Family Tree Welborn » Fulk I `the Red' de Anjou count of Anjou (± 870-± 938)

Persoonlijke gegevens Fulk I `the Red' de Anjou count of Anjou 

Bronnen 1, 2, 3, 4

Gezin van Fulk I `the Red' de Anjou count of Anjou

Hij is getrouwd met Roscille des Loches (de la HAYE).

Zij zijn getrouwd in het jaar 905.Bron 4


Kind(eren):

  1. Adele d'Anjou  ± 924-± 948 


Notities over Fulk I `the Red' de Anjou count of Anjou


Fulk, count of Anjou is your 30th great grandfather.
You
¬â€  ·Üí Marvin "Toad" Henry Welborn, Jr.
your father ·Üí Heny Marvin Welborn, Sr.
his father ·Üí Calhoun H. Welborn
his father ·Üí Sarah Elizabeth Dikes
his mother ·Üí Benjamin Franklin Dykes, II
her father ·Üí William Dykes, Sr.
his father ·Üí George Dykes, Sr.
his father ·Üí Edward George Dykes
his father ·Üí Edward Dykes
his father ·Üí Thomas Dykes
his father ·Üí Edward Dykes
his father ·Üí Thomas Dykes
his father ·Üí Leonard Dykes
his father ·Üí Lord of Whitehall Thomas Dykes
his father ·Üí Christina Dykes
his mother ·Üí Richard Salkeld
her father ·Üí Joan Salkeld
his mother ·Üí William de Stapleton, II
her father ·Üí William de Stapleton
his father ·Üí Sibyl Stapleton
his mother ·Üí Ladereyne de Brus
her mother ·Üí Hawise de Lancaster, Heiress of Kendal
her mother ·Üí Helewyse de Lancaster, of Kendal
her mother ·Üí William Ll de Lancaster, 1st Feudal Baron of Kendal
her father ·Üí Gundred de Warenne, Countess of Warwick
his mother ᆒ Elisabeth de Vermandois, dame de Crépy
her mother ·Üí Hugues I 'Magnus', Comte de Vermandois
her father ·Üí Henry I, king of France
his father ·Üí Constance d'Arles, Reine Consort de France
his mother ᆒ Adélaïde la Blanche d'Anjou, Reine consort d'Aquitaine
her mother ·Üí Fulk II, Count of Anjou
her father ·Üí Fulk, count of Anjou
his father

*** Not to be confused with Fulk, King of Jerusalem. ***
Fulk I of Anjou (c. 870 ·Äì 942) Foulques le Roux (The Red)
Fulk married Roscille de Loches, daughter of Warnerius (Widone), Seigneur de Loches, de Villentrois, & de la Haye, and his wife Tecandra.[2] He and Roscille had:
ဢIngelger (ဠ bef. 927).[2]
ဢGuy (Wido), Bishop of Soissons (ဠ 970).[2][3]
·Ä¢Fulk II. Succeeded his father as Count of Anjou.[2]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fulk_I,_Count_of_Anjou

Fulk I
Dutch: Fulco, French: Foulques, German: Fulko
Gender: Male
Birth: circa 870 Anjou, Isere, Rhone-Alpes, France
Death: circa 938 (60-76) Tours, Indre-et-Loire, Centre, France
Place of Burial: Ch√¢teauneuf, Pays de la Loire, France
Immediate Family:
Son of Ingelger, count of Anjou and Adelais of Amboise
Husband of Roscille des Loches, comtesse d'Anjou
Father of Ingelger d'Anjou; Gilbert de Toulouse; Roscille d d'Anjou; Guy d'Anjou, √©vêque de Soissons; Fulk II, count of Anjou and Adele d'Anjou, Comtesse d'Amiens
Brother of Adele de Dreux; Landry de Dreux; Gerloc; Drago de Normandie and NN d'Anjou

