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The presence of Arundell's family in England is dated back to the eleventh century, at the time of William the Conqueror. [2] A very early member of the family, Roger, was marshal of England; and according to the Exeter Cathedral 'Martyrologium,' William de Arundell, who died in 1246, was a canon of that cathedral; about the same time a Roger ...
He was a descendant of the 11th century landowner Roger de Arundell, who possessed a substantial estate of twenty-eight manors in Wiltshire and Dorset at the Domesday Book survey, [2] and his ancestors on his mother's side included the Varangian chieftain Rurik (ca. 830–879), founder of the Rurikid dynasty. [3]
Coat of arms of the Montgomerys. Roger de Montgomery (died 1094), also known as Roger the Great, was the first Earl of Shrewsbury, and Earl of Arundel, in Sussex.His father was Roger de Montgomery, seigneur of Montgomery, a member of the House of Montgomery, and was probably a grandnephew of the Duchess Gunnor, wife of Duke Richard I of Normandy, the great-grandfather of William the Conqueror.
Robert was the oldest surviving son of Roger of Montgomery, 1st Earl of Shrewsbury and Mabel de Bellême, born probably between 1052 and 1056. [2] In 1070 after the death of his great-uncle Yves Bishop of Séez his parents brought him to Bellême, which at that time became his mother's inheritance, and as the oldest surviving son it would eventually be his.
Sir John Arundell IV; John Arundell (1392–1423) John Arundell (1421–1473) John Arundell (1474–1545) John Arundell (admiral) John Arundell (of Lanherne, died 1557) John Arundel (bishop of Exeter) John Arundell (of Lanherne, died 1590) John Arundell (born 1576) John Arundell (of Trerice, died 1580) John Arundell, 2nd Baron Arundell of Trerice
Henry Arundell, 3rd Baron Arundell of Wardour (1607–1694), who succeeded him; Anne Arundell, married Roger Vaughan; Katherine Arundell (born c. 1614), married Francis Cornwallis, son of Sir Charles Cornwallis.
She was the daughter of Sir John Dinham (1406–1458) and Jane de Arches. This marriage brought great possessions into the Arundell family. Eleanor Arundell (1472–1516), married Nicholas Saintlo (Nicholas St. Lowe) of Chewe; Sir John Arundell (1474–1545) married Lady Eleanor Grey
[4] [dead link ] His wife, Adeliza, was also a major benefactor to leper hospitals at Wilton, Wiltshire and Arundel [4] [dead link ] and his cousin, Roger de Mowbray and his family, were to become the most significant patrons of the Order's headquarters at Burton Lazars Hospital. [5] [6]