'Robert of Rhuddlan' (died
3 July 1088) was a
Norman adventurer who became lord of much of north-east
Wales and for a period lord of all
North Wales.
Robert was the cousin of
Hugh d'Avranches, 1st Earl of Chester, and appears to have come to the
Welsh Marches before 1066 in the service of
Edward the Confessor. Hugh became Earl of Chester in
1070, and Robert appears to have been appointed Hugh's "commander of troops" in
1072. He immediately began hostilities with the Welsh, and having captured land in
Tegeingl he built a castle at
Rhuddlan, holding the lands as a
vassal of Earl Hugh.
When
Gruffydd ap Cynan tried to seize the throne of
Gwynedd from
Trahaearn ap Caradog in
1075, Robert assisted Gruffydd by providing
Norman troops. Later the same year Trahaearn counter attacked and drove Gruffydd to seek refuge in
Ireland, but Robert was able to take advantage of the civil war to seize the
cantrefs of
Rhos and
Rhufoniog and to build another castle at
Deganwy. He now ruled most of northern Wales east of the
River Conwy.
In
1081, Trahaearn ap Caradog, who had been able to prevent Robert from encroaching further west, was killed in the
Battle of Mynydd Carn by Gruffydd ap Cynan and his allies. Gruffudd now became king of Gwynedd, but shortly thereafter he was captured by treachery by the Normans at
Rhug near
Corwen. Gruffydd was imprisoned by Earl Hugh in his castle at Chester, but Robert seems to have been responsible for his capture, since he was the one to claim Gruffydd's lands. Robert built castles at
Bangor,
Caernarfon,
Aberlleiniog and elsewhere. In the
Domesday Book he is said to hold all of North Wales apart from lands belonging to the bishoprics of
Bangor and
St Asaph, holding these lands directly of the king and not as in fief from Earl Hugh. He was liable to an annual rent of forty pounds.
On
William the Conqueror's death in
1087, war broke out between his sons. Robert supported the elder son,
Robert Curthose and in
1088 he and his troops were involved in the siege of
Rochester. They were however obliged to surrender to the forces of
William Rufus.
Robert's career was brought to an abrupt end in 1088. He was enjoying a noontide nap in his castle at
Deganwy when the news was brought to him that Welsh raiders had landed in three ships underneath the
Great Orme and pillaged his lands. Some sources say that these raiders were led by Gruffydd ap Cynan, who had escaped from captivity in Chester. The raiders had beached their ships and were busy loading the plunder. Robert despatched messengers to gather his troops and hastened to the Great Orme, where he found that the rising tide was about to allow the Welsh to refloat their vessels and get away with the loot before Robert's troops could appear. In a fury, Robert rushed down the slopes to attack them, followed only by his armour-bearer. He was killed by a volley of javelins, and the raiders sailed off with his head attached to the mast of one of the vessels.
Robert's lands in Gwynedd were now taken over by Earl Hugh of Chester, but the Welsh revolt of
1094 led by Gruffydd ap Cynan resulted in the loss of most of this territory.
References
★
The history of Gruffydd ap Cynan: the Welsh text with translation, introduction and notes, Arthur Jones, , , Manchester University Press, 1910,
★
A history of Wales: from the earliest times to the Edwardian conquest, John Edward Lloyd, , , Longmans, Green & Co., 1911,