https://www.geni.com/people/Fulk-count-of-Anjou/6000000005911895391

http://genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00020234&tree=LEO
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fulk_I,_Count_of_Anjou
Foulques I "Le Anjou-3067 [Parents] was born about 870 in Of, , Anjou, France. He died in 938 in Anjou, France. He married Roscille De Loches [Countess Of Anj-4148 before 5 Jul 905 in Anjou, France.
Roscille De Loches [Countess Of Anj-4148 [Parents] was born about 874 in Of, , , France. She died about 940. She married Foulques I "Le Anjou-3067 before 5 Jul 905 in Anjou, France.
They had the following children:
M i Ingelger D' Anjou-4050 was born about 898 in Of, , Anjou, France. He died in 927. He was buried in St. Martin de To.
M ii Guy D' Anjou [Bishop Of Soiss-4656 was born about 902 in Of, , Anjou, France. He died before 972.
F iii Roscille D' Anjou-4495 was born about 904.
M iv Foulques II "Le Anjou-2205 was born about 909. He died on 11 Nov 958.
F v Adele (Adelaide) de Vexin (Anjou) Countess of Vexin-75022.
F vi Adele (Adelaide) de Vexin (Anjou) Countess of Vexin-82642.
M vii Guido van Anjou-66097 was born about 902. He died about 972.
F viii Adele van Anjou-65212 was born about 920. She died about 960.
Fulk I of Anjou(about 870 ·Äì 942), called the Red, was son of viscount Ingelger of Angers and Resinde "Aelinde" D'Amboise, was the first count of Anjou from 898 to 941. He increased the territory of the viscounty of Angers and it became a county around 930. During his reign he was permanently at war with the Normans and the Bretons. He occupied the county of Nantes in 907, but abandoned it to the Bretons in 919. He married Rosalie de Loches. He died around 942 and was succeeded by his son Fulk II.

Fulk I (or Fulco) of Anjou, "said Rufus was the first Count of Anjou from 930 to 942, having been first Viscount d'Angers (before 898-930) and Tours (898-909), and Count of Nantes (909-919). It is the family Ingelgeriens and son of Viscount Ingelger and perhaps Aelendis.
It is mentioned for the first time in a charter of April 886, and then as Viscount in another charter dated 29 September 898, signed by Viscount Hardrada Tours. Another 909 charter also says the Vicomte de Tours. In 909, following the death of Alain le Grand, the Viscount of Tours is provided Thibaud the Old and he received the county of Nantes, in charge of fighting against the Normans and Bretons. Nantes is taken by the Normans in 914, and Fulk waives its rights to the county of Nantes in 919. He retained the title of count, but the title was finally recognized in 930, when his overlord Hugh the Great described him as such in one of his charters. He spent most of his life fighting the Vikings.
He married Roscille, daughter of Garnier (Warnerius), Lord of Loches, and Tescende, and had:
Ingelger died before 929 and probably killed in 927 during an engagement against the Vikings.
Gui (Widdoes), canon of St. Martin de Tours, then bishop of Soissons of 937 to 973
Fulk II the Good, Count of Anjou.
Roscille of Anjou, married Alain Barbetorte II, Duke of Brittany. They have a daughter Gerberga Nantes.
He is cited with his son Fulk II the last time in August 941. A charter of 942 mentions a May Fulk Count of Anjou, not as we know it is Fulk Fulk I or II. Given the fact that I Fulk began his career to 886, he probably died shortly after 941.
Fulk le Roux is quoted in "The Chronicle the exploits of the Counts of Anjou," text written from 1100 to 1140 by a monk Angevin, at the request of the Rechin Fulk.
Preceded by Fulk I of Anjou Followed by
Ingelger Vicomte d'Angers,
then Count of Anjou Fulk II the Good
Hardrada Vicomte de Tours Thibaud the Old
Alain le Grand Count of Nantes and Ottar Hroald, vikings

Fulk I of Anjou(about 870 ·Äì 942), called the Red, was son of viscount Ingelger of Angers and Resinde "Aelinde" D'Amboise, was the first count of Anjou from 898 to 941. He increased the territory of the viscounty of Angers and it became a county around 930. During his reign he was permanently at war with the Normans and the Bretons. He occupied the county of Nantes in 907, but abandoned it to the Bretons in 919. He married Rosalie de Loches. He died around 942 and was succeeded by his son Fulk II.
Fulk I of Anjou(about 870 ·Äì 942), called the Red, was son of viscount Ingelger of Angers and Resinde "Aelinde" D'Amboise, was the first count of Anjou from 898 to 941. He increased the territory of the viscounty of Angers and it became a county around 930. During his reign he was permanently at war with the Normans and the Bretons. He occupied the county of Nantes in 907, but abandoned it to the Bretons in 919. He married Rosalie de Loches. He died around 942 and was succeeded by his son Fulk II.

