In Wales Robert succeeded his father in his office (
Custos Campe Abertivi). He first appears in history in 1157, when King
Henry II of England invaded
Gwynedd. While the main royal army faced the forces of
Owain Gwynedd east of the
River Conwy, a force including Robert and his half-brother
Henry Fitzroy (the illegitimate son of Nest and King
Henry I) attacked
Anglesey by sea. However, this force was defeated in a battle in which Robert was seriously wounded and Henry killed. Robert was captured in November 1165 by
Rhys ap Gruffydd (The Lord Rhys) who was the nephew of his mother Nest. The
King of Leinster appealed to Rhys (in 1167) to release Robert for an expedition to Ireland. Rhys did not oblige at the time, but in response to a further appeal in 1168 released Robert from captivity.
In Ireland In 1167, the King of Leinster,
Diarmait Mac Murchada, was deprived of his kingdom by the
High King of Ireland. To recover his kingdom, the exiled king fled to Wales and from there to England and
Aquitaine in France, in order to gain the consent of King
Henry II of England to recruit soldiers. On returning to Wales, Fitz-Stephen helped him to organise a mercenary army of Norman and Welsh soldiers, including
Richard de Clare, 2nd Earl of Pembroke, alias Strongbow. On 1 May 1169, Robert led the vanguard of Diarmait Mac Murchada's
Cambro-Norman auxiliaries to
Ireland, thereby precipitating the
Norman invasion of Ireland. The main invasion party landed near
Bannow Bay,
County Wexford with a force of 30
knights, 60
men-at-arms and 300
archers. The next day,
Maurice de Prendergast landed at the same bay with ten knights and 60 archers. This force merged with about 500 soldiers commanded by Diarmait . In return for capturing
Wexford, MacMurrough granted Fitz-Stephen a share in two
cantreds,
Bargy and Forth which comprised all the land between Bannow and the town of Wexford. The cantreds were to be held jointly with
Maurice FitzGerald, Lord of Lanstephan, his half-brother. The
Siege of Wexford lasted only two days. The first attack was repulsed at the loss of 18 Normans and 3 defenders. These are believed to have been the only deaths during the siege. Fitz-Stephen then ordered his men to burn all the ships in the town's harbour. The next morning, the attack on Wexford began again. Shortly after, the defenders sent envoys to Diarmait. The defenders agreed to surrender and renew their allegiance to Diarmait. It is claimed that they were persuaded to surrender by two bishops who were in the town at the time. He was accompanied at the siege by
Robert de Barry, the eldest son of his half-sister
Angharad de Windsor. Nest then, was the mother of Robert, Maurice and Angharad The Irish launched a
counteroffensive in the summer of 1171.
Dublin was besieged by a large army under the command of the
King of Ireland,
Ruadhrí Ua Conchobhair. Fitzstephen sent his best troops to assist the besieged garrison in Dublin, however this left
Wexford vulnerable to attack. Lacking the strength to defend the town, Fitzstephen withdrew to Carrick.After taking Wexford he was pursued by the Irish to Carrick where he was besieged. Eventually he was forced to surrender. However, after the Norman garrison in Dublin managed to break the siege, the Irish took Fitzstephen and his men prisoner and retreated, burning Wexford as they withdrew. Taken prisoner by the
MacCarthy Reagh in 1171, he was by then surrendered to Henry II of England, who appointed him lieutenant of the
Justiciar of Ireland,
Hugh de Lacy. Robert rendered good service in the troubles of 1173 and was rewarded in 1177 by receiving from the king of England, jointly with
Miles de Cogan, a grant of the kingdom of Cork, "from
Lismore to the sea". with the exception of the city of
Cork. Cogan was the son of Robert's half-sister Gwladys. The native princes of that
province disputed the king's right to dispose of the territory on the grounds that they had not resisted king Henry, or committed any act that would have justified the forfeiture of their lands. In consequence, Fitz-Stephen had difficulty in maintaining his position and was nearly overwhelmed by a rising in the
Kingdom of Desmond in 1182. Having no living male heirs, Fitz-Stephen eventually ceded these territories to
Philip de Barry, his half-nephew around 1180:"Robert FitzStephen to all his lords, friends, and dependents, French, English, Welsh, and Irish, greeting. Be it known to you that I have given and granted to my nephew, Philip de Barri, three cantreds in my land of Cork, namely, Olethan, with all its appurtenances, and two other cantreds in the kingdom of Cork, just as they shall come by lot to him, for ten knights' service, to himself and his heirs, to be held of me and my heirs, for the service aforesaid, in land, in sea, in waters, in ways, etc., to be held as freely of me as I hold of our lord the King, save to me the service of the aforesaid ten knights. The second son of his half-sister Angharad de Windsor,
Philip de Barry came to Ireland in 1183 or 1185 to assist his half-uncle. Together with another relative,
Raymond FitzGerald (also known as Raymond Le Gros), they recovered their lands in the modern county of
Cork, specifically the
baronies of Killede, Olethan and Muscarydonegan. A compromise agreement was reached that allowed the barons to hold seven cantreds near Cork with the remaining twenty-four being retained by the native princes. The date of his death is uncertain. == See also ==