maximum test » Hugues 'Magnus' "Hugues de France" Capet I (± 1057-1101)

Personal data Hugues 'Magnus' "Hugues de France" Capet I 

Sources 1, 2
  • Nickname is Hugues de France.
  • He was born about 1057Vermandois
    France.
  • He was christened in also known as Hugh Crepi the Great.
  • Alternative: He was christened.
  • Baptized (at 8 years of age or later) by the priesthood authority of the LDS church.
  • Alternative: Baptized (at 8 years of age or later) by the priesthood authority of the LDS church.
  • Alternative: Baptized (at 8 years of age or later) by the priesthood authority of the LDS church on July 23, 1923.
  • Alternative: Baptized (at 8 years of age or later) by the priesthood authority of the LDS church on July 23, 1923.
  • Alternative: Baptized (at 8 years of age or later) by the priesthood authority of the LDS church on July 23, 1923.
  • Alternative: Baptized (at 8 years of age or later) by the priesthood authority of the LDS church on July 23, 1923.
  • Alternative: Baptized (at 8 years of age or later) by the priesthood authority of the LDS church on July 23, 1923.
  • Alternative: Baptized (at 8 years of age or later) by the priesthood authority of the LDS church on July 23, 1923.
  • Alternative: Baptized (at 8 years of age or later) by the priesthood authority of the LDS church on July 23, 1923 in ARIZO.
  • Alternative: Baptized (at 8 years of age or later) by the priesthood authority of the LDS church on July 23, 1923.
  • Alternative: Baptized (at 8 years of age or later) by the priesthood authority of the LDS church on July 23, 1923.
  • Alternative: Baptized (at 8 years of age or later) by the priesthood authority of the LDS church on July 23, 1923.
  • Alternative: Baptized (at 8 years of age or later) by the priesthood authority of the LDS church on July 23, 1923.
  • Alternative: Baptized (at 8 years of age or later) by the priesthood authority of the LDS church on July 23, 1923.
  • Alternative: Baptized (at 8 years of age or later) by the priesthood authority of the LDS church on July 23, 1923.
  • Alternative: Baptized (at 8 years of age or later) by the priesthood authority of the LDS church on July 23, 1923.
  • Alternative: Baptized (at 8 years of age or later) by the priesthood authority of the LDS church on July 23, 1923.
  • Alternative: Baptized (at 8 years of age or later) by the priesthood authority of the LDS church on July 23, 1923.
  • Alternative: Baptized (at 8 years of age or later) by the priesthood authority of the LDS church on July 23, 1923.
  • Alternative: Baptized (at 8 years of age or later) by the priesthood authority of the LDS church on May 16, 1936.
  • Alternative: Baptized (at 8 years of age or later) by the priesthood authority of the LDS church on May 16, 1936.
  • Alternative: Baptized (at 8 years of age or later) by the priesthood authority of the LDS church on May 16, 1936.
  • Alternative: Baptized (at 8 years of age or later) by the priesthood authority of the LDS church on May 16, 1936.
  • Alternative: Baptized (at 8 years of age or later) by the priesthood authority of the LDS church on March 16, 1993.
  • Alternative: Baptized (at 8 years of age or later) by the priesthood authority of the LDS church on July 21, 1993.
  • Occupations:
    • on October 18, 1101 Comte de Vermandois, Valois, et CrepyFrance.
    • on August 15, 1096 Crusader Leader of the French Contingent in the First Crusade.
    • in the year 1099 Crusader, Commander of the Crusade.
    • February 1101 Count of Vermandois.
  • Graduated, Cte de Vermandois et de Valois.
  • Resident:
    • France.
  • He died on October 18, 1101Tarsus
    Mersin Province Turkey (Asia Minor).
  • He is buried in the year 1102 in St. Paul's ChurchTarsus
    Mersin Province Turkey (Asia Minor).
  • A child of Henry I of France and Anna Yaroslavna de Kiev

Household of Hugues 'Magnus' "Hugues de France" Capet I

He is married to Adèle de Vermandois.

They got married in the year 1064 at Valois, Bretagne, France.


Child(ren):

  1. Mathilde Maud/Matilda Capet  ± 1080-± 1130 


Notes about Hugues 'Magnus' "Hugues de France" Capet I

GIVN Hugh "The Great" von Vermandois
SURN De Crépi
NSFX Count of Vermandois
AFN 8XJ9-QV
_PRIMARY Y
DATE 9 SEP 2000
TIME 13:15:41
GIVN Hugh "The Great" von Vermandois
SURN De Crépi
NSFX Count of Vermandois
AFN 8XJ9-QV
_PRIMARY Y
DATE 9 SEP 2000
TIME 13:15:41
Weis: Duke of France and Burgundy, Marquis of Orleans, Count of Amiens, Chaumont, Paris, Valois, and Vermandois; a leader of the First Crusade.
[v28t0449.FTW]

Leader of the First Crusade, Duke of France and Burgandy, Marquis ofOrleans, Count of Amiens, Chaumont, Paris. (Ancestral Roots of CertainAmerican Colonists, 7th Edition, Weiss, Line 53)
Name Prefix: Count Name Suffix: Of Vermandois "The Great" Crusader ------------------- Hugh of Vermandois (1053 - October 18 , 1102 ), known as "the Great," wasthe brother of King Philip I of France , and count of Vermandois. In early 1096 Hugh and Philip began discussing the First Crusade after news of the Council of Clermont reached them in Paris . Although Philip could not participate, as he had been excommunicated , Hugh was said to have been influenced to jointhe Crusade after an eclipse of the moon on February 11 , 1096. That summer Hugh's army left France for Italy , where they would cross the Adriatic Sea into territory of the Byzantine Empire , unlike the other Crusader armies who were travelling by land. On the way, many of the soldiers led by fellow Crusader Emich of Leiningen joined Hugh's army after Emich was defeated by the Hungarians , whose land he had been pillaging. Hugh crossed the Adriatic from Bari in southern Italy, butmany of his ships were destroyed in a storm off the Byzantine port of Dyrrhachium . Hugh and most of hisarmy was rescued and escorted to Constantinople ,where they arrived in November of 1096. Prior to his arrival, Hugh sent an arrogant, insulting letter to Emperor Alexius I , demandingthat Alexius meet with him. Alexius was already wary of the armies about to arrive, after the unruly mob led by Peter the Hermit had passed through earlier in the year. Alexius kept Hugh in custody in a monastery until Hugh swore an oath of vassalage to him. After the Crusaders hadsuccessfully made their way across Seljuk territoryand, in 1098 , captured Antioch , Hugh was sent back to Constantinople to appeal for reinforcements from Alexius. Alexius was uninterested, however, and Hugh, instead of returning to Antioch to helpplan the siege of Jerusalem , went back to France. There he was scorned for not having fulfilled his vow as a Crusader to complete a pilgrimage to Jerusalem,and Pope Paschal II threated to excommunicate him. He joined the minor Crusade of 1101, but was wounded in battle with the Turks at Heraclea in June, and died of his wounds in October in Tarsus.
Hugh de Crépi, Comte de Vermandois et de Valois was the son of Henri I, Roi de France and Matilda of Duitsland.2 He was born in 1057. He married Aelis de Vermandois, Comtesse de Vermandois , daughter of Heribert V de Vermandois, Comte de Vermandois et de Valois and Adele de Crépi , circa 1080.3 He died on 18 October 1102 at Tarsus. He was a member of the House of Capet. Hugh de Crépi, Comte de Vermandois et de Valois also went by the nick-name of Hugh 'le Grand'.2 He gained the title of Comte de Vermandois. He gained the title of Comte de Valois.
Child of Hugh de Crépi, Comte de Vermandois et de Valois and Aelis de Vermandois, Comtesse de Vermandois :
Elizabeth de Vermandois + d. 17 Feb 1131
Citations
[S6 ] G.E. Cokayne; with Vicary Gibbs, H.A. Doubleday, Geoffrey H. White, Duncan Warrand and Lord Howard de Walden, editors, The Complete Peerage of England, Scotland, Ireland, Great Britain and the United Kingdom, Extant, Extinct or Dormant, new ed., 13 volumes in 14 (1910-1959; reprint in 6 volumes, Gloucester, U.K.: Alan Sutton Publishing, 2000), volume VII, page 526. Hereinafter cited as The Complete Peerage.
[S6 ] Cokayne, and others, The Complete Peerage, volume XII/2, page 829.
[S16 ] Jirí Louda and Michael MacLagan, Lines of Succession: Heraldry of the Royal Families of Europe, 2nd edition (London, U.K.: Little, Brown and Company, 1999), table 64. Hereinafter cited as Lines of Succession.
Hugh de Crépi, Comte de Vermandois et de Valois1 (M) b. 1057, d. 18 October 1102, #103173d. 18 Oct 1102|p10318.htm#i103173|Henri I, Roi de France|b. Apr 1008d. 4 Aug 1060|p10310.htm#i103097|Matilda of Duitsland|d. b 1044|p10318.htm#i103175|Robert I., Roi de France|b. 27 Mar 972d. 20 Jul 1031|p10310.htm#i103098|Constance d\\'Arles|b. c 973d. 25 Jul 1032|p10310.htm#i103099|||||||');"Pedigree Last Edited=22 May 2004
Hugh de Crépi, Comte de Vermandois et de Valois was the son of Henri I, Roi de France and Matilda of Duitsland.2 He was born in 1057. He married Aelis de Vermandois, Comtesse de Vermandois , daughter of Heribert V de Vermandois, Comte de Vermandois et de Valois and Adele de Crépi , circa 1080.3 He died on 18 October 1102 at Tarsus. He was a member of the House of Capet. Hugh de Crépi, Comte de Vermandois et de Valois also went by the nick-name of Hugh 'le Grand'.2 He gained the title of Comte de Vermandois. He gained the title of Comte de Valois.
Child of Hugh de Crépi, Comte de Vermandois et de Valois and Aelis de Vermandois, Comtesse de Vermandois :
Elizabeth de Vermandois + d. 17 Feb 1131
Citations
[S6 ] G.E. Cokayne; with Vicary Gibbs, H.A. Doubleday, Geoffrey H. White, Duncan Warrand and Lord Howard de Walden, editors, The Complete Peerage of England, Scotland, Ireland, Great Britain and the United Kingdom, Extant, Extinct or Dormant, new ed., 13 volumes in 14 (1910-1959; reprint in 6 volumes, Gloucester, U.K.: Alan Sutton Publishing, 2000), volume VII, page 526. Hereinafter cited as The Complete Peerage.
[S6 ] Cokayne, and others, The Complete Peerage, volume XII/2, page 829.
[S16 ] Jirí Louda and Michael MacLagan, Lines of Succession: Heraldry of the Royal Families of Europe, 2nd edition (London, U.K.: Little, Brown and Company, 1999), table 64. Hereinafter cited as Lines of Succession.
Crusader A leader of the First Crusade
Crusader A leader of the First Crusade
Crusader A leader of the First Crusade
[s2.FTW]

[Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #1241, Date of Import: May 8, 1997]

!COUNT OF VERMANDOIS[Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #1241, Date of Import: May 8, 1997]

!COUNT OF VERMANDOIS
.
[elen.FTW]

[Brøderbund WFT Vol. 3, Ed. 1, Tree #4579, Date of Import: Jun 15, 2003]

Hugh Magnus, the Great, Duke of France and Burgundy, Marquis of Orleans, Count of Amiens.
Hugh of Vermandois
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Hugh of Vermandois (1053 – October 18, 1101), was son to King Henry I of France and Anne of Kiev, and the younger brother of King Philip I of France. He was in his own right Count of Vermandois. William of Tyre called him "Hugh Magnus", Hugh the Great, but he was an ineffectual leader and soldier, great only in his boasting. Indeed, Sir Steven Runciman is certain that "Magnus" is a copyist's error, and should be "minus", "the younger" (referring to Hugh as younger brother of the King of France).

In early 1096 Hugh and Philip began discussing the First Crusade after news of the Council of Clermont reached them in Paris. Although Philip could not participate, as he had been excommunicated, Hugh was said to have been influenced to join the Crusade after an eclipse of the moon on February 11, 1096.

That summer Hugh's army left France for Italy, where they would cross the Adriatic Sea into territory of the Byzantine Empire, unlike the other Crusader armies who were travelling by land. On the way, many of the soldiers led by fellow Crusader Emicho joined Hugh's army after Emicho was defeated by the Hungarians, whose land he had been pillaging. Hugh crossed the Adriatic from Bari in southern Italy, but many of his ships were destroyed in a storm off the Byzantine port of Dyrrhachium. Hugh and most of his army was rescued and escorted to Constantinople, where they arrived in November of 1096. Prior to his arrival, Hugh sent an arrogant, insulting letter to Emperor Alexius I, demanding that Alexius meet with him: "Know, O King, that I am King of Kings, and superior to all, who are under the sky. You are now permitted to greet me, on my arrival, and to receive me with magnificence, as befits my nobility." Alexius was already wary of the armies about to arrive, after the unruly mob led by Peter the Hermit had passed through earlier in the year. Alexius kept Hugh in custody in a monastery until Hugh swore an oath of vassalage to him.

After the Crusaders had successfully made their way across Seljuk territory and, in 1098, captured Antioch, Hugh was sent back to Constantinople to appeal for reinforcements from Alexius. Alexius was uninterested, however, and Hugh, instead of returning to Antioch to help plan the siege of Jerusalem, went back to France. There he was scorned for not having fulfilled his vow as a Crusader to complete a pilgrimage to Jerusalem, and Pope Paschal II threatened to excommunicate him. He joined the minor Crusade of 1101, but was wounded in battle with the Turks at Heraclea in June, and died of his wounds in October in Tarsus.

[edit]
Family and children
He married Adele of Vermandois, the daughter of Herbert IV of Vermandois and Adele of Valois.They had eight children:

Count Raoul I of Vermandois
Henry, senior of Chaumont-en-Vexin, (d. 1130).
Simon, Bishop of Noyon
Elizabeth de Vermandois, married
Robert de Beaumont, 1st Earl of Leicester;
William de Warenne, 2nd Earl of Surrey
Matilde de Vermandois, married Raoul I of Beaugency
Constance de Vermandois, married Godefroy de la Ferte-Gaucher
Agnes de Vermandois, married Bonifacio, Marchese del Vasto
Beatrix de Vermandois, married Hugh III of Gournay-en-Bray
Emma de Vermandois, married Ralph de Gael, 1st Earl of Norfolk
Hugh was also Marquis of Orleans, Count of Amiens, Clermont, Paris, Valois and Vermandois; Crusader; a leader of the 1st Crusade.
[Weis 52] a leader of the 1st Crusade.

[From Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugh_of_Vermandois]
Hugh of Vermandois (1053 ? October 18, 1101), was son to King Henry I of France and Anne of Kiev, and the younger brother of King Philip I of France. He was in his own right Count of Vermandois. William of Tyre called him "Hugh Magnus", Hugh the Great, but he was an ineffectual leader and soldier, great only in his boasting. Indeed, Sir Steven Runciman is certain that "Magnus" is a copyist's error, and should be "minus", "the younger" (referring to Hugh as younger brother of the King of France).

In early 1096 Hugh and Philip began discussing the First Crusade after news of the Council of Clermont reached them in Paris. Although Philip could not participate, as he had been excommunicated, Hugh was said to have been influenced to join the Crusade after an eclipse of the moon on February 11, 1096.

That summer Hugh's army left France for Italy, where they would cross the Adriatic Sea into territory of the Byzantine Empire, unlike the other Crusader armies who were travelling by land. On the way, many of the soldiers led by fellow Crusader Emicho joined Hugh's army after Emicho was defeated by the Hungarians, whose land he had been pillaging. Hugh crossed the Adriatic from Bari in Southern Italy, but many of his ships were destroyed in a storm off the Byzantine port of Dyrrhachium.

Hugh and most of his army was rescued and escorted to Constantinople, where they arrived in November of 1096. Prior to his arrival, Hugh sent an arrogant, insulting letter to Eastern Roman Emperor Alexius I Comnenus, according to the Emperor's biography by his daughter (the Alexiad), demanding that Alexius meet with him: "Know, O King, that I am King of Kings, and superior to all, who are under the sky. You are now permitted to greet me, on my arrival, and to receive me with magnificence, as befits my nobility." Alexius was already wary of the armies about to arrive, after the unruly mob led by Peter the Hermit had passed through earlier in the year. Alexius kept Hugh in custody in a monastery until Hugh swore an oath of vassalage to him.

After the Crusaders had successfully made their way across Seljuk territory and, in 1098, captured Antioch, Hugh was sent back to Constantinople to appeal for reinforcements from Alexius. Alexius was uninterested, however, and Hugh, instead of returning to Antioch to help plan the siege of Jerusalem, went back to France. There he was scorned for not having fulfilled his vow as a Crusader to complete a pilgrimage to Jerusalem, and Pope Paschal II threatened to excommunicate him. He joined the minor Crusade of 1101, but was wounded in battle with the Turks in September, and died of his wounds in October in Tarsus.

