Reginald de Dunstanville, 1st Earl of Cornwall

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Reginald de Dunstanville, 1st Earl of Cornwall (also Reginald FitzRoy , Raynald , lat. Rainaldus de Dunstanivilla , fr. Réginald de Dunstanville ) (* around 1110 , † 1 July 1175 in Chertsey , Surrey ) was an English nobleman .

He was an illegitimate son of King Henry I out of association with Sibyl Corbet, daughter of Sir Robert Corbet, lord of Alcester in Warwickshire .

The nickname “de Dunstanville”, with which Ordericus Vitalis describes him, probably refers to the place Dénestanville in Normandy , where he was possibly born. He is not related to the Dunstanville family, also from there, who owned large estates in Wiltshire at the time .

In the civil war for the successor to Henry I , he stood on the side of his half-sister Matilda , who probably enfeoffed him in April 1141 with the dignity of Earl of Cornwall . When Matilda withdrew from the Battle of Winchester in September 1141, Reginald led the vanguard. Matilda's rival King Stephen later recognized Reginald's earl title. In 1153 he was present as a witness at the settlement between Stephan and Heinrich II .

From 1173 he held the office of sheriff of Devon and fought in October 1173 in the Battle of Fornham on the side of King Henry II against revolting barons .

After his death in 1175 he was buried in Reading Abbey.

Marriage and offspring

He married Beatrice FitzRichard, daughter of William FitzRichard, who owned a number of fiefs in Cornwall, and had the following children with her:

In addition, he also had illegitimate children:

  • Henry Fitz-Count , Sheriff of Cornwall, 1st Earl of Cornwall († 1222);
  • William Fitz-Count.

Apparently he outlived his legitimate sons; in any case, his earldom had been withdrawn from the crown in December 1175 at the latest. In 1217 the earl title was reassigned to his illegitimate son Henry Fitz-Count.

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