Fulk I of Anjou(about 870 ·Äì 942), called the Red, was son of viscount Ingelger of Angers and Resinde "Aelinde" D'Amboise, was the first count of Anjou from 898 to 941. He increased the territory of the viscounty of Angers and it became a county around 930. During his reign he was permanently at war with the Normans and the Bretons. He occupied the county of Nantes in 907, but abandoned it to the Bretons in 919. He married Rosalie de Loches. He died around 942 and was succeeded by his son Fulk II.

Foulques I "le Reux" (Fulk the Red, Fulco Rufus)
Viscount of Angers, before 898-931√ó940.
Count of Anjou, 931√ó940 (or 929)-after 941.
Count of Nantes, 907√ó9-914√ó9.
Viscount of Tours, before 905-before 909.
Abbot of Saint-Aubin d'Angers and Saint-Lézin, before 924-after 941.
Foulques (Fulco) first appears as a witness to a charter of count (later king) Eudes, abbot of of Saint Martin de Tours, in April 886 [BEC 30 (1859): 431-3]. He first appears with the title of viscount in a charter of viscount Hardrad of Tours on 29 September 898 [Signum Fulconis vicecomitis, Mabille (1871), xcii-xciii]. In a charter of a certain Archambaldus dated 5 July 905, he appears as viscount of both Angers and Tours [Signum Fulconis Turonorum et Andecavorum vicecomitis, Mabille (1871): xcv], but does not appear to have the latter title for long, for a charter dated 30 October 909 has Tedbaldus signing as viscount of Tours, immediate after "count" Fulco [Signum domni Fulconis Andecavorum comitis; signum Tedbaldi Turonorum vicecomitis, Mabille (1871), xcviii]. As shown by Werner, this use of the comital title by Foulques comes from a brief period when he was count of Nantes, confirmed by the appearance of Foulques as count of Nantes and viscount of Angers in a charter of count (later king) Robert, abbot of Saint-Martin de Tours, dated 31 March 914 [S. Fulconis Namnetens. comitis et Andegavensis vicecomitis, Werner (1958), 287], and by the statement of the Chronicle of Nantes that Foulques ("Fulco Ruffus") had possessed Nantes [Chr. Nantes, 122]. Foulques had apparently obtained the countship of Nantes between 907 (the death of Alain Barbetorte) and 30 October 909, and lost it before 919 [see the detailed discussion in Werner (1958), 265-8, 284-8]. He appears as abbot and viscount in a charter of a certain Fulculf dated 13 August 924 [Signum Fulconi[s] abbatis atque vicecomitis, Cart. S.-Aubin 1: 60], and calls himself count of the Angevins and abbot of Saint-Aubin d'Angers and Saint-Lézin in a charter of 929 [Cart. S.-Aubin 1: 203-4 (see below)]. However, as he was still not signing as count in two charters of Hugues le Grand on 3 May 930 [S. Fulconis vicecomitis, Werner (1958), 284] and 26 March 931 [Signum domni Fulconis, Mabille (1871), ciii], he does not appear to have been recognized as count of Anjou by his Robertian lords until sometime between 931 and 26 December 940, when he appears as count in a charter of Hugues le Grand [Signum Fulconis comitis, Mabille (1871), cv-cviii, erroneously dated 943; see Werner (1958), 286]. Foulques was still living in [13×31] August 941, when he signed a charter along with his son Foulques [Signum domni Fulconis. Signum Fulconis filii ipsius, Mabille (1871), cv]. See Werner (1958), 264-279, and the detailed list of charters mentioning Foulques on pp. 283-6, many of which are printed in full in Mabille (1871).
