Anchetil de Greye


Anchetil de Greye was a Norman and vassal of William FitzOsbern, 1st Earl of Hereford, one of the great magnates of early Norman England and one of the very few proven companions of William the Conqueror known to have fought at the Battle of Hastings in 1066.
He is regarded as the ancestor of the noble House of Grey, branches of which held many peerage and other titles in England, including Baron Grey de Wilton, Baron Ferrers of Groby, Baron Grey of Codnor, Baron Grey de Ruthyn, Earl of Tankerville, Earl of Huntingdon, Marquess of Dorset, Baron Grey of Powis, Duke of Suffolk, Baronet Grey of Chillingham ; Baron Grey of Werke, Earl of Stamford, Viscount Glendale, Baronet Grey of Howick, Baron Walsingham, Baron Grey of Howick ; Viscount Howick, Earl Grey, Baronet Grey of Fallodon, etc., which married into the royal family and which continues to this day. Lady Jane Grey "the Nine Days' Queen", was a member of this family.

Landholdings

In his Latinised name of Anschtallus de Grai he is listed in the Domesday Book of 1086 as the lord of six Oxfordshire manors, all held from William FitzOsbern, 1st Earl of Hereford, lord of the manor of Breteuil, in Normandy, a relative and close counsellor of William the Conqueror, whose chief residence was Carisbrooke Castle on the Isle of Wight, one of many English castles he built.
The manors held by Anchetil de Greye were as follows:
The principal estate granted to Anchetil de Greye in England was Redrefield, the manor house of which is today represented by Greys Court, now in South Oxfordshire. Anchetil was also the tenant of Standlake, seemingly a part of Brighthampton.

Origins

Greye's origins in Normandy are unclear, although it is believed he came from the vicinity of today's Graye-sur-Mer which would have been within the domain of William I.
It is likely that Anchetil de Greye was of Norse ancestry in whole or in part since the given name Anchetil was a fairly common Norse-origin name in Normandy. The "Greye" in his name then was either simply a reference to his estate, or to his mixed Scandinavian-Frankish ancestry which was also common in Normandy by the time of the invasion of England. His immediate ancestry is uncertain, but some researchers believe he was the son of a certain Hugh Fitz Turgis, that means "Turgis' son", another clue he was from Normandy.
More than 20 superficially distinct instances of Anschitil, Anschil, Anschetil, etc. in early Norman documents must refer to a far smaller number of distinct individuals. Particularly interesting is Anschitil de Ros. According to Domesday Monachorum he was the feudal landlord, under the Bishop of Bayeux, of Craie, another Craie, and Croctune. These three places are in the Cray valley of Kent, which was in Norman times the foremost site of chalk mining from deneholes, on a scale rivalled only by the Hangman's Wood cluster of deneholes on the other side of the Thames in Grays.
Cray and Grey seem to be almost interchangeable in Kent place names. Cray passed from Anglo-Norman French into English as a word for "chalk", while greye is one of the wide range of French regional dialect words for "chalk". In Normandy, Grai is modern Graye-sur-Mer, and Ros is modern Rots, on the outskirts of Caen about away. Between them, on the river Seulles, at Orival near Creully, lies an ancient quarry where building stone is said to have been dug and lime burned since Gallo-Roman times. One of the key resources found in chalk mines is flint, which was used for tools, construction and making fire.
Whether Anschetil de Grai and Anschitil de Ros were two persons or one, they/he must have known about and profited from the digging and shipping of limestone in Normandy, so it is at least curious that they/he picked chalk-digging areas for their new feudal domains in England.

Descendants

He was the great-grandfather of John de Grey, Bishop of Norwich, and probably also of Henry de Grey, and the great-great-grandfather of Walter de Grey, Archbishop of York and Lord Chancellor of England.