Remigius (?) Bishop of Rouen1

M, #95161, d. 787
FatherCharles Martel "the Hammer" (?) King of the Franks1 b. 23 Aug 688, d. 22 Oct 741
Last Edited14 Sep 2020
     Remigius (?) Bishop of Rouen died in 787.1

Citations

  1. [S2203] Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG): MEDIEVAL LANDS - A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/FRANKSMaiordomi.htm#CharlesMarteldied741B. Hereinafter cited as FMG Medieval Lands Website.

Aggrippin le Suèves (?)1

M, #95162, b. circa 410, d. 463
ReferenceGAV41
Last Edited15 Sep 2020
     Aggrippin le Suèves (?) was born circa 410.1
Aggrippin le Suèves (?) died in 463.1
      ; Per Royaume Europe: "Aggripin le Suèves né vers 410 et décédé en 463. Il a la charge de : Gouverneur de la Narbonaise. Épouse une Inconnue“.1 GAV-41.

; See attached map of the Kingdom of the Suebs (in Spain - Galicia) ca 455.2 He was Gouverneur de la Narbonaise.1

Citations

  1. [S4805] Royaume Europe, online <https://royaumeurope.wordpress.com/>, les Rois Alamans: https://royaumeurope.wordpress.com/germains/sueves/#sueves_1roig. Hereinafter cited as Royaume Europe.
  2. [S1953] Wikipedia: The Free Encyclopedia, online http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main_Page, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kingdom_of_the_Suebi#/media/File:Sueben-Reich.jpg. Hereinafter cited as Wikipedia.

Brunulphe (?) des Ardennes1

M, #95163
Last Edited15 Sep 2020
     Brunulphe (?) des Ardennes married Clotilde (?) d’Ostrogothie.1

Family

Clotilde (?) d’Ostrogothie
Child

Citations

  1. [S4805] Royaume Europe, online <https://royaumeurope.wordpress.com/>, Royaume des Francs: https://royaumeurope.wordpress.com/merovingiens/roi/#francs_3roi. Hereinafter cited as Royaume Europe.

Clotilde (?) d’Ostrogothie1

F, #95164
Last Edited15 Sep 2020
     Clotilde (?) d’Ostrogothie married Brunulphe (?) des Ardennes.1

Family

Brunulphe (?) des Ardennes
Child

Citations

  1. [S4805] Royaume Europe, online <https://royaumeurope.wordpress.com/>, Royaume des Francs: https://royaumeurope.wordpress.com/merovingiens/roi/#francs_3roi. Hereinafter cited as Royaume Europe.

Theodebert/Theudbert (?) Herzog von Bayern1

M, #95165, d. circa 719
Last Edited15 Sep 2020
     Theodebert/Theudbert (?) Herzog von Bayern married Régintrudis (?) of the Franks, daughter of Dagobert I (?) King of Austraisa, King of the Franks and Ragnetrude (?) des Ardennes,
;
His 1st wife.1 Theodebert/Theudbert (?) Herzog von Bayern married Folchaide von Salzburg.2,1

Theodebert/Theudbert (?) Herzog von Bayern died circa 719.1
     He was Herzog von Bayern at Bavaria (Bayern), Germany (now).3

; This is the same person as ”Theodbert of Bavaria” at Wikipedia and as ”Theudebert (Bayern)” at Wikipedia (DE).4,3

; Per Geneagraphie:
     "Theodebert, Sohn des Herzogs Theodo, leistete dem Langobarden-König Ansprand, der 9 Jahre lang in Bayern gelebt hatte, 711/12 bei der Rückeroberung Italiens militärische Hilfe. Sein Vater hatte ihn anläßlich einer Erkrankung mit seiner Vertretung beauftragt. Vor Pavia kam es zur Schlacht, die nach den Angaben des Paulus Diaconus mit einer Flucht der Bayern endete. Doch die Tatsachen sprechen eine andere Sprache: Aripert zog sich nach Pavia zurück und versuchte von dort aus ins Frankenreich zu fliehen; dabei ist er in einem Fluß ertrunken. Das läßt wiederum einen Schluß auf die damaligen politischen Konstellation zu, die nun merkwürdigerweise die Franken als die Verteidiger der älteren agilolfingischen Linie in Italien zeigt, während die bayerischen AGILOLFINGER den mit wohl nicht mehr verwandten Ansprand und seinen Sohn Liutprand unterstützten. Jedoch wurden sogleich neue verwandtschaftliche Beziehungen geknüpft, denn König Liutprand (712-744) heiratete Guntrut, die Tochter Herzog Theodos oder Theodeberts, seiner bayerischen Helfer. Diese Vorgänge zeigen, wie das bayerische Herzogtum sich zur Vormacht im SO entwickelt, dass es in die inneren Verhältnisse des Langobarden-Reiches eingreift, im eigenen Interesse handelnd, ohne Rücksicht auf die Franken, im Gegensatz zu ihnen, deren Großmachtpolitik, nach Jarnut, eine "indirekte Niederlage" erlitten hat.
     "Theodebert wird im Indiculus Arnonis, in den Breves Notitiae und bei Paulus Diaconus erwähnt; seine Gemahlin war nach jüngeren Salzburger Aufzeichnungen eine Regintrud. nach einer Urkunde Erzbischof Konrads I. aus dem Jahre 1117 hat eine Regintrud regina Besitz in Tittmoning an das Kloster Nonnberg, das Regintrud auch als seine fundatrix bezeichnet, geschenkt. Da hier nach den Aufzeichnungen des Indiculus Arnonis und der Breves Notitiae ebenfalls Theodebert schenkte, hat man vermutet, dass Regintrud seine Frau oder seine Mutter gewesen sei. Auch über ihre Herkunft bestehen unterschiedliche Meinungen; sie wurde für eine Tochter Dagoberts, aber auch für eine Tochter des Pfalzgrafen Hugobert angesehen, in welch letzterem Fall die Verschwägerung mit Pippin einen Hinweis auf einen Ausgleich zwischen AGILOLFINGERN und PIPPINIDEN geben, vielleicht auch eine Erklärung für das in diese Zeit fallende Wirken Ruperts in Bayern sein könnte. Da der Vater dem Theodebert während der Zeit seiner Krankheit die Herrschaft anvertraute, scheint er der Älteste gewesen zu sein."
     (Translation by Google) "Theodebert, son of Duke Theodo, provided military aid to the Longobard king, Ansprand, who had lived in Bavaria for 9 years, in 711/12 in the reconquest of Italy. His father had asked him to represent him on the occasion of an illness. In front of Pavia there was a battle which, according to Paulus Diaconus, ended with the Bavarians fleeing. But the facts speak a different language: Aripert withdrew to Pavia and tried to flee from there to the Frankish Empire; he drowned in a river. This in turn allows a conclusion to be drawn about the political constellation at that time, which now strangely shows the Franks as the defenders of the older Agilolfingian line in Italy, while the Bavarian AGILOLFINGER supported Ansprand, who was probably no longer related, and his son Liutprand. However, new family relationships were immediately established, because King Liutprand (712-744) married Guntrut, the daughter of Duke Theodos or Theodebert, his Bavarian helper. These events show how the Bavarian duchy developed into a supremacy in the SO, that it intervened in the internal affairs of the Lombards Empire, acting in its own interest, regardless of the Franks, in contrast to them, whose great power policy, according to Jarnut, was a suffered "indirect defeat".
     "Theodebert is mentioned in the Indiculus Arnonis, in the Breves Notitiae and in Paulus Diaconus; According to recent Salzburg records, his wife was a Regintrud. According to a document from Archbishop Konrad I from 1117, a Regintrud regina donated property in Tittmoning to the Nonnberg Monastery, which Regintrud also calls his fundatrix. Since Theodebert also gave here, according to the records of the Indiculus Arnonis and the Breves Notitiae, it has been assumed that Regintrud was his wife or mother. There are also different opinions about their origins; she was considered to be a daughter of Dagobert, but also a daughter of Count Palatine Hugobert, in which latter case the marriage to Pippin indicates a compromise between AGILOLFINGERN and PIPPINIDEN, perhaps also an explanation for Rupert's work in Bavaria during this time could be. Since the father entrusted the rule to Theodebert during his illness, he seems to have been the oldest."
Geneagraphie cites:
1. Die Genealogie der Franken, Die fränkischen Adelsgeschlechter des Mittelalters, Karl-Heinz Schreiber, (http://mitglied.lycos.de/genealogie_franken/).
2. Généalogie de Carné, Alain de Carné, Forez, Loire, France.1


; Per Royaume Europe: "Theodos tert?us d? Bavariæ, Theodon IIIème de Bavière, Theodon dritter von Bayern il est né entre 610 et 615 et décédé en 680 fils de Garibaldus s?cundus d? Bavariæ et de Gailas d? Forum Iulii
Il est le :?— quartus Dux d? Bavariæ ~ 640 à 680?— vierter Herzog von Bayern
? ?— IVème Duc de Bavière « Agilolfingiens »
Épouse Régintrudis Franc?cus née en 630 fille de Daygobertus pr?mus Franc?cus et de Ragentrude des Ardennes
1. Theodos d? Bavariæ né en 625 et décédé le 11 décembre 716 à Ratisbonne
2. Né d? Bavariæ
3. Ragnetrudis d? Bavariæ née vers 640 Épouse en 657 Gottfried des Alamans“.5

Citations

  1. [S4743] Geneagraphie - Families all over the world (Website), online <http://geneagraphie.com/>, Theodebert von Bayern: https://geneagraphie.com/getperson.php?personID=I15838&tree=1. Hereinafter cited as Geneagraphie.
  2. [S4743] Geneagraphie, online http://geneagraphie.com/, Folchaide von Salzburg: https://geneagraphie.com/getperson.php?personID=I386842&tree=1
  3. [S4759] Wikipedia - Die freie Enzyklopädie, online https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Hauptseite, Theudebert (Bayern): https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theudebert_(Bayern). Hereinafter cited as Wikipédia (DE).
  4. [S1953] Wikipedia: The Free Encyclopedia, online http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main_Page, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theodbert_of_Bavaria. Hereinafter cited as Wikipedia.
  5. [S4805] Royaume Europe, online <https://royaumeurope.wordpress.com/>, d?c?t?s d? Bavariæ?—?Duché de Bavière: https://royaumeurope.wordpress.com/duc/baviere/#bavi%C3%A8re_8d. Hereinafter cited as Royaume Europe.
  6. [S4743] Geneagraphie, online http://geneagraphie.com/, Willigard von Bayern: https://geneagraphie.com/getperson.php?personID=I14378&tree=1

Folchaide von Salzburg1

F, #95166, b. circa 645
Last Edited15 Sep 2020
     Folchaide von Salzburg married Theodebert/Theudbert (?) Herzog von Bayern.1,2
Folchaide von Salzburg was born circa 645.3
     Reference: Geneagraphie cites: Généalogie de Carné, Alain de Carné, Forez, Loire, France.1,3

Citations

  1. [S4743] Geneagraphie - Families all over the world (Website), online <http://geneagraphie.com/>, Folchaide von Salzburg: https://geneagraphie.com/getperson.php?personID=I386842&tree=1. Hereinafter cited as Geneagraphie.
  2. [S4743] Geneagraphie, online http://geneagraphie.com/, Theodebert von Bayern: https://geneagraphie.com/getperson.php?personID=I15838&tree=1
  3. [S4806] Généalogie de la famille de Carné, online <http://www.decarne.com/gencar/gencar.html>, http://a.decarne.free.fr/gencar/gencar.htm. Hereinafter cited as Généalogie de Carné.

