Van der Feen/Mendels/Rowe/Hesketh Family Tree » Hugo Archchancellor of the Empire l'Abbé de Saint-Quentin; de Lobbes; de Saint-Bertin de Noaille (802-844)

Données personnelles Hugo Archchancellor of the Empire l'Abbé de Saint-Quentin; de Lobbes; de Saint-Bertin de Noaille 


Famille de Hugo Archchancellor of the Empire l'Abbé de Saint-Quentin; de Lobbes; de Saint-Bertin de Noaille

Il a/avait une relation avec Regina of Auxerre de la Franks.


Enfant(s):



Notes par Hugo Archchancellor of the Empire l'Abbé de Saint-Quentin; de Lobbes; de Saint-Bertin de Noaille

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Hugh, son of Charlemagne & Regina
Please see Charlemagne Project for Source Details

By Regina, Charlemagne had:

1.Drogo (801–855), Bishop of Metz from 823 and abbot of Luxeuil Abbey[Dreux (17 Jun 801-drowned Himeriacum, Bourgogne 8 Dec 855, bur Metz, église abbatiale de Saint-Arnoul). Einhard names "Drogonem et Hugum" as sons of King Charles by his concubine "Reginam"[161]. The Annales Weissemburgenses record the birth "802 aut 803 15 Kal Iul" of Drogo[162]. He and his brother Hugues, and their half-brother Thierry, were brought up in the palace of their half-brother Emperor Louis I after their father died, but after the revolt of Bernard King of Italy in 818 they were forcibly tonsured and "put under free custody into monasteries"[163]. Abbé de Luxeuil 820. Emperor Louis installed "Druagoni fratri suo" as Bishop of Metz in 823[164]. The Annales Fuldenses record that "Druogonem archicapellum et Adalbertum comitem" were sent to the east bank of the Rhine in 840[165]. He became Vicar of the Pope in France in Jun 844. He died after falling into the River Oignon in which he was fishing[166]. A list of bishops of Metz records "domnus Drogo archiepiscopus et sacri palate summus capellanus, filius Karoli imperatoris" as 40th bishop, holding the position for 32 years, 5 months and 7 days, his death "VI Id Dec in Burgundia, prædio sancti Petri Mimeriaco" and his burial in "urbem Medimmatricorum…in ecclesia beati Iohannis apostoli"[167]. [http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/CAROLINGIANS.htm#_Toc240955192'''

2.Hugh (802–844, archchancellor of the Empire "l´Abbé" ([802/06]-killed in battle Angoulême 14 Jun 844, bur Abbaye de Charroux). Einhard names "Drogonem et Hugum" as sons of King Charles by his concubine "Reginam"[168]. He is named "Hugo venerabilis filius Karoli regis magni" in the Cartulaire of Saint-Bertin[169]. He and his brother Drogo, and their half-brother Thierry, were brought up in the palace of their half-brother Emperor Louis I after their father died, but after the revolt of Bernard King of Italy in 818 they were forcibly tonsured and "put under free custody into monasteries"[170]. Monk at Charroux 818. Abbé de Saint-Quentin 822/23, Abbé de Lobbes. Abbé de Saint-Bertin 836[171]. Abbé de Noaillé. Arch-chancellor of Emperor Louis I 834-840. The Vita Hludowici Imperatoris records that "Hugonem fratrem suum sed et Adalgarium comitem" visited the emperor [in 836][172]. He joined Charles "le Chauve" in Sep 841 after the battle of Fontenoy, becoming his Arch-chaplain[173]. The Annales Fuldenses record that "Hugo abbas, patruus Karoli et Rihboto abbas, Rhaban quoque signifer" were killed "844 VII Id Jun" in the battle in which "Pippini duces" defeated the army of Charles II " le Chauve" King of the Franks[174]. [http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/CAROLINGIANS.htm#_Toc240955192'''

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia:

Hugh (802–844) was the illegitimate son of Charlemagne and his concubine Regina, with whom he had one other son: Bishop Drogo of Metz (801–855).

Hugh was the abbot of several abbacies: Saint-Quentin (822–823), Lobbes (836), and Saint-Bertin (836). In 834, he was made archchancellor of the Holy Roman Empire by Louis the Pious, his half-brother.

He is sometimes confused with Hugh the Abbot, resulting in the erroneous claim that he had a daughter, Petronilla, who married Tertullus of Anjou, the semi-legendary father of Ingelger, first count of Anjou. The late accounts of the Angevin origins actually make Petronilla a kinswoman of Hugh the Abbot, not of Charlemagne's son.

See Wikipedia...
From http://www.rpi.edu/~holmes/Hobbies/Genealogy/ps05/ps05_203.htm:

W.H.Turton, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" (Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Co., 1968), p. 6, states that Hugues l'Abbi (d. 844) is father of Tertullus d'Anjou (instead of Conrad of Paris), and that Hughes lAbbi is a son of Charlemagne and Regine. Encyclopaedia Britannica, 1956 Ed., 1:976: "...towards 861, Charles the Bald entrusted [the county of Anjou] to Robert the Strong, but he unfortunately met with his death in 866.... Hugh the Abbot succeeded him in the countship of Anjou as in most of his other duties, and on his death (886) it passed to Odo, the eldest son of Robert the Strong, who, on his accession to the throne of France (888), probably handed it over to his brother Robert. In any case, during the last years of the 9th century, in Anjou as elsewhere the power was delegated to a viscount, Fulk the Red, son of a certain Ingelgerius."

From the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy page on Carolingian Nobility:

http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/FRANKISH%20NOBILITY.htm#PetronillaMTertullus

HUGUES . m ---. The name of Hugues's wife is not known. Hugues & his wife had two children:

1. Hugues (succeeded as Duke of Burgundy)

2. Petronilla (married Tertullus, OUR ANCESTORS)

* Born: 794, Aachen, Rhineland, Prussia * Died: 7 Jun 844, Utrecht, Netherlands
http://www.celtic-casimir.com/webtree/3/3022.htm

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    zelah strick, "Van der Feen/Mendels/Rowe/Hesketh Family Tree", base de données, Généalogie Online (https://www.genealogieonline.nl/van-der-feen-mendels-rowe-hesketh-family-tree/P5643.php : consultée 21 juin 2024), "Hugo Archchancellor of the Empire l'Abbé de Saint-Quentin; de Lobbes; de Saint-Bertin de Noaille (802-844)".