fbpx
Wikipedia

Eustace fitz John

Eustace fitz John (died 1157), Constable of Chester, was a powerful magnate in northern England during the reigns of Henry I, Stephen and Henry II. From a relatively humble background in South East England, Eustace made his career serving Henry I, and was elevated by the king through marriage and office into one of the most important figures in the north of England. Eustace acquired a great deal of property in the region, controlled Bamburgh Castle, and served jointly with Walter Espec as justiciar of the North.

Eustace fitz John
DiedNovember 1157
Cause of deathKilled in battle
Years active1119 to 1157
Known forFounder of Alnwick Abbey, Malton Priory and Watton Priory
TitleLord of Alnwick, Malton and Watton
Constable of Bamburgh and Knaresborough Castles
Spouse(s)Beatrix de Vescy (died before 1130)
Agnes FitzNigel
ChildrenWilliam de Vescy (Beatrix)
Richard fitz Eustace (Agnes of Halton)
ParentJohn fitzRichard
Relatives
  • Pain fitzJohn (brother)
  • William fitzJohn (brother)
  • Agnes (sister)
  • Alice (sister)

After Henry I's death in 1135, Eustace became involved in the Anarchy, the warfare between the supporters of Stephen and his rival the Empress Matilda, the latter led by Matilda's uncle David, King of Scotland. He surrendered Alnwick Castle and Malton Castle temporarily to David, while Bamburgh was taken by Stephen. Eustace became a supporter of David, fighting and suffering defeat at the Battle of the Standard in 1138. He maintained most of his lands in the north, however, and from around 1144 became one of the main followers of Ranulf II, Earl of Chester, through whom he gained even more land. Eustace subsequently founded three religious houses and died on a campaign with Henry II in 1157.

Origins and early career edit

Eustace's family came from the southeast of England.[1] His father John fitzRichard was a tenant-in-chief who appeared in the Domesday Book owning estates in Essex and Norfolk.[1] The family was not of exalted origin, representing the middle rank of society.[2] Eustace had two known sisters, Agnes and Alice. He also had two brothers, Pain (Payne) and William, and it is thought that Pain—whose career was as successful as Eustace's—was probably the eldest.[3] Eustace likely did not inherit much from his father but instead depended on success as a royal servant.[4]

Eustace is witnessing royal charters from at least 1119, but may have been at Henry's court as early as 1114.[5] Through Henry's patronage, Eustace married two heiresses, both of whom brought him lands. Beatrix de Vesci, daughter and heiress of Ivo de Vesci, brought him control of Alnwick Castle and the barony of Alnwick in Northumberland.[6] He probably received, in addition, land in Lincolnshire as well as five-and-a-half knight's fees in Yorkshire previously belonging to Ranulf de Mortimer (died 1104).[7] Although it has often been claimed that this marriage brought Eustace the lordship of Old Malton, a former royal manor in the North Riding of Yorkshire, this was probably a separate gift from the king.[8] Eustace's marriage to Beatrix occurred sometime before 1130.[9]

The other marriage, which also occurred before 1130, was to Agnes daughter of the constable of Chester William fitz Nigel, and this eventually brought Eustace more land in Yorkshire at Bridlington as well as in Northamptonshire at Loddington. Both landholdings were held from the earl of Chester.[10] Eustace would gain control of many other sub-tenancies, held from a number of lords, including the Archbishop of York, Bishop of Durham, Nigel d'Aubigny and the count of Aumale,[11] and in Henry's reign he held lands at Aldborough, Tickhill and Knaresborough from the king as a tenant-in-chief.[12]

