HENRI d'Eu (-12 or 16/17 Jul [1190/91], bur Fécamp). "Johannes comes Augi" made donations to the abbey of St Michel, Tréport by a charter dated [1169/70], witnessed by "Henricus et Robertus filii comitis et A[elicia] comitissa Augi"[1960]. He succeeded his father as Comte d'Eu, Lord of Hastings. "Alizia comitissa Augi" donated "terram meam de Snergate, infra wallum et extra" to Robert´s Bridge Abbey, for the souls of "Willielmi comitis Arundeliæ patris mei et Aliziæ reginæ matris meæ et…domini mei J. comitis Augi et Godefridi fratris mei et Matildis et Margaretæ filiarum mearum", by undated charter, witnessed by "Henrico comite Augi, Roberto fratre eius, Aluredo de Sancto Martino…"[1961]. The Red Book of the Exchequer, listing scutage payments in [1190/91], records "Henricus de Augo" paying "xxxiii l vi s viii d" in Sussex[1962]. m ([after 1172]) as her second husband, MATHILDE, widow of OSBERT de Préaux, daughter of [HAMELIN d'Anjou Earl of Surrey & his first wife ---] (-before 13 Dec 1228). Her first and second marriages are indicated by the charter dated Mar 1233 under which [her daughter by her second marriage] "Ælicia comitissa Augi in viduitate" granted revenue from "molendino de Duno" to "in matrimonium Ælidæ filiæ Petri de Pratellis fratris mei"[1963]. Her connection with the Warenne family is indicated by the undated charter under which her daughter "Haelisia comitissa Augy quondam uxor Radulfi de Ysondun comitis Augy" donated property to Roche Abbey, witnessed by "domino Willielmo comite Warennæ avunculo meo…"[1964]. Because Mathilde had three children by her first husband who died in [1172], she could not have been the daughter of Hamelin by his wife Isabelle de Warenne. There are therefore two possibilities: either she was Hamelin´s daughter by an otherwise unrecorded earlier marriage or she was the daughter of Isabelle de Warenne by her first marriage. The The latter possibility is unlikely as any daughter of Guillaume de Blois Comte de Boulogne would have been Ctss de Boulogne instead of Guillaume´s sister. In any case, the chronology would be tight for Mathilde to have been Isabelle´s daughter. Until more information comes to light, it is supposed that Mathilde was the daughter of Hamelin by an earlier marriage. Thomas Stapleton, in his "Observations on the Great Rolls of the Exchequer of Normandy", records that "Osbert de Préaux" donated tithes from harvest in the parish of Bois l´Evêque to the monks of Holy Trinity of Mont-de-Rouen, for his own soul "those of his parents and of the parents of his wife Matildis", undated, and that his wife and "their sons Simon and John" granted the tythe to the monks in perpetuity, but he does not cite the source reference[1965]. She married thirdly Henry de StutevilleLord of Eckington, Derbyshire. The primary source which confirms her third marriage has not yet been identified. Comte Henri & his wife had [four] children