Dear Wil Johnson:
I checked up previous discussions that presumably you
refer. Thay all appear to apply to this Gospatrick
line but two generations later.
The Gospatrick subject to my enquiry is the son of Orm
son Ketel, son Eldred (Kendal family) and wife
Gunnilda (daughter) Gospatrick I Dunbar.
This individual was alive 1110-1179 Lord of
Workington.
Married (1) Egelaine de Engaine (2) Ada (d) King
William Scotland.
My hope is that someone may possess information
regarding his children.
Sincerely Yours,
Paul Bulkley
__________________________________________________
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Kendal, Gospatrick, Samlesbury
Moderator: MOD_nyhetsgrupper
-
Alex Maxwell Findlater
Re: Kendal, Gospatrick, Samlesbury
He had many sons, but two, Thomas of Colvend and Gilbert of Southwick
are those which seem to matter. They were the progenitors of the
Curwen family (from Colvend), but they returned to Cumbria when England
and Scotland fell out, so losing Colvend and Southwick.
By sea Workington and Colvend are very close - not so by land!
There is a book, I believe, about the Curwen family, where much of this
is laid out.
are those which seem to matter. They were the progenitors of the
Curwen family (from Colvend), but they returned to Cumbria when England
and Scotland fell out, so losing Colvend and Southwick.
By sea Workington and Colvend are very close - not so by land!
There is a book, I believe, about the Curwen family, where much of this
is laid out.
-
Gjest
Re: Kendal, Gospatrick, Samlesbury
Dear Paul and others interested.
I have been following your messages and offer the following regarding
your quest. I have been studying this family for some time now.
First of all from your message:
<<Gospatrick (s) Orm (s) Ketel (s) Eldred born 1100-1120 died 1179
(Samlesbury)Mother Gunilda Dunbar daughter of Gospatrick I Dunbar.
Married (1) Egelaine de Egain (2) Ada (daughter) King
William Scotland.
Children: Thomas born 1130, Orm born 1140, Gilbert,
Alan, and Ada. >>
(1) I have found no evidence that this Gospatric is the same as the
Gospatric of Samlesbury. (2) This Gospatric did not marry Ada of
Scotland. I have seen a number of references to this fact and I provide
the following to help. This is the line to Patric who married Ada of
Scotland.
1. Gospatric Earl of Northumbria 1068-1072
2. Gospatric II of Dunbar
3. Gospatric III of Dunbar
4. Waldeve/Waltheof of Dunbar
5. Patric
Reference (A): http://www.jjhc.info/dunbarpatricius1232.htm
Patricius comes filius Waldeui comitis, 5th Earl of Dunbar
"Patricius comes de Dunbar"
of Scotland
1161-1232
Born: 1161 and died 1232.
Son of: "Waltheuus" or "Waldeuus comes", 4th Earl, and Alina.
Brother of:
1. Constantine.
Patricius married: Ada, daughter of William King of Scotland.
Patricius and Ada had issue:
1. Patricius comes de Dunbar, 6th Earl.
Patricius comes filius Waldeui comitis, 5th Earl : An Overview
We know of Patricius comes filius Waldeui comitis, 5th Earl, from the
book "Records of the Heath Family", 1913 by George Heath. The entry
reads as follows:
Patricius comes filius Waldeui comitis, fifth Earl, who was born about
1161, married in 1184 Ada, daughter of William King of Scotland. He
was reckoned very devout, according to the religion of those times, and
founded a monastery of Red Friars, or Mathurins, at Dunbar, anno 1218,
and his lady founded a nunnery for the Cistercian nuns at St. Bothan's
in Berwickshire.
His seals show a lion rampant on his shield, his horse gallops to
sinister. On his seals and in his later charters he styles himself
"Patricius comes de Dunbar," and appears to have been the first to have
done so. His secretum is an antique gem; subject - the head of a
female in profile. After having held the Earldom for fifty years he
resigned in favour of his son, and died 31st December, 1232, and was
buried in the church of St. Mary, of Eccles. His countess died in
1200.
The following source helps; however, many on this list do not value the
Burkes highly.