Date of Birth: Unknown.
Although there is no direct evidence for his date of birth, an estimate of 870 or a little earlier should not be far off, given his long career.
Place of Birth: Unknown.
Date of Death: After 13 August 941.
Both Foulques and his son Foulques witnessed a charter between 13 and 31 August 941, so Foulques was still living on the former date. A charter was witnessed by a count Foulques of Anjou in May 942 [RHF 9: 723], often identified as Foulques II, but, as Werner points out, it is not certain which Foulques was the signer of that charter, and the date of death of Foulques I remains unknown. Nevertheless, given his long career, he probably did not live long after 941.
Place of Death: Unknown.
Father: Ingelger.
The name of Foulques's father is confirmed by a charter of 929 [Cart. S.-Aubin 1: 203-4 (see below)], but nothing else is known about him. For Ingelger as a figure of legend, see the Commentary section.
Mother: see Commentary Section.
Spouse: Roscille, d. after 929, daughter of Garnier (Warnerius) and Tescende.
In the seventh year of king Raoul, Fulco (Foulques), his wife Roscilla, and his sons Widdo (Gui) and Fulco, gave a donation to Saint-Aubin d'Angers for the benefit of his soul and the souls of his father (genitor) Ingelgerius, his son Ingelgerius, his father-in-law Warnerius and the latter's wife Tescenda ["Ego Fulco, Andecavorum comes, abbas quoque Sancti Albini Sanctique Lizinii, necnon et uxor mea Roscilla et filii mei, Widdo ac Fulco, nullius cogentis imperium, sed nostra plenissima voluntate, fatetur nos, pro Dei amore et pro remedium mee anime vel anime Ingelgario, genitor meo, atque Ingelgerio, filio meo, necnon pro anima Warnerio, socro meo et uxore sua, Tescenda, ..." Cart. S.-Aubin, 1: 203-4; see also Cart. Angers, 75].
Children:
[Cart. S.-Aubin, 1: 203-4 (see above)]
MALE Ingelger, d. before 929 (probably 927).
For the death date, see Werner (1958), 271.
MALE Gui, d. 966√ó985, canon of Saint-Martin de Tours; bishop of Soissons, 937-966√ó985.
He became bishop of Soissons in 937 in succession to Abbo ["Abbo Suessorum praesul defungitur; et Wido filius Fulco Andegavensis, sancti Martini Turonensis canonicus, eius episcopatu potitur", Flodoard's Annals, s.a. 937, MGH SS 3: 385]. Gui was still living in 966, as a charter of Geoffroy I (son of Foulques II) mentions Geoffroy's avunculus bishop Widdo [Cart. S.-Aubin, 1: 62-3].
MALE Foulques II "le Bon", d. after 958, count of Anjou, after 941-after 958, m. Gerberge.
See Commentary section for supposed additional child.
Commentary
Although the 929 charter mentioned above confirms that the father of Foulques was named Ingelger, contemporary records tell us nothing further about this Ingelger, or about other ancestors of Fulk. A history of the counts of Anjou compiled in the twelfth century, Gesta Consulum Andegavorum, purports to give an account of the ancestors of Foulques [Spicilegium 3: 237-243].
http://sbaldw.home.mindspring.com/hproject/prov/fulk0001.htm

