maximum test » Guigues II 'Pinguis' "Comte Guigues VI d'Albon" d'Albon II (± 1025-1106)

Persoonlijke gegevens Guigues II 'Pinguis' "Comte Guigues VI d'Albon" d'Albon II 

  • Roepnaam is Comte Guigues VI d'Albon.
  • Hij is geboren rond 1025Albon
    Rhone Alpes France.
  • Beroepen:
    • Greve.
    • Greve.
    • Comte, de Graisivaudan, d'Albon.
    • Comte, d'Albon, de Graisivaudan.
    • Comte, d'Albon, de Graisivaudan, Moine.
  • Hij is overleden op 19 januari 1106 in Albon, Italy.
  • Hij is begraven in Prieuré de Saint Robert, Saint-Egrève, Isère, Dauphiné, France.
  • Een kind van Guigues d'Albon en Adelaide (Alix) de Beaujeu
  • Deze gegevens zijn voor het laatst bijgewerkt op 28 juni 2019.

Gezin van Guigues II 'Pinguis' "Comte Guigues VI d'Albon" d'Albon II

Hij is getrouwd met Pétronille d'Argental.

Zij zijn getrouwd op 27 april 1050.


Kind(eren):

  1. Guigues d'Albon  ± 1068-1125 


Notities over Guigues II 'Pinguis' "Comte Guigues VI d'Albon" d'Albon II

GIVN Guigue Ii
SURN Albon
NSFX [Count of]
AFN 9HM2-ZK
DATE 9 SEP 2000
TIME 13:15:37
GIVN Guigue Ii
SURN Albon
NSFX [Count of]
AFN 9HM2-ZK
DATE 9 SEP 2000
TIME 13:15:37
Name Suffix: Count Of Albon
Name Suffix: Count Of Albon
Vigo (Guigo), som senere ble kalt ?den Gamle?, var den første greve av Vienne (Albon)
i 1034.
I Frankrike kalles han Guigo I, mens tyskerne kaller ham Guigo IV. På tilsvarende måte
angis hans etterfølgere med samme navn.
Da Rudolf, den siste greve av Vienne, døde uten barn ca. 1010, forlenet kongen av
Burgund sin nye hustru, Ermengarde, med grevskapene Vienne og Sermorens som medgift.
Hun beholdt grevskapet Sermorens og overga grevskapet Vienne til Brochard, erkebiskop av
Vienne. Dagen før sin død ca. 1030, delte Brochard dette grevskap i to deler. Humbert II,
greve av Savoya og erkebiskopens svoger, fikk Nord-Vienne. Han var økonomisk
administrator av Sermorenslandene. Vigo, som var økonomisk administrator av Grenobles
bispesete og svoger til Humberts sønn, fikk det meriodale Vienne. Da byen Vienne ikke
inngikk i forleningen, tok Vigo titelen greve av Albon.
Vigo nevnes i dokument fra ca. 1034 for St. Chaffre, hvor også hans hustru, Adelaide,
og hans sønner, Humbert og Vigo II, nevnes. Blandt underskriverne er biskop Mallenus av
Grenoble.
Vigos og hans sønns tilnavn fremgår av et dokument av Cartulars av Oulx, hvori det
heter ?ego Guigo comes, qui nomine vocor senex et filius mens Guigo Pinguis?.
I et dokument fra ca. 1050 kaller han seg ?gratianopolitanae provincial princeps?.
I 1073 var han meget syk, og ble senere munk av Cluny.
Hans dødsdag angis slik: ?X.Kal.Mai Guigo, comes qui cognominatus est Vetus?.
Vigo (Guiges Pinguis) ?den Tykke? var greve av Albon 1063 - 1079.
Han var den første som antok titelen greve av Albon etter et gods han eide i Vienne.
Da han var den annen greve av Albon, kalles han Vigo II.
Han innstiftet klosteret St. Robert-de-Cornillon i 1070, hvor han innsatte teologer i
?Guds Stol?. Han tilbrakte antagelig sine siste år i dette klosteret.
Vigo var annen gang gift med Agnes av Barcelona.
[Wikipedia, "Counts of Albon and Dauphins of Viennois", retrieved 15 Dec 07]
The Counts of Albon (Comtes d'Albon) were minor French nobles in south-eastern France, in the Rhone Alps region.

Under Guigues IV, Count of Albon, who was nicknamed le Dauphin or the Dolphin on his coat of arms, they took a new hereditary title, Dauphin of Viennois (Dauphin de Viennois), named for the region around Vienne, where they ruled. The collective lands ruled by the Dauphins of Viennois became known as the Dauphiny (le Dauphiné).