Eustace had thus emerged as one of the key players in Henry's reordering of Northumbrian society following the destruction of the earldom of Northumbria in the late 11th century.[13] According to historian William Kapelle, Eustace was one of the "three mainstays of Henry's new regime in the North", the other two being Walter Espec and King David of Scotland.[14] In Northumberland he is known to have commanded authority over at least ten local notables, including John FitzOdard lord of Embleton and Robert II de Umfraville lord of Redesdale.[15] Eustace's barony of Alnwick stretched across the potential Scottish invasion routes of the Tweed basin and was one of the two largest baronies in the county,[a] holding between 14 and 17 knight's fees by 1166, nearly three times the size of the average lordship in the county.[15]

Henry I's only surviving pipe roll, for 1129–30, shows that Eustace served jointly as justiciar of the north along with Walter Espec, and had custody of the former capital of the Northumbrian earldom, Bamburgh Castle.[10] Allowances made to Eustace for the repair of the gate of Bamburgh Castle and the construction of fortifications at Tickhill and Knaresborough in Yorkshire are also recorded in this pipe roll.[10] This and evidence of royal writs show that Eustace and Walter Espec had justiciar responsibility for the counties of Cumberland, Northumberland, Durham, and Yorkshire, a role that involved hearing pleas and conveying instructions from central government.[16]

The Anarchy edit

The death of Henry I on 1 December 1135, led to the accession of Stephen de Blois, to whom Eustace submitted.[1] Stephen's seizure of the throne was contested by Henry I's daughter, the Empress Matilda, who had been Henry's designated heir. The Gesta Stephani claimed that certain "very intimate friends of Henry" had been against Stephen from the beginning because of loyalty to Henry's daughter Matilda, and names Eustace's brother Pain as one of these, making it quite possible that Eustace had likewise never been on Stephen's side.[17] However, they, just like Eustace, did swear fealty to Stephen after a short time.[18] This capitulation meant that Stephen let them keep the honours and positions they had held under Henry, and Stephen is even found confirming the grants of Eustace's family between 1136 and 1138.[19]

Matilda was supported by her uncle King David of Scotland, and he did not accept Stephen's succession peacefully.[20] Thus Eustace was placed in the front line of a new war. When David invaded northern England, Eustace's castle of Alnwick was among those captured by David in the first two months of the year (though it was returned in March).[1] Stephen relieved Eustace of control of Bamburgh Castle when he returned from his punitive invasion of Lothian early in 1138.[21] It has been claimed that Eustace must have gone over to David's side by the end of 1137 when David invaded northern England.[22] There is no proof, however, that Eustace had switched allegiance at this point.[23]

After David crossed back into Northumberland in April 1138, Eustace became one of David's active supporters, and during David's siege of Wark Castle in May, Eustace tried to persuade him to besiege Bamburgh Castle instead.[24] Eustace had had a long association with the Scottish king, or at least with his Norman follower Robert I de Brus, as Eustace's name appears as a witness to David's charter recording the grant of Annandale to Robert, issued at Scone in 1124.[18]

Eustace fought at the Battle of the Standard in August 1138, fighting for David in the second line with the men of Cumbria and Teviotdale. The battle ended in defeat, and Eustace was wounded and fled to Alnwick in its aftermath, leaving his castle at Malton to be captured soon after.[25] Despite the defeat of David, peace the following year brought David victory, his son Henry becoming Earl of Northumbria and Huntingdon, and under the rule of Earl Henry, Eustace regained many of his Northumberland possessions and received other lands in the earldom of Huntingdon.[26] When a succession dispute for the bishopric of Durham erupted in 1141, Eustace supported the pro-David William Cumin against William de Ste Barbara; and in 1143, Eustace helped negotiate a truce between the two claimants.[27]

Eustace's number of known associations with David and Henry after 1144 is small, appearing only as a witness to one charter of Earl Henry issued at Corbridge at some point between 1150 and 1152.[28] Around 1144 Eustace seems to have entered a beneficial relationship with Ranulf II, Earl of Chester. Eustace was married to the sister of Ranulf's constable, William fitz William, and in 1143 or 1144 William died. This made Eustace's wife and her sister Matilda joint heiress to the lands and offices of William, who was childless.[29]