Family and children
He married Adele of Vermandois, the daughter of Herbert IV of Vermandois and Adele of Valois. They had eight children:

Count Raoul I of Vermandois
Henry, senior of Chaumont-en-Vexin, (d. 1130).
Simon, Bishop of Noyon
Elizabeth de Vermandois, married
Robert de Beaumont, 1st Earl of Leicester;
William de Warenne, 2nd Earl of Surrey
Matilde de Vermandois, married Raoul I of Beaugency
Constance de Vermandois, married Godefroy de la Ferte-Gaucher
Agnes de Vermandois, married Bonifacio, Marchese del Vasto. Mother of Adelaide del Vasto.
Beatrix de Vermandois, married Hugh III of Gournay-en-Bray
Emma de Vermandois, married Ralph de Gael, 1st Earl of Norfolk

Prince Hugh Magnus, Count of Vermandois


Hugh of Vermandois (1053 – October 18, 1101), was son to King Henry I of France and Anne of Kiev, and the younger brother of King Philip I of France. He was in his own right Count of Vermandois. William of Tyre called him "Hugh Magnus", Hugh the Great, but he was an ineffectual leader and soldier, great only in his boasting. Indeed, Sir Steven Runciman is certain that "Magnus" is a copyist's error, and should be "minus", "the younger" (referring to Hugh as younger brother of the King of France).

In early 1096 Hugh and Philip began discussing the First Crusade after news of the Council of Clermont reached them in Paris. Although Philip could not participate, as he had been excommunicated, Hugh was said to have been influenced to join the Crusade after an eclipse of the moon on February 11, 1096.

That summer Hugh's army left France for Italy, where they would cross the Adriatic Sea into territory of the Byzantine Empire, unlike the other Crusader armies who were travelling by land. On the way, many of the soldiers led by fellow Crusader Emicho joined Hugh's army after Emicho was defeated by the Hungarians, whose land he had been pillaging. Hugh crossed the Adriatic from Bari in Southern Italy, but many of his ships were destroyed in a storm off the Byzantine port of Dyrrhachium.

Hugh and most of his army was rescued and escorted to Constantinople, where they arrived in November of 1096. Prior to his arrival, Hugh sent an arrogant, insulting letter to Eastern Roman Emperor Alexius I Comnenus, according to the Emperor's biography by his daughter (the Alexiad), demanding that Alexius meet with him: "Know, O King, that I am King of Kings, and superior to all, who are under the sky. You are now permitted to greet me, on my arrival, and to receive me with magnificence, as befits my nobility." Alexius was already wary of the armies about to arrive, after the unruly mob led by Peter the Hermit had passed through earlier in the year. Alexius kept Hugh in custody in a monastery until Hugh swore an oath of vassalage to him.
After the Crusaders had successfully made their way across Seljuk territory and, in 1098, captured Antioch, Hugh was sent back to Constantinople to appeal for reinforcements from Alexius. Alexius was uninterested, however, and Hugh, instead of returning to Antioch to help plan the siege of Jerusalem, went back to France. There he was scorned for not having fulfilled his vow as a Crusader to complete a pilgrimage to Jerusalem, and Pope Paschal II threatened to excommunicate him. He joined the minor Crusade of 1101, but was wounded in battle with the Turks at Heraclea in June, and died of his wounds in October in Tarsus.
[edit]

Family and children
He married Adele of Vermandois, the daughter of Herbert IV of Vermandois and Adele of Valois.They had eight children:
1. Count Raoul I of Vermandois
2. Henry, senior of Chaumont-en-Vexin, (d. 1130).
3. Simon, Bishop of Noyon
4. Elizabeth de Vermandois, married
1. Robert de Beaumont, 1st Earl of Leicester;
2. William de Warenne, 2nd Earl of Surrey
5. Matilde de Vermandois, married Raoul I of Beaugency
6. Constance de Vermandois, married Godefroy de la Ferte-Gaucher
7. Agnes de Vermandois, married Bonifacio, Marchese del Vasto. Mother of Adelaide del Vasto.
8. Beatrix de Vermandois, married Hugh III of Gournay-en-Bray
9. Emma de Vermandois, married Ralph de Gael, 1st Earl of Norfolk

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Hugh de Crépi, Comte de Vermandois et de Valois1 (M)
b. 1057, d. 18 October 1102, #103173
Pedigree
Last Edited=7 Feb 2005

     Hugh de Crépi, Comte de Vermandois et de Valois was born in 1057. He was the son of Henri I, Roi de France and Princess Anne of Kiev.2,3 He married Aelis de Vermandois, Comtesse de Vermandois, daughter of Heribert V, Comte de Vermandois et de Valois and Adele de Crépi, circa 1080.2 He died on 18 October 1102 in Tarsus.
     Hugh de Crépi, Comte de Vermandois et de Valois was a member of the House of Capet. Hugh de Crépi, Comte de Vermandois et de Valois also went by the nick-name of Hugh 'le Grand'.3 He gained the title of Comte de Vermandois. He gained the title of Comte de Valois.

Child of Hugh de Crépi, Comte de Vermandois et de Valois and Aelis de Vermandois, Comtesse de Vermandois
Elizabeth de Vermandois+ d. 17 Feb 11311
Citations
1. [S6] G.E. Cokayne; with Vicary Gibbs, H.A. Doubleday, Geoffrey H. White, Duncan Warrand and Lord Howard de Walden, editors, The Complete Peerage of England, Scotland, Ireland, Great Britain and the United Kingdom, Extant, Extinct or Dormant, new ed., 13 volumes in 14 (1910-1959; reprint in 6 volumes, Gloucester, U.K.: Alan Sutton Publishing, 2000), volume VII, page 526. Hereinafter cited as The Complete Peerage.
2. [S16] Jirí Louda and Michael MacLagan, Lines of Succession: Heraldry of the Royal Families of Europe, 2nd edition (London, U.K.: Little, Brown and Company, 1999), table 64. Hereinafter cited as Lines of Succession.
3. [S6] Cokayne, and others, The Complete Peerage, volume XII/2, page 829.
Hugh was the first prince to leave on the First Crusade (except forPeter the Hermit's 'Peasant's Crusade' earlier that year). He set outfor Italy in August 1096.
Count de Vermandos; Duke of France & Burgundy; Marquis of Orleans. High Steward of England. Of the Capet line.
He commanded the French pilgrims in the 1st Crusade.
[1813] WSHNGT.ASC file (Geo Washington Ahnentafel) # 2180214 b & d

"Our Royal Descent from Alfred 'the Great' ..." in Steve Clare papers, Hugh "le Grand" Count Vermandois

"History ... Crusades, Vol II, p 24, d & bur; Hugh of Vermandois, badly wounded in battle with Turks during second crusade at Heraclea (Turkey) escaped on horseback to Tarsus on the Mediterraneum coast.

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Hugh of Vermandois (1053 – October 18, 1101), was son to King Henry I of France and Anne of Kiev, and the younger brother of King Philip I of France. He was in his own right Count of Vermandois. William of Tyre called him "Hugh Magnus", Hugh the Great, but he was an ineffectual leader and soldier, great only in his boasting. Indeed, Sir Steven Runciman is certain that "Magnus" is a copyist's error, and should be "minus", "the younger" (referring to Hugh as younger brother of the King of France).

In early 1096 Hugh and Philip began discussing the First Crusade after news of the Council of Clermont reached them in Paris. Although Philip could not participate, as he had been excommunicated, Hugh was said to have been influenced to join the Crusade after an eclipse of the moon on February 11, 1096.

That summer Hugh's army left France for Italy, where they would cross the Adriatic Sea into territory of the Byzantine Empire, unlike the other Crusader armies who were travelling by land. On the way, many of the soldiers led by fellow Crusader Emicho joined Hugh's army after Emicho was defeated by the Hungarians, whose land he had been pillaging. Hugh crossed the Adriatic from Bari in Southern Italy, but many of his ships were destroyed in a storm off the Byzantine port of Dyrrhachium.

Hugh and most of his army was rescued and escorted to Constantinople, where they arrived in November of 1096. Prior to his arrival, Hugh sent an arrogant, insulting letter to Eastern Roman Emperor Alexius I Comnenus, according to the Emperor's biography by his daughter (the Alexiad), demanding that Alexius meet with him:

"Know, O King, that I am King of Kings, and superior to all, who are under the sky. You are now permitted to greet me, on my arrival, and to receive me with magnificence, as befits my nobility."
Alexius was already wary of the armies about to arrive, after the unruly mob led by Peter the Hermit had passed through earlier in the year. Alexius kept Hugh in custody in a monastery until Hugh swore an oath of vassalage to him.

After the Crusaders had successfully made their way across Seljuk territory and, in 1098, captured Antioch, Hugh was sent back to Constantinople to appeal for reinforcements from Alexius. Alexius was uninterested, however, and Hugh, instead of returning to Antioch to help plan the siege of Jerusalem, went back to France. There he was scorned for not having fulfilled his vow as a Crusader to complete a pilgrimage to Jerusalem, and Pope Paschal II threatened to excommunicate him. He joined the minor Crusade of 1101, but was wounded in battle with the Turks in September, and died of his wounds in October in Tarsus.

He married Adele of Vermandois, the daughter of Herbert IV of Vermandois and Adele of Valois.They had nine children:
Leo van de Pas' data base has Hugh d. 1102, but Chris Phillips seems to have the better source, which he gives below in response to a request from Leo, on SGM, 22 Jan 2004:
From: Chris Phillips ((XXXXX@XXXX.XXX)) Subject: Re: When DID he die?
Newsgroups: soc.genealogy.medieval Date: 2004-01-22 00:38:39 PST
Runciman on that page, in a chapter on "The Crusades of 1101", describes the Battle of Heraclea, early September 1101, and says this of Hugh: "Hugh of Vermandois was badly wounded in the battle; but some of his men rescued him and he too reached Tarsus. But he was a dying man. His death took place on 18 October and they buried him there in the Cathedral of St Paul. He never fulfilled his vow to go to Jerusalem."
Runciman's sources for this section are "Albert of Aix, VIII, 34-40, pp. 579-82 (the only full source); Ekkehard, XXIV-XXVI, pp. 30-2". If you'd like to follow this to source, both these are available on the gallica website, in the "Recueil des historiens des croisades series" - put these numbers into the "Recherche libre" field on the search page: N051574 for Albert; N051575 for Ekkehard.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Hugh of Vermandois (1053 - October 18, 1101), was the brother of KingPhilip I of France, and count of Vermandois. He married Adela(Adelheid) daughter of Hebert IV Count of Valois and Adela de Vexin.William of Tyre called him "Hugh Magnus", Hugh the Great, but he wasan ineffectual leader and soldier, great only in his boasting.

In early 1096 Hugh and Philip began discussing the First Crusade afternews of the Council of Clermont reached them in Paris. Although Philipcould not participate, as he had been excommunicated, Hugh was said tohave been influenced to join the Crusade after an eclipse of the moonon February 11, 1096.

That summer Hugh's army left France for Italy, where they would crossthe Adriatic Sea into territory of the Byzantine Empire, unlike theother Crusader armies who were travelling by land. On the way, many ofthe soldiers led by fellow Crusader Emich of Leiningen joined Hugh'sarmy after Emich was defeated by the Hungarians, whose land he hadbeen pillaging. Hugh crossed the Adriatic from Bari in southern Italy,but many of his ships were destroyed in a storm off the Byzantine portof Dyrrhachium. Hugh and most of his army was rescued and escorted toConstantinople, where they arrived in November of 1096. Prior to hisarrival, Hugh sent an arrogant, insulting letter to Emperor Alexius I,demanding that Alexius meet with him: "Know, O King, that I am King ofKings, and superior to all, who are under the sky. You are nowpermitted to greet me, on my arrival, and to receive me withmagnificence, as befits my nobility." Alexius was already wary of thearmies about to arrive, after the unruly mob led by Peter the Hermithad passed through earlier in the year. Alexius kept Hugh in custodyin a monastery until Hugh swore an oath of vassalage to him.

After the Crusaders had successfully made their way across Seljukterritory and, in 1098, captured Antioch, Hugh was sent back toConstantinople to appeal for reinforcements from Alexius. Alexius wasuninterested, however, and Hugh, instead of returning to Antioch tohelp plan the siege of Jerusalem, went back to France. There he wasscorned for not having fulfilled his vow as a Crusader to complete apilgrimage to Jerusalem, and Pope Paschal II threated to excommunicatehim. He joined the minor Crusade of 1101, but was wounded in battlewith the Turks at Heraclea in June, and died of his wounds in Octoberin Tarsus.

Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugh_of_Vermandois"
Hugh is also referenced as Marquis of Orleans, Count of Amiens, Chaumo nt, Paris, Valois & Vermandois. He is styled as de Crepi Magnus, Duke of Burgundy and as a coadjutor. He was also a leader during the firs t crusade to Palestine, and participated in the siege and capture of t he cities of Nicaea and Antioch in 1096. In 1101, he made a second vo yage to the East, but the crusading forces were attacked enroute by th e Greeks under Alexius Comnenus, and in 1102, Hugh was killed at Tarsu s in Cilicia and buried in the Church of St. Paul.
GIVN Hugh "The Great" von Vermandois
SURN De Crépi
NSFX Count of Vermandois
AFN 8XJ9-QV
_PRIMARY Y
DATE 9 SEP 2000
TIME 13:15:41
[DC] Theroff's files: Hugh De CREPI b. Of Vermandois, Occ: Count of
Vermandois, m. Adelhelda, b. Of Vermandois, (d/o Herbert) d. 1101.
Hugh, known as 'The Great'. Also Valois, Chamont and Amiens. Children:
Isabel b. 1081.
[AlanBWilson] see his list of refs. under: de BEAUMONT, Roger born c
1022 of Pontaudemer, Normandy.
Duke of France and Burgundy, Marquis of Orleons. More Count of Amiens,
Vlermont, Paris, Valois & Vermandois.
#Générale#inhumation : Tarsus Grece Saint-Paul

#Générale#Prend part à la première croisade.
Profession : Comte de Vermandois & de Valois.
{geni:about_me} '''''Note regarding his name:''' Sources show that Hugues Magnus was a compound name. See below for details.''

== Wikipedia ==

From the English Wikipedia page of Hugh I, Count of Vermandois:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugh_I,_Count_of_Vermandois

French Wikipedia: (1057-1102)

http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugues_Ier_de_Vermandois

Hugh I (1053 – October 18, 1101), called Magnus or the Great, was a younger son of Henry I of France and Anne of Kiev and younger brother of Philip I.

He was in his own right Count of Vermandois, but an ineffectual leader and soldier, great only in his boasting.

Indeed, Steven Runciman is certain that his nickname Magnus (greater or elder), applied to him by William of Tyre, is a copyist's error, and should be Minus (younger), referring to Hugh as younger brother of the King of France.

In early 1096 Hugh and Philip began discussing the First Crusade after news of the Council of Clermont reached them in Paris. Although Philip could not participate, as he had been excommunicated, Hugh was said to have been influenced to join the Crusade after an eclipse of the moon on February 11, 1096.

That summer Hugh's army left France for Italy, where they would cross the Adriatic Sea into territory of the Byzantine Empire, unlike the other Crusader armies who were travelling by land. On the way, many of the soldiers led by fellow Crusader Emicho of Flonheim joined Hugh's army after Emicho was defeated by the Hungarians (under King Coloman I "The Booklover" at Moson fortress), whose land he had been pillaging.

Hugh crossed the Adriatic from Bari in Southern Italy, but many of his ships were destroyed in a storm off the Byzantine port of Dyrrhachium.

Hugh and most of his army was rescued and escorted to Constantinople, where they arrived in November 1096. Prior to his arrival (he would be the first to arrive in Constantinople), Hugh sent an arrogant, insulting letter to Eastern Roman Emperor Alexius I Comnenus, according to the Emperor's biography by his daughter (the Alexiad), demanding that Alexius meet with him:

"Know, O King, that I am King of Kings, and superior to all, who are under the sky. You are now permitted to greet me, on my arrival, and to receive me with magnificence, as befits my nobility."[1]

Alexius was already wary of the armies about to arrive, after the unruly mob led by Peter the Hermit had passed through earlier in the year ("The People's Crusade"). Alexius kept Hugh in custody in a monastery until Hugh swore an oath of vassalage to him.

After the Crusaders had successfully made their way across Seljuk territory and, in 1098, captured Antioch, Hugh (and Baldwin of Hainault were) sent back to Constantinople to appeal for reinforcements from Alexius (Baldwin mysteriously vanishes in an ambush along the way). Alexius was uninterested in sending an expedition to claim the city so late in summer. (This triggers off a series of arguments in Antioch, where Bohemund asserts that Alexius had violated his oath to assist the crusades, and therefore, the city by rights was his. This argument, and an outbreak of typhus, ties up the Crusaders for the remainder of the year.)

Hugh, instead of returning to Antioch to help plan the siege of Jerusalem, went back to France. There he was scorned for not having fulfilled his vow as a Crusader to complete a pilgrimage to Jerusalem, and Pope Paschal II threatened to excommunicate him.

Hugh joined the minor Crusade of 1101 ("The Crusade of the Faint-Hearted," alongside William IX of Aquitaine and Welf I, Duke of Bavaria, and accompanied by Ida of Austria, mother of Leopold III of Austria). Half of this army was allowed to set sail from Constantinople for Palestine, while the other half marched overland, reaching Heraclea by September. Hugh was wounded in battle with the Turks (ambushed by Kilij Arslan) in September, and died of his wounds on October 18 in Tarsus. (Their group continued eastward under William of Nevers and Raymond of Toulouse, arriving at Jerusalem in Easter 1102. Kilij Arslan later establishes his capital at Konya after his victories over the "Crusade of the Faint-Hearted.")

