Godric or Godric the Steward or Godric dapifer (died 1114) was an Englishman around the time of the Norman Conquest.
Godric was a native Englishman who was the dapifer, or steward, of the Earl of East Anglia, Ralph de Gael. Godric may have been a relative of the earl's.[1]
Godric is listed in Domesday Book as administering some royal lands in Norfolk and Suffolk, some of which were lands formerly held by Ralph[1] before the earl's participation in the Revolt of the Earls and subsequent loss of all his English landholdings.[2] Godric is also listed in Domesday Book as holding lands in his own right.[3] Godric was one of only 13 tenants-in-chief who were English listed in Domesday Book.[4]
Godric served King William II of England as a steward also.[5] The historian Frank Barlow states that he held the office of Sheriff of Suffolk,[6] but the historian Judith Green only gives him as probably sheriff of Suffolk around 1087.[7] Green also states that Godric may have been Sheriff of Norfolk at least part of the time between 1091 and 1100.[8]
Godric was married to a woman named Ingreda. The marriage had at least one son, named Ralph. Ingreda may have been the daughter of Edwin, whose lands Godric held in 1086. A further bit of evidence pointing to Edwin being Ingreda's father is that Edwin was married to a woman named Ingreda. Charters of St Benet's Abbey state that Godric's son Ralph had a brother named Eudo and a nephew named Lisewy, but it is not clear how these two individuals were related to Godric.[1]
Godric died around 1114.[1]
. Barlow, Frank . Frank Barlow (historian) . William Rufus . Yale University Press . Second . New Haven, CT . 2000 . 0-300-08291-6 .
. Green, Judith A. . Judith Green (historian) . The Aristocracy of Norman England . 1997 . Cambridge University Press . Cambridge . 0-521-52465-2 .
. Keats-Rohan, K. S. B. . Katharine Keats-Rohan . Domesday People: A Prosopography of Persons Occurring in English Documents, 1066–1166: Domesday Book . Boydell Press . Ipswich, UK . 1999 . 0-85115-722-X .