In either 1144 or 1145, Eustace obtained from Ranulf a large honour with lands mostly in Cheshire, Lancashire and Yorkshire, and gained the office of constable of Chester along with the status as chief counsellor in Ranulf's dominions.[30] Earl Ranulf's patronage also seems to have gained Eustace a grant by Roger de Mowbray (the earl's captive from the Battle of Lincoln) of fourteen knight fees worth of estates in Yorkshire and Lincolnshire, with townships along the river Humber. This was probably part of the attempts of the earl and his half-brother the Earl of Lincoln William de Roumare to tighten their family's grip on the region.[31] Eustace's position vis-à-vis Stephen probably mirrored that of Ranulf, and like other pro-Matildans there was probably no permanent stabilisation of relations until the settlement between Stephen and Matilda in the winter of 1153.[32] In the following year, Eustace attested a charter King Stephen issued at York in favour of Pontefract Priory.[32]

Death and legacy edit

Eustace had a good relationship with Stephen's successor Henry II, and the latter seems to have regarded Eustace as one of his supporters.[33] Henry confirmed Eustace's gifts to his son William de Vescy and would recognise the latter's succession to his father's lands.[34] After Henry's accession in 1154, Eustace attested to the new king's charters. Eustace died in July 1157 at the Battle of Ewloe near Basingwerk in Flintshire, where on a campaign with Henry against the Welsh he was ambushed and killed.[35]

Eustace fitz John was remembered as a great monastic patron. He patronised Gloucester Abbey, a Benedictine house, as well as the Augustinian Priory of Bridlington.[1] In 1147, he founded his own abbey, Alnwick Abbey, as a daughter-house of England's first Premonstratensian monastery, Newhouse Abbey in Lincolnshire.[36] Two years later, Eustace turned his favours to the order of Gilbert of Sempringham, in 1150 founding a Gilbertine priory at Malton in Yorkshire and another priory (with a nunnery) at Watton (also Yorkshire) around the same time.[37] Later tradition held that Eustace founded these houses in penance for fighting alongside the Scots, but there is no original evidence for this.[38]

He founded Watton, scene of Ailred of Rievaulx's De Sanctimoniali de Wattun, jointly with a William Fossard.[39] Eustace's patronage of the Gilbertines was probably influenced by William, Earl of York and Henry Murdac, Archbishop of York.[40] Eustace witnessed two of Earl William's charters between 1150 and 1153, and obtained land from him.[41] Eustace's name appears on coins minted at York, a city under the control of the earl.[41]

Several sources, including Roger of Howden, report that Eustace had only one eye;[1] however, this is likely to be a reference to his father, John "Monoculus" FitzRichard.

Marriage and issue edit

Eustace fitz John married twice. His first wife was Beatrix de Vesci, daughter and heiress of Ivo de Vesci, and they had one known son;

Beatrix is recorded to have died in childbirth. Eustace married, secondly, Agnes de Halton, daughter of William fitz Nigel. He inherited the barony of Halton through this marriage. They had two known sons;

Notes edit

  1. ^ The other being the Balliol barony of Bywell.[15]

