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Hamo Dapifer : ウィキペディア英語版 | Hamo Dapifer Hamo Dapifer〔Hollister ''Henry I'' pp. 363-364〕 (died c. 1100) (''alias'' Haimo〔Barlow ''William Rufus'' pp. 188-189〕) was an Anglo-Norman royal official under both King William the Conqueror (1066-1087) and his son King William Rufus (1087-1100). He held the office, from which his epithet derives, known in Latin as ''dapifer'' and in French ''seneschal'', in English "steward", as well as the office of Sheriff of Kent. ==Origins==
Hamo was the son of Hamon Dentatus (died c. 1047), a Norman noble who held the lordship of Torigny-sur-Vire near Manche in Normandy. Hamon Dentatus rebelled against Duke William, later William the Conqueror, and died in about 1047.〔Keats-Rohan ''Domesday People'' p. 242〕 Traditional pedigrees of the Grenville family of Stowe in the parish of Kilkhampton in Cornwall and of Bideford in Devon, dating from the 17th century when the family was raised to the Earldom of Bath erroneously gave the father of Robert FitzHamon (the most famous of the ''Hamo'' family) as Hamon Dentatus and omitted any mention of his true father Hamo Dapifer. This was despite William of Malmesbury having described Hamo Dentatus as ''avus'' ("grandfather") to Robert FitzHamon.〔Round, p.156〕 The erroneous descent was given official status when recited in the royal warrant〔Recited in Round, p.140〕 signed in 1661 by King Charles II creating titles of nobility for John Granville, 1st Earl of Bath (1628-1701).
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