Bohun the old Humphrey").[1] His nickname, "with the beard" (cum barba), was a distinguishing one in eleventh-century Normandy, where the custom was to shave the face and back of the head.[2]

 

At the time of the Conquest Humphrey possessed the honour of Bohun (today comprising two communes, Saint-André-de-Bohon and Saint-Georges-de-Bohon) in western Normandy. After the Conquest he received an honour with its seat at Tatterford in Norfolk, as recorded in Domesday Book (1086). The small size of his reward in England, despite his relations with William's family, may be a result of his age. He later donated the church of Saint-Georges-de-Bohon to the Abbey of Marmoutier. By his wives he left three sons and two daughters. His eldest son, Robert, predeceased him unmarried, and his second son, Richard, was the progenitor, in the female line, of the Bohuns of Midhurst. His youngest son and namesake is commonly numbered Humphrey I because by his marriage he was "the founder of the fortunes of his family".[1]