== Family and children ==

He married Adele of Vermandois, the daughter of Herbert IV, Count of Vermandois and Alice, Countess of Valois. They had nine children:

1. Matilda(1080-1130), married Ralph I of Beaugency

2. Beatrice (1082-after1144), married Hugh III of Gournay

3. Ralph I (1085-1152)

4. Elizabeth of Vermandois, Countess of Leicester (1085-1131)

5. Constance (1086-??), married Godfrey de la Ferté-Gaucher

6. Agnes (1090-1125), married Boniface of Savone

7. Henry (1091-1130), Lord of Chaumont en Vexin

8. Simon (1093-1148)

9. William (c. 1094-c.1096)

[In order originally presented on Wikipedia page:

1. Count Raoul I of Vermandois

2. Henry, senior of Chaumont-en-Vexin, (d. 1130).

3. Simon, Bishop of Noyon

4. Elizabeth de Vermandois, married Robert de Beaumont, 1st Earl of Leicester; William de Warenne, 2nd Earl of Surrey

5. Matilde de Vermandois, married Raoul I of Beaugency

6. Constance de Vermandois, married Godefroy de la Ferte-Gaucher

7. Agnes de Vermandois, married Margrave Boniface del Vasto. Mother of Adelaide del Vasto.

8. Beatrix de Vermandois, married Hugh III of Gournay-en-Bray

9. Emma de Vermandois)

=== References ===

1.^ http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/The_Alexiad/Book_X chapter VII

== Was He Called Hugues Magnus? ==

Steven Runciman is certain that his nickname Magnus (greater or elder), applied to him by William of Tyre, is a copyist's error, and should be Minus (younger), referring to Hugh as younger brother of the King of France. However, on this point Runciman appears to have been wrong.

"The byname "Magnus" with the given name Hugo in his family did not reflect an outstanding career or personal qualities, was not an error, and did not originate with William of Tyre. It has also been said incorrectly that the byname originated with a mistranslation into Latin of "le maisn", indicating only "the younger brother" (i.e. of King Philippe I); however, the doublet Hugo Magnus was traditional in the early Capetian family, and the count of Vermandois was the fourth man to bear this combined name including others who were eldest or only sons. Notably, this Hugo Magnus, count of Vermandois had a daughter Agnes who married Bonifacio I, margrave of Vasto, giving birth to a younger son by him who was named Hugo Magnus (Ugomagno) after the maternal grandfather. It seems pretty clear from the repetition over many generations that family members considered this a ''compound name'' (emphasis added), hoping that the boy would grow up to display its quality, with the second element being definitely "magnus" (great)." (Peter Stewart, [http://archiver.rootsweb.ancestry.com/th/read/GEN-MEDIEVAL/2007-08/1187165642 soc.genealogy.medieval], Aug. 15, 2007)

Some of the sources that call him Hugues Magnus include:

#. Prou, Recueil des Actes de Philippe Ier, Roi de France (1059–1108) (1908): 217–221 (charter of King Philippe I of France dated 1076; charter witnessed by “Hugoni magni, fratris Philipi regis”).

#. Albert of Aix records that "Hugonem Magnum fratrem regis Franciæ, Drogonem et Clareboldum" were held in chains in prison by the emperor at Constantinople. Reference: Albert of Aix (RHC), Liber II, Cap. IX, p. 305. Citation courtesy of Charles Cawley.

#. Robert of Torigny records the death in 1102 of "Hugo Magnus apud Tarsum." Reference: Chronique de Robert de Torigny I, 1102, p. 124. Citation courtesy of Charles Cawley.

#. Bruel, Recueil des Chartes de l’Abbaye de Cluny 5 (Coll. de Docs. inédits sur l'Histoire de France 1st Ser.) (1894): 421–422 (charter dated c.1140 of Pierre, Abbot of Cluny, names Count Raoul of Perrone,
son of Hugues le Grand, brother of King Philippe I, great friend and benefactor [Comes Rodulfus de Perrona, filius Hugonis magni, fratris Philippe regis Francorum, magnus amicus et benefactor].

#. Monumenta Germaniae Historica Scriptorum 13 (1881): 253 (Genealogiæ Scriptoris Fusniacensis: “Nunc ad Hugonem Magnum revertamur. Hugo cognomento Magnus, frater Philippi regis Francorum, de Adelaide comitissa Veromandensium genuit Radulfum comitem Veromandie et Henricum de Chauni et Simonem episcopum Noviomensem et filias.

#. Monumenta Germaniae Historica Scriptorum 13 (1881): 257 (De Genere Comitum Flandrensium Notæ Parisienses: "Comes Herbertus genuit Odonem et Adelam sororem. Odo fuit fatuus et indiscretus. Barones Viromandenses rogaverunt regem, ut Adelam daret Hugoni le Magne, fratri eiusdem regis; quod factum est. De predicto comite Hugone et predicta Adela uxore sua exivit comes Radulfus, Simon Noviomensis episcopus, dominus Henricus de Chaumont et quatuor filie."

(Douglas Richardson, [http://archiver.rootsweb.ancestry.com/th/read/GEN-MEDIEVAL/2012-05/1336858714 soc.genealogy.medieval], May 12, 2012)

== Was He Count of Vermandois? ==

Some researchers have suggested that Hugues Magnus was not Count of Vermandois (''see, e.g.,'' Douglas Richardson, [http://archiver.rootsweb.ancestry.com/th/read/GEN-MEDIEVAL/2012-05/1336918618 soc.genealogy.medieval], May 13, 2012).

The evidence shows he was Count of Vermandois, but later in life.

Some references that do not call him Count of Vermandois include the following (from Douglas Richardson, [http://archiver.rootsweb.ancestry.com/th/read/GEN-MEDIEVAL/2012-05/1336918618 soc.genealogy.medieval], May 13, 2012).

#. Annales Ordinis S. Benedicti occidentalium monachorum patriarchæ 5 (1713): 95 (charter of King Philippe I of France dated 1075; charter witnessed by “Hugues brother of the king” [Hugonis fratris regis].)

#. Carlier, Histoire du Duché de Valois 1 (1764): 346–352 (“Hugues le Grand commença à prendre la qualité de Comté de Crépy, avant le fin duonzième siècle.").

#. Gallia Christiana 10 (1751): 207 (letter of Hugh Bishop of Senlis to the Abbot of Crepy dated c.1095; letter mentions “domni Hugonis comitis de Crispeio”), 246–247 (charter of King Philippe I dated 1079;
charter witnessed by “comitis Hugonis fratris Regis”), 248 (charter of Guy, Bishop of Beauvais for church of Esserens dated 1081; charter names “Philippo rege & Hugone regis fratre de Crispeio & ejus uxoreAdela” and is witnessed by “Hugo de Crispeio” and “Adelae uxoris Hugonis de Crispeio.”).

#. Academy 15 (1879): 457–458 (Letter of Bishop Ivo dated at beginning of A.D. 1096: “Ivo, Dei gratia Carnotensis episcopus, clericis Mellentis .... Perlatum est ad aures nostras quod Mellentinus comes
ducere velit in uxorem filiam Hugonis Crispeiensis comitis; quod fieri non sinit concors descretorum et canonum sanctio, dicens: (Conjunctiones consanguineorum fleri prohibemus). Horum autem consanguinitas nec ignota est, nec remota, sicut testantur et probare parati sunt praeclari viri de eadem sati prosapia. Dicunt enim quia Gualterius Albus genuit matrem Gualeranni comitis, qui genuit matrem Roberti comitis. Item supradictus Gualterius genuit Radulphum patrem alterius Radulfi, qui genuit Vermandensem comitissam, ex qua nata est uxor comitis Hugonis, cujus filiam nunc ducere vult Mellentinus comes.”).

#. Prou, Recueil des Actes de Philippe Ier, Roi de France (1059–1108) (1908): cxxxv (Souscriptions des frères du roi. Les frères du roi, Robert et Hugues ont souscrit quelques diplômes royaux … Quant à la
souscription d’Hugues, on la rencontre de 1067 à 1082. Dan un diplôme de 1076 on lui a donné le surnom de ‘Grand’, que les historiens lui ont conservé. Il est ordinairement qualifié simplement frère du roi; mais un diplôme de janvier 1079 fait précéder son nom du titre de comte; il était devenu en effet comte de Vermandois par mariage avec la fille d’Herbert IV.), cxciii, note 1; cxciv, note 1; 137–139
(charter of King Philippe I of France dated 1070; charter witnessed by “Hugues brother of the king” [Hugonis fratris regis].), 144–145 (charter of King Philippe I dated 1071; charter witnessed by “Hugo,
frater regis.”), 192–193 (charter of King Philippe I dated 1075; charter witnessed by “Hugonis, fratris regis.”), 197–199 (charter of King Philippe I of France dated 1075; charter witnessed by “domni
Hugonis, fratris regis Francorum”), 217–221 (charter of King Philippe I of France dated 1076; charter witnessed by “Hugoni magni, fratris Philipi regis”), 242–245 (charter of King Philippe I of France dated
1079; charter witnessed by “comitis Hugoni, fratris regis”), 264–266 (charter of King Philippe I of France dated 1080; charter witnessed by “Hugoni, regis fratre, de Crispeo et ejus uxore”), 271–272 (charter of
King Philippe I dated 1082; charter witnessed by Hugonis, Crispeii comitis), 272–273 (charter of King Philippe I of France dated 1082; charter witnessed by “Hugonis, fratris Regis”), 333–337 (charter of
King Philippe I of France dated 1094; charter witnessed by “Hugonis, fratris Philippi regis”), 442.

#. Migne, Patrologiae Cursus Completus 188 (1855): 515 (Orderici Vitalis: “Henricus autem, Francorum rex, Bertradam, Julii Claudii regis Russiæ filiam, uxorem duxit, quæ Philippum, et Hugonem Magnum, Crispeii comitem, peperit.”).

Nevertheless, Hugues Magnus is known to have used the title. Hugues' "wife Adela wasn't the natural heiress of Vermandois, as she had a living brother who was disinherited a year or so before the death of their father. She and Hugo [Hugues] subsequently used the lesser title "count/ess of Crepy" for around twenty years until his brother King Philippe I later confirmed Vermandois to them. The territorial designation of counts was not set in concrete and could behighly variable at the time of Hugo Magnus. There is an undated charter where the canons of Beauvais complained about the actions of Hugo, who was specifically called count of Vermandois, and from circumstantial evidence this person was more probably Hugo than his father-in-law Heribert. There isalso abrief history written at Fleury abbey a few years after Hugo's death stating that he had been given Vermandois by his brother King Philippe I -presumably this grant confirmed possession of Vermandois by right of his wife, who was not the natural heiress since her disinherited brother was still living." (Leo van de Pas, [http://archiver.rootsweb.ancestry.com/th/read/GEN-MEDIEVAL/2012-05/1337145284 soc.genealogy.medieval], May 16, 2012)

--------------------

A narrative on Hugh's death, from Medieval History - The Crusades, XI, The Crusade of 1101:

http://www.third-millennium-library.com/MedievalHistory/CRUSADES/14.html

Near Heraclea (in early September), the crusaders came to a river where they hoped to slake their thirst. But Kilij Arslan and his allies lay in ambush among the growth along the other bank and just as the Christians drew near the water the Turks loosed a volley of arrows and charged.

Caught by surprise and weakened by hunger and thirst, the crusaders could not stand up to the fierce assault. After a desperate stand in the marshy land along the river (where their heavy equipment must have been a hindrance) the army dissolved.

Some crusaders tried vainly to hide in the marsh grass, some escaped by following the stream up to its source, and others fled into the mountains. Most of the Christians were either killed or enslaved.

Among the many women reported to have been carried off into captivity were Corba, wife of Geoffrey Burel, and Ida of Austria. Albert was not certain whether Ida had been captured or killed, but others came to believe that she had lived on in the harem of a Moslem prince to whom she bore a famous son, Zengi.

This is an early instance of what was to become a conventional literary theme; it is matched in interest — and lack of credibility — by the legend of Thiemo of Salzburg. The archbishop was carried off by a Turkish emir and being a metal worker of sorts, he was commanded to repair a certain “Mohammedan idol”. When the idol began to speak blasphemously, Thiemo broke it and for this he was martyred.

As in the previous defeats, an undue proportion of those who escaped were leaders, perhaps because of their superior horses. The bishop of Auvergne, however, walked out. Welf got away by shedding arms and armor and riding through the mountains. Two of his counts, Bernhard and Henry of Regensburg, made their way to the coast.

William IX fled with a single squire and reached Longiniada, the port for Tarsus, then ruled by Bernard the Stranger. Bernard treated them well. After a few days Tancred, learning of William’s misfortunes, sent an escort of knights to conduct him to Antioch, where the duke was lavishly entertained.

Less certain is the case of Hugh of Vermandois. He was wounded in the knee by an arrow, but escaped to Tarsus, where he died on October 18 and was buried in the church of St. Paul.

The chroniclers tell of Hugh's reenlistment in France and of his death, but nothing of his activities on crusade. The context suggests that he was with William IX at Heraclea, but the record is none too clear.

With the disaster at Heraclea the military significance of the Crusade of 1101 vanishes. Remnants of the several bands continu­ed their way to Jerusalem but in effect the crusade had become a pilgrimage.

--------------------

DUKE HUGH CREPI MAGNUS of Vermandois, Normandy, son of King Henry I and Anne (of KIEV), was born circa 1050, died in 1130 and was buried in St Paul De Tarse.

He married circa 1064, COUNTESS ADELAIDE DE VERMANDOIS of Valois, Bretagne, France, daughter of Count Herbert IV and Adela (de VEXIN), who was born circa 1050, and died on 23 Sept. 1120 in Vermandois, Normandy.

Duke of France and Burgundy, Marquis of Orleans, Count of Amiens, Chaumont,

Paris, Valois and Vermandois; leader of the 1st Crusade.

Children:

COUNTESS ISABEL (ELIZABETH)13 DE VERMANDOIS of Valois, b. circa 1081, d. on 13 Feb. 1131 in England; m. (1) ROBERT DE BEAUMONT, 1ST EARL OF LEICESTER in 1096 in France; m. (2) WILLIAM II DE WARREN, 2ND EARL OF SURREY between 1108 and 1118 in France.

MATILDE DE VERMANDOIS; m. (DR-6) RAOUL I DE BEAUGENCY in 1090.

--------------------

Contact: Carolyn Clark Campbell

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

ID: I3476

Name: Hugh (Hugues) Magnus Duke of France &

Sex: M

Birth: 1057 in France

Death: 18 Oct 1101/1102 in Tarsus, Cilicia, Asia Minor

Burial: St. Paul Tarsus

Occupation: Duke of France and Count de Vermandois Pnc. of France

Education: Cte de Vermandois et de Valois

Religion: Sources: Roberts, Gary Boyd. "Ancestors of American Presidenannica, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Note:

Note: --Other Fields

Ref Number: +

Change Date: 3 APR 1997

Father: Henry (Henri) I King of France b: 10 MAY 1005 in Bourgogne, France 23.04.1008

Mother: Anne (Anna) of Kiev JAROSLAVNA b: 1036 in Abt 1023 of Kiev, Ukraine 1024

Marriage 1 Adelaide (or Adele) DE VERMANDOIS Cnts.of Normandy b: ABT 1062 in Vermandois, Normandy, France

Married: 1066

Children

Isabel (Elizabeth) DE VERMANDOIS Ctssof Leicester b: ABT 1081 in Vermandois, Normandy, France

Mathilda (Mahaut) DE VERMANDOIS b: ABT 1080 in France

Agnes DE VERMANDOIS

Raoul I le Vaillant DE VERMANDOIS Ct. deVermandois

Henri DE CHAUMONT sn de Chaumont

Simon DE VERMANDOIS Bp of Noyon

Guillaume DE VERMANDOIS

Beatrix DE VERMANDOIS

Constance DE VERMANDOIS

--------------------

Hugh was one of the knightly leaders of the First Crusade

--------------------

From Darryl Lundy's Peerage page on Hugh de Crepi:

http://www.thepeerage.com/p10318.htm#i103173

Hugh de Crépi, Comte de Vermandois et de Valois1

M, #103173, b. 1057, d. 18 October 1102

Last Edited=7 Feb 2005

Hugh de Crépi, Comte de Vermandois et de Valois was born in 1057. He was the son of Henri I, Roi de France and Anne of Kiev.2,3

He married Aelis de Vermandois, Comtesse de Vermandois, daughter of Heribert V, Comte de Vermandois et de Valois and Adele de Crépi, circa 1080.2

He died on 18 October 1102 at Tarsus.

Hugh de Crépi, Comte de Vermandois et de Valois was a member of the House of Capet. Hugh de Crépi, Comte de Vermandois et de Valois also went by the nick-name of Hugh 'le Grand'.3

He gained the title of Comte de Vermandois. He gained the title of Comte de Valois.

Child of Hugh de Crépi, Comte de Vermandois et de Valois and Aelis de Vermandois, Comtesse de Vermandois

1. Elizabeth de Vermandois+1 d. 17 Feb 1131

Citations

[S6] G.E. Cokayne; with Vicary Gibbs, H.A. Doubleday, Geoffrey H. White, Duncan Warrand and Lord Howard de Walden, editors, The Complete Peerage of England, Scotland, Ireland, Great Britain and the United Kingdom, Extant, Extinct or Dormant, new ed., 13 volumes in 14 (1910-1959; reprint in 6 volumes, Gloucester, U.K.: Alan Sutton Publishing, 2000), volume VII, page 526. Hereinafter cited as The Complete Peerage.

[S16] Jirí Louda and Michael MacLagan, Lines of Succession: Heraldry of the Royal Families of Europe, 2nd edition (London, U.K.: Little, Brown and Company, 1999), table 64. Hereinafter cited as Lines of Succession.

