Family tree Homs » Boson I comte d'Arle (Boson I) "Count De Provence" comte d'Arle (± 919-± 968)

Personal data Boson I comte d'Arle (Boson I) "Count De Provence" comte d'Arle 

Sources 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12
  • Alternative names: Boson Provence, Boso II Count of Provence, Boso Count of Arles Margrave Of Tuscany, Bonifacio I of Spoleto, Boso Marquis Tuscany
  • Nickname is Count De Provence.
  • He was born about 919.
  • 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.
  • Occupations:
    • .
    • .
      {geni:job_title} Greve-markgreve
    • .
      {geni:job_title} Roi d'Arles de Bourgogne et de Provence (14-10-879)
    • .
      {geni:job_title} Unknown GEDCOM info: Markgreve af Toscana 931 - 36 Unknown GEDCOM info: 0
    • .
      {geni:job_title} Unknown GEDCOM info: Greve Unknown GEDCOM info: 0
    • .
      {geni:job_title} Comte, d'Avignon, 913, d'Arles, 923/934, Marquis, de Toscane, 931
    • .
      {geni:job_title} Roi, de Provence, 879, Comte, de Vienne, d'Arles, Roi, de Basse-Bo...
    • .
    • .
    • .
    • .
    • .
    • .
    • .
    • .
      {geni:job_title} Roi, d'Arles, Comte, de Provence, 948, d'Avignon
  • Resident:
    • France.
    • Italia.
  • He died about OCT 965 TO ABT 968.
  • A child of Rotbald I
  • This information was last updated on May 24, 2012.

Household of Boson I comte d'Arle (Boson I) "Count De Provence" comte d'Arle

He has/had a relationship with Constantia.


Child(ren):

  1. Rotbald II de Provença  ± 923-1015 


Notes about Boson I comte d'Arle (Boson I) "Count De Provence" comte d'Arle

Name Prefix: King Name Suffix: II, Of Provence
Name Prefix: Count Name Suffix: II, of Avignon, Marquis de Tuscany
Name Suffix: Marquis Of Tuscany
Name Prefix: King Name Suffix: Of Burgundy
Name Prefix: Count Name Suffix: II, of Avignon, Marquis de Tuscany
Name Suffix: Marquis Of Tuscany
Boso var greve av Avignon 911 - 931 og av Arles 926 - 931.
Han ble markgreve av Toscana før 17.10.931 og avsatt i 936.
Boso, French BOSON (d. Jan. 11, 887, Vienne [France]), king of lower Burgundy, or Provence (from 877).
The son of Buvin (or Beuves), Count of Ardennes, Boso was given the governance of Lombardy (876) by his brother-in-law Charles II the Bald,king of the West Franks (France), and received the title of duke. During the minorities of the West Frankish kings Louis III and Carloman, he demonstrated his ambition by convoking the bishops of Provence and having them proclaim him their king (Oct. 15, 879) and thereafter proceeded to expand his domains. The territory over which he usurped royalauthority included not only Provence but many lands to the north, as far as Autun--an enlarged Burgundy.
In succeeding years, especially 880-882, Boso lost many of the marginal northern lands to the French and German Carolingians, who were reestablishing their authority. He was succeeded by his son, Louis, who in901 became the emperor Louis III
Boso, French BOSON (d. Jan. 11, 887, Vienne [France]), king of lower Burgundy, or Provence (from 877).
The son of Buvin (or Beuves), Count of Ardennes, Boso was given the governance of Lombardy (876) by his brother-in-law Charles II the Bald,king of the West Franks (France), and received the title of duke. During the minorities of the West Frankish kings Louis III and Carloman, he demonstrated his ambition by convoking the bishops of Provence and having them proclaim him their king (Oct. 15, 879) and thereafter proceeded to expand his domains. The territory over which he usurped royalauthority included not only Provence but many lands to the north, as far as Autun--an enlarged Burgundy.
In succeeding years, especially 880-882, Boso lost many of the marginal northern lands to the French and German Carolingians, who were reestablishing their authority. He was succeeded by his son, Louis, who in901 became the emperor Louis III
Boso, French BOSON (d. Jan. 11, 887, Vienne [France]), king of lower Burgundy, or Provence (from 877).
The son of Buvin (or Beuves), Count of Ardennes, Boso was given the governance of Lombardy (876) by his brother-in-law Charles II the Bald,king of the West Franks (France), and received the title of duke. During the minorities of the West Frankish kings Louis III and Carloman, he demonstrated his ambition by convoking the bishops of Provence and having them proclaim him their king (Oct. 15, 879) and thereafter proceeded to expand his domains. The territory over which he usurped royalauthority included not only Provence but many lands to the north, as far as Autun--an enlarged Burgundy.
In succeeding years, especially 880-882, Boso lost many of the marginal northern lands to the French and German Carolingians, who were reestablishing their authority. He was succeeded by his son, Louis, who in901 became the emperor Louis III
[s2.FTW]

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

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

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

!COUNT OF ARLES
Boso of Provence
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Boso was a Frankish nobleman from the Bosonid-family, who was related to the Carolingian dynasty,[1] who rose to become King of Provence (879 – 887).

Boso was the son of Bivin of Gorze, a count in Lotharingia. His aunt Theutberga was the wife of king Lothair II of Lotharingia. Boso was also a nephew of the Italian count Boso, for whom he was named, and of Hucbert, lay abbot of Saint Maurice d’Agaune, to which he succeeded as lay abbot in 869.

Contents [hide]
1 Service of Charles the Bald
2 Out of favour
3 Independent rule
4 Notes

[edit] Service of Charles the Bald
In 870, Charles the Bald, King of West Francia, married Boso's sister Richilde. This marriage paved the way for Boso's career in the service of his royal brother-in-law. In the same year, Boso was appointed Count of Lyon and Vienne, replacing Gerard of Roussillon.

In 872, Charles appointed him chamberlain and magister ostiariorum (master of porters) to his heir Louis the Stammerer. Boso likewise received investiture as Count of Bourges. Louis was reigning as a subordinate king of Aquitaine, but because of his youth, it was Boso who looked after the administration of that realm.

In the autumn of 875, Boso accompanied Charles on his first Italian campaign and at the diet of Pavia in February 876 he was appointed arch-minister and missus dominicus for Italy and elevated to the rank of duke. He was probably also charged with the administration of Provence. He acted as a viceroy and increased his prestige even more by marrying Ermengard, the only daughter of the Emperor Louis II.

