Maud MARSHAL
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Maud MARSHAL (1192?-1248)

Name: Maud MARSHAL 1,2
Sex: Female
Father: William MARSHAL (1146?-1219)
Mother: Isabel DE CLARE (1172-1220)

Individual Events and Attributes

Birth 1192 (app)
Group/Caste Membership House of de Clare
Occupation Countess of Surrey
Death 27 Mar 1248 (age 55-56)
Burial Tintern Abbey

Marriage (1)

      picture     picture    
      Lewes Castle, Warenne's ancestral home, built in 1069     Rochester Castle stands on the east bank of the River Medway in Rochester, Kent, South East England. The 12th-century keep or stone tower, which is the castle's most prominent feature, is one of the best preserved in England or France. Located along the River Medway and Watling Street, Rochester was a strategically important royal castle.    
 
Spouse William DE WARENNE ( -1240)
Children John DE WARENNE (1231-1304)
Marriage 13 Oct 1225 (age 32-33)

Marriage (2)

Spouse Hugh BIGOD (1182?-1225)
Children Isabel BIGOD (1212-1250)
Marriage 1206/07 (age 14-15)

Individual Note

Maud Marshal, Countess of Norfolk, Countess of Surrey (1192 – 27 March 1248) was an Anglo-Norman noblewoman and a wealthy co-heiress of her father William Marshal, 1st Earl of Pembroke, and her mother Isabel de Clare suo jure 4th Countess of Pembroke. Maud was their eldest daughter.[1] She had two husbands: Hugh Bigod, 3rd Earl of Norfolk, and William de Warenne, 5th Earl of Surrey.

 

Maud was also known as Matilda Marshal.

 

Family

Matilda's birthdate is unknown other than being post 1191. She was the eldest daughter of William Marshal, 1st Earl of Pembroke and Isabel de Clare, 4th Countess of Pembroke, herself one of the greatest heiresses in Wales and Ireland. Maud had five brothers and four younger sisters. She was a co-heiress to her parents' extensive rich estates.

 

Her paternal grandparents were John FitzGilbert Marshal and Sybilla of Salisbury, and her maternal grandparents were Richard de Clare, 2nd Earl of Pembroke, known as "Strongbow", and Aoife of Leinster.

 

Marriages and issue

Sometime before Lent in 1207, Maud married her first husband, Hugh Bigod, 3rd Earl of Norfolk. It was through this marriage between Maud and Hugh that the post of Earl Marshal of England came finally to the Howard Dukes of Norfolk.[2] In 1215, Hugh was one of the twenty-five sureties of the Magna Carta. He came into his inheritance in 1221, thus Maud became the Countess of Norfolk at that time. Together they had five children:[3]

 

Roger Bigod, 4th Earl of Norfolk (1209–1270), married Isabella of Scotland. He died childless.

Hugh Bigod (1212–1266), Justiciar of England. Married Joan de Stuteville, by whom he had issue.

Isabel Bigod (c. 1215–1250), married firstly Gilbert de Lacy of Ewyas Lacy, by whom she had issue; she married secondly John FitzGeoffrey, Lord of Shere, by whom she had issue.

Ralph Bigod (born c. 1218, date of death unknown), married Bertha de Furnival, by whom he had one child.

William Bigod

Hugh Bigod died in 1225. Maud married her second husband, William de Warenne, 5th Earl of Surrey before 13 October that same year. Together they had two children:

 

John de Warenne, 6th Earl of Surrey (August 1231 – c. 29 September 1304), in 1247 married Alice le Brun de Lusignan, a half-sister of King Henry III of England, by whom he had three children.

Isabella de Warenne (c. 1228 – before 20 September 1282), married Hugh d'Aubigny, 5th Earl of Arundel. She died childless.

Maud's second husband died in 1240. Her youngest son John succeeded his father as the 6th Earl of Surrey, but as he was a minor, Peter of Savoy, uncle of Queen consort Eleanor of Provence, was guardian of his estates.

 

Death

Maud died on 27 March 1248 at the age of about fifty-six years and was buried at Tintern Abbey with her mother, possibly her maternal grandmother, and two of her brothers.

 

NOTES:

1 Thomas B. Costain, The Magnificent Century, pp. 103-104

2 Costain, The Magnificent Century, pp. 103-104

3 Charles Cawley, Medieval Lands, Earls of Norfolk, Bigod

 

SOURCES:

Thomas B. Costain, The Magnificent Century, published by Doubleday and Company, Garden City, New York, 1959

Charles Cawley, Medieval Lands, Earls of Pembroke

thePeerage.com/p 10677.htm#1067613

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 74, 69-28; 88, 83-27.
2"Genealogy Page of John Blythe Dodson".
3"Wikipedia". http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maud_Marshal.