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Tout and Dalton, "Eustace fitz John"
  2. ^ Dalton, "Eustace Fitz John", p. 359; Green, Henry I, p. 244
  3. ^ Mason, "Pain fitz John"; in many respects, Eustace's career in the north paralleled that of his brother Pain in the south-west of England; Dalton, "Eustace Fitz John", p. 360
  4. ^ Dalton, Conquest, pp. 96–97; Dalton, "Eustace Fitz John", pp. 359–60
  5. ^ Dalton, "Eustace Fitz John", p. 359; Tout and Dalton, "Eustace fitz John"
  6. ^ Crouch, Reign of King Stephen, p. 164; Dalton, Conquest, 97–98
  7. ^ Dalton, Conquest, p. 98; Dalton, "Eustace Fitz John", p. 362
  8. ^ Dalton, "Eustace Fitz John", p. 362
  9. ^ Dalton, Conquest, p. 97
  10. ^ a b c Dalton, Conquest, p. 99
  11. ^ Dalton, Conquest, p. 99; Dalton, "Eustace Fitz John", pp. 363–64 for a more extensive list
  12. ^ Kapelle, Norman Conquest, p. 199
  13. ^ Green, Henry I, p. 317
  14. ^ Kapelle, Norman Conquest, p. 198
  15. ^ a b c Dalton, "Eustace Fitz John", p. 365
  16. ^ Dalton, "Eustace Fitz John", p. 360
  17. ^ Dalton, "Eustace Fitz John", pp. 366–68
  18. ^ a b Dalton, "Eustace Fitz John", p. 366
  19. ^ Dalton, "Eustace Fitz John", pp. 366–367
  20. ^ Oram, David I, pp. 121–123.
  21. ^ Crouch, Reign of King Stephen, pp. 73–74
  22. ^ Oram, David I, pp. 134–135
  23. ^ Dalton, "Eustace Fitz John", pp. 367–370; Tout and Dalton, "Eustace fitz John"
  24. ^ Crouch, Reign of King Stephen, p. 81; Dalton, "Eustace Fitz John", p. 367
  25. ^ Crouch, Reign of King Stephen, p. 82; Dalton, "Eustace Fitz John", p. 370; Tout and Dalton, "Eustace fitz John"
  26. ^ Oram, David I, pp. 140–44.; Tout and Dalton, "Eustace fitz John"
  27. ^ Dalton, "Eustace Fitz John", p. 371; Tout and Dalton, "Eustace fitz John"
  28. ^ Dalton, "Eustace Fitz John", p. 371–72
  29. ^ Dalton, "Eustace Fitz John", p. 372
  30. ^ Dalton, "Eustace Fitz John", pp. 362, 372
  31. ^ Dalton, "Eustace Fitz John", pp. 372–73
  32. ^ a b Dalton, "Eustace Fitz John", p. 379
  33. ^ Dalton, "Eustace Fitz John", pp. 379–80
  34. ^ Dalton, "Eustace Fitz John", p. 380; Tout and Dalton, "Eustace fitz John"
  35. ^ Dalton, "Eustace Fitz John", p. 380
  36. ^ Dalton, "Eustace Fitz John", p. 375
  37. ^ Dalton, "Eustace Fitz John", pp. 374–75
  38. ^ Burton, Monastic Order, p. 137
  39. ^ Dalton, "Eustace Fitz John", pp. 375–76
  40. ^ Dalton, "Eustace Fitz John", pp. 375–79
  41. ^ a b Dalton, "Eustace Fitz John", p. 374
  42. ^ Dalton, "Eustace Fitz John", p. 373

References edit

  • Burton, Janet E. (1999), The Monastic Order in Yorkshire, 1069–1215, Cambridge Studies in Medieval Life and Thought; 4th Series, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, ISBN 0-521-55229-X
  • Crouch, David (2000), The Reign of King of Stephen, 1135–1154, Harlow: Longman / Pearson Education, ISBN 0-582-22658-9
  • Dalton, Paul (1994), Conquest, Anarchy and Lordship. Yorkshire, 1066–1154, Cambridge Studies in Medieval Life and Thought, 4th Series, xxvii, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, ISBN 0-521-45098-5
  • Dalton, Paul (1996), "Eustace Fitz John and the Politics of Anglo-Norman England: The Rise and Survival of a Twelfth-Century Royal Servant", Speculum, Medieval Academy of America, 71 (2): 358–383, doi:10.2307/2865417, ISSN 0038-7134, JSTOR 2865417, S2CID 155189020
  • Green, Judith A. (2006), Henry I: King of England and Duke of Normandy, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-0-521-59131-7
  • Kapelle, William E. (1979), The Norman Conquest of the North: The Region and Its Transformation, 1000–1135, London: Croom Helm Ltd, ISBN 0-7099-0040-6
  • Mason, J. F. A. (2008), "Pain fitz John (d. 1137), baron and administrator", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, retrieved 6 January 2009
  • Oram, Richard (2004), David I : The King Who Made Scotland, Stroud: Tempus, ISBN 0-7524-2825-X
  • Tout, T. F.; Dalton, Paul (2008). "Eustace fitz John (d. 1157), justice and baron". In Dalton, Paul (ed.). Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/9614. Retrieved 6 January 2009. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)