[edit] Out of favour
However, he disapproved of Charles' second Italian campaign in 877 and conspired with other like-minded nobles against his king. After Charles's death in October, these nobles forced Charles's son to confirm their rights and privileges.

Boso also formed close relations to the Papacy and accompanied Pope John VIII in September 878 to Troyes, where the Pope asked King Louis for his support in Italy. The Pope adopted Boso as his son and probably offered to crown Louis emperor. It is said that he wanted to crown Boso emperor.[2]

[edit] Independent rule
In April 879, Louis died, leaving behind two adult sons, Louis and Carloman. Boso joined with other western Frankish nobles and advocated making Louis III of France the sole heir of the western kingdom, but eventually both brothers were elected kings. Boso, however, renounced allegiance to both brothers and in July claimed independence by using the style Dei gratia id quod sum: by the Grace of God, that is what I am. He also claimed that his imperial father-in-law had named him as his heir. On 15 October 879, the bishops and nobles of the region around the rivers Rhône and Saône assembled in the Synod of Mantaille elected Boso king as successor to Louis the Stammerer, the first non-Carolingian king in Western Europe in more than a century.[3]. This event marks the first occurrence of a "free election" among the Franks, without regard to royal descent, inspired by a canonical principle (but not constant practice) of ecclesiastical elections.

Boso's realm, usually called the Kingdom of Provence, comprised the ecclesiastical provinces of the archbishops of Arles, Aix, Vienne, Lyon (without Langres), and probably Besançon, as well as the dioceses of Tarentaise, Uzès, and Viviers.

After Louis and Carloman had divided their father's realm at Amiens in March 880, the two brothers joined to march against Boso. They took Mâcon and the northern parts of Boso's realm. Then uniting their forces with those of Charles the Fat, they unsuccessfully besieged Vienne from August to November.

In August 882, Boso was again besieged at Vienne by his relative, Richard, Count of Autun, who took the city in September. After this, Boso could not regain most of his realm and was restricted to the vicinity of Vienne.

He died in 887 and was succeeded by his son Louis the Blind.

Boso was the progenitor of three successful lineages, called the "Bosonids" by modern historians. Through his marriage to Ermengard he also had two daughters: Ermengard (c.877-917), who married Manasses, Count of Chalon, and Ethelberga, who married first Carloman and then William the Pious, Count of Auvergne.[4]

It is possible (though not certain) that the famous Guilla of Provence, queen of Upper Burgundy, was his daughter, then presumably by an earlier wife than Ermengarde.

[edit] Notes
^ His mother's father, Boso, provided a daughter, Tetburgis/Teutberga, Boso's aunt, to be wife of Lothair II. (Constance B. Bouchard, "The Bosonids or Rising to Power in the Late Carolingian Age" French Historical Studies 15.3 (Spring 1988, pp. 407-431) genealogical table, p.409..
^ Caravale, Mario (ed). Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani: LXI Guglielmo Gonzaga – Jacobini. Rome, 2003.
^ Constance B. Bouchard, "The Bosonids or Rising to Power in the Late Carolingian Age" French Historical Studies 15.3 (Spring 1988), pp. 407-431.
^ Riché, Les Carolingiens: Une famille qui fit l'Europe, genealogical table XII (Bosonides).
Preceded by
Louis the Stammerer King of Lower Burgundy
879–887 Succeeded by
Louis the Blind
Boso of Tuscany
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Boso (885–936) was the count of Arles (895–911 and 926–931, as Boso II) and Avignon (911–931), and margrave of Tuscany (931–936). He was the younger son of Theobald of Arles and Bertha, illegitimate daughter of Lothair II of Lotharingia. His elder brother was Hugh, king of Italy.

Boso supported his brother's Italian designs. Hugh responded by appointing him margrave of Tuscany when he deposed Lambert in 931. Boso was also very active in Lorraine, opposing Henry I of Germany. He was finally deposed and arrested in 936 to be replaced by Hugh's son Humbert.

He married Willa, daughter of Rudolph I of Burgundy, and had two daughters:

Bertha or Gersenda, married firstly Boso of Provence and secondly Raymond II of Rouergue
Willa, married Berengar II of Italy

Preceded by
Lambert Margrave of Tuscany
931 – 936 Succeeded by
Boso
[Wikipedia, "Boso of Tuscany", retrived 5 Oct 07]
Boso (885-936) was the count of Arles (895-911 and 926-931, as Boso II) and Avignon (911-931), and margrave of Tuscany (931-936). He was the younger son of Theobald of Arles and Bertha, illegitimate daughter of Lothair II of Lotharingia. His elder brother was Hugh, king of Italy.

Boso supported his brother's Italian designs. Hugh responded by appointing him margrave of Tuscany when he deposed Lambert in 931. Boso was also very active in Lorraine, opposing Henry I of Germany. He was finally deposed and arrested in 936 to be replaced by Hugh's son Humbert.

He married Willa, daughter of Rudolph I of Burgundy, and had two daughters:

Bertha or Gersenda, married firstly Boso of Provence and secondly Raymond II of Rouergue
Willa, married Berengar II of Italy
[2884] Count of Arles, Marquis of Tuscany

WSHNGT.ASC file (Geo Washington Ahnentafel) # 69801254 = 7341606, Bozo

http://uts.cc.utexas.edu/~churchh/edw3chrt.html#BEGIN b 904
[2124] DUDLE.GED file

WSHNGT.ASC file (Geo Washington Ahnentafel) # 139491492 = 34984100, Boson II (or Boso II), m abt 930/937, d 965/967
Rootsweb Feldman
URL: http://worldconnect.genealogy.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=:3044567&id=I23710
# ID: I23710
# Name: Bozon Count of PROVENCE 1 2 3 4 5
# Sex: M
# Birth: 920 in Autun, Burgundy, France 1 2 3 4 5
# Death: AFT 13 SEP 935 1 2 3 4 5
# Change Date: 15 JAN 2004 5
# Change Date: 20 OCT 2001 2 3 4 5
# Note:

[Joanne's Tree.1 GED.GED]

2 SOUR S332582
3 DATA
4 TEXT Date of Import: 14 Jan 2004

Father: Rotbald D'ANGELICA b: ABT 888
Mother: Dau Of William Count Of Arles LE PIEUX b: 905

