Adam de Port (d. c. 1133)

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Adam de Port (sometimes Adam of Port; [1] d. c. 1133) was an Anglo-Norman nobleman and Baron of Kington.

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Adam was the son of either Hugh de Port [2] or Hubert de Port. [3] The family originated in Port-en-Bessin in the Calvados region of Normandy. [4]

Before 1121, Adam was granted the manor of Kington in Herefordshire by King Henry I of England. Kington had previously been in the royal demense. This grant is considered by I.J. Sanders to have created Adam the baron of Kington. [2] Adam served King Henry in his household as a steward. [1] He was a witness on four royal documents in 1115 and four more in 1121. [5] Adam held 22 knight's fees in Hereford before his death. [6]

Adam may have been the Sheriff of Herefordshire in 1130, [7] and perhaps at other times also, as he may be the person listed as the sheriff in some documents. [8] [lower-alpha 1]

Adam founded Andwell Priory in Hampshire as a dependent priory of Tiron Abbey. He also gave gifts of land to Tiron itself and Les Deux Jumeaux, another dependency of Tiron. [7]

Adam died between 1130 and 1133. [3] His heir was his son Roger de Port, and he had two other sons named Hugh and Robert. [9]

Notes

  1. One document is dated to between 1107 and 1115, another is dated to between 1100 and 1128, and the last is dated to 1121. [8]

Citations

  1. 1 2 Hollister Henry I p. 361
  2. 1 2 Sanders English Baronies p. 57
  3. 1 2 Keats-Rohan Domesday Descendants p. 645
  4. Loyd Origins of Some Anglo-Norman Families pp. 79–80
  5. Newman Anglo-Norman Nobility pp. 185–186
  6. Newman Anglo-Norman Nobility p. 175
  7. 1 2 Cownie "Port, Adam de (fl. 1161–1174)" Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
  8. 1 2 Green English Sheriffs p. 45
  9. Keats-Rohan Domesday Descendants p. 646

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