Online Encyclopedia

ROS, or DE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V23, Page 720 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

ROS, or DE  Ros, the name of a noble
See also:
English
See also:
family . Robert de Ros (d . 1227), a son of Everard de Ros (d . 1191) of Helmsley, or Hamlake, in
See also:
Yorkshire, possessed lands in Yorkshire, including Ros, or Ross, in Holderness, and also in
See also:
Normandy . He served King John in several ways, both in England and abroad, and obtained lands in Northumberland, where he built a castle at Wark, or Werke . About 1215, however, he deserted the king and became one of the leaders of the baronial party, being one of the twenty-five executors of Magna Carta and fighting against John when he repudiated this engagement . He submitted to Henry III. and became a monk before he died in 1227 . His wife was Isabella, daughter of William the Lion, king of Scotland, by whom he had two sons, William and Robert . Robert de Ros the younger (d . 1274), was an itinerant justice under Henry III., but later he was one of the barons who fought against this king . He passed much of his time, however, in Scotland, where he held a
See also:
barony and where he was one of the guardians of Margaret, the English bride of King Alexander III . His son Robert was summoned to parliament as Lord Ros de Werke in 1295; just afterwards he revolted against
See also:
Edward I. and his lands were forfeited .

William de Ros (d . 1258), the

elder son of the executor of Magna Carta, had a son Robert (d . 1285), who was summoned to parliament as a baron by Simon de Montfort in 1264; he was also summoned to parliament by Edward I . His son William, 2nd baron Ros of Helmsley, or Hamlake (d . 1317), obtained Belvoir Castle in Leicestershire through his
See also:
mother
See also:
Isabel, daughter of William d'Albini . He was one of the minor claimants for the
See also:
crown of Scotland in 1292, and soon afterwards he obtained the lands in Northumberland which had been taken from his traitorous cousin Robert de Ros . His second son, John de Ros (d . 1338), was a courtier under Edward II . Later he joined Edward's queen, Isabella, was summoned to parliament by Edward III., and distinguished himself on the sea . Another John de Ros (d . 1332), bishop of Carlisle from 1325 to 1332, was doubtless a member of this family . The second baron's descendants retained the barony of Ros until the
See also:
death of Edmund de Ros, the 11th baron, in
See also:
October 15o8 .

Edmund's

See also:
nephew
See also:
Sir George Manners (d . 1513), of Belvoir and Helmsley, then claimed it, and was called Lord Ros, or Roos . His son, Thomas Manners, the 13th baron (d . 1543), was created
See also:
earl of Rutland in 1525, but the barony was separated from the earldom when Thomas's grandson Edward died in 1587, leaving an only child, Elizabeth (d . 1591), who, as heir general of the family, became Baroness Ros, or Roos . Elizabeth married into the
See also:
Cecil family, and when her only child, William Cecil, died in 1618, the barony reverted to the Manners family, Francis Manners, 6th earl of Rutland (1578-1632), becoming the 18th baron . On his death the barony again passed to a
See also:
female, his daughter Katherine, through whom it came to the family of Villiers . Then in 18o6, after a long abeyance,
See also:
Charlotte (1769-1831), daughter of the Hon . Robert Boyle, and a descendant of the Manners family, was declared Baroness Ros, or Roos . She married' Lord Henry Fitzgerald, and their son, Henry William Fitzgerald-de-Ros (1793-1839), became the 22nd baron on his mother's death . In 1907, on her
See also:
father's death, Mary Frances, wife of the Hon . Anthony Dawson, became Baroness Ros, or rather, De Ros, which is the
See also:
present form of the title .

For a long time after they had ceased to hold the barony the earls and

dukes of Rutland continued to style themselves Lords Roos .

End of Article: ROS, or DE
[back]
SIR RICHARD ROS (b. 1429)
[next]
CARL AUGUST NICHOLAS ROSA (1843-1889)

Additional information and Comments

There are no comments yet for this article.
» Add information or comments to this article.
Please link directly to this article:
Highlight the code below, right click and select "copy." Paste it into a website, email, or other HTML document.