On 14 October 1066 on at the bottom of a hill near Hastings an army of
soldiers gathered led by Duke William of Normandy. Among those resolutely facing the troops of the
English King Harold was Ralph de Mortimer.
After the Normans were victorious, Ralph expected a reward for his efforts and over the next few years William duely obliged granting him considerable
amounts of land including that which would one day be Hull.
The area around the river Hull had belonged to an English woman named
Eadgifu, or Edith. Following the Battle
of Hastings however, she and others like her simply had their land taken from
them or were forced to become tenants subservient to their conquerers. It didn’t matter if they were earls, country gentry,
or one of the 15,000 smaller landowners.
8000 Normans came to settle in England and they enjoyed spoils of victory
ranging from single properties to ownership of several estates.
Ralph de Mortimer had by 1086 acquired land in 12 counties all over
England, although concentrated in Hampshire, Yorkshire and Herefordshire near
the Welsh border. As one of the King
William’s tenants-in-chief he held this land in return for military
service. Ralph then had his own tenants
including eighteen knights who owed military service to him. Following his father’s death he also
inherited land in Normandy. All this
made him an important Anglo-Norman baron, although not quite one of the topmost
rank.
Like many of the Anglo-Norman nobility, Ralph’s life became
more complicated after William I died in 1087.
William left the dukedom of Normandy to his eldest son, Robert Curthose,
but left the crown of England to his second son, William Rufus. Given that the brothers were far from
friends, barons holding estates on both sides of the Channel faced an
impossible situation; offend Duke Robert and lose their lands in Normandy or
offend King William II and lose their lands in England.
From: http://opendomesday.org/book/yorkshire/55/. Credit Professor J.J.N. Palmer and George Slater.
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