Please note that many of the
dates given here are only estimated.
In the early twelfth century,
Swein son of Ailric held several manors in Yorkshire, Lancashire and
Cumberland, some of which had been held before the conquest by his father Ailric.
Swein was dead in 1130 and was succeeded by his son Adam, who died about 1159
and was succeeded by his two daughters and co-heirs [1].
Amabel daughter of Adam son of Swein (c. 1140-1204)
Amabel, the eldest daughter of
Adam son of Swein, married firstly Alexander son of Reginald de Crevequer of
Redbourne, Lincolnshire, who died about 1165, and secondly William, son of
Gilbert de Neville II [2]. Amabel was
married to William de Neville before 1166, when he was holding 8 fees in
Yorkshire of the Lascy honour of Pontefract which were part of Amabel’s
inheritance from Adam son of Swein [3]. William
and Amabel were still alive in November 1202 when they were sued by Robert son
of Ulric de Mirfield concerning a bovate of land in Mirfield [4]. Amabel
appears to have died in or before 1204, when Cecily her daughter gave the king
10 marks to have land in Harpswell and Hardwick (in Lincolnshire) which Amabel
who was the wife of Alexander de Crevequer held in dower of the gift of
Alexander, whose heir she is [5]. Amabel’s
husband William de Neville died in or before 1212.
Cecily de Crevequer (c.1163-1208)
Cecily, daughter of Alexander de
Crevequer and his wife Amabel married Walter de Neville, who is said to be
another son of Gilbert de Neville II, although I am unsure if the church would
allow her to marry her step-father’s brother. In 1185, Walter de Neville
rendered an account of 200 marks to have right touching the lands of Reginald
de Crevequer, whose [grand] daughter he had married [6]. Before
1200, Walter de Neville granted the nuns and brethren of Bullington priory, a
toft in Redbourne and a fishery in the river Alcolne with the assent of his
wife Cecily [7].
Walter died some time before 1200. Cecily is said by Farrer to have been alive
in 1218 [8], but there
is a Curia Regis record showing that she died before Easter 1209 [9].
Alexander de Neville (I) (c. 1182-1222)
Alexander, eldest son of Walter
de Neville and Cecily de Crevequer was probably born between 1180 and 1183. He is
named in an entry in the Fine Rolls in 1204 as the son and heir of Cecily[10]. It is
said that he had a younger brother Walter who was tenant of the manor of Kings
Walden in Hertfordshire [11] (we
will come to that again later). In 1203, Alexander represented his mother in
court in a legal dispute between Cecily and her cousin, Alexander son of Simon
de Crevequer concerning the Crevequer barony in Lincolnshire [12]. After
Cecily’s death in or before 1209, Alexander inherited the barony of Redbourne, and
land in Cumberland and Mirfield, Nunnington and Adwick upon Dearne in Yorkshire
which were part of Cecily’s inheritance from Adam son of Swein.
In 1212, Alexander de Neville, Roger
de Montbegon and Simon fitz Walter were holding land by cornage in Cumberland
which had previously been held by William de Neville; these lands had been
given by Henry I to Adam son of Swein, their ancestor [13]. The
Lancashire lands which William de Neville held in right of his wife Amabel were
still in the king’s hand, which suggests that William had died in or shortly
before 1212 [14].
In 1218-19, Alexander de Neville,
heir of Cecily de Crevequer, rendered an account of £37 and one mark and two
palfreys, for having a reasonable part of the inheritance of his grandmother
Amabel [15].
Little is known about Alexander,
and although he nominally held a barony, he does not appear to have had any
money. He died before 13 June 1222, when Geoffrey de Neville and Richard de
Alençon made fine with the king for having the custody of the land and heir of
Alexander de Neville. They also agreed to pay the £100 that he owed for his
relief and the £100 that his heir owed for his relief, plus to pay the debts
that Alexander owed the king for the debts of the Jews. Richard or Geoffrey was
to render 20 marks per year towards paying off these debts [16].
Alexander left a widow named
Margaret who was still living in January 1227 [17] and at
least three children; John his son and heir, Alexander and a daughter named
Clemence. John died before 10 October
1230, still under age and in the custody of Richard de Alençon [18]. In
1236, Clemence was married to William the brother of Richard de Alençon [19].