[S6] Cokayne, and others, The Complete Peerage, volume XII/2, page 829.

--------------------

From the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy page on Northern France:

http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/NORTHERN%20FRANCE.htm#Elisabethdied1131

HUGUES "le Maisné" de France, son of HENRI I King of France & his second wife Anna Iaroslavna of Kiev (1057-Tarsus 18 Oct 1102, bur Tarsus, Church of St Paul).

The Liber Modernorum Regum Francorum names (in order) "Philippum, Hugonem atque Rotbertum" as the three sons of King Henri and his wife Anna[1325].

William of Tyre records "dominus Hugo Magnus" as brother of Philippe I King of France[1326]. He succeeded as Comte de Vermandois et de Valois, by right of his wife. He left France in Aug 1096 as head of the contingent of his brother Philippe I King of France which left on the First Crusade[1327].

The Alexeiad names "a certain Hugh, brother of the king of France" when recording that he "sent an absurd message to the emperor proposing that he should be given a magnificent reception" after arriving in Constantinople[1328]. He was shipwrecked off Durazzo, but accompanied to Constantinople by the Byzantine admiral Manuel Butumites[1329].

Albert of Aix records that "Hugonem Magnum fratrem regis Franciæ, Drogonem et Clareboldum" were held in chains in prison by the emperor at Constantinople but were released after the intervention of "Baldewinus Hainaucorum comes et Heinricus de Ascha" who were sent as envoys by Godefroi de Bouillon[1330].

Albert of Aix records that "Hugo, Drogo, Willelmus Carpentarius et Clareboldus" joined the army of Godefroi de Bouillon after their release from captivity in Constantinople, dated to end 1096[1331]. He took part in the siege of Antioch in 1098. He was sent on a mission to Emperor Alexios I, but was surprised in a Turkish ambush near Nikaia but escaped with his life[1332].

He returned to France after the capture of Antioch in 1098 to raise another army which he led as part of the second wave of the First Crusade, leaving France in Mar 1101.

Robert of Torigny records the death in 1102 of "Hugo Magnus apud Tarsum"[1333]. He died from wounds received fighting the Turks near Tarsus in Asia Minor[1334].

m (after 1067) as her first husband, ADELAIS Ctss de Vermandois, de Valois et de Crépy, daughter and heiress of HERIBERT [IV] Comte de Vermandois & his wife Adelais de Valois ([1065]-28 Sep [1120/24]).

The Genealogiæ Scriptoris Fusniacensis names "Adelaide comitissa Veromandensium" as wife of "Hugonem Magnum"[1335]. Her husband left her as regent in Vermandois when he left on crusade.

She married secondly (1103) as his first wife, Renaud de Clermont. "Adela…Viromandorum comitissa, filius…meus Radulphus" renounced their claim to certain serfs in favour of the abbey of Compiègne Saint-Corneille, with the consent of "filiorum meorum Radulphi, Henrici, Symonis", by charter dated 1114[1336].

In 1117, Louis VI "le Gros" King of France restored to her the county of Amiens which had been usurped by Thomas de Marle[1337].

Comte Hugues & his wife had nine children:

1. Mathilde de Vermandois (married as second wife Raoul, Seigneur de Baugency)

2. Agnes de Vermandois (b. c.1085, d. after 1127, m. as second wife Bonifacio di Saluzzo, Marchese del Vasto)

3. Constance de Vermandois (d. after 1118, m. Godefroi de la Ferte-Gaucher, Vicomte de Meaux)

4. Isabelle/Elisabeth de Vermandois (b. before 1088, d. 17 February 1131, buried Lewes, OUR ANCESTOR, m. firstly Robert de Beaumont, Comte de Meulan, secondly William de Warenne, Earl of Surrey, OUR ANCESTOR)

5. Raoul I "le Vaillant" de Vermandois (b. c.1094, d. 13 October 1152, buried St-Arnould in Crepy, succeeded as Comte de Vermandois)

6. Henri de Vermandois (d. 1130, Seigneur de Chaumont-en-Vexin)

7. Simon de Vermandois (d. 10 February 1148 in Seleukia returning from second crusade, buried Cistercian Abbey of Notre-Dame-de-l'Assomption, Ourscamp)

8. Guillaume de Vermandois (d. after 1096, parentage uncertain)

9. Beatrix de Vermandois (d. after 1144, married Hugues IV, Seigneur de Gourney-en-Bray)

--------------------

Per www.whitesvill.net/Ruth.pdf

Hugh was the first prince to leave on the First Crusade (except for Peter the Hermit's 'Peasant's Crusade' earlier that year). He set out for Italy in August 1096

--------------------

Not to be confused with:

Humbert II, surnamed the Fat, was Count of Savoy from 1080 until his death in 1103. He was the son of Amadeus II of Savoy.

He was married to Gisela of Burgundy, daughter of William I, Count of Burgundy, and had 7 children:

Amadeus III of Savoy

William, Bishop of Liège

Adelaide, (d. 1154), married to Louis VI of France

Agnes, (d. 1127), married to Archimbald VI, lord of Bourbon

Humbert

Reginald

Guy, abbey of Namur

Preceded by

Amadeus II Count of Savoy Succeeded by

Amadeus III

--------------------

Hugh I (1053 – October 18, 1101), called Magnus or the Great, was a younger son of Henry I of France and Anne of Kiev and younger brother of Philip I. He was in his own right Count of Vermandois, but an ineffectual leader and soldier, great only in his boasting. Indeed, Steven Runciman is certain that his nickname Magnus (greater or elder), applied to him by William of Tyre, is a copyist's error, and should be Minus (younger), referring to Hugh as younger brother of the King of France.

In early 1096 Hugh and Philip began discussing the First Crusade after news of the Council of Clermont reached them in Paris. Although Philip could not participate, as he had been excommunicated, Hugh was said to have been influenced to join the Crusade after an eclipse of the moon on February 11, 1096.

That summer Hugh's army left France for Italy, where they would cross the Adriatic Sea into territory of the Byzantine Empire, unlike the other Crusader armies who were travelling by land. On the way, many of the soldiers led by fellow Crusader Emicho joined Hugh's army after Emicho was defeated by the Hungarians, whose land he had been pillaging. Hugh crossed the Adriatic from Bari in Southern Italy, but many of his ships were destroyed in a storm off the Byzantine port of Dyrrhachium.

Hugh and most of his army was rescued and escorted to Constantinople, where they arrived in November of 1096. Prior to his arrival, Hugh sent an arrogant, insulting letter to Eastern Roman Emperor Alexius I Comnenus, according to the Emperor's biography by his daughter (the Alexiad), demanding that Alexius meet with him:

"Know, O King, that I am King of Kings, and superior to all, who are under the sky. You are now permitted to greet me, on my arrival, and to receive me with magnificence, as befits my nobility."[1]

Alexius was already wary of the armies about to arrive, after the unruly mob led by Peter the Hermit had passed through earlier in the year. Alexius kept Hugh in custody in a monastery until Hugh swore an oath of vassalage to him.

After the Crusaders had successfully made their way across Seljuk territory and, in 1098, captured Antioch, Hugh was sent back to Constantinople to appeal for reinforcements from Alexius. Alexius was uninterested, however, and Hugh, instead of returning to Antioch to help plan the siege of Jerusalem, went back to France. There he was scorned for not having fulfilled his vow as a Crusader to complete a pilgrimage to Jerusalem, and Pope Paschal II threatened to excommunicate him. He joined the minor Crusade of 1101, but was wounded in battle with the Turks in September, and died of his wounds in October in Tarsus.

Family and children

He married Adele of Vermandois, the daughter of Herbert IV, Count of Vermandois and Alice, Countess of Valois. They had nine children:

* Matilda(1080-1130), married Ralph I of Beaugency

* Beatrice (1082-after1144), married Hugh III of Gournay

* Ralph I (1085-1152)

* Elizabeth of Vermandois, Countess of Leicester (1085-1131)

* Constance (1086-??), married Godfrey de la Ferté-Gaucher

* Agnes (1090-1125), married Boniface of Savone

* Henry (1091-1130), Lord of Chaumont en Vexin

* Simon (1093-1148)

* William (c. 1094-c.1096)

--------------------

Hugh of Vermandois

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Hugh of Vermandois (1053 – October 18, 1101), was son to King Henry I of France and Anne of Kiev, and the younger brother of King Philip I of France. He was in his own right Count of Vermandois. William of Tyre called him "Hugh Magnus", Hugh the Great, but he was an ineffectual leader and soldier, great only in his boasting. Indeed, Sir Steven Runciman is certain that "Magnus" is a copyist's error, and should be "minus", "the younger" (referring to Hugh as younger brother of the King of France).

In early 1096 Hugh and Philip began discussing the First Crusade after news of the Council of Clermont reached them in Paris. Although Philip could not participate, as he had been excommunicated, Hugh was said to have been influenced to join the Crusade after an eclipse of the moon on February 11, 1096.

That summer Hugh's army left France for Italy, where they would cross the Adriatic Sea into territory of the Byzantine Empire, unlike the other Crusader armies who were travelling by land. On the way, many of the soldiers led by fellow Crusader Emicho joined Hugh's army after Emicho was defeated by the Hungarians, whose land he had been pillaging. Hugh crossed the Adriatic from Bari in Southern Italy, but many of his ships were destroyed in a storm off the Byzantine port of Dyrrhachium.

Hugh and most of his army was rescued and escorted to Constantinople, where they arrived in November of 1096. Prior to his arrival, Hugh sent an arrogant, insulting letter to Eastern Roman Emperor Alexius I Comnenus, according to the Emperor's biography by his daughter (the Alexiad), demanding that Alexius meet with him:

"Know, O King, that I am King of Kings, and superior to all, who are under the sky. You are now permitted to greet me, on my arrival, and to receive me with magnificence, as befits my nobility."

Alexius was already wary of the armies about to arrive, after the unruly mob led by Peter the Hermit had passed through earlier in the year. Alexius kept Hugh in custody in a monastery until Hugh swore an oath of vassalage to him.

After the Crusaders had successfully made their way across Seljuk territory and, in 1098, captured Antioch, Hugh was sent back to Constantinople to appeal for reinforcements from Alexius. Alexius was uninterested, however, and Hugh, instead of returning to Antioch to help plan the siege of Jerusalem, went back to France. There he was scorned for not having fulfilled his vow as a Crusader to complete a pilgrimage to Jerusalem, and Pope Paschal II threatened to excommunicate him. He joined the minor Crusade of 1101, but was wounded in battle with the Turks in September, and died of his wounds in October in Tarsus.

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Hugh the Great, Duke of France and Burgundy .

Younger brother of Philip I. He was in his own right Count of Vermandois, but an ineffectual leader and soldier, great only in his boasting. Indeed, Steven Runciman is certain that his nickname Magnus (greater or elder), applied to him by William of Tyre, is a copyist's error, and should be Minus (younger), referring to Hugh as younger brother of the King of France.

--------------------

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugh_of_Vermandois

--------------------

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugh_I,_Count_of_Vermandois

--------------------

Hugh I, called "Magnus," or "the Great," was a younger son of King Henry I of France and Anne of Kiev and younger brother of King Philip I. He was in his own right Count of Vermandois, but he was an ineffectual leader and soldier, great only in his boasting. Indeed, Steven Runciman is certain that his nickname Magnus (greater or elder), applied to him by William of Tyre, is a copyist's error, and should be Minus (younger), referring to Hugh as younger brother of the King of France.

Hugh married Adele of Vermandois, the daughter of Herbert IV of Vermandois and Adele of Valois.They had nine children, including two of our ancestors.

In early 1096 Hugh and Philip began discussing the First Crusade after news of the Council of Clermont reached them in Paris. Although Philip could not participate, since he had been excommunicated, Hugh was said to have been influenced to join the Crusade after an eclipse of the moon on February 11, 1096.

That summer Hugh's army left France for Italy, where they would cross the Adriatic Sea into territory of the Eastern Roman (Byzantine) Empire, unlike the other Crusader armies who were traveling by land. On the way, many of the soldiers led by fellow Crusader Emicho joined Hugh's army after Emicho was defeated by the Hungarians, whose land he had been pillaging. Hugh crossed the Adriatic from Bari in Southern Italy, but many of his ships were destroyed in a storm off the Byzantine port of Dyrrhachium.

Hugh and most of his army was rescued and escorted to Constantinople, where they arrived in November of 1096. Prior to his arrival, Hugh sent an arrogant, insulting letter to Eastern Roman Emperor Alexios I Komnenus (also our ancestor), according to the Emperor's biography by his daughter (the Alexiad), demanding that Alexios meet with him:

"Know, O King, that I am King of Kings, and superior to all, who are under the sky. You are now permitted to greet me, on my arrival, and to receive me with magnificence, as befits my nobility."

Alexios was already wary of the armies about to arrive, after the unruly mob led by Peter the Hermit had passed through earlier in the year. Alexios kept Hugh in custody in a monastery until Hugh swore an oath of vassalage to him.

After the Crusaders had successfully made their way across Seljuk territory and, in 1098, captured Antioch, Hugh was sent back to Constantinople to appeal for reinforcements from Alexios. Alexios was uninterested, however, and Hugh, instead of returning to Antioch to help plan the siege of Jerusalem, went back to France. There he was scorned for not having fulfilled his vow as a Crusader to complete a pilgrimage to Jerusalem, and Pope Paschal II threatened to excommunicate him. He joined the minor Crusade of 1101, but was wounded in battle with the Turks in September, and died of his wounds in October in Tarsus.

Hugh was our ancestor through two distinct descent lines--through his daughter Elizabeth (Isabel) and through his daughter Beatrice, each of whom was independently our ancestor.

See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugh_of_Vermandois for more information.

--------------------

Hugh I (1053 – October 18, 1101), called Magnus or the Great, was a younger son of Henry I of France and Anne of Kiev and younger brother of Philip I. He was in his own right Count of Vermandois, but an ineffectual leader and soldier, great only in his boasting. Indeed, Steven Runciman is certain that his nickname Magnus (greater or elder), applied to him by William of Tyre, is a copyist's error, and should be Minus (younger), referring to Hugh as younger brother of the King of France.

In early 1096 Hugh and Philip began discussing the First Crusade after news of the Council of Clermont reached them in Paris. Although Philip could not participate, as he had been excommunicated, Hugh was said to have been influenced to join the Crusade after an eclipse of the moon on February 11, 1096.

That summer Hugh's army left France for Italy, where they would cross the Adriatic Sea into territory of the Byzantine Empire, unlike the other Crusader armies who were travelling by land. On the way, many of the soldiers led by fellow Crusader Emicho joined Hugh's army after Emicho was defeated by the Hungarians, whose land he had been pillaging. Hugh crossed the Adriatic from Bari in Southern Italy, but many of his ships were destroyed in a storm off the Byzantine port of Dyrrhachium.

Hugh and most of his army was rescued and escorted to Constantinople, where they arrived in November of 1096. Prior to his arrival, Hugh sent an arrogant, insulting letter to Eastern Roman Emperor Alexius I Comnenus, according to the Emperor's biography by his daughter (the Alexiad), demanding that Alexius meet with him:

"Know, O King, that I am King of Kings, and superior to all, who are under the sky. You are now permitted to greet me, on my arrival, and to receive me with magnificence, as befits my nobility."

Alexius was already wary of the armies about to arrive, after the unruly mob led by Peter the Hermit had passed through earlier in the year. Alexius kept Hugh in custody in a monastery until Hugh swore an oath of vassalage to him.

After the Crusaders had successfully made their way across Seljuk territory and, in 1098, captured Antioch, Hugh was sent back to Constantinople to appeal for reinforcements from Alexius. Alexius was uninterested, however, and Hugh, instead of returning to Antioch to help plan the siege of Jerusalem, went back to France. There he was scorned for not having fulfilled his vow as a Crusader to complete a pilgrimage to Jerusalem, and Pope Paschal II threatened to excommunicate him. He joined the minor Crusade of 1101, but was wounded in battle with the Turks in September, and died of his wounds in October in Tarsus.

He married Adele of Vermandois, the daughter of Herbert IV of Vermandois and Adele of Valois.They had nine children:

Count Raoul I of Vermandois

Henry, senior of Chaumont-en-Vexin, (d. 1130).

Simon, Bishop of Noyon

Elizabeth de Vermandois, married

Robert de Beaumont, 1st Earl of Leicester;

William de Warenne, 2nd Earl of Surrey

Matilde de Vermandois, married Raoul I of Beaugency

Constance de Vermandois, married Godefroy de la Ferte-Gaucher

Agnes de Vermandois, married Margrave Boniface del Vasto. Mother of Adelaide del Vasto.

Beatrix de Vermandois, married Hugh III of Gournay-en-Bray

Emma de Vermandois

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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugh_of_Vermandois

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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugh_of_Vermandois
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see- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugh_of_Vermandois
--------------------
Hugh I (1053 – October 18, 1101), called Magnus or the Great, was a younger son of Henry I of France and Anne of Kiev and younger brother of Philip I. He was in his own right Count of Vermandois, but an ineffectual leader and soldier, great only in his boasting. Indeed, Steven Runciman is certain that his nickname Magnus (greater or elder), applied to him by William of Tyre, is a copyist's error, and should be Minus (younger), referring to Hugh as younger brother of the King of France.

