Odo Carrio (Carris, Carew)
Odo FitzWilliam FitzGerald De Carrio (Carris, Carew), Male before 2 Jan 1174 - ?
Born, Of Carew Castle, Pembrokeshire, Wales & Moulsford.
Partner of Margaret Tancred (Fitztancred). Father of William Carrio (Carew, Caerw), Solomon Carrio (Carew), Stephen Carrio (Carew), Walter Carrio (Carew), Robert Carrio (Carew), Thomas Carrio (Carew) and Morice Carrio (Carew).
Eldest sonhe Manor of Spershot, co. Berks, 9 Henry II. His wife was NOT Maria de Montgomery da. of Stephen, Constable of Cardigan, ancestor of (Adam) Montgomery of Ireland (Sir Th. Phillipps). NEITHER was she da. of Kingsley of Cheshire, as Berry has her. We don't know who his wife was, but we know it was not either of these women. I have seen a note that he married Maria, daughter of Arnulf de Montgomery and his wife, Lafracoth, daughter of Muirchertach Ua Briain, high king of Ireland, but have not been able to confirm. We know that William's brother, Maurice, married Alice, daughter of Arnulf de Montgomery and his wife, Lafracoth, so it is possible, but the other two possibilities mentioned above are not.ereafter, the Pipe Rolls carried the entry: "20 pounds to Odo FitzWilliam FitzGerald in Branton, (Devonshire), for his claim to the castle and land of Emlyn which Rhys ap Gryffydd has." (Pipe roll 28 Henry II., 27) In 1194, Odo CAREW disputed the claim of Geoffrey de Cholsey to land in Moulsford, co. Berkshire. He d. ca. 1202 and was succeeded by his son, William FitzOdo FitzWilliam FitzGerald styled William CAREW. In 1195, he made fine with the king not to be impeded concerning his land in Moulsford, co. Berkshire. Again in 1207, he paid 40 oz. of gold not to be impeded by Geoffrey concerning this land as King John wished him to remain in peach thereof. In 1212, he had further confirmation of the grant to his great-grandfather, Gerald FitzWalter. William CAREW d. ca. 1213 and was succeeded by Nicholas (I.), who is said to be his son.ng pleasure. In the following September, the grant was extended until the heir of Nicholas (I.) should be of age. John Marshall endeavored to recover the custody of the lands and heir of Nicholas (I.) Carew in 1230 and Crioil was disseised, but restored again in 1232. on of Nicholas (II.) and Avice was summoned to Parliament as Lord of Moulsford in 1300-01 and died seised of the manor about 1311. He was succeeded by his son, John ("the elder") CAREW, who had livery of the lands of Moulsford, but John Wogan, Justicar of Ireland, evidently had the custody of Moulsford in 1316. John ("the elder") Carew d. ca. 1324. He was succeeded by his eldest son, Nicholas (IV.) CAREW who died about the same time as his father.s Carew.s son Leonard received seisin of it in 1364. He died 9 October 1369, leaving an infant son, Thomas, and his "next friend" had the custody of the manor. This was evidently Nicholas Carew of Purley in Theale Hundred, who had a grant of free warren there in 1373. Thomas Carew was in possession in 1401 and made settlement on his wife, Elizabeth de Bonville, 8 April 1410.Alan He d. 9 October 1369, leaving as his successor, a son, Thomas Carew, m. Elizabeth de Bonville, and had issue, Nicholas Carew, m. Joan Courtenay, and had with 3 daughters, 5 sons. His second son, Nicholas Carew, m. Elizabeth Croker, widow of John Seymour of Bury Pomeroy. . He d. n fact Robert did receive his lands before Sir George's death. Sir George died without legitimate issue.re gave it thus: rmandy, and thence into England.Ê He was so powerful at that period that it is probable that he was one of the foreigners who came to England with King Edward, and whom he favoured so much as to excite the jealousy of the native nobles.Ê It is also remarkable that OthoÕs son, Walter, was treated as a fellow countryman by the Normans after the Conquest.Ê The Latin form of the name of his descendants, ÔGeraldini,Õ being the same as that of Gherardini, also indicates that he was of that family.t as to the Latin form ÔGeraldini,Õ I can state that the name given by Giraldus Cambrensis to his own family was, on the contrary, ÔGiraldidae.