Powys-Lybbe Forbears - Person Sheet
Powys-Lybbe Forbears - Person Sheet
Birthca 1170
DeathAug 1216, Ambushed at Barnard Castle
GeneralNegotiated with William the Lion on behalf of K. John.
FatherWilliam de Vescy (-1183)
MotherBurga de Stuteville (->1185)
Notes for Eustace de Vescy
Feudal baron (2nd class) of Alnwick, Northumberland.
Arms Generally notes for Eustace de Vescy
The BOMC and NSMCD&B both have:

  Gules a cross Argent.
Armorial Blazon notes for Eustace de Vescy
Gules a cross patonce argent.
Blazon source notes for Eustace de Vescy
“The Matthew Paris shields” ed  Thos Tremlett, pub Harleian 1957, p. 17.
DNB Main notes for Eustace de Vescy
Vescy or Vesci, Eustace de, Baron Vesci 1170?-1216

Name: Vescy or Vesci, Eustace de
Title: Baron Vesci
Dates: 1170?-1216
Active Date: 1210
Gender: Male

Spouse: Margaret, illegitimate daughter of William the Lion
Sources: Authorities cited in text; Dugdale's Baronage of England.
Contributor: W. E. R. [Walter Eustace Rhodes]

Article
Vescy or Vesci, Eustace de, Baron Vesci 1170?-1216, son of William de Vesci and Burga de Stuteville, paid his relief on coming of age in 2 Richard I (1191-2). He was with the king in Palestine in 1195. On 13 Aug. 1199 he appeared as one of the guarantors of the treaty between John and Renaud, count of Boulogne (Charter Rolls, p. 30 b), and in the same year, probably later, he was sent to William the Lion of Scotland to promise him satisfaction of his rights in England, and witnessed his homage on 22 Nov. 1200 (Rog. Wend.; Rog. Hov. iv. 122). He witnessed charters frequently in the early years of John's reign, in 1209 was one of the guardians of the bishopric of Durham (Charter Rolls, passim; Patent Rolls, p. 91), and on 10 April of the same year he was sent to meet William the Lion on his visit to England (Patent Rolls, p. 91). He was serving the king in Ireland from June to August 1210 (Rotul. de Præstitis, pp. 182, 205, 222). Accused of conspiring against John in 1212, he fled to Scotland (Rog. Wend. ii. 62). The tale of John's attempted seduction of his wife, and the trick played on him, which first appears in Walter of Hemingburgh (i. 247-249), and is copied in Knighton (i. 193-5), is scarcely credible, and bears in some of its main details a close resemblance to the story of Valentinian III and Petronius Maximus (Procopius, Bonn ed., i. 328). His lands were seized, but after John's submission to the pope he was forced to invite Vescy back (27 May 1213; Patent Rolls, p. 99), though orders were sent on the same day to Philip de Ulecot [q.v.] to cripple him by destroying his castle of Alnwick. On 18 July 1213 he was one of the recipients of John's pledge to abide by the decision of the pope concerning the things about which he had been excommunicated (Charter Rolls, p. 193 b), and his lands were restored to him the next day (Patent Rolls, p. 101 b). On 5 Nov. 1214 Innocent III warned him not to trouble the king by reason of his previous disputes with the barons (Rymer, i. 126). He was prominent among the barons who wrung the Great Charter from John (Rog. Wend. ii. 114), and was one of the twenty-five appointed to see it carried out (Matt. Paris, ii. 605). He was excommunicated by name with others of the barons in 1216 (Rog. Wend. ii. 167-9). He accompanied Alexander I of Scotland on his way to do homage to Louis of France. On the way they laid siege to Barnard Castle, belonging to Hugh de Balliol, and, approaching too near, Vesci was shot through the head by an arrow (Rog. Wend. ii. 194). His lands were confiscated and given to Simon de Champ Rémy, Philip de Ulecot, and William de Harcourt (Patent Rolls, p. 164 b; Close Rolls, pp. 314 b, 288).
He married Margaret, illegitimate daughter of William the Lion and sister of Alexander II of Scotland, and left a son William (d. 1253), who was father of John de Vescy [q.v.] and of William de Vescy [q.v.].

Sources
Authorities cited in text; Dugdale's Baronage of England.

Contributor: W. E. R.

published  1899
Last Modified 21 May 2011Created 14 May 2022 by Tim Powys-Lybbe
Re-created by Tim Powys-Lybbe on 14 May 20220