Unknown (?)1

F, #95167
Last Edited19 Sep 2020
     Unknown (?) married Guillaume Hugues I (?) Sire de Monteil, seigneur de Montélimar, son of Hugues (?) de Valence and Ahaldisia de Peyrine.1

      ; Per Med Lands:
     "GUILLAUME HUGUES de Monteil (-1130 or later). "Artaldus miles de Argentaco et uxor mea Fica et filii mei Ademarus atque Wilelmus" made donations to Cluny by charter dated [1049/1109], subscribed by "Wilelmi filii Hugonis et Ademari fratris sui et Lamberti"[698]. The chronicler Raymond d'Agiles names "comes Guillelmum Hugonem de Montillo, fratrem Podiensis episcopi", referring to Bishop Adémar[699]. Adémar Bishop of Le Puy sold property to the monastery of Cliou by charter dated 18 Nov 1095 which names "frater eius Wilhermus de Montilio"[700].
     "m firstly ---.
     "m secondly LECERINA, daughter of --- (-after 1157). The primary source which confirms her marriage has not yet been identified.
     "Guillaume Hugues & his first wife had one child:
a) GUILLAUME HUGUES [II] de Monteil (-[24 Aug 1156/5 Sep 1157]). m --- de Romestang.

     "Guillaume Hugues [I] & his second wife had one child:
b) GIRAUD Adémar [I] de Monteil (-after 1164)."

Med Lands cites:
[698] Cluny Tome IV, 3010, p. 205.
[699] Raimundus de Agiles, col. 646, quoted in Mémoires Valentinois et Diois, p. 149.
[700] Chartularium Sancti Theofredi, p. 139, cited in Mémoires Valentinois et Diois, p. 145.1


;
His 1st wife.1

Citations

  1. [S2203] Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG): MEDIEVAL LANDS - A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/provvaldi.htm#_Toc28766343. Hereinafter cited as FMG Medieval Lands Website.

Rixende de Valentinois1

F, #95168
Last Edited19 Sep 2020
     Rixende de Valentinois married Aymar I de Poitiers Seigneur de Boulogne-en-Velay, Comte de Valentinois, son of Guillaume (?) de Poitiers, Cte de Valentinois and (?) de Beziers.1,2

      ; Per Med Lands:
     "AYMAR [I] de Poitiers . Comte de Valentinois. It is assumed that he inherited the county of Valentinois from his wife’s family, although the primary source which confirms that this is correct has not yet been identified. An enquiry dated 1421 by the parliament at Poitiers records that "Raimon Duc de Narbonne, Comte de Tolose et Marquis de Provence" granted "la comté de Dioys" to "Aimart Comte de Valentinois" in 1189[900]. "Aemarus Pictaviensis" placed the monks of Léoncel under his protection by an undated charter, but dateable to the mid-12th century, sealed by "A Pictaviensis comitis Valentini"[901]. The Historia Albigensis records "Ademarus Pictavensis" as one of the supporters of the comte de Toulouse who fortified his castles against threat [from Simon de Montfort][902].
     "m [RIXENDE], daughter of ---. The name and origin of Aymar’s wife are unknown. According to Europäische Stammtafeln[903], she was Rixende, possible sister of Eustache Bishop and Comte de Valentinois, daughter of ---. Julien Chevalier refers to speculation that Bishop Eustache introduced Aymar de Poitiers into the region and gave him his daughter, presumably illegitimate, in marriage but emphasises that there is no documentary evidence to support this[904]. Aymar's use of the name Eustache for his second son does suggest there may be a family relationship. The relationship appears to be confirmed by the charter dated 1217 under which her son "Eustachius prepositus Valentinus" confirmed the donation of "W[illelm]us Valentinus prepositus avunculus meus" of "Clivum" to the abbey of Saint-Chaffre, Saint-Guy du Puy[905], although the same donation was confirmed earlier by another charter in which "Wilelmus Pictaviensis et…Eustachius frater Wilelmi" name the donor "patruus noster Wilelmus Vivariensis episcopus"[906]. The charter dated Mar 1138 under which her supposed brother "Wilelmus Valencie prepositus" confirmed a donation to the Templars at Richerenches at the request of "Riperto de Charrovalis", confirmed by "comes Eustachius frater W. prepositi predicti"[907], suggests that "avunculus" should be preferred over "patruus" and that the donor was the maternal uncle of the brothers Guillaume and Eustache de Poitiers. Another perspective is provided by an enquiry dated 1421 by the parliament at Poitiers which records that "aux anciens des pays de Valentinois et de Dioys…la Comtesse de Marsanne" was challenged "estant veuve whose parents are unknown les evesques de Valence et de Dye" and that she married her daughter to "un surnommé de Poitiers", who was passing through the town of Montélimar, to enlist his support and that "Guillaume de Poitiers…comte de Valentinois et de Dioys" was the son of this marriage[908]. According to the charter dated 22 Sep 1099, under which "Guillelmus Hugo Adhemarii de Montilio et Giraudus Adhemarii de Montilio fratres…filii…defunctorum…Giraudeti Adhemarii de Montilio et Alisiæ de Poligniaco" confirmed the donations of "patres et avunculi nostri" dated 21 Mar 1094 and of "avum nostrum" dated 22 Sep 1099 to Montélimar, witnessed by "Guillelmus de Pictavia comes Valentinensis et Diensis, Eustachius de Pictavia, præpositus ecclesiæ cathedralis civitatis Valentiæ, fratres et filii defunctorum…Aymarii de Pictaviæ et Veronicæ Adhemarii de Montilio amitæ…contrahentium, quondam comitum Valentinen. et Dyens"[909], she was Véronique Adémar de Monteil, daughter of Giraud Adémar de Monteil & his wife [Anne d’Albon]. This charter is classified as spurious in the compilation, along with other similar charters in the same series, and it is uncertain how much of the genealogical information contained therein is based on historical fact."
Med Lands cites:
[900] Duchesne (Valentinois), Preuves, p. 3.
[901] Léoncel III, p. 6.
[902] Petrus Vallis Caernaii Historia Albigensium, Patrologia Latina Vol. 213, Chap. LXXV, Col. 0678C.
[903] ES III 820.
[904] Mémoires Valentinois et Diois, pp. 175-6.
[905] Saint-Chaffre, Saint-Guy du Puy, Chartarum Appendix, CCCCXLV, p. 185.
[906] Richerenches, p. xxiii, quoting Cais de Perlas Revue historique de Provence, T. I, p. 144.
[907] Richerenches, 23, p. 25.
[908] Duchesne (Valentinois), Preuves, p. 5.
[909] Montélimar, VII, p. 17.2


; Per Med Lands:
     "[RIXENDE] . According to Europäische Stammtafeln[893], she was Rixende, possible sister of Eustache Bishop and Comte de Valentinois, daughter of ---. Julien Chevalier refers to speculation that Bishop Eustache introduced Aymar de Poitiers into the region and gave him his daughter, presumably illegitimate, in marriage but emphasises that there is no documentary evidence to support this[894]. Aymar's use of the name Eustache for his second son does suggest a family relationship. The relationship appears to be confirmed by the charter dated 1217 under which her son "Eustachius prepositus Valentinus" confirmed the donation of "W[illelm]us Valentinus prepositus avunculus meus" of "Clivum" to the abbey of Saint-Chaffre, Saint-Guy du Puy[895], although the same donation was confirmed earlier by another charter in which "Wilelmus Pictaviensis et…Eustachius frater Wilelmi" name the donor "patruus noster Wilelmus Vivariensis episcopus"[896]. The charter dated Mar 1138 under which her supposed brother "Wilelmus Valencie prepositus" confirmed a donation to the Templars at Richerenches at the request of "Riperto de Charrovalis", confirmed by "comes Eustachius frater W. prepositi predicti"[897], suggests that "avunculus" should be preferred over "patruus" and that the donor was the maternal uncle of the brothers Guillaume and Eustache de Poitiers. Another perspective is provided by an enquiry dated 1421 by the parliament at Poitiers which records that "aux anciens des pays de Valentinois et de Dioys…la Comtesse de Marsanne" was challenged "estant veuve whose parents are unknown les evesques de Valence et de Dye" and that she married her daughter to "un surnommé de Poitiers", who was passing through the town of Montélimar, to enlist his support and that "Guillaume de Poitiers…comte de Valentinois et de Dioys" was the son of this marriage[898].
     "m AYMAR [I] de Poitiers, son of [GUILLAUME de Poitiers] & his wife ---."
Med Lands cites:
[893] ES III 820.
[894] Mémoires Valentinois et Diois, pp. 175-6.
[895] Saint-Chaffre, Saint-Guy du Puy, Chartarum Appendix, CCCCXLV, p. 185.
[896] Richerenches, p. xxiii, quoting Cais de Perlas Revue historique de Provence, T. I, p. 144.
[897] Richerenches, 23, p. 25.
[898] Duchesne (Valentinois)"), Preuves, p. 5.1

Citations

  1. [S2203] Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG): MEDIEVAL LANDS - A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/provvaldi.htm#RixendeMAymarIPoitiers. Hereinafter cited as FMG Medieval Lands Website.
  2. [S2203] FMG Medieval Lands Website, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/provvaldi.htm#AymarIPoitiersValentinois
  3. [S2203] FMG Medieval Lands Website, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/provvaldi.htm#GuillaumeValentinoisdied1187B

Guillaume I de Poitiers Comte de Valentinois1

M, #95169, d. between 1188 and 1189
FatherAymar I de Poitiers Seigneur de Boulogne-en-Velay, Comte de Valentinois1,2
MotherRixende de Valentinois1,2
Last Edited19 Sep 2020
     Guillaume I de Poitiers Comte de Valentinois married Beatrix/Béatrice d'Albon, daughter of Guigues IV [VII] "Dauphin" d'Albon Comte d'Albon, Dauphin du Viennois and Marguerite/Clemence de Mâcon Dauphine de Vienne,,
;
His 2nd wife.1,3 Guillaume I de Poitiers Comte de Valentinois married NN de Die, daughter of Isoard II de Die Comte de die,
;
His 1st wife.4 Guillaume I de Poitiers Comte de Valentinois married Matheline de Clérieux in 1180
;
His 3rd wife; her 2nd husband.5
Guillaume I de Poitiers Comte de Valentinois died between 1188 and 1189.1
      ; Per Med Lands:
     "[BEATRIX] . The Vita Margaritæ Albonensis comitissæ records that the two daughters of Marguerite de Viennois married "alteram…Arvenensium comiti, regis Franciæ consanguineo" and "alteram Valentinensium comiti"[292]. The Aymari Rivalli De Allobrogibus names "Marchesiam et Delphinam" as the two daughters of "Guigo secundus" and his wife "Macildam vel Clementiam filiam Stephani seu Sophini, Burgundiæ ducis, neptem papæ Claixti secundi", adding that "una comita Arverno, alterna Valentino" married[293]. Bearing in mind the [1120] marriage date of her parents of [Beatrix], and the death of her father in 1142 which provides the latest possible date for her birth, Guillaume is the only known Comte de Valentinois to whom this can refer. The primary source which names her has not yet been identified.
     "m as his [second] wife, GUILLAUME de Poitiers Comte de Valentinois, son of AYMAR de Poitiers Comte de Valentinois & his wife --- (-[1187/88])."
Med Lands cites:
[292] Ex vita Margaritæ Albonensis comitissæ, RHGF XIV, p. 428.
[293] De Allobrogibus VIII, p. 416.3


