William FitzAlan, 1st Lord of Oswestry and Clun

William FitzAlan (d. 1210) was a Norman nobleman who lived in Oswestry and Clun, near Shrewsbury, along the medieval Welsh Marches. William was the son of William FitzAlan and Christiana (stepmother was Isabella de Say). His father's second wife brought the lordship of Clun into the family.

He was the first FitzAlan to hold both the castles of Clun and Oswestry in his own right, and was responsible for the significant expansion of Clun Castle.[1] William was still in his minority in 1160, and Guy Lestrange was appointed as his guardian.[2] William later had two sons, the first also called William FitzAlan and a younger son, John by the daughter of Hugh de Lacy, whose name is not mentioned in any documents.[3] Upon William's death in 1210, the eldest son succeded his father.

Bibliography

References

  1. Brown, p.93.
  2. Mackenzie, p.146.
  3. As stated in Bibliography: Antiquities of Shropshire, vol. 3, By Robert W. Eyton (1856). p. 11 Antiquities of Shropshire, vol. 5, By Robert W. Eyton (1857). p. 86 Antiquities of Shropshire, vol. 7, By Robert W. Eyton (1858). p. 242 Antiquities of Shropshire, vol. 10, By Robert W. Eyton (1860). p. 126 Complete Peerage XII (2) p. 168 fn. g
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