Fulk, count of Anjou is your 31st great grandfather.
You
¬â€  ·Üí Geneva Allene Welborn
your mother ·Üí Alice Elmyra Smith
her mother ·Üí Nellie Mary Henley
her mother ·Üí John Merrit Wooldridge
her father ·Üí Merritt Wooldridge
his father ·Üí Chesley Wooldridge
his father ·Üí Edward Wooldridge, Jr.
his father ·Üí Mary Wooldridge
his mother ·Üí Mary Martha Flournoy
her mother ·Üí Jane Gower
her mother ·Üí William Hatcher, of Varina Parish
her father ·Üí William Hatcher, Sr.
his father ·Üí Katherine Reade
his mother ·Üí Anne Yelverton
her mother ·Üí Anne Paston
her mother ·Üí Margaret Paston
her mother ·Üí John de Mauteby
her father ·Üí Margaret de Mautby
his mother ·Üí Sir Roger de Beauchamp, of Bletsoe
her father ·Üí Lord Roger de Beauchamp, Sr., 1st Baron Beauchamp of Bletso
his father ·Üí Alice de Tosny
his mother ·Üí Ralph VI de Tosny, Lord of Flamstead
her father ·Üí Constance de Beaumont
his mother ·Üí Richard I de Beaumont, Viscount
her father ·Üí Roscelin de Beaumont, Vicomte de Beaumont
his father ·Üí Raoul (Ralph) de Beaumont, VI, Vicomte Beaumont-au-Maine
his father ·Üí Ermengarde de Nevers
his mother ·Üí Guillaume I, comte de Nevers
her father ·Üí Renaud I, comte de Nevers
his father ·Üí Mathilde (Mahaut) de Bourgogne, Dame De Limais
his mother ᆒ Adélaïde la Blanche d'Anjou, Reine consort d'Aquitaine
her mother ·Üí Fulk II, Count of Anjou
her father ·Üí Fulk, count of Anjou
his father

https://www.geni.com/people/Fulk-count-of-Anjou/6000000005911895391

Fulk
Dutch: Fulco, French: Foulques, German: Fulko
Gender:
Male
Birth:
circa 870
Anjou, Isere, Rhone-Alpes, France
Death:
circa 938 (60-76)
Tours, Indre-et-Loire, Centre, France
Place of Burial:
Ch√¢teauneuf, Pays de la Loire, France
Immediate Family:
Son of Ingelger, count of Anjou and Adelais of Amboise
Husband of Roscille des Loches, comtesse d'Anjou
Father of Ingelger d'Anjou; Gilbert de Toulouse; Roscille d d'Anjou; Guy d'Anjou, √©vêque de Soissons; Fulk II, Count of Anjou; and Adele d'Anjou, Comtesse d'Amiens ¬´ less
Brother of Adele de Dreux; Landry de Dreux; Gerloc; Drago de Normandie and NN d'Anjou

http://genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00020234&tree=LEO
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fulk_I,_Count_of_Anjou
Foulques I "Le Anjou-3067 [Parents] was born about 870 in Of, , Anjou, France. He died in 938 in Anjou, France. He married Roscille De Loches [Countess Of Anj-4148 before 5 Jul 905 in Anjou, France.
Roscille De Loches [Countess Of Anj-4148 [Parents] was born about 874 in Of, , , France. She died about 940. She married Foulques I "Le Anjou-3067 before 5 Jul 905 in Anjou, France.
They had the following children:
M i Ingelger D' Anjou-4050 was born about 898 in Of, , Anjou, France. He died in 927. He was buried in St. Martin de To.
M ii Guy D' Anjou [Bishop Of Soiss-4656 was born about 902 in Of, , Anjou, France. He died before 972.
F iii Roscille D' Anjou-4495 was born about 904.
M iv Foulques II "Le Anjou-2205 was born about 909. He died on 11 Nov 958.
F v Adele (Adelaide) de Vexin (Anjou) Countess of Vexin-75022.
F vi Adele (Adelaide) de Vexin (Anjou) Countess of Vexin-82642.
M vii Guido van Anjou-66097 was born about 902. He died about 972.
F viii Adele van Anjou-65212 was born about 920. She died about 960.
Fulk I of Anjou(about 870 ·Äì 942), called the Red, was son of viscount Ingelger of Angers and Resinde "Aelinde" D'Amboise, was the first count of Anjou from 898 to 941. He increased the territory of the viscounty of Angers and it became a county around 930. During his reign he was permanently at war with the Normans and the Bretons. He occupied the county of Nantes in 907, but abandoned it to the Bretons in 919. He married Rosalie de Loches. He died around 942 and was succeeded by his son Fulk II.

Fulk I (or Fulco) of Anjou, "said Rufus was the first Count of Anjou from 930 to 942, having been first Viscount d'Angers (before 898-930) and Tours (898-909), and Count of Nantes (909-919). It is the family Ingelgeriens and son of Viscount Ingelger and perhaps Aelendis.
It is mentioned for the first time in a charter of April 886, and then as Viscount in another charter dated 29 September 898, signed by Viscount Hardrada Tours. Another 909 charter also says the Vicomte de Tours. In 909, following the death of Alain le Grand, the Viscount of Tours is provided Thibaud the Old and he received the county of Nantes, in charge of fighting against the Normans and Bretons. Nantes is taken by the Normans in 914, and Fulk waives its rights to the county of Nantes in 919. He retained the title of count, but the title was finally recognized in 930, when his overlord Hugh the Great described him as such in one of his charters. He spent most of his life fighting the Vikings.
He married Roscille, daughter of Garnier (Warnerius), Lord of Loches, and Tescende, and had:
Ingelger died before 929 and probably killed in 927 during an engagement against the Vikings.
Gui (Widdoes), canon of St. Martin de Tours, then bishop of Soissons of 937 to 973
Fulk II the Good, Count of Anjou.
Roscille of Anjou, married Alain Barbetorte II, Duke of Brittany. They have a daughter Gerberga Nantes.
He is cited with his son Fulk II the last time in August 941. A charter of 942 mentions a May Fulk Count of Anjou, not as we know it is Fulk Fulk I or II. Given the fact that I Fulk began his career to 886, he probably died shortly after 941.
Fulk le Roux is quoted in "The Chronicle the exploits of the Counts of Anjou," text written from 1100 to 1140 by a monk Angevin, at the request of the Rechin Fulk.
Preceded by Fulk I of Anjou Followed by
Ingelger Vicomte d'Angers,
then Count of Anjou Fulk II the Good
Hardrada Vicomte de Tours Thibaud the Old
Alain le Grand Count of Nantes and Ottar Hroald, vikings

Fulk I of Anjou(about 870 ·Äì 942), called the Red, was son of viscount Ingelger of Angers and Resinde "Aelinde" D'Amboise, was the first count of Anjou from 898 to 941. He increased the territory of the viscounty of Angers and it became a county around 930. During his reign he was permanently at war with the Normans and the Bretons. He occupied the county of Nantes in 907, but abandoned it to the Bretons in 919. He married Rosalie de Loches. He died around 942 and was succeeded by his son Fulk II.
Fulk I of Anjou(about 870 ·Äì 942), called the Red, was son of viscount Ingelger of Angers and Resinde "Aelinde" D'Amboise, was the first count of Anjou from 898 to 941. He increased the territory of the viscounty of Angers and it became a county around 930. During his reign he was permanently at war with the Normans and the Bretons. He occupied the county of Nantes in 907, but abandoned it to the Bretons in 919. He married Rosalie de Loches. He died around 942 and was succeeded by his son Fulk II.

Fulk I of Anjou(about 870 ·Äì 942), called the Red, was son of viscount Ingelger of Angers and Resinde "Aelinde" D'Amboise, was the first count of Anjou from 898 to 941. He increased the territory of the viscounty of Angers and it became a county around 930. During his reign he was permanently at war with the Normans and the Bretons. He occupied the county of Nantes in 907, but abandoned it to the Bretons in 919. He married Rosalie de Loches. He died around 942 and was succeeded by his son Fulk II.

