Family tree Den Hollander en Van Dueren den Hollander » Adela ""the Holy"" (1009-1078)

Personal data Adela ""the Holy"" 

Sources 1, 2, 3
  • Nickname is "the Holy".
  • She was born on March 5, 1009Toulouse
    Midi-Pyrénées France.
  • She was christened in Countess of, flanders.
  • Alternative: She was christened in Countess of, flanders.
  • Alternative: She was christened in Countess of, flanders.
  • 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.
  • 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 May 21, 1929.
  • Alternative: Baptized (at 8 years of age or later) by the priesthood authority of the LDS church on May 21, 1929.
  • Alternative: Baptized (at 8 years of age or later) by the priesthood authority of the LDS church on May 21, 1929.
  • Alternative: Baptized (at 8 years of age or later) by the priesthood authority of the LDS church on May 21, 1929.
  • Alternative: Baptized (at 8 years of age or later) by the priesthood authority of the LDS church on May 21, 1929.
  • Alternative: Baptized (at 8 years of age or later) by the priesthood authority of the LDS church on May 21, 1929.
  • Alternative: Baptized (at 8 years of age or later) by the priesthood authority of the LDS church on May 21, 1929.
  • Alternative: Baptized (at 8 years of age or later) by the priesthood authority of the LDS church on May 21, 1929.
  • Alternative: Baptized (at 8 years of age or later) by the priesthood authority of the LDS church on May 21, 1929.
  • Alternative: Baptized (at 8 years of age or later) by the priesthood authority of the LDS church on May 21, 1929.
  • Alternative: Baptized (at 8 years of age or later) by the priesthood authority of the LDS church on May 21, 1929.
  • Alternative: Baptized (at 8 years of age or later) by the priesthood authority of the LDS church on May 21, 1929.
  • Alternative: Baptized (at 8 years of age or later) by the priesthood authority of the LDS church on May 21, 1929.
  • Alternative: Baptized (at 8 years of age or later) by the priesthood authority of the LDS church on May 21, 1929.
  • Alternative: Baptized (at 8 years of age or later) by the priesthood authority of the LDS church on May 21, 1929.
  • Alternative: Baptized (at 8 years of age or later) by the priesthood authority of the LDS church on May 21, 1929.
  • Alternative: Baptized (at 8 years of age or later) by the priesthood authority of the LDS church on February 17, 1934.
  • Alternative: Baptized (at 8 years of age or later) by the priesthood authority of the LDS church on July 23, 1934.
  • Profession: Princess of France, Countess of Flanders, Countess of Auxerre, Comtesse de Corbie, Comtesse de Corbie, Comtesse de Coutances, , Countess of Normandy, Prinsessa av Frankrike, Duchesse de Normandie, comtesse de Flandre.
  • She died on January 8, 1078, she was 68 years oldMesen
    Vlaams Gewest Belgium.
  • She is buried in the year 1079Mesen
    Vlaams Gewest Belgium.
  • A child of Robert II Capet and Constance of Arles

Household of Adela ""the Holy""

She is married to Baldwin.

They got married in the year 1028, she was 18 years oldAmiens
Picardy France.


Child(ren):

  1. Constance de Flanders  1036-1094 
  2. Matilda  ± 1031-1083 


Notes about Adela ""the Holy""

GIVN Adele (Alix), Princess
SURN France
AFN 9HMQ-FK
_PRIMARY Y
DATE 9 SEP 2000
TIME 13:15:48
GIVN Adele (Alix), Princess
SURN France
AFN 9HMQ-FK
_PRIMARY Y
DATE 9 SEP 2000
TIME 13:15:48
[grosenbaum.ged]

Henry I of France (1008-1060), king of France (1031-1060), son of King Robert II and grandson of Hugh Capet, founder of the Capetian dynasty. From the beginning of his reign he was occupied with putting down rebellions led by members of his family and other French nobles. Between 1035 and 1047 he assisted his nephew William, duke of Normandy, later William the Conqueror, king of England, in establishing William's authority over rebelliouis Norman nobles. Henry later grew jealous of William's power and waged unsuccessful war against him in 1054 and 1058. Henry was succeeded by his son Philip I.[grosenbaum4.ged]

Henry I of France (1008-1060), king of France (1031-1060), son of King Robert II and grandson of Hugh Capet, founder of the Capetian dynasty. From the beginning of his reign he was occupied with putting down rebellions led by members of his family and other French nobles. Between 1035 and 1047 he assisted his nephew William, duke of Normandy, later William the Conqueror, king of England, in establishing William's authority over rebelliouis Norman nobles. Henry later grew jealous of William's power and waged unsuccessful war against him in 1054 and 1058. Henry was succeeded by his son Philip I.
Still Living.
Still Living.
Adele (Adelheid) var 1. gang gift i 1027 med hertug Rikard III av Normandie som døde
samme år.

Adelaide de France was the daughter of (?) Robert II [King of France] and Constance of Provence. She married Richard III Duke of Normandy in 1027.1 She married (?) Baldwin V, deLille Count of Flander circa 1028.2,3,4 Adelaide died between 8 January 1079 and 1080 at Messines
Adela of France, Countess of Flanders
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search
Adela Capet, Adèle of France or Adela of Flanders[1], known also as Adela the Holy or Adela of Messines; (1009 ? 8 January 1079, Messines) was the second daughter of Robert II (the Pious), and Constance of Arles. As dowry to her future husband, she received from his father the title of Countess of Corbie.

Contents [hide]
1 Her family
2 Political influence
2.1 Battle of Cassel
3 Church influence
4 Note

[edit] Her family
She was a member of the House of Capet, the rulers of France. As the wife of Baldwin V, she was Countess of Flanders from 1036 to 1067.

She married first 1027 Richard III Duke of Normandy (997 ? 1027). They never had children. As a widow, she remarried in 1028 in Paris to Baldwin V of Flanders (1012 ? 1067). Their children were:

Baldwin VI of Flanders, (1030 ? 1070)
Matilda of Flanders (1032 ? 1083). In 1053 she married William Duke of Normandy, the future king of England
Robert I of Flanders, (1033-1093)
Henry of Flanders (c. 1035)
Sir Richard of Flanders (c. 1050-1105)

[edit] Political influence
Adèle?s influence lay mainly in her family connections. On the death of her brother, Henry I of France, the guardianship of his seven-year-old son Philip I fell jointly on his widow, Ann of Kiev, and on his brother-in-law, Adela's husband, so that from 1060 to 1067, they were Regents of France.

[edit] Battle of Cassel
When Adela's third son, Robert the Frisian, was to invade Flanders in1071 to become the new count (at that time the count was Adela's grandson, Arnulf III), she asked Phillip I to stop him. Phillip sent troops in order to to aid Arnulf, being among the forces sent by the kinga contingent of ten Norman knights led by William FitzOsborn. Robert's forces attacked Arnulf's numerically superior army at Cassel beforeit could organize, and Arnulf himself was killed along with William FitzOsborn. The overwhelming triumph of Robert made Phillip invest him with Flanders, making the peace. A year later, Phillip married Robert's step-daughter, Bertha of Holland, and in 1074, Phillip restored theseigneurie of Corbie to the crown.

[edit] Church influence
Adèle had an especially great interest in Baldwin V?s church-reform politics and was behind her husband?s founding of several collegiate churches. Directly or indirectly, she was responsible for establishing the Colleges of Aire (1049), Lille (1050) and Harelbeke (1064) as well as the abbeys of Messines (1057) and Ename (1063). After Baldwin?s death in 1067, she went to Rome, took the nun?s veil from the hands of Pope Alexander II and retreated to the Benedictine convent of Messines, near Ypres. There she died, being buried at the same monastery. Her commemoration day is 8 September.

[edit] Note
^ Other forms of her name are Adela, Adélaïde, Adelheid, Aelis and Alix.
Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adela_of_France%2C_Countess_of_Flanders"
[s2.FTW]

Source: Church of JC of the LDS "Ancestral File" CD-Rom database, ver 4.17.Source: Church of JC of the LDS "Ancestral File" CD-Rom database, ver 4.17.
Adela Capet
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Adela of Flanders (1009-June 5, 1063) was the Countess of Contenance, later the Countess of Flanders, and second daughter of Robert II of France (Robert le Pieux) and Constance of Arles. Her first husband, Richard III of Normandy (997 - 1027), had a short and inconsequential reign over the Duchy of Normandy before dying under mysterious circumstances in 1027. They did not have any children together, though Richard had two illegitimate children by unknown mistresses.

Adela married Baldwin V of Flanders (d.September 1, 1067) in 1028 and encouraged her husband to rebel against his father, Baldwin IV of Flanders. Her efforts failed, and Baldwin V did not become Count of Flanders until his father's death in 1035. Baldwin and Adela had four children:

* Baldwin VI, 1030-1070
* Matilda of Flanders, c.1031-1083 who married William the Conqueror
* Robert I of Flanders, c.1033–1093
* Henry of Flanders c.1035
Frederick Lewis Weis and Walter Lee Sheppard, Jr., Ancestral Roots
of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America Before 1700, 7th ed., at 115, 142 (1992). Line 162-22, 128-22.

TITLE: Countess of Contenance
She was a member of the House of Capet, the rulers of France. As the wife of Baldwin V, she was Countess of Flanders from 1036 to 1067.

She married first 1027 Richard III Duke of Normandy (997 † 1027). They had no children. As a widow, she remarried in 1028 in Paris to Baldwin V of Flanders (1012 † 1067). Their children were:

* Baldwin VI of Flanders, (1030 † 1070)
* Matilda of Flanders (1032 † 1083). In 1053 she married William Duke of Normandy, the future king of England
* Robert I of Flanders, (1033-1093)
* Henry of Flanders (c. 1035)

[edit] Political influence

Adèle’s influence lay mainly in her family connections. On the death of her brother, Henry I of France, the guardianship of his seven-year-old son Philip I fell jointly the boy's mother and to Adèle’s husband so that from 1060 to 1067, they were Regents of France.

[edit] Church influence

Adèle had an especially great interest in Baldwin V’s church-reform politics and was behind her husband’s founding of several collegiate churches. Directly or indirectly, she was responsible for establishing the Colleges of Aire (1049), Lille (1050) and Harelbeke (1064) as well as the abbeys of Messines (1057) and Ename (1063). After Baldwin’s death in 1067, she went to Rome, took the nun’s veil from the hands of Pope Alexander II and retreated to the Benedictine convent of Messines. There she died. Her commemoration day is 8 September.
She was a member of the House of Capet, the rulers of France. As the wife of Baldwin V, she was Countess of Flanders from 1036 to 1067.

She married first 1027 Richard III Duke of Normandy (997 † 1027). They had no children. As a widow, she remarried in 1028 in Paris to Baldwin V of Flanders (1012 † 1067). Their children were:

* Baldwin VI of Flanders, (1030 † 1070)
* Matilda of Flanders (1032 † 1083). In 1053 she married William Duke of Normandy, the future king of England
* Robert I of Flanders, (1033-1093)
* Henry of Flanders (c. 1035)

[edit] Political influence

Adèle’s influence lay mainly in her family connections. On the death of her brother, Henry I of France, the guardianship of his seven-year-old son Philip I fell jointly the boy's mother and to Adèle’s husband so that from 1060 to 1067, they were Regents of France.

