Flaald, seneschal of Dol - Will the Real Flaald please stand up?

Started by Private User on Sunday, October 14, 2018
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Private User
10/14/2018 at 8:54 AM

No kidding, we've got multiples of him with multiple ages, parents, wives, etc.

There's this one, and also:
Flaald fitz Flaald, Seneschal de Dol-de-Bretagne
Flaald
Flaald, seneschal of Dol
Flaald Baron of St. Lorent
Flaald Baron of St. Lorent
Flaald unknown
Flaald
Seneschal Flaald Fratmaldus Dol
Flaald

and, probably Fictitious: Steward of Dol in Brittany Flaald Hereditary, Fitz Flaad

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Now, what do we really *know* about Flaald of Dol? Not very much except that he had a brother named Hato and three sons named Alain, Flaa(l)d, and Riwallon. Flaald and Hato may have been the sons of another Hato who was a loyal servitor of Guinguen (Junkeneus, etc.) Archbishop of Dol and fl. c. 1927-1039. There is no other historical record that can be construed in any way to make them children of anyone else.

All constructions attempting to tie Flaald to the Scottish House of Dunkeld are Wild Mass Guesses intended to salvage some part of the (very very late) Stewart tradition that they were descendants of Fleance (Fictional) son of Banquo (Fictional).

The seneschals of Dol were NOT the same people as the Seigneurs de Dol, although there may possibly have been some wrong-side-of-the-blanket connections a ways back (a known medieval phenomenon).

Alain FitzFlaald is fairly well documented, except for the period immediately following the First Crusade, which (mis?)led J. Horace Round to think there were two of him. An alternative interpretation is that there was only one, who went East (possibly after/because of the death of a first wife) and came back again to wed (a second time).

Flaa(l)d FitzFlaald seems to have stayed moslty in Brittany.

Riwallon FitzFlaald became a monk at St. Florent near Dol (thus a genealogical dead end).

"Sibil fitz Flaald, of Dol " seems actually to have been the daughter of Alan FitzFlaald of Oswestry and his (second) wife Avelina. Walter FitzAlan le Steward would indeed have been her full brother - the rest is hogwash.

Private User
10/14/2018 at 8:57 AM

1027-1039 - typo city. This means Hato was an adult male during approximately those years.

10/14/2018 at 12:58 PM

http://www.medievalgenealogy.org.uk/sources/round/stewarts1.shtml

“J.H. Round: The Origin of the Stewarts: Part 1”

10/14/2018 at 1:03 PM

More references, from https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:Round_and_Fox_and_the_Seneschal...

http://fmg.ac/phocadownload/userupload/foundations3/JN-03-01/061Dol...

“Paul A. Fox. The Archbishops of Dol and the Origin of the Stewarts Foundations (2009) 3 (1): 61-76. Copyright FMG and the author”

http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/brittcope.htm#_Toc492709250

“Charles Cawley. Foundation for Medieval Genealogy, Medieval Lands Database. ”

http://fmg.ac/phocadownload/userupload/foundations3/JN-03-01/061Dol...

“Keats-Rohan, 2006, no. 18 and notes pp. 219-221, cited by Paul A. Fox. The Archbishops of Dol and the Origin of the Stewarts Foundations (2009) 3 (1): 61-76. Copyright FMG and the author.”

https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/soc.genealogy.medieval/vxHx...

Andrew Lancaster "Stewards of Dol" Discussion on soc.gen.medieval, 12/9/2016.

Private User
10/14/2018 at 2:23 PM

Gotta love Round's snarkiness, but I wish he had clearly stated why he thought there ere two Alains, uncle and nephew, instead of one long-lived adventurer.

Private User
10/14/2018 at 2:44 PM

Guinguen, Abbot and Archbishop of Dol (d. 1039) was a son of Hamon, Vicomte de Dinan and a brother of Riwallon Seigneur de Dol (not to be confused with Riwallon the monk of St. Florent). Other charters, and researches in the time of Henry II of England, provide the names of brothers Hamon, Joscelin, and Salomon "the bastard", and include the curious notation that Riwallon was known as "Capra Canuta" (freely translated as "shaggy beard").

