Powys-Lybbe Forbears - Person Sheet
Powys-Lybbe Forbears - Person Sheet
Death26 Sep 1316
General1st baron: 29 Dec 1299. Custodian of Corfe Castle.
FatherWilliam de Montagu (-1270)
MotherBerthe
Notes for Simon Montacute Lord Montagu
DNB says his wife was as follows, totally contradicted by CP:

Montacute married Aufricia, daughter of Fergus, and sister of Orray, king of Man, by whom he had two sons, William, who succeeded him, and is separately noticed, and Simon.

However CP concedes some connection with the isle of Man in the Montague article, vol V, p. 79 incl Note (e):

“At Thurlbear, in June 1304, Aufrica de Connoght, heiress of the Isle of Man, quitclaimed all her rights therein to Simon de Montagu, knight”

and in Note (e):

“Her original quitclaim (Ancient Deed, P.R.O. B 11477) now lacks her seal and that of the Bishop of Bath and Wells, which was attached to it because hers was not generally known.  From Bridgewater, 24 Mar 1305/6, she notified all her tenants in the island to give obedience to Sir Simon (Cotton Charter v, 73).  In 1313, on account of his public services, Simon was released from all suits brought against him in the court of King’s Bench, on account of his attempt to occupy the Isle of Man to the King’s disinheritance (Cal. Patent Rolls, 1307-13, p. 565).”

This sounds as if his reported inheritance of the Kingship of Man was not well founded.
________________
Arms Generally notes for Simon Montacute Lord Montagu
CP, IX, p. 79, note (b):
both A fesse of three fusils
and a griffon rampant
and, sometimes, quartered with the griffon in qtrs 1 and 4.
The tinctures are not known.
DNB Main notes for Simon Montacute Lord Montagu
Montacute, Simon de, first Baron Montacute d. 1317

Name: Montacute, Simon de
Title: first Baron Montacute
Dates: d. 1317
Active Date: 1297
Gender: Male

Spouse: Aufricia, daughter of Fergus
Sources: Rolls of Parliament, vol. i.; Parliamentary Writs;...
Contributor: A. F. P. [Albert Frederick Pollard]

Article
Montacute, Simon de, first Baron Montacute d. 1317, descended from Drogo de Montacute, who came across with the Conqueror, and received grants in Somerset, was son of William de Montacute (fl. 1257) and Bertha, his wife. William had constantly served in the Welsh wars, and Simon first appears during Edward's great campaign in 1277 against Llywelyn ab Gruffydd (d. 1282) [q.v.] (Parl. Writs, i. 742); in 1282 he served in a similar campaign, when Edward finally crushed that prince (ib.; Dugdale, Baronage, i. 644; Rymer, Federa, i. ii. 619), and during the autumn attended the king at Rhuddlan. Next year he was summoned to the parliament which met on 30 Sept. at Shrewsbury for the trial of Llywelyn's brother, Davydd III [q.v.]. In 1290 he was apparently confirmed in the possession of Shipton Montacute, Somerset, and received additional grants in Dorset, Devonshire, Buckinghamshire, and Oxfordshire (cf. Dugdale). On 14 June 1294 he was summoned to meet the king at Portsmouth on 1 Sept. and accompany him to Gascony (Rymer, i. ii. 801), but his services were apparently for the time dispensed with (Parl. Writs, i. 742). In 1296, however, he was in command of a vessel, and by his bravery broke through the French fleet blockading Bordeaux, re-victualled the town, and caused the siege to be raised (Walsingham, Hist. Anglicana, Rolls Ser., i. 55; Leland, Collectanea, i. 180); he appears to have remained in Gascony until 1297. In March 1298 a truce was made with France, and in May Montacute was summoned as a baron to an assembly of the lay estates at York; on 26 Sept. he was summoned to serve in the war with Scotland, and again in August and December 1299. In the latter year he was made governor of Corfe Castle. The next two years he attended parliament, and served in the Scottish war, and in 1301 signed, as `Simon dominus de Monte Acuto,' the famous letter of the barons to the pope (Chronicles of Edward I and Edward II, i. 123; Rymer; Parl. Writs, i. 742; Dugdale). In 1306, for his services in Scotland and elsewhere, he was pardoned a debt of 120l. which his father had owed to the exchequer (cf. Memoranda de Parliamento, ed. Maitland, Rolls Ser. pp. 112, 280, 283); on 5 April he was asked for an aid on the occasion of the knighting of Prince Edward, at which he was present, and was serving in the Scottish wars until Edward's death on 7 July 1307. He was summoned to attend parliament at the coronation of Edward II, and in 1308 was made governor of Beaumaris Castle, Anglesey; during this and the next year he was serving against the Scots, and was also appointed justice to try persons guilty of forestalling in London. In 1310 he was constituted admiral of the fleet employed against the Scots; and from 1313 was in constant attendance in parliament and in the Scottish war. He was stationed in the north to watch the frontier during the winter campaign of 1315-16, and was summoned to the parliament of Lincoln in January 1316. He died in 1317 (Continuatio Nicholas Trivet, ed. 1722, p. 24; Parl. Writs). Montacute married Aufricia, daughter of Fergus, and sister of Orray, king of Man, by whom he had two sons, William, who succeeded him, and is separately noticed, and Simon.

Sources
Rolls of Parliament, vol. i.; Parliamentary Writs; Rymer's Federa, passim; Chronicles of Edward I and Edward II, i. 123; Walsingham's Historia Anglicana, i. 55; Cal. Rot. Pat. 76; Memoranda de Parliamento, ed. Maitland (Rolls Ser.); Dugdale's Baronage, i. 643-5; Peerage, ed. G. E. C.; Burke's Extinct Peerage; Collinson's Somerset, iii. 45-9; A Compleat History of Somerset, 1742, fol., p. 87.

Contributor: A. F. P.

published  1894
Last Modified 14 Mar 2015Created 14 May 2022 by Tim Powys-Lybbe
Re-created by Tim Powys-Lybbe on 14 May 20220