; Per Racines et Histoire (Poitiers): “Guilhem 1er de Poitiers ° 1125/35 (ou 31/01/1202 ?) + après 14/05/1187 1° comte de Valentinois & de Diois (26), seigneur de Boulogne-en-Velay
     ép. 1) dès 1155 Béatrix d’Albon dame de Saint-Nazaire-en-Royans ° 1129/42 + dès 1185 (fille de Guigue IV Dauphin, comte d’Albon, et de Clémence de Bourgogne (-Comté))
     ép. 2) Matheline (alias Métheline) de Clérieux, dame de La Voulte-sur-Rhône”.6

; Per Med Lands:
     "GUILLAUME [I] de Poitiers, son of AYMAR [I] Comte de Valentinois & his wife Rixende --- (-[1188/89]). Comte de Valentinois. "Willelmus Pictavensis comes Valentinus" donated property to Léoncel by an undated charter in which he names "patris mei domini Aldemari"[914]. "Guillelmus de Pictavia comes Valentinensis et Diensis, Eustachius de Pictavia, præpositus ecclesiæ cathedralis civitatis Valentiæ, fratres et filii defunctorum…Aymarii de Pictaviæ et Veronicæ Adhemarii de Montilio amitæ…contrahentium, quondam comitum Valentinen. et Dyens" witnessed the charter dated 22 Feb 1161 under which "Guillelmus Hugo Adhemarii de Montilio et Giraudus Adhemarii de Montilio fratres…filii…defunctorum…Giraudeti Adhemarii de Montilio et Alisiæ de Poligniaco" confirmed the donations of "patres et avunculi nostri" dated 21 Mar 1094 and of "avum nostrum" dated 22 Sep 1099 to Montélimar, classified as spurious in the compilation[915]. Comte Guillaume acquired the castles of Suze and Gigors in fief from Pierre Bishop of Die in 1163 and in 1165 swore allegiance to the bishop[916]. "Wilelmus Pictaviensis et…Eustachius frater Wilelmi" confirmed the donation of property to the order of St John of Jerusalem by "patruus noster Wilelmus Vivariensis episcopus" by charter dated 1164[917]. "Vuilelmus Pictaviensis…Valentinus comes" confirmed the privileges of Léoncel by charter dated 1183[918]. "W de Pictavo comes Val[entinensis]" signed a charter dated May 1184 related to a donation of property to Valence Saint-Rufus[919].
     "[m firstly --- de Die, daughter of ISOARD [II] Comte de Die & his wife ---. Jules Chevalier notes “le personnage quelque peu légendaire...probablement l’aînée des filles du comte Isoard II”[920]. Troubadour poetry records that she fell in love with Raimbaud d’Orange: “la comtessa de Dia...moiller d’en Guilhem de Peitieus...enamoret se d’en Raembaut d’Aurenga”, Chevalier noting that the text “par son ancienneté mérite une certaine créance”[921].]
     "m [secondly] [BEATRIX] d'Albon, daughter of GUIGUES [VI] Comte d'Albon [Viennois] & his wife Clémence [Marguerite] de Mâcon [Bourgogne-Comté] (-after 3 Dec 1173). The Vita Margaritæ Albonensis comitissæ records that the two daughters of Marguerite de Viennois married "alteram…Arvenensium comiti, regis Franciæ consanguineo" and "alteram Valentinensium comiti"[922]. The Aymari Rivalli De Allobrogibus names "Marchesiam et Delphinam" as the two daughters of "Guigo secundus" and his wife "Macildam vel Clementiam filiam Stephani seu Sophini, Burgundiæ ducis, neptem papæ Claixti secundi", adding that "una comita Arverno, alterna Valentino" married[923]. Bearing in mind the [1120] marriage date of the parents of [Beatrix], and the death of her father in 1142 which provides the latest possible date for her birth, Guillaume is the only known Comte de Valentinois to whom this can refer. The primary source which confirms her name has not yet been identified.
     "[m thirdly ([1180]) as her second husband, MATHELINE de Clérieux, widow of GUILLAUME JOURDAIN Seigneur de Fay et de Mezenc, daughter of ROGER [I] Seigneur de Clérieux & his wife ---. The primary source which confirms her parentage and two marriages has not yet been identified.]
     "Comte Guillaume & his first wife had [one possible child]:
1. [ALIX de Valentinois .

     "Comte Guillaume & his second wife had one child:
2. AYMAR [II] de Poitiers (-[1250])."

Med Lands cites:
[914] Léoncel VIII, p. 9.
[915] Montélimar, VII, p. 17.
[916] Mémoires Valentinois et Diois, p. 185.
[917] Richerenches, p. xxiii, quoting Cais de Perlas Revue historique de Provence, T. I, p. 144.
[918] Bibliotheca Sebusiana, Centuria I, XVIII, p. 57.
[919] Valence Saint-Rufus LIX, p. 71.
[920] Chevalier ‘Valentinois, Diois’ (1889), p. 124.
[921] Chevalier ‘Valentinois, Diois’ (1889), p. 124, quoting Raynouard (1820) Choix des poésies originales des Troubadours, Tome V (Paris), p. 125.
[922] Ex Vita Margaritæ Albonensis comitissæ, RHGF XIV, p. 428.
[923] De Allobrogibus VIII, p. 416.1


; Per Med Lands:
     "[daughter . Jules Chevalier notes “le personnage quelque peu légendaire...probablement l’aînée des filles du comte Isoard II”[201]. Troubadour poetry records that she fell in love with Raimbaud d’Orange: “la comtessa de Dia...moiller d’en Guilhem de Peitieus...enamoret se d’en Raembaut d’Aurenga”, Chevalier noting that the text “par son ancienneté mérite une certaine créance”[202].
     "m [as his first wife,] GUILLAUME de Poitiers Comte de Valentinois, son of ADEMAR Comte de Valentinois & his wife Rixende --- (-[1188/89]).]"
Med Lands cites:
[201] Chevalier ‘Valentinois, Diois’ (1889), p. 124.
[202] Chevalier ‘Valentinois, Diois’ (1889), p. 124, quoting Raynouard (1820) Choix des poésies originales des Troubadours, Tome V (Paris), p. 125.4

; Per Med Lands:
     "MATHELINE de Clérieux . Her parentage is indicated by the following document: a charter dated 1 May 1214 records an arbitral settlement between “Dragonet de Montauban et son fils Raymond” and “Raymond de Mévouillon et [her daughter] son épouse Saure” concerning half “des seigneuries des châteaux de Valréas, Montbrison, Grillon, Roussieu (Rosseuf) et Cayranne (Quayranne), laissées à Saure par sa mère Mételine, et du château du Pègue (Opigii), qui appartint à Roger de Clérieu, aïeul de Saure”[1236]. It is also indicated by the following document: [her daughter] “Philippa comtesse de Valentinois” donated property to Saint-Ruf, for the soul of “son aïeul maternel Rotgerius de Claireu”, by charter dated 26 Jun 1235[1237].
     "m firstly GUILLAUME JOURDAIN Seigneur de Fay, son of --- et de Mezenc , son of --- (-[1179/80]).
     "m secondly ([1180]) as his [third] wife, GUILLAUME [I] de Poitiers Comte de Valentinois, son of AYMAR [I] Comte de Valentinois & his wife Rixende --- (-[1188/89])."
Med Lands cites:
[1236] Regeste Dauphinois, Tome II, 6268, col. 74.
[1237] Regeste Dauphinois, Tome II, 7392, col. 268.5

Family 1

NN de Die

Citations

  1. [S2203] Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG): MEDIEVAL LANDS - A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/provvaldi.htm#GuillaumeValentinoisdied1187B. Hereinafter cited as FMG Medieval Lands Website.
  2. [S2203] FMG Medieval Lands Website, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/provvaldi.htm#AymarIPoitiersValentinois
  3. [S2203] FMG Medieval Lands Website, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/burgkvien.htm#BeatrixMAimarIPoitiers
  4. [S2203] FMG Medieval Lands Website, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/provvaldi.htm#dauIsoardIIDioisMGuillaumePoiValentinois
  5. [S2203] FMG Medieval Lands Website, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/burgkvien.htm#MetellineClerieux
  6. [S2280] Racines et Histoire, online http://racineshistoire.free.fr/LGN/LGN-frameset.html, Maison de Poitiers Comtes de Valentinois & seigneurs de Saint-Vallier, p. 2: http://racineshistoire.free.fr/LGN/PDF/Poitiers-Valentinois.pdf. Hereinafter cited as Racines et Histoire.
  7. [S1438] Miroslav Marek, online http://genealogy.euweb.cz/index.html, unknown author (e-mail address), downloaded updated 15 May 2003, Poitou 4 page: http://genealogy.euweb.cz/poitou/poitou4.html
  8. [S1490] Genealogics Website (oiginated by Leo van de Pas, continued by Ian Fettes), online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Aymar II de Poitiers: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00048701&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
  9. [S2203] FMG Medieval Lands Website, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/provvaldi.htm#AymarPoitiersValentinoisdied1230