In early 1096 Hugh and Philip began discussing the First Crusade after news of the Council of Clermont reached them in Paris. Although Philip could not participate, as he had been excommunicated, Hugh was said to have been influenced to join the Crusade after an eclipse of the moon on February 11, 1096.

That summer Hugh's army left France for Italy, where they would cross the Adriatic Sea into territory of the Byzantine Empire, unlike the other Crusader armies who were travelling by land. On the way, many of the soldiers led by fellow Crusader Emicho joined Hugh's army after Emicho was defeated by the Hungarians, whose land he had been pillaging. Hugh crossed the Adriatic from Bari in Southern Italy, but many of his ships were destroyed in a storm off the Byzantine port of Dyrrhachium.
Hugh I of Vermandois.jpg

Hugh and most of his army were rescued and escorted to Constantinople, where they arrived in November of 1096. Prior to his arrival, Hugh sent an arrogant, insulting letter to Eastern Roman Emperor Alexius I Comnenus, according to the Emperor's biography by his daughter (the Alexiad), demanding that Alexius meet with him:

"Know, O King, that I am King of Kings, and superior to all, who are under the sky. You are now permitted to greet me, on my arrival, and to receive me with magnificence, as befits my nobility."[1]

Alexius was already wary of the armies about to arrive, after the unruly mob led by Peter the Hermit had passed through earlier in the year. Alexius kept Hugh in custody in a monastery until Hugh swore an oath of vassalage to him.

After the Crusaders had successfully made their way across Seljuk territory and, in 1098, captured Antioch, Hugh was sent back to Constantinople to appeal for reinforcements from Alexius. Alexius was uninterested, however, and Hugh, instead of returning to Antioch to help plan the siege of Jerusalem, went back to France. There he was scorned for not having fulfilled his vow as a Crusader to complete a pilgrimage to Jerusalem, and Pope Paschal II threatened to excommunicate him. He joined the minor Crusade of 1101, but was wounded in battle with the Turks in September, and died of his wounds in October in Tarsus.

Familly and Children

He married Adele of Vermandois, the daughter of Herbert IV, Count of Vermandois and Alice, Countess of Valois. They had nine children:

* Matilda(1080–1130), married Ralph I of Beaugency
* Beatrice (1082 – after1144), married Hugh III of Gournay
* Ralph I (1085–1152)
* Elizabeth of Vermandois, Countess of Leicester (1085–1131)
* Constance (born 1086, date of death unknown), married Godfrey
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Hugh I, Count of Vermandois Hugh I (1053 - October 18, 1101), called Magnus or the Great, was a younger son of Henry I of France and Anne of Kiev and younger brother of Philip I. He was in his own right Count of Vermandois, but an ineffectual leader and soldier, great only in his boasting. Indeed, Steven Runciman is certain that his nickname Magnus (greater or elder), applied to him by William of Tyre, is a copyist's error, and should be Minus (younger), referring to Hugh as younger brother of the King of France. In early 1096 Hugh and Philip began discussing the First Crusade after news of the Council of Clermont reached them in Paris. Although Philip could not participate, as he had been excommunicated, Hugh was said to have been influenced to join the Crusade after an eclipse of the moon on February 11, 1096. That summer Hugh's army left France for Italy, where they would cross the Adriatic Sea into territory of the Byzantine Empire, unlike the other Crusader armies who were travelling by land. On the way, many of the soldiers led by fellow Crusader Emicho joined Hugh's army after Emicho was defeated by the Hungarians, whose land he had been pillaging. Hugh crossed the Adriatic from Bari in Southern Italy, but many of his ships were destroyed in a storm off the Byzantine port of Dyrrhachium. Hugh and most of his army were rescued and escorted to Constantinople, where they arrived in November of 1096. Prior to his arrival, Hugh sent an arrogant, insulting letter to Eastern Roman Emperor Alexius I Comnenus, according to the Emperor's biography by his daughter (the Alexiad), demanding that Alexius meet with him: "Know, O King, that I am King of Kings, and superior to all, who are under the sky. You are now permitted to greet me, on my arrival, and to receive me with magnificence, as befits my nobility."[1] Alexius was already wary of the armies about to arrive, after the unruly mob led by Peter the Hermit had passed through earlier in the year. Alexius kept Hugh in custody in a monastery until Hugh swore an oath of vassalage to him. After the Crusaders had successfully made their way across Seljuk territory and, in 1098, captured Antioch, Hugh was sent back to Constantinople to appeal for reinforcements from Alexius. Alexius was uninterested*(see below), however, and Hugh, instead of returning to Antioch to help plan the siege of Jerusalem, went back to France. There he was scorned for not having fulfilled his vow as a Crusader to complete a pilgrimage to Jerusalem, and Pope Paschal II threatened to excommunicate him. He joined the minor Crusade of 1101, but was wounded in battle with the Turks in September, and died of his wounds in October in Tarsus.
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugh_I,_Count_of_Vermandois
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Hugh I of Vermandois (1057 – October 18, 1101),[1] called Magnus or the Great, was a younger son of Henry I of France and Anne of Kiev and younger brother of Philip I. He was in his own right Count of Vermandois, but an ineffectual leader and soldier, great only in his boasting. Indeed, Steven Runciman is certain that his nickname Magnus (greater or elder), applied to him by William of Tyre, is a copyist's error, and should be Minus (younger), referring to Hugh as younger brother of the King of France.[2]

In early 1096 Hugh and Philip began discussing the First Crusade after news of the Council of Clermont reached them in Paris. Although Philip could not participate, as he had been excommunicated, Hugh was said to have been influenced to join the Crusade after an eclipse of the moon on February 11, 1096.

That summer Hugh's army left France for Italy, where they would cross the Adriatic Sea into territory of the Byzantine Empire, unlike the other Crusader armies who were travelling by land. On the way, many of the soldiers led by fellow Crusader Emicho joined Hugh's army after Emicho was defeated by the Hungarians, whose land he had been pillaging. Hugh crossed the Adriatic from Bari in Southern Italy, but many of his ships were destroyed in a storm off the Byzantine port of Dyrrhachium.

Hugh and most of his army were rescued and escorted to Constantinople, where they arrived in November 1096. Prior to his arrival, Hugh allegedly sent an arrogant, insulting letter to Eastern Roman Emperor Alexius I Comnenus. According to the Emperor's biography written by his daughter Anna Comnena (the Alexiad), he demanded that Alexius meet with him:
"Know, O King, that I am King of Kings, and superior to all, who are under the sky. You are now permitted to greet me, on my arrival, and to receive me with magnificence, as befits my nobility."[3]
Alexius was already wary of the armies about to arrive, after the unruly mob led by Peter the Hermit had passed through earlier in the year. Alexius kept Hugh in custody in a monastery until Hugh swore an oath of vassalage to him.

After the Crusaders had successfully made their way across Seljuk territory and, in 1098, captured Antioch, Hugh was sent back to Constantinople to appeal for reinforcements from Alexius. Alexius was uninterested,[4] however, and Hugh, instead of returning to Antioch to help plan the siege of Jerusalem, went back to France. There he was scorned for not having fulfilled his vow as a Crusader to complete a pilgrimage to Jerusalem, and Pope Paschal II threatened to excommunicate him. He joined the minor Crusade of 1101, but was wounded in battle with the Turks in September, and died of his wounds in October in Tarsus.

Family and children[edit]

He married Adelaide of Vermandois, the daughter of Herbert IV, Count of Vermandois and Alice, Countess of Valois. They had nine children:
Mathilde (1080–1130), married Raoul I of Beaugency
Elizabeth of Vermandois, Countess of Leicester (1081–1131)
Beatrice (1082 – after 1144), married Hugh III of Gournay
Ralph I (1085–1152)
Constance (born 1086, date of death unknown), married Godfrey de la Ferté-Gaucher
Agnes (1090–1125), married Boniface del Vasto
Henry (1091–1130), seigneur of Chaumont en Vexin
Simon (1093–1148)
William (c. 1094 – c. 1096)

Ancestry[edit]
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugh_I,_Count_of_Vermandois
--------------------
Note regarding his name: Sources show that Hugues Magnus was a compound name. See below for details.

Wikipedia

From the English Wikipedia page of Hugh I, Count of Vermandois:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugh_I,_Count_of_Vermandois

French Wikipedia: (1057-1102)

http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugues_Ier_de_Vermandois

Hugh I (1053 – October 18, 1101), called Magnus or the Great, was a younger son of Henry I of France and Anne of Kiev and younger brother of Philip I.

He was in his own right Count of Vermandois, but an ineffectual leader and soldier, great only in his boasting.

Indeed, Steven Runciman is certain that his nickname Magnus (greater or elder), applied to him by William of Tyre, is a copyist's error, and should be Minus (younger), referring to Hugh as younger brother of the King of France.

In early 1096 Hugh and Philip began discussing the First Crusade after news of the Council of Clermont reached them in Paris. Although Philip could not participate, as he had been excommunicated, Hugh was said to have been influenced to join the Crusade after an eclipse of the moon on February 11, 1096.

That summer Hugh's army left France for Italy, where they would cross the Adriatic Sea into territory of the Byzantine Empire, unlike the other Crusader armies who were travelling by land. On the way, many of the soldiers led by fellow Crusader Emicho of Flonheim joined Hugh's army after Emicho was defeated by the Hungarians (under King Coloman I "The Booklover" at Moson fortress), whose land he had been pillaging.

Hugh crossed the Adriatic from Bari in Southern Italy, but many of his ships were destroyed in a storm off the Byzantine port of Dyrrhachium.

Hugh and most of his army was rescued and escorted to Constantinople, where they arrived in November 1096. Prior to his arrival (he would be the first to arrive in Constantinople), Hugh sent an arrogant, insulting letter to Eastern Roman Emperor Alexius I Comnenus, according to the Emperor's biography by his daughter (the Alexiad), demanding that Alexius meet with him:

"Know, O King, that I am King of Kings, and superior to all, who are under the sky. You are now permitted to greet me, on my arrival, and to receive me with magnificence, as befits my nobility."[1]

Alexius was already wary of the armies about to arrive, after the unruly mob led by Peter the Hermit had passed through earlier in the year ("The People's Crusade"). Alexius kept Hugh in custody in a monastery until Hugh swore an oath of vassalage to him.

After the Crusaders had successfully made their way across Seljuk territory and, in 1098, captured Antioch, Hugh (and Baldwin of Hainault were) sent back to Constantinople to appeal for reinforcements from Alexius (Baldwin mysteriously vanishes in an ambush along the way). Alexius was uninterested in sending an expedition to claim the city so late in summer. (This triggers off a series of arguments in Antioch, where Bohemund asserts that Alexius had violated his oath to assist the crusades, and therefore, the city by rights was his. This argument, and an outbreak of typhus, ties up the Crusaders for the remainder of the year.)

Hugh, instead of returning to Antioch to help plan the siege of Jerusalem, went back to France. There he was scorned for not having fulfilled his vow as a Crusader to complete a pilgrimage to Jerusalem, and Pope Paschal II threatened to excommunicate him.

Hugh joined the minor Crusade of 1101 ("The Crusade of the Faint-Hearted," alongside William IX of Aquitaine and Welf I, Duke of Bavaria, and accompanied by Ida of Austria, mother of Leopold III of Austria). Half of this army was allowed to set sail from Constantinople for Palestine, while the other half marched overland, reaching Heraclea by September. Hugh was wounded in battle with the Turks (ambushed by Kilij Arslan) in September, and died of his wounds on October 18 in Tarsus. (Their group continued eastward under William of Nevers and Raymond of Toulouse, arriving at Jerusalem in Easter 1102. Kilij Arslan later establishes his capital at Konya after his victories over the "Crusade of the Faint-Hearted.")

Family and children

He married Adele of Vermandois, the daughter of Herbert IV, Count of Vermandois and Alice, Countess of Valois. They had nine children:

1. Matilda(1080-1130), married Ralph I of Beaugency

2. Beatrice (1082-after1144), married Hugh III of Gournay

3. Ralph I (1085-1152)

4. Elizabeth of Vermandois, Countess of Leicester (1085-1131)

5. Constance (1086-??), married Godfrey de la Ferté-Gaucher

6. Agnes (1090-1125), married Boniface of Savone

7. Henry (1091-1130), Lord of Chaumont en Vexin

8. Simon (1093-1148)

9. William (c. 1094-c.1096)

[In order originally presented on Wikipedia page:

1. Count Raoul I of Vermandois

2. Henry, senior of Chaumont-en-Vexin, (d. 1130).

3. Simon, Bishop of Noyon

4. Elizabeth de Vermandois, married Robert de Beaumont, 1st Earl of Leicester; William de Warenne, 2nd Earl of Surrey

5. Matilde de Vermandois, married Raoul I of Beaugency

6. Constance de Vermandois, married Godefroy de la Ferte-Gaucher

7. Agnes de Vermandois, married Margrave Boniface del Vasto. Mother of Adelaide del Vasto.

8. Beatrix de Vermandois, married Hugh III of Gournay-en-Bray

9. Emma de Vermandois)

References

1.^ http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/The_Alexiad/Book_X chapter VII

Was He Called Hugues Magnus?

Steven Runciman is certain that his nickname Magnus (greater or elder), applied to him by William of Tyre, is a copyist's error, and should be Minus (younger), referring to Hugh as younger brother of the King of France. However, on this point Runciman appears to have been wrong.

"The byname "Magnus" with the given name Hugo in his family did not reflect an outstanding career or personal qualities, was not an error, and did not originate with William of Tyre. It has also been said incorrectly that the byname originated with a mistranslation into Latin of "le maisn", indicating only "the younger brother" (i.e. of King Philippe I); however, the doublet Hugo Magnus was traditional in the early Capetian family, and the count of Vermandois was the fourth man to bear this combined name including others who were eldest or only sons. Notably, this Hugo Magnus, count of Vermandois had a daughter Agnes who married Bonifacio I, margrave of Vasto, giving birth to a younger son by him who was named Hugo Magnus (Ugomagno) after the maternal grandfather. It seems pretty clear from the repetition over many generations that family members considered this a compound name (emphasis added), hoping that the boy would grow up to display its quality, with the second element being definitely "magnus" (great)." (Peter Stewart, soc.genealogy.medieval, Aug. 15, 2007)

Some of the sources that call him Hugues Magnus include:

. Prou, Recueil des Actes de Philippe Ier, Roi de France (1059–1108) (1908): 217–221 (charter of King Philippe I of France dated 1076; charter witnessed by “Hugoni magni, fratris Philipi regis”).
. Albert of Aix records that "Hugonem Magnum fratrem regis Franciæ, Drogonem et Clareboldum" were held in chains in prison by the emperor at Constantinople. Reference: Albert of Aix (RHC), Liber II, Cap. IX, p. 305. Citation courtesy of Charles Cawley.
. Robert of Torigny records the death in 1102 of "Hugo Magnus apud Tarsum." Reference: Chronique de Robert de Torigny I, 1102, p. 124. Citation courtesy of Charles Cawley.
. Bruel, Recueil des Chartes de l’Abbaye de Cluny 5 (Coll. de Docs. inédits sur l'Histoire de France 1st Ser.) (1894): 421–422 (charter dated c.1140 of Pierre, Abbot of Cluny, names Count Raoul of Perrone,
son of Hugues le Grand, brother of King Philippe I, great friend and benefactor [Comes Rodulfus de Perrona, filius Hugonis magni, fratris Philippe regis Francorum, magnus amicus et benefactor].

. Monumenta Germaniae Historica Scriptorum 13 (1881): 253 (Genealogiæ Scriptoris Fusniacensis: “Nunc ad Hugonem Magnum revertamur. Hugo cognomento Magnus, frater Philippi regis Francorum, de Adelaide comitissa Veromandensium genuit Radulfum comitem Veromandie et Henricum de Chauni et Simonem episcopum Noviomensem et filias.
. Monumenta Germaniae Historica Scriptorum 13 (1881): 257 (De Genere Comitum Flandrensium Notæ Parisienses: "Comes Herbertus genuit Odonem et Adelam sororem. Odo fuit fatuus et indiscretus. Barones Viromandenses rogaverunt regem, ut Adelam daret Hugoni le Magne, fratri eiusdem regis; quod factum est. De predicto comite Hugone et predicta Adela uxore sua exivit comes Radulfus, Simon Noviomensis episcopus, dominus Henricus de Chaumont et quatuor filie."
(Douglas Richardson, soc.genealogy.medieval, May 12, 2012)

Was He Count of Vermandois?

Some researchers have suggested that Hugues Magnus was not Count of Vermandois (see, e.g., Douglas Richardson, soc.genealogy.medieval, May 13, 2012).

The evidence shows he was Count of Vermandois, but later in life.

Some references that do not call him Count of Vermandois include the following (from Douglas Richardson, soc.genealogy.medieval, May 13, 2012).

. Annales Ordinis S. Benedicti occidentalium monachorum patriarchæ 5 (1713): 95 (charter of King Philippe I of France dated 1075; charter witnessed by “Hugues brother of the king” [Hugonis fratris regis].)
. Carlier, Histoire du Duché de Valois 1 (1764): 346–352 (“Hugues le Grand commença à prendre la qualité de Comté de Crépy, avant le fin duonzième siècle.").
. Gallia Christiana 10 (1751): 207 (letter of Hugh Bishop of Senlis to the Abbot of Crepy dated c.1095; letter mentions “domni Hugonis comitis de Crispeio”), 246–247 (charter of King Philippe I dated 1079;
charter witnessed by “comitis Hugonis fratris Regis”), 248 (charter of Guy, Bishop of Beauvais for church of Esserens dated 1081; charter names “Philippo rege & Hugone regis fratre de Crispeio & ejus uxoreAdela” and is witnessed by “Hugo de Crispeio” and “Adelae uxoris Hugonis de Crispeio.”).