[edit] Church influence

Adèle had an especially great interest in Baldwin V’s church-reform politics and was behind her husband’s founding of several collegiate churches. Directly or indirectly, she was responsible for establishing the Colleges of Aire (1049), Lille (1050) and Harelbeke (1064) as well as the abbeys of Messines (1057) and Ename (1063). After Baldwin’s death in 1067, she went to Rome, took the nun’s veil from the hands of Pope Alexander II and retreated to the Benedictine convent of Messines. There she died. Her commemoration day is 8 September.

http://www.peterwestern.f9.co.uk/maximilia/pafg69.htm#948
1 NAME Adila Adele /(Alix)/ 1 UPDA 2 PLAC Princess FRANCE
Which spouse of Robert was her mother is not clear.Some sources show her as the daughter of Robert I of France.
[alfred_descendants10gen_fromrootsweb_bartont.FTW]

ref. (CCN 112)
[Eldad_Grannis.FTW]

[SPARKMAN DATABASE.FTW]

[muncyeagle.FBC.FTW]

[Brøderbund WFT Vol. 19, Ed. 1, Tree #0402, Date of Import: 20 Nov 1999]

!Our Noble & Gentle Families of Royal Descent Together with Their Paternal
Ancestry by Joseph Foster p 178 1884 Edition:

!Our Noble & Gentle Families of Royal Descent Together with Their Paternal
Ancestry by Joseph Foster p 178 1884 Edition:

[SPARKMAN DATABASE.FTW]

[muncyeagle.FBC.FTW]

[Brøderbund WFT Vol. 19, Ed. 1, Tree #0402, Date of Import: 20 Nov 1999]

!Our Noble & Gentle Families of Royal Descent Together with Their Paternal
Ancestry by Joseph Foster p 178 1884 Edition:

!Our Noble & Gentle Families of Royal Descent Together with Their Paternal
Ancestry by Joseph Foster p 178 1884 Edition:

[SPARKMAN DATABASE.FTW]

[muncyeagle.FBC.FTW]

[Brøderbund WFT Vol. 19, Ed. 1, Tree #0402, Date of Import: 20 Nov 1999]

!Our Noble & Gentle Families of Royal Descent Together with Their Paternal
Ancestry by Joseph Foster p 178 1884 Edition:

!Our Noble & Gentle Families of Royal Descent Together with Their Paternal
Ancestry by Joseph Foster p 178 1884 Edition:
[Eldad_Grannis.FTW]

[SPARKMAN DATABASE.FTW]

[muncyeagle.FBC.FTW]

[Brøderbund WFT Vol. 19, Ed. 1, Tree #0402, Date of Import: 20 Nov 1999]

!Our Noble & Gentle Families of Royal Descent Together with Their Paternal
Ancestry by Joseph Foster p 178 1884 Edition:

!Our Noble & Gentle Families of Royal Descent Together with Their Paternal
Ancestry by Joseph Foster p 178 1884 Edition:

[SPARKMAN DATABASE.FTW]

[muncyeagle.FBC.FTW]

[Brøderbund WFT Vol. 19, Ed. 1, Tree #0402, Date of Import: 20 Nov 1999]

!Our Noble & Gentle Families of Royal Descent Together with Their Paternal
Ancestry by Joseph Foster p 178 1884 Edition:

!Our Noble & Gentle Families of Royal Descent Together with Their Paternal
Ancestry by Joseph Foster p 178 1884 Edition:

[SPARKMAN DATABASE.FTW]

[muncyeagle.FBC.FTW]

[Brøderbund WFT Vol. 19, Ed. 1, Tree #0402, Date of Import: 20 Nov 1999]

!Our Noble & Gentle Families of Royal Descent Together with Their Paternal
Ancestry by Joseph Foster p 178 1884 Edition:

!Our Noble & Gentle Families of Royal Descent Together with Their Paternal
Ancestry by Joseph Foster p 178 1884 Edition:
Princess of France
[1810] OCCU Lady, of France ...

DEATH: ROYAL.JRW (Compuserve)
1CHARL.TXT (Compuserve)
COMYNI.GED (Compuserve)

Adele Capet de France - COMYN4.TAF (Compuserve Roots), p. 3; 1st name sometime spelled Adelheid - ROYAL.JRW (Compuserve);Adelaide de France-1CHARL.TXT(Compu- serve)

WSHNGT.ASC file (Geo Washington Ahnentafel) # 4362579 = 458851, Adele or Alix, b.

http://uts.cc.utexas.edu/~churchh/edw3chrt.html#BEGIN b 1009
Kinship II - A collection of family, friends and U.S. Presidents
URL: http://worldconnect.genealogy.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=:2902060&id=I575183000
ID: I575183000
Name: *Adela CAPET
Given Name: *Adela
Surname: Capet
Sex: F
Birth: Aft 1005 in of Flanders,Belgium
Death: 8 Jan 1096/1097
Change Date: 18 Nov 2002 1 2

Father: *Robert , II, King of France CAPET b: 27 Mar 0972 in France
Mother: *Constance , of Provence ARLES b: 0986

Marriage 1 Spouse Unknown
Married: 1031
Note: _UID8E93153EC24AF2448C21A9BA80D15E6BE060

Marriage 2 Spouse Unknown
Married: Jan 1025/1026
Note: _UIDD264D06BD11E4D49923CD7FA37D2F2770741

Sources:
Title: GEDCOM File : a39278.ged
Note:
1 _TYPE Electronic File
Date: 12 Dec 1999
Title: GEDCOM File : SM.ged
Note:
1 _TYPE Electronic File
Date: 18 Nov 2002

====================================================
Kinship II - A collection of family, friends and U.S. Presidents
URL: http://worldconnect.genealogy.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=:2902060&id=I575152066
ID: I575152066
Name: Richard III De NORMANDIE
Given Name: Richard III De
Surname: NORMANDIE
Sex: M
Birth: Abt 0997 in Normandy,France
Death: 6 Aug 1028 in POISONED 1
Birth: Abt. 1001 in ,Normandie 1
Birth: Abt. 1008 in Normandy, France 2
Death: 6 Aug 1027 2
Event: ACCEDED Unknown 1026 2
Event: CAUSED BY DEA Unknown Said to have been poisoned in 1027. 2
Event: RULED Unknown Duke Of Normandy 2
Change Date: 20 Mar 2004 3 3 3 3 3 2
Note:
Also Known As:<_AKA> /Richard/ III
Ancestral File Number: 9R45-2B
1 NAME Richard /de Normandie/
2 SOUR S002205
2 SOUR S004198
3 DATA
4 TEXT Date of Import: Oct 7, 2001
1 NAME Richard III /De Normandy/
2 SOUR S004198
3 DATA
4 TEXT Date of Import: Oct 7, 2001

OCCU 5th Duke of Normandy ..
SOUR HAWKINS.GED says ABT 997, Normandy, France;
gendex.com/users/daver/rigney/D0001 says 997, France;
members.aol.com/sargen3 says ABT 997, Normandy, France
SOUR HAWKINS.GED; www.teleport.com/ddonahue/donahue ;
ROYAL.THD (Compuserve) says 1098;
Americans of Royal Descent, Charles H. Browning, p. 467 says 1027
5th Duke of Normandy, 1026-7 - The Norman Conquest, C.T. Chevallier, p. 6

OCCU 5th Duke of Normandy ..
SOUR HAWKINS.GED says ABT 997, Normandy, France;
gendex.com/users/daver/rigney/D0001 says 997, France;
members.aol.com/sargen3 says ABT 997, Normandy, France
SOUR HAWKINS.GED; www.teleport.com/ddonahue/donahue ;
ROYAL.THD (Compuserve) says 1098;
Americans of Royal Descent, Charles H. Browning, p. 467 says 1027
5th Duke of Normandy, 1026-7 - The Norman Conquest, C.T. Chevallier, p. 6

GIVN Richard III De
SURN NORMANDIE
AFN 9R45-2B
_PRIMARY Y
PEDI adopted
REPO @REPO1097@
TITL Ancestral File (R)
AUTH The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
PUBL Copyright (c) 1987, June 1998, data as of 5 January 1998
ABBR Ancestral File (R)
_MASTER Y
REPO @REPO1097@
TITL Ancestral File (R)
AUTH The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
PUBL Copyright (c) 1987, June 1998, data as of 5 January 1998
ABBR Ancestral File (R)
_MASTER Y
REPO @REPO1097@
TITL Ancestral File (R)
AUTH The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
PUBL Copyright (c) 1987, June 1998, data as of 5 January 1998
ABBR Ancestral File (R)
_MASTER Y
REPO @REPO1097@
TITL Ancestral File (R)
AUTH The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
PUBL Copyright (c) 1987, June 1998, data as of 5 January 1998
ABBR Ancestral File (R)
_MASTER Y
REPO @REPO1097@
TITL Ancestral File (R)
AUTH The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
PUBL Copyright (c) 1987, June 1998, data as of 5 January 1998
ABBR Ancestral File (R)
_MASTER Y
REPO @REPO1097@
TITL Ancestral File (R)
AUTH The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
PUBL Copyright (c) 1987, June 1998, data as of 5 January 1998
ABBR Ancestral File (R)
_MASTER Y
REPO @REPO1097@
TITL Ancestral File (R)
AUTH The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
PUBL Copyright (c) 1987, June 1998, data as of 5 January 1998
ABBR Ancestral File (R)
_MASTER Y
DATE 4 OCT 2000
TIME 21:34:12

DATE 31 MAY 2000

Father: RICHARD II The Good', Duke of NORMANDY b: 0962 in Normandy,Fran
Mother: Judith DE BRETAGNE b: Abt 0982 in Bretagne, France

Marriage 1 Spouse Unknown
Married: Jan 1025/1026 in Not Married 1 2
Note: _UID1C7296E695262C448F55E97D02B3A3C69DE9

Marriage 2 Mrs-Richard-III, Concubine Of NORMANDY b: Abt 1000 in , Normandie
Married: in Not Married
Note: _UID58A7194F22DD804BBF99287686F638E3BE16
Children
Alix De NORMANDY b: Abt 1021 in Of, , Normandie

Sources:
Title: Le Savage.FTW
Note:
Source Media Type: Other
Repository:
Title: Talcott.FTW
Note:
Source Media Type: Other
Repository:
Author: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
Title: Ancestral File (R)
Publication: Copyright (c) 1987, June 1998, data as of 5 January 1998
Repository:
!Name is; Adele (Alix), Princess Of /FRANCE/
Place; Monastere De L'Ordre De St. Benoist, Messines,, France
Adela is also styled as Aélicie de France. Adela, Countess of Contena nce, later Adela, Countess of Flanders (1009-June 5, 1063), married (1 ) Duke Richard III of Normandy; and (2) Count Baldwin V of Flanders. I n about 1028, Adela was granted the lordship of Corbie by her brother Henri. She is better known as the mother of Matilda of Flanders, wif e of William the Conqueror. At least one souce indicates that instea d of in 1063, Adela may have d. 08 Jan 1078/79
GIVN Adele (Alix), Princess
SURN France
AFN 9HMQ-FK
_PRIMARY Y
DATE 9 SEP 2000
TIME 13:15:48
Adela Capet, Adèle of France or Adela of Flanders[1], known also as Adela the Holy or Adela of Messines; (1009 - 8 January 1079 , Messines ) was the second daughter of Robert II (the Pious), and Constance of Arles . As dowry to her future husband, she received from her father the title of Countess of Corbie.
She was a member of the House of Capet , the rulers of France. As the wife of Baldwin V , she was Countess of Flanders from 1036 to 1067.
She married first 1027 Richard III Duke of Normandy (997 † 1027). They never had children. As a widow, she remarried in 1028 in Paris to Baldwin V of Flanders (1012 † 1067). Their children were:
Baldwin VI of Flanders , (1030 † 1070)
Matilda of Flanders (1032 † 1083). In 1053 she married William Duke of Normandy , the future king of England
Robert I of Flanders , (1033-1093)
Henry of Flanders (c. 1035)
Sir Richard of Flanders (c. 1050-1105)
Adèle’s influence lay mainly in her family connections. On the death of her brother, Henry I of France, the guardianship of his seven-year-old son Philip I fell jointly on his widow, Ann of Kiev , and on his brother-in-law, Adela's husband, so that from 1060 to 1067, they were Regents of France.

[edit ] Battle of Cassel (1071)
When Adela's third son, Robert the Frisian , was to invade Flanders in 1071 to become the new count (at that time the count was Adela's grandson, Arnulf III ), she asked Phillip I to stop him. Phillip sent troops in order to aid Arnulf, being among the forces sent by the king a contingent of ten Norman knights led by William FitzOsborn . Robert's forces attacked Arnulf's numerically superior army at Cassel before it could organize, and Arnulf himself was killed along with William FitzOsborn. The overwhelming triumph of Robert made Phillip invest him with Flanders, making the peace. A year later, Phillip married Robert's stepdaughter, Bertha of Holland , and in 1074, Phillip restored the seigneurie of Corbie to the crown.
Adèle had an especially great interest in Baldwin V’s church-reform politics and was behind her husband’s founding of several collegiate churches . Directly or indirectly, she was responsible for establishing the Colleges of Aire (1049), Lille (1050) and Harelbeke (1064) as well as the abbeys of Messines (1057) and Ename (1063). After Baldwin’s death in 1067, she went to Rome, took the nun’s veil from the hands of Pope Alexander II and retreated to the Benedictine convent of Messines, near Ypres . There she died, being buried at the same monastery. Her commemoration day is 8 September.
Other forms of her name are Adela, Adélaïde, Adelheid, Aelis and Alix.
#Générale#inhumation : Messine Italie
{geni:about_me} https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ad%C3%A8le_of_France,_Countess_of_Flanders

http://genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00004012&tree=LEO

Parents: Robert II (the Pious) and Constance d'Arles.