NN de Die1

F, #95170
FatherIsoard II de Die Comte de die1 d. a 1166
Last Edited19 Sep 2020
     NN de Die married Guillaume I de Poitiers Comte de Valentinois, son of Aymar I de Poitiers Seigneur de Boulogne-en-Velay, Comte de Valentinois and Rixende de Valentinois,
;
His 1st wife.1
      ; Per Med Lands:
     "GUILLAUME [I] de Poitiers, son of AYMAR [I] Comte de Valentinois & his wife Rixende --- (-[1188/89]). Comte de Valentinois. "Willelmus Pictavensis comes Valentinus" donated property to Léoncel by an undated charter in which he names "patris mei domini Aldemari"[914]. "Guillelmus de Pictavia comes Valentinensis et Diensis, Eustachius de Pictavia, præpositus ecclesiæ cathedralis civitatis Valentiæ, fratres et filii defunctorum…Aymarii de Pictaviæ et Veronicæ Adhemarii de Montilio amitæ…contrahentium, quondam comitum Valentinen. et Dyens" witnessed the charter dated 22 Feb 1161 under which "Guillelmus Hugo Adhemarii de Montilio et Giraudus Adhemarii de Montilio fratres…filii…defunctorum…Giraudeti Adhemarii de Montilio et Alisiæ de Poligniaco" confirmed the donations of "patres et avunculi nostri" dated 21 Mar 1094 and of "avum nostrum" dated 22 Sep 1099 to Montélimar, classified as spurious in the compilation[915]. Comte Guillaume acquired the castles of Suze and Gigors in fief from Pierre Bishop of Die in 1163 and in 1165 swore allegiance to the bishop[916]. "Wilelmus Pictaviensis et…Eustachius frater Wilelmi" confirmed the donation of property to the order of St John of Jerusalem by "patruus noster Wilelmus Vivariensis episcopus" by charter dated 1164[917]. "Vuilelmus Pictaviensis…Valentinus comes" confirmed the privileges of Léoncel by charter dated 1183[918]. "W de Pictavo comes Val[entinensis]" signed a charter dated May 1184 related to a donation of property to Valence Saint-Rufus[919].
     "[m firstly --- de Die, daughter of ISOARD [II] Comte de Die & his wife ---. Jules Chevalier notes “le personnage quelque peu légendaire...probablement l’aînée des filles du comte Isoard II”[920]. Troubadour poetry records that she fell in love with Raimbaud d’Orange: “la comtessa de Dia...moiller d’en Guilhem de Peitieus...enamoret se d’en Raembaut d’Aurenga”, Chevalier noting that the text “par son ancienneté mérite une certaine créance”[921].]
     "m [secondly] [BEATRIX] d'Albon, daughter of GUIGUES [VI] Comte d'Albon [Viennois] & his wife Clémence [Marguerite] de Mâcon [Bourgogne-Comté] (-after 3 Dec 1173). The Vita Margaritæ Albonensis comitissæ records that the two daughters of Marguerite de Viennois married "alteram…Arvenensium comiti, regis Franciæ consanguineo" and "alteram Valentinensium comiti"[922]. The Aymari Rivalli De Allobrogibus names "Marchesiam et Delphinam" as the two daughters of "Guigo secundus" and his wife "Macildam vel Clementiam filiam Stephani seu Sophini, Burgundiæ ducis, neptem papæ Claixti secundi", adding that "una comita Arverno, alterna Valentino" married[923]. Bearing in mind the [1120] marriage date of the parents of [Beatrix], and the death of her father in 1142 which provides the latest possible date for her birth, Guillaume is the only known Comte de Valentinois to whom this can refer. The primary source which confirms her name has not yet been identified.
     "[m thirdly ([1180]) as her second husband, MATHELINE de Clérieux, widow of GUILLAUME JOURDAIN Seigneur de Fay et de Mezenc, daughter of ROGER [I] Seigneur de Clérieux & his wife ---. The primary source which confirms her parentage and two marriages has not yet been identified.]
     "Comte Guillaume & his first wife had [one possible child]:
1. [ALIX de Valentinois .

     "Comte Guillaume & his second wife had one child:
2. AYMAR [II] de Poitiers (-[1250])."

Med Lands cites:
[914] Léoncel VIII, p. 9.
[915] Montélimar, VII, p. 17.
[916] Mémoires Valentinois et Diois, p. 185.
[917] Richerenches, p. xxiii, quoting Cais de Perlas Revue historique de Provence, T. I, p. 144.
[918] Bibliotheca Sebusiana, Centuria I, XVIII, p. 57.
[919] Valence Saint-Rufus LIX, p. 71.
[920] Chevalier ‘Valentinois, Diois’ (1889), p. 124.
[921] Chevalier ‘Valentinois, Diois’ (1889), p. 124, quoting Raynouard (1820) Choix des poésies originales des Troubadours, Tome V (Paris), p. 125.
[922] Ex Vita Margaritæ Albonensis comitissæ, RHGF XIV, p. 428.
[923] De Allobrogibus VIII, p. 416.2


; Per Med Lands:
     "[daughter . Jules Chevalier notes “le personnage quelque peu légendaire...probablement l’aînée des filles du comte Isoard II”[201]. Troubadour poetry records that she fell in love with Raimbaud d’Orange: “la comtessa de Dia...moiller d’en Guilhem de Peitieus...enamoret se d’en Raembaut d’Aurenga”, Chevalier noting that the text “par son ancienneté mérite une certaine créance”[202].
     "m [as his first wife,] GUILLAUME de Poitiers Comte de Valentinois, son of ADEMAR Comte de Valentinois & his wife Rixende --- (-[1188/89]).]"
Med Lands cites:
[201] Chevalier ‘Valentinois, Diois’ (1889), p. 124.
[202] Chevalier ‘Valentinois, Diois’ (1889), p. 124, quoting Raynouard (1820) Choix des poésies originales des Troubadours, Tome V (Paris), p. 125.1

Citations

  1. [S2203] Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG): MEDIEVAL LANDS - A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/provvaldi.htm#dauIsoardIIDioisMGuillaumePoiValentinois. Hereinafter cited as FMG Medieval Lands Website.
  2. [S2203] FMG Medieval Lands Website, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/provvaldi.htm#GuillaumeValentinoisdied1187B

Isoard II de Die Comte de die1

M, #95171, d. after 1166
Last Edited19 Sep 2020
     Isoard II de Die Comte de die died after 1166.1
      ; Per Med Lands:
     "ISOARD [II] de Die (-after 1166). Comte de Die. "Ysoardus comes Diensis" donated his possessions “in Rivo Frigido et Garnazia” [Rioufroid and Garnaisier] to the monastery of Durbon by charter dated 1149[196]. He refused to swear homage to Hugues Bishop of Die in 1145, the dispute being referred to the arbitration of Raymond V Comte de Toulouse who gave judgment 22 Mar 1159 in favour of the bishop[197]. This was confirmed by bull dated 28 Mar 1165 under which "Isoardus filius Jaucerandi et Beatricis" recognised the episcopal ownership of certain castles[198]. "Ysoardus comes Diensis et Petrus Ysoardi filius meus" donated property “in nemore dels Ramails et in montanis de Chamosset” to Durbon by charter dated 1166[199].
     "m ---. The name of Isoard's wife is not known."
Med Lands cites:
[196] Mémoires Valentinois et Diois, p. 36, and Durbon, 36, p. 42.
[197] Mémoires Valentinois et Diois, pp. 31.
[198] Mémoires Valentinois et Diois, p. 31.
[199] Mémoires Valentinois et Diois, p. 33, and Durbon, 58, p. 63.1

Family

Children

Citations

  1. [S2203] Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG): MEDIEVAL LANDS - A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/provvaldi.htm#dauIsoardIIDioisMGuillaumePoiValentinois. Hereinafter cited as FMG Medieval Lands Website.

Matheline de Clérieux1

F, #95172
Last Edited19 Sep 2020
     Matheline de Clérieux married Guillaume Jourdain de Fay Seigneur de Fay et de Mezenc.2,1
Matheline de Clérieux married Guillaume I de Poitiers Comte de Valentinois, son of Aymar I de Poitiers Seigneur de Boulogne-en-Velay, Comte de Valentinois and Rixende de Valentinois, in 1180
;
His 3rd wife; her 2nd husband.1
     ; Per Racines et Histoire (Poitiers): “Guilhem 1er de Poitiers ° 1125/35 (ou 31/01/1202 ?) + après 14/05/1187 1° comte de Valentinois & de Diois (26), seigneur de Boulogne-en-Velay
     ép. 1) dès 1155 Béatrix d’Albon dame de Saint-Nazaire-en-Royans ° 1129/42 + dès 1185 (fille de Guigue IV Dauphin, comte d’Albon, et de Clémence de Bourgogne (-Comté))
     ép. 2) Matheline (alias Métheline) de Clérieux, dame de La Voulte-sur-Rhône”.3
; Per Med Lands:
     "GUILLAUME [I] de Poitiers, son of AYMAR [I] Comte de Valentinois & his wife Rixende --- (-[1188/89]). Comte de Valentinois. "Willelmus Pictavensis comes Valentinus" donated property to Léoncel by an undated charter in which he names "patris mei domini Aldemari"[914]. "Guillelmus de Pictavia comes Valentinensis et Diensis, Eustachius de Pictavia, præpositus ecclesiæ cathedralis civitatis Valentiæ, fratres et filii defunctorum…Aymarii de Pictaviæ et Veronicæ Adhemarii de Montilio amitæ…contrahentium, quondam comitum Valentinen. et Dyens" witnessed the charter dated 22 Feb 1161 under which "Guillelmus Hugo Adhemarii de Montilio et Giraudus Adhemarii de Montilio fratres…filii…defunctorum…Giraudeti Adhemarii de Montilio et Alisiæ de Poligniaco" confirmed the donations of "patres et avunculi nostri" dated 21 Mar 1094 and of "avum nostrum" dated 22 Sep 1099 to Montélimar, classified as spurious in the compilation[915]. Comte Guillaume acquired the castles of Suze and Gigors in fief from Pierre Bishop of Die in 1163 and in 1165 swore allegiance to the bishop[916]. "Wilelmus Pictaviensis et…Eustachius frater Wilelmi" confirmed the donation of property to the order of St John of Jerusalem by "patruus noster Wilelmus Vivariensis episcopus" by charter dated 1164[917]. "Vuilelmus Pictaviensis…Valentinus comes" confirmed the privileges of Léoncel by charter dated 1183[918]. "W de Pictavo comes Val[entinensis]" signed a charter dated May 1184 related to a donation of property to Valence Saint-Rufus[919].
     "[m firstly --- de Die, daughter of ISOARD [II] Comte de Die & his wife ---. Jules Chevalier notes “le personnage quelque peu légendaire...probablement l’aînée des filles du comte Isoard II”[920]. Troubadour poetry records that she fell in love with Raimbaud d’Orange: “la comtessa de Dia...moiller d’en Guilhem de Peitieus...enamoret se d’en Raembaut d’Aurenga”, Chevalier noting that the text “par son ancienneté mérite une certaine créance”[921].]
     "m [secondly] [BEATRIX] d'Albon, daughter of GUIGUES [VI] Comte d'Albon [Viennois] & his wife Clémence [Marguerite] de Mâcon [Bourgogne-Comté] (-after 3 Dec 1173). The Vita Margaritæ Albonensis comitissæ records that the two daughters of Marguerite de Viennois married "alteram…Arvenensium comiti, regis Franciæ consanguineo" and "alteram Valentinensium comiti"[922]. The Aymari Rivalli De Allobrogibus names "Marchesiam et Delphinam" as the two daughters of "Guigo secundus" and his wife "Macildam vel Clementiam filiam Stephani seu Sophini, Burgundiæ ducis, neptem papæ Claixti secundi", adding that "una comita Arverno, alterna Valentino" married[923]. Bearing in mind the [1120] marriage date of the parents of [Beatrix], and the death of her father in 1142 which provides the latest possible date for her birth, Guillaume is the only known Comte de Valentinois to whom this can refer. The primary source which confirms her name has not yet been identified.
     "[m thirdly ([1180]) as her second husband, MATHELINE de Clérieux, widow of GUILLAUME JOURDAIN Seigneur de Fay et de Mezenc, daughter of ROGER [I] Seigneur de Clérieux & his wife ---. The primary source which confirms her parentage and two marriages has not yet been identified.]
     "Comte Guillaume & his first wife had [one possible child]:
1. [ALIX de Valentinois .

