William Fitzosbern, 1st Earl of Hereford
William fitzOsbern (cir
1020 –
February 22,
1071), Seigneur de Breteuil, was a relative and close counsellor of
William the Conqueror who became one of the great
magnates of early
Norman England. He was created
Earl of Hereford in
1067, one of the first peerage titles in the
English peerage.
He was the son of
Osbern the Steward, a nephew of Duchess
Gunnor, the wife of Duke
Richard I of Normandy. Osbern became the
steward of his cousin Duke
Robert I of Normandy, and when Robert left the duchy to his young son William, Osbern was one of duke William's guardians. He was killed defending the person of duke William against an
assassination attempt, sometime around
1040.
Osbern had married Emma, a daughter of count
Rodolf of Ivry, who was a half-brother of Richard I. Through her he inherited a large property in central
Normandy, including the honors of
Pacy and
Breteuil.
William fitzOsbern was probably raised at the court of his cousin and namesake duke William, and like his father became one of the ducal stewards. He was one of the earliest and most vigorous advocates of the invasion of England, and tradition holds that he convinced the doubters amongst the Norman
barons of the feasibility of the invasion.
fitzOsbern's younger brother Osbern was one of
Edward the Confessor's
chaplains, and possessed the rich church of
Bosham in
Sussex, and was well-placed to pass along
intelligence on the situation in England. He later became
bishop of Exeter.
As duke William took control of England (becoming William I of England), fitzOsbern was given charge of the
Isle of Wight, and then in
1067 was given the status of an
earl. He is generally considered earl of
Hereford, though his authority may have extended to some of the neighbouring
shires as well. In any case, that part of England was not yet under Norman control; the understanding must have been that fitzOsbern was to take charge of their conquest when he was able.
Also for the central part of 1067 the king returned to Normandy, leaving fitzOsbern (along with
Odo of Bayeux) in charge of England. The king was back in England in
1068, and fitzOsbern accompanied him in the subdual of southwest England. He attended the king's
Whitsun court in May, and then himself paid a visit to
Normandy, where he fell ill for some months.
In February or March of
1069 fitzOsbern was given charge of the new castle at
York, but he returned south in time to attend the king's
Easter court in April.
Anglo-Saxon resistance in the west
Midlands was subdued later in 1069, and it is likely fitzOsbern played a major part in this, though the details are not certain. During this time fitzOsbern and his followers pushed on into
Wales, beginning the conquest of
Gwent.
As part of the assertion of Norman control over England (and Wales), fitzOsbern was one of the major Norman
castle builders. Early castles attributed to him include
Carisbrooke,
Chepstow (
Striguil),
Wigmore, and
Monmouth, as well as creating or improving the
fortifications of the towns of Hereford and
Shrewsbury.
In
1070 trouble arose in
Flanders, where king William's brother-in-law
Baldwin VI of Flanders had died, leaving his county and his young sons in the hands of his widow
Richildis of Hannonia. Her control of Flanders was challenged by the brother of her late husband,
Robert the Frisian. Looking for help, she offered herself in marriage to fitzOsbern. He could not resist the chance to become also count of the rich principality in the
German Empire, close to Normandy. He hurried with his army, but nevertheless was defeated by the Count of Flanders: fitzOsbern lost his life in the
Battle of Cassel on
February 22,
1071.
fitzOsbern married first
Adeliza, daughter of
Roger I of Tosny. One assumes that he also married
Richilde, Countess of Mons and Hainaut shortly before the
Battle of Cassel. He was succeeded in Normandy by his eldest son,
William of Breteuil, and in England and Wales by his younger son,
Roger de Breteuil. His daughter Emma married
Ralph de Gael, 1st Earl of Norfolk .
He lived in carisbrooke castle
References
*David C. Douglas, "The Ancestors of William Fitz Osbern",
English Historical Review, 59 (1944), 62-79
*Chris P. Lewis, "The early earls of Norman England",
Anglo-Norman Studies, 13 (1991), 207-23
*Lynn Nelson,
The Normans in South Wales, 1070-1171 (see especially pages 24-33 in chapter 2)
*W.E. Wightman, "The palatine earldom of William fitz Osbern in Gloucestershire and Worcestershire (1066-1071)",
English Historical Review, 77 (1962), 6-17
External links
*
castle at Chepstow