Family tree Kempin Finken » Philips I van Frankrijk (1052-1108)

Personal data Philips I van Frankrijk 

Source 1

Household of Philips I van Frankrijk

(1) He is married to Bertha van Holland.

They got married.


Child(ren):



(2) He is married to Bertrada de Montfort.

They got married.


Child(ren):

  1. Cecilia Capet  1097-> 1145


Notes about Philips I van Frankrijk

PHILIPPE de France, son of HENRI I King of France & his second wife Anna Iaroslavna of Kiev (1052-Château de Melun, Seine-et-Marne 30 Jul 1108, bur Abbaye de Saint Benoît-sur-Loire[292]).  The Liber Modernorum Regum Francorum names (in order) "Philippum, Hugonem atque Rotbertum" as the three sons of King Henri and Anna[293].  Orderic Vitalis names "Philippum et Hugonem Magnum Crispeii comitem" as the children of "Henricus…Francorum rex" and his wife "Bertradam, Julii Claudii regis Russiæ filiam"[294].  The Chronicle of Alberic de Trois-Fontaines records the birth in 1052 of "rex futurus regis Francorum Henrici filius ex Anna filia Georgii regis Sclavonum"[295].  He was consecrated associate-king 23 May 1059, at the cathedral of Notre-Dame de Reims: the Hugonis Floriacensis Actum records the consecration in 1058 of “rex...Henricus...Philippum filium suum duodennum” at “Remis a Gervasio archiepiscopo”, in the presence of “duo Nicholai papæ legati, Hugo...Bisunciensis archiepiscopus et Hermenfredus Sedunensis episcopus”[296].  His father entrusted his education to his uncle Baldwin V Count of Flanders, who later became regent until 1066/67.  He succeeded his father in 1060 as PHILIPPE I King of France.  The Bertholdi Annales record in 1060 the death of “Heinricus Galliarum rex” and the succession of “filius eius Philippus adhuc puer regnum cum matre gubernandum suscepit”[297].  Consecrated 25 Dec 1071 at Laon, again 16 May 1098 at Tours, and for a fourth time 25 Dec 1100 at Reims.  Foulques IV "le Rechin" Comte d'Anjou ceded Château-Landon and Gâtinais to him in 1069, in return for the king's recognition of his accession as count[298].  King Philippe pursued this policy of expanding his territories, adding Corbie in 1074, acquiring part of Vermandois on the death of Raoul Comte de Vermandois in 1074, invading Vexin in 1077, and taking possession of Bourges in 1100[299].  In 1071, after ineffectively helping Arnoul III Count of Flanders against his uncle Robert, the latter made peace with King Philippe and arranged the king's marriage to his stepdaughter.  The Historia Regum Francorum Monasterii Sancti Dionysii records the death "apud Milidunum IV Kal Aug" of King Philippe and his burial "in ecclesia sancti Benedicti super Ligerim in pago Aurelianensi"[300].  The necrology of the abbey of Saint-Germain-des-Prés records the death "III Kal Aug" of "Philippus rex Francorum"[301].  The necrology of the abbey of Saint-Denis records the death "III Kal Aug" of "Philippus rex"[302]. 

Betrothed ([1055/59]) to JUDITH [Maria/Sophia] of Germany, daughter of Emperor HEINRICH III King of Germany & his second wife Agnès de Poitou ([1054]-14 Mar [1092/96], bur Admont Abbey).  The Gesta Hungarorum records that King András forced the marriage of "Salomoni regi" and "Henricus imperator…Sophiam suam filiam", specifying that she had earlier been betrothed to "filio regis Franciæ"[303].  This could only refer to the future Philippe I King of France as it is unlikely that the emperor's daughter would have been betrothed to his younger brother.  This betrothal is not corroborated in the western European primary sources so far consulted. 

m firstly (1072, repudiated 1092) BERTHA of Holland, daughter of FLORIS I Count of Holland & his wife Gertrud of Saxony[-Billung] ([1058]-Montreuil-sur-Mer, Pas-de-Calais 15 Oct 1094).  The Liber Modernorum Regum Francorum records the marriage of "filiam ducis Frisiæ" and "rex Philippus"[304].  The Historia Francorum names "filiam Florentii ducis Frisonum Bertam" as wife of King Philippe[305].  The Chronologia Johannes de Beke names (in order) "Theodricum et Florencium…et Machtildim" as children of Count Floris & his wife, specifying that "Machtildim" married "Philippus rex Francie" after the death of her father which indicates that "Machtildim" in this text is an error for Bertha[306].  Her marriage was arranged as part of the settlement under which her future husband recognised her stepfather as Count of Flanders[307].  She was repudiated after King Philippe abducted Bertrade de Montfort from her husband, and was sent to Montreuil[308].  The necrology of the abbey of Saint-Victor records the death "Id Oct" of "Berta mater Ludovici regis"[309].  Clarius’s Chronicon Sancti Petri Vivi Senonensis records the death in 1094 of “Berta regina, quæ a rege Philippo prius fuerat derelicta”[310]. 