     "Comte Guillaume & his second wife had one child:
2. AYMAR [II] de Poitiers (-[1250])."

Med Lands cites:
[914] Léoncel VIII, p. 9.
[915] Montélimar, VII, p. 17.
[916] Mémoires Valentinois et Diois, p. 185.
[917] Richerenches, p. xxiii, quoting Cais de Perlas Revue historique de Provence, T. I, p. 144.
[918] Bibliotheca Sebusiana, Centuria I, XVIII, p. 57.
[919] Valence Saint-Rufus LIX, p. 71.
[920] Chevalier ‘Valentinois, Diois’ (1889), p. 124.
[921] Chevalier ‘Valentinois, Diois’ (1889), p. 124, quoting Raynouard (1820) Choix des poésies originales des Troubadours, Tome V (Paris), p. 125.
[922] Ex Vita Margaritæ Albonensis comitissæ, RHGF XIV, p. 428.
[923] De Allobrogibus VIII, p. 416.4


; Per Med Lands:
     "MATHELINE de Clérieux . Her parentage is indicated by the following document: a charter dated 1 May 1214 records an arbitral settlement between “Dragonet de Montauban et son fils Raymond” and “Raymond de Mévouillon et [her daughter] son épouse Saure” concerning half “des seigneuries des châteaux de Valréas, Montbrison, Grillon, Roussieu (Rosseuf) et Cayranne (Quayranne), laissées à Saure par sa mère Mételine, et du château du Pègue (Opigii), qui appartint à Roger de Clérieu, aïeul de Saure”[1236]. It is also indicated by the following document: [her daughter] “Philippa comtesse de Valentinois” donated property to Saint-Ruf, for the soul of “son aïeul maternel Rotgerius de Claireu”, by charter dated 26 Jun 1235[1237].
     "m firstly GUILLAUME JOURDAIN Seigneur de Fay, son of --- et de Mezenc , son of --- (-[1179/80]).
     "m secondly ([1180]) as his [third] wife, GUILLAUME [I] de Poitiers Comte de Valentinois, son of AYMAR [I] Comte de Valentinois & his wife Rixende --- (-[1188/89])."
Med Lands cites:
[1236] Regeste Dauphinois, Tome II, 6268, col. 74.
[1237] Regeste Dauphinois, Tome II, 7392, col. 268.1


; Per Med Lands:
     "GUILLAUME JOURDAIN de Fay (-[1179/80]). Seigneur de Fay et de Mezenc . "Guillaume Jourdain" donated “un mas...del Motos...et dans le terroir de Cantaloup et le droit de pêche dans le lac d’Arcone” to Bonnefoy by charter dated 1179[1165]. He is named in the 1249 charter of his daughter Philippa (see below).
     "m as her first husband, MATHELINE de Clérieux, daughter of ROGER [I] Seigneur de Clérieux & his wife ---. Her parentage is indicated by the following document: a charter dated 1 May 1214 records an arbitral settlement between “Dragonet de Montauban et son fils Raymond” and “Raymond de Mévouillon et [her daughter] son épouse Saure” concerning half “des seigneuries des châteaux de Valréas, Montbrison, Grillon, Roussieu (Rosseuf) et Cayranne (Quayranne), laissées à Saure par sa mère Mételine, et du château du Pègue (Opigii), qui appartint à Roger de Clérieu, aïeul de Saure”[1166]. It is also indicated by the following document: [her daughter] “Philippa comtesse de Valentinois” donated property to Saint-Ruf, for the soul of “son aïeul maternel Rotgerius de Claireu”, by charter dated 26 Jun 1235[1167]. She married secondly ([1180]) as his [third] wife, Guillaume [I] de Poitiers Comte de Valentinois."
Med Lands cites:
[1165] Histoire Générale de Languedoc 3rd Edn. Tome VIII, Preuves, III Chartreuse de Bonnefoy, I, col. 1923 (summary only of original charter).
[1166] Regeste Dauphinois, Tome II, 6268, col. 74.
[1167] Regeste Dauphinois, Tome II, 7392, col. 268.2

Citations

  1. [S2203] Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG): MEDIEVAL LANDS - A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/burgkvien.htm#MetellineClerieux. Hereinafter cited as FMG Medieval Lands Website.
  2. [S2203] FMG Medieval Lands Website, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/provvaldi.htm#GuillaumeJourdainFaydied1180
  3. [S2280] Racines et Histoire, online http://racineshistoire.free.fr/LGN/LGN-frameset.html, Maison de Poitiers Comtes de Valentinois & seigneurs de Saint-Vallier, p. 2: http://racineshistoire.free.fr/LGN/PDF/Poitiers-Valentinois.pdf. Hereinafter cited as Racines et Histoire.
  4. [S2203] FMG Medieval Lands Website, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/provvaldi.htm#GuillaumeValentinoisdied1187B

Guillaume Jourdain de Fay Seigneur de Fay et de Mezenc1

M, #95173, d. between 1179 and 1180
Last Edited19 Sep 2020
     Guillaume Jourdain de Fay Seigneur de Fay et de Mezenc married Matheline de Clérieux.1,2

Guillaume Jourdain de Fay Seigneur de Fay et de Mezenc died between 1179 and 1180.1
      ; Per Med Lands:
     "MATHELINE de Clérieux . Her parentage is indicated by the following document: a charter dated 1 May 1214 records an arbitral settlement between “Dragonet de Montauban et son fils Raymond” and “Raymond de Mévouillon et [her daughter] son épouse Saure” concerning half “des seigneuries des châteaux de Valréas, Montbrison, Grillon, Roussieu (Rosseuf) et Cayranne (Quayranne), laissées à Saure par sa mère Mételine, et du château du Pègue (Opigii), qui appartint à Roger de Clérieu, aïeul de Saure”[1236]. It is also indicated by the following document: [her daughter] “Philippa comtesse de Valentinois” donated property to Saint-Ruf, for the soul of “son aïeul maternel Rotgerius de Claireu”, by charter dated 26 Jun 1235[1237].
     "m firstly GUILLAUME JOURDAIN Seigneur de Fay, son of --- et de Mezenc , son of --- (-[1179/80]).
     "m secondly ([1180]) as his [third] wife, GUILLAUME [I] de Poitiers Comte de Valentinois, son of AYMAR [I] Comte de Valentinois & his wife Rixende --- (-[1188/89])."
Med Lands cites:
[1236] Regeste Dauphinois, Tome II, 6268, col. 74.
[1237] Regeste Dauphinois, Tome II, 7392, col. 268.2


; Per Med Lands:
     "GUILLAUME JOURDAIN de Fay (-[1179/80]). Seigneur de Fay et de Mezenc . "Guillaume Jourdain" donated “un mas...del Motos...et dans le terroir de Cantaloup et le droit de pêche dans le lac d’Arcone” to Bonnefoy by charter dated 1179[1165]. He is named in the 1249 charter of his daughter Philippa (see below).
     "m as her first husband, MATHELINE de Clérieux, daughter of ROGER [I] Seigneur de Clérieux & his wife ---. Her parentage is indicated by the following document: a charter dated 1 May 1214 records an arbitral settlement between “Dragonet de Montauban et son fils Raymond” and “Raymond de Mévouillon et [her daughter] son épouse Saure” concerning half “des seigneuries des châteaux de Valréas, Montbrison, Grillon, Roussieu (Rosseuf) et Cayranne (Quayranne), laissées à Saure par sa mère Mételine, et du château du Pègue (Opigii), qui appartint à Roger de Clérieu, aïeul de Saure”[1166]. It is also indicated by the following document: [her daughter] “Philippa comtesse de Valentinois” donated property to Saint-Ruf, for the soul of “son aïeul maternel Rotgerius de Claireu”, by charter dated 26 Jun 1235[1167]. She married secondly ([1180]) as his [third] wife, Guillaume [I] de Poitiers Comte de Valentinois."
Med Lands cites:
[1165] Histoire Générale de Languedoc 3rd Edn. Tome VIII, Preuves, III Chartreuse de Bonnefoy, I, col. 1923 (summary only of original charter).
[1166] Regeste Dauphinois, Tome II, 6268, col. 74.
[1167] Regeste Dauphinois, Tome II, 7392, col. 268.1

Citations

  1. [S2203] Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG): MEDIEVAL LANDS - A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/provvaldi.htm#GuillaumeJourdainFaydied1180. Hereinafter cited as FMG Medieval Lands Website.
  2. [S2203] FMG Medieval Lands Website, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/burgkvien.htm#MetellineClerieux

Mathilde ? (?)1,2,3

F, #95174
Last Edited12 Dec 2020
     Mathilde ? (?) married Guillaume I 'Talvas' (?) Comte de Alençon. Duc de Alençon, Comte de Ponthieu & Montreuil., son of Robert II de Bellême de Montgomery 3rd Earl of Shrewsbury, seigneur d’Alençon, vicomte d’Hiesmes and Agnès de Ponthieu d’Abbeville, héritière du Ponthieu,
;
His 1st (?) wife.2
      ; Per Racines et Histoire (Ponthieu): “Guillaume 1er ou II de Ponthieu (III Talvas d’Alençon) ° ~1095 + 29/06/1171 comte de Ponthieu (04/03/1106/1110) et d’Alençon, seigneur de Bellême et de Montgomery (restauré dans ses titres et ses biens normands par le Roi Henry 1er 06/1119 ; reçoit des biens d’Henry II (Alençon, etc.) en 1166) (transfère le Ponthieu à son fils Gui 1126)
     ép. 1) Mathilde ?
     ép. 2) ~1115 Hélie (Alix) Borel de Bourgogne ° ~1080 + dès 28/02/1142 (fille d’Eudes 1er Borel «Le Roux», duc en Bourgogne (1058-1103) et de Sybille de Bourgogne (-comté, 1065-1102) ; veuve de Bertra”.3