Foulques I "le Reux" (Fulk the Red, Fulco Rufus)
Viscount of Angers, before 898-931√ó940.
Count of Anjou, 931√ó940 (or 929)-after 941.
Count of Nantes, 907√ó9-914√ó9.
Viscount of Tours, before 905-before 909.
Abbot of Saint-Aubin d'Angers and Saint-Lézin, before 924-after 941.
Foulques (Fulco) first appears as a witness to a charter of count (later king) Eudes, abbot of of Saint Martin de Tours, in April 886 [BEC 30 (1859): 431-3]. He first appears with the title of viscount in a charter of viscount Hardrad of Tours on 29 September 898 [Signum Fulconis vicecomitis, Mabille (1871), xcii-xciii]. In a charter of a certain Archambaldus dated 5 July 905, he appears as viscount of both Angers and Tours [Signum Fulconis Turonorum et Andecavorum vicecomitis, Mabille (1871): xcv], but does not appear to have the latter title for long, for a charter dated 30 October 909 has Tedbaldus signing as viscount of Tours, immediate after "count" Fulco [Signum domni Fulconis Andecavorum comitis; signum Tedbaldi Turonorum vicecomitis, Mabille (1871), xcviii]. As shown by Werner, this use of the comital title by Foulques comes from a brief period when he was count of Nantes, confirmed by the appearance of Foulques as count of Nantes and viscount of Angers in a charter of count (later king) Robert, abbot of Saint-Martin de Tours, dated 31 March 914 [S. Fulconis Namnetens. comitis et Andegavensis vicecomitis, Werner (1958), 287], and by the statement of the Chronicle of Nantes that Foulques ("Fulco Ruffus") had possessed Nantes [Chr. Nantes, 122]. Foulques had apparently obtained the countship of Nantes between 907 (the death of Alain Barbetorte) and 30 October 909, and lost it before 919 [see the detailed discussion in Werner (1958), 265-8, 284-8]. He appears as abbot and viscount in a charter of a certain Fulculf dated 13 August 924 [Signum Fulconi[s] abbatis atque vicecomitis, Cart. S.-Aubin 1: 60], and calls himself count of the Angevins and abbot of Saint-Aubin d'Angers and Saint-Lézin in a charter of 929 [Cart. S.-Aubin 1: 203-4 (see below)]. However, as he was still not signing as count in two charters of Hugues le Grand on 3 May 930 [S. Fulconis vicecomitis, Werner (1958), 284] and 26 March 931 [Signum domni Fulconis, Mabille (1871), ciii], he does not appear to have been recognized as count of Anjou by his Robertian lords until sometime between 931 and 26 December 940, when he appears as count in a charter of Hugues le Grand [Signum Fulconis comitis, Mabille (1871), cv-cviii, erroneously dated 943; see Werner (1958), 286]. Foulques was still living in [13×31] August 941, when he signed a charter along with his son Foulques [Signum domni Fulconis. Signum Fulconis filii ipsius, Mabille (1871), cv]. See Werner (1958), 264-279, and the detailed list of charters mentioning Foulques on pp. 283-6, many of which are printed in full in Mabille (1871).

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Voorouders (en nakomelingen) van Fulk I `the Red' de Anjou


Via Snelzoeken kunt u zoeken op naam, voornaam gevolgd door een achternaam. U typt enkele letters in (minimaal 3) en direct verschijnt er een lijst met persoonsnamen binnen deze publicatie. Hoe meer letters u intypt hoe specifieker de resultaten. Klik op een persoonsnaam om naar de pagina van die persoon te gaan.

  • Of u kleine letters of hoofdletters intypt maak niet uit.
  • Wanneer u niet zeker bent over de voornaam of exacte schrijfwijze dan kunt u een sterretje (*) gebruiken. Voorbeeld: "*ornelis de b*r" vindt zowel "cornelis de boer" als "kornelis de buur".
  • Het is niet mogelijk om tekens anders dan het alfabet in te voeren (dus ook geen diacritische tekens als ö en é).



Visualiseer een andere verwantschap

Bronnen

  1. GenealogieOnline

    http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=sse&db=WebASM-9289&h=31779780&indiv=try
    Record for Fulk I Anjou
  2. GenealogieOnline
  3. Find A Grave. Find A Grave. http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi.
  4. The Millennium File

Aanknopingspunten in andere publicaties

Deze persoon komt ook voor in de publicatie:

Over de familienaam De Anjou

  • Bekijk de informatie die Genealogie Online heeft over de familienaam De Anjou.
  • Bekijk de informatie die Open Archieven heeft over De Anjou.
  • Bekijk in het Wie (onder)zoekt wie? register wie de familienaam De Anjou (onder)zoekt.

Wilt u bij het overnemen van gegevens uit deze stamboom alstublieft een verwijzing naar de herkomst opnemen:
Marvin Loyd Welborn, "Family Tree Welborn", database, Genealogie Online (https://www.genealogieonline.nl/family-tree-welborn/I875.php : benaderd 26 april 2024), "Fulk I `the Red' de Anjou count of Anjou (± 870-± 938)".