Online Encyclopedia

UMFRAVILLE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V27, Page 577 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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UMFRAVILLE  , the name of an

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English baronial
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family, derived from Amfreville in
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Normandy . Members of this family obtained lands in Northumberland, including Redesdale and Prudhoe, from the Norman kings, and a later member, Gilbert de Umfraville (d . 1245), married Matilda, daughter of Malcolm,
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earl of Angus, and obtained this Scottish earldom . Gilbert's son, Gilbert, earl of Angus (c . 1244–1307), took
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part in the fighting between Henry III. and his barons, and in the Scottish expeditions of
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Edward I . His son, Robert, earl of Angus (1277–1325), was taken prisoner by the Scots at
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Bannockburn, but was soon released, though he was deprived of the earldom of Angus and of his Scottish estates . His son and heir, Gilbert de Umfraville (1310–1381), claimed the earldom, which he hoped to gain by helping Edward Baliol to win the Scottish
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crown, but he failed, and on his
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death without issue the greater part of his English estates passed to his niece, Eleanor, the wife of
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Sir Henry Talboys (d . 1370), while others, including Redesdale, Harbottle and Otterbourne, came to his
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half-
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brother, Sir Thomas de Umfraville (d . 1386) . Sir Thomas's son, another Sir Thomas de Umfraville (1362–1391),
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left a son, Gilbert de Umfraville (1390-1421), who fought on the Scottish border and in France under his warlike
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uncle, Sir Robert de Umfraville (d . 1436) . Although not related in
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blood he appears to have inherited the estates in
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Lincolnshire of the Kyme family, and he was generally known as the earl of Kyme, though the title was never properly conferred upon him .

In 1415 he fought at Agin-

court; he was afterwards sent as an ambassador to Charles VI. of France, and arranged an
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alliance between the English and the Burgundians . He was killed at the
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battle of Bauge on the 22nd of March 1421 . His heir was his uncle Sir Robert, who died on the 29th of
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January 1436, when the male
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line of the Umfraville family became
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extinct . The chronicler John
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Hardyng was for many years in the service of Sir Robert, and in his Chronicle he eulogizes various members of the family .

End of Article: UMFRAVILLE
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