IndividualID FirstName MiddleName LastName Gender DateOfBirth DateOfDeath Comments I1 Philip de Moubray M 1233 Sir Philip. Ancestor of the Scottish Mowbrays. Acquired the baronies of Inverkeithing and Dalmeny upon his marriage to Galiena, thus the beginning of the story of the founding family of the Scottish Mowbrays.d. 1233-1240. I2 Mabel de Clare F I3 Nigel de Moubray M 1150 1191 Baron. Attended the coronation of King Richard the Lionhearted. Married Mabel de Clare about 1170.d. on journey to Palestine and buried at sea. I4 Galiena F 1233 d. 1233-1240. I5 UNKNOWN F I6 Waldeve M I7 Roger de Moubray M Sir Roger, kt. Both Roger and his brother were witnesses of a charter of John Avenel to Inchcolm 1236-1249. I8 Nigel de Moubray M Sir Nigel, kt. I9 Christiana Fraser F Christiana was her father's heir. She survived her husband and founded the House of the Red Friars at Houston, Haddingtonshire. The date of the confirmation of the charter by Alexander III being 26 Jan. 1271-1272. I10 UNKNOWN F I11 Bernard Fraser M Sir Bernard Fraser of Fortun and Linton. I12 UNKNOWN F I13 Geoffrey de Moubray M 1300 Sir Galfrid. Sir Galfrid was a prominent figure between 1287 and 1299, and swore fealty to Edward I on 12 July 1201. He was one of the nominees of John Baliol. He later opposed Edward I, was declared a rebel, and had to forfeit his lands of Bolton on 2 July 1299. Geoffrey is recorded in the Index Nominum of the Ragman Roll of 1291 as Master Galfridus de Moubray. d. before 30 June 1300. I14 UNKNOWN F The second daughter of Red John Cumyn. I15 UNKNOWN F I16 Red John Cumyn M Justiciary of Scotland. I17 William de Moubray M I18 John de Moubray M I19 Roger de Moubray M Roger succeeded his father, but his marriage to Margaret de Abernathy ended with a Papal Dispensation of 24 Oct. 1328, because Roger and Margaret were too closely related and King Edward of England wrote a letter to the Pope. Margaret became the wife of John Stewart, Earl of Angus. Roger later plotted with others to overthrow or kill King Robert the Bruce. The plot was discovered. Roger died before sentence was pronounced. He was accused of treason, but the King relented and granted the corpse right of sepulture. Roger's estates were forfeited. I20 Philip de Moubray M Sir Philip de Moubray, kt. Philip received Redcastle, Forfarshire, by his marriage to Evem Lady Redcastle. I21 Eve F Lady Redcastle. I22 John de Moubray M Sir John of Redcastle. I23 UNKNOWN F I24 UNKNOWN F I25 Philippa F With her husband, Philippa carried on the line of Moubrays of Barnbougle and Inverkeithing. I26 Bartholomew de Leon M A foreign night. A favorite of David II. I27 Alice de Gant F I28 Roger de Moubray M 1188 I29 F I30 Robert de Montbray M 1060 Nephew and heir of Bishop Geoffrey. Made Earl of Northumberland in 1080. Later deprived of earldom and imprisoned at Windsor. One of his contemporaries described him: "Powerful, rich, bold, fierce in war, haughty, he despised his equals, and, swollen with vanity, disdained to obey his superiors. He was of great stature, strong, swarthy and hairy. Daring and crafty, stern and grim, he was more given to meditation than speech, and in conversation scarce ever smiled." Hanna, Charles A. The Scotch-Irish. Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Co., 1968 (1902). Robert de Mowbray, a Norman baron, killed Malcolm Canmore, King of Scotland, in 1093 while Malcolm was besieging the castle at Alnwick. Malcolm's second son, Edward, perished with him. The Norman barons defeated King David, the youngest son of Malcolm, in 1138 in the Battle of the Standard. The prominent barons were William of Albemarle, Walter of Ghent, De Moubrays, De Percys, De Coucys, Nevilles, and Ferrers. William the Lion endowed the younger sons od the Norman barons with Scottish lands, thus the migration of the great Norman houses to Scotland, among them the de Moubrays. As recorded by Sir Thomas Gray in his Chronicle written in the 14th century: "Il enprist od ly en Escoce plusours dez fitzpusnes dez seygnours Dengleterre qi ly estoient beinuoillauntz, et lour dona lez terres des autres qy ly estoient rebelis. Si estoint dez Baillolfs, de Bruys, de Soulis, et de Moubray, et les Saynclers; lez Hayes, les Giffardis, les Ramseys, et Laundels: les Biseys, les Berkleys, les Walenges, lez Boysis, .ez Mountgomeris, lez Vaus, lez Colevyles, lez Frysers, lez Grames, lez Gourlays, et plusours autres?" Burton, History of Scotland, vol. ii., p. 14. There were Moubrays in Linlithgowshire and Fifeshire before 1200. The Scotch Mowbrays settled early at Barnbougle and on the opposite Fife coast. The name is one of many that derived from places in England and Normandy rather than places in Scotland. I31 