Reference (B) "A GENEALOGICAL AND HERALDIC HISTORY OF THE COMMONERS
OF GREAT BRITAIN AND IRELAND, VOL. I. ENJOYING TERRITORIAL POSSESSIONS
OR HIGH OFFICIAL RANK; BUT UNINVESTED WITH HERITABLE HONOURS." BY
JOHN BURKE, ESQ.1834
" GOSPATRIC (son of Orme), to whom Alan, second Lord of Allerdale (also
Lord of Galloway), his cousin german, gave High Ireby, which remained
vested in a younger branch of the Curwens, which terminated in female
heirs. This Gospatric was the first of the family who was Lord of
WORKINGTON, having exchanged with his cousin, William de Lancaster, the
lordship of Middleton in Westmorland for the lands of Lamplugh and
Workington in Cumberland. In this bargain de Lancaster retained to
himself and his heirs an annual rent charge of 6d. to be paid at the
fair of Carlisle, or a pair of gilt spurs, binding Gospatric and his
heirs to do homage, and to discharge his foreign service for the same
to the barony or castle of Egremont. Gospatric had, with four younger
sons (Gilbert, Adam, Orme, and Alexander), his successor, Thomas."
Reference (C): http://www.stevebulman.f9.co.uk/cumbria/work1901.html
Images of Cumbria: Workington
"The Manor of Workington, together with that of Lamplugh, was given
by William de Lancaster in exchange for Middleton, in Westmorland, to
Gospatric, son of Orme, brother-in-law of Waltheof, lord of Allerdale.
Thomas, son of Waltheof, having a grant of the great lordship of
Culwen, in Galloway, his posterity assumed the name of De Culwen,
subsequently changed to Curwen, and continued to hold the manor of
Workington until almost our own times." FDP Note: Bulmer is an
excellent source for Cumbria. He notes here that Thomas is son of
Waltheof brother of Gunnilda. This Thomas is often stated to be the
father of Amabilis de Culwen first wife of Thomas son of Gospatric son
of Orme. Thomas then married Grace who after his death in 1200 married
Roger de Beauchamp.
Reference (D) "Records of Kendale" William Farrar Vol II, page 297
Preston Patrick Chapter
"Preston in Kendale, commonly known as Preston Patrick, took its
distinguishing apellative from Patric, younger son and ultimate heir of
Thomas son of Gospatric de Workington. Patrick having received the
lordship of Culwen in Galloway acquired that name, which became Curwen
in the following generation. The manor was granted or confirmed to
Thomas son of Gospatric by Gilbert Fitz-Reinfrid after the grant of
certain lands in Kendale made to him by Richard I in 1189. This
Thomas founded a house of Premonstratensian canons here about 1191
which afterwards was removed to Shap. The manor descended in the
family of Culwen, or Curwen, at least as late as the 16th century
(1577)."
Reference (E): "A GENEALOGICAL AND HERALDIC HISTORY OF THE COMMONERS
OF GREAT BRITAIN AND IRELAND, VOL. I. ENJOYING TERRITORIAL POSSESSIONS
OR HIGH OFFICIAL RANK; BUT UNINVESTED WITH HERITABLE HONOURS." BY
JOHN BURKE, ESQ. 1834
(1) " THOMAS, called after the fashion of those times, SON OF
GOSPATRIC. To this Thomas, one Rowland (Roland), son of Ughtred, son of
Fergus, gave the lordship of CULWEN, in Galloway. He d. 7th December,
1152, having had issue, (FDP Note: Here the Culwen line originates with
Thomas father of Amabilis coming from Fergus of Galloway. Also, the
date must be wrong for Thomas de Workington son of Gospatric. I believe
this date is for Thomas father of Amablis. It is Thomas brother of
Patric de Culwen who died in the time of his father.)
THOMAS, who m. Joan, daughter of Robert de Veteripont, but died in
the lifetime of his father, leaving an only daughter, who wedded
Harrington, of Harrington.
PATRIC. DE CULWEN; his elder brother dying subsequently without male
issue, he succeeded to the entire estate, and was thenceforward
designated "Patric de Culwen, of Workington." He was s. by his eldest
son, THOMAS DE CULWEN, of Workington,"
Alan, who acquired by gift of his brother Patric the lands of
CAMERTON, and thence deriving their surname, the Camertons descend from
him.
This Thomas, son of Gospatric, granted Lamplugh to Robert de Lamplugh
and his heirs, to be holden by the yearly presentment of a pair of gilt
spurs. To his second son, Patric, he had given, while his eldest son
was living, the lordship of CULWEN, in Galloway, and the said Patric
assuming his surname therefrom, became Patric de Culwen.
