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Gunhild, daughter of Harold Godwinsson and Eadgyth Swanneck
https://www.academia.edu/2039901/Domesday_People_Revisted
Edgiva, or Eadgifu in Old English, was an immensely wealthy lady who died after 1066 and whose lands had initially been given to the Breton Ralph de Gael, earl of Norfolk. When he forfeited his lands following his revolt in 1075, they were given to Count Alan. Eddeva Pulcra was first identified in the margins of a seventeenth-century manuscript with Edgiva Swanneck, the concubine of King Harold Godwinsson, and the case was argued in detail by J R Boyle in 1896.
Sharpe shows on chronological grounds that Edgiva was Gunnilda’s mother. It is known from letters of Archbishop Anselm that Harold’s daughter Gunnilda, who had taken refuge in Wilton abbey in 1066, was later the wife or concubine of Alan Rufus, and had sought the protection of Alan’s brother and successor on his death in August 1093. Sharpe argues that, as was not uncommon at that time, Gunnilda had first entered the abbey to escape the turmoil of 1066, and had subsequently left the abbey in order to legitimize the succession of one of the newcomers to an English inheritance by marriage; in this case by her marriage to Count Alan, who now held the land her mother Edgiva had been given by Harold. Alan and Gunnilda’s daughter Matilda was probably born about 1073, according to Sharpe; she married [Walter D’Eincourt] around 1089 and was mother of both his sons. She was not, of course, treated as her father’s heiress, and disposed of only a few of her grandmother’s manors, but her mother’s marriage had served its purpose in helping to consolidate the creation of the eastern portion of what was to become the vast honour of Richmond.
1055 |
1055
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London, Middlesex, England (United Kingdom)
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1097 |
1097
Age 42
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England (United Kingdom)
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England
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