Biography of William "Pincerna aka Butler" D'Aubigny 1064-1139

Paternal Family Tree: Daubigny

1106 Battle of Tinchebray

1120 Sinking of The White Ship

In or before 1064 [his father] Roger "Pincerna aka Butler" D'Aubigny 2nd Baron Thirsk (age 28) and [his mother] Amice or Alice de Grandesmil were married.

Around 1064 William "Pincerna aka Butler" D'Aubigny was born to Roger "Pincerna aka Butler" D'Aubigny 2nd Baron Thirsk (age 28) and Amice or Alice de Grandesmil.

In 1068 [his grandfather] William D'Aubigny 1st Baron Thirsk (age 58) died at Plessis. His son [his father] Roger "Pincerna aka Butler" D'Aubigny 2nd Baron Thirsk (age 32) succeeded 2nd Baron Thirsk.

In 1104 [his father] Roger "Pincerna aka Butler" D'Aubigny 2nd Baron Thirsk (age 68) died. His son [his brother] Nigel D'Aubigny 3rd Baron Thirsk (age 34) succeeded 3rd Baron Thirsk.

Battle of Tinchebray

On 28 Sep 1106 King Henry I "Beauclerc" England (age 38) defeated his older brother Robert Curthose III Duke Normandy (age 55) at the Battle of Tinchebray at Tinchebray, Orne.

William Warenne 2nd Earl Surrey and Robert Beaumont 1st Earl of Leicester Count Meulan (age 66). Elias La Flèche De Baugency I Count Maine commanded the reserve. The following fought for Henry:

William "Brito aka Breton" D'Aubigny (age 20).

Alan Canhiart IV Duke Brittany (age 43).

Raoul Tosny (age 26).

William "Pincerna aka Butler" D'Aubigny (age 42).

Robert Grandesmil (age 28), and.

William Normandy I Count Évreux.

Robert Curthose III Duke Normandy (age 55) was captured and spent the next twenty-eight years in prison; never released.

William Mortain Count Mortain 2nd Earl Cornwall (age 22) was also captured. He spent the next thirty or more years in prison before becoming a monk. Earl Cornwall forfeit.

Edgar Ætheling II King England (age 55) was captured and subsequently released; Henry had married to Edgar's niece Edith aka Matilda Dunkeld Queen Consort England (age 26) in 1100.

Robert II Belleme 2nd Count Ponthieu 3rd Earl of Shrewsbury (age 50) escaped.

Robert Stuteville was captured.

In 1107 William "Pincerna aka Butler" D'Aubigny (age 43) founded Wymondham Abbey, Norfolk [Map].

Wymondham Abbey, Norfolk [Map] was a Benedictine Abbey founded in 1107 by William "Pincerna aka Butler" D'Aubigny (age 43).

Before 1109 William "Pincerna aka Butler" D'Aubigny (age 45) and Maud Bigod (age 23) were married. The difference in their ages was 21 years.

Around 1109 [his son] William D'Aubigny 1st Earl Lincoln 1st Earl Arundel was born to William "Pincerna aka Butler" D'Aubigny (age 45).

Sinking of The White Ship

On 25 Nov 1120 the White Ship left Barfleur, Basse Normandie, with a party of young Normans. King Henry I "Beauclerc" England (age 52) had left earlier on another ship. A mile out the White Ship foundered on a submerged rock. William Adelin Normandy Duke Normandy (age 17), his half-siblings Richard Fitzroy (age 19) and Matilda Fitzroy Countess Perche, [his brother-in-law] William Bigod (age 27), Lucia Mahaut Blois Countess Chester, brothers Geoffrey Aigle and Engenulf Aigle, half-brothers Richard Avranches 2nd Earl Chester (age 26) and Ottiwel Avranches, brothers Ivo Grandesmil and William Grandesmil and Geoffrey Ridel were all drowned.

Before 1129 [his wife] Maud Bigod (age 44) died. She was buried before the High Altar at Wymondham Abbey, Norfolk [Map].

In or before 1130 William "Brito aka Breton" D'Aubigny (age 44) and [his former sister-in-law] Cecily Bigod (age 39) were married.

After 1134 [his former sister-in-law] Cecily Bigod (age 44) died.

In 1138 [his son] William D'Aubigny 1st Earl Lincoln 1st Earl Arundel (age 29) and [his daughter-in-law] Adeliza of Louvain Queen Consort England (age 35) were married. She the daughter of Godfrey Reginar I Count Louvain (age 78) and Ida Chiny Countess Louvain.