Marriage 1 Constance of PROVENCE b: 924

* Married: 980 1 2 3 4 5

Children

1. Has Children William TAILLEFER III b: 955 in Toulouse, Haute-Garonne, France
2. Has Children Rotbold VENAISSIN b: 960 in Toulouse, France

Sources:

1. Title: daveanthes.FTW
Note: ABBR daveanthes.FTW
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Repository:
Call Number:
Media: Book
Text: Date of Import: 14 Jan 2004
2. Title: daveanthes.FTW
Note: ABBR daveanthes.FTW
Note: Source Media Type: Other
Repository:
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Media: Book
Text: Date of Import: Jan 13, 2004
3. Title: Spare.FTW
Repository:
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Media: Other
Text: Date of Import: Jan 18, 2004
4. Title: Spare.FTW
Repository:
Call Number:
Media: Other
Text: Date of Import: 21 Jan 2004
5. Title: Joanne's Tree.1 GED.GED
Repository:
Call Number:
Media: Other
Text: Date of Import: Feb 6, 2004
Boson II, King de Provenc Andre Roux: Scrolls, 215.) (Stuart, Royalty for Commoners, Page 241, Line 343-39.) (Rosamond, Frankish kingdom under Carolingians, Page 259). AKA: Boson II, Comte de Vienne; Boson II became Count of Vienne in 870 Boson II became Count of Vienne in 870. AKA: Boson II, Count de Bourges. AKA: Boson II, King de Bourgogne; Boson II became King of Lower Burgundy in 879 Boson II became King of Lower Burgundy in 879. Born: before 854, son of Beuve=Bouin, Comte de Bourgogne and Richilde d'Arles, Boson II is presumed to have been at least 10 years of age when he became Count. Note -between 869 and 882: In 869, Boson II's sister Richilde married Charles the Bald. In 871, he was made Count of Vienne, and became the Count of Bourges a year later. After arranging an exchange with Count Theudebert of Vermandois, Boson also acquired the Countship of Autun, so that his territory included most of Burgundy and Provence including the regions of the Lyonnais and Viennois.
When Charles the Bald was crowned emperor in 875, he made Boson his dux et missus Italiae sacrique palatii archiminister. In other words, Boson ruled Italy for Charles, and once there took the opportunity to
marry Ermengarde, daughter of Emperor Louis II. He was the King of Provence from 879 to 887, being elected at Montaille (near Vienne) on 15-Oct-879 the King of Burgundy. As soon as he was crowned, he
consolidated his position, appointed the powerful bishop of Autun, Adalgar as his archchancellor, and made Geilo, Abbot of Tournus, the bishop of Langres. There was also some collusion between Boson and his Lotharingian countrymen who had rallied in support of Hugh, Lothar II's bastard, in his attempt to claim the right to rule Lotharingia. Boson's elevation and Hugh's pretentions had the effect of uniting all the Carolingians - Louis theYounger (Le Jeune), Charles the Fat (Le Gros), Louis III andCarloman - and their supporters against him. Hugh was dealt with quickly, but Boson presented a more serious obstacle to Charles Le Gros as well as to Carloman and Hugh the Abbot. Charles seized the Italian lands of Boso's mother-in-law Engelberge, kidnapped Engelberge herself, appropriated the temporal of the archbishopric of Besancon and occupied Lausanne. By 881, Boson had lost the Jura and transjurane
region to Charles Le Gros. The county of Autun was conferred on Richard, Boson's brother, who supported Carloman from then on. In 882, Vienne was attacked by the Frankish army under Richard who captured Boson's wife and his daughter. Abandoned by the Pope, his brother and his chancellor who defected to Charles Le Gros, and forsaken by the bishops and counts, Boson died in
historical obscurity.
#Générale##Générale#Profession : Marquis de Toscane (913-931), Comte d'Arles(926-931),d'Avignon & de Vaison (911-931).
#Générale##Générale#Profession : Comte de Provence.
#Générale##Générale#Profession : Roi de Bourgogne-Provence couronné le 15octobre 879 àVienne.
{geni:occupation} Comte de Provence, Comte d'Arles, 935 Graf von Avignon und ab 949 Graf von Arles., Comte de Provençe, Conde de Arles e Avignton, Roi, d'Arles, Comte, de Provence, 948, d'Avignon, Count of Arles, Marquis of Tuscany
{geni:about_me} From the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy page on Provence:

http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/PROVENCE.htm#_Toc220666437

BOSON, son of ROTBALD [I] & his wife --- (-after Oct [965/67]). "Bosoni comitis, filii Rothboldi quondam" restored property to Saint-Victor by charter dated Mar 965[202]. Comte [d'Arles]. "Boso comes et uxor sua Constantia…illorum filii…Willelmus comes, Rotbaldus comes, Pontius juvenis" signed the charter dated May [963] under which "Gencius et uxor mea Aiburga" donated property "in pago Aquense superiore ad castrum…Ansoyse" to Monmajour, for the souls of "seniore meo Bosone et uxor sua quondam"[203]. "Boso comes" donated property "villam…Agello…ultra fluvium Durentia" acquired by his father to "ecclesiam sancte Marie et sancti Stephani Avinionensis", dated Oct [965/67] at Avignon but referred to only in a copy dated 24 Nov 1209[204].

m CONSTANTIA, daughter of --- (-after May [963]). "Boso comes et uxor sua Constantia…illorum filii…Willelmus comes, Rotbaldus comes, Pontius juvenis" signed the charter dated May [963] under which "Gencius et uxor mea Aiburga" donated property "in pago Aquense superiore ad castrum…Ansoyse" to Monmajour[205]. Her affiliation is unknown. Chaume[206] proposed that she was Constantia, daughter of Charles Constantin Comte de Vienne, for onomastic reasons only on the basis that names with the root "Constant-" were unknown in western royal genealogy before Charles Constantin himself. This supposition is, however, incorrect as numerous charters of the monastery of Cluny dated between 891 and 946 include the name "Constantia"[207], and many others during the same period the names "Constantius" and "Constantinus". Poly[208] suggests that Constantia, wife of Count Boson II, was the sister rather than daughter of Charles Constantin, but this appears to be more difficult to sustain chronologically.

