1095 - 1166 (71 years) Submit Photo / Document
Set As Default Person
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Name |
FITZROY, Elizabeth Joan |
Birth |
1095 |
Talbey, Yorkshire, England |
Gender |
Female |
Burial |
May 1166 |
England |
Death |
12 May 1166 |
Abbey Holyrood, Edinburgh, Scotland |
WAC |
30 Apr 1913 |
_TAG |
Reviewed on FS |
Headstones |
Submit Headstone Photo |
Person ID |
I68574 |
Joseph Smith Sr and Lucy Mack Smith |
Last Modified |
19 Aug 2021 |
Father |
BEAUCLERC, King Henry I , b. 13 Jun 1068, Selby, Yorkshire, England Selby, Yorkshire, Englandd. 1 Dec 1135, Lyon, Eure, Haute-Normandie, France (Age 67 years) |
Mother |
SCOTLAND, Queen Mathilda Princess of Scotland , b. 1 May 1080, Dunfermline, Fife, Scotland Dunfermline, Fife, Scotlandd. 1 May 1118, Westminster Palace, Westminster, London, England (Age 38 years) |
Marriage |
11 Nov 1100 |
Westminster, Middlesex, England [1] |
Notes |
- MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married Westminster, London, England. ~SEALING_SPOUSE: Also shown as SealSp 19 May 1954, SLAKE.
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Family ID |
F32472 |
Group Sheet | Family Chart |
Family |
GALLOWAY, Lord Fergus , b. 1096, Carrick, Ayrshire, Scotland Carrick, Ayrshire, Scotlandd. 12 May 1161, Abbey of Holyrood, Edinburgh, Scotland (Age 65 years) |
Marriage |
1124 |
Carrick, Ayrshire, Scotland |
Notes |
- MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married , Carrick, Argyllshire, Scotland.
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Family ID |
F32509 |
Group Sheet | Family Chart |
Last Modified |
24 Jan 2022 |
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Notes |
- 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
http://www.wikitree.com/wiki/FitzHenry-35
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Sources |
- [S983] The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Ancestral File (TM), (June 1998 (c), data as of 5 JAN 1998).
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