An enigmatic figure Considerable interest developed in Ernulf after
Robert William Eyton, a pioneering historian of Shropshire, showed in the 1850s that, through the marriage of his daughter, Avelina, to
Alan fitz Flaad, Ernulf was an ancestor of the
Stewart Kings of Scotland as well as the
FitzAlan,
Earls of Arundel. A letter to the
Herald and Genealogist journal in 1866 then posed the question: "Who was Arnulph de Hesding?" However, the author then ably summarised what had become known of Ernulf's property holdings and offspring without adding anything to the biography. In a reply, Eyton himself opened up more areas for genealogical research but, as he confessed at the outset, did not try to answer the question posed.
Henry Barkly remarked in 1888 that "despite all researches, Ernulph de Hesding still remains one of the most mysterious personages in Domesday." Although the property details are scrupulously cited, the author produced no authority for his biographical assertion. Ernulf is listed as a companion of William the Conqueror (see
companions of William the Conqueror) in the late-19th-century version of the
Battle Abbey Roll posted by
Léopold Victor Delisle in the church at
Dives-sur-Mer, where he is called
Arnoul de Hesdin. However, the list has no authority, being a collation of lists from a tradition that was not even claimed to stem from
Battle Abbey until the 16th century. It is likely Arnulf served William the Conqueror with some distinction at some stage during the Norman conquest of England, as it would otherwise be difficult to account for his great wealth and power at the time of
Domesday Book. It is plausible, but unproven, that this included the
Battle of Hastings. The
Liber Monasterii de Hyda, the chronicle and
cartulary of
Hyde Abbey, was to describe him in later life as
statura procerus, industria summus, possessionibus suffultus—"tall in stature, outstanding in activity, well-supported by possessions"—which accords with a successful military career. The Domesday survey found Ernulf a
tenant-in-chief in ten counties and lord of other estates under other great tenants-in-chief. However, there is no direct evidence of what won him such fortune. It is known that he sometimes attended court. In 1081 his gift of an estate to
Gloucester Abbey was witnessed at Salisbury by the Conqueror himself,
Queen Matilda, Princes
Robert and
Henry, the two archbishops, two further bishops, and other dignitaries: signalling great prestige.
With Rufus Ernulf's good fortune continued into the reign of William Rufus (1089–1100). He seems to have been at the royal court on occasion and is recorded as a witness to important royal charters. On 27 January 1091 at
Dover he witnessed the king's confirmation of
John of Tours as the first
Bishop of Bath and Wells. Probably later that year he was at
Hastings to witness royal confirmation of
St Osmund's establishment of
Salisbury Cathedral as a
collegiate church of
secular clergy.
The Normandy Campaign Ernulf was involved in the king's attempts to conquer
Normandy, which was largely under the rule of the Conqueror's eldest son,
Robert Curthose. In 1093 William negotiated with
Robert I, Count of Flanders, Ernulf's overlord, in preparation for a military expedition to Normandy. Robert was sympathetic, as he had long preferred an English alliance to facing the threat of a powerful Normandy. However, he died shortly afterwards, and was succeeded by his son,
Robert II, who was less inclined to offer practical support. Engelram and his vassals, including Ernulf, mobilised for war and it seems that part of their preparations involved religious donations, primarily to the
Priory of St George, very near Hesdin. Count Robert gladly agreed to guarantee these gifts during the coming conflict and permitted the priory to be made subject to
Anchin Abbey. William's invasion fleet was delayed until March 1094 and his campaign was then stalled by the intervention of King
Philip I of France on the side of Robert Curthose. William bought off Philip but by the autumn, hostilities had petered out inconclusively. Threatened by the appearance of his brother
Henry in England, William made for home. Ernulf accompanied him on the return journey, stopping at Hesdin. There he confirmed and perhaps extended his grants to the Prior of St George, including all the
fiefs he held under Engelram at Hesdin. The revolt was not widely supported and was over by the end of the year. However, Ernulf was one of those accused of involvement in the plot—unjustly according to the Hyde chronicle. and some received brutal justice,
William II, Count of Eu, being castrated and blinded. According to the semi-legendary account of the
Liber de Hyda, Ernulf was represented in the
ordeal by his own champion who defeated the king's representative. Facing death, he refused the aid of a doctor, saying: "No doctor can reach me except he for whom I have undertaken this pilgrimage." ==Landholder==