William "Le Breton" de ALBINI, LORD OF BELVOIR
Name Suffix:Lord Of Belvoir William, surnamed Meschines, and likewise Brito, had Belvoir Castle and a considerable portion of his lands restored by King Henry II, in the 14th of which monarch's reign [1168] he d. and was s. by his son, by his 1st wife, Adeliza, William de Albini. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, England, 1883, p. 160, Daubeney, Barons Daubeney, Earl of Bridgewater]
The Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by WalterLee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999, 157-2
Name Suffix:[Countess Of Chester Ancestral File Number: V9V7-JW Name Suffix: [Countess of Che Ancestral File Number: V9V7-JW
Name Suffix:[Lord Of Belvoir Ancestral File Number: LCJG-29 William de Albini, feudal Lord of Belvoir, in the 6th of Richard I [1195], was with that monarch in the army in Normandy, and the next year was sheriff of the counties of Warwick and Leicester, as he was subsequently of Rutlandshire. In the 2nd of King John [1201], he had special license to make a park at Stoke, in Northampton, and liberty to hunt the fox and hare (it lying within the royal forestof Rockingham). Afterwards, however, he took up arms with the other barons and, leaving Belvoir well fortified, he assumed the governorship of Rochester Castle, which he held out for three months against the Royalists, and ultimately only surrendered when reduced to the last state of famine. Upon the surrender of Rochester, William Albini was sent prisoner to Corfe Castle, and there detaineduntil his freedom became one of the conditions upon which Belvoir capitulated,and until he paid a ransom of 6,000 marks. In the reign of Henry III, we find him upon the other side and a principal commander at the battle of Lincoln, anno 1217, where his former associates sustained so signal a defeat. This stout baron, who had been one of the celebrated twenty-five appointed to enforce the observance of Magna Carta, m. 1st, Margery, dau. of Odonel de Umfraville, by whomhe had had issue, William, Sir Odinel, Robert, and Nicholas, rector of Bottesford. He m. 2ndly, Agatha, dau. and co-heir of William Trusbut, and dying in 1236, was s. by his eldest son, William de Albini. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, England, 1883, p. 160, Daubeney, Barons Daubeney, Earl of Bridgewater]
He married Maud Fitzrobert de Caen Abt 1140 at Northamptonshire, England . Maud Fitzrobert de Caen was born at Gloucestershire, England Abt 1117 daughter of Robert "the King's Son" Caen, 1st Earl of Gloucester and Maud Fitzhamon .
They were the parents of 2
children:
William de Albini
born Abt 1150.
Matilda de Albini
born Abt 1153.
William "Le Breton" de Albini, Lord of Belvoir died 1168 at Belvoir Castle, Belvoir, Leicestershire, England .
Maud Fitzrobert de Caen died 29 Jul 1189 at Chester, Cheshire, England .