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Hugh III of Lusignan
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Hugh III (fl. late tenth century), called Albus, was the third lord of Lusignan, probably the son and successor of Hugh II. He confirmed the donation by one of his vassals of the church of Mezeaux to the abbey of Saint-Cyprien and himself granted the abbey the woodland and the public road between Lusignan and Poitiers. He may have been intimate with the comital court of Poitou, for the Duchess Emma, wife of William IV of Aquitaine, imposed a tax on the abbey of Saint-Maixent and gave him the proceeds. His own wife was Arsendis and he was succeeded by his son Hugh Brunus, not the last of that name in the family.
Preceded by:
Hugh II Lord of Lusignan Succeeded by:
Hugh IV
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=I575176049
ID: I575176049
Name: Hugh III SIRE
Given Name: Hugh III
Surname: SIRE
Sex: M
Birth: Abt 0955 in Of, Lusignan, Vienne, France
Change Date: 1 Apr 2003 1 1
Note: Ancestral File Number: 9HM9-2V
Father: Hugh II SIRE b: Abt 0910 in Of, Lusignan, Vienne, France
Marriage 1 Spouse Unknown
Note: _UIDA5EBA1FF8D9D0A4689B60777DB0C988C7216
Children
Hugh IV SIRE b: Abt 0985 in Of, Lusignan, Vienne, France
Sources:
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:
{geni:about_me} Hugh III (fl. late tenth century), called Albus, was the third Lord of Lusignan, probably the son and successor of Hugh II. He confirmed the donation by one of his vassals of the church of Mezeaux to the abbey of Saint-Cyprien and himself granted the abbey the woodland and the public road between Lusignan and Poitiers. He may have been intimate with the comital court of Poitou, for the Duchess Emma, wife of William IV of Aquitaine, imposed a tax on the abbey of Saint-Maixent and gave him the proceeds. His own wife was Arsendis, whom he married in 967, and he was succeeded by his son Hugh Brunus, not the last of that name in the family.
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Hugh III (fl. late tenth century), called Albus, was the third Lord of Lusignan, probably the son and successor of Hugh II. He confirmed the donation by one of his vassals of the church of Mezeaux to the abbey of Saint-Cyprien andhimself granted the abbey the woodland and the public road between Lusignan and Poitiers. He may have been intimate with the comital court of Poitou, for the Duchess Emma, wife of William IV of Aquitaine, imposed a tax on the abbey of Saint-Maixent and gave him the proceeds. His own wife was Arsendis, whom he married in 967, and he was succeeded by his son Hugh Brunus, not the last of that name in the family.
[edit] Sources
Painter, Sidney. "The Lords of Lusignan in the Eleventh and Twelfth Centuries." Speculum, Vol. 32, No. 1. (Jan., 1957), pp 27–47.
Preceded by
Hugh II Lord of Lusignan Succeeded by
Hugh IV
Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugh_III_of_Lusignan"
Categories: House of Lusignan | 10th-century people | 10th-century French people
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Hugh III (fl. late tenth century), called Albus, was the third Lord of Lusignan, probably the son and successor of Hugh II. He confirmed the donation by one of his vassals of the church of Mezeaux to the abbey of Saint-Cyprien andhimself granted the abbey the woodland and the public road between Lusignan and Poitiers. He may have been intimate with the comital court of Poitou, for the Duchess Emma, wife of William IV of Aquitaine, imposed a tax on the abbey of Saint-Maixent and gave him the proceeds. His own wife was Arsendis, whom he married in 967, and he was succeeded by his son Hugh Brunus, not the last of that name in the family.
--------------------
Hugh III (fl. late tenth century), called Albus, was the third Lord of Lusignan, probably the son and successor of Hugh II. He confirmed the donation by one of his vassals of the church of Mezeaux to the abbey of Saint-Cyprien andhimself granted the abbey the woodland and the public road between Lusignan and Poitiers. He may have been intimate with the comital court of Poitou, for the Duchess Emma, wife of William IV of Aquitaine, imposed a tax on the abbey of Saint-Maixent and gave him the proceeds. His own wife was Arsendis, whom he married in 967, and he was succeeded by his son Hugh Brunus, not the last of that name in the family.
Sources[edit]
Painter, Sidney. "The Lords of Lusignan in the Eleventh and Twelfth Centuries." Speculum, Vol. 32, No. 1. (Jan., 1957), pp 27–47.
p027797-001939
http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=image&guid=8fdf8f27-9773-4545-b9ea-812e09db3251&tid=10145763&pid=-317194583
p027797-001939
http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=image&guid=8fdf8f27-9773-4545-b9ea-812e09db3251&tid=10145763&pid=-317194583
_P_CCINFO 1-20792
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