Baldwin de Redvers, 1st Earl of Devon
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- There is a disagreement about whether Richard de Redvers was Earl of Devon. For those who think he was, the numbers of the medieval earls must be one greater.
Baldwin de Reviers, 1st Earl of Devon(? – 4 June 1155), was the son of Richard de Redvers and his wife Adeline Peverel.
He was one of the first to rebel against King Stephen. He seized Exeter, and was a pirate out of Carisbrooke, but he was driven out of England to Anjou, where he joined the Empress Matilda. She made him Earl of Devon after she established herself in England, probably in early 1141.
He founded several monasteries, notably those of Quarr Abbey (1131), in the Isle of Wight, and the Priory of St. James, at Exeter. Some monastic chronicles call his father also Earl of Devon, but no contemporary record uses the title, including the monastic charters.
[edit] Family and children
He was married to Adelise Baluun (d. aft. 1155) and had children:
- Richard de Reviers, 2nd Earl of Devon. Married Denise de Dunstanville.
- Henry de Reviers
- William de Reviers, 5th Earl of Devon. Married Mabel de Beaumont.
- Matilda de Reviers, married to Anschetil de Greye.
- Maud, married Ralph de Avenel.
- Alice, married Roger II de Nonant.
- Hawise, married Robert Castellan.
- Eva, married Robert d' Oyly.
[edit] Sources
- Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America Before 1700 by Frederick Lewis Weis; Line 50-27
- Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom by G. E. Cokayne; Pages: IV:311-2,IV:312
- Burke's Peerage & Baronetage, 106th Edition, Charles Mosley Editor-in-Chief, 1999, Page: 832
Preceded by New creation |
Earl of Devon 1141-1155 |
Succeeded by Richard de Redvers, 2nd Earl of Devon |