Sir Gerard Furnival (died 1219) was an English landowner and soldier.[1]
Origins
editBorn about 1179, he was the son of Sir Gerard Furnival, who had accompanied King Richard I on the Third Crusade to Palestine[1] and is said to have fought there at the Siege of Acre in 1191.[citation needed]
Career
editThrough marriage around 1199, he acquired considerable lands at Hallamshire in Yorkshire and at Worksop in Nottinghamshire.[1] He joined the Fifth Crusade to Damietta in Egypt, where he is said to have died in 1219.[citation needed]
Family
editAbout 1199 he married Matilda de Lovetot,[1] a great-granddaughter of William Lovetot,[citation needed] whose parents were William Lovetot and Maud FitzWalter. They had three sons, Thomas Furnival,[1] Gerard Furnival, and William. Both Thomas and Gerard died taking part in the Barons' Crusade in 1241.[citation needed] His widow outlived her husband and two of her sons, dying at some point after 1258.[1]
References
edit- White, Robert (1875) Worksop, The Dukery, and Sherwood Forest.
- Nicholson, AP: Nottinghamshire History (accessed 28 January 2006).
- James Doherty, 'The Crusading Furnivals: Family Tradition, Political Expediency and Social Pressure in Crusade Motivation', Journal of Family History (2022)[1]