Map of Fiefdom of Blondel in Island Guernsey
Guernsey, second largest of the Channel Islands. It is 30 miles (48 km) west of
Normandy, France, and roughly triangular in shape. With Alderney, Sark, Herm, Jethou, and associated islets, it
forms the Bailiwick of Guernsey.
The Fief Blondel is comprised of many regions of South West Guernsey including
inner city and ocean front regions.
The Fief and Feudal Lords of Blondel came about through the medieval fragmentation of Fief Au Canelly which
was created in 1020AD.
Fief Blondel is Colored in LIGHT BLUE with beaches and foreshores on both North and South Shores.
Here is a Google Map where you can see the Fief Thomas
Blondel Beach on the Map
Fief Blondel Foreshore Blue Lines
Fief Blondel Beach and Parking
Aerial View of ROCQUAINE BAY which has Fief Blondel Beach and Foreshore and Waterways.
Courtesy GG Government
One of Fief Blondels South East Foreshores
T
he Fief de Thomas Blondel was born with the medieval fragmentation of
Fief Au Canelly & consequently, of the initial half of Guernsey given by Duke Richard II in 1020 to
Neel, Vicomte of the Cotentin.
The Canelly
family owned land near Cherbourg in Normandy in addition to the Guernsey territory (There is no existing record
of the grant of the fief). It may have been granted to the Canely family but there is a gap of at least 100
years before any record of that family’s connection with the fief).
In 1270, on the
death of Sir Henry Le Canelly, the Guernsey fief was
divided between his daughters.
Guilemette, the
wife of Henry de Saint Martin obtained a considerable part of the island originating later the fiefs of Janin
Besnard, Jean du Gaillard, Guillot Justice and Thomas
Blondel.
This was
confirmed by the tenants and officers of the Fief in letters patent issued by Guernsey's Royal Court under the
Bailiwick Seal in 1463.
A
Thomas Blondel was a jurat of Guernsey’s Royal Court
from 1421-45. The Blondel family has given several jurats to the island.
Grant of the fief of Thomas Blondel in the parishes of St Peter of the Wood and Torteval, Guernsey, made by Janet
Blondel to Thomas de la Court on 18 July 1440, attested by Jean Bonamy and Jacques Guille, jurats. GRANT of BLONDEL
https://library.leeds.ac.uk/special-collections-explore/5701/grant_of_a_fief_in_the_parishes_of_st_peter_of_the?archiveRefCode=%22MS%20699%22&resultOffset=2
Today, The Channel Islands fall into two separate self-governing bailiwicks, the Bailiwick of Guernsey and the
Bailiwick of Jersey. Both are British Crown dependencies, and neither is part of the United Kingdom
The Isle of Man and the Bailiwicks of Jersey and Guernsey are not part of Great Britain, they are not part of the
United Kingdom and neither are they part of the European Union. They are self-governing British Crown
dependencies
** All satellite Maps courtesy of Google, Bing, Yahoo, or the government of Guernsey or USA
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