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Fulbert ? (of Falaise) b. 970 d. 1016

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Line 2: Line 2:
<person> <person>
<sex>m</sex> <sex>m</sex>
- <clan>[[Clan:Tonniere]]</clan>+ <fname>?
- <fname>Tonnerre+of Falaise</fname>
-Tonnière+
-Tonnerre</fname>+
<name>Fulbert <name>Fulbert
Fulberht Fulberht
Fuhlbert</name> Fuhlbert</name>
<children>117422</children> <children>117422</children>
- <ext>Although traditionally given to be a common tradesman it is my belief that Fuhlburt was actually the son of a Jutish (Lowland) Lord and a (Sahlien) Frankish woman. His name Tanner may have been a historical misrepresentation of the term &quot;danner&quot; a phrase used by the Normans to deride their fellow normans who were not of Norwegian/Frankish descent, whose descendants has a tendency to be friends or foes of the Norman Duchy depending on the weather. + <wiki_page>[[wikipedia:Fulbert_of_Falaise]]</wiki_page>
- +
-In the tradition of most Saxons in his day, Fuhlburt was likely an Aryan Christian which could explain the lack of church record with regard to his marriages and the baptisms of any children. +
- +
-The shame of William I low birth would have had more to do with the fact that he was concieved out of wedlock rather than the shame of his mother's &quot;low birth&quot;. My records indicate that Arlette his mother was the daughter of a pictish noble and a Danish/Norman warlord and was in fact the half sister of Macbeth.</ext>+
<language>en</language> <language>en</language>
<id>117423</id> <id>117423</id>
Line 22: Line 16:
<ev_type>BIRT</ev_type> <ev_type>BIRT</ev_type>
<year>970</year> <year>970</year>
- <place>[[Place:Falais]], [[Place:France]]</place>+ <place>[[Place:Falaise (Calvados)]], [[Place:France]]</place>
 +</events>
 +<events>
 + <ev_id>476540</ev_id>
 + <ev_type>EVEN</ev_type>
 + <ev_info>Cubicularii Ducis</ev_info>
</events> </events>
<events> <events>
<ev_id>191723</ev_id> <ev_id>191723</ev_id>
<ev_type>DEAT</ev_type> <ev_type>DEAT</ev_type>
- <year>1017</year>+ <year>1016</year>
<place>[[Place:Normandy]], [[Place:France]]</place> <place>[[Place:Normandy]], [[Place:France]]</place>
</events> </events>
<sources> <sources>
<desc>History of the Anglo-Saxons - Francis Palgrave</desc> <desc>History of the Anglo-Saxons - Francis Palgrave</desc>
- <note>Indicates the Fulhburht de Falaise was the King's Chamberlain.</note>+ <note>Although traditionally presented to be a common &quot;tanner&quot;, Palgrave indicates instead that Fuhlburt served as the Duke's Chamberlain at the astle of Falaise. The story Duke William's bastardy by the daughter of a common &quot;Tanner&quot; was in actuality incorrect.</note>
 +</sources>
 +<sources>
 + <desc>Macbeth Research Bibliography</desc>
 + <note>#The Book of Deer
 +#The Chronicon Scotorum
 +#The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle
 +#The Chronicle of the Kings of Alba [Duan Albanach]
 +#The Prophecy of Berchan
 +#The Domesday Registry
 +#Tranter, Nigel MacBeth the King Hodder &amp; Stoughton, 1978.
 +*Barrow, G.W.S., Kingship and Unity: Scotland 1000–1306. Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh, (corrected ed.) 1989.
 +*Byrne, Francis John, Irish Kings and High-Kings. Batsford, London, 1973.
 +*Duncan, A.A.M., The Kingship of the Scots 842–1292: Succession and Independence. Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh, 2002.
 +*Hudson, Benjamin T., The Prophecy of Berchán: Irish and Scottish High-Kings of the Early Middle Ages. Greenwood, London, 1996.
 +*McDonald, R. Andrew, Outlaws of medieval Scotland: Challenges to the Canmore kings, 1058–1266. Tuckwell, East Linton, 2003.
 +*Sellar, W.D.H., &quot;Moray: to 1130&quot; in Michael Lynch (ed.), The Oxford Companion to Scottish History. Oxford UP, Oxford, 2001.</note>
 +</sources>
 +<sources>
 + <desc>Orderic Vitalis. Gesta Normannorum Ducum</desc>
 + <note>Origin of the nickname Tanner. Fuhlbert may have been the butt of a long running joke involving a play on word with this surname &quot;Tonnerre&quot; being rendered &quot;Tanner&quot; by the tongue of the Norman nobles. According to Orderic Vitalis, Fulbert served as Duke's chamberlain (cubicularii ducis) whose duties included that of the pollinctore (mortician).</note>
</sources> </sources>
<version>0.2</version> <version>0.2</version>
</record> </record>

Current revision

Lineage ?
Sex Male
Full name (at birth) Fulbert ?
Other last names of Falaise
Other given names Fulberht, Fuhlbert
Wiki-page wikipedia:Fulbert_of_Falaise
[1][2][3]

