Global Information Lookup Global Information

Robert of Thurnham information


Robert of Thurnham (sometimes Thornham, Tornham, or Turnham) (died 1211) was an English soldier and administrator. The namesake of his landowner father, he was the younger brother of Stephen of Thurnham. Robert made his reputation in connection with the conquest of Cyprus in 1191 during the Third Crusade. On order of King Richard I, he led half the fleet in that battle. Subsequently, he was responsible for controlling the island when the Crusaders moved on, first jointly with Richard de Camville and then independently, when he defeated a group of Cypriot rebels.[1] After he left Cyprus, Robert became more closely identified with Richard I. As the king's familiaris, he carried Richard's equipment from the Holy Land to England. When Richard I was captured in 1192 in Vienna, among the terms of his release was the presentation of men to stand as "pledges" that the ransom would be paid.[2] Robert was among these hostages,[3] though evidently not for long, as he was back by the king's side in 1194 at Poitiers. Appointed Seneschal of Anjou,[4] he served in France with Richard I, primarily in Anjou and Normandy, throughout the rest of Richard's reign. At around the same time, he was also appointed High Sheriff of Surrey, but he did not return to England until after Richard's death. In 1196, he led troops at Richard's behest into Brittany on an unsuccessful attempt to capture the child Duke of Brittany Arthur, whose mother Constance was resistant to Richard's control.[5] In 1197, King Richard arranged for Robert to marry Isabella Fossard, daughter and heiress of the powerful Yorkshire baron William Fossard. The Fossard inheritance included the castle, honor, and lordship of Mulgrave with 34.5 attached knight's fees.

Robert was not with Richard at the siege of Château de Chalus-Chabrol in 1199, where Richard died, and after Richard's death became an important source of information about the activities of the king.[6] After Richard's death, Robert ceremonially transferred Chinon castle to the new king, Richard's brother John.[7] He traveled with John in Normandy and England for several years before he was appointed the Seneschal of Poitou and of Gascony in 1201. He was the first Englishman ever appointed to this function.[8] For the next several years he was troubled by conflict with the French and by rebellious barons in Poitou, which caused him to limit his efforts to his northern territories. In 1203, he made an effort to regain the city of Angers from the French, but though he partially destroyed the city he was unsuccessful and was captured. Ransomed in 1205, he continued to serve John, travelling with him during the Anjou campaign of 1206. From 1205 to 1207 he focused on his service as High Sheriff of Surrey before returning in 1207 to France, but not as Seneschal of Poitou, since Savary de Mauléon is still holding the office.[8] He died on 26 April 1211 with the Bishop of Winchester at his deathbed.

Robert's heir was his daughter Isabella, who married Peter de Maulay in 1214.[9]

  1. ^ Gillingham, 152.
  2. ^ McLynn, Frank (2008). Richard and John: Kings at War. Da Capo Press. p. 235. ISBN 978-0-306-81738-0.
  3. ^ Gillingham, 248.
  4. ^ Sources do not agree on the date of this appointment. The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, cited below, estimates this appointment ca. 1194. The Oxford Illustrated History of Medieval England states the appointment had been made by Henry II, who died in 1189, a view echoed by Sidney Painter in The Reign of King John. Saul, Nigel (15 May 1991). The Oxford Illustrated History of Medieval England. Oxford University Press. p. 10. ISBN 0-19-820502-3.; Painter, Saul (1979). The Reign of King John. Ayer Publishing. p. 8. ISBN 0-405-10575-4..
  5. ^ Everard, Judith (2000). Brittany and the Angevins: Province and Empire, 1158-1203. Cambridge University Press. p. 162. ISBN 0-521-66071-8.
  6. ^ Gillingham, 82, 329.
  7. ^ Gillingham, 335.
  8. ^ a b Tranchant, Marie (10 December 2020). "Une stratégie au service de la réussite: Robert de Thurnham, un officier anglais en Aquitaine (1189-1211)". Annales de Bretagne et des pays de l'Ouest (127): 35–51. doi:10.4000/abpo.6461. ISSN 0399-0826.
  9. ^ Vincent "Maulay, Peter (I) de" Oxford Dictionary of National Biography

and 25 Related for: Robert of Thurnham information

Request time (Page generated in 0.8494 seconds.)

Robert of Thurnham

Last Update:

Robert of Thurnham (sometimes Thornham, Tornham, or Turnham) (died 1211) was an English soldier and administrator. The namesake of his landowner father...

Word Count : 831

Thurnham Hall

Last Update:

Thurnham Hall is a Grade I listed 17th-century country house in the village of Thurnham, Lancashire, England some 10 km (6 miles) south of Lancaster. The...

Word Count : 457

Stephen Thurnham

Last Update:

Stephen of Thurnham (died 6 March 1214) was a British justice and administrator. He was the son of Robert of Thurnham, a Kentish landowner, and the older...

