Aunou "Anjou", to include de Clare, Family History This is a Family history of the Aunou "Anjou" family who include Richard de Clare, Wigerius, Baldric Aunou, Gunnora Aunou, Richard DeNovavilla and Foulques "Fulco" "Fulk" Aunou. It was written by an ancestor who descended from the Comerford branch and ended up in Ireland. We come from the Neville (Richard DeNovavilla) branch that ended up in England, a brother of this writer's ancestor and from Foulques "Fulco" Aunou. Richard DeNovavilla and Foulques Aunou as well as Richard de Clare and Clare de Clare are discussed in this document.... From the website: http://comerford1.tripod.com/id1.html Comerford d’Aunou family: a brief historical summary Overview from early times The family takes its name from Baron Fulco d’Aunou (Fulques d’Aunou) of Aunou le Faucon via Argentan, in Normandy, France. Fulco, born 1004, was the second son of Baldric le Teuton , born 977, of Bacqueville in Normandy, and Clare de Clare, born 981. Baldric was a son of Wigerius (Wiger), born 952, one of a number of Jewish traders brought into Normandy from Germany by Duke Richard 1st in an endeavour to boost trade in Normandy. Clare was a daughter of Richard de Clare, born 948, and Rohesia, born 959, a natural daughter of Duke Richard 1st and a concubine of name unknown. Clare was a full sister of Geoffrey de Brionne. By his descent from Richard the First Fulco was a second cousin of William the Conqueror. Fulco married Hadvisa whose family is unknown to the writer. Baldric had his home in Bacqueville-en-Caux, Normandy. He and his family were for a short time in Apulia, Italy, about 1017. Here they adopted as the family seal the Byzantine symbol of the crescent moon and the pentagonal star. This symbol was later adopted by the Turkish Empire and later again became the symbol of Islam. In Ireland this symbol was subsequently altered to the bugle horn and star and was incorporated into the family coat of arms, for in Ireland the Irish founding father Henry de Quemerford d’Aunou was appointed Great Master of the Game. Fulco or an early descendant also adopted the displayed eagle from the Byzantine flag as the family shield charge but this subsequently came to be shown on the shield as a fess and four eagles. Baldric’s six sons all rose to great prominence and founded families that were to establish themselves among the leading families of Normandy and Great Britain including the families of de Bacqueville/Baskerville, d’Aunou/Dando/Comerford, de Courci and de Neuville/Neville. His two daughters likewise helped to establish and were members of prominent families Fulco is one of 30 or so people known by name to have fought at Hastings. He is also shown on several documents to have been a witness to a number of documents of Duke William before the Conquest including one between William and the Pope. He was succeeded in Aunou le Faucon by his son Fulco. The d’Aunou family name is still to be found today in the area around Argentan. The name Fulco means falcon and the name Fulco d’Aunou means hunter of the forest, that is the forest about the Orne River. Baron Fulco d’Aunou was a warrior and one of the leading Norman lords. His name is on the Battle Abbey Roll (naming those known to have taken part in the Conquest) posted by the French Government in 1931 in the Town Hall of Falaise in Normandy (the birthplace of The Conqueror). Also on the roll are Baldric’s son Richard de Neuville and grandsons Richard and Aubri de Courci and Gilbert de Neuville. (The family names of his other sons, de Bacqueville, de Balgenzais and Apulensis, do not appear but they may well have taken part in the Conquest and indeed their names may be shown in other forms.) A second son of Fulco, probably Nicholas, settled in Quemerford Village near Calne in Wiltshire, England. A branch of this family moved to Somerset and eventually elided the name to Dando and gained considerable prominence. Another branch, founded by Henry, went to Ireland with Prince John in 1185 landing at Crooke (Crucan – the little hill) near Passage East (An Pasaiste) in Waterford at noon on the 25th April of that year. In Ireland he adopted the Gaelic name of O’Comartun (pronounced O’Comartoon). The family name seems to have died out at Quemerford by 1400. In Ireland the family settled in County Kilkenny and took the name de Quemerford after the English Village of that name. After about 1400 most family members simplified the name to Quemerford and from about 1620 it gradually took the form of Comerford although the original form of Quemerford was still in use well into the 1700’s. The Irish branch was to gain great prominence and at one stage was in possession of seven castles including the now restored Ballybur Castle just south of Kilkenny City, built by Richard Quemerford in 1480. In the early 1400’s Richard de Quemerford of Maiowestern (born 1370c) and grandfather of the above Richard of Ballybur, was elevated to the position of Baron of Danganmore, a palatine title bestowed on behalf of the English monarch Henry IV by the Irish lord James Butler, Lord of Ormond. In 1433 his nephew Fulco assumed the office of Mayor of Waterford and his descendants held high rank in that city 1648. The family was dispossessed during the English invasion under Cromwell in 1648, most especially because they offered strong resistance. Interestingly, the name Fulco continued in the Irish family until recent times. [By way of note all of the Kilkenny castles, Danganmore, Ballybur, Ballymacka, Kilbline, Derryleigh and Inchihologhan were in close proximity and are a little to the north of Kilnaspic which is in the area of Mooncoin. Ballybur (fully restored) and Kilbline still stand and remnants of Danganmore are still evident. When the writer visited Kilbline the owners, the Lennon family, were working to maintain it. Also, the name Richard is dominant in the family and extends back as far as Fulco (1004) when one of his brothers was Richard – Richard de Neuville. At Ballybur there were four Richards in succession. The writer’s father was Richard, named after his grandfather.] The d’Aunou seal of the crescent moon and star was used by the family in Quemerford as the family seal for several centuries. At the time of Fulco or soon after the French branch of the family adopted for their shield charge a fess and four eagles displayed. The Byzantine flag showed an eagle displayed. This eagle image is also like the falcon. The writer’s own family was from the Mooncoin district of Kilkenny and are descendent from the lords of Derryleigh who were in turn scions of the lords of Ballybur, Barons of Danganmore. The Australian founding father was Patrick Comerford d’Aunou who migrated to Australia in 1885, arriving on the 24th January of that year, exactly 700 years after the Irish landing, and settled in the Mansfield district where his descendants are to this day.