(2) Page 578 Curwen Lineage.
" Workington (says Camden) is now the seat of the ancient knightly
family of the CURWENS, descended from Gospatric, Earl of
Northumberland, who took that name by covenant from Culwen, a family of
Galloway, the heir whereof they had married. They have a stately
castle-like seat; and from this family (increaseth vanity) I myself am
descended by the mother's side."
Referebce (F):
http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/cgi-bi ... t&id=I4100
Amabils and Grace and not differentiated by which mother.
20. Thomas DE WORKINGTON was born ABT. 1160, and died AFT. 13 NOV 1200
in Workington, Cumberland, England. He was the son of 40. Gospatric
(Lord of High Ireby) DE WORKINGTON and 41. EGELINA.
21. Amabilis (Grace) DE CULWEN was born ABT. 1160. She was the daughter
of 42. Thomas DE CULWEN and 43. (Wife-of-Thomas-De-Culwen) ?.
Children of Amabilis (Grace) DE CULWEN and Thomas DE WORKINGTON are:
i. Thomas DE WYRKINGTON was born ABT. 1180 in WFT Est. 1163-1200, and
died WFT Est. 1190-1280. He married Joan DE VIPOND WFT Est. 1185-1237.
She was born ABT. 1180 in WFT Est. 1164-1206, and died WFT Est.
1190-1288.
ii. Ada DE WORKINGTON was born ABT. 1181. She married William LE
FLEMING. He was born 1150, and died 1203.
iii. Hugh DE WYRKINGTON was born ABT. 1182 in WFT Est. 1163-1200,
and died WFT Est. 1175-1280.
iv. William DE WYRKINGTON was born ABT. 1182 in WFT Est. 1163-1200,
and died WFT Est. 1175-1280.
v. Gilbert DE WYRKINGTON was born ABT. 1184 in WFT Est. 1163-1200,
and died WFT Est. 1175-1280.
vi. Patric (De Culwen) CURWEN was born ABT. 1193 in (de Culwen)
Workington, Cumberland, England, and died ABT. 1258. He married
(Wife-of-Patric-de-Culwen-Curwen) ? WFT Est. 1186-1240. She was born
ABT. 1193.
vii. Alexander DE CULWEN was born ABT. 1195 in WFT Est. 1163-1200,
and died WFT Est. 1175-1280.
viii. Amabilis (ll) DE CULWEN was born ABT. 1197 in WFT Est.
1163-1200, and died WFT Est. 1174-1283.
10. ix. Alan DE CAMERTON was born ABT. 1200 in WFT Est. 1163-1200,
and died WFT Est. 1191-1280.
Feference (G): "Ancestral Roots" by Weis, 8th edition line 34
extracted by OCR.
23. GUNNILDA, m. Orm, son of Ketel, Baron Kendal, son of Eldred,
the Thane; held
the manor of Seaton, also the towns of Camberton, Craysother and
Flemingsby. (SP III:
245; Jackson, Curwens of Working-ton Hall, 3).
24. GOSPATRIC, d. 1179, of High Ireby, Lord ofWorkington in
Coupland; exchanged
his lands with his cousin, William I de Lancaster, Baron of Kendal, d.
1170 (son of Gilbert, a Norman Knt. and GODITHA (88-24), dau. of ELDRED
THE THANE (88-23), Lord of Workington, and sister of Ketel, Baron
Kendal. The Barony of Kendall prob. passed to William through his aunt,
Christiana, wife of Ketel, 3rd Baron Ketel, prob. dau. of Ivo de
Tailbois, Baron of Kendal) for the lands of William de Lancaster
at Workington in Coupland; m. Egeline, perh. dau. of Ranulf Engaine.
(Trans. Cumberland, and Westmorland Ant. and Arch. Soc. 62 (1962);
95-100; Sanders, £ng/<s/) Baronies, pp 56-57; Hinde, Westmorland
Pipe Rolls, 24 Henry II, p. 167; NEHGR 96: 93; Pipe Roll, 24 Henry II).
