Isabel DE SAY
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The Rest of the Story: The Ancestors of Sarah May Paddock Otstott
See also
Isabel DE SAY's father: Ingram DE SAY ( - )

Isabel DE SAY ( - )

Name: Isabel DE SAY 1
Sex: Female
Father: Ingram DE SAY ( - )
Mother: -

Individual Events and Attributes

(none)

Marriage

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      Clun Castle, Shropshire, England, an important Marcher lord castle in the 12th century owned for many years by the Fitzalan family.     Ruins of the Clun Castle keep.    
 
Spouse William FITZ ALAN (1154?-1210?)
Children John FITZ ALAN (1200-1240)

Individual Note

NOTE: Dates to match between the Wikipedia article on her son John Fitz Alan and the article on Isabel de Say.

 

Isabella de Say (c.1132-1199) was an Anglo-Norman heiress. Isabella was the only surviving child of Helias de Say upon his death in 1165; Helias was the third lord of Clun, a powerful Norman stronghold in Shropshire, England, along the Welsh border. She was also a niece of the influential Robert, 1st Earl of Gloucester. She is notable for helping to create the powerful medieval house of the Fitz Allans. Isabella married William Fitz Alan, the lord of nearby Oswestry, as his second wife.[1] William died in 1160, leaving a son by Isabella, William Fitz Alan II.[2] Isabella passed Clun Castle to him. The combined lordship of Oswestry and Clun was a significant power in the borderlands with Wales.[3]

 

Isabella had married Geoffrey de Vere II, brother of the earl of Oxford by early 1166. After de Vere's death in 1170 she married William Boterel, probably by 1175, the year her son William reached his majority. She was certainly married to him by 1188.[4] Isabella's death date is disputed, but she probably lived to 1199.

 

A charter of Isabella's to Much Wenlock Priory in Shropshire, purportedly issued on her deathbed, granted the church and chapels of Clun to that monastery.[5] Her grant was confirmed by her third husband William Boterel,

 

NOTES:

1 Eyton 1860, p.45.

2 Eyton 1862, p.45.

3 Brown, p.93.

4 Brown, p.93.

5 Dugdale, et al., Monasticon Anglicanum, vol. V, p. 76, num. iv

 

SOURCES:

Brown, Reginald Allen. (1989) Castles from the Air. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-32932-3.

Dugdale, William, John Caley, Sir Henry Ellis, Bulkeley Bandinel (1819) Monasticon Anglicanum vol. 5

Eyton, William. (1860) Antiquities of Shropshire, Volume XI. London: John Russell Smith.

Eyton, William. (1862) "The Castles of Shropshire and its Border." in Collectanea Archæologica: communications made to the British Archaeological Association Vol. 1. London: Longman.2

Sources

1"Wikipedia". http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Fitzalan,_Lord_of_Oswestry.
2Ibid. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isabella_de_Say.