John Marshal (also referred to as John FitzGilbert, died 22 July 1165), was a minor nobleman of Anglo-Norman origins who served as marshal of England and fought in the 12th-century civil war on the side of Empress Matilda. He is best remembered as the father of William Marshal. [1] [2]
John was the son of Gilbert Giffard, who held the position of marshal under King Henry I and maybe under King William Rufus. He inherited his father’s title sometime before 1130. In that year, but as stated probably starting earlier, he is described himself as a marshal under Henry. Following Henry’s death in 1135, John swore fealty to King Stephen and was granted the castles of Marlborough and Ludgershall, Wiltshire during this time. Along with Hamstead Marshal, this gave him control of the valley of the River Kennet in Wiltshire. He also held lands in Somerset and Berkshire, and owned some buildings in Winchester. In 1130, his total lands were assessed, for the purpose of a tax exemption, as 35 hides and 1/4. [2] [3]
When Empress Matilda, along with her half-brother Robert of Gloucester and her supporters, landed in Sussex in 1139 to press her claim for the throne, John seems to have only been a nominal supporter of Stephen. His loyalty to the king seems to have been in sufficient doubt that his castle at Marlborough was briefly besieged. In 1140 the castle of Marlborough was also threatened by Robert fitzHubert, who had captured Devizes castle, but John tricked him into imprisonment and sold him to earl William of Gloucester. On the same year, king Stephen tried to appoint a breton governor in Wiltshire, causing the disfavour of both John and the Salisburys. When Stephen was captured at the Battle of Lincoln in 1141, John definitively switched allegiance to Matilda. [3] [4]
In September 1141, Matilda fled the siege of Winchester and took refuge in the Marshal's castle at Ludgershall. While covering her retreat from Winchester, John was forced to take refuge from the enemies at Wherwell Abbey. The attackers set fire to the building, and John was seriously injured by dripping lead from the melting roof, to the point that his pursuers thought him dead. Although he was splashed, burnt, and lost an eye, John was not dead and he stumbled back home to Marlborough on foot, in a 25 miles long march. [3] In 1142 John is seen at the Empress’s side again at Oxford, where his brother William Giffard was acting as a chancellor. [4]
In the mid 1140s (surely after the siege of Winchester and probably starting in 1145), John entered in conflict with Patrick of Salisbury in a matter of local power. Patrick launched a series of aggressive sieges, which John resisted; the first mentioned’s eventual success might explain Matilda’s decision to make him an earl. The matter was ultimately resolved by a marriage between John and Sybil, Patrick’s daughter, and John was forced to annul his pre-existing marriage to a woman named Adelina on the grounds of consanguinity. [3]
In 1152, with the civil war dying down, John tried to increase his control in the Kenneth Valley. This caught the attention of King Stephen, who promptly besieged him at Newbury castle. Stephen gave John a day to think about surrender, but Marshal asked for more time. As a consequence, the king demanded that one of John’s sons was given to him as a hostage in order to prevent trickery. John agreed and sent out his youngest son, William Marshal, but he had no intention of actually keeping the agreement. Stephen sent John a messenger, stating the intention to hang William if he didn’t change his mind, but John observed that he could make more and better sons anyway. Stephen, however, didn’t want the young boy to die, and took pity on him (perhaps having lost two of his own sons). Little William was kept at the king’s court, and was reunited with his mother Sybil after the end of the civil war in 1153. [3]
From 1156 onward John's affairs started declining, and he started to sell some of his properties. In 1158, King Henry II (which had succeeded Stephen) revoked John's possession of Marlborough castle, maybe considering him as a danger, but didn't deprive him of his role of marshal. In the same year, both in an attempt to decipher Merlin's fictitious prophecies and irritated by the loss of Marlborough, John let it be known that according to the prophecies, Henry II would have not returned in England after his campaign against Tolouse. When the king returned in 1163, he considered John as a traitor. John, however, restored the king’s favor by taking part in the Becket controversy. [3]
John had previously argued with Theobald of Bec (Thomas Becket's predecessor as Archbishop of Canterbury) that one of the archbishopric's estates belonged to him by hereditary right. It seems that he even occupied said estate. After Becket succeeded Theobald, he retook the estates for the archbishopric. John then tried to claim them back and presented himself at the archbishop's court, but he failed. However, he knew that the archbishop was falling out of royal favour, and he appealed to king Henry II. The king summoned a council to discuss the situation, and although that council would eventually lead to Becket’s exile, he wasn't found guilty of the confiscation of John's property. [5]
John Marshal died on 22 July 1165, and he was buried at the Salisbury family foundation of Bradenstoke in Wiltshire. His death was not sudden, as he had time to write a testament. After John, the title of marshal (later Earl Marshal) became honorific and hereditary. [2] [3]
John was the son of Gilbert Giffard. He also had a brother named Walter Giffard, who held a clerical office. [1] [2]
His first wife was Adelina Pipard, the heiress of the baron Walter Pipard. By her, John had two sons: Walter, who predeceased him, and Gilbert, who died shortly after him. John then cast Adelina aside in order to marry Sybil, sister of Patrick of Salisbury. Adelina was subsequently remarried to Stephen de Gay, maternal uncle of Earl Robert of Gloucester. [2] [3]
John's eldest son by Sybil was also called John (II); upon his father's death, he inherited the title of Marshal. When John (II) died, King Richard the Lionheart gave the title to his brother, the well-known William Marshal. As well as John (II) and William, John (I) and Sybil also had Henry, who went on to become Bishop of Exeter, and Ansel, who served as a knight under his brother William and under his cousin Rotrou IV, Count of Perche. They also had two or three daughters: Margaret, wife of Ralph de Somery, Matilda, wife of Robert du Pont de l’Arche, and probably a third daughter who was the wife of William le Gros. [2]
William Marshal, 1st Earl of Pembroke, also called William the Marshal, was an Anglo-Norman soldier and statesman during High Medieval England who served five English kings: Henry II and his son and co-ruler Young Henry, Richard I, John, and finally Henry III.
