Page:The Complete Peerage (Edition 1, Volume 8).djvu/364

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354 OORRIGENDA, BTO.^ TO VOL. n. CORNWALL. A Baront of Cornwall may possibly be held to have existed conjointly with that of Fuuho|>e, inasmuch as John (Cornwall), Lonl Fanhope appears to have been always sum. to Pari, by writs directed Jokanni Cffmtwall, ChivaUei" See *' Fanhope," Barony, cr. 1433; ex. 1443." CORNWALL (county of). Barldom. i. Brian db Brbi'agnb, a Count of Britanny, is often I. 10681 considered as EARL OF OORNWALL(d) being undoubtedly to spoken of as Omui Angliee terr€.{^) He was br. of Alan, who 1A7^t received the honour of Richmond [see vol. vi, p. 842, tub lU/O f *( Richmond "], with whom he is said to have commanded a band of Bretons at the battle of Hastings. He received Cornwall and West Devon, when that region had been reduced into possession, in the spring of 1068. Early in 1060, he witnessed a charter in favour of Exeter Cathedral, and, in June, put to flight the fona of Harold near the river Taw. He was probably deposed after Guador's rebellion in 1075. He was, subsequently, amoni; the invaders of South Italy, capitulating, in 1084, as Governor, for the city of Caatoria. interi ai »a%d nota " {^) Chester Waters writes, as to the Earldom of Cornwall, that 'the first Earl after the Conquest was Brient of Brittanv, the elder br. of Alan, who was created Earl of East Anglia to soothe the Bretons m England, when they were indignant at the expulsion of Ralph de Quader^ in 1076, and the tranaler of Brient'a Earldom to Robert of MorUin." *'(») See vol. vi, p. 342, note (•), under Richmond. It should be noted that his nephew, Alan de Bretagne, Earl of Cornwall, in a charter of 1140 to the monks of St. Michael in Cornwall, mentions him as his uncle from whom he had inherited the Earldom of Cornwall"; lines 17 and 35, for ** Mobtun," read *<Mortaim"; line 20, /ot*

  • 'MORTBIN in the Coteiitiui^)," read '* MORTAm, in the AvranchinH";

and vneert at »aid note ** (**) The Avranchin in which Mortain (Moritonium or Morelolium) is situated in the south part (the Cotentin being the north part) of what is now called La Maiiche, not being in the Cotentin, tho' the Counts of Mortain were sometimes called Counts of the city of Coutances. It is not to be confounded with a place of a somewhat like name, vis., Mortagne (Mauritania) in Perche [Bx. infonn. G. W. Watson]"; line 23, after ^'proUbly," add <* eventually"; line 24, a/ter "he," add "after the expulsion of Earl Brian"; lines 82 and 83, dele ** He was living " to the end, snd inaert ** He(b) d. 8 Dec. 1000." Note (^), liue 1, dde ** not to be confounded with Mortagne in La Manche." Note («), dele the whole note. p. 361 to 364 ; in margin, for « III, IV, V, VI, VII, VIII, IX, X, XI," read " IV, V, VI, VII, VIII, IX, X, XI, XII " respectively ; alao/cr « 1813," nod " 1812," and /or •* 1880," read ** 1828." p. 361 1 note (}*) eonehide *' See Vol. vi, p. 845, note {^), as to the possibility of Alan de Dinan having been nominated Earl of Cornwall, in 1141, by the Empress Maud." Note (•), eonelude " See Vol. iii, p. 66, note (»), sub Derby, as to the Eaurldoma supposed to have been then conferred on him." p. 362; line 81, for " Mavbieske;' read "Savoy"; lines 82 and 83, deU « Theodoric " to " Cologne," and inurt " Thierry db Fauqubmont, by Jane, da. of Amoul, Count or Looz(««)"; and ifisert m euid fio<« **(•«) G. W. Watson remarks: * The parentage of the tliird wife of Kichard, Earl of Cornwall has been variously stated. According to Butkens, she was dau.of Lothaire, Count of Hostade and Daelhem ; it is this hypothesis alone which would make her niece of Conrad, Archbishop of Cologne. Gebauer, iu his Life of Richard (1744), endeavours to prove that she was dau. of Philip von Falckenstein, Arch-chamberlain of the Empire. But it appears certain that she was really dau. of Thierry de Fauque- mout (Valkenberg, near Maastricht), by his wife Jane, da. of Amoul, Count of Loos : and oonaequently niece, not of Conrad, but of his suooessor, Engilbert de Fanquemont,' " I »>