See also

Family of Ivo + of GRENTSMESNIL and Fila + of GAUNT

Husband: Ivo + of GRENTSMESNIL (1064-1102)
Wife: Fila + of GAUNT (1075- )
Children: Hugh II + (1092- )
Marriage 1089

Husband: Ivo + of GRENTSMESNIL

Name: Ivo + of GRENTSMESNIL
Sex: Male
Father: Hugh + of GRENTSMESNIL (1032-1094)
Mother: Adeliza + of BEAUMONT (1035-1091)
Birth 1064 Grentsmesnil, Calvados, France
Death 1102 (age 37-38)

Wife: Fila + of GAUNT

Name: Fila + of GAUNT
Sex: Female
Father: Gilbert + of GAND (1048-1094)
Mother: Alice + of MONTFORT (1050- )
Birth 1075 Folkingham, Lincolnshire, England

Child 1: Hugh II +

Name: Hugh II +
Sex: Male
Spouse: Alice + of BEAUMONT (1111-1191)
Birth 1092 Hinckley, Leicestershire, England
Occupation Baron of Grentsmesnil
Title Baron of Grentsmesnil

Note on Husband: Ivo + of GRENTSMESNIL

Ivo de Grandmesnil (died 1101 or 1102), son of Hugh de Grandmesnil, was a Norman magnate in England and a participant in the First Crusade, in 1096.

 

Ivo participated in the first crusade in 1096, following Robert Curthose, Duke of Normandy. Having been among the nobles who rebelled against William Rufus in 1088, participation in the crusade was a good way to avoid the English king's wrath.[citation needed] However, Ivo became a figure of some derision when, during the Siege of Antioch he and some his compatriots (including his brother) panicked, let themselves over the city walls by rope and fled back home.[1]

 

After the death of his father in 1098, he inherited the town and castle of Leicester and additional estates, assuming the title of Sheriff of Leicester.

 

He was among the barons supporting the claims of Robert Curthose against his brother Henry I in 1100.[2]

 

In 1102, after the attempt to put Curthose on the English throne had failed, Ivo was severely fined by King Henry I for waging private war against his neighbors. He sought the help of Robert de Beaumont, who agreed to help Ivo return to the king's favor, and took mortgage of Ivo's lands for fifteen years in return for a large sum which Ivo would use to go back to the Holy Land. In addition, he agreed to eventually marry the infant daughter of his brother Henry de Beaumont, 1st Earl of Warwick to Ivo's young son, and to return the mortgaged lands to the son.[3]

 

Ivo de Grandmesnil and his wife died on the pilgrimage in 1101 or 1102, but Robert de Beaumont retained control of his estates even after the end of the fifteen years, dispossessing Ivo's sons. Deathbed attempts to induce him to return them were unavailing. Two years later Henry I made plans to return the lands to the sons, who were probably serving in the king's household, but both died in the wreck of the White Ship in 1120.[4]