Everything about Robert De Mowbray totally explained
Robert de Mowbray (d.
1125), a
Norman, was
Earl of Northumbria from
1086, until 1095, when he was deposed for rebelling against
William Rufus,
King of England. He was the son of Roger de Mowbray and nephew of
Geoffrey de Montbray,
bishop of Coutances. The family name derives from Montbray in
Manche,
Normandy, Mowbray being a corruption of it.
Earldom of Northumbria
Robert was made Earl of Northumbria after
Aubrey de Coucy, the previous earl decided that he no longer wished to remain in his post. Aubrey was made earl in 1080 and, probably that same year, resigned his position and returned to
Normandy losing all of the lands that he held in England. He wasn't replaced until Robert was appointed in 1086.
Rebellion against King William
In 1088 Robert and his uncle, Geoffrey, sided with
Robert, duke of Normandy, in the
rebellion against
William Rufus, and both were active militarily. The rebellion failed but the king subsequently pardoned them both, and Robert remained in his post as Earl of Northumbria.
Invasion of Malcolm of Scotland
In November 1093
Malcolm III of Scotland invaded
Northumbria for the second time since 1091, and attacked
Alnwick. Robert de Mowbray raised an army and attacked the Scots taking them by surprise on November 13 (St Brice’s Day). In the ensuing conflict, known as the
Battle of Alnwick, Malcolm and his son Edward were slain. Earlier that same year Geofrey de Montbray died and Mowbray succeeded to his uncle's large estates, so becoming one of the most powerful barons in the kingdom.
Marriage
In 1095 Mowbray married Matilda, daughter of Richard de l'Aigle, and niece of Hugh d'Avranches, earl of Chester.
Rebellion and downfall
In 1095 Mowbray took part in a rebellion which had for its object the transference of the crown from the sons of the
Conqueror to
Stephen of Aumale. It appears that there was a conspiracy that included several barons, but that when the time came for action most of the conspirators abandoned the scheme leaving Mowbray and his fellow conspirator
William of Eu exposed. The incident that brought the matter to a head was Mowbray seizing four Norwegian vessels lying in the Tyne. The merchants who owned the vessels complained to the king and Mowbray was commanded to attend the
Curia Regis to explain his actions. Mowbray didn't attend and ignored further summonses, so that William finally led an army against him. Mowbray shut himself up in his stronghold,
Bamborough Castle. William laid siege to Bamborough and built a temporary siege castle alongside it, known as
Malvoisin, or “evil neighbour”. For some reason, during the siege, Mowbray left the castle with a small force of knights and was pursued by his besiegers, being forced to take refuge in Tynemouth. After a siege of six days he was wounded in the leg, captured and was taken back to Bamborough where his wife was still resisting the besiegers. She finally surrendered the castle after the besiegers threatened to blind her husband.
Imprisonment and death
As a result of his part in the rebellion Mowbray forfeited his estates and was imprisoned for life, initially at
Windsor Castle. He spent many years in prisons, “growing old without offspring”, according to the chronicler,
Florence of Worcester, and then was allowed to become a monk at
St Albans Abbey, according to another chronicler
Orderic Vitalis. There is some doubt about the date of his death. On one hand it was claimed that he spent thirty years in prison, giving his date of death about 1125. However,
William Dugdale claimed that Mowbray became a monk and died in 1106.
Mowbray’s fellow conspirators,
William of Eu and
William of Aldrie, received harsher punishment, William of Eu being castrated and blinded, and William of Aldrie being condemned to death.
Continuation of the Mowbray name
Mowbray's wife, Matilda, was granted an annulment of her marriage by
Pope Paschal II and sometime after 1107, she became the wife of
Nigel d'Aubigny, who was also granted the lands in Montbray forfeited by her former husband. The couple remained childless and in 1118 d’Aubigny divorced Matilda and married Gundred de Gournay, daughter of Gerard de Gournay and Edith de Warenne. They had a son, Roger who inherited the estates originally forfeited by Robert Mowbray. On receiving his inheritance Roger changed his name to Mowbray at the instruction of
Henry I. Thus the name Mowbray was continued, but with no blood line from Robert de Mowbray.
Mowbray’s character
Orderic Vitalis gives the following description of Robert de Mowbray: "Powerful, rich, bold, fierce in war, haughty, he despised his equals and, swollen with vanity, disdained to obey his superiors. He was of great stature, strong, swarthy and hairy. Daring and crafty, stern and grim, he was given more to meditation than speech, and in conversation scarce ever smiled".
Subsequent fate of the earldom
After Mowbray's downfall, the ancient earldom of the
Anglo-Saxons was left vacant for a long period. The
Scottish royal family asserted a dynastic claim, through
Henry of Scotland (1139-52),
William I of Scotland (1252-57) and
Alexander II of Scotland (1215-17) but the dignity wasn't really filled again until Henry Percy was made Earl of Northumberland in the 1377.
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