Spouses

1. Baudouin V 'le Pieux', Comte de Flandre

Children:

* Baldwin VI of Flanders, (1030 † 1070)

* Matilda of Flanders (1032 † 1083). In 1053 she married William Duke of Normandy, the future king of England

* Robert I of Flanders, (1033-1093)

* Henry of Flanders (c. 1035)

* Sir Richard of Flanders (c. 1050-1105)

LINKS

http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/CAPET.htm#Adeladied1079

http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ad%C3%A8le_de_France_%281009-1079%29

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

MEDIEVAL LANDS

ADELA de France (-Messines 8 Jan 1079, bur Messines, Benedictine monastery).

The Chronicle of Alberic de Trois-Fontaines names "soror…regis Henrici Adela" as wife of "Balduino Insulano"[171].

The Genealogiæ Scriptoris Fusniacensis names "Alam comitissam Flandrensem" as the daughter of King Robert[172].

She is named as daughter of King Robert in a manuscript whose attribution to Orderic Vitalis is disputed, which also refers to her marriage[173].

Kerrebrouck mentions her betrothal to Duke Richard "très jeune" but does not cite the primary source on which this is based[174]. Her father gave her the seigneurie of Corbie as her dowry.

Ctss de Contenance. She founded the Benedictine monastery at Messines near Ypres.

The necrology of the abbey of Saint-Denis records the death "VI Id Jan" of "Adelaidis comitissa"[175].

Betrothed (Jan 1027) to RICHARD III Duke of Normandy, son of RICHARD I Duke of Normandy & his first wife Judith de Bretagne ([1001]-6 Aug 1027).

m (Amiens 1028) BAUDOUIN de Flandre, son of BAUDOUIN IV "le Barbu/Pulchrae Barbae" Count of Flanders & his first wife Ogive de Luxembourg ([1012/13]-Lille 1 Sep 1067, bur Lille, Saint-Pierre).

He succeeded his father in 1035 as BAUDOUIN V “le Pieux/Insulanus” Count of Flanders. He was regent of France for his nephew Philippe I King of France 1060-1066/67.

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

WIKIPÉDIA (fr)

Adèle de France (née en 1009 - morte à Messines le 8 janvier 1079) était la fille de Robert II, roi de France, et de Constance d'Arles. Elle était comtesse de Corbie.

Elle épousa en premières noces en 1027 Richard III (997 † 1027), duc de Normandie, mais n'eut pas d'enfants. Veuve, elle se remaria en 1028 à Paris avec Baudouin V (1012 † 1067), comte de Flandre, dont elle eut :

*Baudouin VI, (1030 † 1070)

*Mathilde (1032 † 1083), mariée en 1053 à Guillaume le Conquérant, duc de Normandie, neveu de Richard III

*Robert Ier de Flandre, dit aussi Robert le Frison (1033-1093)

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

WIKIPEDIA (Eng)

Adela Capet, Adèle of France or Adela of Flanders[1], known also as Adela the Holy or Adela of Messines; (1009 – 8 January 1079, Messines) was the second daughter of Robert II (the Pious), and Constance of Arles. As dowry to her future husband, she received from her father the title of Countess of Corbie.

Her family

She was a member of the House of Capet, the rulers of France. As the wife of Baldwin V, she was Countess of Flanders from 1036 to 1067.

She married first 1027 Richard III Duke of Normandy (997 † 1027). They never had children.

As a widow, she remarried in 1028 in Paris to Baldwin V 'the Pious' of Flanders (1012 † 1067). Their children were:

* Baldwin VI of Flanders, (1030 † 1070)

* Matilda of Flanders (1032 † 1083). In 1053 she married William Duke of Normandy, the future king of England

* Robert I of Flanders, (1033-1093)

* Henry of Flanders (c. 1035)

* Sir Richard of Flanders (c. 1050-1105)

Political influence

Adèle’s influence lay mainly in her family connections. On the death of her brother, Henry I of France, the guardianship of his seven-year-old son Philip I fell jointly on his widow, Ann of Kiev, and on his brother-in-law, Adela's husband, so that from 1060 to 1067, they were Regents of France.

Battle of Cassel (1071)

When Adela's third son, Robert the Frisian, was to invade Flanders in 1071 to become the new count (at that time the count was Adela's grandson, Arnulf III), she asked Phillip I to stop him. Phillip sent troops in order to aid Arnulf, being among the forces sent by the king a contingent of ten Norman knights led by William FitzOsborn. Robert's forces attacked Arnulf's numerically superior army at Cassel before it could organize, and Arnulf himself was killed along with William FitzOsborn. The overwhelming triumph of Robert made Phillip invest him with Flanders, making the peace. A year later, Phillip married Robert's stepdaughter, Bertha of Holland, and in 1074, Phillip restored the seigneurie of Corbie to the crown.

Church influence

Adèle had an especially great interest in Baldwin V’s church-reform politics and was behind her husband’s founding of several collegiate churches. Directly or indirectly, she was responsible for establishing the Colleges of Aire (1049), Lille (1050) and Harelbeke (1064) as well as the abbeys of Messines (1057) and Ename (1063). After Baldwin’s death in 1067, she went to Rome, took the nun’s veil from the hands of Pope Alexander II and retreated to the Benedictine convent of Messines, near Ypres. There she died, being buried at the same monastery. Her commemoration day is 8 September.

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

De Zalige Adela van Mesen, geschiedkundig bekend als Adela van Frankrijk, (1009 of 1014 - Mesen, 8 januari 1079) was een dochter van koning Robert II van Frankrijk en van Constance Taillefer d'Arles.

Als weduwe van hertog Richard III van Normandië huwde zij in 1028 met graaf Boudewijn V van Vlaanderen. Hun kinderen waren:

Boudewijn VI van Vlaanderen

Mathilda (1032 - Caen, 2 november 1083), gehuwd in 1053 met Willem I de Veroveraar, hertog van Normandië en koning van Engeland

Robrecht I van Vlaanderen, vader van Adela, gehuwd met Knoet IV van Denemarken.

Na Boudewijns (V) overlijden in 1067 trok zij zich terug in de abdij van Mesen.

Haar feestdag valt op 8 september. In de oude crypte onder de kerk van Mesen bevindt zich een gedenkteken ter harer ere.

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Note

1. ^ Other forms of her name are Adela, Adélaïde, Adelheid, Aelis and Alix.

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Adela of France, Countess of Flanders

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search

Adela Capet, Adèle of France or Adela of Flanders[1], known also as Adela the Holy or Adela of Messines; (1009 – 8 January 1079, Messines) was the second daughter of Robert II (the Pious), and Constance of Arles. As dowry to her future husband, she received from his father the title of Countess of Corbie.

Contents [hide]

1 Her family

2 Political influence

2.1 Battle of Cassel (1071)

3 Church influence

4 Note

Her family

She was a member of the House of Capet, the rulers of France. As the wife of Baldwin V, she was Countess of Flanders from 1036 to 1067.

She married first 1027 Richard III Duke of Normandy (997 † 1027). They never had children. As a widow, she remarried in 1028 in Paris to Baldwin V of Flanders (1012 † 1067). Their children were:

Baldwin VI of Flanders, (1030 † 1070)

Matilda of Flanders (1032 † 1083). In 1053 she married William Duke of Normandy, the future king of England

Robert I of Flanders, (1033-1093)

Henry of Flanders (c. 1035)

Sir Richard of Flanders (c. 1050-1105)

Political influence

Adèle’s influence lay mainly in her family connections. On the death of her brother, Henry I of France, the guardianship of his seven-year-old son Philip I fell jointly on his widow, Ann of Kiev, and on his brother-in-law, Adela's husband, so that from 1060 to 1067, they were Regents of France.

Battle of Cassel (1071)

When Adela's third son, Robert the Frisian, was to invade Flanders in 1071 to become the new count (at that time the count was Adela's grandson, Arnulf III), she asked Phillip I to stop him. Phillip sent troops in order to aid Arnulf, being among the forces sent by the king a contingent of ten Norman knights led by William FitzOsborn. Robert's forces attacked Arnulf's numerically superior army at Cassel before it could organize, and Arnulf himself was killed along with William FitzOsborn. The overwhelming triumph of Robert made Phillip invest him with Flanders, making the peace. A year later, Phillip married Robert's stepdaughter, Bertha of Holland, and in 1074, Phillip restored the seigneurie of Corbie to the crown.

Church influence

Adèle had an especially great interest in Baldwin V’s church-reform politics and was behind her husband’s founding of several collegiate churches. Directly or indirectly, she was responsible for establishing the Colleges of Aire (1049), Lille (1050) and Harelbeke (1064) as well as the abbeys of Messines (1057) and Ename (1063). After Baldwin’s death in 1067, she went to Rome, took the nun’s veil from the hands of Pope Alexander II and retreated to the Benedictine convent of Messines, near Ypres. There she died, being buried at the same monastery. Her commemoration day is 8 September.

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

Adela Capet, Adèle of France or Adela of Flanders[1], known also as Adela the Holy or Adela of Messines; (1009 – 8 January 1079, Messines) was the second daughter of Robert II (the Pious), and Constance of Arles. As dowry to her future husband, she received from her father the title of Countess of Corbie.

Contents [hide]

1 Her family

2 Political influence

2.1 Battle of Cassel (1071)

3 Church influence

4 Ancestry

5 Note

[edit] Her family

She was a member of the House of Capet, the rulers of France. As the wife of Baldwin V, she was Countess of Flanders from 1036 to 1067.

She married first 1027 Richard III Duke of Normandy (997 † 1027). They never had children. As a widow, she remarried in 1028 in Paris to Baldwin V of Flanders (1012 † 1067). Their children were:

Baldwin VI of Flanders, (1030 † 1070)

Matilda of Flanders (1032 † 1083). In 1053 she married William Duke of Normandy, the future king of England

Robert I of Flanders, (1033-1093)

Henry of Flanders (c. 1035)

Sir Richard of Flanders (c. 1050-1105)

[edit] Political influence

Adèle’s influence lay mainly in her family connections. On the death of her brother, Henry I of France, the guardianship of his seven-year-old son Philip I fell jointly on his widow, Ann of Kiev, and on his brother-in-law, Adela's husband, so that from 1060 to 1067, they were Regents of France.

[edit] Battle of Cassel (1071)

When Adela's third son, Robert the Frisian, was to invade Flanders in 1071 to become the new count (at that time the count was Adela's grandson, Arnulf III), she asked Phillip I to stop him. Phillip sent troops in order to aid Arnulf, being among the forces sent by the king a contingent of ten Norman knights led by William FitzOsborn. Robert's forces attacked Arnulf's numerically superior army at Cassel before it could organize, and Arnulf himself was killed along with William FitzOsborn. The overwhelming triumph of Robert made Phillip invest him with Flanders, making the peace. A year later, Phillip married Robert's stepdaughter, Bertha of Holland, and in 1074, Phillip restored the seigneurie of Corbie to the crown.

[edit] Church influence

Adèle had an especially great interest in Baldwin V’s church-reform politics and was behind her husband’s founding of several collegiate churches. Directly or indirectly, she was responsible for establishing the Colleges of Aire (1049), Lille (1050) and Harelbeke (1064) as well as the abbeys of Messines (1057) and Ename (1063). After Baldwin’s death in 1067, she went to Rome, took the nun’s veil from the hands of Pope Alexander II and retreated to the Benedictine convent of Messines, near Ypres. There she died, being buried at the same monastery. Her commemoration day is 8 September.

