He was the heir of his brother Roger de Pitres (d. pre-1083), Sheriff of Gloucestershire from about 1071.[2] He died in about 1096 when his heir became his nephew (Roger's son) Walter of Gloucester (died 1129), hereditary Sheriff of Gloucestershire in 1097 and in 1105–6,[3] and Castellan of Gloucester Castle (also seemingly Constable of England under King Henry I (1100–1135))[4]
^Walter of Gloucester (d.1129) is described in an annal of Llanthony Secunda Priory (transcribed by Dugdale (Monasticon Anglicanum...a History of the Abbies and Other Monasteries...and ...
By William Dugdale [1]) as Constabularius, princeps militiae domus regiae, vir magnus et potens et inter primos regni praecipue honoratus ("Constable, chief of the royal military household, a great and powerful man and amongst the first of the kingdom especially honoured"). Some sources however suggest that Walter was merely the Constable of Gloucester Castle.
^Sanders, I.J. English Baronies: A Study of their Origin and Descent 1086–1327, Oxford, 1960, p.7, Barony of Miles of Gloucester
^David Walker, 'Gloucester and Gloucestershire in Domesday Book', Transactions of the Bristol and Gloucestershire Archaeological Society, Vol. 94 (1976), p. 112