Adam FitzRoy
|
|
This article may need to be wikified to meet Wikipedia's quality standards. Please help by adding relevant internal links, or by improving the article's layout. (October 2011)
Click [show] on right for more details.
No reason has been cited for the Wikify tag on this article.
|
Adam FitzRoy was the illegitimate son of Edward II of England. The identity of Adam's mother is not known. He accompanied his father in the Scottish campaigns of 1322, and died shortly afterwards on September 18, 1322.
Adam is named as "Ade filio domini Regis bastardo" (Adam, bastard son of the lord king) in Edward II's Wardrobe account of 1322. Between 6 June and 18 September that year, Adam was given a total of thirteen pounds and twenty-two pence to buy himself "equipment and other necessaries" ("armatura et alia necessaria") to take part in Edward's Scottish campaign that autumn. This suggests he was somewhere in his teens, born between about 1305 and 1310.
The money was paid in five instalments, either to Adam directly or to his 'magister' (tutor) Hugh Chastilloun. Adam died during the campaign, of unknown causes, and was buried at Tynemouth Priory on 30 September 1322; his father paid for a silk cloth with gold thread to be placed over his body.
No other references to him have yet been discovered.
[edit] Sources
- Seymour Phillips, Edward II (2010), pp. 102, 428-9
- F.D. Blackley, 'Adam, the bastard son of Edward II', Bulletin of the Institute of Historical Research, xxxvii (1964), pp. 76–7.
- British Library Stowe MS 553.
| This English biographical article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |