- Hugh
fitzBaldric (sometimes Hugh
FitzBaldric or Hugh
fitz Baldric) was a
Norman nobleman and
royal official in
England after the
Norman Conquest of England...
-
properties in
Lincolnshire and Yorkshire. In 1086 he
succeeded Hugh
fitz Baldric as High
Sheriff of Yorkshire.
However between 1102 and 1118 his lands...
- the
Domesday Book of 1086,
where it is
recorded as
belonging to Hugh
fitzBaldric.
Thomas de
Cuckney founded the
religious house in 1140. It was an abbey...
-
Gilbert of Gant 12.0 3.0
Gilbert Tison 47.4 26.6
Richard FitzArnfastr 5.5 3.2 Hugh
FitzBaldric 96.5 7.4
Erneis of
Burun 23.7 10.8
Osbern of
Arches 53.5...
- p****ed from
Gamel son of
Osbert to Hugh
FitzBaldric after the
Norman Conquest, but
shortly after 1089
FitzBaldric's Yorkshire lands were
forfeited and p****ed...
-
Norman Conquest High
Sheriff of
Yorkshire 1068–1069 Succeeded by Hugh
FitzBaldric Preceded by New
Creation After Norman Conquest High
Sheriff of Norfolk...
- of
their personal abilities and usefulness. Thus, for instance,
Turstin FitzRolf, the
relatively humble and
obscure knight who had
stepped in at the last...
- 1066,
Asfrith was lord, this
transferred to
Ralph in 1086, with Hugh
fitzBaldric becoming tenant-in-chief to king
William I. In 1870
Beningbrough was...
-
woods with his band on
perpetual raids". J.
Green indicates that Hugh
fitzBaldric, the late-eleventh-century
Sheriff of
Nottinghamshire and Yorkshire,...
- 1066–1068 Gamel, son of
Osbern 1068–1069
William Malet 1069–1086 Hugh
fitzBaldric 1086–1087
Erneis de
Burun 1087–1093
Ralph de
Paganel or
Paynell 1093–1095...