The identity of St Bees Man is now considered almost certainly to be Anthony de Lucy, who may have been born in 1332/1333 and was probably killed in 1368, fighting for the
Teutonic Knights in the
Northern Crusades against the
Lithuanians. This was established in 2010 after an osteobiographical approach was taken in identifying the skeleton of the woman who was buried with him, which was still available for analysis using modern methods developed since the remains were found in 1981. It is now thought that after his death the vault was enlarged to take the body of his sister, Maud de Lucy, who died in 1398. It is possible that Anthony de Lucy was sent on crusade in Lithuania by
Thomas de Beauchamp, 11th Earl of Warwick, who had been appointed to a supervisory role over the
Wardens of the Marches in 1367, after de Lucy had caused trouble on the English-Scottish border (raiding
Annandale, for example). Warwick had been on crusade to Lithuania previously and probably saw a way to re-direct the troublesome energies of de Lucy away from the
Scottish Marches. (Warwick's three sons also travelled with de Lucy.) A letter written by John De Moulton of Frampton to his wife in 1367, confirms that; "Anthony de Lucy and I and all our company make our way towards the parts of Spruz [i.e.
Prussia]..." along with Richard de Welby "my companion." It seems that John De Moulton also died at New
Kaunas, along with a Sir Roger Felbrigg, a Norfolk knight. The Moultons had close family and tenurial ties with the Lucy family. Anthony was the last of the male line, and the de Lucy estates passed to Maud on his death. Maud also inherited considerable estates after the death of her first husband Gilbert de
Umfraville in 1380/81, and probably in a move to ally herself politically with the Percy family,
Henry Percy "purchased the licence fee on Gilbert's lands and, therefore, the hand of Maud in 1381". Maud's connection with St Bees is proven by an existing stone in the priory
belfry which carries the quartered arms of the de Lucy and Percy families. Maud insisted on this quartering as part of the marriage agreement, probably so that the de Lucy arms should be perpetuated. ==Exhibition==