25. THOMAS OF WORKINGTON, son and h., d. soon aft. 13 Nov. 1200;
m. Grace,
who m. (2) bef. 1209/10, Roger de Beauchamp. (Register of St Bees,
61-64, and charters
numbers 35 to 37 and 61).
26. ADA, m. (1) William Ie Fleming, b. abt. 1150, d. 1203, of
Aldingham, son of
Michael Ie Fleming II, d. 1186, and Christian de Stainton, dau. of
Gilbert de Lancaster,
Lord of Stainton in Kendal d. bef. 1220, and illeg. son of WILLIAM II
DE LANCASTER (88-26), Baron Kendal; she m. (2) William Ie Boteler, Lord
of Warrington. (.NEHGR 96: 314-315 chart, 317-319; Keats-Rohan,
Domesday Desc. II: 539).
27. SIR MICHAEL LE FLEMING III, b. 1197; m. AGATHA OF RAVENSWORTH
(226-9), dau. of Ranulf Fitz Henry, and granddau. of Henry Fitz Hervey,
Lord of Ravensworth. (Gens. 24-33: NEHGR 96: 319-320, Clay, 73). (See
226-28).
28. WILLIAM LE FLEMING of Aldingham. (.VCH Lane. VIII: 324 note
28).
29. ALINE (AL1CIA or ELEANOR) LE FLEMING, Lady of Aldingham; m.
Sir Richard Cansfield, Knt., Lord of Cancefield and Farleton, co.
Lancaster. (CP VI: 314; VCH Lanc. VIII; 324 note 29).
30. AGNES CANSFIELD, Lady of Aldingham, d. 1293; m. Sir Robert de
Haverington, of Harrington, co. Cumberland, d. 1297. (CPVI: 314).
31. SIR JOHN DE HAVERINGTON (HARINGTON), KNT., b. abt. 1281, d. 2
July
1347, of Aldingham, Cancefield and Farleton, knighted 22 May 1306, 1st
Lord Harington, M.P. 1326-1347; m. Joan (prob. a Dacre). He held the
manors of Aldingham, Thurnham and Ulverston in co. Lancaster,
Witherslack and Hutton Roof in Westmorland, and Austwick and Harrington
in Cumberland. (CPVI: 315; VCH Lane. VIII: 202; Cal. Inq.p.m. vol. IX:
30; Banks I: 244).
32. SIR JOHN HARINGTON, d. 1359, of Farleton, Melling Parish, co.
Lancaster
(younger bro. of Sir Robert Harington, Knt., CP VI: 316); m. Katherine
Banastre, dau. of
Sir Adam Banastre, Knt., beheaded 1314, and Margaret de Holand, sister
of Sir Robert de Holand of Upholland, co. Lancaster, and widow of Sir
John Blackburn; in Sept. 1352,
Henry, Duke of Lancaster, granted to John de Harington of Farleton a
lease of the manor
of Hornby. He also held the manors of Bolton-le-Moors, Chorley and
Aighton; 1358, went to London in the King's service. (CPVI: 315,
note/; VCH Lane. VII: 3, VIII: 202).
33. SIR NICHOLAS HARINGTON of Farleton, b. 1345, liv. 1397; m.
Isabel English, dau. of Sir William English, of co. Cumberland. (VCH
Lane. VIII: 202).
34. SIR JAMES HARINGTON, KNT., of Blackrod, Justice of the Peace,
and soldier at Agincourt, 1415; m. Ellen Urswick, dau. of Thomas
Urswick, Esq., of Urswick. (VCH Lane.
Ill: 424, V: 300; Whitaker, Richmondshire II: 251 for the
Harington pedigree; Ancestry of John Barber White, 107-112; Paget
2: 415).
35. SIR RICHARD HARINGTON of Blackrod in Westleigh, d. 1467; m. bef. 16
Aug. 1414, Elizabeth Bradshagh (or Bradshaw) of Blackrod in
Westleigh,....
Reference (H): Lastly, I offer the following from From: Chris
Dickinson (sejanus@globalnet.co.uk) Subject: Re: Lds of Galloway/CULWEN
Newsgroups: soc.genealogy.medieval; Date: 1999/07/09
"C Roy Hudleston, in "Cumberland Families and Heraldry"[CWAAS, 1978],
has some relevant entries. For CURWEN, he quotes his source as JF
Curwen "A History of the Ancient House of Curwen", JPP [W Jackson
'Papers and Pedigrees mainly relating to Cumberland and Westmorland,
1891/92], CW2 xiv [Transactions of the CWAAS], and SBR [James Wilson
'The Register of the Priory of St Bees').