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

Adela Capet, Adèle of France or Adela of Flanders[1], known also as Adela the Holy or Adela of Messines; (1009 – 8 January 1079, Messines) was the second daughter of Robert II (the Pious), and Constance of Arles. As dowry to her future husband, she received from his father the title of Countess of Corbie.

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

From Wikipedia:

Adela Capet, Adèle of France or Adela of Flanders[1], known also as Adela the Holy or Adela of Messines; (1009 – 8 January 1079, Messines) was the second daughter of Robert II (the Pious), and Constance of Arles. As dowry to her future husband, she received from her father the title of Countess of Corbie.

She was a member of the House of Capet, the rulers of France. As the wife of Baldwin V, she was Countess of Flanders from 1036 to 1067.

She married first 1027 Richard III Duke of Normandy (997 † 1027). They never had children. As a widow, she remarried in 1028 in Paris to Baldwin V of Flanders (1012 † 1067). Their children were:

* Baldwin VI of Flanders, (1030 † 1070)

* Matilda of Flanders (1032 † 1083). In 1053 she married William Duke of Normandy, the future king of England

* Robert I of Flanders, (1033-1093)

* Henry of Flanders (c. 1035)

* Sir Richard of Flanders (c. 1050-1105)

Adèle’s influence lay mainly in her family connections. On the death of her brother, Henry I of France, the guardianship of his seven-year-old son Philip I fell jointly on his widow, Ann of Kiev, and on his brother-in-law, Adela's husband, so that from 1060 to 1067, they were Regents of France.

Adèle had an especially great interest in Baldwin V’s church-reform politics and was behind her husband’s founding of several collegiate churches. Directly or indirectly, she was responsible for establishing the Colleges of Aire (1049), Lille (1050) and Harelbeke (1064) as well as the abbeys of Messines (1057) and Ename (1063). After Baldwin’s death in 1067, she went to Rome, took the nun’s veil from the hands of Pope Alexander II and retreated to the Benedictine convent of Messines, near Ypres. There she died, being buried at the same monastery. Honored as a saint in the Roman Catholic Church, her commemoration day is 8 September.

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

From the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy page on France Capetian Kings:

http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/CAPET.htm#_Toc154137001

ADELA de France (-Messines 8 Jan 1079, bur Messines, Benedictine monastery).

The Chronicle of Alberic de Trois-Fontaines names "soror…regis Henrici Adela" as wife of "Balduino Insulano"[213]. The Genealogiæ Scriptoris Fusniacensis names "Alam comitissam Flandrensem" as the daughter of King Robert[214]. She is named as daughter of King Robert in a manuscript whose attribution to Orderic Vitalis is disputed, which also refers to her marriage[215].

Kerrebrouck mentions her betrothal to Duke Richard "très jeune" but does not cite the primary source on which this is based[216].

"Richardus Nortmannorum dux" agreed grants of property to "Adela" on the occasion of their marriage by charter dated Jan 1026, which does not specify her parentage[217].

Her father gave her the seigneurie of Corbie as her dowry. Ctss de Contenance.

She founded the Benedictine monastery at Messines near Ypres.

The necrology of the abbey of Saint-Denis records the death "VI Id Jan" of "Adelaidis comitissa"[218].

Betrothed (Jan 1027) to RICHARD III Duke of Normandy, son of RICHARD I Duke of Normandy & his first wife Judith de Bretagne ([1001]-6 Aug 1027).

m (Amiens 1028) BAUDOUIN de Flandre, son of BAUDOUIN IV "le Barbu/Pulchrae Barbae" Count of Flanders & his first wife Ogive de Luxembourg ([1012/13]-Lille 1 Sep 1067, bur Lille, Saint-Pierre). He succeeded his father in 1035 as BAUDOUIN V “le Pieux/Insulanus” Count of Flanders. He was regent of France for his nephew Philippe I King of France 1060-1066/67.

From the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy page on Flanders:

http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/FLANDERS,%20HAINAUT.htm#BaudouinVdied1067B

Count Baudouin V & his wife had three children:

1. Baudouin de Flandre (b. c.1030, d. 17 July 1070, Hanson Abbey, succeeded as Comte de Flandres, married in 1051 Richilde)

2. Mathilde de Flandre (b. c.1032, d. 2 November 1083, buried Caen, Abbey of the Holy Trinity, married William I the Conquerer of England)

3. Robert de Flandre (b. c. 1035, d. 13 October 1093, succeeded as Comte de Flandres)

Adela Capet, Adèle of France or Adela of Flanders[1], known also as Adela the Holy or Adela of Messines; (1009 – 8 January 1079, Messines) was the second daughter of Robert II (the Pious), and Constance of Arles. As dowry to her future husband, she received from her father the title of Countess of Corbie.

Her family

She was a member of the House of Capet, the rulers of France. As the wife of Baldwin V, she was Countess of Flanders from 1036 to 1067.

She married first 1027 Richard III Duke of Normandy (997 † 1027). They never had children. As a widow, she remarried in 1028 in Paris to Baldwin V of Flanders (1012 † 1067).

Their children were:

1. Baldwin VI of Flanders, (1030 † 1070)

2. Matilda of Flanders (1032 † 1083). In 1053 she married William Duke of Normandy, the future king of England

3. Robert I of Flanders, (1033-1093)

4. Henry of Flanders (c. 1035)

5. Sir Richard of Flanders (c. 1050-1105)

Political influence

Adèle’s influence lay mainly in her family connections. On the death of her brother, Henry I of France, the guardianship of his seven-year-old son Philip I fell jointly on his widow, Ann of Kiev, and on his brother-in-law, Adela's husband, so that from 1060 to 1067, they were Regents of France.

Battle of Cassel (1071)

When Adela's third son, Robert the Frisian, was to invade Flanders in 1071 to become the new count (at that time the count was Adela's grandson, Arnulf III), she asked Phillip I to stop him. Phillip sent troops in order to aid Arnulf, being among the forces sent by the king a contingent of ten Norman knights led by William FitzOsborn. Robert's forces attacked Arnulf's numerically superior army at Cassel before it could organize, and Arnulf himself was killed along with William FitzOsborn. The overwhelming triumph of Robert made Phillip invest him with Flanders, making the peace. A year later, Phillip married Robert's stepdaughter, Bertha of Holland, and in 1074, Phillip restored the seigneurie of Corbie to the crown.

Church influence

Adèle had an especially great interest in Baldwin V’s church-reform politics and was behind her husband’s founding of several collegiate churches. Directly or indirectly, she was responsible for establishing the Colleges of Aire (1049), Lille (1050) and Harelbeke (1064) as well as the abbeys of Messines (1057) and Ename (1063). After Baldwin’s death in 1067, she went to Rome, took the nun’s veil from the hands of Pope Alexander II and retreated to the Benedictine convent of Messines, near Ypres. There she died, being buried at the same monastery. Honored as a saint in the Roman Catholic Church, her commemoration day is 8 September.

Note

1.^ Other forms of her name are Adela, Adélaïde, Adelheid, Aelis and Alix.

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1 NAME Adela (or Adelaide) of /France/

2 SOUR S033320

3 DATA

4 TEXT Date of Import: Jan 17, 2001

1 BIRT

2 DATE ABT. 1003

2 PLAC of Nevers, Nierre, France

2 SOUR S033320

3 DATA

4 TEXT Date of Import: Jan 17, 2001

1 DEAT

2 DATE ABT. 1063

2 PLAC ,Nevers, Nierre, France

2 SOUR S033320

3 DATA

4 TEXT Date of Import: Jan 17, 2001

[De La Pole.FTW]

Sources: RC 73, 140, 141, 232, 255; Kraentzler 1157, 1176, 1218, 1221, 1241,

1258, 1265, 1342, 1350, 1371; Coe; A. Roots 107; Royal Descents; AIS; Davis;

AF.

Roots: Adele of France, Countess of Auxerre, died about 1063.

RC: Adela (Adelaide), Princess of France, died about 1063.

Descents: Adela of France.

K: Adele ou Alix de France, Princess of France (reigning Countess of France).

Died 1079, l'abbaye de Messine, dioc. Ypres, France.

AIS: Adela, Princess of France.

Davis: Adela, daughter of Robert of France.

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

From http://www.rpi.edu/~holmes/Hobbies/Genealogy/ps05/ps05_230.htm

Adelaide (also known as Adelisa of France, and Adele-Alice or even Aelicie) may be daughter of Robert II and another wife.

References: [AR7],[Weis1],[ES],[PlantagenetA],[RFC],[Paget1]

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

Adela of France, Countess of Flanders

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Adela Capet, Adèle of France or Adela of Flanders[1], known also as Adela the Holy or Adela of Messines; (1009 – 8 January 1079, Messines) was the second daughter of Robert II (the Pious), and Constance of Arles. As dowry to her future husband, she received from her father the title of Countess of Corbie.

Her family

She was a member of the House of Capet, the rulers of France. As the wife of Baldwin V, she was Countess of Flanders from 1036 to 1067.

She married first 1027 Richard III Duke of Normandy (997 † 1027). They never had children. As a widow, she remarried in 1028 in Paris to Baldwin V of Flanders (1012 † 1067). Their children were:

Baldwin VI of Flanders, (1030 † 1070)

Matilda of Flanders (1032 † 1083). In 1053 she married William Duke of Normandy, the future king of England

Robert I of Flanders, (1033-1093)

Henry of Flanders (c. 1035)

Sir Richard of Flanders (c. 1050-1105)

[edit]Political influence

Adèle’s influence lay mainly in her family connections. On the death of her brother, Henry I of France, the guardianship of his seven-year-old son Philip I fell jointly on his widow, Ann of Kiev, and on his brother-in-law, Adela's husband, so that from 1060 to 1067, they were Regents of France.

[edit]Battle of Cassel (1071)

When Adela's third son, Robert the Frisian, was to invade Flanders in 1071 to become the new count (at that time the count was Adela's grandson, Arnulf III), she asked Phillip I to stop him. Phillip sent troops in order to aid Arnulf, being among the forces sent by the king a contingent of ten Norman knights led by William FitzOsborn. Robert's forces attacked Arnulf's numerically superior army at Cassel before it could organize, and Arnulf himself was killed along with William FitzOsborn. The overwhelming triumph of Robert made Phillip invest him with Flanders, making the peace. A year later, Phillip married Robert's stepdaughter, Bertha of Holland, and in 1074, Phillip restored the seigneurie of Corbie to the crown.

[edit]Church influence

Adèle had an especially great interest in Baldwin V’s church-reform politics and was behind her husband’s founding of several collegiate churches. Directly or indirectly, she was responsible for establishing the Colleges of Aire (1049), Lille (1050) and Harelbeke (1064) as well as the abbeys of Messines (1057) and Ename (1063). After Baldwin’s death in 1067, she went to Rome, took the nun’s veil from the hands of Pope Alexander II and retreated to the Benedictine convent of Messines, near Ypres. There she died, being buried at the same monastery. Her commemoration day is 8 September.

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

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adela_of_France,_Countess_of_Flanders

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

Adela Capet, Adèle of France or Adela of Flanders, known also as Adela the Holy or Adela of Messines; (1009–Messines 8 January 1079) was the second daughter of Robert II (the Pious), and Constance of Arles. She was buried in the monastery at Messines, near Ypres.

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

Adelaide (also known as Adelisa of France, and Adele-Alice or even Aelicie) may be daughter of Robert II and another wife.

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

Adela Capet, Adèle of France or Adela of Flanders[1], known also as Adela the Holy or Adela of Messines; (1009 – 8 January 1079, Messines) was the second daughter of Robert II (the Pious), and Constance of Arles. As dowry to her future husband, she received from his father the title of Countess of Corbie.

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

Adela Capet, Adèle of France or Adela of Flanders, known also as Adela the Holy or Adela of Messines; (1009–Messines 8 January 1079) was the second daughter of Robert II (the Pious), and Constance of Arles. She was buried in the monastery at Messines, near Ypres. Other forms of her name are Adela, Adélaïde, Adelheid, Aelis and Alix.

She was a member of the House of Capet, the rulers of France. As the wife of Baldwin V, she was Countess of Flanders from 1036 to 1067.