Alexander de Neville (II) (c. 1214-1249)
Alexander, son of Alexander de
Neville came of age before 8 July 1236 when the escheators in Lincolnshire and
Yorkshire were ordered to give him seisin of his father’s lands [20]. In September 1236, the king agreed that he
could pay off his debts at a rate of 10 marks per year instead of the 20 marks
which Richard de Alençon had been paying [21].
Alexander married, some time
before 1236, a lady called Mateleon by whom he had six children, Alexander, his
son and heir, and five daughters, whose descendants are the subject of this
article. The daughter’s names were Joan, Margery, Ellen, Julian and Cecily, in
the probable order of their birth, although there is conflicting evidence
whether Joan was the eldest or the youngest.
Alexander de Neville died before
12 July 1249, when his writ of diem clausit extremum was issued to the
escheators. His inquisition post mortem found that his heir was his son
Alexander, aged 12 and more, that he held in Lincolnshire 3¼ and 1/8 knight’s
fees and land in Nunnington and Mirfield in Yorkshire [22]. Another
inquisition held on 8 March 1253 after the death of his young son Alexander
found that he held his barony of the king in chief by the service of 3 knight's
fees by finding 3 knights in the king's army for 40 days at his own cost [23]. This
is probably much more than he could actually afford.
On 14 August 1249, Richard de
Alençon was granted the wardship, during the minority of the heirs, of the land
and heirs of Alexander de Nevill, with their marriages [24].
Alexander de Neville (III) (c. 1237-1252)
Alexander (III), the young heir
of Alexander de Neville (II) died before 19 October 1252, aged about 15, when the
sheriff of York was ordered to deliver to Richard de Alençon, Margery, Ellen,
Julian, and Cecily, heirs of Alexander de Neville, who had been unjustly
detained, it is said, by Mateleon their mother [25]. The
other and probably eldest sister, Joan was already married to John de Heton [26].
The heirs
of Alexander de Neville who died in 1252 were his five sisters:
-
Joan who married John de Heton,
-
Margery who married Nicholas de Neville,
-
Ellen who married firstly William de Pontefract
and secondly Henry le Tyas,
-
Julian who married Ingram Folenfaunt,
-
Cecily who married Adam de Neufmarché.
The
succeeding parts of this post will look at their descendants.
[1] William Farrer, ed., Early
Yorkshire Charters; Being a Collection of Documents Anterior to the Thirteenth
Century Made from the Public Records, Monastic Chartularies, Roger Dodsworth’s
Manuscripts and Other Available Sources, vol. 3 (Edinburgh, 1916), 317n
https://archive.org/stream/earlyyorkshirech03farruoft#page/317/mode/1up.
[2] W. O. Massingberd, “Lincolnshire
Nevill Families,” The Genealogist, New Series 27 (1911): 1–7
https://archive.org/stream/genealogist2719selb#page/5/mode/1up.
[4] William Brown, ed., Pedes
Finium Ebor. Regnante Johanne A.D. MCXCIX-A.D. MCCXIV, Surtees Society 94,
1894, 60 https://archive.org/stream/pedesfiniumeborr00york#page/60/mode/1up.
[5] Thomas Duffus Hardy, ed., Rotuli
de Oblatis et Finibus in Turri Londinensi Asservati Tempore Regis Johannes
(London, 1835), 213
https://archive.org/stream/rotulideoblatse00johngoog#page/n278/mode/1up.
[6] The Great roll of the pipe for the thirty-first year of the reign
of King Henry the Second, A.D. 1184-1185, Pipe Roll Society, 34 (1913), 91.
https://archive.org/stream/piperollsociety34pipeuoft#page/91/mode/1up
[7] Frank M. Stenton, ed., Danelaw
Charters (London, 1920), 64, 65
https://archive.org/stream/documentsillustr00stenuoft#page/64/mode/1up.
[8] Farrer, Early Yorkshire
Charters, 3:317
https://archive.org/stream/earlyyorkshirech03farruoft#page/317/mode/1up.
