Child(ren):
Baudouin le Riche de Beauvais, II, Seigneur de Beauvais
Gender:
Male
Birth:
circa 1030
France
Death:
circa 1070 (31-48)
Immediate Family:
Son of Baudouin le Riche de Corbeil, I
Father of Baudouin III de Beauvais de Corbeil and Ferry de Corbeil, "de Beauvais"
https://www.geni.com/people/Baudouin-le-Riche-de-Beauvais-II-Seigneur-de-Beauvais/6000000003827217451
Baudouin le Riche de Beauvais, II, Seigneur de Beauvais is your 30th great grandfather.
You ‰ ᆒ Henry Marvin Welborn
your father ·Üí Emma Corine Welborn (Bombard)
his mother ·Üí Charles Everett Bombard
her father ·Üí Thomas Joseph {Charles Edward} Bombard
his father ·Üí Charles Bombard
his father ·Üí Marie Marguerite Bombard (Laporte)
his mother ·Üí Jean-Baptiste Laporte
her father ·Üí Pierre Toussaint Laporte
his father ·Üí Toussaint Laporte dit St-Georges
his father ·Üí Marie-Angâ©lique Dit Gauthier dite Landreville
his mother ·Üí Marie Angelique Lacasse
her mother ·Üí Antoine Casse-Lacasse
her father ·Üí Charles Lacasse (Cassâ©), Casse
his father ·Üí Franâßoise Pilois
his mother ·Üí Francois Pilois (de Berthaucourt)
her father ·Üí Charles De Billy (Billy), Seigneur de Mauregard, de Quesmy, de Baricourt et du Pont
his father ·Üí Charles De Billy, I
his father ·Üí Louis de Billy, seigneur de Mauregard
his father ·Üí Antoine II de Billy, seigneur de Mauregard
his father ·Üí Marguerite d`Orgemont
his mother ·Üí Philippe d'Orgemont
her father ·Üí Marguerite de Sainte-Maure
his mother ·Üí Marguerite d'Amboise
her mother ·Üí Ingelger I, seigneur d'Amboise
her father ·Üí Jeanne de Chevreuse
his mother ·Üí Anseau de Chevreuse
her father ·Üí Hervâ© de Chevreuse
his father ·Üí Adeline de Corbeil
his mother ·Üí Jean II de Beauvais, dit de Corbeil
her father ·Üí Baudouin V de Beauvais, dit de Corbeil, du Donjon
his father ·Üí Baudouin III de Beauvais de Corbeil
his father ·Üí Baudouin le Riche de Beauvais, II, Seigneur de Beauvais
his father
https://gw.geneanet.org/alaindufour11?lang=en&pz=aude+ariane+marie+...
http://www.corpusetampois.com/che-20-estournet1944lafertealais.html
http://www.corpusetampois.com/che-20-estournet1944lafertealais.html...
Beaudoin II son of Beaudoin I de Corbeil, is the stem of the branch called Beauvais (91) Around 1047, following the example given by Eustachie his mother-in-law, he gave his tithe of Ossonville, to buy furs to the nuns of Yerres, to whom Aveline his wife also gave in 1158 2 muids of wheat and 2 muids of oats on his champarts of the same place.
Around 992, among the knights of Count Bouchard who subscribed the charter in favor of Saint-Guâ©naud, there was a certain Ferry about whom little is known. On 1 May 1006, at Corbeil, Bouchard expressed his last wishes in the presence of his son, Renaud, bishop of Paris; the officers of his household, the chamberlain Joscelin, the bottler Gaudry, the constable Hugues; a friend, Ansoud II Le Riche of Paris, adviser and most probably chamberlain to King Robert; Ferry; Robert, Viscount of Corbeil; and another Joscelin, Viscount of Melun. Kinship alone can explain the exceptional rank of Ferry, next to Ansoud, before the viscounts of Corbeil and Melun: S. Ansoaldi Divitis Parisii, S. Frederici, S. Rotberti vicecomitis... Wouldn't he be a son of Ansoud? It is
It is possible to suppose it if we observe that there was in Corbeil, fifty years later, an opulent knight, called Ansoud, son of a ferry, who could well have for father the one we have just seen in 1006 at the court of Bouchard. Not content with having inherited the seigneuries of Viry and Bondoufle, which were part of the heritage of Le Riche, his descendants owned in Corbeil, in the vicinity of the church of Saint-Laurent, not far from the Donjon, an important censive which was crossed by the rue Le Riche, burgus Divitis, so named in memory of the royal councillor. Thanks to the credit of Ansoud II, Ferry had been entrusted with the guard of the Donjon de Corbeil and, consequently, the military defence of the city: he was the captain or gastellier*, as he was then called. He was rewarded for his services by the allocation of property taken from the county, Viry, Bondoufle, Vaux, Jouy, Yerres, Orangis, Plessis-le-Comte, Draveil, etc... He became the strain of the most illustrious family of all those who, for similar reasons, bore the nickname of the Dungeon; she sometimes added those of Corbeil and Beauvais, which I believe to be a bad translation of Belveer, Bellevue. It took for coat of arms, sown with fleurs-de-lys to the lion issant. In 1018, Ferry subscribed the act by which Robert, Viscount of Corbeil, on the occasion of his taking of habit among