Although his name is spelled many different ways, I prefer "Guinguen", as it underlines the originally close links between Welsh and Breton (both P-Celt languages derived from Old Brythonic, as distinguished from the Q-Celt tongue spoken by the Irish).

Private User
10/14/2018 at 3:06 PM

And I repeat once more, one must *not* confuse the Seigneurs de Dol with the seneschals of Dol. The latter served the former, but were not the former.

Some sort of family connection is indicated by the occurrence of Alain fitz Flaald in an undated charter made by Main son of Tehel (and of Innoguen daughter of Hamon vicomte de Dinan): "Maino filius Theogineti […Theonus]" donated the churches of Gugnen and Voël to Combourg priory, with the consent of "filiis suis Haimone et Gauterio, et Alanus filius Flaudi"...r[631, 632].

It would be advisable to look up the original charter to determine whether Alan fitz Flaald was also required to consent, or whether he was merely a witness. Cawley has been known to chop his quotes so short that the real meaning is lost.

Private User
10/14/2018 at 3:56 PM

Found it. https://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k1041641k/f312.image It's very dense Late Latin but seems to say that Alan fitz Flaald had an interest of some kind in the church at Gugnen (so his agreement was required).

Private User
11/2/2018 at 9:20 AM

Started this discussion from a Master Profile despite several obvious wrongnesses - Flaald was no son of Aimon (Hamon) de Dinan, and was certainly not married to a hypothetical, probably mythical, member of the Scottish House of Dunkeld. (There are at least two Master Profiles, both with bad information.)

Most of the rest are disconnected bits of driftwood, and one or two appear to belong to Flaad fitz Flaald, brother (not father) of Alan fitz Flaald.

11/3/2018 at 1:58 AM

Private User I’ll power merge the old dup fragments together but you’ll need to get one of the medievalists to help on MPs.

5/10/2019 at 5:41 PM

Flaald, seneschal of Dol is your 29th great grandfather.
You
→ Alice Childers
your mother → Charles Childers
her father → Mary Martha Childers
his mother → James Uriah Seaton
her father → Kenner Houser Seaton
his father → James B. Seaton
his father → William Seaton
his father → James Seaton
his father → George Seaton
his father → Henry Seaton
his father → Lady Margaret Hay
his mother → Francis Hay, 9th Earl of Erroll
her father → Jean Hay
his mother → William Hay, 6th Earl of Erroll
her father → William Hay, 5th Earl of Erroll
his father → Christian Lyon
his mother → John Lyon, 3rd Lord Glamis
her father → Patrick Lyon, 1st Lord Glamis
his father → Sir John Lyon of Glamis, Kt.
his father → Johanna “Jean” Stewart, Princess of Scots
his mother → Robert II, King of Scots
her father → Walter Stewart, 6th High Steward of Scotland
his father → James Stewart, 5th High Steward of Scotland
his father → Alexander Stewart, 4th High Steward of Scotland
his father → Walter Stewart, 3rd High Steward of Scotland
his father → Alain Fitzwalter, 2d High Steward of Scotland
his father → Walter FitzAlan, 1st High Steward of Scotland
his father → Alan FitzFlaald, Sheriff of Shropshire
his father → Flaald, Seneschal de Dol en Bretagne
his father → Alain "Dapifer" fitz Flaald, Seneschal of Dol
his father → Flaald, seneschal of Dol
his father

Private User
5/15/2019 at 5:47 PM

I think there's some question about the bottom two lines, but it looks good up to Alan FitzFlaald, Sheriff of Shropshire and Flaald, Seneschal de Dol.

Cawley at Medieval Lands thinks Flaald's father may have been a fellow named Hato who was man-at-arms to Guinguen, Archbishop of Dol - but he isn't confident enough to state it as fact (no primary proof).

J. Horace Round, for all his formidable reputation, wasn't infallible, and never really explained why he thought there were two Alain FitzFlaalds. There may have been just one, with a robust constitution and a long career. (There *were* people like that, e.g. William the Marshal.)

5/16/2019 at 11:38 AM

Oh, yes, Billy Marshall. Am very fond of him.

What do you need MP'd?

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