词条 | Gilbert fitz Roger fitz Reinfried |
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Gilbert fitz Roger fitz Reinfried, or Gilbert the son of Roger fitzReinfrid, (died about 1220) was an Anglo-Norman feudal baron whose administrative career in England began in the time of Henry II (1154-1189), for whom his father Roger fitzReinfrid had been steward, and continued during the reigns of Richard I, King John, and Henry III. Early careerHenry II married Gilbert to Hawise, the heiress of the de Lancastre family of Cumbria, grand-daughter of William de Lancaster I, who had first been under the custody of the famous knight, William Marshal, 1st Earl of Pembroke. Her family's title to Kendal passed to Gilbert's control, and it was the Lancaster surname which was passed on to his children. It appears to be during Gilbert's time that the Barony of Kendal was brought into existence by King Richard as a truly independent district directly answerable to the King, rather than to the lord of North Westmorland (in other words what would become a few years later the Barony of Westmorland, which together with the Barony of Kendal forms the later county of Westmorland). Gilbert's Barony not only included the Barony of Kendale as it was later defined, but also at least the main parts of the North Westmorland parishes of Barton and Morland. He was given control of the royal forest of not only "Kentdale" but also Furness and North Westmorland, in the same way, says the charter, as William de Lancaster I had control.[2] Gilbert's Lancaster rights in Furness were however subject to dispute versus the powerful Abbey of Furness. Barons' warIn 1216, as a result of his role in the First Barons' War, Gilbert was captured and his son and some of his knights were held in custody until hostage were found from the Cumbrian land-owning class, and Gilbert was forced to agree to large retribution payments. He failed to pay these off during his lifetime, passing them on to the same son and heir, William, and then after his death, to the husbands of his daughters.
LegacyGilbert died in about 1220, and was survived by his only legitimate son and heir William de Lancastre III, who married Agnes de Brus, but had no children, and also by three legitimate daughters, and one bastard son, Roger de Lancastre, who was given lordship under the king of Rydal as well as possession, under his brother and his heirs, of many other lands in Cumbria. Roger became keeper of the King's forests in northern England. After the death of William de Lancaster III, the Barony of Kendal was split into different parts, in the possession of the husbands of his sisters. These were:
Roger de Lancaster of Rydal, illegitimate son of Gilbert fitz Reinfrid, had sons, but his heir, the knight Sir John de Lancaster of Grisedale, left no heir. Roger and John used not only the Lancaster surname, but also the same coat of arms which Gilbert fitz Reinfrid's grandfather-in-law William de Lancaster I had used, despite the fact that Helewise de Lancaster was not Roger's mother.[4] References1. ^{{citation |title=Lancaster Castle Website |chapter=Heraldry |url=http://www.lancastercastle.com/html/heraldry/herald.php |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20121010023006/http://www.lancastercastle.com/html/heraldry/herald.php |archivedate=10 October 2012 |df=dmy }} 2. ^{{citation|title=Records Relating to the Barony of Kendal|year=1923|url=http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=49272|chapter=Introduction}} 3. ^{{citation|chapter=Kirkby in Kendale: c.1100-1350 |title=Records relating to the Barony of Kendale| volume=1| year=1923|pages=1–22|url=http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=49273}} 4. ^F. W. Ragg (1910), "De Lancaster", Transactions of the Cumberland and Westmorland Antiquarian and Archaeological Society: 395–493. 3 : History of Westmorland|Anglo-Normans|Norman warriors |
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