Under Curwen, CRH gives the pedigree you list but makes no mention of
the second marriage.
A separate entry on Thomas' younger son 'Alan de Camerton' says that he
is mentioned as a Knight of Cumberland 1213-14 and that his elder
brother Patric de Curwen granted or
confirmed to him all his lands in Camerton in 1236.
CRH also has entries on Thomas' uncles Orm de Ireby and Gilbert de
Southaic."
I hope this helps somewhat in your work.
Sincerely, Dix Preston
I have been following your messages and offer the following regarding
your quest. I have been studying this family for some time now.
First of all from your message:
<<Gospatrick (s) Orm (s) Ketel (s) Eldred born 1100-1120 died 1179
(Samlesbury)Mother Gunilda Dunbar daughter of Gospatrick I Dunbar.
Married (1) Egelaine de Egain (2) Ada (daughter) King
William Scotland.
Children: Thomas born 1130, Orm born 1140, Gilbert,
Alan, and Ada. >>
(1) I have found no evidence that this Gospatric is the same as the
Gospatric of Samlesbury. (2) This Gospatric did not marry Ada of
Scotland. I have seen a number of references to this fact and I provide
the following to help. This is the line to Patric who married Ada of
Scotland.
1. Gospatric Earl of Northumbria 1068-1072
2. Gospatric II of Dunbar
3. Gospatric III of Dunbar
4. Waldeve/Waltheof of Dunbar
5. Patric
Reference (A): http://www.jjhc.info/dunbarpatricius1232.htm
Patricius comes filius Waldeui comitis, 5th Earl of Dunbar
"Patricius comes de Dunbar"
of Scotland
1161-1232
Born: 1161 and died 1232.
Son of: "Waltheuus" or "Waldeuus comes", 4th Earl, and Alina.
Brother of:
1. Constantine.
Patricius married: Ada, daughter of William King of Scotland.
Patricius and Ada had issue:
1. Patricius comes de Dunbar, 6th Earl.
Patricius comes filius Waldeui comitis, 5th Earl : An Overview
We know of Patricius comes filius Waldeui comitis, 5th Earl, from the
book "Records of the Heath Family", 1913 by George Heath. The entry
reads as follows:
Patricius comes filius Waldeui comitis, fifth Earl, who was born about
1161, married in 1184 Ada, daughter of William King of Scotland. He
was reckoned very devout, according to the religion of those times, and
founded a monastery of Red Friars, or Mathurins, at Dunbar, anno 1218,
and his lady founded a nunnery for the Cistercian nuns at St. Bothan's
in Berwickshire.
His seals show a lion rampant on his shield, his horse gallops to
sinister. On his seals and in his later charters he styles himself
"Patricius comes de Dunbar," and appears to have been the first to have
done so. His secretum is an antique gem; subject - the head of a
female in profile. After having held the Earldom for fifty years he
resigned in favour of his son, and died 31st December, 1232, and was
buried in the church of St. Mary, of Eccles. His countess died in
1200.
The following source helps; however, many on this list do not value the
Burkes highly.
Reference (B) "A GENEALOGICAL AND HERALDIC HISTORY OF THE COMMONERS
OF GREAT BRITAIN AND IRELAND, VOL. I. ENJOYING TERRITORIAL POSSESSIONS
OR HIGH OFFICIAL RANK; BUT UNINVESTED WITH HERITABLE HONOURS." BY
JOHN BURKE, ESQ.1834
" GOSPATRIC (son of Orme), to whom Alan, second Lord of Allerdale (also
Lord of Galloway), his cousin german, gave High Ireby, which remained
vested in a younger branch of the Curwens, which terminated in female
heirs. This Gospatric was the first of the family who was Lord of
WORKINGTON, having exchanged with his cousin, William de Lancaster, the
lordship of Middleton in Westmorland for the lands of Lamplugh and
Workington in Cumberland. In this bargain de Lancaster retained to
himself and his heirs an annual rent charge of 6d. to be paid at the
fair of Carlisle, or a pair of gilt spurs, binding Gospatric and his
heirs to do homage, and to discharge his foreign service for the same
to the barony or castle of Egremont. Gospatric had, with four younger
sons (Gilbert, Adam, Orme, and Alexander), his successor, Thomas."
