Fulk Fitz Warine
- Born: Alveston, Thornbury, Gloucestershire, England
- Marriage: Hawise de Dinan 733,940
- Died: 1197, Alveston, Thornbury, Gloucestershire, England 940
General Notes:
~The Antiquities of Shropshire, Vol. VII, p. 70, On 6 Nov 1194, Hawise de Dinant names her husand as Fulk fitz Warine in a suit of mort d'ancestre. In the same year, Fulk Fitz Warein was accessed 20s to the Scutage for the King's Redemption and had fined ten merks to excused transfretation (to Normandy). 733
~The History of the Princes, the Lords Marcher, . . ., p. 184, tells us that Fulk Fitz Warrine was rasied from infancy by his father-in-law, Sir Josce de Dinan. 941
Noted events in his life were:
• Background Information. 141 Fulk Fitz Warin, living in Nov. 1194, married Hawise, daughter and coheir of Josce de Dinan. The last named Fulk, was son and heir of Fulk Fitz Warin, of Whittington and Alveston, who died in 1170/1, son of the shadowy or mythical Warin, of Metz in Lorraine.
~ Cokayne's Complete Peerage, 2nd Edition, Vol. V., (Fitz Warren), p. 495, footnote (c)
• Background Information. 940 Fulk had four sons, of whom the eldest, Fulk II, married Hawise, daughter and coheir of Joceas of Dinan and is traditionally stated to have made a claim upon Ludlow, which was allowed [ib. vii. 69]. The Shropshire Pipe Roll of 1177 shows that he had been amerced forty merks by Henry II for forest trespass. About 1180, he successfully disputed the right of Shrewsbury Abbey to the advowson of Alberbury. Ten years later he was fined 100l. for his wife's share of an inheritance [Rot. Pipe, 2 Ric II. 'Wilts'], and through her probably acquired and interest in several Wiltshire manors [Testa de Nevill, 1807, p. 150]. On 6 Nov 1194, he was named as attorney for his wife in a sut of mort d'ancestre on account of the lands in the same county [Rot. Curiæ. Regis, 1835, i. 35, 36]; and was fined ten merks to be excused transfretation to Normandy [Rot. Canc. De 30 Joannis, 1833, p. 122]. In 1195, he is entered as owing forty merks for the castle of Whittington adjudged to him in curia regis. The fine remained unliquidated in 1201 [ib. p. 225]. He died in 1197. The next year, his widow paid thirty merks that she might not be obliged to remarry [Rot. Pipe, 10 Ric I, 'Wilts']. Her name constantly appears as a litigant down to 1226 [Testa de Nevill, 1807, p. 128].
~ H.R. Tedder, The Dictionary of National Biography, p. 223
Fulk married Hawise de Dinan, daughter of Josceline de Dinan and Unknown 733.,940 (Hawise de Dinan died In or After 1226 940.)
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