. Academy 15 (1879): 457–458 (Letter of Bishop Ivo dated at beginning of A.D. 1096: “Ivo, Dei gratia Carnotensis episcopus, clericis Mellentis .... Perlatum est ad aures nostras quod Mellentinus comes
ducere velit in uxorem filiam Hugonis Crispeiensis comitis; quod fieri non sinit concors descretorum et canonum sanctio, dicens: (Conjunctiones consanguineorum fleri prohibemus). Horum autem consanguinitas nec ignota est, nec remota, sicut testantur et probare parati sunt praeclari viri de eadem sati prosapia. Dicunt enim quia Gualterius Albus genuit matrem Gualeranni comitis, qui genuit matrem Roberti comitis. Item supradictus Gualterius genuit Radulphum patrem alterius Radulfi, qui genuit Vermandensem comitissam, ex qua nata est uxor comitis Hugonis, cujus filiam nunc ducere vult Mellentinus comes.”).

. Prou, Recueil des Actes de Philippe Ier, Roi de France (1059–1108) (1908): cxxxv (Souscriptions des frères du roi. Les frères du roi, Robert et Hugues ont souscrit quelques diplômes royaux … Quant à la
souscription d’Hugues, on la rencontre de 1067 à 1082. Dan un diplôme de 1076 on lui a donné le surnom de ‘Grand’, que les historiens lui ont conservé. Il est ordinairement qualifié simplement frère du roi; mais un diplôme de janvier 1079 fait précéder son nom du titre de comte; il était devenu en effet comte de Vermandois par mariage avec la fille d’Herbert IV.), cxciii, note 1; cxciv, note 1; 137–139 (charter of King Philippe I of France dated 1070; charter witnessed by “Hugues brother of the king” [Hugonis fratris regis].), 144–145 (charter of King Philippe I dated 1071; charter witnessed by “Hugo, frater regis.”), 192–193 (charter of King Philippe I dated 1075; charter witnessed by “Hugonis, fratris regis.”), 197–199 (charter of King Philippe I of France dated 1075; charter witnessed by “domni Hugonis, fratris regis Francorum”), 217–221 (charter of King Philippe I of France dated 1076; charter witnessed by “Hugoni magni, fratris Philipi regis”), 242–245 (charter of King Philippe I of France dated 1079; charter witnessed by “comitis Hugoni, fratris regis”), 264–266 (charter of King Philippe I of France dated 1080; charter witnessed by “Hugoni, regis fratre, de Crispeo et ejus uxore”), 271–272 (charter of King Philippe I dated 1082; charter witnessed by Hugonis, Crispeii comitis), 272–273 (charter of King Philippe I of France dated 1082; charter witnessed by “Hugonis, fratris Regis”), 333–337 (charter of King Philippe I of France dated 1094; charter witnessed by “Hugonis, fratris Philippi regis”), 442.

. Migne, Patrologiae Cursus Completus 188 (1855): 515 (Orderici Vitalis: “Henricus autem, Francorum rex, Bertradam, Julii Claudii regis Russiæ filiam, uxorem duxit, quæ Philippum, et Hugonem Magnum, Crispeii comitem, peperit.”).
Nevertheless, Hugues Magnus is known to have used the title. Hugues' "wife Adela wasn't the natural heiress of Vermandois, as she had a living brother who was disinherited a year or so before the death of their father. She and Hugo [Hugues] subsequently used the lesser title "count/ess of Crepy" for around twenty years until his brother King Philippe I later confirmed Vermandois to them. The territorial designation of counts was not set in concrete and could behighly variable at the time of Hugo Magnus. There is an undated charter where the canons of Beauvais complained about the actions of Hugo, who was specifically called count of Vermandois, and from circumstantial evidence this person was more probably Hugo than his father-in-law Heribert. There isalso abrief history written at Fleury abbey a few years after Hugo's death stating that he had been given Vermandois by his brother King Philippe I -presumably this grant confirmed possession of Vermandois by right of his wife, who was not the natural heiress since her disinherited brother was still living." (Leo van de Pas, soc.genealogy.medieval, May 16, 2012)

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A narrative on Hugh's death, from Medieval History - The Crusades, XI, The Crusade of 1101:

http://www.third-millennium-library.com/MedievalHistory/CRUSADES/14.html

Near Heraclea (in early September), the crusaders came to a river where they hoped to slake their thirst. But Kilij Arslan and his allies lay in ambush among the growth along the other bank and just as the Christians drew near the water the Turks loosed a volley of arrows and charged.

Caught by surprise and weakened by hunger and thirst, the crusaders could not stand up to the fierce assault. After a desperate stand in the marshy land along the river (where their heavy equipment must have been a hindrance) the army dissolved.

Some crusaders tried vainly to hide in the marsh grass, some escaped by following the stream up to its source, and others fled into the mountains. Most of the Christians were either killed or enslaved.

Among the many women reported to have been carried off into captivity were Corba, wife of Geoffrey Burel, and Ida of Austria. Albert was not certain whether Ida had been captured or killed, but others came to believe that she had lived on in the harem of a Moslem prince to whom she bore a famous son, Zengi.

This is an early instance of what was to become a conventional literary theme; it is matched in interest — and lack of credibility — by the legend of Thiemo of Salzburg. The archbishop was carried off by a Turkish emir and being a metal worker of sorts, he was commanded to repair a certain “Mohammedan idol”. When the idol began to speak blasphemously, Thiemo broke it and for this he was martyred.

As in the previous defeats, an undue proportion of those who escaped were leaders, perhaps because of their superior horses. The bishop of Auvergne, however, walked out. Welf got away by shedding arms and armor and riding through the mountains. Two of his counts, Bernhard and Henry of Regensburg, made their way to the coast.

William IX fled with a single squire and reached Longiniada, the port for Tarsus, then ruled by Bernard the Stranger. Bernard treated them well. After a few days Tancred, learning of William’s misfortunes, sent an escort of knights to conduct him to Antioch, where the duke was lavishly entertained.

Less certain is the case of Hugh of Vermandois. He was wounded in the knee by an arrow, but escaped to Tarsus, where he died on October 18 and was buried in the church of St. Paul.

The chroniclers tell of Hugh's reenlistment in France and of his death, but nothing of his activities on crusade. The context suggests that he was with William IX at Heraclea, but the record is none too clear.

With the disaster at Heraclea the military significance of the Crusade of 1101 vanishes. Remnants of the several bands continu­ed their way to Jerusalem but in effect the crusade had become a pilgrimage.

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DUKE HUGH CREPI MAGNUS of Vermandois, Normandy, son of King Henry I and Anne (of KIEV), was born circa 1050, died in 1130 and was buried in St Paul De Tarse.

He married circa 1064, COUNTESS ADELAIDE DE VERMANDOIS of Valois, Bretagne, France, daughter of Count Herbert IV and Adela (de VEXIN), who was born circa 1050, and died on 23 Sept. 1120 in Vermandois, Normandy.

Duke of France and Burgundy, Marquis of Orleans, Count of Amiens, Chaumont,

Paris, Valois and Vermandois; leader of the 1st Crusade.

Children:

COUNTESS ISABEL (ELIZABETH)13 DE VERMANDOIS of Valois, b. circa 1081, d. on 13 Feb. 1131 in England; m. (1) ROBERT DE BEAUMONT, 1ST EARL OF LEICESTER in 1096 in France; m. (2) WILLIAM II DE WARREN, 2ND EARL OF SURREY between 1108 and 1118 in France.

MATILDE DE VERMANDOIS; m. (DR-6) RAOUL I DE BEAUGENCY in 1090.

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Contact: Carolyn Clark Campbell
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

ID: I3476

Name: Hugh (Hugues) Magnus Duke of France &

Sex: M

Birth: 1057 in France

Death: 18 Oct 1101/1102 in Tarsus, Cilicia, Asia Minor

Burial: St. Paul Tarsus

Occupation: Duke of France and Count de Vermandois Pnc. of France

Education: Cte de Vermandois et de Valois

Religion: Sources: Roberts, Gary Boyd. "Ancestors of American Presidenannica, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Note:

Note: --Other Fields

Ref Number: +

Change Date: 3 APR 1997

Father: Henry (Henri) I King of France b: 10 MAY 1005 in Bourgogne, France 23.04.1008

Mother: Anne (Anna) of Kiev JAROSLAVNA b: 1036 in Abt 1023 of Kiev, Ukraine 1024

Marriage 1 Adelaide (or Adele) DE VERMANDOIS Cnts.of Normandy b: ABT 1062 in Vermandois, Normandy, France

Married: 1066

Children

Isabel (Elizabeth) DE VERMANDOIS Ctssof Leicester b: ABT 1081 in Vermandois, Normandy, France
Mathilda (Mahaut) DE VERMANDOIS b: ABT 1080 in France
Agnes DE VERMANDOIS
Raoul I le Vaillant DE VERMANDOIS Ct. deVermandois
Henri DE CHAUMONT sn de Chaumont
Simon DE VERMANDOIS Bp of Noyon
Guillaume DE VERMANDOIS
Beatrix DE VERMANDOIS
Constance DE VERMANDOIS
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Hugh was one of the knightly leaders of the First Crusade

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From Darryl Lundy's Peerage page on Hugh de Crepi:

http://www.thepeerage.com/p10318.htm#i103173

Hugh de Crépi, Comte de Vermandois et de Valois1

M, #103173, b. 1057, d. 18 October 1102

Last Edited=7 Feb 2005

Hugh de Crépi, Comte de Vermandois et de Valois was born in 1057. He was the son of Henri I, Roi de France and Anne of Kiev.2,3

He married Aelis de Vermandois, Comtesse de Vermandois, daughter of Heribert V, Comte de Vermandois et de Valois and Adele de Crépi, circa 1080.2

He died on 18 October 1102 at Tarsus.

Hugh de Crépi, Comte de Vermandois et de Valois was a member of the House of Capet. Hugh de Crépi, Comte de Vermandois et de Valois also went by the nick-name of Hugh 'le Grand'.3

He gained the title of Comte de Vermandois. He gained the title of Comte de Valois.

Child of Hugh de Crépi, Comte de Vermandois et de Valois and Aelis de Vermandois, Comtesse de Vermandois

1. Elizabeth de Vermandois+1 d. 17 Feb 1131

Citations

[S6] G.E. Cokayne; with Vicary Gibbs, H.A. Doubleday, Geoffrey H. White, Duncan Warrand and Lord Howard de Walden, editors, The Complete Peerage of England, Scotland, Ireland, Great Britain and the United Kingdom, Extant, Extinct or Dormant, new ed., 13 volumes in 14 (1910-1959; reprint in 6 volumes, Gloucester, U.K.: Alan Sutton Publishing, 2000), volume VII, page 526. Hereinafter cited as The Complete Peerage.

[S16] Jirí Louda and Michael MacLagan, Lines of Succession: Heraldry of the Royal Families of Europe, 2nd edition (London, U.K.: Little, Brown and Company, 1999), table 64. Hereinafter cited as Lines of Succession.

[S6] Cokayne, and others, The Complete Peerage, volume XII/2, page 829.

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From the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy page on Northern France:

http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/NORTHERN%20FRANCE.htm#Elisabethdied1131

HUGUES "le Maisné" de France, son of HENRI I King of France & his second wife Anna Iaroslavna of Kiev (1057-Tarsus 18 Oct 1102, bur Tarsus, Church of St Paul).

The Liber Modernorum Regum Francorum names (in order) "Philippum, Hugonem atque Rotbertum" as the three sons of King Henri and his wife Anna[1325].

William of Tyre records "dominus Hugo Magnus" as brother of Philippe I King of France[1326]. He succeeded as Comte de Vermandois et de Valois, by right of his wife. He left France in Aug 1096 as head of the contingent of his brother Philippe I King of France which left on the First Crusade[1327].

The Alexeiad names "a certain Hugh, brother of the king of France" when recording that he "sent an absurd message to the emperor proposing that he should be given a magnificent reception" after arriving in Constantinople[1328]. He was shipwrecked off Durazzo, but accompanied to Constantinople by the Byzantine admiral Manuel Butumites[1329].

Albert of Aix records that "Hugonem Magnum fratrem regis Franciæ, Drogonem et Clareboldum" were held in chains in prison by the emperor at Constantinople but were released after the intervention of "Baldewinus Hainaucorum comes et Heinricus de Ascha" who were sent as envoys by Godefroi de Bouillon[1330].

Albert of Aix records that "Hugo, Drogo, Willelmus Carpentarius et Clareboldus" joined the army of Godefroi de Bouillon after their release from captivity in Constantinople, dated to end 1096[1331]. He took part in the siege of Antioch in 1098. He was sent on a mission to Emperor Alexios I, but was surprised in a Turkish ambush near Nikaia but escaped with his life[1332].

He returned to France after the capture of Antioch in 1098 to raise another army which he led as part of the second wave of the First Crusade, leaving France in Mar 1101.

Robert of Torigny records the death in 1102 of "Hugo Magnus apud Tarsum"[1333]. He died from wounds received fighting the Turks near Tarsus in Asia Minor[1334].

m (after 1067) as her first husband, ADELAIS Ctss de Vermandois, de Valois et de Crépy, daughter and heiress of HERIBERT [IV] Comte de Vermandois & his wife Adelais de Valois ([1065]-28 Sep [1120/24]).

The Genealogiæ Scriptoris Fusniacensis names "Adelaide comitissa Veromandensium" as wife of "Hugonem Magnum"[1335]. Her husband left her as regent in Vermandois when he left on crusade.

She married secondly (1103) as his first wife, Renaud de Clermont. "Adela…Viromandorum comitissa, filius…meus Radulphus" renounced their claim to certain serfs in favour of the abbey of Compiègne Saint-Corneille, with the consent of "filiorum meorum Radulphi, Henrici, Symonis", by charter dated 1114[1336].

In 1117, Louis VI "le Gros" King of France restored to her the county of Amiens which had been usurped by Thomas de Marle[1337].

Comte Hugues & his wife had nine children:

1. Mathilde de Vermandois (married as second wife Raoul, Seigneur de Baugency)

2. Agnes de Vermandois (b. c.1085, d. after 1127, m. as second wife Bonifacio di Saluzzo, Marchese del Vasto)

3. Constance de Vermandois (d. after 1118, m. Godefroi de la Ferte-Gaucher, Vicomte de Meaux)

4. Isabelle/Elisabeth de Vermandois (b. before 1088, d. 17 February 1131, buried Lewes, OUR ANCESTOR, m. firstly Robert de Beaumont, Comte de Meulan, secondly William de Warenne, Earl of Surrey, OUR ANCESTOR)

5. Raoul I "le Vaillant" de Vermandois (b. c.1094, d. 13 October 1152, buried St-Arnould in Crepy, succeeded as Comte de Vermandois)

6. Henri de Vermandois (d. 1130, Seigneur de Chaumont-en-Vexin)

7. Simon de Vermandois (d. 10 February 1148 in Seleukia returning from second crusade, buried Cistercian Abbey of Notre-Dame-de-l'Assomption, Ourscamp)

8. Guillaume de Vermandois (d. after 1096, parentage uncertain)

9. Beatrix de Vermandois (d. after 1144, married Hugues IV, Seigneur de Gourney-en-Bray)

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Per www.whitesvill.net/Ruth.pdf

Hugh was the first prince to leave on the First Crusade (except for Peter the Hermit's 'Peasant's Crusade' earlier that year). He set out for Italy in August 1096

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Not to be confused with:

Humbert II, surnamed the Fat, was Count of Savoy from 1080 until his death in 1103. He was the son of Amadeus II of Savoy.

He was married to Gisela of Burgundy, daughter of William I, Count of Burgundy, and had 7 children:

Amadeus III of Savoy

William, Bishop of Liège

Adelaide, (d. 1154), married to Louis VI of France

Agnes, (d. 1127), married to Archimbald VI, lord of Bourbon

Humbert

Reginald

Guy, abbey of Namur

Preceded by

Amadeus II Count of Savoy Succeeded by

Amadeus III

--------------------

Hugh I (1053 – October 18, 1101), called Magnus or the Great, was a younger son of Henry I of France and Anne of Kiev and younger brother of Philip I. He was in his own right Count of Vermandois, but an ineffectual leader and soldier, great only in his boasting. Indeed, Steven Runciman is certain that his nickname Magnus (greater or elder), applied to him by William of Tyre, is a copyist's error, and should be Minus (younger), referring to Hugh as younger brother of the King of France.

In early 1096 Hugh and Philip began discussing the First Crusade after news of the Council of Clermont reached them in Paris. Although Philip could not participate, as he had been excommunicated, Hugh was said to have been influenced to join the Crusade after an eclipse of the moon on February 11, 1096.

That summer Hugh's army left France for Italy, where they would cross the Adriatic Sea into territory of the Byzantine Empire, unlike the other Crusader armies who were travelling by land. On the way, many of the soldiers led by fellow Crusader Emicho joined Hugh's army after Emicho was defeated by the Hungarians, whose land he had been pillaging. Hugh crossed the Adriatic from Bari in Southern Italy, but many of his ships were destroyed in a storm off the Byzantine port of Dyrrhachium.

