Prinsessa Elisabet FITZROY, PRINCESS OF ENGLAND

Kvinna 1095 - 1166  (71 år)


Generationer:      Standard    |    Kompakt    |    Vertikal    |    Endast text    |    Registerformat    |    PDF

Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Prinsessa Elisabet FITZROY, PRINCESS OF ENGLAND föddes den 1083 - 1095 i Talby, Yorkshire, , England; dog den 12 Maj 1166 i Edinburgh, Midlothian, Scotland.

    Noteringar:

    Joan (Elizabeth)

    Notes: Not shown in The Complete Peerage, but shown in Weir as having an unknown mother. Father: Henry I Beauclerc, King of England, b. ABT SEP 1068. Mother: Corbet, Sybilla. Married to Fergus of Galloway. (Directory of Royal Genealogical Data, Hull, England)

    Olav Bitling (Dverg), kung av Söderöarna (Hebriderna), död ca 1153, gift med Afreca, dr av Fergus av Galloway och Elisabet, illegitim dr av Henry I, kung av England. (Fra Skanke-släktens historia, G.V.C. Young, stamtavla 1a)



    Elizabeth FitzRoy
    Also Known As: "Elizabeth de Talby", "Princess of England", "Isabel", "Princess Elizabeth Joan Fitz Henry of /England/", "Princess of /England/", "12751", "13147"
    Birthdate: cirka 1095
    Birthplace: Talby, Yorkshire, , England
    Death: 12 Maj 1166 (67-75)
    Edinburgh, Midlothian, , Scotland
    Begravningsort: England
    Närstående:
    Dotter till Henrik I, kung av England och Unconfirmed & U/K Mother of Elizabeth Joan or Emma
    Hustru till Fergus, Lord of Galloway
    Moder till Afreca nic Fergus of Galloway; Daughter Of Fergus, of Galloway; Uchtred mac Fergus, Lord of Galloway; Gilbert mac Fergus, Lord of Galloway och Douval De Galloway
    Syster till Emma Guyon FitzRoy
    Halvsyster till Euphemia (Name & Sex Unconfirmed) Child of Henry I & Mathilda; Empress Matilda; William Atheling, Duke of Normandy; Adelaide de Angers (Possibly Empress Mathilda); Robert de Caen, 1st Earl of Gloucester och 19 andra
    Occupation: Hertiginna, Princess of England, Illegitamate child of Henry I King of England, Hertiginna i Galloway, Skottland.




    About Elizabeth FitzRoy
    Elizabeth or Joan is an illegitimate daughter of Henry Beauclerc, but her mother is uncertain. It is probable that a daughter of Henry married Fergus. Whether Elizabeth was really married to Fergus of Galloway, or whether his children had a different mother is uncertain.

    Joan (?)1

    F, #106739

    Last Edited=3 May 2008

    Joan (?) was the daughter of Henry I 'Beauclerc', King of England.1 She married Fergus, Lord of Galloway.1
    Joan (?) was also known as Elizabeth (?).1
    Citations

    1. [S11] Alison Weir, Britain's Royal Family: A Complete Genealogy (London, U.K.: The Bodley Head, 1999), page 49. Hereinafter cited as Britain's Royal Family.
    Elizabeth, natural daughter of Henry I, and sister of Sibilla, who married Alexander I, brother of David." [Ref: Sir Herbert Maxwell, "A History of Dumfries and Galloway" by Sir Herbert Maxwell, Edinburgh, 1896, pp. 47-48]

    sources needed. Not listed in FMG as daughter of Henry I. Not linked here to Henry I, just to one of his mistresses. Work needed.

    See "My Lines"

    ( http://homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~cousin/html/p62.htm#i7938 )

    from Compiler: R. B. Stewart, Evans, GA

    ( http://homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~cousin/html/index.htm )

    Elizabeth, Princess of England was the daughter of Henry I 'Beauclerc,' King of England [1100-1135]. She was born in 1095 and died in Galloway, Dumfries and Galloway, Scotland. Elizabeth married Fergus of Galloway circa 1115. Fergus was born circa 1090 in Carrick, Dundonald, Argyleshire, Scotland, died 12 May 1161 of Galloway, Dumfries and Galloway, Scotland at age 71, and was buried in Holyrood Abbey, Edinburgh, Scotland.