Reference (C): http://www.stevebulman.f9.co.uk/cumbria/work1901.html
Images of Cumbria: Workington
"The Manor of Workington, together with that of Lamplugh, was given
by William de Lancaster in exchange for Middleton, in Westmorland, to
Gospatric, son of Orme, brother-in-law of Waltheof, lord of Allerdale.
Thomas, son of Waltheof, having a grant of the great lordship of
Culwen, in Galloway, his posterity assumed the name of De Culwen,
subsequently changed to Curwen, and continued to hold the manor of
Workington until almost our own times." FDP Note: Bulmer is an
excellent source for Cumbria. He notes here that Thomas is son of
Waltheof brother of Gunnilda. This Thomas is often stated to be the
father of Amabilis de Culwen first wife of Thomas son of Gospatric son
of Orme. Thomas then married Grace who after his death in 1200 married
Roger de Beauchamp.
Reference (D) "Records of Kendale" William Farrar Vol II, page 297
Preston Patrick Chapter
"Preston in Kendale, commonly known as Preston Patrick, took its
distinguishing apellative from Patric, younger son and ultimate heir of
Thomas son of Gospatric de Workington. Patrick having received the
lordship of Culwen in Galloway acquired that name, which became Curwen
in the following generation. The manor was granted or confirmed to
Thomas son of Gospatric by Gilbert Fitz-Reinfrid after the grant of
certain lands in Kendale made to him by Richard I in 1189. This
Thomas founded a house of Premonstratensian canons here about 1191
which afterwards was removed to Shap. The manor descended in the
family of Culwen, or Curwen, at least as late as the 16th century
(1577)."
Reference (E): "A GENEALOGICAL AND HERALDIC HISTORY OF THE COMMONERS
OF GREAT BRITAIN AND IRELAND, VOL. I. ENJOYING TERRITORIAL POSSESSIONS
OR HIGH OFFICIAL RANK; BUT UNINVESTED WITH HERITABLE HONOURS." BY
JOHN BURKE, ESQ. 1834
(1) " THOMAS, called after the fashion of those times, SON OF
GOSPATRIC. To this Thomas, one Rowland (Roland), son of Ughtred, son of
Fergus, gave the lordship of CULWEN, in Galloway. He d. 7th December,
1152, having had issue, (FDP Note: Here the Culwen line originates with
Thomas father of Amabilis coming from Fergus of Galloway. Also, the
date must be wrong for Thomas de Workington son of Gospatric. I believe
this date is for Thomas father of Amablis. It is Thomas brother of
Patric de Culwen who died in the time of his father.)
THOMAS, who m. Joan, daughter of Robert de Veteripont, but died in
the lifetime of his father, leaving an only daughter, who wedded
Harrington, of Harrington.
PATRIC. DE CULWEN; his elder brother dying subsequently without male
issue, he succeeded to the entire estate, and was thenceforward
designated "Patric de Culwen, of Workington." He was s. by his eldest
son, THOMAS DE CULWEN, of Workington,"
Alan, who acquired by gift of his brother Patric the lands of
CAMERTON, and thence deriving their surname, the Camertons descend from
him.
This Thomas, son of Gospatric, granted Lamplugh to Robert de Lamplugh
and his heirs, to be holden by the yearly presentment of a pair of gilt
spurs. To his second son, Patric, he had given, while his eldest son
was living, the lordship of CULWEN, in Galloway, and the said Patric
assuming his surname therefrom, became Patric de Culwen.
(2) Page 578 Curwen Lineage.
" Workington (says Camden) is now the seat of the ancient knightly
family of the CURWENS, descended from Gospatric, Earl of
Northumberland, who took that name by covenant from Culwen, a family of
Galloway, the heir whereof they had married. They have a stately
castle-like seat; and from this family (increaseth vanity) I myself am
descended by the mother's side."
From the excellent site of Bob and Joy Salt we have the collowing:
Referebce (F):
http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/cgi-bi ... t&id=I4100
From my work I find these dates late and off by 25 to 30 years. The
children some found in other references are I believe issue from both
Amabils and Grace and not differentiated by which mother.
