Robert DE ROS
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The Rest of the Story: The Ancestors of Sarah May Paddock Otstott
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Robert DE ROS's parents: Everard DE ROS ( - ) and Rose TRUSBUT ( - )

Robert DE ROS of Helmsley in Holderness, County York (1170?-bef1226)

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      Effigy of a member of the de Ros family at the Temple Church in London. Robert de Ros is listed as a Templar Knight, so this may be his effigy. Photo by Dana Otstott Shear January 2012.     Effigy of a member of the de Ros family at the Temple Church in London. Robert de Ros is listed as a Templar Knight, so this may be his effigy. Photo by Dana Otstott Shear January 2012     Effigy of a member of the de Ros family at the Temple Church in London. Robert de Ros is listed as a Templar Knight, so this may be his effigy. Photo by Dana Otstott Shear January 2012     Effigy of a member of the de Ros family at the Temple Church in London. Robert de Ros is listed as a Templar Knight, so this may be his effigy. Photo by Dana Otstott Shear January 2012
 
Name: Robert DE ROS 1
Sex: Male
Name Suffix: of Helmsley in Holderness, County York
Father: Everard DE ROS ( - )
Mother: Rose TRUSBUT ( - )

Individual Events and Attributes

Birth 1170 (app)
magna carta surety 1215 (age 44-45)
Title (1) Baron of Helmsley
Title (2) Sheriff of Cumberland
Occupation Templar Knight
Death bef 23 Dec 1226 (age 55-56)
Burial Temple Church, London, England

Marriage

Spouse Isabella ( - )
Children William DE ROS (aft1192-1264?)
Marriage 1191 (age 20-21) Haddington

Individual Note 1

Sir Robert de Ros, or de Roos of Helmsley, (ca. 1170/1172 – 1227[1]), was the grandfather and ancestor of the Barons Ros of Helmsley that was created by writ in 1264. In 1215, Ros joined the confederation of the barons at Stamford. He was one of the twenty-five barons to guarantee the observance of the Magna Carta, signed by King John on 15 Jun 1215.[1]

 

He was the son of Everard de Ros, Baron of Helmsley and Roese Trussebut, daughter of William Trussebut of Warter. In 1191, aged fourteen, he paid a thousand marks fine for livery of his lands to King Richard I of England. In 1197, while serving King Richard in Normandy, he was arrested for an unspecified offence, and was committed to the custody of Hugh de Chaumont, but Chaumont entrusted his prisoner to William de Spiney, who allowed him to escape from the castle of Bonville, England. King Richard thereupon hanged Spiney and collected a fine of twelve hundred marks from Ros' guardian as the price of his continued freedom.

 

When King John came to the throne, he gave Ros the barony of his great-grandmother's father, Walter d'Espec. Soon afterwards he was deputed one of those to escort William the Lion, his father-in-law, into England, to swear fealty to King John. Some years later, Robert de Ros assumed the habit of a monk, whereupon the custody of all his lands and Castle Werke (Wark), in Northumberland, were committed to Philip d'Ulcote, but he soon returned and about a year later he was High Sheriff of Cumberland.

 

When the struggle of the barons for a constitutional government began, de Ros at first sided with King John, and thus obtained some valuable grants from the crown, and was made governor of Carlisle; but he subsequently went over to the barons and became one of the celebrated twenty-five "Sureties" appointed to enforce the observance of Magna Carta, the county of Northumberland being placed under his supervision. He gave his allegiance to King Henry III and, in 1217-18, his manors were restored to him. Although he was witness to the second Great Charter and the Forest Charter, of 1224, he seems to have remained in royal favour.

 

In early 1191, in Haddington, East Lothian, Scotland, Ros married Isabella Mac William (Isibéal nic Uilliam), widow of Robert III de Brus. Isabella was the illegitimate daughter of William the Lion, King of Scots by the daughter of Richard Avenel.[1]

 

Issue with Isabella:

 

Sir William de Ros (b. before 1200 - d. ca. 1264/1265), father of Robert de Ros, 1st Baron de Ros.[1]

Sir Robert de Ros[1] (ca. 1223 - 13 May 1285), was Chief Justice of the Kings Bench. He married Christian Bertram; from which Elizabeth Ros (d.1395), wife of William Parr of Kendal (1350 - c.1404) descended. The two were ancestors of Queen consort Catherine Parr.

Sir Alexander de Ros (d. ca. 1306), he fathered one child with an unknown wife, William.[1]

Peter de Ros[1]

He erected Helmsley or Hamlake Castle in Yorkshire, and of Werke in Northumberland. Sir Robert is buried at the Temple Church under a magnificent tomb.[1]

 

While "Fursan" is given as a location for Robert de Ros (sometimes also Roos) most use the term "furfan" to designate a title within the Templars essentially equivalent to grandmaster or head priest. This title also further refers to the resulting aura resembling a "fan" / "Furry fan". Some would also use the term "Kingmaker".

 

NOTES:

1 a b c d e f g h Douglas Richardson, Kimball G. Everingham. Magna Carta ancestry: a study in colonial and medieval families, Genealogical Publishing Company, 2005. pg 699. Google eBook2

Individual Note 2

He was the grandson of Robert de Ros and Sibyl de Valognes.

Sources

1Weis, Frederick Lewis & Sheppard, Walter Lee, Jr, "Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America before 1700: Lineages from Alfred the Great, Charlemagne, Malcolm of Scotland, Robert the Strong, and other Historical Individuals". p 162, 170-25.
2"Wikipedia". http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_de_Ros.