    Children of Fergus of Galloway and wife Elizabeth, Princess of England:

    Utrech Of GALLOWAY was born circa 1120 in Carrick, Dundonald, Argyleshire, Scotland, died 22 Sep 1174, murdered in Loch Fergus, Scotland at age 54, and was buried of Carrick, Ayrshire, Scotland.
    Gilbert Of GALLOWAY Lord of Galloway was born circa 1125 in Wigtown, Galloway, Scotland and died 1 Jan 1185 in Carrick, Argyleshire, Scotland at age 60. Gilbert married UNKNOWN circa 1145. She was born circa 1125 and died at Carrick, Argyleshire, Scotland.
    Daughter of Fergus Of GALLOWAY was born circa 1115 in Galloway, Dumfries and Galloway, Scotland and died in Scotland. She married Thomas DE CULWEN circa 1135. Thomas was born circa 1110 in Scotland and died in Scotland.
    Notes

    From Galloway in Ancient and Modern Times (Google eBook) Peter Handyside M'Kerlie.W. Blackwood and sons, 1891 - Galloway (Scotland) - 324 pages. page 155

    "It is necessary to repeat here that Fergus married Elizabeth, the natural daughter of King Henry I. of England. This king ruled from 1100 to 1135. Unless Fergus had been in England he could not have become acquainted with her and married before he became governor of Galloway, otherwise his descendants — three generations — would have had very short lives. Also, had he been a native, from the position apparently held from the first, he would have led the Galwegians at the Battle of the Standard, instead of Ulgric and Dovenald. That Fergus was married long before his connection with Galloway is supported by the facts that Olave, King of Man, began to reign in 1102, and that he married Affrica, the daughter of Fergus ..."

    Links to additional material:

    http://washington.ancestryregister.com/ENGLAND500006.htm#i4001
    About Elizabeth / Joan Illegitimate d/o Henry I (Of Gloucester) Elizabeth or Joan was an illegitimate daughter of Henry Beauclerc, but her mother is uncertain. It is probable that a daughter of Henry married Fergus. Whether Elizabeth was really married to Fergus of Galloway, or whether his children had a different mother is uncertain.

    Elizabeth or Joan was an illegitimate daughter of Henry Beauclerc, but her mother is uncertain. It is probable that a daughter of Henry married Fergus. Whether Elizabeth was really married to Fergus of Galloway, or whether his children had a different mother is uncertain.
    Fergus may have married an ilegitimate daughter of Henri Beauclerc, King Henry I of England. Her name, however, is unknown. One of the candidates is Sibylla, the widow of King Alexander of Scotland, but there is little evidence for this. Another candidate could be Elisabeth; but likewise, there is little evidence. If he did marry a daughter of Henry I, the marriage can be interpreted as part of the forward policy of Henry I in the northwest of his dominions and the Irish Sea zone in general, which was engineered in the second decade of the 12th century. It may have been during this time that Fergus began calling himself rex Galwitensium (King of Galloway). However, while his possible father-in-law lived, Fergus seems to have remained a faithful vassal to Henry.[1][2]

    From the Geni profile ...
    - Added by: Susan Bryant (Cranmer) on April 21, 2007 - Managed by: Jim Semple, Jr and 177 others - Curated by: Terry Jackson (Switzer)
    Elizabeth or Joan is an illegitimate daughter of Henry Beauclerc, but her mother is uncertain. It is probable that a daughter of Henry married Fergus. Whether Elizabeth was really married to Fergus of Galloway, or whether his children had a different mother is uncertain.

    Joan (?)1

    F, #106739

    Last Edited=3 May 2008

    Joan (?) was the daughter of Henry I 'Beauclerc', King of England.1 She married Fergus, Lord of Galloway.1

    Joan (?) was also known as Elizabeth (?).1

    Citations

    1. [S11] Alison Weir, Britain's Royal Family: A Complete Genealogy (London, U.K.: The Bodley Head, 1999), page 49. Hereinafter cited as Britain's Royal Family.

    Elizabeth, natural daughter of Henry I, and sister of Sibilla, who married Alexander I, brother of David." [Ref: Sir Herbert Maxwell, "A History of Dumfries and Galloway" by Sir Herbert Maxwell, Edinburgh, 1896, pp. 47-48]

    sources needed. Not listed in FMG as daughter of Henry I. Not linked here to Henry I, just to one of his mistresses. Work needed.

