See also

Family of Geoffrey + of MANDEVILLE and Adeliza + of BALTS

Husband: Geoffrey + of MANDEVILLE (1038-1085)
Wife: Adeliza + of BALTS (1040-1085)
Children: William + of MANDEVILLE (1054-1105)
Beatrice (c. 1056- )
Marriage 1049

Husband: Geoffrey + of MANDEVILLE

Name: Geoffrey + of MANDEVILLE
Sex: Male
Father: Geoffrey + of MANDEVILLE (1010-1053)
Mother: -
Birth 1038 Rycott, Oxfordshire, England
Occupation First Sheriff of London and Middlesex
Death 1085 (age 46-47) Westminster Abbey, Westminster, Middlesex, England

Wife: Adeliza + of BALTS

Name: Adeliza + of BALTS
Sex: Female
Father: -
Mother: -
Birth 1040
Death 1085 (age 44-45) Westminster Abbey, Westminster, Middlesex, England

Child 1: William + of MANDEVILLE

Name: William + of MANDEVILLE
Sex: Male
Spouse: Margaret + of Rie (1078- )
Birth 1054 Great Waltham, Essex, England
Occupation Constable of The Tower of London
Death 1105 (age 50-51) Essex, England

Child 2: Beatrice

Name: Beatrice
Sex: Female
Birth 1056 (est)

Note on Husband: Geoffrey + of MANDEVILLE

Geoffrey de Mandeville (died c. 1100) may have been Constable of the Tower of London. His surname comes from the town of (Thil-)Manneville (Magnavilla, Mannevilla)[1] or Magna Villa near Valognes in Manche on the Cotentin Peninsula.[2] Little is known of him before the Norman Conquest of England.

 

An important Domesday tenant-in-chief, de Mandeville was one of the ten richest magnates of the reign of William the Conqueror. William granted him large estates, primarily in Essex, but in ten other shires as well. He served as the first sheriff of London and Middlesex, and perhaps also in Essex, and in Hertfordshire.

 

He married firstly Athelaise (Adeliza), by whom he had a son William, and a daughter Beatrix (Beatrice), and possibly others. He married secondly Lescelina, by whom he had no children. About 1085 he and Lescelina founded Hurley Priory as a cell of Westminster Abbey.

 

His lands were inherited by his son William de Mandeville. His daughter Beatrix (Beatrice) was the wife of Geoffrey[which?], whom some[who?] have speculated was a natural son of Eustace II, Count of Boulogne.