She married first 1027 Richard III Duke of Normandy (997 † 1027). They had no children. As a widow, she remarried in 1028 in Paris to Baldwin V of Flanders (1012 † 1067). Their children were:

Baldwin VI of Flanders, (1030 † 1070)

Matilda of Flanders (1032 † 1083). In 1053 she married William Duke of Normandy, the future king of England

Robert I of Flanders, (1033-1093)

Henry of Flanders (c. 1035)

Adèle’s influence lay mainly in her family connections. On the death of her brother, Henry I of France, the guardianship of his seven-year-old son Philip I fell jointly the boy's mother and to Adèle’s husband so that from 1060 to 1067, they were Regents of France.

Adèle had an especially great interest in Baldwin V’s church-reform politics and was behind her husband’s founding of several collegiate churches. Directly or indirectly, she was responsible for establishing the Colleges of Aire (1049), Lille (1050) and Harelbeke (1064) as well as the abbeys of Messines (1057) and Ename (1063). After Baldwin’s death in 1067, she went to Rome, took the nun’s veil from the hands of Pope Alexander II and retreated to the Benedictine convent of Messines. There she died. Her commemoration day is 8 September.

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

Adela Capet, Adèle of France or Adela of Flanders[1], known also as Adela the Holy or Adela of Messines; (1009 – 8 January 1079, Messines) was the second daughter of Robert II (the Pious), and Constance of Arles. As dowry to her future husband, she received from her father the title of Countess of Corbie.

Her family

She was a member of the House of Capet, the rulers of France. As the wife of Baldwin V, she was Countess of Flanders from 1036 to 1067.

She married first 1027 Richard III Duke of Normandy (997 † 1027). They never had children. As a widow, she remarried in 1028 in Paris to Baldwin V of Flanders (1012 † 1067). Their children were:

* Baldwin VI of Flanders, (1030 † 1070)

* Matilda of Flanders (1032 † 1083). In 1053 she married William Duke of Normandy, the future king of England

* Robert I of Flanders, (1033-1093)

* Henry of Flanders (c. 1035)

* Sir Richard of Flanders (c. 1050-1105)

[edit] Political influence

Adèle’s influence lay mainly in her family connections. On the death of her brother, Henry I of France, the guardianship of his seven-year-old son Philip I fell jointly on his widow, Ann of Kiev, and on his brother-in-law, Adela's husband, so that from 1060 to 1067, they were Regents of France.

[edit] Battle of Cassel (1071)

When Adela's third son, Robert the Frisian, was to invade Flanders in 1071 to become the new count (at that time the count was Adela's grandson, Arnulf III), she asked Phillip I to stop him. Phillip sent troops in order to aid Arnulf, being among the forces sent by the king a contingent of ten Norman knights led by William FitzOsborn. Robert's forces attacked Arnulf's numerically superior army at Cassel before it could organize, and Arnulf himself was killed along with William FitzOsborn. The overwhelming triumph of Robert made Phillip invest him with Flanders, making the peace. A year later, Phillip married Robert's stepdaughter, Bertha of Holland, and in 1074, Phillip restored the seigneurie of Corbie to the crown.

[edit] Church influence

Adèle had an especially great interest in Baldwin V’s church-reform politics and was behind her husband’s founding of several collegiate churches. Directly or indirectly, she was responsible for establishing the Colleges of Aire (1049), Lille (1050) and Harelbeke (1064) as well as the abbeys of Messines (1057) and Ename (1063). After Baldwin’s death in 1067, she went to Rome, took the nun’s veil from the hands of Pope Alexander II and retreated to the Benedictine convent of Messines, near Ypres. There she died, being buried at the same monastery. Honored as a saint in the Roman Catholic Church, her commemoration day is 8 September.

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

Adela Capet, Adèle of France or Adela of Flanders[1], known also as Adela the Holy or Adela of Messines; (1009 – 8 January 1079, Messines) was the second daughter of Robert II (the Pious), and Constance of Arles. As dowry to her future husband, she received from her father the title of Countess of Corbie.

Her family

She was a member of the House of Capet, the rulers of France. As the wife of Baldwin V, she was Countess of Flanders from 1036 to 1067.

She married first 1027 Richard III Duke of Normandy (997 † 1027). They never had children. As a widow, she remarried in 1028 in Paris to Baldwin V of Flanders (1012 † 1067). Their children were:

* Baldwin VI of Flanders, (1030 † 1070)

* Matilda of Flanders (1032 † 1083). In 1053 she married William Duke of Normandy, the future king of England

* Robert I of Flanders, (1033-1093)

* Henry of Flanders (c. 1035)

* Sir Richard of Flanders (c. 1050-1105)

[edit] Political influence

Adèle’s influence lay mainly in her family connections. On the death of her brother, Henry I of France, the guardianship of his seven-year-old son Philip I fell jointly on his widow, Ann of Kiev, and on his brother-in-law, Adela's husband, so that from 1060 to 1067, they were Regents of France.

[edit] Battle of Cassel (1071)

When Adela's third son, Robert the Frisian, was to invade Flanders in 1071 to become the new count (at that time the count was Adela's grandson, Arnulf III), she asked Phillip I to stop him. Phillip sent troops in order to aid Arnulf, being among the forces sent by the king a contingent of ten Norman knights led by William FitzOsborn. Robert's forces attacked Arnulf's numerically superior army at Cassel before it could organize, and Arnulf himself was killed along with William FitzOsborn. The overwhelming triumph of Robert made Phillip invest him with Flanders, making the peace. A year later, Phillip married Robert's stepdaughter, Bertha of Holland, and in 1074, Phillip restored the seigneurie of Corbie to the crown.

[edit] Church influence

Adèle had an especially great interest in Baldwin V’s church-reform politics and was behind her husband’s founding of several collegiate churches. Directly or indirectly, she was responsible for establishing the Colleges of Aire (1049), Lille (1050) and Harelbeke (1064) as well as the abbeys of Messines (1057) and Ename (1063). After Baldwin’s death in 1067, she went to Rome, took the nun’s veil from the hands of Pope Alexander II and retreated to the Benedictine convent of Messines, near Ypres. There she died, being buried at the same monastery. Honored as a saint in the Roman Catholic Church, her commemoration day is 8 September.

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

Adela Capet, Adèle of France or Adela of Flanders[1], known also as Adela the Holy or Adela of Messines; (1009 – 8 January 1079, Messines) was the second daughter of Robert II (the Pious), and Constance of Arles. As dowry to her future husband, she received from her father the title of Countess of Corbie.

Her family

She was a member of the House of Capet, the rulers of France. As the wife of Baldwin V, she was Countess of Flanders from 1036 to 1067.

She married first 1027 Richard III Duke of Normandy (997 † 1027). They never had children. As a widow, she remarried in 1028 in Paris to Baldwin V of Flanders (1012 † 1067). Their children were:

* Baldwin VI of Flanders, (1030 † 1070)

* Matilda of Flanders (1032 † 1083). In 1053 she married William Duke of Normandy, the future king of England

* Robert I of Flanders, (1033-1093)

* Henry of Flanders (c. 1035)

* Sir Richard of Flanders (c. 1050-1105)

[edit] Political influence

Adèle’s influence lay mainly in her family connections. On the death of her brother, Henry I of France, the guardianship of his seven-year-old son Philip I fell jointly on his widow, Ann of Kiev, and on his brother-in-law, Adela's husband, so that from 1060 to 1067, they were Regents of France.

[edit] Battle of Cassel (1071)

When Adela's third son, Robert the Frisian, was to invade Flanders in 1071 to become the new count (at that time the count was Adela's grandson, Arnulf III), she asked Phillip I to stop him. Phillip sent troops in order to aid Arnulf, being among the forces sent by the king a contingent of ten Norman knights led by William FitzOsborn. Robert's forces attacked Arnulf's numerically superior army at Cassel before it could organize, and Arnulf himself was killed along with William FitzOsborn. The overwhelming triumph of Robert made Phillip invest him with Flanders, making the peace. A year later, Phillip married Robert's stepdaughter, Bertha of Holland, and in 1074, Phillip restored the seigneurie of Corbie to the crown.

[edit] Church influence

Adèle had an especially great interest in Baldwin V’s church-reform politics and was behind her husband’s founding of several collegiate churches. Directly or indirectly, she was responsible for establishing the Colleges of Aire (1049), Lille (1050) and Harelbeke (1064) as well as the abbeys of Messines (1057) and Ename (1063). After Baldwin’s death in 1067, she went to Rome, took the nun’s veil from the hands of Pope Alexander II and retreated to the Benedictine convent of Messines, near Ypres. There she died, being buried at the same monastery. Honored as a saint in the Roman Catholic Church, her commemoration day is 8 September.

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

Adela Capet, Adèle of France or Adela of Flanders[1], known also as Adela the Holy or Adela of Messines; (1009 – 8 January 1079, Messines) was the second daughter of Robert II (the Pious), and Constance of Arles. As dowry to her future husband, she received from her father the title of Countess of Corbie.

Her family

She was a member of the House of Capet, the rulers of France. As the wife of Baldwin V, she was Countess of Flanders from 1036 to 1067.

She married first 1027 Richard III Duke of Normandy (997 † 1027). They never had children. As a widow, she remarried in 1028 in Paris to Baldwin V of Flanders (1012 † 1067). Their children were:

* Baldwin VI of Flanders, (1030 † 1070)

* Matilda of Flanders (1032 † 1083). In 1053 she married William Duke of Normandy, the future king of England

* Robert I of Flanders, (1033-1093)

* Henry of Flanders (c. 1035)

* Sir Richard of Flanders (c. 1050-1105)

[edit] Political influence

Adèle’s influence lay mainly in her family connections. On the death of her brother, Henry I of France, the guardianship of his seven-year-old son Philip I fell jointly on his widow, Ann of Kiev, and on his brother-in-law, Adela's husband, so that from 1060 to 1067, they were Regents of France.

[edit] Battle of Cassel (1071)

When Adela's third son, Robert the Frisian, was to invade Flanders in 1071 to become the new count (at that time the count was Adela's grandson, Arnulf III), she asked Phillip I to stop him. Phillip sent troops in order to aid Arnulf, being among the forces sent by the king a contingent of ten Norman knights led by William FitzOsborn. Robert's forces attacked Arnulf's numerically superior army at Cassel before it could organize, and Arnulf himself was killed along with William FitzOsborn. The overwhelming triumph of Robert made Phillip invest him with Flanders, making the peace. A year later, Phillip married Robert's stepdaughter, Bertha of Holland, and in 1074, Phillip restored the seigneurie of Corbie to the crown.

[edit] Church influence

Adèle had an especially great interest in Baldwin V’s church-reform politics and was behind her husband’s founding of several collegiate churches. Directly or indirectly, she was responsible for establishing the Colleges of Aire (1049), Lille (1050) and Harelbeke (1064) as well as the abbeys of Messines (1057) and Ename (1063). After Baldwin’s death in 1067, she went to Rome, took the nun’s veil from the hands of Pope Alexander II and retreated to the Benedictine convent of Messines, near Ypres. There she died, being buried at the same monastery. Honored as a saint in the Roman Catholic Church, her commemoration day is 8 September.

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

Adela Capet, Adèle of France or Adela of Flanders[1], known also as Adela the Holy or Adela of Messines; (1009 – 8 January 1079, Messines) was the second daughter of Robert II (the Pious), and Constance of Arles. As dowry to her future husband, she received from her father the title of Countess of Corbie.

Her family

She was a member of the House of Capet, the rulers of France. As the wife of Baldwin V, she was Countess of Flanders from 1036 to 1067.

She married first 1027 Richard III Duke of Normandy (997 † 1027). They never had children. As a widow, she remarried in 1028 in Paris to Baldwin V of Flanders (1012 † 1067). Their children were:

* Baldwin VI of Flanders, (1030 † 1070)

* Matilda of Flanders (1032 † 1083). In 1053 she married William Duke of Normandy, the future king of England

* Robert I of Flanders, (1033-1093)

* Henry of Flanders (c. 1035)

* Sir Richard of Flanders (c. 1050-1105)

[edit] Political influence

Adèle’s influence lay mainly in her family connections. On the death of her brother, Henry I of France, the guardianship of his seven-year-old son Philip I fell jointly on his widow, Ann of Kiev, and on his brother-in-law, Adela's husband, so that from 1060 to 1067, they were Regents of France.