Boson & his wife had two children:

1. Guillaume II (b. 955, d. 993 after 29 August in Avignon, Comte de Provence, Marquis de Provence) m. Arsinde, m. Adelaide (Blanche) d'Anjou

2. Rotbald II (d. 1008/22 April 1015, Comte de Provence) m. Ermengarde, Emilde, Ermengarde...

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

Boso II. (* um 928, † 965/67) war seit 935 Graf von Avignon und seit 949 Graf von Arles.

Biografie [Bearbeiten]948, nach dem Tod von Hugo von Arles, ordnete Konrad III., König von Burgund, die Macht im Süden des Königreichs neu, um seine Stellung und die seiner Nachfolger zu sichern. Er teilte die Provence in drei Grafschaften auf und beschränkte damit die Autorität und die Ressourcen der neuen Grafen.

Boso und sein Bruder Wilhelm, burgundischer Herkunft, übernahmen die Grafschaften Arles und Avignon. Der dritte Graf, Gripho von Apt, wurde bald aus dem Weg geräumt, so dass die Brüder die wahren Herren des Landes wurden.

Um 953 heiratete Boso II. Konstanze von Provence, eine Tochter des Buviniden Karl Konstantin, Graf von Vienne, von der er zwei Söhne bekam:

Rotbald II. (Roubaud), † wohl 1008, und

Wilhelm I. (Guillaume le Libérateur), * um 952, † 994, Graf von Arles und Provence, dann Markgraf von Provence.

Herkunft [Bearbeiten]Zur Herkunft Bosos gibt es eine Reihe von Hypothesen:

Boso II. war der Sohn von Rotbold (Roubaud) von Agel, einem Adligen aus dem Mâconais, den Ludwig der Blinde 903 zum Grafen der Provence gemacht hatte. Dessen Vorfahren sind unbekannt; es wird jedoch angenommen, dass er der Schwiegersohn von Wilhelm dem Frommen, Herzog von Aquitanien und Ermengarde, einer Tochter von Boso von Vienne war.

Boson II. war der Enkel von Boso (†936), dem späteren Markgraf von Tuscien, und Sohn von Rotbold dem Alten oder Rotbold von Spoleto († 936), Sohn Boso von Tusciens aus einer früheren Beziehung. Diese Beziehung (oder Ehe) vor der Ehe mit Willa von Burgund konnte bislang nicht identifiziert werden. Dieser Rotbold heiratete Ermengarde von Aquitanien und wurde auf Befehl seines Onkels Hugo I. von Italien zugleich mit seinem Vater ermordet.

Boso II. und Boso von Tuscien (Boso I.) sind identisch. P.A. Février schreibt in La Provence des origines à l’an mil (Editions Ouest-France Université, 1989 – ISBN 2737304563): 949, nach dem Tod Hugos, trat ein neuer Graf von Arles auf, Boso, zu dessen Identität die Historiker stark gezögert haben. Er wurde schließlich als erster Ehemann von Bertha, der Nichte Hugos, identifiziert, die er verstieß, um sein Schicksal von dem des Markgrafen zu trenen, als ihn das Glück verließ. Er heiratete dann Konstanze, die ansonsten unbekannt ist. Mit ihr hatte er zwei Söhne, Rotbald und Wilhelm Boso, die ... ungeteilt die gräfliche Autorität ausübten, immer gemeinsam, als Repräsentanten Konrads. Was Bertha betrifft, sie heiratete danach den Grafen von Rodez und beschloss ihre Tage in Aquitanien. Diese Hypothese bedeutet, dass Boso 73 Jahre alt wurde und bereits fast 60 war, als er seine Söhne bekam.

Weblinks [Bearbeiten]Die Grafen von Provence (frz.)

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

The family of Boso de PROVENCE and Constance de PROVENCE

[128948] PROVENCE (de), Boso (Rotbold & Ermengarde d'AQUITAINE [129059])

* married about 945, from France ? (France)

PROVENCE (de), Constance (Charles-Constantin & .. [128947]), born about 925

1) Guillaume II, comte de Provence et d'Arles, born about 950, married about 980 Adèle dite Blanche d'ANJOU

Bibliographie : Essai sur l'histoire des comtes souverains de Provence; Histoire de la maison royale de France (Père Anselme)

http://www.francogene.com/quebec--genealogy/128/128948.php

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

Alt birth years: c. 885, 904, 899, c. 899,

Alt Death Date: 936, 938, c. 938

Boso (885–936) was the count of Arles (895–911 and 926–931, as Boso II) and Avignon (911–931), and margrave of Tuscany (931–936). He was the younger son of Theobald of Arles and Bertha, illegitimate daughter of Lothair II of Lotharingia. His elder brother was Hugh, king of Italy.

Boso supported his brother's Italian designs. Hugh responded by appointing him margrave of Tuscany when he deposed Lambert in 931. Boso was also very active in Lorraine, opposing Henry I of Germany. He was finally deposed and arrested in 936 to be replaced by Hugh's son Humbert.

He married Willa, daughter of Rudolph I of Burgundy, and had two daughters:

Bertha or Gersenda, married firstly Boso of Provence and secondly Raymond II of Rouergue

Willa, married Berengar II of Italy.

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

Boso of Tuscany

Boso (885–936) was the count of Arles (895–911 and 926–931, as Boso II) and Avignon (911–931), and margrave of Tuscany (931–936). He was the younger son of Theobald of Arles and Bertha, illegitimate daughter of Lothair II of Lotharingia. His elder brother was Hugh, king of Italy.

Boso supported his brother's Italian designs. Hugh responded by appointing him margrave of Tuscany when he deposed Lambert in 931. Boso was also very active in Lorraine, opposing Henry I of Germany. He was finally deposed and arrested in 936 to be replaced by Hugh's son Humbert.

He married Willa, daughter of Rudolph I of Burgundy, and had two daughters:

Bertha or Gersenda, married firstly Boso of Provence and secondly Raymond II of Rouergue

Willa, married Berengar II of Italy

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

Boso (885–936) was the count of Arles (895–911 and 926–931, as Boso II) and Avignon (911–931), and margrave of Tuscany (931–936). He was the younger son of Theobald of Arles and Bertha, illegitimate daughter of Lothair II of Lotharingia. His elder brother was Hugh, king of Italy.

Boso supported his brother's Italian designs. Hugh responded by appointing him margrave of Tuscany when he deposed Lambert in 931. Boso was also very active in Lorraine, opposing Henry I of Germany. He was finally deposed and arrested in 936 to be replaced by Hugh's son Humbert.