ÕÊ J. Horace Round, The Origins of FitzGeralds, II., The Ancestor, Number II., (Westminster, July 1902), p.120. e Studies (p.69), that the date of Domesday Book was 1086, not 1078; that Walter was the son of Other, not Otho; and, that Domesday does not state that his lands had been held by his father, but, on the contrary, proves them to have belonged to forfeited Englishmen.Ê J. Horace Round, The Origins of FitzGeralds, II., The Ancestor, Number II., (Westminster, July 1902), p.121-22) illiam Duke of Normandy at the conquest of England, with additions and corrections by G. Andrews Moriarty, from The American Genealogist, Volume XVI., No.I, (London, Frome, July 1939), p.220. f the family and granted by another Aother, c987, to the Abbey of Fluery near Orleans (Ibid.).Ê His son, Autier (whose name was Latinised Austerius) was Lord of the Castle of Mortaine in Acquitaine c1030, and had issue Gilbert, Lord of Mortaine (Gallia Christ. ii. 48, Instr.), and Walter fitz Other who accompanied the Conqueror to England and received from him a barony and the office of Castellan of Windsor, whence his descendants bore the name of de Windsor.Ê The Norman People and their existing descendants in the British Dominions and the United States of America, (London, King, 1874), p. 243-4. e somewhere.Ê I will dig it out for you and send you the reference, but it's there although Stowe does not connect Otherowerus to Other.) ngdom of Norway.Ê It also appears, that Other, as wrote in the Doomsday Book (Ex lib. vocat. Doomsday), was living in England in the reign of King Edward the Confessor; and in the pedigrees is made to be the son (more likely a grandson or great grandson) of Othoere.Ê Arthur Collins (1682?-1760), CollinsÕs Peerage of England, genealogical, biographical, and historical, greatly augmented and continued to the present time by Egerton Brydges, 9 volumes, (originally: London, Rivington, 1812, this edition: New York, AMS, 1970), Vol. 4, Windsor, Earl of Plymouth (article), pp. 37-38. ed with horses.Ê His principal wealth was derived partly from fishing for walrus and whale but was chiefly derived from tribute in skins and furs levied from the Lapps who lived further north, and it was in order to dispose of these goods that he traveled to England.ÓÊ D. J. V. Fisher, The Anglo-Saxon Age, c. 400-1042, (New York, Marboro, 1973). inely versified by Longfellow: , the son of Othoere.Ê The seat of his power was Stanwell, a princely domain on the north bank of the Thames, about two miles from Staines, and standing nearly between it and Old Windsor.Ê His vastÊ estates extended over considerable portions of five counties Ð Middlesex, Bercseire, Hamtseire, Bockinghamsheire, and Surry.Ê A lengthened enumeration of all these estates will be found in Doomsday Book, compiled in the reign of William the Conqueror, when Walter, the son of Other, and who subsequently assumed the surname de Windsor, was in possession.Ê After the extended account in Doomsday Book of Walter de WindsorÕs property, it is said, ÔAll which lordships, manors and land Dominus Otherus, his father, held in the reign of Kind Edward the Confessor.Õ [As far as I know, these words are not to be found in the Doomsday Book.Ê Round says likewise.]ÊÊ At Stanwell,Ê Other lived in princely state and ruled his vast possessions with almost sway.Ê [Not so.Ê From DB Middlesex, p.130a.Ê ÒWalterivis fili Other tenet de rege Stanwelle.Ê Hoc m tenuit Azor Hufcarle. R.E.7 potuit inde face qd uoluitÓ which translates ÒWalter son of Othere holds Stanwell from the King.Ê Azor, one of King EdwardÕs Guards, held this manor, and could do what he would with it.Ó]Ê Altering slightly and very slightly one of the LaureatÕs verses, it might be said of Other that h a full account of the rejoicing on the coming of age of Robert Geroge Windsor-Clive, 27 August 1878, (Cardiff, Owen, 1879)., ,
Sources
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