; Per Med Lands:
     "GUILLAUME [I] "Talvas" de Ponthieu, son of ROBERT de Montgommery "de Bellême" Seigneur d'Alençon, Comte de Ponthieu, Earl of Shrewsbury & his wife Agnès de Ponthieu (-30 Jun 1171). Orderic Vitalis names “Guillelmum” as the son of “Rodbertum Belesmensem” and his wife “filiam Guidonis Pontivi comitis Agnetem”[615]. He succeeded his father [4 Mar 1106/1110][616] as Comte de Ponthieu. "Wilelmus comes Pontivi" confirmed the donation of the church of Saint-Léonard de Bellême to Marmoutier by charter dated to [1112/14][617]. Henry I King of England restored Comte Guillaume to his father's lands in Normandy in Jun 1119[618]. He resigned Ponthieu [before 1129] in favour of his son Guy: Guillaume of Jumièges records that ”Willelmum Talavatium” married “Ala...quæ fuerat antea uxor ducis Burgundiæ” [incorrect], and had “duos filios et totidem filias” of whom “filiorum primogenitus Wido” was made “patre vivente...comes Pontivi”[619]. "Gulielmus comes Pontivorum" donated property to the abbey of Saint-Sauveur-le-Vicomte for the souls of "his predecessors earl Roger and Mabel his wife, count Guy and Adda his wife, his father Robert de Belesmo and his mother Agnes and…Ela his wife and of their sons two of them called Robert and two William and two Enguerrand and Mabel his daughter" by charter dated 1127[620]. Robert of Torigny records that Henry II King of England granted "castrum Alenceium et Rocam Mabiriæ" to "Willermus Talavacius comes Sagiensis et filius eius Johannes et iterum Johannes nepos eius filius Guidonis primogeniti sui comitis Pontivi" in 1166[621]. Robert of Torigny records the death in 1171 of "Guillermus Talavercius comes Pontivi" and the succession of "Johannes nepos suus…ex Guidone primogenito suo"[622]. The Obituaire of Saint-Martin de Séez records the death 30 Jun of "Guillelmus Pontivorum comes"[623]. The necrology of the monastery of Ouche records the death "30 Jun" of "Willelmus comes Talevat"[624].
     "[m firstly ---. The name of Guillaume’s supposed first wife is not known. This first marriage is strongly suggested by the marriage date of Guillaume’s daughter Clémence. She is named in Jul 1128 with her son "Gaufrido primogenito" (see below). The addition of the word "primogenito" suggests that there was at least one other younger child at that date. This would place her marriage in late 1125 at the very latest. It is extremely unlikely, therefore, that she could have born from Guillaume’s marriage to Hélie de Bourgogne, the death of whose first husband is recorded in late Apr 1112. The other indication is the unlikelihood that Hélie de Bourgogne could have had eleven children by her second husband, considering her own estimated birth date.]
     "m [secondly] ([late 1112/1115]) as her second husband, HELIE de Bourgogne, widow of BERTRAND de Toulouse Count of Tripoli, daughter of EUDES I Duke of Burgundy [Capet] & his wife Sibylle de Bourgogne [Comté] ([1080/83]-28 Feb 1141). She is named by Orderic Vitalis, who also records her parentage, her two marriages and the names of her eldest sons by each marriage[625]. The contract of marriage between "Bertrandus Raimundi filius" and "Electæ" is dated Jun 1095[626]. If this document is correctly dated, it is unlikely that Hélie was born much later than [1080/83]. Guillaume of Jumièges records that ”Willelmum Talavatium” married “Ala...quæ fuerat antea uxor ducis Burgundiæ” [incorrect], and had “duos filios et totidem filias”[627]. "Gulielmus comes Pontivorum" donated property to the abbey of Saint-Sauveur-le-Vicomte for the souls of "…Ela his wife…" by charter dated 1127[628]. "Guido comes Pontivi" donated property to Cîteaux with the consent of "pater eius Willelmus comes…et mater eius Hela" by charter dated 18 Dec 1139[629]. "Wido comes Pontivii" confirmed freedoms over his lands, with the consent of "patris mei Willermi et domine Ele matris mee, fratris mei Johannis et uxoris mee Ide et filii mei Johannis" by undated charter[630]."
Med Lands cites:
[615] Orderic Vitalis (Prévost), Vol. III, Liber VIII, V, p. 300.
[616] CP XI 697.
[617] Marmoutier-Perche, 20, p. 32.
[618] Orderic Vitalis (Chibnall), Vol. VI, Book XII, p. 225.
[619] Willelmi Gemmetencis Historiæ (Duchesne, 1619), Liber VIII, XXXV, p. 311.
[620] Round (1899) 970, p. 346.
[621] Chronique de Robert de Torigny I, 1166, p. 360.
[622] Robert de Torigny, Vol. II, p. 28.
[623] Obituaire de Saint-Martin de Séez, Bibl.Nat. Ms français 18953, p. 227, quoted in Robert de Torigny, Vol. II, p. 28 footnote 3.
[624] RHGF, Tome XXIII, Ex Uticensis monasterii necrologio, p. 487.
[625] Orderic Vitalis (Chibnall), Vol. VI XIII, p. 431.
[626] Histoire Générale de Languedoc 3rd Edn. (Toulouse), Tome V, Preuves, Chartes et Diplômes, 389, col. 738.
[627] Willelmi Gemmetencis Historiæ (Duchesne, 1619), Liber VIII, XXXV, p. 311.
[628] Round (1899) 970, p. 346.
[629] Cîteaux, 113, p. 104.
[630] Ponthieu, I, p. 9.2

Citations

  1. Name is from Racines et Histoire.
  2. [S2203] Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG): MEDIEVAL LANDS - A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/nfraamp.htm#GuillaumeIPonthieudied1171B. Hereinafter cited as FMG Medieval Lands Website.
  3. [S2280] Racines et Histoire, online http://racineshistoire.free.fr/LGN/LGN-frameset.html, Comtes de Ponthieu, & Montreuil, Saint-Pol, p. 7: http://racineshistoire.free.fr/LGN/PDF/Ponthieu.pdf. Hereinafter cited as Racines et Histoire.

Baudouin de Saint-Omer1,2,3,4,5

M, #95177, b. before 1030, d. between 1097 and 1100
FatherOuvri Rabel de Saint-Omer1,6,7 b. 1000, d. 1064
ReferenceEDV27
Last Edited8 Nov 2020
     Baudouin de Saint-Omer was born before 1030; Geneagraphie says b. bef 1030; Wikipédia (FR) says b. 1030.4,3 He married Mahaut de Créquy, daughter of Baudouin II/III de Créquy seigneur de Créquy et de Fressin and Mauguerite (?) de Louvaine, circa 1060.2,5

Baudouin de Saint-Omer died between 1097 and 1100; Wikipédia (FR) says d. 1098; Geneagrapahie says d. aft 1097; Racines et Histoire says d. 1097-1100.4,1,3
     Reference: Geneagraphie cites: Généalogie de Carné, Alain de Carné, Forez, Loire, France.4,5 EDV-27.

; Per Wikipédia (FR):
     "Baudouin de Saint-Omer, seigneur de Saint-Omer (°1030, †1098) X Mahaut de Créquy."3

; Per Racines et Histoire (Saint-Omer): “Baudouin fl 1092-1097 + entre 09/1097 et 1100 Châtelain de Saint-Omer (souscrit charte 1092 de Jean, Abbé de Saint-Bertin ; assiste 09/1097 à la translation des reliques de Saint Folquin ; autre charte 1093)
     ép.~1060 Mahaut de Créquy”.1

; Per Racines et Histoire (Créquy): “Mahaut de Créquy
     ép.1049 Baudouin de Saint-Omer, seigneur de Saint-Omer, Pair de Flandres° ~1025 + après 1097”.2 He was living between 1092 and 1097.

Citations

  1. [S2280] Racines et Histoire, online http://racineshistoire.free.fr/LGN/LGN-frameset.html, Châtelains de Saint-Omer & Morbecque, Fauquembergues, p. 2: http://racineshistoire.free.fr/LGN/PDF/Saint-Omer.pdf. Hereinafter cited as Racines et Histoire.
  2. [S2280] Racines et Histoire, online http://racineshistoire.free.fr/LGN/LGN-frameset.html, Seigneurs de Créquy, p. 3: http://racineshistoire.free.fr/LGN/PDF/Crequy.pdf
  3. [S4742] Wikipédia - L'encyclopédie libre, online https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikip%C3%A9dia:Accueil_principal, Maison de Saint-Omer: https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maison_de_Saint-Omer. Hereinafter cited as Wikipédia (FR).
  4. [S4743] Geneagraphie - Families all over the world (Website), online <http://geneagraphie.com/>, Baudouin de Saint Omer: https://geneagraphie.com/getperson.php?personID=I426126&tree=1. Hereinafter cited as Geneagraphie.
  5. [S4806] Généalogie de la famille de Carné, online <http://www.decarne.com/gencar/gencar.html>, http://www.decarne.com/gencar/pag654.html#24. Hereinafter cited as Généalogie de Carné.
  6. [S4743] Geneagraphie, online http://geneagraphie.com/, Rabel de Saint Omer: https://geneagraphie.com/getperson.php?personID=I426123&tree=1
  7. [S4806] Généalogie de Carné, online http://www.decarne.com/gencar/gencar.html, http://www.decarne.com/gencar/pag1318.html#16

Colle de Rumigny1

F, #95178
ReferenceEDV29
Last Edited8 Nov 2020
     Colle de Rumigny married Ramelin II de Créquy, son of Arnoul III de Crequy and Adele d'Arkel,
;
His 2nd wife.1
     EDV-29.

Citations

  1. [S2280] Racines et Histoire, online http://racineshistoire.free.fr/LGN/LGN-frameset.html, Seigneurs de Créquy, p. 3: http://racineshistoire.free.fr/LGN/PDF/Crequy.pdf. Hereinafter cited as Racines et Histoire.
  2. [S812] e-mail address, online http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?db=bferris, Jr. William R. Ferris (unknown location), downloaded updated 4 Apr 2002, http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=bferris&id=I30232

Mahaut de Créquy1

F, #95179
FatherBaudouin II/III de Créquy seigneur de Créquy et de Fressin1 d. c 1007
MotherMauguerite (?) de Louvaine1
ReferenceEDV27
Last Edited6 Nov 2020
     Mahaut de Créquy married Baudouin de Saint-Omer, son of Ouvri Rabel de Saint-Omer, circa 1060.1,2

      ; Per Wikipédia (FR):
     "Baudouin de Saint-Omer, seigneur de Saint-Omer (°1030, †1098) X Mahaut de Créquy."3

; Per Racines et Histoire (Saint-Omer): “Baudouin fl 1092-1097 + entre 09/1097 et 1100 Châtelain de Saint-Omer (souscrit charte 1092 de Jean, Abbé de Saint-Bertin ; assiste 09/1097 à la translation des reliques de Saint Folquin ; autre charte 1093)
     ép.~1060 Mahaut de Créquy”.4 EDV-27.