He married Willa, daughter of Rudolph I of Burgundy, and had two daughters:

* Bertha or Gersenda, married firstly Boso of Provence and secondly Raymond II of Rouergue

* Willa, married Berengar II of Italy

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

Boson di Toscana, Marchese di Toscana

M, #75123, b. before 910

Last Edited=4 Feb 2004

Boson di Toscana, Marchese di Toscana was born before 910. He was the son of Buwin (Beuves), Count of Ardem and Tibaldo of Vienna.

Boson di Toscana, Marchese di Toscana gained the title of Marchese di Toscana.

Child of Boson di Toscana, Marchese di Toscana and Willa II di Borgogna

-1. Willa di Toscana+ b. b 926, d. a 6 Aug 966

Forrás / Source:

http://www.thepeerage.com/p7513.htm#i75123

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

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

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

From Wikipedia:

Boso (885–936) was the count of Arles (895–911 and 926–931, as Boso II) and Avignon (911–931), and margrave of Tuscany (931–936). He was the younger son of Theobald of Arles and Bertha, illegitimate daughter of Lothair II of Lotharingia. His elder brother was Hugh, king of Italy.

Boso supported his brother's Italian designs. Hugh responded by appointing him margrave of Tuscany when he deposed Lambert in 931. Boso was also very active in Lorraine, opposing Henry I of Germany. He was finally deposed and arrested in 936 to be replaced by Hugh's son Humbert.

He married Willa, daughter of Rudolph I of Burgundy, and had two daughters:

* Bertha or Gersenda, married firstly Boso of Provence and secondly Raymond II of Rouergue

* Willa, married Berengar II of Italy

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

http://nl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bosso_van_Provence

Bosso van Provence, of van Vienne, (844 - 11 januari 887) was een zoon van Bivinus van Metz en Richardis van Arles en een broer van Richard I van Bourgondië.

In 876 huwde hij met Ermengarde, een dochter van Lodewijk II van het Heilige Roomse Rijk. Zijn zuster Richildis was bijzit en nadien echtgenote van Karel de Kale. Bosso werd achtereenvolgens:

870, graaf van Troyes

871, gouverneur (hertog) van Lyon en Viennois

872, raadgever en kamerheer van zijn neef Lodewijk de Stamelaar, graaf van Berry

876, hertog in Italië en in Provence, onderkoning van Koninkrijk Italië

877, graaf van Mâcon en van Chalon

879, graaf van Autun

In 879 werd het koninkrijk Bourgondië opnieuw opgericht en werd Bosso de nieuwe koning. Het voorstel van paus Johannes VIII om hem koning van Italië te maken, wees Bosso echter af. Lodewijk III van Frankrijk, Carloman II, Karel de Dikke en Lodewijk III van Oost-Francië vormden nu een front tegen hem, verplichten Bosso om zich terug te trekken en plunderen Vienne, zodat zijn broer Richard I van Bourgondië te hulp moest snellen. Na de dood van Carloman II en de troonsbestijging van Karel de Dikke in 884, werd Bosso aangeboden om koning van Provence te worden, op eenvoudige voorwaarde van eerbetuiging aan de koning van Frankrijk.

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

From the French Wikipedia page on Boson II d'Arles:

http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boson_II_d%27Arles

Boson II (c.910-†968) appelé aussi Boson VII de Provence, comte d’Arles, d’Avignon et de Provence (949-968)

Son origine est controversée, même si sa vie est relativement bien connue.

Sommaire [masquer]

1 Origine

2 Biographie

3 Notes

4 Voir aussi

4.1 Liens internes

4.2 Liens externes

Origine [modifier]

Hypothèse 1 : Boson II, fils de Rotbold (Roubaud) ou Rodboald d'Agel (noble mâconais) fait comte de Provence en 903 par Louis III l'Aveugle.

L'ascendance de ce Rotbald nous est restée inconnue. Des historiens considèrent toutefois qu’il pourrait s’agir du mari d’une fille d’Ermengarde (fille de Boson V de Provence) et de Guillaume d’Aquitaine (cf. généalogie des souverains de Provence ici). Cette hypothèse repose sur le fait que l'origine d'une descendante de Boson d'Arles (885-†936) est pour certains historiens rejetée car ce Boson n’aurait eu que des filles[1].

Pour l'historien Jean-Pierre Poly qui soutient cette hypothèse, cette famille comtale mise en place par les Bourguignons (ie Hugues d'Arles) serait probablement originaire de Septimanie. Son représentant Boson aurait su virer de bord à temps (vers 947-948?) en rompant son mariage avec Berthe, la nièce d’Hugues, après les revers de fortune de celui-ci, puis en épousant une Constance, qui bien qu’inconnue[2], était suffisamment illustre pour donner son nom à sa petite-fille, Constance d’Arles, épouse d’un roi de France[3]. Le nom de Guilhem porté par son frère et donné à un de ses fils évoque probablement les Guilhelmides d’Auvergne. Et Conrad, le nouveau roi de Provence, aurait trouvé en Boson un comte d’une famille de second rang, moins dangereux et ambitieux, plus à même de bien s’entendre avec les notables provençaux[4].

Hypothèse 2 : Boson II, petit fils de Boson d'Arles (885-†936) par Rotbold l’Ancien (c.907-† 936), fils d’un premier lit de celui-ci.

D'un premier lit (non identifié) précédant son mariage avec Willa de Bourgogne en 912, Boson d'Arles a un enfant, Roubaud I ou Rotbold l'Ancien dit aussi Rotbold de Spolète (c.907-936) qui épouse Ermengarde d'Aquitaine et est assassiné sur ordre de son oncle le roi Hugues d'Arles en 936 probablement en même temps que son père lors d’une tentative de coup d’État contre ce dernier.

Hypothèse 3 : Boson II et Boson Ier , une même et seule personne

Certains auteurs, comme P.A. Février[5] identifient Boson Ier et Boson II, le père de Guillaume de Provence, comme une seule et même personne ; et de ce fait font décéder Boson Ier en 968. À l’encontre de cette affirmation, certains auteurs constatent que ce Boson aurait vécu 73 ans et aurait eu des enfants à un âge avancé, à presque 60 ans.