eustace, fitz, john, died, 1157, constable, chester, powerful, magnate, northern, england, during, reigns, henry, stephen, henry, from, relatively, humble, background, south, east, england, eustace, made, career, serving, henry, elevated, king, through, marria. Eustace fitz John died 1157 Constable of Chester was a powerful magnate in northern England during the reigns of Henry I Stephen and Henry II From a relatively humble background in South East England Eustace made his career serving Henry I and was elevated by the king through marriage and office into one of the most important figures in the north of England Eustace acquired a great deal of property in the region controlled Bamburgh Castle and served jointly with Walter Espec as justiciar of the North Eustace fitz JohnDiedNovember 1157Flintshire WalesCause of deathKilled in battleYears active1119 to 1157Known forFounder of Alnwick Abbey Malton Priory and Watton PrioryTitleLord of Alnwick Malton and WattonConstable of Bamburgh and Knaresborough CastlesSpouse s Beatrix de Vescy died before 1130 Agnes FitzNigelChildrenWilliam de Vescy Beatrix Richard fitz Eustace Agnes of Halton ParentJohn fitzRichardRelativesPain fitzJohn brother William fitzJohn brother Agnes sister Alice sister After Henry I s death in 1135 Eustace became involved in the Anarchy the warfare between the supporters of Stephen and his rival the Empress Matilda the latter led by Matilda s uncle David King of Scotland He surrendered Alnwick Castle and Malton Castle temporarily to David while Bamburgh was taken by Stephen Eustace became a supporter of David fighting and suffering defeat at the Battle of the Standard in 1138 He maintained most of his lands in the north however and from around 1144 became one of the main followers of Ranulf II Earl of Chester through whom he gained even more land Eustace subsequently founded three religious houses and died on a campaign with Henry II in 1157 Contents 1 Origins and early career 2 The Anarchy 3 Death and legacy 4 Marriage and issue 5 Notes 6 Citations 7 ReferencesOrigins and early career editEustace s family came from the southeast of England 1 His father John fitzRichard was a tenant in chief who appeared in the Domesday Book owning estates in Essex and Norfolk 1 The family was not of exalted origin representing the middle rank of society 2 Eustace had two known sisters Agnes and Alice He also had two brothers Pain Payne and William and it is thought that Pain whose career was as successful as Eustace s was probably the eldest 3 Eustace likely did not inherit much from his father but instead depended on success as a royal servant 4 Eustace is witnessing royal charters from at least 1119 but may have been at Henry s court as early as 1114 5 Through Henry s patronage Eustace married two heiresses both of whom brought him lands Beatrix de Vesci daughter and heiress of Ivo de Vesci brought him control of Alnwick Castle and the barony of Alnwick in Northumberland 6 He probably received in addition land in Lincolnshire as well as five and a half knight s fees in Yorkshire previously belonging to Ranulf de Mortimer died 1104 7 Although it has often been claimed that this marriage brought Eustace the lordship of Old Malton a former royal manor in the North Riding of Yorkshire this was probably a separate gift from the king 8 Eustace s marriage to Beatrix occurred sometime before 1130 9 The other marriage which also occurred before 1130 was to Agnes daughter of the constable of Chester William fitz Nigel and this eventually brought Eustace more land in Yorkshire at Bridlington as well as in Northamptonshire at Loddington Both landholdings were held from the earl of Chester 10 Eustace would gain control of many other sub tenancies held from a number of lords including the Archbishop of York Bishop of Durham Nigel d Aubigny and the count of Aumale 11 and in Henry s reign he held lands at Aldborough Tickhill and Knaresborough from the king as a tenant in chief 12 