[edit] Battle of Cassel (1071)

When Adela's third son, Robert the Frisian, was to invade Flanders in 1071 to become the new count (at that time the count was Adela's grandson, Arnulf III), she asked Phillip I to stop him. Phillip sent troops in order to aid Arnulf, being among the forces sent by the king a contingent of ten Norman knights led by William FitzOsborn. Robert's forces attacked Arnulf's numerically superior army at Cassel before it could organize, and Arnulf himself was killed along with William FitzOsborn. The overwhelming triumph of Robert made Phillip invest him with Flanders, making the peace. A year later, Phillip married Robert's stepdaughter, Bertha of Holland, and in 1074, Phillip restored the seigneurie of Corbie to the crown.

[edit] Church influence

Adèle had an especially great interest in Baldwin V’s church-reform politics and was behind her husband’s founding of several collegiate churches. Directly or indirectly, she was responsible for establishing the Colleges of Aire (1049), Lille (1050) and Harelbeke (1064) as well as the abbeys of Messines (1057) and Ename (1063). After Baldwin’s death in 1067, she went to Rome, took the nun’s veil from the hands of Pope Alexander II and retreated to the Benedictine convent of Messines, near Ypres. There she died, being buried at the same monastery. Honored as a saint in the Roman Catholic Church, her commemoration day is 8 September.

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

Adela Capet, Adèle of France or Adela of Flanders[1], known also as Adela the Holy or Adela of Messines; (1009 – 8 January 1079, Messines) was the second daughter of Robert II (the Pious), and Constance of Arles. As dowry to her future husband, she received from her father the title of Countess of Corbie.

Her family

She was a member of the House of Capet, the rulers of France. As the wife of Baldwin V, she was Countess of Flanders from 1036 to 1067.

She married first 1027 Richard III Duke of Normandy (997 † 1027). They never had children. As a widow, she remarried in 1028 in Paris to Baldwin V of Flanders (1012 † 1067). Their children were:

* Baldwin VI of Flanders, (1030 † 1070)

* Matilda of Flanders (1032 † 1083). In 1053 she married William Duke of Normandy, the future king of England

* Robert I of Flanders, (1033-1093)

* Henry of Flanders (c. 1035)

* Sir Richard of Flanders (c. 1050-1105)

[edit] Political influence

Adèle’s influence lay mainly in her family connections. On the death of her brother, Henry I of France, the guardianship of his seven-year-old son Philip I fell jointly on his widow, Ann of Kiev, and on his brother-in-law, Adela's husband, so that from 1060 to 1067, they were Regents of France.

[edit] Battle of Cassel (1071)

When Adela's third son, Robert the Frisian, was to invade Flanders in 1071 to become the new count (at that time the count was Adela's grandson, Arnulf III), she asked Phillip I to stop him. Phillip sent troops in order to aid Arnulf, being among the forces sent by the king a contingent of ten Norman knights led by William FitzOsborn. Robert's forces attacked Arnulf's numerically superior army at Cassel before it could organize, and Arnulf himself was killed along with William FitzOsborn. The overwhelming triumph of Robert made Phillip invest him with Flanders, making the peace. A year later, Phillip married Robert's stepdaughter, Bertha of Holland, and in 1074, Phillip restored the seigneurie of Corbie to the crown.

[edit] Church influence

Adèle had an especially great interest in Baldwin V’s church-reform politics and was behind her husband’s founding of several collegiate churches. Directly or indirectly, she was responsible for establishing the Colleges of Aire (1049), Lille (1050) and Harelbeke (1064) as well as the abbeys of Messines (1057) and Ename (1063). After Baldwin’s death in 1067, she went to Rome, took the nun’s veil from the hands of Pope Alexander II and retreated to the Benedictine convent of Messines, near Ypres. There she died, being buried at the same monastery. Honored as a saint in the Roman Catholic Church, her commemoration day is 8 September.

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

Adela Capet, Adèle of France or Adela of Flanders[1], known also as Adela the Holy or Adela of Messines; (1009 – 8 January 1079, Messines) was the second daughter of Robert II (the Pious), and Constance of Arles. As dowry to her future husband, she received from her father the title of Countess of Corbie.

Her family

She was a member of the House of Capet, the rulers of France. As the wife of Baldwin V, she was Countess of Flanders from 1036 to 1067.

She married first 1027 Richard III Duke of Normandy (997 † 1027). They never had children. As a widow, she remarried in 1028 in Paris to Baldwin V of Flanders (1012 † 1067). Their children were:

* Baldwin VI of Flanders, (1030 † 1070)

* Matilda of Flanders (1032 † 1083). In 1053 she married William Duke of Normandy, the future king of England

* Robert I of Flanders, (1033-1093)

* Henry of Flanders (c. 1035)

* Sir Richard of Flanders (c. 1050-1105)

[edit] Political influence

Adèle’s influence lay mainly in her family connections. On the death of her brother, Henry I of France, the guardianship of his seven-year-old son Philip I fell jointly on his widow, Ann of Kiev, and on his brother-in-law, Adela's husband, so that from 1060 to 1067, they were Regents of France.

[edit] Battle of Cassel (1071)

When Adela's third son, Robert the Frisian, was to invade Flanders in 1071 to become the new count (at that time the count was Adela's grandson, Arnulf III), she asked Phillip I to stop him. Phillip sent troops in order to aid Arnulf, being among the forces sent by the king a contingent of ten Norman knights led by William FitzOsborn. Robert's forces attacked Arnulf's numerically superior army at Cassel before it could organize, and Arnulf himself was killed along with William FitzOsborn. The overwhelming triumph of Robert made Phillip invest him with Flanders, making the peace. A year later, Phillip married Robert's stepdaughter, Bertha of Holland, and in 1074, Phillip restored the seigneurie of Corbie to the crown.

[edit] Church influence

Adèle had an especially great interest in Baldwin V’s church-reform politics and was behind her husband’s founding of several collegiate churches. Directly or indirectly, she was responsible for establishing the Colleges of Aire (1049), Lille (1050) and Harelbeke (1064) as well as the abbeys of Messines (1057) and Ename (1063). After Baldwin’s death in 1067, she went to Rome, took the nun’s veil from the hands of Pope Alexander II and retreated to the Benedictine convent of Messines, near Ypres. There she died, being buried at the same monastery. Honored as a saint in the Roman Catholic Church, her commemoration day is 8 September.

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

Adela Capet, Adèle of France or Adela of Flanders[1], known also as Adela the Holy or Adela of Messines; (1009 – 8 January 1079, Messines) was the second daughter of Robert II (the Pious), and Constance of Arles. As dowry to her future husband, she received from her father the title of Countess of Corbie.

Her family

She was a member of the House of Capet, the rulers of France. As the wife of Baldwin V, she was Countess of Flanders from 1036 to 1067.

She married first 1027 Richard III Duke of Normandy (997 † 1027). They never had children. As a widow, she remarried in 1028 in Paris to Baldwin V of Flanders (1012 † 1067). Their children were:

* Baldwin VI of Flanders, (1030 † 1070)

* Matilda of Flanders (1032 † 1083). In 1053 she married William Duke of Normandy, the future king of England

* Robert I of Flanders, (1033-1093)

* Henry of Flanders (c. 1035)

* Sir Richard of Flanders (c. 1050-1105)

[edit] Political influence

Adèle’s influence lay mainly in her family connections. On the death of her brother, Henry I of France, the guardianship of his seven-year-old son Philip I fell jointly on his widow, Ann of Kiev, and on his brother-in-law, Adela's husband, so that from 1060 to 1067, they were Regents of France.

[edit] Battle of Cassel (1071)

When Adela's third son, Robert the Frisian, was to invade Flanders in 1071 to become the new count (at that time the count was Adela's grandson, Arnulf III), she asked Phillip I to stop him. Phillip sent troops in order to aid Arnulf, being among the forces sent by the king a contingent of ten Norman knights led by William FitzOsborn. Robert's forces attacked Arnulf's numerically superior army at Cassel before it could organize, and Arnulf himself was killed along with William FitzOsborn. The overwhelming triumph of Robert made Phillip invest him with Flanders, making the peace. A year later, Phillip married Robert's stepdaughter, Bertha of Holland, and in 1074, Phillip restored the seigneurie of Corbie to the crown.

[edit] Church influence

Adèle had an especially great interest in Baldwin V’s church-reform politics and was behind her husband’s founding of several collegiate churches. Directly or indirectly, she was responsible for establishing the Colleges of Aire (1049), Lille (1050) and Harelbeke (1064) as well as the abbeys of Messines (1057) and Ename (1063). After Baldwin’s death in 1067, she went to Rome, took the nun’s veil from the hands of Pope Alexander II and retreated to the Benedictine convent of Messines, near Ypres. There she died, being buried at the same monastery. Honored as a saint in the Roman Catholic Church, her commemoration day is 8 September.

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

# Death: 5 Jun 1063 in Nevers, Nierre, France 2 3

# Burial: Monastere DE L'o, Messines, , France

# Ancestral File #: 8XJK-SB 3 4 4 5 2

# Event: Alt. Death 8 Jan 1078-1079 Monastere DE L'ordre DE St. Benoist, Messines, France

# Event: Princess Of France Titled

# Change Date: 21 Sep 2005 at 15:23

# Note:

She was the sister of Queen Matilda of England and widow of Richard 111, Duke of Normandy who dsp the uncle of William the Conqueror who married Baldwin V. de I'Isle, count of Flanders and of Artois.

Father also shown as Hugh Carpet King of France and mother as Adelheid

Adele is known as Countess d'Auxerre in band II of Europaische Stanntafeln (Marburg, Germany: Verlag Von J.A.Stargardt, 1984).

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

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adela_of_France,_Countess_of_Flanders

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

Title: Princess

After her husbands death she went to Rome, took the nun's veil from the hands of Pope Alexander II & retreated to the Benedictine convent of Messines, near Ypres. There she died & was buried at the same monastery.

Sources:

The book, 'Pedigrees of Some of the Emperor Charlemagne's Descendants'

The book, 'Kings & Queens of Great Britain'

The book, 'The Oxford History of Medieval Europe'

--------------------
Adela of France, Countess of Flanders

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search

Adela Capet, Adèle of France or Adela of Flanders[1], known also as Adela the Holy or Adela of Messines; (1009 – 8 January 1079, Messines) was the second daughter of Robert II (the Pious), and Constance of Arles. As dowry to her future husband, she received from his father the title of Countess of Corbie.

Contents [hide]

1 Her family

2 Political influence

2.1 Battle of Cassel

3 Church influence

4 Note

[edit] Her family

She was a member of the House of Capet, the rulers of France. As the wife of Baldwin V, she was Countess of Flanders from 1036 to 1067.

She married first 1027 Richard III Duke of Normandy (997 † 1027). They never had children. As a widow, she remarried in 1028 in Paris to Baldwin V of Flanders (1012 † 1067). Their children were:

Baldwin VI of Flanders, (1030 † 1070)

Matilda of Flanders (1032 † 1083). In 1053 she married William Duke of Normandy, the future king of England

Robert I of Flanders, (1033-1093)

Henry of Flanders (c. 1035)

Sir Richard of Flanders (c. 1050-1105)

[edit] Political influence

Adèle’s influence lay mainly in her family connections. On the death of her brother, Henry I of France, the guardianship of his seven-year-old son Philip I fell jointly on his widow, Ann of Kiev, and on his brother-in-law, Adela´s husband, so that from 1060 to 1067, they were Regents of France.

[edit] Battle of Cassel

When Adela´s third son, Robert the Frisian, was to invade Flanders in 1071 to become the new count (at that time the count was Adela´s grandson, Arnulf III), she asked Phillip I to stop him. Phillip sent troops in order to to aid Arnulf, being among the forces sent by the king a contingent of ten Norman knights led by William FitzOsborn. Robert's forces attacked Arnulf's numerically superior army at Cassel before it could organize, and Arnulf himself was killed along with William FitzOsborn. The overwhelming triumph of Robert made Phillip invest him with Flanders, making the peace. A year later, Phillip married Robert´s step-daughter, Bertha of Holland, and in 1074, Phillip restored the seigneurie of Corbie to the crown.