Theobald of Bec was a Norman archbishop of Canterbury from 1139 to 1161. His exact birth date is unknown. Some time in the late 11th or early 12th century Theobald became a monk at the Abbey of Bec, rising to the position of abbot in 1137. King Stephen of England chose him to be Archbishop of Canterbury in 1138. Canterbury's claim to primacy over the Welsh ecclesiastics was resolved during Theobald's term of office when Pope Eugene III decided in 1148 in Canterbury's favour. Theobald faced challenges to his authority from a subordinate bishop, Henry of Blois, Bishop of Winchester and King Stephen's younger brother, and his relationship with King Stephen was turbulent. On one occasion Stephen forbade him from attending a papal council, but Theobald defied the king, which resulted in the confiscation of his property and temporary exile. Theobald's relations with his cathedral clergy and the monastic houses in his archdiocese were also difficult.
The title Earl of Wiltshire is one of the oldest in the Peerage of England, going back to the 12th century. It is currently held by the Marquess of Winchester, and is used as a courtesy title for the eldest son of the marquess.
Hamelin de Warenne, Earl of Surrey, was an Anglo-Angevin nobleman, being an elder half-brother of the first Plantagenet English monarch King Henry II.
Henry of Blois, often known as Henry of Winchester, was Abbot of Glastonbury Abbey from 1126, and Bishop of Winchester from 1129 to his death.
Wiltshire is a historic county located in the South West England region. Wiltshire is landlocked and is in the east of the region.
Ranulf II, 4th Earl of Chester (1099–1153), was an Anglo-Norman baron who inherited the honour of the palatine county of Chester upon the death of his father Ranulf Meschin, 3rd Earl of Chester. He was descended from the Counts of Bessin in Normandy.
Alexander of Lincoln was a medieval English Bishop of Lincoln, a member of an important administrative and ecclesiastical family. He was the nephew of Roger of Salisbury, a Bishop of Salisbury and Chancellor of England under King Henry I, and he was also related to Nigel, Bishop of Ely. Educated at Laon, Alexander served in his uncle's diocese as an archdeacon in the early 1120s. Unlike his relatives, he held no office in the government before his appointment as Bishop of Lincoln in 1123. Alexander became a frequent visitor to King Henry's court after his appointment to the episcopate, often witnessing royal documents, and he served as a royal justice in Lincolnshire.
Gilbert Foliot was a medieval English monk and prelate, successively Abbot of Gloucester, Bishop of Hereford and Bishop of London. Born to an ecclesiastical family, he became a monk at Cluny Abbey in France at about the age of twenty. After holding two posts as prior in the Cluniac order he was appointed Abbot of Gloucester Abbey in 1139, a promotion influenced by his kinsman Miles of Gloucester. During his tenure as abbot he acquired additional land for the abbey, and may have helped to fabricate some charters—legal deeds attesting property ownership—to gain advantage in a dispute with the Archbishops of York. Although Foliot recognised Stephen as the King of England, he may have also sympathised with the Empress Matilda's claim to the throne. He joined Matilda's supporters after her forces captured Stephen, and continued to write letters in support of Matilda even after Stephen's release.
Patrick of Salisbury, 1st Earl of Salisbury was an Anglo-Norman nobleman, and the uncle of the famous William Marshal.
Marlborough Castle, locally known and recorded in historical documents as The Mound, was an 11th-century royal castle located in the civil parish of Marlborough, a market town in the English county of Wiltshire, on the Old Bath Road, the old main road from London to Bath. The barrow on which the fortification was built, perhaps the "barrow of Maerla", seems to be a prehistoric earthwork which formed the motte of the Norman Marlborough Castle. It survives as a tree-covered mound known as Marlborough Mound, within the site of Marlborough College.
Events from the 1170s in England.
Events from the 1160s in England.
Events from the 1150s in England.
Events from the 1100s in England.
William de Chesney was an Anglo-Norman magnate during the reign of King Stephen of England and King Henry II of England. Chesney was part of a large family; one of his brothers became Bishop of Lincoln and another Abbot of Evesham Abbey. Stephen may have named him Sheriff of Oxfordshire. Besides his administrative offices, Chesney controlled a number of royal castles and served Stephen during some of the king's English military campaigns. Chesney's heir was his niece, Matilda, who married Henry fitzGerold.
Edward of Salisbury was a nobleman and courtier (curialis), probably part Anglo-Saxon, who served as High Sheriff of Wiltshire during the reigns of William I, William II and Henry I.
Robert Fitzhubert was a mercenary.
Josce de Dinan was an Anglo-Norman nobleman who lived during and after the civil war between King Stephen of England and his cousin Matilda over the throne of England. He was a landholder in the Welsh Marches when he was married by Stephen to the widow of Pain fitzJohn, a union that gave Josce control of Ludlow Castle. Control of the castle was contested by other noblemen, and the resulting warfare between the nobles forms the background to a late medieval romance known as Fouke le Fitz Waryn, which is mainly concerned with the actions of Josce's grandson, but also includes some material on Josce's lifetime. Josce eventually lost control of Ludlow and was granted lands in compensation by Matilda and her son, King Henry II of England, who succeeded Stephen in 1154.
The Marshal family was a noble family of Anglo-Norman origins. Their name, Marshal, derives from the Frankish term for “a person who tended horses”. By 1066 the term was used for a position in royal and aristocratic households.
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