Eustace had thus emerged as one of the key players in Henry s reordering of Northumbrian society following the destruction of the earldom of Northumbria in the late 11th century 13 According to historian William Kapelle Eustace was one of the three mainstays of Henry s new regime in the North the other two being Walter Espec and King David of Scotland 14 In Northumberland he is known to have commanded authority over at least ten local notables including John FitzOdard lord of Embleton and Robert II de Umfraville lord of Redesdale 15 Eustace s barony of Alnwick stretched across the potential Scottish invasion routes of the Tweed basin and was one of the two largest baronies in the county a holding between 14 and 17 knight s fees by 1166 nearly three times the size of the average lordship in the county 15 Henry I s only surviving pipe roll for 1129 30 shows that Eustace served jointly as justiciar of the north along with Walter Espec and had custody of the former capital of the Northumbrian earldom Bamburgh Castle 10 Allowances made to Eustace for the repair of the gate of Bamburgh Castle and the construction of fortifications at Tickhill and Knaresborough in Yorkshire are also recorded in this pipe roll 10 This and evidence of royal writs show that Eustace and Walter Espec had justiciar responsibility for the counties of Cumberland Northumberland Durham and Yorkshire a role that involved hearing pleas and conveying instructions from central government 16 The Anarchy editThe death of Henry I on 1 December 1135 led to the accession of Stephen de Blois to whom Eustace submitted 1 Stephen s seizure of the throne was contested by Henry I s daughter the Empress Matilda who had been Henry s designated heir The Gesta Stephani claimed that certain very intimate friends of Henry had been against Stephen from the beginning because of loyalty to Henry s daughter Matilda and names Eustace s brother Pain as one of these making it quite possible that Eustace had likewise never been on Stephen s side 17 However they just like Eustace did swear fealty to Stephen after a short time 18 This capitulation meant that Stephen let them keep the honours and positions they had held under Henry and Stephen is even found confirming the grants of Eustace s family between 1136 and 1138 19 Matilda was supported by her uncle King David of Scotland and he did not accept Stephen s succession peacefully 20 Thus Eustace was placed in the front line of a new war When David invaded northern England Eustace s castle of Alnwick was among those captured by David in the first two months of the year though it was returned in March 1 Stephen relieved Eustace of control of Bamburgh Castle when he returned from his punitive invasion of Lothian early in 1138 21 It has been claimed that Eustace must have gone over to David s side by the end of 1137 when David invaded northern England 22 There is no proof however that Eustace had switched allegiance at this point 23 After David crossed back into Northumberland in April 1138 Eustace became one of David s active supporters and during David s siege of Wark Castle in May Eustace tried to persuade him to besiege Bamburgh Castle instead 24 Eustace had had a long association with the Scottish king or at least with his Norman follower Robert I de Brus as Eustace s name appears as a witness to David s charter recording the grant of Annandale to Robert issued at Scone in 1124 18 Eustace fought at the Battle of the Standard in August 1138 fighting for David in the second line with the men of Cumbria and Teviotdale The battle ended in defeat and Eustace was wounded and fled to Alnwick in its aftermath leaving his castle at Malton to be captured soon after 25 Despite the defeat of David peace the following year brought David victory his son Henry becoming Earl of Northumbria and Huntingdon and under the rule of Earl Henry Eustace regained many of his Northumberland possessions and received other lands in the earldom of Huntingdon 