    See "My Lines"

    ( http://homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~cousin/html/p62.htm#i7938 )

    from Compiler: R. B. Stewart, Evans, GA

    ( http://homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~cousin/html/index.htm )

    Elizabeth, Princess of England was the daughter of Henry I 'Beauclerc,' King of England [1100-1135]. She was born in 1095 and died in Galloway, Dumfries and Galloway, Scotland. Elizabeth married Fergus of Galloway circa 1115. Fergus was born circa 1090 in Carrick, Dundonald, Argyleshire, Scotland, died 12 May 1161 of Galloway, Dumfries and Galloway, Scotland at age 71, and was buried in Holyrood Abbey, Edinburgh, Scotland.

    Children of Fergus of Galloway and wife Elizabeth, Princess of England: •Utrech Of GALLOWAY was born circa 1120 in Carrick, Dundonald, Argyleshire, Scotland, died 22 Sep 1174, murdered in Loch Fergus, Scotland at age 54, and was buried of Carrick, Ayrshire, Scotland. •Gilbert Of GALLOWAY Lord of Galloway was born circa 1125 in Wigtown, Galloway, Scotland and died 1 Jan 1185 in Carrick, Argyleshire, Scotland at age 60. Gilbert married UNKNOWN circa 1145. She was born circa 1125 and died at Carrick, Argyleshire, Scotland. •Daughter of Fergus Of GALLOWAY was born circa 1115 in Galloway, Dumfries and Galloway, Scotland and died in Scotland. She married Thomas DE CULWEN circa 1135. Thomas was born circa 1110 in Scotland and died in Scotland.

    Notes

    From Galloway in Ancient and Modern Times (Google eBook) Peter Handyside M'Kerlie.W. Blackwood and sons, 1891 - Galloway (Scotland) - 324 pages. page 155

    "It is necessary to repeat here that Fergus married Elizabeth, the natural daughter of King Henry I. of England. This king ruled from 1100 to 1135. Unless Fergus had been in England he could not have become acquainted with her and married before he became governor of Galloway, otherwise his descendants — three generations — would have had very short lives. Also, had he been a native, from the position apparently held from the first, he would have led the Galwegians at the Battle of the Standard, instead of Ulgric and Dovenald. That Fergus was married long before his connection with Galloway is supported by the facts that Olave, King of Man, began to reign in 1102, and that he married Affrica, the daughter of Fergus ..."

    Links to additional material: •http://washington.ancestryregister.com/ENGLAND500006.htm#i4001

    About Elizabeth / Joan Illegitimate d/o Henry I (Of Gloucester) Elizabeth or Joan was an illegitimate daughter of Henry Beauclerc, but her mother is uncertain. It is probable that a daughter of Henry married Fergus. Whether Elizabeth was really married to Fergus of Galloway, or whether his children had a different mother is uncertain.

    Elizabeth (?) was born illegitimately. She is the daughter of Henry I 'Beauclerc', King of England

    Dotter (o.ä) till Henry I, kung av England. Hertiginna i Galloway, Skottland.

    Elisabet gift Fergus OF GALLOWAY 1099. Fergus föddes 1070 i Galloway, Skottland; dog 1161 i Edinburg, England. [Familjeöversikt] [Familjediagram]

    Barn:
    1. 2. Afreca NIC FERGUS OF GALLOWAY  Grafiskt ättlingaverk till denna punkt föddes 1099 i Galloway, Skottland; dog 1166 i Isle of Man, England.
    2. 3. Gilbert OF GALLOWAY  Grafiskt ättlingaverk till denna punkt föddes 1100; dog 1120.
    3. 4. Roland OF GALLOWAY  Grafiskt ättlingaverk till denna punkt föddes 1110; dog 1174.


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Afreca NIC FERGUS OF GALLOWAY Grafiskt ättlingaverk till denna punkt (1.Elisabet1) föddes 1099 i Galloway, Skottland; dog 1166 i Isle of Man, England.