F I32 Geoffrey de Montbray M 1030 1093 Bishop of Coutances. The town of Coutances has a street named "Rue Geoffroi de Montbray." Geoffrey fought with William the Conqueror's army at Hastings, where King Harold of England was killed. For his services to William, Geoffrey was granted 280 English manors. "Geoffrey/Geoffroi, Eveque de Coutances was from Montbrai (Montrai) in the canton of Percy, arrondissement of Saint-Lo. Geoffrey de Montbray, Bishop of Coutances, was at the battle of Senlac. Dugdale remarks, "This Geoffroi being of noble Norman extraction and more skillful in arms than divinity, knowing better to train up soldiers than to instruct clergy, did good service at the battle of Hastings," for which he received vast possessions in Somerset and other counties, amounting to 280 manors, and dedicated his immense wealth to the building of the cathedral of Coutances. In 1069 he marched against the insurgents of Dorset and Somerset and raised the siege of Montacute. Two years later he represented the king in a suit against Bishop Odo and Archbishop Lanfranc, and in 1074, with Bishop Odo, suppressed the rebellion of the Earls of Hereford and Norfolk, at which time he was appointed Earl of Northumberland but soon relinquished the earldom to his nephew, Robert, who became his heir. He assisted at the coronation of the Conqueror and died in 1093/94." b. Montbray, Normandy, France. I33 F I34 Roger de Montbray M Roger, Sire de Montbray, owned the village of Montbray in Normandy. I35 Robert de Moubray M I36 William de Moubray M 1222 One of the executors of the Magna Carta. "As short as a dwarf."d. at Axholme, Lincolnshire. I37 Robert de Moubray M I38 Roger de Moubray M I39 F I40 Nigel de Moubray M 1200 1230 I41 Roger de Moubray M 1266 I42 Matilda de Beauchamp F Daughter of the baron of Bedford. I43 Roger 1st Lord Mowbray M 1257 1297 Roger became the premier baron of England in 1294, by writ from the King. Married Rose de Clare in 1270.d. Ghent. Interred Fountains Abbey, Yorkshire, where there is an effigy in stone. I44 Rose de Clare F Daughter of the Earl of Gloucester. I45 John 2nd Lord Mowbray M 1286 1322 Knighted by Edward I.b. Sept. 1286. d. drawn and hanged in York for betraying Edward II. His son John and widow Alina were imprisoned in the Tower of London. I46 Alina F I47 John 3rd Lord Mowbray M 1310 4-Oct-1361 b. c. 1310. d. of the plague at York. Buried in the Franciscan church at Bedford. I48 Joan Plantagenet F Daughter of the Earl of Lancaster. I49 John 4th Lord Mowbray M 1328 1368 Married 1349d. at the hands of the Turks near Constantinople. I50 Elizabeth Segrave F 25-Oct-1338 1368 Only child and heiress of the 6th Lord Segrave. I51 John 5th Lord Mowbray M 1363 10-Feb-1383 Created Earl of Nottingham on the day of Richard II's coronation.d. at early age without issue. I52 Thomas 6th Lord Mowbray M 22-Mar-1366 22-Sep-1399 The first Duke of Norfolk. Of blood royal through his mother, a descendant of Thomas of Brotherton, Earl of Norfolk (son of Edward I). Married Elizabeth Fitzalan in 1385 (another says about 1384) in Castle Arundel, Sussex. Thomas was named because of his mother's reverence for St. Thomas a' Becket. Became Earl of Nottingham, Feb. 1383, by King Richard. Became Earl Marshal of England.b. 1365/1366. d. of the plague and buried in Venice. I53 Elizabeth F Daughter of Roger le Strange of Blackmore. Died soon after marriage. I54 Elizabeth Fitzalan F 8-Jul-1425 Daughter of Richard, Earl of Arundel. I55 John Mowbray M I56 Thomas Mowbray M 1386 8-Jun-1405 Earl Marshal. Third Earl of Nottingham. The office of Marshal of England was soon granted to the Earl of Westmoreland. Married Constance Holland toward the end of 1400 (aged 14).Beheaded for denouncing the King (Henry), 2 miles south of York, on the feast of St. William of York. Buried in the Grey Friars Church, York. I57 Isabel Mowbray F Married Sir James Berkley. I58 Margaret Mowbray F Married Sir Robert Howard, created Duke of Norfolk after the extinction of the Mowbray line in the 15th century. I59 Constance Holland F Constance's father was the Duke of Exeter, who was beheaded in Jan. 1400. She was the king's niece. I60 Margaret Plantagenet F I61 John Segrave M 1315 20-Mar-1352 Married about 1338.d. 1352/1353. FamilyID MarriageDate ParentIDs ChildrenIDs Comments F1 I3,I2 I36,I1,I37,I38 F2 I1,I4 I7,I8 F3 I6,I5 I4 F4 I7,I9 F5 I11,I10 I9 F6 I8,I12 I13 F7 I13,I14 I17,I18,I19,I20 F8 I16,I15 I14 F9 I20,I21 I22,I23,I24,I25 F10 I26,I25 F11 I28,I27 I3,I35 F12 I30,I29 I28 F13 I32,I31 I30 F14 I34,I33 I32 F15 I36,I39 I40,I41 F16 I41,I42 I43 F17 I43,I44 I45 F18 I45,I46 I47 F19 I47,I48 I49 F20 I49,I50 I51,I52 F21 I52,I53 F22 I52,I54 I56,I55,I58,I57 F23 I56,I59 F24 I61,I60 I50