Hugh and most of his army was rescued and escorted to Constantinople, where they arrived in November of 1096. Prior to his arrival, Hugh sent an arrogant, insulting letter to Eastern Roman Emperor Alexius I Comnenus, according to the Emperor's biography by his daughter (the Alexiad), demanding that Alexius meet with him:

"Know, O King, that I am King of Kings, and superior to all, who are under the sky. You are now permitted to greet me, on my arrival, and to receive me with magnificence, as befits my nobility."[1]
Alexius was already wary of the armies about to arrive, after the unruly mob led by Peter the Hermit had passed through earlier in the year. Alexius kept Hugh in custody in a monastery until Hugh swore an oath of vassalage to him.

After the Crusaders had successfully made their way across Seljuk territory and, in 1098, captured Antioch, Hugh was sent back to Constantinople to appeal for reinforcements from Alexius. Alexius was uninterested, however, and Hugh, instead of returning to Antioch to help plan the siege of Jerusalem, went back to France. There he was scorned for not having fulfilled his vow as a Crusader to complete a pilgrimage to Jerusalem, and Pope Paschal II threatened to excommunicate him. He joined the minor Crusade of 1101, but was wounded in battle with the Turks in September, and died of his wounds in October in Tarsus.

Family and children

He married Adele of Vermandois, the daughter of Herbert IV, Count of Vermandois and Alice, Countess of Valois. They had nine children:

* Matilda(1080-1130), married Ralph I of Beaugency
* Beatrice (1082-after1144), married Hugh III of Gournay
* Ralph I (1085-1152)
* Elizabeth of Vermandois, Countess of Leicester (1085-1131)
* Constance (1086-??), married Godfrey de la Ferté-Gaucher
* Agnes (1090-1125), married Boniface of Savone
* Henry (1091-1130), Lord of Chaumont en Vexin
* Simon (1093-1148)
* William (c. 1094-c.1096)
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Hugh of Vermandois

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Hugh of Vermandois (1053 – October 18, 1101), was son to King Henry I of France and Anne of Kiev, and the younger brother of King Philip I of France. He was in his own right Count of Vermandois. William of Tyre called him "Hugh Magnus", Hugh the Great, but he was an ineffectual leader and soldier, great only in his boasting. Indeed, Sir Steven Runciman is certain that "Magnus" is a copyist's error, and should be "minus", "the younger" (referring to Hugh as younger brother of the King of France).

In early 1096 Hugh and Philip began discussing the First Crusade after news of the Council of Clermont reached them in Paris. Although Philip could not participate, as he had been excommunicated, Hugh was said to have been influenced to join the Crusade after an eclipse of the moon on February 11, 1096.

That summer Hugh's army left France for Italy, where they would cross the Adriatic Sea into territory of the Byzantine Empire, unlike the other Crusader armies who were travelling by land. On the way, many of the soldiers led by fellow Crusader Emicho joined Hugh's army after Emicho was defeated by the Hungarians, whose land he had been pillaging. Hugh crossed the Adriatic from Bari in Southern Italy, but many of his ships were destroyed in a storm off the Byzantine port of Dyrrhachium.

Hugh and most of his army was rescued and escorted to Constantinople, where they arrived in November of 1096. Prior to his arrival, Hugh sent an arrogant, insulting letter to Eastern Roman Emperor Alexius I Comnenus, according to the Emperor's biography by his daughter (the Alexiad), demanding that Alexius meet with him:

"Know, O King, that I am King of Kings, and superior to all, who are under the sky. You are now permitted to greet me, on my arrival, and to receive me with magnificence, as befits my nobility."

Alexius was already wary of the armies about to arrive, after the unruly mob led by Peter the Hermit had passed through earlier in the year. Alexius kept Hugh in custody in a monastery until Hugh swore an oath of vassalage to him.

After the Crusaders had successfully made their way across Seljuk territory and, in 1098, captured Antioch, Hugh was sent back to Constantinople to appeal for reinforcements from Alexius. Alexius was uninterested, however, and Hugh, instead of returning to Antioch to help plan the siege of Jerusalem, went back to France. There he was scorned for not having fulfilled his vow as a Crusader to complete a pilgrimage to Jerusalem, and Pope Paschal II threatened to excommunicate him. He joined the minor Crusade of 1101, but was wounded in battle with the Turks in September, and died of his wounds in October in Tarsus.

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Hugh the Great, Duke of France and Burgundy .

Younger brother of Philip I. He was in his own right Count of Vermandois, but an ineffectual leader and soldier, great only in his boasting. Indeed, Steven Runciman is certain that his nickname Magnus (greater or elder), applied to him by William of Tyre, is a copyist's error, and should be Minus (younger), referring to Hugh as younger brother of the King of France.

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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugh_of_Vermandois

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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugh_I,_Count_of_Vermandois

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Hugh I, called "Magnus," or "the Great," was a younger son of King Henry I of France and Anne of Kiev and younger brother of King Philip I. He was in his own right Count of Vermandois, but he was an ineffectual leader and soldier, great only in his boasting. Indeed, Steven Runciman is certain that his nickname Magnus (greater or elder), applied to him by William of Tyre, is a copyist's error, and should be Minus (younger), referring to Hugh as younger brother of the King of France.

Hugh married Adele of Vermandois, the daughter of Herbert IV of Vermandois and Adele of Valois.They had nine children, including two of our ancestors.

In early 1096 Hugh and Philip began discussing the First Crusade after news of the Council of Clermont reached them in Paris. Although Philip could not participate, since he had been excommunicated, Hugh was said to have been influenced to join the Crusade after an eclipse of the moon on February 11, 1096.

That summer Hugh's army left France for Italy, where they would cross the Adriatic Sea into territory of the Eastern Roman (Byzantine) Empire, unlike the other Crusader armies who were traveling by land. On the way, many of the soldiers led by fellow Crusader Emicho joined Hugh's army after Emicho was defeated by the Hungarians, whose land he had been pillaging. Hugh crossed the Adriatic from Bari in Southern Italy, but many of his ships were destroyed in a storm off the Byzantine port of Dyrrhachium.

Hugh and most of his army was rescued and escorted to Constantinople, where they arrived in November of 1096. Prior to his arrival, Hugh sent an arrogant, insulting letter to Eastern Roman Emperor Alexios I Komnenus (also our ancestor), according to the Emperor's biography by his daughter (the Alexiad), demanding that Alexios meet with him:

"Know, O King, that I am King of Kings, and superior to all, who are under the sky. You are now permitted to greet me, on my arrival, and to receive me with magnificence, as befits my nobility."

Alexios was already wary of the armies about to arrive, after the unruly mob led by Peter the Hermit had passed through earlier in the year. Alexios kept Hugh in custody in a monastery until Hugh swore an oath of vassalage to him.

After the Crusaders had successfully made their way across Seljuk territory and, in 1098, captured Antioch, Hugh was sent back to Constantinople to appeal for reinforcements from Alexios. Alexios was uninterested, however, and Hugh, instead of returning to Antioch to help plan the siege of Jerusalem, went back to France. There he was scorned for not having fulfilled his vow as a Crusader to complete a pilgrimage to Jerusalem, and Pope Paschal II threatened to excommunicate him. He joined the minor Crusade of 1101, but was wounded in battle with the Turks in September, and died of his wounds in October in Tarsus.

Hugh was our ancestor through two distinct descent lines--through his daughter Elizabeth (Isabel) and through his daughter Beatrice, each of whom was independently our ancestor.

See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugh_of_Vermandois for more information.

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Hugh I (1053 – October 18, 1101), called Magnus or the Great, was a younger son of Henry I of France and Anne of Kiev and younger brother of Philip I. He was in his own right Count of Vermandois, but an ineffectual leader and soldier, great only in his boasting. Indeed, Steven Runciman is certain that his nickname Magnus (greater or elder), applied to him by William of Tyre, is a copyist's error, and should be Minus (younger), referring to Hugh as younger brother of the King of France.

In early 1096 Hugh and Philip began discussing the First Crusade after news of the Council of Clermont reached them in Paris. Although Philip could not participate, as he had been excommunicated, Hugh was said to have been influenced to join the Crusade after an eclipse of the moon on February 11, 1096.

That summer Hugh's army left France for Italy, where they would cross the Adriatic Sea into territory of the Byzantine Empire, unlike the other Crusader armies who were travelling by land. On the way, many of the soldiers led by fellow Crusader Emicho joined Hugh's army after Emicho was defeated by the Hungarians, whose land he had been pillaging. Hugh crossed the Adriatic from Bari in Southern Italy, but many of his ships were destroyed in a storm off the Byzantine port of Dyrrhachium.

Hugh and most of his army was rescued and escorted to Constantinople, where they arrived in November of 1096. Prior to his arrival, Hugh sent an arrogant, insulting letter to Eastern Roman Emperor Alexius I Comnenus, according to the Emperor's biography by his daughter (the Alexiad), demanding that Alexius meet with him:

"Know, O King, that I am King of Kings, and superior to all, who are under the sky. You are now permitted to greet me, on my arrival, and to receive me with magnificence, as befits my nobility."

Alexius was already wary of the armies about to arrive, after the unruly mob led by Peter the Hermit had passed through earlier in the year. Alexius kept Hugh in custody in a monastery until Hugh swore an oath of vassalage to him.

After the Crusaders had successfully made their way across Seljuk territory and, in 1098, captured Antioch, Hugh was sent back to Constantinople to appeal for reinforcements from Alexius. Alexius was uninterested, however, and Hugh, instead of returning to Antioch to help plan the siege of Jerusalem, went back to France. There he was scorned for not having fulfilled his vow as a Crusader to complete a pilgrimage to Jerusalem, and Pope Paschal II threatened to excommunicate him. He joined the minor Crusade of 1101, but was wounded in battle with the Turks in September, and died of his wounds in October in Tarsus.

He married Adele of Vermandois, the daughter of Herbert IV of Vermandois and Adele of Valois.They had nine children:

Count Raoul I of Vermandois

Henry, senior of Chaumont-en-Vexin, (d. 1130).

Simon, Bishop of Noyon

Elizabeth de Vermandois, married

Robert de Beaumont, 1st Earl of Leicester;

William de Warenne, 2nd Earl of Surrey

Matilde de Vermandois, married Raoul I of Beaugency

Constance de Vermandois, married Godefroy de la Ferte-Gaucher

Agnes de Vermandois, married Margrave Boniface del Vasto. Mother of Adelaide del Vasto.

Beatrix de Vermandois, married Hugh III of Gournay-en-Bray

Emma de Vermandois

--------------------

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugh_of_Vermandois

--------------------

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugh_of_Vermandois -------------------- see- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugh_of_Vermandois -------------------- Hugh I (1053 – October 18, 1101), called Magnus or the Great, was a younger son of Henry I of France and Anne of Kiev and younger brother of Philip I. He was in his own right Count of Vermandois, but an ineffectual leader and soldier, great only in his boasting. Indeed, Steven Runciman is certain that his nickname Magnus (greater or elder), applied to him by William of Tyre, is a copyist's error, and should be Minus (younger), referring to Hugh as younger brother of the King of France.

In early 1096 Hugh and Philip began discussing the First Crusade after news of the Council of Clermont reached them in Paris. Although Philip could not participate, as he had been excommunicated, Hugh was said to have been influenced to join the Crusade after an eclipse of the moon on February 11, 1096.

That summer Hugh's army left France for Italy, where they would cross the Adriatic Sea into territory of the Byzantine Empire, unlike the other Crusader armies who were travelling by land. On the way, many of the soldiers led by fellow Crusader Emicho joined Hugh's army after Emicho was defeated by the Hungarians, whose land he had been pillaging. Hugh crossed the Adriatic from Bari in Southern Italy, but many of his ships were destroyed in a storm off the Byzantine port of Dyrrhachium. Hugh I of Vermandois.jpg

Hugh and most of his army were rescued and escorted to Constantinople, where they arrived in November of 1096. Prior to his arrival, Hugh sent an arrogant, insulting letter to Eastern Roman Emperor Alexius I Comnenus, according to the Emperor's biography by his daughter (the Alexiad), demanding that Alexius meet with him:

"Know, O King, that I am King of Kings, and superior to all, who are under the sky. You are now permitted to greet me, on my arrival, and to receive me with magnificence, as befits my nobility."[1]
Alexius was already wary of the armies about to arrive, after the unruly mob led by Peter the Hermit had passed through earlier in the year. Alexius kept Hugh in custody in a monastery until Hugh swore an oath of vassalage to him.

After the Crusaders had successfully made their way across Seljuk territory and, in 1098, captured Antioch, Hugh was sent back to Constantinople to appeal for reinforcements from Alexius. Alexius was uninterested, however, and Hugh, instead of returning to Antioch to help plan the siege of Jerusalem, went back to France. There he was scorned for not having fulfilled his vow as a Crusader to complete a pilgrimage to Jerusalem, and Pope Paschal II threatened to excommunicate him. He joined the minor Crusade of 1101, but was wounded in battle with the Turks in September, and died of his wounds in October in Tarsus.

Familly and Children

He married Adele of Vermandois, the daughter of Herbert IV, Count of Vermandois and Alice, Countess of Valois. They had nine children:

* Matilda(1080–1130), married Ralph I of Beaugency * Beatrice (1082 – after1144), married Hugh III of Gournay * Ralph I (1085–1152) * Elizabeth of Vermandois, Countess of Leicester (1085–1131) * Constance (born 1086, date of death unknown), married Godfrey
-------------------- Hugh I, Count of Vermandois Hugh I (1053 - October 18, 1101), called Magnus or the Great, was a younger son of Henry I of France and Anne of Kiev and younger brother of Philip I. He was in his own right Count of Vermandois, but an ineffectual leader and soldier, great only in his boasting. Indeed, Steven Runciman is certain that his nickname Magnus (greater or elder), applied to him by William of Tyre, is a copyist's error, and should be Minus (younger), referring to Hugh as younger brother of the King of France. In early 1096 Hugh and Philip began discussing the First Crusade after news of the Council of Clermont reached them in Paris. Although Philip could not participate, as he had been excommunicated, Hugh was said to have been influenced to join the Crusade after an eclipse of the moon on February 11, 1096. That summer Hugh's army left France for Italy, where they would cross the Adriatic Sea into territory of the Byzantine Empire, unlike the other Crusader armies who were travelling by land. On the way, many of the soldiers led by fellow Crusader Emicho joined Hugh's army after Emicho was defeated by the Hungarians, whose land he had been pillaging. Hugh crossed the Adriatic from Bari in Southern Italy, but many of his ships were destroyed in a storm off the Byzantine port of Dyrrhachium. Hugh and most of his army were rescued and escorted to Constantinople, where they arrived in November of 1096. Prior to his arrival, Hugh sent an arrogant, insulting letter to Eastern Roman Emperor Alexius I Comnenus, according to the Emperor's biography by his daughter (the Alexiad), demanding that Alexius meet with him: "Know, O King, that I am King of Kings, and superior to all, who are under the sky. You are now permitted to greet me, on my arrival, and to receive me with magnificence, as befits my nobility."[1] Alexius was already wary of the armies about to arrive, after the unruly mob led by Peter the Hermit had passed through earlier in the year. Alexius kept Hugh in custody in a monastery until Hugh swore an oath of vassalage to him. After the Crusaders had successfully made their way across Seljuk territory and, in 1098, captured Antioch, Hugh was sent back to Constantinople to appeal for reinforcements from Alexius. Alexius was uninterested*(see below), however, and Hugh, instead of returning to Antioch to help plan the siege of Jerusalem, went back to France. There he was scorned for not having fulfilled his vow as a Crusader to complete a pilgrimage to Jerusalem, and Pope Paschal II threatened to excommunicate him. He joined the minor Crusade of 1101, but was wounded in battle with the Turks in September, and died of his wounds in October in Tarsus. -------------------- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugh_I,_Count_of_Vermandois -------------------- Hugh I of Vermandois (1057 – October 18, 1101),[1] called Magnus or the Great, was a younger son of Henry I of France and Anne of Kiev and younger brother of Philip I. He was in his own right Count of Vermandois, but an ineffectual leader and soldier, great only in his boasting. Indeed, Steven Runciman is certain that his nickname Magnus (greater or elder), applied to him by William of Tyre, is a copyist's error, and should be Minus (younger), referring to Hugh as younger brother of the King of France.[2]

In early 1096 Hugh and Philip began discussing the First Crusade after news of the Council of Clermont reached them in Paris. Although Philip could not participate, as he had been excommunicated, Hugh was said to have been influenced to join the Crusade after an eclipse of the moon on February 11, 1096.

That summer Hugh's army left France for Italy, where they would cross the Adriatic Sea into territory of the Byzantine Empire, unlike the other Crusader armies who were travelling by land. On the way, many of the soldiers led by fellow Crusader Emicho joined Hugh's army after Emicho was defeated by the Hungarians, whose land he had been pillaging. Hugh crossed the Adriatic from Bari in Southern Italy, but many of his ships were destroyed in a storm off the Byzantine port of Dyrrhachium.

Hugh and most of his army were rescued and escorted to Constantinople, where they arrived in November 1096. Prior to his arrival, Hugh allegedly sent an arrogant, insulting letter to Eastern Roman Emperor Alexius I Comnenus. According to the Emperor's biography written by his daughter Anna Comnena (the Alexiad), he demanded that Alexius meet with him: "Know, O King, that I am King of Kings, and superior to all, who are under the sky. You are now permitted to greet me, on my arrival, and to receive me with magnificence, as befits my nobility."[3] Alexius was already wary of the armies about to arrive, after the unruly mob led by Peter the Hermit had passed through earlier in the year. Alexius kept Hugh in custody in a monastery until Hugh swore an oath of vassalage to him.

