- Anchetil de Greye
Anchetil de Greye was a vassal of William the Conqueror who accompanied him in the
Norman conquest of England .Anchetil de Greye (rendered variously in different documents, e.g. "de Graye", "de Grei"; also "Anketil") is specifically named in the
Domesday Book of1086 . The principal estate granted to Anchetil de Greye inEngland was called "Redrefield" (subsequentlyRotherfield Greys ) and the manor house,Greys Court , inOxfordshire . He was the great grandfather ofJohn de Gray ,Bishop of Norwich , and the great great grandfather ofWalter de Gray ,Archbishop of York andLord Chancellor ofEngland ; and is regarded as the ancestor of all the Grey/Gray noble families in England.Greye's origins in France are unclear. Some sources speculate a connection to the
Croy family whose ancient estate and castle were in what was later calledPicardy , and that "Greye" derived from "Croy". Others however believe that there was a connection to an estate in the vicinity of today'sGraye-sur-Mer which would have been within the domain of William, and possibly also to an estate in the vicinity of the eastern French town of Gray. History records that the original Viking founder of Normandy, Rollo, made raids into the eastern part of France where the town of Gray is located. It is also possible that a family having some form of the name "Grey" held an estate called "Croy".The etymology of the name "Greye/Grey/Gray" depends on which speculation is true. If "Croy", then it ultimately derives from either the French word for "cross" ("croix") or "
chalk " (OF "croie"), a reference perhaps to an element of the soil. If "Gray", then it derives either from theGallo-Roman name "Gradus", cognate to the Celtic "Grady" which means "illustrious" or "noble", or from the Gallo-Roman name "Gratus" meaning "pleasing".It is likely that Anchetil de Greye was of
Viking ancestry in whole or in part since the given name "Anchetil" ("god-helmet") 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-French ancestry which was also common in Normandy by the time of the invasion of England.ee also
* Greys of Wilton
* Greys of Codnor
* Greys of Ruthyn
*Gray's Inn
* Grays ThurrockExternal links
* [http://www.castles-abbeys.co.uk/Greys-Court.html Greys Court in Oxfordshire]
* [http://archiver.rootsweb.com/th/read/GEN-MEDIEVAL/2005-04/1114032753 Origin of the Name Anchetil]
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