    Noteringar:

    Kändsom: "Aufricia of Isle of Man", "montagu", "Aufrica", "Afreca", "Aufrcia", "Queen of Isle of Man", "Queen of Man"

    Afreca gift Kung Olof "Bitling" GUDRÖDSSON OF ISLE OF MAN 1127. Olof (son till Kung Gudröd II "Crovan" HARALDSSON och Drottning Ragnhild Maria) föddes 1080 i Isle of Man, England; dog den 29 Jun 1153 i Ramsey, Isle of Man, England. [Familjeöversikt] [Familjediagram]

    Barn:
    1. 5. Godred "the Black" Olofsson OF ISLE OF MAN  Grafiskt ättlingaverk till denna punkt föddes 1127 i Isle of Man, England; dog den 10 Nov 1187 i Isle of Man, England; begravdes Dec 1187 i Iona, Hebriderna, Skottland.

  2. 3.  Gilbert OF GALLOWAY Grafiskt ättlingaverk till denna punkt (1.Elisabet1) föddes 1100; dog 1120.

  3. 4.  Roland OF GALLOWAY Grafiskt ättlingaverk till denna punkt (1.Elisabet1) föddes 1110; dog 1174.


Generation: 3

  1. 5.  Godred "the Black" Olofsson OF ISLE OF MAN Grafiskt ättlingaverk till denna punkt (2.Afreca2, 1.Elisabet1) föddes 1127 i Isle of Man, England; dog den 10 Nov 1187 i Isle of Man, England; begravdes Dec 1187 i Iona, Hebriderna, Skottland.

    Andra Händelser:

    • Bott i: 1160 - Oslo, Norge 1164 - Isle of Man, England

    Noteringar:

    In the year 1153 King Olave (Bitling) was slain on the feast of the holy apostles Peter and Paul. In the following autumn Godred, his son, came from Norway with five ships, and put in at the Orkneys. All the chiefs of the Isles were rejoiced when they heard of his arrival, and assembling together, unanimously elected him for their king. Godred then came to Man, seized the three sons of Harold, and, to avenge his father's murder, awarded them the death they deserved. Another story is that he put out the eyes of two of them, and put the third to death. (Chronicle of Man and the Sudreys)

    Efter ett sjöslag år 1156 delades Söderöarna i två delar och Hebriderna bildade ett eget rike med Islay som centrum. (Nordisk Vikingaguide, sid 189, Lars G. Holmblad)

    In the year 1176, John de Courcy subdued Ulster. In the same year Vivian, Cardinal legate of the apostolic See, came to Man, and in the discharge of his office caused Godred to be united in lawful marriage with his wife, the daughter (Finola) of MacLoughlin, son of Muinrough, King of Ireland, who was mother of Olave then three years old. They were married by Silvanus, Abbot of Rivaulx. (Chronicle of Man and the Sudreys)

    In the year 1187, on the 10th of November, Godred, King of the Isles, died in the Island of St. Patrick, in Man. In the beginning of the following summer his body was removed to the Island called lona (ett kloster på inre Hebriderna). He left three sons, Reginald, Olave, and Ivar. Reginald, then a full grown young man, was absent in the Isles. Olave, yet a very young boy, resided in Man. (Chronicle of Man and the Sudreys)

    Godred during his life had appointed Olave to succeed to the kingdom, for the inheritance belonged to him by right, because he was born of lawful wedlock; and had commanded all the people of Man to appoint Olave king after his own death, and preserve inviolate their oath of allegiance. How ever, after the death of Godred, the Manxmen sent their messengers to the Isles for Reginald, and made him king, because he was a man of energy and of riper age. For they dreaded the weakness of Olave, for he was but a boy ten years old, and they considered that a person, who on account of his tender age, knew not how to direct himself, would be wholly incapable of governing his subjects. This was the reason why the people of Man appointed Reginald king. (Chronicle of Man and the Sudreys)



    Källa: Chronicle of Man and the Sudreys, P. A. Munch
     

    Godred gift Finola MacLochliann OF IRELAND 1176. Finola (dotter till Murcard MacLochlainn OF IRELAND) föddes 1145 i Ulster, Irland; dog 1190 i Isle of Man, England. [Familjeöversikt] [Familjediagram]

    Barn:
    1. 6. Olof "the Black" Gudrödsson OF ISLE OF MAN  Grafiskt ättlingaverk till denna punkt föddes 1173 i Isle of Man, England; dog den 21 Maj 1237 i Isle of Man, England.
    2. 7. Ivar OF ISLE OF MAN  Grafiskt ättlingaverk till denna punkt föddes 1175; dog 1257.
    3. 8. Afreca OF ISLE OF MAN  Grafiskt ättlingaverk till denna punkt föddes 1176; dog 1219.


