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Robert de Mowbray raised an army and attacked the Scots taking them by surprise on 13 November (St Brice's Day). In the ensuing Battle of Alnwick, Malcolm and his son Edward were slain. Earlier that same year, Geoffrey de Montbray died and Mowbray succeeded to his uncle's large estates, becoming one of the most powerful barons in the kingdom. [1]
Margaret de Mowbray (d. 1459) m. Robert Howard: Isabel de Mowbray (d. 1452) m1. Henry Ferrers m2. James Berkeley 1st Baron Berkeley (progeny were eventual Mowbray heirs) John de Mowbray 9th Baron Mowbray 10th Baron Segrave 4th Earl of Nottingham 6th Earl of Norfolk 3rd Duke of Norfolk (1415–1461) King Edward IV 1442–1483: John de Mowbray ...
Barony de Mowbray/Thursk: William de Mowbray (~1200–1224) Roger II de Mowbray (1240–1266) Roger de Mowbray, 1st Baron Mowbray (1266–1297) John de Mowbray, 2nd Baron Mowbray (1297–1322) Barony of Wark (Honour) Robert de Ros (died 1227) (1183–1227) Robert de Ros, Baron Wark (1227–1269) Robert de Ross II of Wark (1269–1274)
Roger was the son of Nigel d'Aubigny by his second wife, Gundreda de Gournay. [2]On his father's death in 1129 he became a ward of the crown. [3] Based at Thirsk with his mother, on reaching his majority in 1138, he took title to the lands awarded to his father by Henry I both in Normandy including Montbray, from which he would adopt his surname, as well as the substantial holdings in ...
They were spread far and wide geographically from Kent, controlled by Bishop Odo, to Northumberland, controlled by Robert de Mowbray, to Gloucestershire and Somerset under Geoffrey de Montbray (Bishop of Coutances), to Norfolk with Roger Bigod, through Shropshire and Sussex and other counties with Roger of Montgomery, and a vast swathe of ...
Robert de Comines: 1068 1069 ... c.1070 1075 Walcher: 1075 1080 Also bishop of Durham. Aubrey de Coucy: 1080 1086 Robert de Mowbray: c.1086×1090 1095 Anglo-Norman ...
Robert de Mowbray, who defeated Malcolm, subsequently joined a baronial conspiracy against William Rufus in 1095, and, as a result, was dispossessed and imprisoned for life. A rough stone memorial was placed to mark the place of the battle, north of Alnwick.
Moubray, also seen as Mowbray and Mobray, is a name of Norman origin, coming from the House of Mowbray from ancient barony of Montbray in Normandy. [1]Robert de Moubray, is first recorded as witness to the gift of Staplegortoun to Kelso Abbey, during the reign of Malcolm IV of Scotland.