Biographie

En dépit de ces interrogations, la plupart des auteurs, notamment ceux partisans des hypothèses 1 et 3, considèrent que Boson épouse, probablement avant 931[6], Berthe d'Arles, la fille de Boson d'Arles, le frère d'Hugues. Dans ces conditions il aurait pu être comte d'Arles dès le départ de son beau-père en Italie, ou la mort de ce dernier, soit en 931 ou 936. Ces mêmes historiens s'accordent sur le fait que ce mariage aurait été rompu au moment des revers d'Hugues, c'est-à-dire au plus tard vers les années 945-948.

En 948, à la mort d’Hugues d'Arles, Conrad veille à remplacer ce dernier et à maîtriser les pouvoirs de son ou ses successeurs. C’est pourquoi, il éclate la Provence en trois comtés, limitant ainsi l’autorité et les ressources des nouveaux comtes. Boson et son frère Guillaume, d’origine incertaine, bourguignonne ou autre[7], prennent en charge les comtés d’Arles et Avignon. Le comte Griffon d’Apt ayant été rapidement éliminé, les deux frères, sans s’affranchir de l’autorité nominale du roi, deviennent les vrais maîtres du pays.

Vers 953 (ou 942 ?)[8], Boson II épouse Constance appelée parfois Constance de Provence ou Constante de Vienne, supposée être une fille ou une sœur de Charles Constantin, comte de Vienne.

Boson II et Constance ont deux fils :

1. Rotboald Ier (Roubaud) (†1008), comte d'Arles et de Provence

2. Guillaume Ier le Libérateur (v. 953 † 993), comte d'Arles et de Provence puis marquis de Provence en 975.

Il meurt en 968.

Notes

1.↑ Ce qui est vrai, si on se limite aux seuls enfants issus de son mariage avec Willa de Bourgogne en 912

2.↑ D'autres auteurs identifient toutefois cette Constance à Constance de Provence appelée aussi Constance de Vienne.

3.↑ Robert II de France

4.↑ Jean-Pierre Poly - La Provence et la société féodale 879-1166 - page 33.

5.↑ P.A. Février (sous la direction de) - La Provence des origines à l’an mil - Editions Ouest-France Université, 1989 – (ISBN 2737304563), on peut lire :

C’est en 949, après la mort d’Hugues, qu’apparaît un nouveau comte d’Arles, Boson, sur l’identité duquel les historiens ont beaucoup hésité. Il a été finalement été identifié avec le premier mari de Berthe, la nièce d’Hugues, qu’il aurait répudié afin de dissocier son sort de celui des proches du marquis au moment de ses revers de fortune. Il aurait alors épousé Constance, une inconnue par ailleurs. Il en eut deux fils, Roubaud et Guillaume Boson (qui) avec son frère appelé aussi Guillaume, exercèrent de manière indivise l’autorité comtale, toujours unique, en temps (tant ?) que représentants de Conrad. Berthe, quant à elle, se remariait avec le comte de Rodez et terminait ses jours en Aquitaine.

6.↑ On sait que lorsque son père Boson d'Arles part en Italie, elle est déjà mariée.

7.↑ D'après Jean-Pierre Poly, cité dans La Provence au Moyen Âge, page 12, le premier de la dynastie, le père de Boson et Guillaume un dénommé Roubaud, serait non pas d'origines bourguignonnes, mais provençales ou septimanes.

8.↑ Probablement après 945 et avant 948, c'est-à-dire au moment des revers de fortune d'Hugues d'Arles.

In English:

Boson II of Arles (b. c.910, d. 968), also called Boson VII of Provence, was Comte d'Arles, Avignon, and Provence (949-968).

His origin is controversial, even if his life is relatively well-known.

Origin:

Hypothesis 1: Boson II, son of Rotbold (Roubaud) or Rodboald Agel (a noble of Macon), was made Comte de Provence in 903 by Louis the Blind.

The ancestry of this Rotbold remains unknown. Historians believe, however, that he could be the father of a girl named Ermengarde (daughter of Boson V of Provence) and William of Aquitaine. This assumption is based on the fact that the origin of a descendant of Boson of Arles (885-936) is for some historians unacceptable becausse it would have given Boson girls [1].

For the historian Jean-Pierre Poly, who supports this hypothesis, the count's family, if set up by the Burgundians (i.e. Hugh d'Arles), would probably have originated in Septimania. His representative had known Boson earlier (until 947-948?) by the breaking of his marriage with Bertha, niece of Hugh, after the fortunes of the latter failed, then marrying Constance, who although unknown [2] had enough status to provide a name to his granddaughter, Constance of Arles, wife of a king of France (OUR ANCESTOR) [3].

The name Guilhem carried by his brother and given to one of his sons probably evokes the Guilhemides of Auvergne. And Conrad, the new King of Provence, would have given Boson a county of second ranking, less dangerous and ambitious, and more able to get along with notables from Provence [4].

Hypothesis 2: Boson II, the grandson of Boson I of Arles (886-936) by Rotbold the Elder (c.907-936), son of a stepchild thereof.

On the first marriage (unidentified) before his marriage to Willa of Burgundy in 912, Boson of Alres had a child, Roubaud I or Rotbold l'Ancien, who was also known as Rotbold de Spolete (c. 907-936) who married Ermengarde d'Aquitaine and was assassinated on orders from his uncle, King Hugh of Arles, in 936, probably along with his father during a coup attempt against him.

Hypothesis 3: Bosson II and Boson I are one person.

Some authors, like P.A. Fevrier [5], identifies Boson I and Boson II as the same person, father of William of Provence, and therefore Boson died in 968. Contrary to this assertion, some authors find that this Boson lived 73 years and had children at an older age, almost 60 years.

Biography:

Despite these concerns, most authors, including supporters of assumptions 1 and 3, consider Boson to have married probably before 931 [6] to Berthe d'Arles, the daughter of Boson of Arles who was brother of Hugues. In these circumstances, he could have been the Comte d'Arles at the death of his stepfather in Italy, either 931 or 936. These same historians agree that this marriage was broken at the time of Hugues' setbacks, say in the years 945-948.

In 948, at the death of Hugh of Arles, Conrad stood by to replace him and to take over his powers as his successors. His province is partitioned into three counties of Provence, thereby limiting the authority and resources of the new counts. Boson and his brother William, who is of uncertain origin, Burgundy or otherwise [7], supported the counties of Arles and Avignon. Comte Griffon d'Apt was quickly eliminated, and the two brothers, without throwing off the normal authority of the King, became the real masters of the County.

