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Thurcytel de Neufmarché
Richard Fitz Gilbert Seigneur of Hugleville and Auffay in Normandy
Geoffrey de Neufmarché
Ada de Hugleville
Bernard de Neufmarché Lord of Brecon & Brecknock
(Abt 1050-1093)

 

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Spouses/Children:
Nesta verch Osborn

Bernard de Neufmarché Lord of Brecon & Brecknock

  • Born: Abt 1050, Neufmarché, Seine-Inferiere, Normandy
  • Marriage: Nesta verch Osborn 160
  • Died: 1093, Neufmarché, Seine-Inferiere, Normandy about age 43 160

bullet  General Notes:


~Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America before 1700, 8th Edition, 177:3, Bernard de Neurfmarché was the husband of Nesta of Wales, daughter of Nesta and Osbern Fitz Richard. Bernard was Lord of Brecon, son of Geoffrey (son of Thurcytel) by Ada, daughter of Richard Fitz Gilbert, seigneur of Hugleville and Aufflay in Normandy, who seen alive in 1025-1053. Richard Fitz Gilbert was the son of Gilbert de Valerie, seen alive in 1011, and was the advocate of St. Valerie, preotector of the monsatery of Fecamp. Gibert Valerie was said to be married to Papia, the illegal daughter of Richard I, Duke of Normandy. 160

bullet  Information about this person:

• Background Information. 1011
Bernard de Neufmarché
(de Novo-mercatu), often called in English 'of Newmarch' was the son of Geoffrey, son of Thurcytel, lord of Neufmarché by the forest of Lions, and of Ada, daughter of Richard Hugleville, famous for his faithfulness to his duke, William, in the war of Arques, and a grandson of Richard the Good by his daughter Papia. Bernard came over to England with the Conqueror, and his name appears as a witness to two charters granted by William to his abbey of Battle. He married the daughter of Osbern, son of Richard Fitz Scrob, the Norman lord who built his castle in Herefordshire before the Conquest. This marriage led him to settle in Herefordshire. During the general rebellion of the Norman lords against William Rufus in 1088, he joined with Roger de Lacy, and Ralph de Mortemer, with the men of Earl Roger of Shrewsbury, and the confederate lords at the head of the forces of Herefordshire and Shropshire, and with a large number of Welsh allies harried Worcestershire and threatened to burn the city of Worcester, to plunder the minster and take the king's castle. Encouraged, however, by the exhortations of their bishop, Wulfstan, the men of Worcester attacked and routed the rebel army. Later in the reign Bernard invaded and settled in Brecheiniog, building his castle on the hill of Aberhonwy on the site where now stand the ruins of Brecknock Castle. In 1093 Rhys ap Tewdwr, king of Deheubarth, who attacked the intruders, was slain, and Bernard conquered and occupied the three 'cantrevs' of Brecheiniog.

He married, probably as his second wife, Nest, the daughter of another Nest, daughter of Gruffydd ap Llewelyn and his English wife Ældgyth, though it is possible that the elder Nest was the wife of Osbern, and that her daughter was the only wife of Bernard. The English called her Anneis, and hence her name sometimes appears as Agnes. In the reign of Henry I, Bernard founded and liberally endowed the priory of St. John at Brecknock, without the walls of the castle, granting to it lands and tithes in Herefordshire, Staffordshire, and Somerset, as well as in Wales. He made his new foundation subordinate to Battle Abbey. His wife and his principal tenants joined him in this work. The date of his death is not known. He was a benefactor to St. Peter's, Gloucester, and Leland saw a stone in the chapter house of that abbey purporting to mark his tomb. The monks of Brecknock, however, claimed to have the body of their founder. In spite of the pious benefaction made by Nest to her husband's priory, her wickedness caused her son Mahel the loss of his father's estates. Mahel caught her lover coming from her, and beat and mutilated him. In revenge Nest went to King Henry and swore that her son was not the son of her husband Bernard. The king, we are told, allowed himself to be swayed by his wishes rather than his judgment. He made Nest's daughter, Sibyl, whom she declared to be her husband's child, the heiress of all her father's wealth, and gave her in marriage to Miles Fitz Walter, constable of Chester, afterwards made earl of Hereford by the Empress Matilda.
[Sources Cited by Author: Giraldus Cambrensis, Itin. Kambriæ, i. 12; Orderic, 606; Florence, 1088; Anglo-Sax. Chron. 1088; Brut y Tywysogion, 1091; Chron de Bello, 34, 35; Monasticon, i. 545, iii, 264, 245; Freeman's Norman Conquest, iii. 132, v. 109, and William Rufus, i. 34, ii. 89-91

~Rev. William Hunt, The Dictionary of National Biography, Vol. II, 1908, p. 376


Bernard married Nesta verch Osborn, daughter of Osbern Fitz Richard and Nesta verch Gruffydd of North Wales.160 (Nesta verch Osborn was born about 1075 in Herefordshire, England.)


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