[edit] Church influence

Adèle had an especially great interest in Baldwin V’s church-reform politics and was behind her husband’s founding of several collegiate churches. Directly or indirectly, she was responsible for establishing the Colleges of Aire (1049), Lille (1050) and Harelbeke (1064) as well as the abbeys of Messines (1057) and Ename (1063). After Baldwin’s death in 1067, she went to Rome, took the nun’s veil from the hands of Pope Alexander II and retreated to the Benedictine convent of Messines, near Ypres. There she died, being buried at the same monastery. Her commemoration day is 8 September.


Adela von Frankreich (die Heilige oder Adela von Messines; * wohl 1009 oder 1014; † 8. Januar 1079, begraben im Kloster Messines bei Ypern) stammte aus der Dynastie der Kapetinger, die zu ihrer Zeit die Könige von Frankreich stellten. Sie war von 1036 bis 1067 als Gemahlin von Balduin V. Gräfin von Flandern. Statt Adela wird bei ihr als Vorname oft Adélaide, Adelheid, Aelis oder Alix verwendet.

Inhaltsverzeichnis [Verbergen]

1 Abstammung

2 Ehen und Nachkommen

3 Leben

4 Weblinks

Abstammung [Bearbeiten]Adelas Vater war der Kapetinger Robert II. der Fromme (* 27. März 972; † 20. Juli 1031 in Melun), König von Frankreich von 996 bis 1031. Adela ging aus dessen dritten Ehe mit Konstanze von Provence hervor.

Ehen und Nachkommen [Bearbeiten]Adela wurde 1027 mit Richard III. (* um 1001; † 6. August 1027), dem dritten Herzog der Normandie, verlobt. Ob diese Verlobung in die Ehe mündete ist ungewiss, da Richard III. noch im selben Jahr verstarb.

Im Jahre 1028 heiratete Adela Balduin V. von Flandern (der Fromme oder Balduin von Lille ; * um 1012 in Arras; † 1. September 1067 in Lille), der von 1036 bis 1067 Graf von Flandern war. Aus dieser Ehe stammten drei Kinder:

Balduin VI. (* ca. 1030; † 17. Juli 1070), der 1067 seinem Vater als Graf von Flandern nachfolgte

Robert der Friese (* ca. 1035; † 3. Oktober 1093), der 1071 als Robert I. Graf von Flandern wurde und

Mathilde von Flandern, (* ca. 1032; † 2. November 1083), die 1053 den Herzog Wilhelm II. von der Normandie heiratete. Dieser eroberte 1066 England, wurde als Wilhelm I. König von England und ging so als Wilhelm der Eroberer in die Geschichte ein.

Leben [Bearbeiten]Adelas Einfluss wird zugeschrieben, dass Balduin V. beim Tode ihres Bruders, des französischen Königs Heinrich I., die Vormundschaft über dessen 7-jährigen Sohn Philipp I. erwarb und somit von 1060 bis 1067 Regent von Frankreich war. Adela hatte insbesondere einen großen Anteil an der kirchlichen Reformpolitik Balduins V. und hat auch viele Kirchenstiftungen ihres Gemahls inspiriert. Direkt oder indirekt sind ihr die Errichtung der Stifte von Aire (1049), Lille (1050) und Harelbeke (1064) sowie der Abteien von Messines bei Ypern (1057) und Ename (1063) zu verdanken. Nach dem Tode Balduins V. im Jahre 1067 reiste Adela nach Rom, erhielt den Nonnenschleier aus den Händen Papst Alexanders II. und trat nach ihrer Rückkehr in die Frauenabtei des Benediktinerordens in Messines ein. Dort blieb sie bis zu ihrem Tod. Ihr Gedenktag ist der 8. September.

--------------------
# Name: Adele De France 1 2
# Sex: F
# ALIA: /Alix/
# Title: Princess of France
# Birth: 1009 in France 3
# Death: 1079 in Monastere de l'Ordre de Saint Benoist, Messines, France 3
# Burial: UNKNOWN Monastere de l'Ordre de Saint Benoist, Messines, France 3

Father: Robert II b: 27 MAR 972 in Orleans, France
Mother: Constance De Provence b: 976 in Toulouse, France

Marriage 1 Richard III b: ABT 997 in Normandy, France

* Married: JAN 1026/27 in Contract 3
* Marriage Beginning Status: Other

Children

1. Has Children Alix De Normandy b: ABT 1026 in Normandy, France

Marriage 2 Baudouin V b: ABT 1012 in Flanders, France

* Married: 1028 in Seine, France 4 5

Children

1. Has Children Baudouin VI b: 1030 in Flanders, Belgium
2. Has Children Matilda b: ABT 1031 in Flanders, France
3. Has Children Robert I b: 1033 in Flanders, Belgium
4. Has No Children Henry b: ABT 1035 in Flanders, France
5. Has Children Judith Fausta b: ABT 1037 in Flanders, Fr

She was a member of the House of Capet, the rulers of France. As the wife of Baldwin V, she was Countess of Flanders from 1036 to 1067.

She married first 1027 Richard III Duke of Normandy (997 † 1027). They never had children. As a widow, she remarried in 1028 in Paris to Baldwin V of Flanders (1012 † 1067). Their children were:

* Baldwin VI of Flanders, (1030 † 1070)
* Matilda of Flanders (1032 † 1083). In 1053 she married William Duke of Normandy, the future king of England
* Robert I of Flanders, (1033-1093)
* Henry of Flanders (c. 1035)
* Sir Richard of Flanders (c. 1050-1105)

http://generationsgoneby.com/getperson.php?personID=I55211&tree=1

--------------------
Adela of France, Countess of Flanders
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adela_of_France,_Countess_of_Flanders

Adela Capet, Adèle of France or Adela of Flanders[1], known also as Adela the Holy or Adela of Messines; (1009 – 8 January 1079, Messines) was the second daughter of Robert II (the Pious), and Constance of Arles. As dowry to her future husband, she received from her father the title of Countess of Corbie.
Contents
[hide]

1 Her family
2 Political influence
2.1 Battle of Cassel (1071)
3 Church influence
4 Ancestry
5 Note

[edit] Her family

She was a member of the House of Capet, the rulers of France. As the wife of Baldwin V, she was Countess of Flanders from 1036 to 1067.

She married first 1027 Richard III Duke of Normandy (997 † 1027). They never had children. As a widow, she remarried in 1028 in Paris to Baldwin V of Flanders (1012 † 1067). Their children were:

Baldwin VI of Flanders, (1030 † 1070)
Matilda of Flanders (1032 † 1083). In 1053 she married William Duke of Normandy, the future king of England
Robert I of Flanders, (1033-1093)
Henry of Flanders (c. 1035)
Sir Richard of Flanders (c. 1050-1105)

[edit] Political influence

Adèle’s influence lay mainly in her family connections. On the death of her brother, Henry I of France, the guardianship of his seven-year-old son Philip I fell jointly on his widow, Ann of Kiev, and on his brother-in-law, Adela's husband, so that from 1060 to 1067, they were Regents of France.
[edit] Battle of Cassel (1071)

When Adela's third son, Robert the Frisian, was to invade Flanders in 1071 to become the new count (at that time the count was Adela's grandson, Arnulf III), she asked Philip I to stop him. Philip sent troops in order to aid Arnulf, being among the forces sent by the king a contingent of ten Norman knights led by William FitzOsborn. Robert's forces attacked Arnulf's numerically superior army at Cassel before it could organize, and Arnulf himself was killed along with William FitzOsborn. The overwhelming triumph of Robert made Philip invest him with Flanders, making the peace. A year later, Philip married Robert's stepdaughter, Bertha of Holland, and in 1074, Philip restored the seigneurie of Corbie to the crown.
[edit] Church influence

Adèle had an especially great interest in Baldwin V’s church-reform politics and was behind her husband’s founding of several collegiate churches. Directly or indirectly, she was responsible for establishing the Colleges of Aire (1049), Lille (1050) and Harelbeke (1064) as well as the abbeys of Messines (1057) and Ename (1063). After Baldwin’s death in 1067, she went to Rome, took the nun’s veil from the hands of Pope Alexander II and retreated to the Benedictine convent of Messines, near Ypres. There she died, being buried at the same monastery. Honored as a saint in the Roman Catholic Church, her commemoration day is 8 September.
--------------------
'''ADELA de France'''

(-Messines 8 Jan 1079, bur Messines, Benedictine monastery). The Chronicle of Alberic de Trois-Fontaines names "soror…regis Henrici Adela" as wife of "Balduino Insulano"[229]. The Genealogiæ Scriptoris Fusniacensis names "Alam comitissam Flandrensem" as the daughter of King Robert[230]. She is named as daughter of King Robert in a manuscript whose attribution to Orderic Vitalis is disputed, which also refers to her marriage[231]. Kerrebrouck mentions her betrothal to Duke Richard "très jeune" but does not cite the primary source on which this is based[232]. "Richardus Nortmannorum dux" agreed grants of property to "Adela" on the occasion of their marriage by charter dated Jan 1026, which does not specify her parentage[233]. Her father gave her the seigneurie of Corbie as her dowry. Ctss de Contenance. She founded the Benedictine monastery at Messines near Ypres. The necrology of the abbey of Saint-Denis records the death "VI Id Jan" of "Adelaidis comitissa"[234]. Betrothed (Jan 1027) to RICHARD III Duke of Normandy, son of RICHARD I Duke of Normandy & his first wife Judith de Bretagne ([1001]-6 Aug 1027). m (Amiens 1028) BAUDOUIN de Flandre, son of BAUDOUIN IV "le Barbu/Pulchrae Barbae" Count of Flanders & his first wife Ogive de Luxembourg ([1012/13]-Lille 1 Sep 1067, bur Lille, Saint-Pierre). He succeeded his father in 1035 as BAUDOUIN V “le Pieux/Insulanus” Count of Flanders. He was regent of France for his nephew Philippe I King of France 1060-1066/67.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Advisa, comtesse d'Auxerre, (c.1003 - après 1063), fille de Constance et Robert, épouse le comte Renaud Ier de Nevers.

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

Adela was the widow of Richard III, Duke of Normandy, when she married Baldwin V.

995-1040 Sovereign Countess Adélaide de France of Auxerre (France)

Granddaughter of Hugues le Grand, in succession to his illegitimate son, Herbert. Reigned jointly with husband, Renaud I de Nevers, who died 1040. From then on to 1060 the county was occupied by Burgundy [http://www.guide2womenleaders.com/womeninpower/Womeninpowe-chronological1.htm].
--------------------
Adèle of France or Adela of Flanders,[a] known also as Adela the Holy or Adela of Messines; (1009 – 8 January 1079, Messines), she was the Countess of Normandy (January 1027–August 1027), Countess of Flanders (1028–1067).
Adèle was the second daughter of Robert II (the Pious), and Constance of Arles. In January 1027 she married Richard III, Duke of Normandy The marriage was short-lived for on 6 August of that same year Richard III suddenly died. Adela secondly married Baldwin V, Count of Flanders in 1028.
Adèle’s influence lay mainly in her family connections. On the death of her brother, Henry I of France, the guardianship of his seven-year-old son Philip I fell jointly on his widow, Ann of Kiev, and on his brother-in-law, Adela's husband, so that from 1060 to 1067, they were Regents of France.
When Adela's third son, Robert the Frisian, was to invade Flanders in 1071 to become the new count (at that time the count was Adela's grandson, Arnulf III), she asked Philip I to stop him. Philip sent troops in order to aid Arnulf, being among the forces sent by the king a contingent of ten Norman knights led by William FitzOsborn. Robert's forces attacked Arnulf's numerically superior army at Cassel before it could organize, and Arnulf himself was killed along with William FitzOsborn. The overwhelming triumph of Robert made Philip invest him with Flanders, making the peace. A year later, Philip married Robert's stepdaughter, Bertha of Holland, and in 1074, Philip restored the seigneurie of Corbie to the crown.
Adèle had an especially great interest in Baldwin V’s church-reform politics and was behind her husband’s founding of several collegiate churches. Directly or indirectly, she was responsible for establishing the Colleges of Aire (1049), Lille (1050) and Harelbeke (1064) as well as the abbeys of Messines (1057) and Ename (1063). After Baldwin’s death in 1067, she went to Rome, took the nun’s veil from the hands of Pope Alexander II and retired to the Benedictine convent of Messines, near Ypres. There she died, being buried at the same monastery. Honored as a saint in the Roman Catholic Church, her commemoration day is 8 September.
Family:
She married first 1027 Richard III Duke of Normandy (†1027). They had no children.
She married secondly 1028 Baldwin V Count Of Flanders (†1067). Their children were:
Baldwin VI of Flanders (c. 1030–1070).
Matilda of Flanders (c. 1032–1083). In c. 1053 she married William, Duke of Normandy, the future king of England.
Robert I of Flanders (c. 1035–1093).[