In 1139 William "Pincerna aka Butler" D'Aubigny (age 75) died at Buckenham Wayland, Norfolk. He was buried at Wymondham Abbey, Norfolk [Map].

A History of the County of Leicestershire: Volume 5 Gartree Hundred: Horninghold. Horninghold [Map] lies seven miles north-east of Market Harborough [Map] and four miles south-west of Uppingham [Map]. The parish, which is 1,217 a. in area, extends over the Middle Lias clays which underlie the hills on the borders of Rutland. The soil is chiefly clay and largely devoted to pasture. The road from Hallaton to Uppingham [Map], on which the village stands, crosses the parish from west to east; it is joined at the east end of the village by a road from Great Easton. There are two field tracks, one to Blaston, and one which crosses the road from Hallaton to Allexton and continues to Keythorpe.

Before the Conquest Horninghold [Map] was one of a group of estates apparently held by four thegns, Osulf, Osmund, Roulf, and Levrick. In 1086 the vill was said to be held by Robert de Todeni, lord of Belvoir, though it may have been given before this date to Robert's priory of Belvoir, which had been founded in 1076. At the beginning of the 12th century it was farmed by William D'Aubigny. Horninghold formed part of the original endowment of the priory and remained in its possession until the Dissolution. It was confirmed to the priory at various times during the Middle Ages.

Note A. the Dissolution the manor [Map] passed to the Crown, and in 1545 Henry VIII licensed Edward Elrington and Humphrey Metcalfe, to whom he had previously sold it, to alienate the manor and the rest of the former priory's property in the parish to John Beaumont and Henry Alycock. There was a lease of the manor outstanding for 41 years from 1531 which had been made by Belvoir Priory to Anthony Bewell, the priory's bailiff. On Beaumont's forfeiture the manor once more passed to the Crown, and in 1553 it was purchased for £566 by Edward Griffin, the Attorney-General, whose family owned the nearby manor of Gumley. In 1590 William Turpin of Knaptoft, whose father had owned land in Horninghold, purchased the manor from Edward Griffin's heir. Turpin was knighted in 1603 and died in 1617; his widow held the manor until her death about the end of 1633, and was succeeded by her daughter Elizabeth, who married Sir John Pretyman of Loddington (age 64).

The estate was settled upon their eldest son John and his wife Margaret on their marriage in 1649. John Pretyman died in 1658 leaving his widow as owner of the estate, which she brought to her second husband Sir John Heath, the second son of Sir Robert Heath of Brasted Place (Kent) and M.P. for Clitheroe (Lancs.) from 1661 to 1679. She died in 1676 and the available evidence suggests that Horninghold manor did not descend to her daughter and heir. It appears to have been sold by Heath to Sir Edward Hungerford (age 43), who was in possession by 1676 and presented to the living. Thereafter the manorial descent is lost. Sir Edward Hungerford died in 1711, but it is by no means certain that he could or would have retained the manor of Horninghold for more than a few years, for his extravagance was notorious and he is said to have disposed of more than thirty manors during his lifetime.

Royal Descendants of William "Pincerna aka Butler" D'Aubigny 1064-1139

King Henry V of England x 1

Philippa Lancaster Queen Consort Denmark x 1

Joan Beaufort Queen Consort Scotland x 1

King Edward IV of England x 2

King Richard III of England x 2

Anne Neville Queen Consort England x 3

King Henry VII of England and Ireland x 1

Queen Anne Boleyn of England x 6

Anne Jagiellon Holy Roman Empress x 1

Queen Jane Seymour x 4

Catherine Parr Queen Consort England x 6

Queen Catherine Howard of England x 5

Jane "Nine Days Queen" Grey I Queen England and Ireland x 9

President George Washington x 2

Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom x 727

Queen Consort Camilla Shand x 259

Diana Spencer Princess Wales x 2259

Catherine Middleton Princess of Wales x 8

Ancestors of William "Pincerna aka Butler" D'Aubigny 1064-1139

Father: Roger "Pincerna aka Butler" D'Aubigny 2nd Baron Thirsk

Great x 1 Grandfather: Osulf "fil France" Plessis

GrandMother: Adeliza Plessis

William "Pincerna aka Butler" D'Aubigny

Mother: Amice or Alice de Grandesmil