26 When a succession dispute for the bishopric of Durham erupted in 1141 Eustace supported the pro David William Cumin against William de Ste Barbara and in 1143 Eustace helped negotiate a truce between the two claimants 27 Eustace s number of known associations with David and Henry after 1144 is small appearing only as a witness to one charter of Earl Henry issued at Corbridge at some point between 1150 and 1152 28 Around 1144 Eustace seems to have entered a beneficial relationship with Ranulf II Earl of Chester Eustace was married to the sister of Ranulf s constable William fitz William and in 1143 or 1144 William died This made Eustace s wife and her sister Matilda joint heiress to the lands and offices of William who was childless 29 In either 1144 or 1145 Eustace obtained from Ranulf a large honour with lands mostly in Cheshire Lancashire and Yorkshire and gained the office of constable of Chester along with the status as chief counsellor in Ranulf s dominions 30 Earl Ranulf s patronage also seems to have gained Eustace a grant by Roger de Mowbray the earl s captive from the Battle of Lincoln of fourteen knight fees worth of estates in Yorkshire and Lincolnshire with townships along the river Humber This was probably part of the attempts of the earl and his half brother the Earl of Lincoln William de Roumare to tighten their family s grip on the region 31 Eustace s position vis a vis Stephen probably mirrored that of Ranulf and like other pro Matildans there was probably no permanent stabilisation of relations until the settlement between Stephen and Matilda in the winter of 1153 32 In the following year Eustace attested a charter King Stephen issued at York in favour of Pontefract Priory 32 Death and legacy editEustace had a good relationship with Stephen s successor Henry II and the latter seems to have regarded Eustace as one of his supporters 33 Henry confirmed Eustace s gifts to his son William de Vescy and would recognise the latter s succession to his father s lands 34 After Henry s accession in 1154 Eustace attested to the new king s charters Eustace died in July 1157 at the Battle of Ewloe near Basingwerk in Flintshire where on a campaign with Henry against the Welsh he was ambushed and killed 35 Eustace fitz John was remembered as a great monastic patron He patronised Gloucester Abbey a Benedictine house as well as the Augustinian Priory of Bridlington 1 In 1147 he founded his own abbey Alnwick Abbey as a daughter house of England s first Premonstratensian monastery Newhouse Abbey in Lincolnshire 36 Two years later Eustace turned his favours to the order of Gilbert of Sempringham in 1150 founding a Gilbertine priory at Malton in Yorkshire and another priory with a nunnery at Watton also Yorkshire around the same time 37 Later tradition held that Eustace founded these houses in penance for fighting alongside the Scots but there is no original evidence for this 38 He founded Watton scene of Ailred of Rievaulx s De Sanctimoniali de Wattun jointly with a William Fossard 39 Eustace s patronage of the Gilbertines was probably influenced by William Earl of York and Henry Murdac Archbishop of York 40 Eustace witnessed two of Earl William s charters between 1150 and 1153 and obtained land from him 41 Eustace s name appears on coins minted at York a city under the control of the earl 41 Several sources including Roger of Howden report that Eustace had only one eye 1 however this is likely to be a reference to his father John Monoculus FitzRichard Marriage and issue editEustace fitz John married twice His first wife was Beatrix de Vesci daughter and heiress of Ivo de Vesci and they had one known son William de Vesci d 1184 married Burga daughter of Robert III de Stuteville and had issue William was the sheriff of Northumberland between 1157 and 1170 and would become the ancestor of the Northumberland de Vescy family 1 Beatrix is recorded to have died in childbirth Eustace married secondly Agnes de Halton