the religious of Saint Maur-les-Fossâ©s, gave Villiers-sur-Nogent. The name of Ferry s wife is not known, but it is probable that he took an alliance among the officers of Count Bouchard, where we saw a provost, called Baudouin: in his posterity, this name will alternate with his in each generation, for more than three centuries. According to in all likelihood, he was the father of the two brothers, Ferry and Baudouin, who both reached the dapiferat. In 1043, Baldwin, who had the rank of knight, subscribed the charter by which William, Count of Corbeil, gave the church of Saint-Jean in that city to the abbey of Fossâ©s: S. Guillelmi, Corboilensis comitis, S. Nanterii, vicecomitis Corboilensis, S. Begonis militis, S. Balduini militis. In October 1045, he witnessed the act by which Imbert, bishop of Paris, gathered at the abbey of Saint-Germain-des-Prâ©s the altar of Saint-Georges in Villeneuve: S Beggonis militis, S. Balduini militis, S. Widonis militis, that is to say Bâ©gon, father of Gaudry II viscount of Corbeil, Baudouin du Donjon, castellan of La Fertâ©, and of this chief vassal of the bishop, which explains his presence at the episcopal court finally, his son-in-law, Guy de Montlhâ©ry. According to William of Jumiâ®ges, Henry I, although already crowned, was forced on the death of his father, in 1031, to take refuge with Robert, Duke of Normandy, to escape the pitfalls of Queen Constance who wanted to substitute his second son; after having equipped him well with arms and horses, the duke sent him back to his uncle, Mauger, Count of Corbeil, "to whom he commanded to pursue all those who deviated from the fidelity they owed to this monarch". Certainly, Albert de Corbeil had to unite his efforts with those of his brother-in-law, to make the young king triumph over his opponents and retain the throne; Henry I retained a deep gratitude to the house of Corbeil, whose devotion and fidelity he had been able to feel. It will therefore not be surprising to find Baldwin, as early as 1056, among the king's advisers or palatines; that year, together with his brother Ferry, he graduated immediately after the great officers: S. Frederici, S. Balduini. The accession of Philip I did not change their situation, and in 1060, in Dreux, the two brothers appeared in the entourage of the young prince. Over time, Baldwin's credit only increased, so that in 1069 he had the great honour of being promoted to Grand Seneschal of France. It is known that the dapiferate was then by far the most important charge of the crown. The seneschal commanded all the military forces of the kingdom; he headed the palace service, presided over judgments and received, for his benefit, a portion of the State revenues. In reality, he was a viceroy. In 1069, before August 4, Baldwin subscribed a privilege in favor of Saint-Germain de Pontoise, a second in Poissy for Saint-Ouen de Gisors, a third ratifying in 1070 an exchange of Geoffrey, bishop of Paris, with Saint-Germain-des-Prâ©s, and the same year a notice in favor of Marmoutier, S. Bauduini dapiferi, S. Frederici de Curbeio. Baldwin remained in charge for a short time, for his name appears for the last time at the bottom of a diploma for the abbey of Ferriâ®res, of March 18, 1070. It is not even certain that the previous two are a few months later than this one. It can be said, however, that his brother Ferry succeeded him before August 4, 1070, Most likely due to death, because he does not appear again. Assiduous with Philip I, Ferry had subscribed several diplomas as part of the king's household, de familia regis. His name is not usually followed by any title, in 1069, after the seneschal Baldwin, S. Frederici. Once, in 1068, he was knighted, S. Fridirici militis, immediately after the four grand officers. On several occasions, in 1066, 1067 and 1069, it was called Ferry de Corbeil. Seneschal from August 1070, Ferry remained in office until 1077.
The halo whose office of seneschal made the name of Baudouin shine among his contemporaries, his marriage, no less than the attribution of the name of Baudouin to the eldest of three generations, earned La Fertâ© the honor of being called by the contemporaries La Fertâ©-Baudouin, Firmitas Balduini, whom I met for the first time in 1076. Baldwin left at least six children: 1¬â and 2¬â Baldwin II and Ferry III; 3¬â John, abbot of Saint-Spire; 4¬â Ugrin, cited in 1071; 5 ¬â Hodierne, lady partly of La Fertâ© and Gometz, married Guy I of Montlhâ©ry, ; 6 ¬â Adelaide, lady in part of La Fertâ© and wife of Ebrard II, viscount of Chartres
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