Word Count : 340

Peter Thurnham

Last Update:

Peter Giles Thurnham (21 August 1938 – 10 May 2008) was a British politician. He was Member of Parliament for Bolton North East from 1983 to 1997, originally...

Word Count : 603

Combwell Priory

Last Update:

southeast of Tunbridge Wells in Kent, England. This is a Grade II listed building. It was founded as a Premonstratensian abbey by Robert de Thurnham in the...

Word Count : 272

Bayham Old Abbey

Last Update:

founded c. 1208 by the merger of two monasteries, Otham (Sussex) and Brockley (Kent), under the authority of Robert of Thurnham. The former abbey had been...

Word Count : 899

Thurnham Castle

Last Update:

flint-built castle constructed by Robert of Thurnham in the reign of Henry II on a hill on the edge of the North Downs. One side of the bailey wall still stands...

Word Count : 167

Bearsted

Last Update:

named Bearsted and Thurnham. Footpaths: both the ancient Pilgrims' Way and the modern North Downs Way run along the North Downs north of Bearsted. Bearsted...

Word Count : 1591

Robert Roper

Last Update:

naves of the churches of St Michael, Kirkham, and St John the Baptist, Broughton, and also added a façade to Thurnham Hall. List of works by Robert Roper...

Word Count : 221

Milgate House

Last Update:

previously Milgate Park, is an English country house in Thurnham near Maidstone, Kent. The oldest parts of the house were constructed in the mid to late 16th...

Word Count : 762

Kilndown

Last Update:

in 1588. The Combwell Estate was formed during the reign of King Henry II by Robert de Thurnham, who founded a Premonstratensian Abbey, which became an...

Word Count : 211

List of works by Robert Roper

Last Update:

 668–669. Historic England, "Thurnham Hall (1317674)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 21 June 2012 Welcome, Thurnham Hall, retrieved 21 June...

Word Count : 240

Cockersand Abbey chapter house

Last Update:

by the Daltons of Thurnham Hall during the 18th and 19th centuries. The land was acquired by the Daltons shortly after 1556, when Robert Dalton married...

Word Count : 202

2023 Maidstone Borough Council election

Last Update:

Conservatives lost their majority due to the resignation of Robert Eves, leaving them with 27 out of the 54 occupied seats. The council stayed under no overall...

Word Count : 238

Cockersand Abbey

Last Update:

by the Daltons of Thurnham Hall during the 18th and 19th centuries. The land was acquired by the Daltons shortly after 1556, when Robert Dalton married...

Word Count : 907

List of MPs elected in the 1992 United Kingdom general election

Last Update:

Nicholson (Devon West and Torridge) defects from Con to Lib Dem. 1996 Peter Thurnham (Bolton North East) defects from Con to Lib Dem, with eight months as an...

Word Count : 362

James Fox

Last Update:

from 2007 to 2016. Robert Morley, Robert Morley: a reluctant autobiography (1967), p. 214 "A Family Of Foxes: Edward, James, Robert, Laurence, Emilia,...

Word Count : 1338

List of Harvard University politicians

Last Update:

original on July 26, 2011. Department Of State. The Office of Electronic Information, Bureau of Public Affairs. "1909: Robert Bacon". 2001-2009.state.gov. Retrieved...

Word Count : 11030

Golden rice

Last Update:

Effective Source of Vitamin A" (PDF). American Society of Nutrition. Grune, T.; Lietz, G.; Palou, A.; Ross, A. C.; Stahl, W.; Tang, G.; Thurnham, D.; Yin, S...

Word Count : 4125

West Kennet Long Barrow

Last Update:

West Kennet, Thurnham used patients from a mental asylum as labourers, presenting it as a form of occupational therapy for them. Thurnham excavated the...

Word Count : 4290

Tory Reform Group

Last Update:

Peter Thurnham, Sir Anthony Meyer, Paul Howell MEP Labour Party: Shaun Woodward, Alan Howarth, Peter Temple-Morris, Alan Amos, Anthony Nelson, Robert V....

Word Count : 1149

1983 United Kingdom general election

Last Update:

leadership of Margaret Thatcher the most decisive election victory since that of the Labour Party in 1945, with a majority of 144 seats and the first of two...

Word Count : 2393

River Len

Last Update:

mill was presented to the Priory of Leeds by Robert de Crevecoeur the Younger. The mill was also mentioned in the will of Daniel de Crevequer, who died in...

Word Count : 5944

Results of the 1997 United Kingdom general election by constituency

Last Update:

This is the breakdown of the results of the 1997 United Kingdom general election by constituency. The results are listed by nation, region and/or county...

Word Count : 12318

Borough of Maidstone

Last Update:

Sutton Valence Teston Thurnham Tovil Ulcombe West Farleigh Wichling (1) Wormshill (1) Yalding The River Medway was the earliest form of transport through...

Word Count : 1653

PDF Search Engine © AllGlobal.net