The titles and lands, many of which were within the legal boundaries of the Holy Roman Empire rather than of the kingdom of France, were all sold to King Philip VI of France in 1349, on condition that the heir to the French crown always be named Dauphin, and be personal holder of the lands and titles. By condition of the Emperor, the Dauphiny could never be united to Franc. When the King of France had no son, he would personally rule the Dauphiny separately, as Dauphin.

Lords of Chateau d'Albon

House of Albon
- Guigues I of Albon the Old (c. 1000-1070), Count in Oisans, Grésivaudan and Briançonnais, Lord of Chateau d'Albon, ruled until 1070
- Guigues II of Albon the Fat (c.1020-1079), Count in Grésivaudan and Briançonnais, Lord of Chateau d'Albon, ruled 1070-1079, son of

Counts of Albon

House of Albon
- Guigues III of Albon the Count (c.1050-1133), first Count of Albon (the southern part of the ancient County of Vienne, divided between himself and the Count of Savoy), ruled 1079-1133, son of
- Guigues IV of Albon, le Dauphin (c. 1095-1142), Count of Albon, ruled 1133-1142, son of,

Counts of Albon and Dauphins of Viennois
- Robert V, Count of Auvergne married Marquise d'Albon, a daughter of Guigues IV. Their descendants adopted the title of Dauphin of Auverge.

House of Albon
- Guigues V of Albon (c. 1120-1162), Count of Albon and Grenoble, Dauphin of Viennois, ruled 1142-1162, son of,
- Béatrice of Albon, (1161-1228), Dauphine of Viennois, Countess of Albon, Grenoble, Oisans et Briançon, ruled 1162-1228, married Hugh III of Burgundy.

[Wikipedia, "Guy I of Albon", retrieved 15 Dec 07]
Guigues Ier of Albon, known as Veteris ("the Old"), born c. 1000, died in 1070 at Cluny, was Count in Oisans, Grésivaudan and in Briançonnais. He was the son of Guigues d'Albon and Gotelana de Clérieux.

The "official" history written by George de Manteyer has caused him to be known as the first Dauphin, despite this name only appearing a century later. In fact, Guiges was an ambitious minor noble, who extended his domain between the Rhone and the Alps: in 1016, he is called count in a charter concerning possessions in Moirans. Thereafter, he is found to be a landowner in Champsaur (1027), in Oisans with the title of count (1035), Grésivaudan (towards 1050), Briançonnais (towards 1053) and in the valley of Oulx (1070).

From 1035, he is always dignified as "count". We do not know how Guigues took possession of these lands, but growing power already enables him to impose family members as bishop, and to plunder and alienate church goods. Guy's uncle de Guigues was bishop of Grenoble, and succeeds Isarn. The episcopate will pass then to a cousin, Mallen. His brother is bishop of Valence and the archbishop's palace at Vienne, attached to the most prestigious church of the province, is in the hands of a cousin by marriage.

Throughout eleventh century, it is always the elder son, Humbert, who is dedicated to becoming bishop; the second son, always Guigues (Guy), is intended to inherit the lay goods. Mallen undoubtedly systematized the transfer of the goods of church towards his cousin Guigues. The other lay lords do not seem able to oppose the expansionism.

At the end of his life, Guigues retired to Burgundy at Cluny where he dies in 1070. He had married Adelaide, who seems to be of the family of the counts de Turin, and had had a son, Guigues II (1025 - 1079), who succeeded him.
GIVN Guigue Ii
SURN Albon
NSFX [Count of]
AFN 9HM2-ZK
DATE 9 SEP 2000
TIME 13:15:37
GIVN Guigue I
SURN Albon
NSFX [Count of]
AFN 9HML-G6
DATE 9 SEP 2000
TIME 13:15:38
{geni:about_me} http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guigues_II_d'Albon

http://genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00048722&tree=LEO

# Name: Guigues D'ALBON
# Given Name: Guigues
# Surname: D'Albon
# Sex: M
# Birth: Abt 1025 in Albon, Rhone Alpes, France
# Death: 22 Apr 1075

Father: Guigues D'ALBON b: 995 in Albon, Rhone Alpes, France
Mother: Adelaide Of BEAUJEU b: Abt 1001 in France

Marriage 1 Petronell DE ANNONAY b: Abt 1025 in Annonay, Haute Savoie, Rhone Alpes, France