m secondly (Paris 1092, before 27 Oct) as her second husband, BERTRADE de Montfort, fifth wife of FOULQUES IV “le Réchin” Comte d’Anjou, daughter of SIMON [I] de Montfort-l'Amaury & his third wife Agnès d’Evreux (-Fontevrault end-1115/1116, bur church of the priory of Hautes-Bruyères, Saint-Rémy-l’Honoré, Yvelines).  Orderic Vitalis records that “Bertrada...Andegavorum comitissa”, fearing that her husband was about to treat her like his previous two wives, sought protection from “Philippo regi Francorum” who repudiated his own wife and married her, the ceremony being conducted by “Odo Bajocensis episcopus”[311].  The De Genere Comitum Flandrensium, Notæ Parisienses names "Fulconi Richin Andegavensi comiti uxorem suam nomine Bertradam" as second wife of King Philippe, specifying that the king abducted her from her first husband after repudiating his first wife[312].  William of Tyre records this marriage[313].  Pope Urban II at the Council of Autun excommunicated the king 16 Oct 1094, confirmed at the Council of Clermont 18/28 Nov 1095[314].  The church finally admitted the validity of the marriage after the Council of Paris 2 Dec 1104[315].  Orderic Vitalis alleges that Bertrade tried to poison her stepson Louis so her own sons could succeed to the throne[316].  "Fulco iunior Andegavensium comes Fulconis comitis filius" donated property to the abbey of Fontevraud with the consent of "Bertrade regina matre meo, Philipo fratre meo" by charter dated to [1109/1112/13][317]. 

King Philippe I & his first wife had three children:
CONSTANCE de France ([1078]-14 Sep 1126[318]). 
LOUIS THIBAUT de France (Paris end 1081-Château
Bethizy near Paris 1 Aug 1137, bur église de l'Abbaye royale de Saint-Denis). 
HENRI de France (1083-young). 

King Philippe I & his second wife had [four] children:
PHILIPPE de France ([1093]-[2 Sep] after 1133
FLEURI [Florus] de France ([1095]-after 1119).  
CECILE de France ([1097]-after 1145).
EUSTACHIE de France ([1095/1100]-[1143]).

Bronnen:

[292] Orderic Vitalis, Vol. VI, Book XI, p. 155. 

[293] Hugonis Floriacensis, Liber qui Modernorum Regum Francorum continet Actus 10, MGH SS IX, p. 389. 

[294] Orderic Vitalis (Prévost), Vol. III, Liber VII, I, p. 159. 

[295] Chronica Albrici Monachi Trium Fontium 1052, MGH SS XXIII, p. 789. 

[296] Hugonis Floriacensis Modernorum Regum Francorum Actus, MGH SS IX, p. 389. 

[297] Bertholdi Annales, 1060, MGH SS Tome V, p. 271. 

[298] Kerrebrouck (2000), p. 70. 

[299] Kerrebrouck (2000), pp. 70-1. 

[300] Historia Regum Francorum Monasterii Sancti Dionysii 31, MGH SS IX, p. 405. 

[301] Obituaires de Sens Tome I.1, Abbaye de Saint-Germain-des-Prés, p. 268.       

[302] Obituaires de Sens Tome I.1, Abbaye de Saint-Denis, p. 322.       

[303] Kézai, S., Veszprémy, L. and Schaer, F. (eds. and trans.) (1999) Simonis de Kéza Gesta Hungarorum (CEP), 57, p. 127. 

[304] Hugonis Floriacensis, Liber qui Modernorum Regum Francorum continet Actus 11, MGH SS IX, p. 390. 

[305] Hugonis Floriacensis, Liber qui Modernorum Regum Francorum continet Actus 11, MGH SS IX, p. 391, additional manuscript quoted in footnote *. 

[306] Bruch, H. (ed.) (1973) Chronologia Johannes de Beke (The Hague), 45, p. 85, available at < http://www.inghist.nl/Onderzoek/Projecten /KroniekVanJohannesDeBekeTot1430/latijn> (31 Aug 2006). 

[307] Nicholas (1992), p. 52. 

[308] Kerrebrouck (2000), p. 71. 

[309] Obituaires de Sens Tome I.1, Abbaye de Saint-Victor, p. 593.       

[310] Duru, L. M. (1863) Bibliothèque historique de l’Yonne (Auxerre, Paris), Tome II, Chronicon Sancti-Petri-Vivi Senonensis auctore Clario, p. 512. 

[311] Orderic Vitalis (Prévost), Vol. III, Liber VIII, XX, p. 386. 

[312] De Genere Comitum Flandrensium, Notæ Parisienses MGH SS, p. 257. 

[313] William of Tyre XIV.I, p. 606. 

[314] Runciman, S. (1978) A History of the Crusades (Penguin Books), Vol. 1, p. 107. 

[315] Kerrebrouck (2000), p. 72. 

[316] Orderic Vitalis, Vol. VI, Book XI, pp. 51-5. 

[317] Bienvenue, J. M. (ed.) (2000) Grand Cartulaire de Fontevraud, Tome I (Poitiers) (“Fontevraud”) 156, p. 142. 

https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/CAPET.htm#PhilippeIdied1108B

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Timeline Philips I van Frankrijk

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Ancestors (and descendant) of Philips I van Frankrijk

Anna van Kiev
± 1036-1078

Philips I van Frankrijk
1052-1108

(1) 
(2) 
Cecilia Capet
1097-> 1145

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    Sources

    1. Foundation for Medieval Genealogy
    2. Karel de Grote

    About the surname Van Frankrijk


    When copying data from this family tree, please include a reference to the origin:
    Jan Kempin, "Family tree Kempin Finken", database, Genealogy Online (https://www.genealogieonline.nl/stamboom-kempin-finken/I8004.php : accessed May 4, 2024), "Philips I van Frankrijk (1052-1108)".