--------------------
http://www.ourfamilyhistories.org/getperson.php?personID=I3612&tree=00
--------------------
Courtesy of fantastically full family tree cf.:

Hughes of Gwerclas 1/2/3/4:

http://www.maximiliangenealogy.co.uk/burke1/Royal%20Descents/hughesofgwerclas_1.htm

http://www.maximiliangenealogy.co.uk/burke1/Royal%20Descents/hughesofgwerclas_2.htm

http://www.maximiliangenealogy.co.uk/burke1/Royal%20Descents/hughesofgwerclas_3.htm

http://www.maximiliangenealogy.co.uk/burke1/Royal%20Descents/hughesofgwerclas_4.htm

--------------------
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adela_of_France
1 NAME Adela (or Adelaide) of /France/ 2 SOUR S033320 3 DATA 4 TEXT Date of Import: Jan 17, 2001 1 BIRT 2 DATE ABT. 1003 2 PLAC of Nevers, Nierre, France 2 SOUR S033320 3 DATA 4 TEXT Date of Import: Jan 17, 2001 1 DEAT 2 DATE ABT. 1063 2 PLAC ,Nevers, Nierre, France 2 SOUR S033320 3 DATA 4 TEXT Date of Import: Jan 17, 2001

[De La Pole.FTW]
Sources: RC 73, 140, 141, 232, 255; Kraentzler 1157, 1176, 1218, 1221, 1241, 1258, 1265, 1342, 1350, 1371; Coe; A. Roots 107; Royal Descents; AIS; Davis; AF. Roots: Adele of France, Countess of Auxerre, died about 1063. RC: Adela (Adelaide), Princess of France, died about 1063.
Descents: Adela of France. K: Adele ou Alix de France, Princess of France (reigning Countess of France). Died 1079, l'abbaye de Messine, dioc. Ypres, France.
AIS: Adela, Princess of France.
Davis: Adela, daughter of Robert of France.
1 NAME Adela (or Adelaide) of /France/ 2 SOUR S033320 3 DATA 4 TEXT Date of Import: Jan 17, 2001 1 BIRT 2 DATE ABT. 1003 2 PLAC of Nevers, Nierre, France 2 SOUR S033320 3 DATA 4 TEXT Date of Import: Jan 17, 2001 1 DEAT 2 DATE ABT. 1063 2 PLAC ,Nevers, Nierre, France 2 SOUR S033320 3 DATA 4 TEXT Date of Import: Jan 17, 2001

[De La Pole.FTW]
Sources: RC 73, 140, 141, 232, 255; Kraentzler 1157, 1176, 1218, 1221, 1241, 1258, 1265, 1342, 1350, 1371; Coe; A. Roots 107; Royal Descents; AIS; Davis; AF. Roots: Adele of France, Countess of Auxerre, died about 1063. RC: Adela (Adelaide), Princess of France, died about 1063.
Descents: Adela of France. K: Adele ou Alix de France, Princess of France (reigning Countess of France). Died 1079, l'abbaye de Messine, dioc. Ypres, France.
AIS: Adela, Princess of France.
Davis: Adela, daughter of Robert of France.
Which spouse of Robert was her mother is not clear
Some sources show her as the daughter of Robert I of France.
[Custer February 1, 2002 Family Tree.FTW]

[merge G675.FTW]

Which spouse of Robert was her mother is not clear
Some sources show her as the daughter of Robert I of France.AncestralFile Number: 9HMQ-FK
_P_CCINFO 1-2782
_P_CCINFO 1-2782
Grundade klostret Messines bei Ypres
Name Prefix: Princess
Alias: Adela
Alias: Adele, Aelis, Adela, Alice
http://www.3angelz.com/d0000/g0000065.html#I4959
PNCSY
Daughter of Robert I, King of France and his 2nd wife Constance, Princess of Provence and Arles. After Richard�s death she remarried in 1028 Balwin V, Count of Flanders. Adela died a Nun. {Burke�s Peerage} [GADD.GED]
_P_CCINFO 1-7369
BIOGRAPHY: !Also the widow of Richard the 111, Duke of Normandy.
Grundade klostret Messines bei Ypres
Adele also had a "contract" with Richard III, Duke of NORMANDY, butwas not married to him, Jan. 1026/1027 (Ancestral File - Ver 4.16).

from "Our Folk" by Albert D Hart, Jr.
Fue hija de la Reina Matilde de Inglaterra y viuda de Ricardo III, Duque de Normandía.
1 NAME Adela (or Adelaide) of /France/ 2 SOUR S033320 3 DATA 4 TEXT Date of Import: Jan 17, 2001 1 BIRT 2 DATE ABT. 1003 2 PLAC of Nevers, Nierre, France 2 SOUR S033320 3 DATA 4 TEXT Date of Import: Jan 17, 2001 1 DEAT 2 DATE ABT. 1063 2 PLAC ,Nevers, Nierre, France 2 SOUR S033320 3 DATA 4 TEXT Date of Import: Jan 17, 2001

[De La Pole.FTW]
Sources: RC 73, 140, 141, 232, 255; Kraentzler 1157, 1176, 1218, 1221, 1241, 1258, 1265, 1342, 1350, 1371; Coe; A. Roots 107; Royal Descents; AIS; Davis; AF. Roots: Adele of France, Countess of Auxerre, died about 1063. RC: Adela (Adelaide), Princess of France, died about 1063.
Descents: Adela of France. K: Adele ou Alix de France, Princess of France (reigning Countess of France). Died 1079, l'abbaye de Messine, dioc. Ypres, France.
AIS: Adela, Princess of France.
Davis: Adela, daughter of Robert of France.
Widow of Richard III, Duke of Normandy
[large-G675.FTW]

Which spouse of Robert was her mother is not clear
Some sources show her as the daughter of Robert I of France.
?? Line 1597: (New PAF RIN=7709)
1 NAME Adele (Alix) Princess Of /FRANCE/
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1 DEAT
2 PLAC Monastere De L'Ordre De St. Benoist, Messines,, France
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1 NAME Adele (Alix) Princess Of /FRANCE/
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"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.

Data From Lynn Jeffrey Bernhard, 2445 W 450 South #4, Springville UT 84663-4950
email - (XXXXX@XXXX.XXX)
She was the sister of Queen Matilda of England and widow of Richard 111, Duke of Normandy who d s p the uncle of William the Conqueror who married Baldwin V. de I'Isle, count of Flanders and of Artois.
She was the sister of Queen Matilda of England and widow of Richard 111, Duke of Normandy who d s p the uncle of William the Conqueror who married Baldwin V. de I'Isle, count of Flanders and of Artois.
BIRTH: Adélaide de France
A wikipédia em inglês aponta como mãe de Guilherme de Nevers e esposa de Renauld, Adele de France filha de Hugo Capeto e Adelaide da Aquitania. Entretanto, no verbete Adele de France (c.1003-1063), diz: She was supposedly married to Renauld I, Count of Nevers 1000-1040 but there is no evidence to support this.
A wiki em francês lista uma Adelaide como filha de Hugo mas esta teria nascido por volta de 973
***
A Wiki em francês aponta, como esposa de Renauld e mãe de Guilherme, para Alix ou Avoye de France (c. 1003-1063), filha de Robert II, rei da França e de Constance d'Arles. Na wiki em inglës, no verbete Robert II, encontramos Adele of France entre suas filhas (sem link) e esta tendo se casado com Renauld de Nevers assim como na wiki em francês e uma Adela of France, tendo se casado com Richard III of Normandy e depois com Baldwin V of Flanders. O GeneAll corrobora essa hipótese (Advise, filha de Roberto II se casa com Reinaldo I, sendo mãe de Guillaume). É citada também uma Adelaide, mas esta, segundo o GeneAll, se casou com Richard III, duque da Normandia e depois com Baudouin V, conde de Flanders.
--Other Fields

Ref Number: 296
_P_CCINFO 1-20792
Original individual @P2689282866@ (@MS_NHFETTERLYFAMIL0@) merged with @P2689282749@ (@MS_NHFETTERLYFAMIL0@)
_P_CCINFO 1-20792
_P_CCINFO 1-20792
.
Les Sources du Regne de Hughes Capet Revue Historique
Tome XXVIII Paris 1891, P. Violet
_P_CCINFO 2-2438
Fonda en 1065 l'abbaye de Messines à 2 lieues d'Ypres pour 30 filles nobles qui suivaient la règle de Saint Benoît et 12 ecclésiastiques pour leur administrer les sacrements. Après la mort de son mari, elle alla à Rome et reçut du pape Alexandre II le voile de religieuse.
OR "ADELE"
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NAME Adele (Alix) Princess Of /FRANCE/

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DEAT PLAC Monastere De L'Ordre De St. Benoist, Messines,, France

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BURI PLAC Monastere De L'Ordre De St. Benoist, Messines,, France
29th great grandmother
Fue hija de la Reina Matilde de Inglaterra y viuda de Ricardo III, Duque de Normandía.
Marriage was a contract, not an actual marriage
_P_CCINFO 2-2438
épouse Richard III duc de Normandie (elle se remarie avec Baudouin V comte de Flandre).
She married first 1027 Richard III Duke of Normandy (997 † 1027). They had two children: Alice of Normandy and Agnes d'Evreux. As a widow, she remarried in 1028 in Paris to Baldwin V of Flanders (1012 † 1067). Their children were:

Baldwin VI of Flanders, (1030 † 1070)
Matilda of Flanders (1032 † 1083). In 1053 she married William Duke of Normandy, the future king of England
Robert I of Flanders, (1033-1093)
Henry of Flanders (c. 1035)

As the wife of Baldwin V, she was Countess of Flanders from 1036 to 1067
story
http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=document&guid=8b6e4673-2ef2-4500-bf68-4ba494cb88ac&tid=12140672&pid=-108047910
story
http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=document&guid=ea0001b0-b342-4a77-add0-a7b71d06cfa5&tid=12140672&pid=-108047910

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Historical events

  • The temperature on July 23, 1934 was between 13.4 °C and 21.5 °C and averaged 17.5 °C. There was 3.0 hours of sunshine (19%). The average windspeed was 3 Bft (moderate breeze) and was prevailing from the west-northwest. Source: KNMI
  • Koningin Wilhelmina (Huis van Oranje-Nassau) was from 1890 till 1948 sovereign of the Netherlands (also known as Koninkrijk der Nederlanden)
  • In The Netherlands , there was from May 26, 1933 to July 31, 1935 the cabinet Colijn II, with Dr. H. Colijn (ARP) as prime minister.
  • In the year 1934: Source: Wikipedia
    • The Netherlands had about 8.3 million citizens.
    • February 6 » Far-right leagues rally in front of the Palais Bourbon in an attempted coup against the French Third Republic, creating a political crisis in France.
    • April 21 » The "Surgeon's Photograph", the most famous photo allegedly showing the Loch Ness Monster, is published in the Daily Mail (in 1999, it is revealed to be a hoax).
    • May 15 » Kārlis Ulmanis establishes an authoritarian government in Latvia.
    • July 11 » Engelbert Zaschka of Germany flies his large human-powered aircraft, the Zaschka Human-Power Aircraft, about 20 meters at Berlin Tempelhof Airport without assisted take-off.
    • July 25 » The Nazis assassinate Austrian Chancellor Engelbert Dollfuss in a failed coup attempt.
    • December 11 » Bill Wilson, co-founder of Alcoholics Anonymous, takes his last drink and enters treatment for the final time.


Same birth/death day

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Source: Wikipedia



When copying data from this family tree, please include a reference to the origin:
Kees den Hollander, "Family tree Den Hollander en Van Dueren den Hollander", database, Genealogy Online (https://www.genealogieonline.nl/stamboom-den-hollander-en-van-dueren-den-hollander/I6000000002441590664.php : accessed May 22, 2024), "Adela ""the Holy"" (1009-1078)".