* Married: 27 Apr 1050 in 1st Wife

Children

1. Guigues D'ALBON b: Abt 1058 in Albon, Rhone Alpes, France

Marriage 2 Ida De FOREZ b: Abt 1062 in Le Forez, Provence, France

* Married: Aft 1089 in 2ND Husband 2ND Wife

Children

1. Guy I Count Of Lyon FOREZ b: Abt 1092 in Le Forez, Provence, France
=--------------------=
Although numbered differently by Charles Crowley, this is the same person:
http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/BURGUNDY%20Kingdom.htm#_Toc475984176

GUIGUES [IV] "Pinguis", son of GUIGUES [d'Albon] & his wife first wife Adelsindis --- ([1025/30]-19 Jan [1106], bur Priory of Saint-Robert). A charter dated to [1100] relates details of a dispute between the bishop and counts of Albon which names "Guigo Vetus, pater Guigonis Crassus…Guigoni comiti, filio Guigonis Crassis"[3395]. "Malleni episcopi Gratianopolitani et Wigonis comitis et uxoris eius Adelsendis, filiorumque suorum Umberti et Wigonis" signed a charter dated 26 Aug 1035 relating to the donation of four churches in Vico to the abbey of Saint-Chaffre[3396]. A charter dated 29 Apr 1050 records the donation by "Guigoni…maiori, qui postea effectus est monachus…et Adelai comitissæ, et alii Guigoni, filio illius Guigonis…et uxori eius Petronillæ" to Saint-Pierre de Vienne[3397]. "…Guigo comes et filius eius Guigo…" witnessed the charter dated 27 Jan 1052 which records an agreement between the archbishop of Vienne and the canons of the church of Romans[3398]. "Guigo comes qui nomine vocor senex atque filius meus Guigo pinguis" donated property to Oulx by charter dated 1063[3399]. Comte d'Albon. "Wigo Albionis comes" named "fratres mei Guigonis cognomento Raimundi, Richardi, Armannique" in his donation to Cluny dated 1079[3400]. "Vuigo comes" donated property "in parrochia Heroneii" to Domène by undated charter[3401]. "Wigo…comes" confirmed a donation to Cluny by charter dated [1100][3402]. "Guigonis comitis, filii Guigonis Veteris…" subscribed the charter dated 22 Jan 1105 relating to a donation to the cathedral of Grenoble[3403]. Chorier’s Histoire de Dauphiné states that an epitaph in the priory of Saint-Robert records the death 19 Jan of "Guigo Grassus Dalphinus primus et monachus" but comments that it was erected long after his death[3404].

m (before 29 Apr 1050) PETRONILLE, daughter of --- ([1039/41]-9 Sep, before 1106, bur Priory of Domene). A charter dated 29 Apr 1050 records the donation by "Guigoni…maiori, qui postea effectus est monachus…et Adelai comitissæ, et alii Guigoni, filio illius Guigonis…et uxori eius Petronillæ" to Saint-Pierre de Vienne[3405]. According to Europäische Stammtafeln[3406], the first wife of Guigues [IV] was Adelaide de Savoie, daughter of Oddon Comte de Chablais, Marchese di Susa & his wife Adelaida Marchesa di Susa ([1052/53]-[Schloß Twiel] early 1079, bur St Blasius). Another table in Europäische Stammtafeln[3407] shows the first wife of Guigues Comte d'Albon as "Adelais (von Turin)" and their son Guigues [V] Comte d'Albon as co-heir of Adelaida Marchesa di Susa in 1091. The basis for this hypothesis has not been found, but it is unlikely to be correct considering Adelaide's estimated birth date. On the other hand, it is likely that the first wife of Guigues [IV] was a descendant of Adelaida Marchesa di Susa, assuming that it is correct that his son Guigues [V] was one of her co-heirs in 1091. If that is correct, it is possible that his wife was the daughter of Adelaida’s second marriage to Enrico di Monferrato, and therefore born in [1039/41]. If Guigues [IV]’s wife was Petronille named in the charter quoted above, she would have still been a child at the time of the marriage. The necrology of the priory of Saint-Robert records the death "V Id Sep" of "la comtesse Pétronille, épouse de Guigues le Gras et mère de Guigues le comte"[3408]. Her burial place is confirmed by the charter dated 1106 under which "dominus Vuigo comes et uxor eius Regina quæ fuit de Anglia" confirmed a donation to Domène which states that "matris suæ" was buried in the monastery[3409].
Guigues [IV] & his wife had [three] children:

