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Robert de Stafford

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(Redirected from Robert de Tonei) Norman nobleman For other people named Robert Stafford, see Robert Stafford (disambiguation).

Robert de Stafford (c. 1039 – c. 1100) (alias Robert de Tosny/Toeni, etc.) was an Anglo-Norman nobleman, a member of the House of Tosny and the first feudal baron of Stafford in Staffordshire in England, where he probably built a baronial castle. His many landholdings are listed in the Domesday Book of 1086.

He was the son of Roger I of Tosny and the brother of Raoul II of Tosny.

He seems to have been the sheriff of Staffordshire.

He was a big landholder in England, and there is no evidence of him inheriting land in Normandy. His property concentrated in Staffordshire and Warwickshire. An analysis of his holdings also shows a strong presence of non-Norman subtenants, with a significant presence of English and Breton ones.

Moreover, he patronized many religious institutions, among them Evesham and Conches, prioritizing the former, which shows the importance he assigned to his holdings in England over the ones in Normandy. He founded Stone Priory in Staffordshire, which became the burial place of many of his family.

The analysis of both his subtenants and his patronage point out to a strategy much less concentrated in Normandy than his brother Raoul II, and almost solely centered in England.

He died c. 1082 and was buried at Evesham.

Family and Descendants

Robert de Stafford married Avice de Clare, daughter of Richard fitz Gilbert (de Clare), by whom he had sons,

  • Nicholas I de Stafford (d.circa 1138), eldest son and heir, 2nd feudal baron of Stafford.
  • Alan de Stafford
  • Roger de Stafford
  • Jordan de Stafford
  • Nigel de Stafford
  • Robert de Stafford

Notes

  1. Sanders, I.J. English Baronies: A Study of their Origin and Descent 1086-1327, Oxford, 1960, p.81
  2. ^ Moore, James (2017). The Norman Aristocracy in the Long Eleventh Century: Three Case Studies (PhD thesis). University of Oxford.
  3. ^ Traill, Vanessa Josephine (2013). The Social & Political Networks of the Anglo-Norman Aristocracy: The Clare, Giffeard & Tosny Kin-groups, c.940 to c.1200 (PhD thesis). University of Glasgow.
  4. Wilhelmina, Duchess of Cleveland, The Battle Abbey Roll with some Account of the Norman Lineages, 3 volumes, London, 1889, Vol.3, pp.171 et seq, re: Toesni, p.174
  5. Sir William Dugdale - Monasticon Anglicanum, Volume VI, Part I, Priory of Stone, page 231
  6. ^ "Stafford". Tudor Place. Archived from the original on 9 December 2023.

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