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William le Gros, 1st Earl of Albemarle

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Name
  
William Gros,

Children
  
Hawise le Gros

Spouse
  
Cicely, Lady of Skipton

Died
  
August 20, 1179

Role
  
Count of Aumale


Parents
  
Hawise, Daughter of Ralph de Mortimer of Wig, Stephen of Aumale

Grandparents
  
Adelaide of Normandy, Odo, Count of Champagne

Great-grandparents
  
Robert I, Duke of Normandy, Herleva, Stephen II of Troyes

Similar People
  
David I of Scotland, Stephen - King of England, Robert - 1st Earl of Gloucester

William le Gros, William le Gras, William d'Aumale, William Crassus (died 20 August 1179) was the Count of Aumale (Earl of Albemarle), Earl of York, and Lord of Holderness. He was the eldest son of Stephen, Count of Aumale, and his spouse, Hawise, daughter of Ralph de Mortimer of Wigmore.

He founded the town of Chipping Sodbury, South Gloucester.

William witnessed two charters of King Stephen in 1136, in which he is recorded as Willelmus de Albamarla, but is not placed among the earls.

He distinguished himself at the Battle of the Standard in 1138, and was made Earl of Yorkshire (apart from Richmondshire) as his reward. He was with Stephen in his defeat at Lincoln on 2 February 1141. He founded the Abbey of Meaux in 1150.

His Scarborough Castle was forfeited to King Henry II as a result of unauthorised construction during the Anarchy.

William married Cicely, Lady of Skipton, the daughter and co-heir of William Fitz-Duncan by his spouse Alice, Lady of Skipton, daughter of William Meschin, Lord of Copeland.

He was intombed within the Abbey of Thornton, Lincolnshire, which he had founded in 1139.

Dying without male issue, the Earl of York and Albemarle left a daughter and heiress, Hawise (died 11 March 1214), who succeeded her father in the County of Aumale and Lordship of Holderness.

Hawise married three times, firstly, on 14 January 1180, William de Mandeville, 3rd Earl of Essex, who thereby became Count of Aumale. He died without issue 14 January 1189.

She married secondly after 3 July 1190, the crusader William de Forz (d. 1195), who thereby became Count of Aumale, by whom she had her heir and successor.

Thirdly, King Richard I gave her in marriage to Baldwin de Béthune.

References

William le Gros, 1st Earl of Albemarle Wikipedia