1. GUIGUES [V] ([1050/70]-21 Dec 1125). A charter dated to [1100] relates details of a dispute between the bishop and counts of Albon which names "Guigo Vetus, pater Guigonis Crassus…Guigoni comiti, filio Guigonis Crassis"[3410]. In 1091, he was co-heir to Adelaida Marchesa di Susa. "Guigo comes, filius Guigonis Crassi" donated property to the cathedral of Grenoble by charter dated 1099[3411]. Comte d'Albon. "Dominus Vuigo comes et uxor eius Regina quæ fuit de Anglia" confirmed a donation to Domène by charter dated 1106 which states that "matris suæ" was buried in the monastery[3412]. "Guigo comes Albionensis" is recorded as present in a charter dated 2 Aug 1107 which relates to a dispute between "fratres Guidonem Viennensium et Hugonem Gratianopolitanum episcopos" relating to property "in pago Salmoracensi"[3413]. An undated charter notes concessions made by "domini Guigonis comitis" to Domène, witnessed by "uxor domini comitis domina Regina et soror eiusdem comitis domina Adelaida…"[3414]. "Dominus Vuigo comes" donated property "cabannaria…in mandamento castri Vorappiæ" to Domène, in the presence of "dominæ Reginæ uxoris domini Vuigonis comitis", by charter dated 1107[3415]. Comte Guigues and his wife "Regina nominate Maheldis" donated property to Chalais abbey, with the approval of "leurs fils Guigues Delfinus et Humbert", by charter dated 31 Oct 1110[3416]. Comte Guigues and his wife "Matelda" donated property to the Hospital of Jerusalem at Gap by charter dated 30 Apr 1112[3417]. A charter dated to [1122] records a donation by "Guigo comes et Matildis uxor eius" of property "in parochia Sancti Saturnini juxta aquam Velciam" to the abbey of Bonnevaux, later confirmed by "Guigo delphinus et uxor eius et Humbertus Podiensis episcopus frater eius", the confirmation witnessed by "Matildis mater eius"[3418]. "Guigo comes filius Petronille" donated property to Oulx, for the soul of "uxorisque mee Matildis", by charter dated to [1101/32], witnessed by "Matiltis regina uxor eius et filius eius Humbertus Aniciensi ecclesie electus…"[3419]. The necrology of the priory of Saint-Robert records the death 21 Dec 1125 of "Guigues le Comte, qui construisit le monastère de Saint-Robert de Cornillon"[3420]. m REGINA [Matilda], daughter of --- [from England] (-[1146/47]). "Dominus Vuigo comes et uxor eius Regina quæ fuit de Anglia" confirmed a donation to Domène by charter dated 1106 which states that "matris suæ" was buried in the monastery[3421]. An undated charter notes concessions made by "domini Guigonis comitis" to Domène, witnessed by "uxor domini comitis domina Regina et soror eiusdem comitis domina Adelaida…"[3422]. "Dominus Vuigo comes" donated property "cabannaria…in mandamento castri Vorappiæ" to Domène, in the presence of "dominæ Reginæ uxoris domini Vuigonis comitis", by charter dated 1107[3423]. "Vuigo comes et uxor eius Mahiol" granted commitments to the monks of Chalais by charter dated to [1108/10][3424]. Comte Guigues and his wife "Regina nominate Maheldis" donated property to Chalais abbey, with the approval of "leurs fils Guigues Delfinus et Humbert", by charter dated 31 Oct 1110[3425]. Comte Guigues and his wife "Matelda" donated property to the Hospital of Jerusalem at Gap by charter dated 30 Apr 1112[3426]. "Guigo comes et Matildis uxor eius" donated property "in parochial Sancti Saturnini juxta aquam Velciam" naming "Humbertus Podiensis episcopus frater eius" dated [1122][3427]. "Guigo comes filius Petronille" donated property to Oulx, for the soul of "uxorisque mee Matildis", by charter dated to [1101/32], witnessed by "Matiltis regina uxor eius et filius eius Humbertus Aniciensi ecclesie electus…"[3428]. A charter dated to [1122] records a donation by "Guigo comes et Matildis uxor eius" of property "in parochia Sancti Saturnini juxta aquam Velciam" to the abbey of Bonnevaux, later confirmed by "Guigo delphinus et uxor eius et Humbertus Podiensis episcopus frater eius", the confirmation witnessed by "Matildis mater eius"[3429]. "La reine Mathilde" donated property to the abbey of Chalais in 1146, confirmed by charter dated 1147 by "Humbert alors évêque du Puy, depuis archévêque de Vienne…le comte Guigues, fils de Guigues dauphin et sa mere"[3430].

2. ADELAIDE . An undated charter notes concessions made by "domini Guigonis comitis" to Domène, witnessed by "uxor domini comitis domina Regina et soror eiusdem comitis domina Adelaida…"[3445].