Until 953 (or 942?) [8], Boson II married Constance, sometimes called Constance de Provence or Constance de Vienne, who was the daughter or sister of Charles Constantine, Comte de Vienne. Boson II and Constance had two sons:

1. Rotbold I (Roubaud) (d. 1008), Comte d'Arles and Provence

2. William I the Liberator (b. c.953, d. 993), Comte d'Arles and Province, and then in 975 Marquis of Provence.

He died in 968.

Notes:

1. This is true if we restrict ourselves only to children from his first marriage to Willa of Burgundy in 912

2. Other authors, however, identify Constance of Provence as also Constance of Vienne.

3. Robert Ii of France.

4. Jean-Pierre Poly - Province and the Feudal Era 879-1166 - page 33.

5. P.A. Fevriere (editor) - Provence origins to the year 1000 - Ouest-France University 1989. We read: "In 949, after the death of Hugh, Boson became the new Comte d'Arles, a personality that historians have hesitated to identify. He was finally determined to be the first husband of Bertha, the niece of Hugh, and he would have repudiated to separate his fate from that of the relatives of the Marquis when his fortunes failed. He then married Constance, an otherwise unknown figure. He had two sons, Robaud and Guillaume Boson (who) with his brother, also called Guillaume, exerted an undivided authority of the courts, unique, temporary (both?) as representatives of Conrad. Bertha, meanwhile, remarried to the Count of Rodez and ended her days in Aquitaine.

6. We know that when his father, Boson of Arles, left Italy, he was already married.

7. According to Jean-Pierre Poly, quoted in Provence in the Middle Ages on page 12, the first of the dynasty, the father of a man named Guillaume Boson and Roubaud, would not be of Burgundian origin, but Provencal Seveners.

8. Probably after 945 and before 948. That is to say when the fortunes of Hugh of Arles failed.

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

http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boso_II._%28Provence%29

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

Count Of Provence & Arles BOSO7,207 was born about 935. ES II:187 Parents: Of Agel ROTBAUD I and Of Arles NN.

Spouse: Constance OF VIENNE. Count Of Provence & Arles BOSO and Constance OF VIENNE were married. Children were: Count Of Provenc\ Rotbaud II, Count Of Provenc\ William I.

Rotbold II of Provence

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Rotbold II (also Rothbold, Rotbald, Rodbald, Robald(us), Roubaud, or Rotbaud; died 1008) was the Count of Provence from 968 to his death and margrave from 993. He was the elder of two sons of Boso II of Arles and Constance, the younger being William I, who took up the title of marchio in 979 and that of dux later. He ruled with William, probably jointly over the whole county. On William's death, Rotbold was left as head of the family with the title of marchio.

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

William I of Provence

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

He and his elder brother Rotbold II, sons of Boso II of Arles and Constance of Viennois, daughter of Charles-Constantine.

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

Boso (885–936) was the count of Arles (895–911 and 926–931, as Boso II) and Avignon (911–931), and margrave of Tuscany (931–936). He was the younger son of Theobald of Arles and Bertha, illegitimate daughter of Lothair II of Lotharingia. His elder brother was Hugh, king of Italy.

Boso supported his brother's Italian designs. Hugh responded by appointing him margrave of Tuscany when he deposed Lambert in 931. Boso was also very active in Lorraine, opposing Henry I of Germany. He was finally deposed and arrested in 936 to be replaced by Hugh's son Humbert.

He married Willa, daughter of Rudolph I of Burgundy, and had two daughters:

* Bertha or Gersenda, married firstly Boso of Provence and secondly Raymond II of Rouergue

* Willa, married Berengar II of Italy

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

Boso (885–936) was the count of Arles (895–911 and 926–931, as Boso II) and Avignon (911–931), and margrave of Tuscany (931–936). He was the younger son of Theobald of Arles and Bertha, illegitimate daughter of Lothair II of Lotharingia. His elder brother was Hugh, king of Italy.

Boso supported his brother's Italian designs. Hugh responded by appointing him margrave of Tuscany when he deposed Lambert in 931. Boso was also very active in Lorraine, opposing Henry I of Germany. He was finally deposed and arrested in 936 to be replaced by Hugh's son Humbert.

He married Willa, daughter of Rudolph I of Burgundy, and had two daughters:

Bertha or Gersenda, married firstly Boso of Provence and secondly Raymond II of Rouergue

Willa, married Berengar II of Italy
443594930. Markgreve Boso THEOBALDSON Toscana was born about 885. (16567) He was a Greve between 911 and 931 in Avignon. (16568) He was a Greve between 926 and 931 in Arles. (16569) He died about 938.(16570) He was a Markgreve bef 17.10.931 avsatt 936 in Toscana. (16571) He was married to Willa N.NSDTR.
Ancestral File Number: 9HMZ-FJ
Boso II de Provence
http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=document&guid=91bce448-7b36-45f7-9a04-5aaea0ee6b94&tid=10145763&pid=-434943983

from "Our Folk" by Albert D Hart, Jr.

from "Our Folk" by Albert D Hart, Jr.
Boso II de Provence
http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=document&guid=91bce448-7b36-45f7-9a04-5aaea0ee6b94&tid=10145763&pid=-434943983
Greve av Arles-Avignon + markgreve av Toseana. Avsatt 936
RESEARCH NOTES:
Count of Avignon, Arles; Marquis of Tuscany.
SOURCE NOTES:
Bu305; http://www.goldenfrog.com/jeffman/genealogy/html/d0013/I1502.html
_P_CCINFO 1-20792
AKA: Boso
Markgreve
Kung av Provance
Henrettet
Boso was a Frankish nobleman from the Bosonid-family, who was related to the Carolingian dynasty,[1] who rose to become King of Provence (879 - 887).

Boso was the son of Bivin of Gorze, a count in Lotharingia. His aunt Theutberga was the wife of king Lothair II of Lotharingia. Boso was also a nephew of the Italian count Boso, for whom he was named, and of Hucbert, lay abbot of Saint Maurice d'Agaune, to which he succeeded as lay abbot in 869.

Service of Charles the Bald
In 870, Charles the Bald, King of West Francia, married Boso's sister Richilde. This marriage paved the way for Boso's career in the service of his royal brother-in-law. In the same year, Boso was appointed Count of Lyon and Vienne, replacing Gerard of Roussillon.

