William Giffard, first earl of Essex: Difference between revisions

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| death_date        = 1080 (aged 36)
| death_place      = Colchester, Essex, England
| death_place      = Colchester, Essex, England
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Revision as of 23:48, 6 September 2023

William Giffard
Earl of Essex
PredecessorTitle created
SuccessorWilliam
Born1044
Normandy
Died1080 (aged 36)
Colchester, Essex, England
BuriedAbbey of St. Martin, Aumale
Noble familyGiffard
Spouse(s)Sigrid
Issue
FatherGodfrey Giffard

William Giffard (1044 - 1080) was a Norman knight and nobleman, the progenitor of the Giffard dynasty. He became earl of Essex in 1068, after the Norman conquest of England.

Life

William Giffard was born in 1044 in the duchy of Normandy, the son of Godfrey Giffard, who had served as a knight for Duke Robert the Magnificent and later a high-ranking servant of Robert's son, William the Bastard. Godfrey died around 1059, and his son was knighted by Duke William. In 1066 William Giffard accompanied the duke on his invasion of England. He distinguished himself as a knight at the battle of Tottenham in June 1067 and thereafter gained the firm favor of the duke, who was crowned king of England at the end of the year.

In February 1068 William Giffard was given the earldom of Essex for his services in the invasion. Thereafter he has only a scant presence in the records, although he was loyal to the House of Normandy during the civil wars that erupted after his master's death in late 1068. The earl is known to have fought beside King Richard at the battle of Reading in 1072.

In January 1077 Giffard sat as a royal justiciar to pass the death sentence on Ælfwine Haroldsson after the latter's rebellion against the king. During the winter of 1078-79 the earl also sat as a justiciar during the condemnations of Harold II's brothers Leofwine of Kent and Gyrth of Norfolk. Giffard's royal service seems to have been limited to these judicial roles, and most of the earl's surviving charters were issued at his own castle of Colchester.

Giffard died at Colchester in 1080; the exact date of his death has been lost. The later Waltham chronicle, written in the 13th century, claimed that he was strangled in his sleep by his chamberlain.

Issue

The earl had five children by his wife Sigrid, about whom nothing is known.

  • Hermessent, countess of Lancaster
  • Felicia, countess of Sussex
  • William, who succeeded his father as earl of Essex
  • Fressenda
  • Hamelin (d. 1099)