William OF SALISBURY
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The Rest of the Story: The Ancestors of Sarah May Paddock Otstott

William OF SALISBURY (1150?-1196)

Name: William OF SALISBURY 1
Sex: Male
Father: -
Mother: -

Individual Events and Attributes

Birth 1150 (app)
Occupation (1) frm 1168 to 1261 (age 17-111) Earl of Salisbury
Occupation (2) 1194 (age 43-44) High Sheriff of Somerset and Dorset
Occupation (3) Earl of Wiltshire
Death 17 Apr 1196 (age 45-46)

Marriage

      picture    
      Lacock Abbey which was founded in 1229 by Ela, Countess of Salisbury    
 
Spouse Eléonore DE VITRÉ OF TILLIERS ( -1233)
Children Ela OF SALISBURY (aft1187-1261)
Marriage 1190 (app) (age 39-40)

Individual Note

William of Salisbury, 2nd Earl of Salisbury (died 1196) was an Anglo-Norman peer. Though he is generally known as such, his proper title was Earl of Wiltshire, which title was conferred on his father by the Empress Maud around 1143. He was also called William FitzPatrick.

 

He was the son and heir of Patrick of Salisbury, Earl of Wiltshire, styled Earl of Salisbury, and of Ela Talvas.[1].

 

He married Eléonore, daughter of Robert III de Vitre of Tilliers. He died without male issue in 1196. Their only daughter and heiress, was Ela of Salisbury, 3rd Countess of Salisbury who married William Longespée, 3rd Earl of Salisbury, who was half-brother to the king.

 

William bore the golden sceptre at the coronation of King Richard I, but the next year when the king became a prisoner in Almaine, he was one of those who adhered to the then Count of Mortain, who later became King John of England. In 1194 he served as High Sheriff of Somerset and Dorset. In 1195, William was back with King Richard in the expedition into Normandy and upon his return to England was one of Richard's great council assembled at Nottingham. The Earl of Salisbury was one of the four earls who supported the canopy of state at the second coronation of Richard that same year [2]

 

SOURCES:

1 The Complete Peerage of England, Scotland, Ireland, Great Britain, and the United Kingdom Extant, Extinct, or Dormant; first edition by George Edward Cokayne, Clarenceux King of Arms; 2nd edition revised by the Hon. Vicary Gibbs et al., entries under Salisbury & Wiltshire, p.729

2 Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, England, 1883, p. 168,2

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 110, 108-27.
2"Wikipedia". http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_of_Salisbury,_2nd_Earl_of_Salisbury.