In 872, Charles appointed him chamberlain and magister ostiariorum (master of porters) to his heir Louis the Stammerer. Boso likewise received investiture as Count of Bourges. Louis was reigning as a subordinate king of Aquitaine, but because of his youth, it was Boso who looked after the administration of that realm.

In the autumn of 875, Boso accompanied Charles on his first Italian campaign and at the diet of Pavia in February 876 he was appointed arch-minister and missus dominicus for Italy and elevated to the rank of duke. He was probably also charged with the administration of Provence. He acted as a viceroy and increased his prestige even more by marrying Ermengard, the only daughter of the Emperor Louis II.

Out of favour
Boso disapproved of Charles' second Italian campaign in 877 and conspired with other like-minded nobles against his king. After Charles's death in October, these nobles forced Charles's son to confirm their rights and privileges.

Boso also formed close relations to the Papacy and accompanied Pope John VIII in September 878 to Troyes, where the Pope asked King Louis for his support in Italy. The Pope adopted Boso as his son and probably offered to crown Louis emperor. It is said that he wanted to crown Boso emperor.[2]

Independent rule
In April 879, Louis died, leaving behind two adult sons, Louis and Carloman. Boso joined with other western Frankish nobles and advocated making Louis III of France the sole heir of the western kingdom, but eventually both brothers were elected kings. Boso, however, renounced allegiance to both brothers and in July claimed independence by using the style Dei gratia id quod sum: by the Grace of God, that is what I am. He also claimed that his imperial father-in-law had named him as his heir. On 15 October 879, the bishops and nobles of the region around the rivers Rhône and Saône assembled in the Synod of Mantaille elected Boso king as successor to Louis the Stammerer, the first non-Carolingian king in Western Europe in more than a century.[3]. This event marks the first occurrence of a "free election" among the Franks, without regard to royal descent, inspired by a canonical principle (but not constant practice) of ecclesiastical elections.

Boso's realm, usually called the Kingdom of Provence, comprised the ecclesiastical provinces of the archbishops of Arles, Aix, Vienne, Lyon (without Langres), and probably Besançon, as well as the dioceses of Tarentaise, Uzès, and Viviers.

After Louis and Carloman had divided their father's realm at Amiens in March 880, the two brothers joined to march against Boso. They took Mâcon and the northern parts of Boso's realm. Then uniting their forces with those of Charles the Fat, they unsuccessfully besieged Vienne from August to November.

In August 882, Boso was again besieged at Vienne by his relative, Richard, Count of Autun, who took the city in September. After this, Boso could not regain most of his realm and was restricted to the vicinity of Vienne.

He died in 887 and was succeeded by his son Louis the Blind.

Boso was the progenitor of three successful lineages, called the "Bosonids" by modern historians. Through his marriage to Ermengard he also had two daughters: Ermengard (c.877-917), who married Manasses, Count of Chalon, and Ethelberga, who married first Carloman and then William the Pious, Count of Auvergne.[4]

It is possible (though not certain) that the famous Guilla of Provence, queen of Upper Burgundy, was his daughter, then presumably by an earlier wife than Ermengarde.

Notes
^ His mother's father, Boso, provided a daughter, Tetburgis/Teutberga, Boso's aunt, to be wife of Lothair II. (Constance B. Bouchard, "The Bosonids or Rising to Power in the Late Carolingian Age" French Historical Studies 15.3 (Spring 1988, pp. 407-431) genealogical table, p.409..
^ Caravale, Mario (ed). Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani: LXI Guglielmo Gonzaga - Jacobini. Rome, 2003.
^ Constance B. Bouchard, "The Bosonids or Rising to Power in the Late Carolingian Age" French Historical Studies 15.3 (Spring 1988), pp. 407-431.
^ Riché, Les Carolingiens: Une famille qui fit l'Europe, genealogical table XII (Bosonides).
Boso (885-936) was the count of Arles (895-911 and 926-931, as Boso II) and Avignon (911-931), and margrave of Tuscany (931-936). He was the younger son of Theobald of Arles and Bertha, illegitimate daughter of Lothair II of Lotharingia. His elder brother was Hugh, king of Italy.

Boso supported his brother's Italian designs. Hugh responded by appointing him margrave of Tuscany when he deposed Lambert in 931. Boso was also very active in Lorraine, opposing Henry I of Germany. He was finally deposed and arrested in 936 to be replaced by Hugh's son Humbert.

He married Willa, daughter of Rudolph I of Burgundy, and had two daughters:

Bertha or Gersenda, married firstly Boso of Provence and secondly Raymond II of Rouergue
Willa, married Berengar II of Italy
COUNT OF ARLES; MARGRAVE OF TUSCANY 913-936
COUNT OF PROVENCE
OR "BOSO"; COUNT OF PROVENCE 942-ca. 966
He was Count in 942.
He was Margrave from 913 to 936.
Boso II van de Provence, ook bekend als Boso d'Agel, ovl. 965/67, ref. nr. 09.03.2004 ES II-187, EGS II.1-174.4,37 Graaf van Avignon 935, graaf van Arles 949. Door koning Conrad III (Welf) van Bourgondië-Arelaat tot graaf in de Provence benoemd. Is de veruit machtigste en aanzienlijkste vasal in het Arelaat, wat ook door afstamming en door zijn huwelijk bedingt is. Zet zich sterk in voor de afweer van de Sarazenische kustpiraten, die in Fraxinetum hun steunpunt hebben. Hij trouwde met Constance van de Provence.
Source: Provence Généalogie Juillet 1978 Léon MARTIN
Source MANTEYER BUSQUET et SETTIPANI
Comte d'avignon
Source Sebastien AVY
Source: Provence Généalogie Juillet 1978 Léon MARTIN
Source MANTEYER BUSQUET et SETTIPANI
He was Margrave from 913 to 936.

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Ancestors (and descendant) of Boson I comte d'Arle comte d'Arle

Rotbald I
????-± 949

Boson I comte d'Arle comte d'Arle
± 919-± 968


Constantia
± 919-± 965


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The Family tree Homs publication was prepared by .contact the author
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George Homs, "Family tree Homs", database, Genealogy Online (https://www.genealogieonline.nl/stamboom-homs/I6000000003481830669.php : accessed June 22, 2024), "Boson I comte d'Arle (Boson I) "Count De Provence" comte d'Arle (± 919-± 968)".