Richard de Courcy[1] (died 1098) was a Norman baron. He accompanied William the Conqueror as a soldier, in the invasion of England[2].
He was subsequently granted lands, giving his name to Stoke Courcy, in Somerset. He held also Newenham in Oxfordshire[3], Setenden, and Foxcote, in the Domesday Book.
He was a grandson of Baudric le Teuton, and son of Robert de Courcy, seneschal in Normandy.