; Per Racines et Histoire (Créquy): “Mahaut de Créquy
     ép.1049 Baudouin de Saint-Omer, seigneur de Saint-Omer, Pair de Flandres° ~1025 + après 1097”.1

Family

Baudouin de Saint-Omer b. b 1030, d. bt 1097 - 1100
Child

Citations

  1. [S2280] Racines et Histoire, online http://racineshistoire.free.fr/LGN/LGN-frameset.html, Seigneurs de Créquy, p. 3: http://racineshistoire.free.fr/LGN/PDF/Crequy.pdf. Hereinafter cited as Racines et Histoire.
  2. [S4806] Généalogie de la famille de Carné, online <http://www.decarne.com/gencar/gencar.html>, http://www.decarne.com/gencar/pag654.html#24. Hereinafter cited as Généalogie de Carné.
  3. [S4742] Wikipédia - L'encyclopédie libre, online https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikip%C3%A9dia:Accueil_principal, Maison de Saint-Omer: https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maison_de_Saint-Omer. Hereinafter cited as Wikipédia (FR).
  4. [S2280] Racines et Histoire, online http://racineshistoire.free.fr/LGN/LGN-frameset.html, Châtelains de Saint-Omer & Morbecque, Fauquembergues, p. 2: http://racineshistoire.free.fr/LGN/PDF/Saint-Omer.pdf

Ouvri Rabel de Saint-Omer1,2,3,4

M, #95180, b. 1000, d. 1064
FatherLambert de Saint-Omer avoué de Saint-Pierre de Gand1,5,2 b. 975, d. 1043
ReferenceEDV28
Last Edited8 Nov 2020
     Ouvri Rabel de Saint-Omer was born in 1000; Wikipédia (FR) says b. 1000; Geneagraphie says b. bef 1000; Carné says be. ca 1000.2,3,4
Ouvri Rabel de Saint-Omer died in 1064; Wikipédia (FR) says d. 1064; Geneagraphie and Carné say d. aft 1063.2,3,4
      ; Per Wikipédia (FR): "Rabel de Saint-Omer (°1000 - †1064.)2"

; Per Racines et Histoire (Saint-Omer): “Ouvri Rabel fl 1072-1083 + après 1063 (partisan de Richilde : Wilfricus, Walericus ?, témoin d’une charte de Gérard, Evêque de Cambrai à l’Abbaye de Grandmont ; autre charte 1063)”.1 EDV-28. He was living between 1072 and 1083.1

Family

Child

Citations

  1. [S2280] Racines et Histoire, online http://racineshistoire.free.fr/LGN/LGN-frameset.html, Châtelains de Saint-Omer & Morbecque, Fauquembergues, p. 2: http://racineshistoire.free.fr/LGN/PDF/Saint-Omer.pdf. Hereinafter cited as Racines et Histoire.
  2. [S4742] Wikipédia - L'encyclopédie libre, online https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikip%C3%A9dia:Accueil_principal, Maison de Saint-Omer: https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maison_de_Saint-Omer. Hereinafter cited as Wikipédia (FR).
  3. [S4743] Geneagraphie - Families all over the world (Website), online <http://geneagraphie.com/>, Rabel de Saint Omer: https://geneagraphie.com/getperson.php?personID=I426123&tree=1. Hereinafter cited as Geneagraphie.
  4. [S4806] Généalogie de la famille de Carné, online <http://www.decarne.com/gencar/gencar.html>, http://www.decarne.com/gencar/pag1318.html#16. Hereinafter cited as Généalogie de Carné.
  5. [S4743] Geneagraphie, online http://geneagraphie.com/, Lambert de Saint Omer: https://geneagraphie.com/getperson.php?personID=I426117&tree=1

Lambert de Saint-Omer avoué de Saint-Pierre de Gand1,2,3,4

M, #95181, b. 975, d. 1043
ReferenceEDV29
Last Edited8 Nov 2020
     Lambert de Saint-Omer avoué de Saint-Pierre de Gand was born in 975; Wikipédia (FR) says b. 975; Geneagraphie says b. bef 975; Carné says b. ca 975.2,3,4
Lambert de Saint-Omer avoué de Saint-Pierre de Gand died in 1043; Wikipédia (FR) says d. 1043; Geneagraphie and Carné say aft 1042.2,3,4
     EDV29.

; Per Wikipédia (FR): "Lambert de Saint-Omer (°975, †1043.)2"

; Per Racines et Histoire (Saint-Omer): “Lambert fl 1042-1063 (souscrit un échange 01/03/1042 entre SaintBertin et le Prévôt de Notre-Dame de SaintOmer ; signe une charte 1063)”.1 He was living between 1042 and 1063.1

Family

Child

Citations

  1. [S2280] Racines et Histoire, online http://racineshistoire.free.fr/LGN/LGN-frameset.html, Châtelains de Saint-Omer & Morbecque, Fauquembergues, p. 2: http://racineshistoire.free.fr/LGN/PDF/Saint-Omer.pdf. Hereinafter cited as Racines et Histoire.
  2. [S4742] Wikipédia - L'encyclopédie libre, online https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikip%C3%A9dia:Accueil_principal, Maison de Saint-Omer: https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maison_de_Saint-Omer. Hereinafter cited as Wikipédia (FR).
  3. [S4743] Geneagraphie - Families all over the world (Website), online <http://geneagraphie.com/>, Lambert de Saint Omer: https://geneagraphie.com/getperson.php?personID=I426117&tree=1. Hereinafter cited as Geneagraphie.
  4. [S4806] Généalogie de la famille de Carné, online <http://www.decarne.com/gencar/gencar.html>, http://www.decarne.com/gencar/pag1318.html#14. Hereinafter cited as Généalogie de Carné.

Alard de Warneton1

M, #95182
Last Edited20 Sep 2020
     Alard de Warneton married Aganitrude (?) van Brugge, daughter of NN van Brugge, between 1126 and 1128
;
Her 2nd husband.1,2,3
     ; Per Med Lands:
     "AGANITRUDE . Her family background and two marriages are confirmed by the Vita Karoli Comitis Flandriæ which records that, after Charles Count of Flanders was killed, Bertulf took refuge with "Alardi Warnesunensis" who had married "neptem illius Aganitrudem", adding that she was "castri…sancti Audomari quondam castellanam"[88]. This source does not specify the name of her first husband, but as the châtelain de Saint-Omer is named Guillaume in the sources dated between 1113 and 1126, it is likely that this was the Aganitrude’s husband.
     "m firstly [as his second wife,] GUILLAUME [I] Châtelain de Saint-Omer, son of --- (-before 1128).
     "m secondly (1128) ALARD de Warneton, son of ---."
Med Lands cites:
[88] Vita Karoli Comitis Flandriæ 37, MGH SS XII, p. 554.3


Reference: Genealogics cites: Europäische Stammtafeln, J.A. Stargardt Verlag, Marburg, Schwennicke, Detlev (Ed.) 3/4:623.1

Family

Aganitrude (?) van Brugge b. b 1080

Citations

  1. [S1490] Genealogics Website (oiginated by Leo van de Pas, continued by Ian Fettes), online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Alard de Warneton: https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00587568&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
  2. [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Aganitrude van Brugge: https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00275714&tree=LEO
  3. [S2203] Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG): MEDIEVAL LANDS - A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/FLEMISH%20NOBILITY.htm#AganitrudeM1GuillaumeSaintOmer. Hereinafter cited as FMG Medieval Lands Website.

NN van Brugge1

M, #95183
FatherErembald van Brugge Châtelain de Bruges2 d. a 1089
MotherDedda/Duva (?)2
ReferenceEDV27
Last Edited11 Nov 2020
     EDV-27.

Family

Child

Citations

  1. [S2203] Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG): MEDIEVAL LANDS - A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/FLEMISH%20NOBILITY.htm#AganitrudeM1GuillaumeSaintOmer. Hereinafter cited as FMG Medieval Lands Website.
  2. [S2203] FMG Medieval Lands Website, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/FLEMISH%20NOBILITY.htm#ErembaldBruges

Erembald van Brugge Châtelain de Bruges1

M, #95184, d. after 1089
ReferenceEDV28
Last Edited11 Nov 2020
     Erembald van Brugge Châtelain de Bruges married Dedda/Duva (?)
;
Her 2nd husband.1
Erembald van Brugge Châtelain de Bruges died after 1089.1
     EDV-28.

; Per Med Lands:
     "EREMBALD (-after 1089). Galbert of Bruges names "Boldranni homo et miles…Erembaldus, de Furnis natus" when recording that he murdered "Boldrannus castellanus…in Brudgis", married his widow, and took "vicecomitatum"[44]. The Passio Karoli Comitis Auctore Anonymo records that "Eremboldum" as "dapiferum" of "Bruggis quidam pretor…Holdrannus" during the time of Robert I Count of Flanders, adding that he murdered Holdran and married his widow[45]. Châtelain de Bruges. “Cononis de Emis, Radulfi camerarii, Rodberti pincernæ, Gerardi præstabularii, Galteri dapiferi, Athelardi filii Cononis, Erembaldi castellani Brugensis, Rodberti filii eius...” witnessed the charter dated 31 Oct 1089 under which "Rodbertus...Flandrensis marchio, comitis Rodberti agnomine Fresonis filius" conferred the functions of "cancellarium" on the provost of Bruges St. Donat[46].
     "m as her second husband, DEDDA [Duva], widow of BAULDRAN, daughter of ---. Galbert of Bruges names "Dedda vel Duva" as wife of "Boldrannus castellanus…in Brudgis", adding that she married secondly "miles…Erembaldus" who had murdered her first husband[47]. The Passio Karoli Comitis Auctore Anonymo records that "Eremboldum" as "dapiferum" of "Bruggis quidam pretor…Holdrannus" during the time of Robert I Count of Flanders, adding that he murdered Holdran and married his widow[48]."
Med Lands cites:
[44] Galbert de Bruges, 71, p. 115.
[45] Passio Karoli Comitis Auctore Anonymo 2, MGH SS XII, p. 620.
[46] Miraeus (1723), Tome I, XXVI, p. 359.
[47] Galbert de Bruges, 71, p. 115.
[48] Passio Karoli Comitis Auctore Anonymo 2, MGH SS XII, p. 620.1

Citations

  1. [S2203] Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG): MEDIEVAL LANDS - A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/FLEMISH%20NOBILITY.htm#ErembaldBruges. Hereinafter cited as FMG Medieval Lands Website.