After the Crusaders had successfully made their way across Seljuk territory and, in 1098, captured Antioch, Hugh was sent back to Constantinople to appeal for reinforcements from Alexius. Alexius was uninterested,[4] however, and Hugh, instead of returning to Antioch to help plan the siege of Jerusalem, went back to France. There he was scorned for not having fulfilled his vow as a Crusader to complete a pilgrimage to Jerusalem, and Pope Paschal II threatened to excommunicate him. He joined the minor Crusade of 1101, but was wounded in battle with the Turks in September, and died of his wounds in October in Tarsus.

Family and children[edit]

He married Adelaide of Vermandois, the daughter of Herbert IV, Count of Vermandois and Alice, Countess of Valois. They had nine children: Mathilde (1080–1130), married Raoul I of Beaugency Elizabeth of Vermandois, Countess of Leicester (1081–1131) Beatrice (1082 – after 1144), married Hugh III of Gournay Ralph I (1085–1152) Constance (born 1086, date of death unknown), married Godfrey de la Ferté-Gaucher Agnes (1090–1125), married Boniface del Vasto Henry (1091–1130), seigneur of Chaumont en Vexin Simon (1093–1148) William (c. 1094 – c. 1096)

Ancestry[edit] -------------------- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugh_I,_Count_of_Vermandois

read more
--------------------
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/103487897/hugues-de_france

"Nobility. Son of Henri I of France and his second wife Anna Iaroslavna of Kiev. He married Adelais de Vermandois who bore him nine children."
He was the leader of the first Crusade. Called the Great, duke of France.
Hugh was one of the illustrious seven leaders of the first crusade. Hewas Duke of France and Burgundy, Marquise of Orleans, Count of Valois andVermandois.
Sources: Browning's Colonial Dames of Royal Descent, pp. 28, 277-8.
Families Descended from All Royal Families, by Elizabeth Leach
Rexford, pp. 154-7.
Americans of Royal Descent--Browning, pp. 28-9.
Magna Charta, by John S. Wurts. Part 3, pp. 566-572. Parts 1 and 2,
pp. 213-219--English Kings Edwards I, II, III.
Lines of Mellcene Thurman Smith. genealogylibrary.com

from "Our Folk" by Albert D Hart, Jr.
Hugh de Crepi or Magnus, The Great, Count of Vermandois
From Genealogical Library book "House of Adam".
!BIRTH: "Royal Ancestors" by Michel Call - Based on Call Family Pedigrees FHL
film 844805 & 844806, Family History Library, Salt Lake City, UT. Copy of
"Royal Ancestors" owned by Lynn Bernhard, Orem, UT.

!Count of Vermandois
Leader of the 1st crusade

Data From Lynn Jeffrey Bernhard, 2445 W 450 South #4, Springville UT 84663-4950
email - (XXXXX@XXXX.XXX)
COUNY
! (1) Pedigree in Visitation of Cornwall, Vivian ed., 1887, p.105
(2) Royal Ancestors
(3) 2nd son
(4) Count of Vermandois, Valois, Chamont, and Amiens
Duke of France and Burgundy; Marquis of Orleans and Count of Amiens,Chaumont, Paris, Valois and Vermandois. Hugh was a leader in thefirst crusade.
Hugh de Crepi or Magnus, The Great, Count of Vermandois
From Genealogical Library book "House of Adam".
Problem: Born after mother and father died
Hugh I (1053 - 18. oktober 1101), kalt Magnus eller den store, var en sønn av Henrik I av Frankrike og Anne av Kiev og yngre bror av Filip I. Han var greve av Vermandois, men en ineffektiv leder og soldat, stor bare i skryt. Steven Runciman er sikker på at hans kallenavn Magnus (store eller eldre), gitt ham av William av Tyr, skyldes en avskriftsfeil og skulle være Minus (yngre), noe som henviste til at han var yngre bror av kongen av Frankrike.

Tidlig i 1096 begynte Hugh og Filip å diskutere det første korstoget etter at nyheter om konsilet i Clermont nådde dem i Paris. Selv om Filip ikke kunne delta, siden han var bannlyst, skal Hugh ha blitt valgt å slutte seg til korstoget etter et måneformørkelse den 11. februar 1096.

Den sommeren dro Hughs hær fra Frankrike med kurs for Italia hvor de skulle krysse Adriaterhavet inn i territoriet til Østromerriket, i motsetning til de fleste andre korsfarerhærene som reiste over land. På veien sluttet mange av soldatene ledet av Emicho seg til Hughs hær etter at Emicho ble beseiret av ungarere viss land han hadde plyndret. Hugh krysset Adriaterhavet fra Bari i det sørlige Italia, men mange av skipene hans ble ødelagt i en storm utenfor den bysantinske havnen Dyrrhachium.

Hugh og de fleste i hæren hans ble reddet og eskortert til Konstantinopel hvor de kom frem i november 1096. Før han kom frem, sendte Hugh et arrogant, fornærmende brev til den bysantinske keiseren Alexios I Komnenos som ifølge keiserens datter, Anna Komnena, krevde at Alexios skulle møte ham:

Vit, o konge, at jeg er kongenes konge, og overlegen dem alle som er under himmelen. Du har nå tillatelse til å hilse meg når jeg ankommer og motta med med storhet slik det passer min edelhet[1].

Alexios var allerede på vakt ovenfor arméene som skulle til å komme frem etter at den ustyrlige mobben ledet av Peter Eremitten hadde passert gjennom tidligere det året. Alexios holdt Hugh i et kloster til han sverget å være hans vasall.

Etter at korsfarerne lyktes i å komme frem gjennom seldsjukkenes territorium og erobret Antiokia i 1098, ble Hugh sendt tilbake til Konstantinopel for å be om forsterkninger fra Alexios. Alexios var ikke interessert i dette, og Hugh dro tilbake til Frankrike istedet for å dra tilbake til Antiokia og hjelpe til med å planlegge beleiringen av Jerusalem. Der ble han avskydd for ikke å ha fullført sitt løfte som korsfarer om å fullføre pilegrimsreisen til Jerusalem, og pave Paschal II truet med å bannlyse ham. Han sluttet seg til det mindre korstoget i 1101, men ble såret i et slag mot tyrkerne i september og døde av sine skader i oktober i Tarsus.

Familie og barn
Han giftet seg med Adele av Vermandois, datteren til Herbert IV av Vermandois og Adele av Valois. De hadde ni barn:

Grev Raoul I av Vermandois
Henrik, leder av Chaumont-en-Vexin, (død 1130).
Simon, biskop av Noyon
Elisabeth de Vermandois, gift med
Robert de Beaumont, 1. jarl av Leicester;
William de Warenne, 2. jarl av Surrey
Matilde de Vermandois, gift med Raoul I av Beaugency
Constance de Vermandois, gift med Godefroy de la Ferte-Gaucher
Agnes de Vermandois, gift med markgreve Boniface del Vasto. Mor til Adelaide del Vasto.
Beatrix de Vermandois, gift med Hugh III av Gournay-en-Bray
Emma de Vermandois
_P_CCINFO 2-2438
_P_CCINFO 2-2438
_P_CCINFO 2-2438
KNOWN AS "HUGH THE GREAT"; DUKE OF FRANCE & BURGUNDY; LEADER OF THE 1ST
CRUSADE; MARQUIS OF ORLEANS; COUNT OF AMIENS, CHAUMONT, PARIS, VALOIS,
VERMANDOIS
! (1) Pedigree in Visitation of Cornwall, Vivian ed., 1887, p.105
(2) Royal Ancestors
(3) 2nd son
(4) Count of Vermandois, Valois, Chamont, and Amiens
Hugh I de Vermandois
http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=document&guid=f182d66d-864c-4ab6-9bf6-710cca8bc374&tid=10145763&pid=-681535689
He was Duke of France and Burgundy, Marquis of Orleans, Count of Amiens, Clermont, Parish, Valois and Vermandois. He was a Crusader, a leader of the 1st Crusade.
BIOGRAPHY
Hugues was born in 1057, the son of Henri I, king of France, and Anna of Kiev. He was the younger brother of King Philippe I. After 1067 he married Adelaide, comtesse de Vermandois et de Valois, only child of Heribert IV, comte de Vermandois et de Valois and Adèle, comtesse de Valois. Hugues and Adelaide had five children of whom four would have progeny.

In early 1096 Hugues and Philippe began discussing the First Crusade after news of the Council of Clermont reached them in Paris. Although Philippe could not participate, as he had been excommunicated, Hugues was said to have been influenced to join the Crusade after an eclipse of the moon on 11 February 1096.

That summer Hugues' army left France for Italy, where they would cross the Adriatic Sea into territory of the Byzantine empire, unlike the other Crusader armies which were travelling by land. On the way, many of the soldiers led by fellow Crusader Emicho von Leiningen joined Hugues' army after Emicho was defeated by the Hungarians, whose land he had been pillaging. Hugues crossed the Adriatic from Bari in Southern Italy, but many of his ships were destroyed in a storm off the Byzantine port of Dyrrhachium.

Hugues and most of his army were rescued and escorted to Constantinople, where they arrived in November 1096. Prior to his arrival, Hugues sent an arrogant, insulting letter to the Eastern Roman Emperor Alexius I Comnenos, according to the emperor's biography by his daughter (the _Alexiad_), demanding that Alexius meet with him.

'Know, O King, that I am King of Kings, and superior to all who are under the sky. You are now permitted to greet me, on my arrival, and to receive me with magnificence, as befits my nobility.'

Alexius was already weary of the armies about to arrive, after the unruly mob led by Peter the Hermit had passed through earlier in the year. Alexius kept Hugues in custody in a monastery until Hugues swore an oath of vassalage to him.

After the Crusaders had successfully made their way across Seljuk territory and, in 1098, captured Antioch, Hugues was sent back to Constantinople to appeal for reinforcements from Alexius. Alexius was uninterested, however, and Hugues, instead of returning to Antioch to help plan the siege of Jerusalem, went back to France. There he was scorned for not having fulfilled his vow as a crusader to complete a pilgrimage to Jerusalem, and Pope Paschal II threatened to excommunicate him. He joined the minor Crusade of 1101, but was wounded in battle with the Turks in Asia Minor about 5 September, and died of his wounds on 18 October in Tarsus.

In 1103 his widow Adelaide married Renaud, comte de Clermont-en-Beauvaisis, and they had two children. Adelaide died on 28 September 1120 or 1124.
de Crépi, Hugh the Great of Vermandois, Count of Vermandois

Born: 1057
Died: 18 OCT 1102

Father: Capet, Henry I of France, King of France, b. APR 1008

Mother: , Matilda of Duitsland

Married to Vermandois, Adelaide of

Child 1: de Crépi, Elizabeth (Isabel)of VermandoisAncestral FileNumber: 8XJ9-QVREFN: 1301
! (1) Pedigree in Visitation of Cornwall, Vivian ed., 1887, p.105
(2) Royal Ancestors
(3) 2nd son
(4) Count of Vermandois, Valois, Chamont, and Amiens
! (1) Pedigree in Visitation of Cornwall, Vivian ed., 1887, p.105
(2) Royal Ancestors
(3) 2nd son
(4) Count of Vermandois, Valois, Chamont, and Amiens
?? Line 3098: (New PAF RIN=9517)
1 NAME Hugh "The Great" De /CREPI/
?? Line 3099: (New PAF RIN=9517)
1 TITL [COUNT OF VERMANDOIS]
?? Line 5272: (New PAF RIN=10347)
1 NAME Hugh "The Great" De /CREPI/
?? Line 5273: (New PAF RIN=10347)
1 TITL [COUNT OF VERMANDOIS]
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TITL [COUNT OF VERMANDOIS]
Hugo I van Vermandois, ook bekend als "de Grote", geb. 1057, ovl. 18.10.1102 in Tarsus, begraven in Tarsus, St. Paul, ref. nr. 29.03.2004 ES I.1-7, ES III.1-55, MAYp47,65, INT.5,9,16,50 Graaf van Valois en van Vermandois, heer van Chaumont-en-Vexin 1087. Nam deel aan de Eerste Kruistocht, kwam met zijn legereenheid via de zeeweg als eerste in Constantinopel aan, waar keizer Alexios hem als eerste een eed deed zweren, dat alle oorspronkelijk Byzantijnse landen na verdrijving van de Turken terug zou geven. Bij het beleg van Antiochië werd Hugo naar Constantinopel gezonden om hulp te vragen, die de keizer echter niet wilde geven; hij keerde niet meer terug en ging naar huis. In Frankrijk oefende men druk op hem uit een tweede keer deel te nemen (de paus dreigde zelfs met de ban), daar hij zijn belofte, Jerusalem te bevrijden, niet vervuld had. Hij ging daarom 1101 nogmaals op kruistocht met o.a. Stephan van Bois, Willem IX van Aquitaniën en Welf IV van Beieren. Deze kruistocht mislukte, hij werd gewond in een slag tegen de Turken bij Heraclea in juni 1102 en overleed aan zijn verwondingen te Tarsus. Hij trouwde met Adelaide van Vermandois, getrouwd 1067/1080.

From "A Genealogy of the Southworths (Southards), Descendants of Constant Southworth, with a Sketch of the Family in England," by Samuel G. Webber, A.B., M.D., p. 435: "...Hughes le Grand, second son of Henry I, king of France. He went on the crusade to the Holy Land and died at Tarsus from wounds received in battle."
Name Suffix: [COUNT OF VERMAN
Ancestral File Number: 8XJ9-QV
First leader of the crusades.

Name Suffix: [COUNT OF VERMAN
Ancestral File Number: 8XJ9-QV
First leader of the crusades.
! (1) Pedigree in Visitation of Cornwall, Vivian ed., 1887, p.105
(2) Royal Ancestors
(3) 2nd son
(4) Count of Vermandois, Valois, Chamont, and Amiens
! (1) Pedigree in Visitation of Cornwall, Vivian ed., 1887, p.105
(2) Royal Ancestors
(3) 2nd son
(4) Count of Vermandois, Valois, Chamont, and Amiens
Hugh of Vermandois
http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=document&guid=0b643e7c-46d9-4877-931e-508b4e6e4d84&tid=2440653&pid=-1169409631
Line 1600 from GEDCOM File not recognizable or too long:
NAME Hugh "The Great" De /CREPI/

Line 1601 from GEDCOM File not recognizable or too long:
TITL [COUNT OF VERMANDOIS]
He was Duke of France and Burgundy, Marquis of Orleans, Count of Amiens, Clermont, Parish, Valois and Vermandois. He was a Crusader, a leader of the 1st Crusade.
Count of Vermandois
1 NAME Hugues /de Crepi/
2 GIVN Hugues
2 SURN de Crepi
Hugh I de Vermandois
http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=document&guid=f182d66d-864c-4ab6-9bf6-710cca8bc374&tid=10145763&pid=-681535689
All notes of this line;
Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists by Frederic Lewis Weis
Eight lines of descent of John Prescot, founder of Lancaster, Mass
by Frederick Lewis Weis
Some Magna Carta Barons and Other royal Linages by Dorothy a. Sherman Lainson;B.A.; M.N.

Ancestral Roots of Certain american Colonists, 7th Ed, Weis (line 53)

Led the first Crusade and died before reaching Jerusalem.

Duke of France, Burgundy, Marquis d'Orleans, Count of Amiens

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Timeline Hugues 'Magnus' "Hugues de France" Capet I

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Ancestors (and descendant) of Hugues 'Magnus' Capet


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    Historical events

    • The temperature on July 21, 1993 was between 10.4 °C and 17.9 °C and averaged 14.6 °C. There was 11.8 mm of rain during 0.8 hours. There was 6.2 hours of sunshine (39%). The partly clouded was. The average windspeed was 2 Bft (weak wind) and was prevailing from the west. Source: KNMI
    • Koningin Beatrix (Huis van Oranje-Nassau) was from April 30, 1980 till April 30, 2013 sovereign of the Netherlands (also known as Koninkrijk der Nederlanden)
    • In The Netherlands , there was from Tuesday, November 7, 1989 to Monday, August 22, 1994 the cabinet Lubbers III, with Drs. R.F.M. Lubbers (CDA) as prime minister.
    • In the year 1993: Source: Wikipedia
      • The Netherlands had about 15.2 million citizens.
      • March 22 » The Intel Corporation ships the first Pentium chips (80586), featuring a 60MHz clock speed, 100+ MIPS, and a 64 bit data path.
      • April 8 » The Republic of North Macedonia joins the United Nations.
      • May 1 » Dingiri Banda Wijetunga became president of Sri Lanka automatically after killing of R Premadasa in LTTE bomb explosion.
      • August 9 » The Liberal Democratic Party of Japan loses a 38-year hold on national leadership.
      • August 21 » NASA loses contact with the Mars Observer spacecraft.
      • September 22 » A barge strikes a railroad bridge near Mobile, Alabama, causing the deadliest train wreck in Amtrak history. Forty-seven passengers are killed.
    

    Same birth/death day

    Source: Wikipedia


    About the surname Capet

    • View the information that Genealogie Online has about the surname Capet.
    • Check the information Open Archives has about Capet.
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    The maximum test publication was prepared by .contact the author
    When copying data from this family tree, please include a reference to the origin:
    Ard van Bergen, "maximum test", database, Genealogy Online (https://www.genealogieonline.nl/maximum-test/I6000000005864637017.php : accessed May 18, 2024), "Hugues 'Magnus' "Hugues de France" Capet I (± 1057-1101)".