Generation: 4

  1. 6.  Olof "the Black" Gudrödsson OF ISLE OF MAN Grafiskt ättlingaverk till denna punkt (5.Godred3, 2.Afreca2, 1.Elisabet1) föddes 1173 i Isle of Man, England; dog den 21 Maj 1237 i Isle of Man, England.

    Noteringar:

    Godred during his life had appointed Olave to succeed to the kingdom, for the inheritance belonged to him by right, because he was born of lawful wedlock; and had commanded all the people of Man to appoint Olave king after his own death, and preserve inviolate their oath of allegiance. How ever, after the death of Godred, the Manxmen sent their messengers to the Isles for Reginald, and made him king, because he was a man of energy and of riper age. For they dreaded the weakness of Olave, for he was but a boy ten years old, and they considered that a person, who on account of his tender age, knew not how to direct himself, would be wholly incapable of governing his subjects. This was the reason why the people of Man appointed Reginald king. (Chronicle of Man and the Sudreys)

    Know you not that you lived long with the cousin of her whom you now have as your wife ? Olave did not deny the truth of what had been said, and acknowledged that he had long kept her cousin as a concubine. A synod therefore was assembled, and in it bishop Reginald canonically separated Olave the son of Godred and Lauon his wife. Afterwards, Olave married Christina, daughter of Fenquhard, Earl of Ross. (Chronicle of Man and the Sudreys)

    In the year 1187, on the 10th of November, Godred, King of the Isles, died in the Island of St. Patrick, in Man. In the beginning of the following summer his body was removed to the Island called lona (ett kloster på inre Hebriderna). He left three sons, Reginald, Olave, and Ivar. Reginald, then a full grown young man, was absent in the Isles. Olave, yet a very young boy, resided in Man. (Chronicle of Man and the Sudreys)

    Olof var även gift med Christina, dr till Ferguard, jarl av Ross, Skottland, hon var hans tredje hustru. Young menar att äktenskapet med Cristina av Ross stod 1223 eller kort tidigare. (Fra Skanke-slektens historie, G.V.C. Young, 1986)

    Olaf (Svarte) and Godred (son of Reginald) arrived 1230 together in the Norwegian fleet, and immediately divided the kingdom between them-selves. (Chronicle of Man and the Sudreys, notes 37)

    Olof II Gudrödsson anses vara den förste kände, som förde det egendomliga och sällsynta vapnet med sina tre springande ben. Vapnet finns avbildat på Isle of Mans statssvärd, som traditionellt tillskrives Olof. Detta fordrar en datering till omkring 1230. Experter från Brittish Museum har daterat svärdet till omkring 1250. (Jämten 1969, C. R. Carlsson)

    Olaf II of the Isle of Man, also known as Olaf the Black, was King of the Isle of Man from 1229-1237. Olaf was the son of Godred V and Findguala from Ireland, and the half-brother of his predecessor, Ragnald. His younger brother Ragnald IV usurped his succession to the throne and it was only after years of campaigning against his brother's rule that Olaf killed him and took the throne in the year 1229. On the other hand, sources maintain that Findguala was his father's third and last wife, which would presumably make Olav as the younger brother. He however was the intended successor by his father. Olaf was driven out of Man by Alan, Lord of Galloway and forced to flee to Norway for assistance. In early 1230 Olaf and his nephew, Godred Donn, sailed from Norway in a fleet commanded by Gilla Esbuig mac Dubgaill. The fleet of 12 ships was strengthened by 20 more as the fleet stopped at Orkney on its way to the west coast of Scotland. According to saga accounts the fleet had grown to about 80 ships and over 3000 men by the time it entered the Firth of Clyde in around June. The force invaded the Isle of Bute and captured Rothesay Castle which was held by the powerful Stewart dynasty. The sagas tell of how the Norwegian force hewed the wall with their axes, because it was soft. Gilla Esbuig, who was severly wounded in the siege of Rothesay Castle, soon died and was buried in Iona. It was after the death of Gilla Esbuig mac Dubgaill that Olaf took command of the fleet and by Autumn had took control of Man with ease. Olaf died in the year 1237 at Peel Castle. He was succeeded by his son, who became Harald I of the Isle of Man. Later, Olaf's younger son became king Magnus II. (Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia)