Dedda/Duva (?)1

F, #95185
Last Edited25 Oct 2020
     Dedda/Duva (?) married Erembald van Brugge Châtelain de Bruges
;
Her 2nd husband.1 Dedda/Duva (?) married Bauldran (?) Châtelain de Bruges
;
Her 1st husband.
      ; Per Med Lands:
     "EREMBALD (-after 1089). Galbert of Bruges names "Boldranni homo et miles…Erembaldus, de Furnis natus" when recording that he murdered "Boldrannus castellanus…in Brudgis", married his widow, and took "vicecomitatum"[44]. The Passio Karoli Comitis Auctore Anonymo records that "Eremboldum" as "dapiferum" of "Bruggis quidam pretor…Holdrannus" during the time of Robert I Count of Flanders, adding that he murdered Holdran and married his widow[45]. Châtelain de Bruges. “Cononis de Emis, Radulfi camerarii, Rodberti pincernæ, Gerardi præstabularii, Galteri dapiferi, Athelardi filii Cononis, Erembaldi castellani Brugensis, Rodberti filii eius...” witnessed the charter dated 31 Oct 1089 under which "Rodbertus...Flandrensis marchio, comitis Rodberti agnomine Fresonis filius" conferred the functions of "cancellarium" on the provost of Bruges St. Donat[46].
     "m as her second husband, DEDDA [Duva], widow of BAULDRAN, daughter of ---. Galbert of Bruges names "Dedda vel Duva" as wife of "Boldrannus castellanus…in Brudgis", adding that she married secondly "miles…Erembaldus" who had murdered her first husband[47]. The Passio Karoli Comitis Auctore Anonymo records that "Eremboldum" as "dapiferum" of "Bruggis quidam pretor…Holdrannus" during the time of Robert I Count of Flanders, adding that he murdered Holdran and married his widow[48]."
Med Lands cites:
[44] Galbert de Bruges, 71, p. 115.
[45] Passio Karoli Comitis Auctore Anonymo 2, MGH SS XII, p. 620.
[46] Miraeus (1723), Tome I, XXVI, p. 359.
[47] Galbert de Bruges, 71, p. 115.
[48] Passio Karoli Comitis Auctore Anonymo 2, MGH SS XII, p. 620.1


; Per Med Lands:
     "BAULDRAN (-murdered 1067 or before). Galbert of Bruges records that "Boldrannus castellanus…in Brudgis" was murdered by "miles…Erembaldus"[41]. Châtelain de Bruges.
     "m as her first husband, DEDDA [Duva], daughter of ---. Galbert of Bruges names "Dedda vel Duva" as wife of "Boldrannus castellanus…in Brudgis", adding that she married secondly "miles…Erembaldus" who had murdered her first husband[42]. She married secondly Erembald."
Med Lands cites:
[41] Galbert de Bruges, 71, p. 115.
[42] Galbert de Bruges, 71, p. 115.2

Citations

  1. [S2203] Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG): MEDIEVAL LANDS - A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/FLEMISH%20NOBILITY.htm#ErembaldBruges. Hereinafter cited as FMG Medieval Lands Website.
  2. [S2203] FMG Medieval Lands Website, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/FLEMISH%20NOBILITY.htm#BauldranBruges

Bauldran (?) Châtelain de Bruges

M, #95186, d. circa 1067
Last Edited20 Sep 2020
     Bauldran (?) Châtelain de Bruges married Dedda/Duva (?)
;
Her 1st husband.
Bauldran (?) Châtelain de Bruges died circa 1067; Murdered.
      ; Per Med Lands:
     "BAULDRAN (-murdered 1067 or before). Galbert of Bruges records that "Boldrannus castellanus…in Brudgis" was murdered by "miles…Erembaldus"[41]. Châtelain de Bruges.
     "m as her first husband, DEDDA [Duva], daughter of ---. Galbert of Bruges names "Dedda vel Duva" as wife of "Boldrannus castellanus…in Brudgis", adding that she married secondly "miles…Erembaldus" who had murdered her first husband[42]. She married secondly Erembald."
Med Lands cites:
[41] Galbert de Bruges, 71, p. 115.
[42] Galbert de Bruges, 71, p. 115.1

Citations

  1. [S2203] Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG): MEDIEVAL LANDS - A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/FLEMISH%20NOBILITY.htm#BauldranBruges. Hereinafter cited as FMG Medieval Lands Website.

Hosto de Saint-Omer Chatelain de Saint-Omer, seigneur de Fauquembergues1,2

M, #95187, d. after 1128
FatherGuillaume I de Saint-Omer Chatelain de Saint-Omer1 d. bt 1126 - 1128
MotherAganitrude (?) van Brugge1 b. b 1080
Last Edited20 Sep 2020
     Hosto de Saint-Omer Chatelain de Saint-Omer, seigneur de Fauquembergues died after 1128.2
      ; Per Wikipédia (FR): "Hosto, châtelain de Saint-Omer, seigneur de Fauquembergues d. a 1128."2

Citations

  1. [S1438] Miroslav Marek, online http://genealogy.euweb.cz/index.html, unknown author (e-mail address), downloaded updated 15 May 2003, The chatelains de Saint-Omer: http://genealogy.euweb.cz/french/stomer.html
  2. [S4742] Wikipédia - L'encyclopédie libre, online https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikip%C3%A9dia:Accueil_principal, Maison de Saint-Omer: https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maison_de_Saint-Omer. Hereinafter cited as Wikipédia (FR).

Gauthier/Wautier de Saint-Omer1,2

M, #95188, b. circa 1130, d. before 1174
FatherGuillaume II de Saint-Omer Châtelain de Saint-Omer1,3,4,5,2 b. c 1070, d. a 1143
MotherMélisende de Picquigny1,6,4,7,2 b. c 1070
Last Edited21 Sep 2020
     Gauthier/Wautier de Saint-Omer married Eschiva II de Bures Princess of Galilee, Lady of Tiberias, daughter of Elinard de Bures Prince of Galilee,
;
Her 1st husband; his 2nd wife.8,2 Gauthier/Wautier de Saint-Omer was born circa 1130.1
Gauthier/Wautier de Saint-Omer died before 1174.1,2
      ; Per Racines et Histoire (Saint-Omer): “Wautier (Gaut(h)ier) de Saint-Omer ou de Fauquembergues °~1130 + avant 1173 (ou 1174 ?) Châtelain de Saint-Omer (1145) puis croisé (1152/53, familier du roi Baudouin III de Jérusalem; puis 1157/60), devient seigneur & Prince de Galilée et de Tibériade (1159/61), X au siège d’Ascalon (1153) (souscrit charte 02/08/1128 de Thierri d’Alsace ; nombreux actes jusqu’en 1143 ; cède probablement sa châtellenie à son frère Guillaume ~1160)
ép. avant 03/1159 Eschive de Bures ° ~1150 + 09/1187 dame de Tibériade (ou Tabarie) et de Galilée (fille de Guillaume ; ép. 2) Raymond III de Toulouse, comte de Tripoli, fils de Raymond, comte de Tripoli, et d’Hodierne de Réthel, d’où Marie d’Antioche)”.1

Citations

  1. [S2280] Racines et Histoire, online http://racineshistoire.free.fr/LGN/LGN-frameset.html, Châtelains de Saint-Omer & Morbecque, Fauquembergues , p. 4: http://racineshistoire.free.fr/LGN/PDF/Saint-Omer.pdf. Hereinafter cited as Racines et Histoire.
  2. [S2203] Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG): MEDIEVAL LANDS - A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/JERUSALEM%20NOBILITY.htm#GuillaumeTiberiasdiedbefore1204. Hereinafter cited as FMG Medieval Lands Website.
  3. [S1490] Genealogics Website (oiginated by Leo van de Pas, continued by Ian Fettes), online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Guillaume II: https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00174415&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
  4. [S2203] FMG Medieval Lands Website, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/NORTHERN%20FRANCE.htm#GuillaumeIISaintOmerdied1143B
  5. [S4743] Geneagraphie - Families all over the world (Website), online <http://geneagraphie.com/>, Guillaume de Saint Omer, II: https://geneagraphie.com/getperson.php?personID=I381421&tree=1. Hereinafter cited as Geneagraphie.
  6. [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Millesende de Picquigny: https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00174416&tree=LEO
  7. [S4743] Geneagraphie, online http://geneagraphie.com/, Mélissende de Picquigny: https://geneagraphie.com/getperson.php?personID=I381422&tree=1
  8. [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Eschiva II de Bures: https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00416721&tree=LEO
  9. [S2280] Racines et Histoire, online http://racineshistoire.free.fr/LGN/LGN-frameset.html, Châtelains de Saint-Omer & Morbecque, Fauquembergues , p. 13: http://racineshistoire.free.fr/LGN/PDF/Saint-Omer.pdf

Béatrix de Saint-Omer Châtelaine de Saint-Omer, dame de Gemelle ou La Jumelle1,2

F, #95189, b. circa 1180, d. 26 April 1254
FatherGuillaume IV de Saint-Omer Chatelain de Saint-Omer, seigneur de Fauquembergues1,2 d. bt 1190 - 1192
MotherIda (?) d'Avesnes1,2
Last Edited20 Sep 2020
     Béatrix de Saint-Omer Châtelaine de Saint-Omer, dame de Gemelle ou La Jumelle married Phillipe d'Aire seigneur de Thiennes, son of Christian de Strazeele and Havise d'Aire.2
Béatrix de Saint-Omer Châtelaine de Saint-Omer, dame de Gemelle ou La Jumelle was born circa 1180.1,2
Béatrix de Saint-Omer Châtelaine de Saint-Omer, dame de Gemelle ou La Jumelle died on 26 April 1254.1,2
      ; Per Wikipédia (FR):
     "Beatrix de Saint-Omer †26 avril 1254, à la mort de son frère, Guillaume VI) hérite de la châtellenie de Saint-Omer et de la seigneurie de Fauquembergue. Épouse Philippe d'Aire."1

; Per Racines et Histoire (Saint-Omer): “Béatrix ° ~1180 + 24-26/04/1254 dame de Gemelle ou La Jumelle (10/1216) (citée ~1194/1216) puis Châtelaine de Saint-Omer et dame de Fauquembergue (~1247/51) (dotée dès 1190, dot confirmée par son frère aîné en 1194 : elle est mieux dotée d’un tiers)
ép. avant 1203 (1197 ?) Philippe d’Aire + dès 03/1211 seigneur de Thiennes, croisé (1191) (fils de Christian de Strazeele et d’Havise d’Aire)”.2

Citations

  1. [S4742] Wikipédia - L'encyclopédie libre, online https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikip%C3%A9dia:Accueil_principal, Maison de Saint-Omer: https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maison_de_Saint-Omer. Hereinafter cited as Wikipédia (FR).
  2. [S2280] Racines et Histoire, online http://racineshistoire.free.fr/LGN/LGN-frameset.html, Châtelains de Saint-Omer & Morbecque, Fauquembergues , p. 6: http://racineshistoire.free.fr/LGN/PDF/Saint-Omer.pdf. Hereinafter cited as Racines et Histoire.
  3. [S2280] Racines et Histoire, online http://racineshistoire.free.fr/LGN/LGN-frameset.html, Châtelains de Saint-Omer & Morbecque, Fauquembergues , p. 7: http://racineshistoire.free.fr/LGN/PDF/Saint-Omer.pdf

Phillipe d'Aire seigneur de Thiennes1

M, #95190, d. before March 1211
FatherChristian de Strazeele1
MotherHavise d'Aire1
Last Edited20 Sep 2020
     Phillipe d'Aire seigneur de Thiennes married Béatrix de Saint-Omer Châtelaine de Saint-Omer, dame de Gemelle ou La Jumelle, daughter of Guillaume IV de Saint-Omer Chatelain de Saint-Omer, seigneur de Fauquembergues and Ida (?) d'Avesnes.1

Phillipe d'Aire seigneur de Thiennes died before March 1211.1
      ; Crusader.1

Citations

  1. [S2280] Racines et Histoire, online http://racineshistoire.free.fr/LGN/LGN-frameset.html, Châtelains de Saint-Omer & Morbecque, Fauquembergues , p. 6: http://racineshistoire.free.fr/LGN/PDF/Saint-Omer.pdf. Hereinafter cited as Racines et Histoire.
  2. [S2280] Racines et Histoire, online http://racineshistoire.free.fr/LGN/LGN-frameset.html, Châtelains de Saint-Omer & Morbecque, Fauquembergues , p. 7: http://racineshistoire.free.fr/LGN/PDF/Saint-Omer.pdf