Events

970 birth: Falaise (Calvados), France

other: Cubicularii Ducis

marriage: Doda (Duxia) ? [?] b. about 980

1003 child birth: Falaise (Calvados), Herleve (Arletta) ? (of Falaise) [?] b. 1003 d. 1050

1016 death: Normandy, France

[edit] Sources

  1. History of the Anglo-Saxons - Francis Palgrave - Although traditionally presented to be a common "tanner", Palgrave indicates instead that Fuhlburt served as the Duke's Chamberlain at the astle of Falaise. The story Duke William's bastardy by the daughter of a common "Tanner" was in actuality incorrect.
  2. Macbeth Research Bibliography - #The Book of Deer
    1. The Chronicon Scotorum
    2. The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle
    3. The Chronicle of the Kings of Alba [Duan Albanach]
    4. The Prophecy of Berchan
    5. The Domesday Registry
    6. Tranter, Nigel MacBeth the King Hodder & Stoughton, 1978.
    • Barrow, G.W.S., Kingship and Unity: Scotland 1000–1306. Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh, (corrected ed.) 1989.
    • Byrne, Francis John, Irish Kings and High-Kings. Batsford, London, 1973.
    • Duncan, A.A.M., The Kingship of the Scots 842–1292: Succession and Independence. Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh, 2002.
    • Hudson, Benjamin T., The Prophecy of Berchán: Irish and Scottish High-Kings of the Early Middle Ages. Greenwood, London, 1996.
    • McDonald, R. Andrew, Outlaws of medieval Scotland: Challenges to the Canmore kings, 1058–1266. Tuckwell, East Linton, 2003.
    • Sellar, W.D.H., "Moray: to 1130" in Michael Lynch (ed.), The Oxford Companion to Scottish History. Oxford UP, Oxford, 2001.
  3. Orderic Vitalis. Gesta Normannorum Ducum - Origin of the nickname Tanner. Fuhlbert may have been the butt of a long running joke involving a play on word with this surname "Tonnerre" being rendered "Tanner" by the tongue of the Norman nobles. According to Orderic Vitalis, Fulbert served as Duke's chamberlain (cubicularii ducis) whose duties included that of the pollinctore (mortician).

From grandparents to grandchildren

 
== 1 ==
Doda (Duxia) ?
birth: about 980, Falaise (Calvados), France
marriage: w Fulbert ? (of Falaise)
Fulbert ? (of Falaise)
birth: 970, Falaise (Calvados), France
other: Cubicularii Ducis
marriage: Doda (Duxia) ?
death: 1016, Normandy, France
== 1 ==
Children
Herluin de Conteville
birth: estimated 1005, Conteville (Eure), France
title: Vicomte de Conteville
marriage: Herleve (Arletta) ? (of Falaise)
death: about 1066
burial: Fatouville-Grestain, Abbaye de Grestain
Robert I FitzRichard (Evereaux)
birth: between 1002 and 1010, Normandy, France
engagement: w Estrid Sweynsdotter (Knytling)
title: from 6 August 1027 - 22 June 1035, Duke of Normandy
death: 22 July 1035, İznik, Bithynia, Anatolia, (Nicaea)
burial: 1088, reburied in Italy
Herleve (Arletta) ? (of Falaise)
birth: 1003, Falaise (Calvados)
marriage: Herluin de Conteville
death: 1050
burial: 1050, Fatouville-Grestain, Grestain Abbey
Children
Grandchildren
Adelaide (Adelis) of Normandy
birth: about 1027, Normandy, France
marriage: w Enguerrand de Ponthieu (Picard)
marriage: w Lambert van Boulogne
title: from 1053 - 1080, comtesse d'Aumale
death: about 1083, Aumale, France
Guillaume Guerlenc
birth: 1031
death: 8 December 1090
Matilda of Flanders (de Flandres)
birth: 1031, Bruges (Belgium), Flanders (Belgium)
marriage: William I FitzRobert (The Conqueror) , Eu (Seine-Maritime), Normandy, France
title: 1050, Caen, Normandy, France, St. Stephen's
title: 14 October 1066, Hastings (England), Queen of England
other: 25 December 1066, London, Sacre
physical description: 1083, 1.52m, très mince.
death: 2 November 1083, Caen, Normandy, France, Abbaye aux Dames
burial: Caen (14), Abbaye aux Dames
William I FitzRobert (The Conqueror)
birth: 14 October 1025, Falaise (Calvados), France
title: from 3 July 1035 - 9 September 1087, Duke of Normandy
marriage: Matilda of Flanders (de Flandres) , Eu (Seine-Maritime), Normandy, France
title: from 14 October 1066 - 9 September 1087, King of England
death: 9 September 1087, Rouen, France
Robert de Burgh (Le Bello Campo)
birth: 1031, Conteville (Calvados), France
title: Count de Mortain
death: 8 December 1090, Roches, France
burial: Fatouville-Grestain, Abbaye de Grestain
Odo von Bayeux
birth: after 1030
death: 1097, Palermo
Grandchildren

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