20. Thomas DE WORKINGTON was born ABT. 1160, and died AFT. 13 NOV 1200
in Workington, Cumberland, England. He was the son of 40. Gospatric
(Lord of High Ireby) DE WORKINGTON and 41. EGELINA.
21. Amabilis (Grace) DE CULWEN was born ABT. 1160. She was the daughter
of 42. Thomas DE CULWEN and 43. (Wife-of-Thomas-De-Culwen) ?.
Children of Amabilis (Grace) DE CULWEN and Thomas DE WORKINGTON are:
i. Thomas DE WYRKINGTON was born ABT. 1180 in WFT Est. 1163-1200, and
died WFT Est. 1190-1280. He married Joan DE VIPOND WFT Est. 1185-1237.
She was born ABT. 1180 in WFT Est. 1164-1206, and died WFT Est.
1190-1288.
ii. Ada DE WORKINGTON was born ABT. 1181. She married William LE
FLEMING. He was born 1150, and died 1203.
iii. Hugh DE WYRKINGTON was born ABT. 1182 in WFT Est. 1163-1200,
and died WFT Est. 1175-1280.
iv. William DE WYRKINGTON was born ABT. 1182 in WFT Est. 1163-1200,
and died WFT Est. 1175-1280.
v. Gilbert DE WYRKINGTON was born ABT. 1184 in WFT Est. 1163-1200,
and died WFT Est. 1175-1280.
vi. Patric (De Culwen) CURWEN was born ABT. 1193 in (de Culwen)
Workington, Cumberland, England, and died ABT. 1258. He married
(Wife-of-Patric-de-Culwen-Curwen) ? WFT Est. 1186-1240. She was born
ABT. 1193.
vii. Alexander DE CULWEN was born ABT. 1195 in WFT Est. 1163-1200,
and died WFT Est. 1175-1280.
viii. Amabilis (ll) DE CULWEN was born ABT. 1197 in WFT Est.
1163-1200, and died WFT Est. 1174-1283.
10. ix. Alan DE CAMERTON was born ABT. 1200 in WFT Est. 1163-1200,
and died WFT Est. 1191-1280.
Feference (G): "Ancestral Roots" by Weis, 8th edition line 34
extracted by OCR.
23. GUNNILDA, m. Orm, son of Ketel, Baron Kendal, son of Eldred,
the Thane; held
the manor of Seaton, also the towns of Camberton, Craysother and
Flemingsby. (SP III:
245; Jackson, Curwens of Working-ton Hall, 3).
24. GOSPATRIC, d. 1179, of High Ireby, Lord ofWorkington in
Coupland; exchanged
his lands with his cousin, William I de Lancaster, Baron of Kendal, d.
1170 (son of Gilbert, a Norman Knt. and GODITHA (88-24), dau. of ELDRED
THE THANE (88-23), Lord of Workington, and sister of Ketel, Baron
Kendal. The Barony of Kendall prob. passed to William through his aunt,
Christiana, wife of Ketel, 3rd Baron Ketel, prob. dau. of Ivo de
Tailbois, Baron of Kendal) for the lands of William de Lancaster
at Workington in Coupland; m. Egeline, perh. dau. of Ranulf Engaine.
(Trans. Cumberland, and Westmorland Ant. and Arch. Soc. 62 (1962);
95-100; Sanders, £ng/<s/) Baronies, pp 56-57; Hinde, Westmorland
Pipe Rolls, 24 Henry II, p. 167; NEHGR 96: 93; Pipe Roll, 24 Henry II).
25. THOMAS OF WORKINGTON, son and h., d. soon aft. 13 Nov. 1200;
m. Grace,
who m. (2) bef. 1209/10, Roger de Beauchamp. (Register of St Bees,
61-64, and charters
numbers 35 to 37 and 61).
26. ADA, m. (1) William Ie Fleming, b. abt. 1150, d. 1203, of
Aldingham, son of
Michael Ie Fleming II, d. 1186, and Christian de Stainton, dau. of
Gilbert de Lancaster,
Lord of Stainton in Kendal d. bef. 1220, and illeg. son of WILLIAM II
DE LANCASTER (88-26), Baron Kendal; she m. (2) William Ie Boteler, Lord
of Warrington. (.NEHGR 96: 314-315 chart, 317-319; Keats-Rohan,
Domesday Desc. II: 539).