[9] Doris M. Stenton, ed., The
Earliest Lincolnshire Assize Rolls A.D. 1202-1209, Lincoln Record Society
22, 1926, 280
https://archive.org/stream/publicationslinc22lincuoft#page/280/mode/1up.
[10] Hardy, Rotuli de Oblatis,
199 https://archive.org/stream/rotulideoblatse00johngoog#page/n264/mode/1up.
[11] Edmund Nevill, “Nevill of
Herts.,” The Genealogist, New Series 26 (1910): 24–26
https://archive.org/stream/genealogist2619selb#page/n78/mode/1up.
[12] Stenton, Earliest Lincoln
Assize Rolls, 232 https://archive.org/stream/publicationslinc22lincuoft#page/232/mode/1up.
[13] H. C. Maxwell Lyte, ed., Liber
Feodorum. The Book of Fees Commonly Called Testa de Nevill. Part I, A.D.
1198-1242 (London: HMSO, 1920), 199.
[15] Pipe Roll, 3 Henry III, as cited in
William Brown, Yorkshire Inquisitions of the Reigns of Henry III. and Edward
I., vol. 1, Yorkshire Archaeological Society, Record Series 13, 1892, 277.
[16] Calendar of Fine Rolls 6 Henry III, No. 192.
http://www.finerollshenry3.org.uk/content/calendar/roll_016.html#it192_005
[17] Calendar of Fine Rolls 11 Henry III, No. 83.
http://www.finerollshenry3.org.uk/content/calendar/roll_025.html#it083_010
[18] Calendar of Patent Rolls, Henry III, vol. 2, 405.
http://sdrc.lib.uiowa.edu/patentrolls/h3v2/body/Henry3vol2page0405.pdf
[19] F. W. Maitland, Bracton’s Note
Book, vol. 3 (London, 1887), 201, No. 1187
https://archive.org/stream/notebook03bracuoft#page/201/mode/1up.
[20] Calendar of Close Rolls, Henry III: vol. 3: 1234-1237 (1908), 288.
[21] Calendar of Fine Rolls 20 Henry III, No. 527.
http://www.finerollshenry3.org.uk/content/calendar/roll_035.html#it527_002
[22] Calendar of Inquisitions Post Mortem, Volume 1: Henry III (1904),
38, No. 154.
https://archive.org/stream/calendarofinquis01grea#page/n97/mode/1up
[23] Calendar of Inquisitions Post Mortem, Volume 1: Henry III (1904),
69, No. 154.
https://archive.org/stream/calendarofinquis01grea#page/69/mode/1up
[24] Calendar of Patent Rolls, Henry III, vol. 4, 46.
[25] Calendar of Close Rolls, Henry III: vol. 7: 1251-1253 (1927), 166.
[26] Calendar of Fine Rolls 37 Henry III, No. 539.
http://www.finerollshenry3.org.uk/content/calendar/roll_050.html#it539_014
Hello John,i read with interest the account of Amabel Fitz Sweins 2 marriages first to Alexander de Crevequer and secondly to William de Neville.The first marriage producing a daughter Cecily de Crevequer who went on to marry a Walter de Neville and this marriage produced a son Alexander de Neville c 1180 who in 1203 represented his mother at court against her cousin Alexander son of Simon de Crevequer.
ReplyDeleteNow what I am interested in is this second Alexander de Crevequer the son of Simon who I cant seem to find any information on only your reference that ive just mentioned.Whilst reading Early Yorkshire Families C T Clay the Fitzwilliam family are said to have descended from Godric son of Ketelbern it goes on to say the descent is proved by a case in 1211 when William son of William son of Godric claimed against Alexander de Crevequer a carucate of land in Hopton of which Ketelbern his ancestor was seized in 1135 Hopton was a Manor that was held 1066 and 1086 by Alric father of Swein grandfather of Adam Fitz Swein father of Amble daughter of Adam wife of Alexander de Crevequer who was dead c 1165 so it must be Alexander son of Simon de Crevequer who had dispute with William son of William do you have any idea where I could find out about Alexander son of Simon de Crevequer I hope you can follow all that it sounds like something off the old American sit com soap thank you Darrell Haywood