Ancestors & Descendants of Larry Gordon & Nedra Callender

Notes


Baron Nele de Mowbray

Was present at the council of Clarendon in 1163/64, and joined with his father in the rebellion of 1173. In the 3rd of King Richard I, he assumed the cross and set out for Palestine, but while on the journey, died at Acre in 1191.


Baron Roger de Mowbray

Succeeded to the lands of Mumbray or Mowbray, thus came to be know by the surname of de Mowbray.

In 1138, though still young, he took part in the expedition against the Scots which culminated in the Battle of the Standard. At the Battle of Lincoln in Feb. 1140/41 he fought for Stephen and was taken prisoner. In 1147 he took part in the second Crusade. At about Easter 1186, again as a Crusader, he arrived in Jerusalem. In the Battle of Hittin, 4 July 1187, he was taken prisoner and the following year was ransomed by the Templars, but died in 1188, in Palestine or on the way home.


Sir Nele d'Aubigny

Came into England with William the Conqueror and obtained several lordships after the Battle at Hastings. After the Battle at Tenercheby in 1106, the king granted him the English lands of Robert de Stuteville. During the Norman rebellion, Nele, with his brother William, remained faithful to King Henry I and fought for him at the victory over the French King at Bremule on 20 August 1119. He had a grant of Montbraik or Mowbray and the other forfeited lands in Normandy of Robert de Mowbray, Earl of Northumberland.


Gundred de Gourney

Daughter of Gerard de Gourney and his wife Edith, daughter of William, first Earl of Surrey.


Baron William de Huntingfield

Of Huntingfied and Mendham, Suffolk, and other estates. Sided with the king in the Baron's War. From 1263 to 1287 he was summoned for military service and to attend King Edward I at Shrewsbury 28 June 1283.


King of Castile Alphonso-Raimond VII

After capturing Cordova and other Moorish territory, died in 1157.


Magna Charta Surety, Baron William de Huntingfield

Dover Castle, the stronghold which William de Huntingfield held in the Barons' War, is a famous one, fulfilling the dream of the grim place of nameless cruelties and horrible prisons. It was built near the site of the ancient Roman Pharos or lighthouse. Legends attest that once William the Conqueror advised Harold to fortify it, then to deliver it up to the Normans when the time came, for it was a stout coastal defense. Harold was allegedly enticed to swear to do this, but if he did swear it, he took his oath lightly.
The Castle was completed by the son of Godwin, and was set high upon a rock above the sea. The rock was cut so that it was flush with the wall. By 1066 Dover Castle was thoroughly established, but there is no doubt that the wide encircling walls, the sturdy watch towers and massive keep are Norman. Even so, there were probably Roman and Saxon forts on the same site. The keep is believed to have been erected by Henry II about 1154. But the whole Castle, as we can envision it today, dates to a much earlier period.
WILLIAM de HUNTINGFIELD, the Surety, born about 1165, married Isabel Gressinghall, widow of Osmond de Stuteville. He was made constable of Dover Castle in 1204, and delivered up his son and daughter as hostages for his loyalty to the King. The son was to remain with the Earl of Arundel, the daughter with Earl Ferrers.
He was one of five wardens of the Ports of Norfolk and Suffolk from 1210 to 1212, and the following year he was one of the itinerant justices of Lincoln. He was high sheriff of Norfolk and Suffolk until the end of 1214. He witnessed King John's grant of freedom of election to churches in 1214. He was governor of Sauvey Castle in Leistershire when he joined the cause of the Barons in arms against King John, and was excommunicated by the Pope. His lands were then given to Nicholas de Haya. According to the close and patent rolls he was one of the men actively in rebellion against King John before the issuance of Magna Charta. Very likely the cause of the Protector's severity toward Huntingfield was that he was one of those who plotted to have the Dauphin come to England and, after the Dauphin's landing, was very active in reducing the Courts of Essex and Suffolk to French authority. He fought at Lincoln 20 May 1217, and was taken prisoner by the King's forces. William had a daughter, Alice Huntingfield, who was married twice, but the name of her first husband has not been preserved. Her father paid the King a fine of "six fair Norway Goshawks," in the 15th of King John, for permission to marry Alice, his daughter, then a widow, to Richard de Solers. William de Huntingfield, the Surety, died 25 January 1220/1 on a Crusade.