27. SIR MICHAEL LE FLEMING III, b. 1197; m. AGATHA OF RAVENSWORTH
(226-9), dau. of Ranulf Fitz Henry, and granddau. of Henry Fitz Hervey,
Lord of Ravensworth. (Gens. 24-33: NEHGR 96: 319-320, Clay, 73). (See
226-28).
28. WILLIAM LE FLEMING of Aldingham. (.VCH Lane. VIII: 324 note
28).
29. ALINE (AL1CIA or ELEANOR) LE FLEMING, Lady of Aldingham; m.
Sir Richard Cansfield, Knt., Lord of Cancefield and Farleton, co.
Lancaster. (CP VI: 314; VCH Lanc. VIII; 324 note 29).
30. AGNES CANSFIELD, Lady of Aldingham, d. 1293; m. Sir Robert de
Haverington, of Harrington, co. Cumberland, d. 1297. (CPVI: 314).
31. SIR JOHN DE HAVERINGTON (HARINGTON), KNT., b. abt. 1281, d. 2
July
1347, of Aldingham, Cancefield and Farleton, knighted 22 May 1306, 1st
Lord Harington, M.P. 1326-1347; m. Joan (prob. a Dacre). He held the
manors of Aldingham, Thurnham and Ulverston in co. Lancaster,
Witherslack and Hutton Roof in Westmorland, and Austwick and Harrington
in Cumberland. (CPVI: 315; VCH Lane. VIII: 202; Cal. Inq.p.m. vol. IX:
30; Banks I: 244).
32. SIR JOHN HARINGTON, d. 1359, of Farleton, Melling Parish, co.
Lancaster
(younger bro. of Sir Robert Harington, Knt., CP VI: 316); m. Katherine
Banastre, dau. of
Sir Adam Banastre, Knt., beheaded 1314, and Margaret de Holand, sister
of Sir Robert de Holand of Upholland, co. Lancaster, and widow of Sir
John Blackburn; in Sept. 1352,
Henry, Duke of Lancaster, granted to John de Harington of Farleton a
lease of the manor
of Hornby. He also held the manors of Bolton-le-Moors, Chorley and
Aighton; 1358, went to London in the King's service. (CPVI: 315,
note/; VCH Lane. VII: 3, VIII: 202).
33. SIR NICHOLAS HARINGTON of Farleton, b. 1345, liv. 1397; m.
Isabel English, dau. of Sir William English, of co. Cumberland. (VCH
Lane. VIII: 202).
34. SIR JAMES HARINGTON, KNT., of Blackrod, Justice of the Peace,
and soldier at Agincourt, 1415; m. Ellen Urswick, dau. of Thomas
Urswick, Esq., of Urswick. (VCH Lane.
Ill: 424, V: 300; Whitaker, Richmondshire II: 251 for the
Harington pedigree; Ancestry of John Barber White, 107-112; Paget
2: 415).
35. SIR RICHARD HARINGTON of Blackrod in Westleigh, d. 1467; m. bef. 16
Aug. 1414, Elizabeth Bradshagh (or Bradshaw) of Blackrod in
Westleigh,....
Reference (H): Lastly, I offer the following from From: Chris
Dickinson (sejanus@globalnet.co.uk) Subject: Re: Lds of Galloway/CULWEN
Newsgroups: soc.genealogy.medieval; Date: 1999/07/09
"C Roy Hudleston, in "Cumberland Families and Heraldry"[CWAAS, 1978],
has some relevant entries. For CURWEN, he quotes his source as JF
Curwen "A History of the Ancient House of Curwen", JPP [W Jackson
'Papers and Pedigrees mainly relating to Cumberland and Westmorland,
1891/92], CW2 xiv [Transactions of the CWAAS], and SBR [James Wilson
'The Register of the Priory of St Bees').
Under Curwen, CRH gives the pedigree you list but makes no mention of
the second marriage.
A separate entry on Thomas' younger son 'Alan de Camerton' says that he
is mentioned as a Knight of Cumberland 1213-14 and that his elder
brother Patric de Curwen granted or
confirmed to him all his lands in Camerton in 1236.
CRH also has entries on Thomas' uncles Orm de Ireby and Gilbert de
Southaic."
I hope this helps somewhat in your work.
Sincerely, Dix Preston