Mortimer

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For Mortimer in Berkshire, see Stratfield Mortimer. For the town in Shropshire, see Cleobury Mortimer.

Mortimer is a popular English name, used both as a surname and a given name.

The name almost certainly derives from "Mortemer", site of the Cistercian Abbaye de Mortemer between Les Andelys and Évreux in Normandy. The land was gifted to the Cistercians by Henry II in the 1180s. Finding the land to be marsh-land (in old french, 'dead water' or "Morte Mer"), the monks dug out a large drainage lake and built the Abbaye de Mortemer. The ruins and lake can still be visited, and the later XVIth century Abbey hosts tours.

The village of Mortemer-sur-Eaulne further north in the Seine-Maritime area is almost certainly later and named after the site of the abbey.

In the Middle Ages, the Mortimers were a powerful magnate family in the Welsh Marches, centered around Wigmore Castle in Herefordshire, and from the 14th century holding the title of Earl of March. Through marriage, the Mortimers came during the reign of Richard II to be close to the English throne, but when Richard II was deposed in 1399, the claims of the Mortimers were ignored and the throne vested in Henry of Lancaster instead. The Mortimer claims were later (1425) transmitted to the House of York, which ultimately claimed them in the Wars of the Roses.

Members of the Mortimer family included:

  • Favell Lee Mortimer, cynical author of Reading Without Tears and Far Away. Despite having left her house no more than 2 times, Favell scrutinizes just about every country in the known (at that time) world. The Clumsiest People in Europe by Todd Pruzan accounts her life and writings.


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