    Reginald (IV) gave his brother Olave (II, the Black) a certain island called Lewis, which is said to be more extensive than the other islands, but thinly peopled, because it is mountainous and rocky, and almost totally unfit for cultivation. The inhabitants live mostly by hunting and fishing. Olave took possession of this island and dwelt there; living, how ever, very scantily. Finding that the island could not support himself and his followers, he went frankly to his brother Reginald, who was then residing in the Isles, and spoke to him as follows: You know, my brother and king, that the kingdom of the Isles was mine by hereditary right, but as the Lord chose you for its governor, I do not grudge it you, nor am I discontented because you have been raised to the supreme dignity of king. I now therefore beg that you will allot me hand somewhere in the Isles sufficient for my own decent maintenance and that of my followers, for the island of Lewis which you gave me is unequal to my support. When Reginald had heard this, he promised to take advice on the subject, and return an answer to the petition next day. When next day had dawned, and Olave had conic by summons, to speak with the king, Reginald ordered him to be seized, bound, and carried in chains to William, King of Scotland, to be kept prisoner by that Sovereign. This order was executed, and Olave remained prisoner with the King of Scotland nearly seven years. In the seventh year, William, king of Scotland, died, and was succeeded by his son Alexander. Before his death, however, William gave directions for the liberation of all who were confined in his prisons. Olave then, having his chains removed, and being restored to liberty, went to Man to his brother Reginald, and shortly afterwards set out with a considerable attendance of men of rank for the shrine of St. James. Returning from the pilgrimage, he again visited his brother Reginald, by whom he was received in a friendly manner. At that time Reginald caused his brother Olave to marry Lanon' the daughter of a certain man of rank of Kintyre, sister to his own wife, and gave him the afore said island of Lewis, whether Olave, taking leave of his brother, went with his wife, amid dwelt there. (Chronicle of Man and the Sudreys).



    Källor:
    - Chronicle of Man and the Sudreys, P. A. Munch
    - Fra Skanke-slektens historie, G.V.C. Young

    Olof gift Lawon OF KINTYRE 1215, och skildes 1220. Lawon (dotter till Kenneth (Ruaídrí) OF KINTYRE, dotter till Kenneth (Ruaídrí) OF ARGYLL) föddes 1175 i Kintyre, Skottland; dog 1240 i Kintyre, Skottland. [Familjeöversikt] [Familjediagram]

    Barn:
    1. 9. Ragnvald OF ISLE OF MAN  Grafiskt ättlingaverk till denna punkt föddes 1165 i Isle of Man, England; dog 1229 i Isle of Man, England.
    2. 10. Magnus OF ISLE OF MAN  Grafiskt ättlingaverk till denna punkt föddes 1200; dog 1265.
    3. 11. Godred OF ISLE OF MAN  Grafiskt ättlingaverk till denna punkt föddes 1220; dog 1237.

    Olof gift Christina ROSS 1233. Christina (dotter till Ferquard OF ROSS) föddes 1200 i Ross, Skottland; dog 1250 i Isle of Man, England. [Familjeöversikt] [Familjediagram]

    Barn:
    1. 12. Harold OF ISLE OF MAN  Grafiskt ättlingaverk till denna punkt föddes 1223; dog 1248 i I.
    2. 13. Magnhild OF ISLE OF MAN  Grafiskt ättlingaverk till denna punkt föddes 1230 i Isle of Man, England; dog 1295 i Trondhjem, Sør-Trøndelag, Norge.
    3. 14. Afreca OF ISLE OF MAN  Grafiskt ättlingaverk till denna punkt föddes 1230; dog 1310.

  2. 7.  Ivar OF ISLE OF MAN Grafiskt ättlingaverk till denna punkt (5.Godred3, 2.Afreca2, 1.Elisabet1) föddes 1175; dog 1257.

    Noteringar:

    riddare och kung på Isle of Man, England 1250-1256.


  3. 8.  Afreca OF ISLE OF MAN Grafiskt ättlingaverk till denna punkt (5.Godred3, 2.Afreca2, 1.Elisabet1) föddes 1176; dog 1219.

    Noteringar:

    Grevinna (countess), gift med Lord John de Courcy i Ulster, Irland.