daughter of William fitz Nigel He inherited the barony of Halton through this marriage They had two known sons Richard fitz Eustace d c 1163 married Aubrey de Lisours daughter of Robert de Lisours by Aubrey sister of Ilbert II de Lacy another baron captured by Earl Ranulf at the Battle of Lincoln and had issue 42 He became ancestor of a second line of de Lacys 1 Geoffrey fitz Eustace named as his son in a charter of Watton Priory Notes edit The other being the Balliol barony of Bywell 15 Citations edit a b c d e f g h Tout and Dalton Eustace fitz John Dalton Eustace Fitz John p 359 Green Henry I p 244 Mason Pain fitz John in many respects Eustace s career in the north paralleled that of his brother Pain in the south west of England Dalton Eustace Fitz John p 360 Dalton Conquest pp 96 97 Dalton Eustace Fitz John pp 359 60 Dalton Eustace Fitz John p 359 Tout and Dalton Eustace fitz John Crouch Reign of King Stephen p 164 Dalton Conquest 97 98 Dalton Conquest p 98 Dalton Eustace Fitz John p 362 Dalton Eustace Fitz John p 362 Dalton Conquest p 97 a b c Dalton Conquest p 99 Dalton Conquest p 99 Dalton Eustace Fitz John pp 363 64 for a more extensive list Kapelle Norman Conquest p 199 Green Henry I p 317 Kapelle Norman Conquest p 198 a b c Dalton Eustace Fitz John p 365 Dalton Eustace Fitz John p 360 Dalton Eustace Fitz John pp 366 68 a b Dalton Eustace Fitz John p 366 Dalton Eustace Fitz John pp 366 367 Oram David I pp 121 123 Crouch Reign of King Stephen pp 73 74 Oram David I pp 134 135 Dalton Eustace Fitz John pp 367 370 Tout and Dalton Eustace fitz John Crouch Reign of King Stephen p 81 Dalton Eustace Fitz John p 367 Crouch Reign of King Stephen p 82 Dalton Eustace Fitz John p 370 Tout and Dalton Eustace fitz John Oram David I pp 140 44 Tout and Dalton Eustace fitz John Dalton Eustace Fitz John p 371 Tout and Dalton Eustace fitz John Dalton Eustace Fitz John p 371 72 Dalton Eustace Fitz John p 372 Dalton Eustace Fitz John pp 362 372 Dalton Eustace Fitz John pp 372 73 a b Dalton Eustace Fitz John p 379 Dalton Eustace Fitz John pp 379 80 Dalton Eustace Fitz John p 380 Tout and Dalton Eustace fitz John Dalton Eustace Fitz John p 380 Dalton Eustace Fitz John p 375 Dalton Eustace Fitz John pp 374 75 Burton Monastic Order p 137 Dalton Eustace Fitz John pp 375 76 Dalton Eustace Fitz John pp 375 79 a b Dalton Eustace Fitz John p 374 Dalton Eustace Fitz John p 373References editBurton Janet E 1999 The Monastic Order in Yorkshire 1069 1215 Cambridge Studies in Medieval Life and Thought 4th Series Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 55229 X Crouch David 2000 The Reign of King of Stephen 1135 1154 Harlow Longman Pearson Education ISBN 0 582 22658 9 Dalton Paul 1994 Conquest Anarchy and Lordship Yorkshire 1066 1154 Cambridge Studies in Medieval Life and Thought 4th Series xxvii Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 45098 5 Dalton Paul 1996 Eustace Fitz John and the Politics of Anglo Norman England The Rise and Survival of a Twelfth Century Royal Servant Speculum Medieval Academy of America 71 2 358 383 doi 10 2307 2865417 ISSN 0038 7134 JSTOR 2865417 S2CID 155189020 Green Judith A 2006 Henry I King of England and Duke of Normandy Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 59131 7 Kapelle William E 1979 The Norman Conquest of the North The Region and Its Transformation 1000 1135 London Croom Helm Ltd ISBN 0 7099 0040 6 Mason J F A 2008 Pain fitz John d 1137 baron and administrator Oxford Dictionary of National Biography retrieved 6 January 2009 Oram Richard 2004 David I The King Who Made Scotland Stroud Tempus ISBN 0 7524 2825 X Tout T F Dalton Paul 2008 Eustace fitz John d 1157 justice and baron In Dalton Paul ed Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 9614 Retrieved 6 January 2009 Subscription or UK public library membership required Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Eustace fitz John amp oldid 1174164925, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.