3. [daughter . It is possible that the mother of Amédée was the daughter of Guigues named Adelaide, shown above, but the primary source which confirms that this is correct has not yet been identified.] m SOFFREDUS [Siboud] d'Hauterive, son of ---. One child:
>a) AMEDEE (-after 1122). Monk at Bonnevaux 1119. Chorier’s Histoire de Dauphiné states that "un ancient auteur" (whom he does not name or cite) records that "Guigo comes Albinensis avunculus eius" visited "Amadeus" at Bonnevaux in 1122[3446].
=------------------------------=
http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guigues_II_d%27Albon
Guigues II d'Albon
Un article de Wikipédia, l'encyclopédie libre.
Aller à : Navigation, rechercher
Page d'aide sur l'homonymie Pour les articles homonymes, voir Guigues.

Guigues II d'Albon, dit Pinguis (le gras), né vers 1025, mort en 1079, fut comte en Grésivaudan et en Briançonnais de 1070 à 1079.

Il était fils de Guigues Ier d'Albon et d'Agnès de Barcelone.

Surnommé Pinguis du fait de son embonpoint, ce comte se soucie plus d'asseoir son autorité sur son domaine et de l'agrandir que de partir guerroyer au loin. Sa première épouse, issue d’une branche des puissants comtes de Valentinois, est la sœur de l’évêque de Grenoble. En 1070, il épouse en deuxième noce la fille du comte de Barcelone, qui est aussi apparentée à la famille normande de Hauteville qui règne en Pouilles et Calabre. Ces différentes alliances matrimoniales étendent ainsi la renommée des Guigues.

Il est possessionné au sud de Vienne, autour de Grenoble (Cornillon, Uriol, Varces ainsi qu'à Briançon). A cette époque, les terres des Guigues n’ont pas d’unité géographique mais leur nombre, comparable à celui des comtes de Savoie ou de Valentinois, est déjà beaucoup plus important que celui de n’importe quel autre seigneur de la région.

Bien que n'ayant pas laissé de traces dans l'histoire, ce personnage a eu le mérite d'affermir la dynastie.

Il avait épousé le 27 avril 1050 Pétronille de Royans, fille d'Arnaud de Royans et de Pétronille de Grenoble, et avait eu :

* Guigues III († 1033), comte d'Albon
* Adélaïde, mariée à Soffredus d'Hauterive

En secondes noces, il se remarie le 10 mai 1070 avec Inès de Barcelone, fille de Raymond-Bérenger Ier, comte de Barcelone et d'Almodis de la Marche, et avait eu un fils:

* Guigues-Raymond d'Albon, marié en 1091 à Ide de Forez, héritière du comté de Forez

Sources [modifier]

* Partie biographique, avec l'autorisation de l'Atelier des Dauphins
* partie généalogique

Précédé par Guigues II d'Albon Suivi par
Guigues Ier comte en Grésivaudan Guigues III
Dernière modification de cette page le 13 octobre 2009 à 13:05.
--------------------
http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guigues_II_d'Albon

Guigues II d'Albon

Guigues II d'Albon, dit Pinguis (le gras), né vers 1025, mort en 1079, fut comte en Grésivaudan et en Briançonnais de 1070 à 1079.

Il était fils de Guigues Ier d'Albon.

Surnommé Pinguis du fait de son embonpoint, ce comte se soucie plus d'asseoir son autorité sur son domaine et de l'agrandir que de partir guerroyer au loin. Sa première épouse, issue d’une branche des puissants comtes de Valentinois, est la sœur de l’évêque de Grenoble. En 1070, il épouse en deuxième noce la fille du comte de Barcelone, qui est aussi apparentée à la famille normande de Hauteville qui règne en Pouilles et Calabre. Ces différentes alliances matrimoniales étendent ainsi la renommée des Guigues.

Il est possessionné au sud de Vienne, autour de Grenoble (Cornillon, Uriol, Varces ainsi qu'à Briançon). A cette époque, les terres des Guigues n’ont pas d’unité géographique mais leur nombre, comparable à celui des comtes de Savoie ou de Valentinois, est déjà beaucoup plus important que celui de n’importe quel autre seigneur de la région.

Bien que n'ayant pas laissé de traces dans l'histoire, ce personnage a eu le mérite d'affermir la dynastie.

Il avait épousé le 27 avril 1050 Pétronille de Royans, fille d'Arnaud de Royans et de Pétronille de Grenoble, et avait eu :

* Guigues III († 1033), comte d'Albon
* Adélaïde, mariée à Soffredus d'Hauterive

En secondes noces, il se remarie le 10 mai 1070 avec Inès de Barcelone, fille de Raymond-Bérenger Ier, comte de Barcelone et d'Almodis de la Marche, et avait eu un fils:

* Guigues-Raymond d'Albon, marié en 1091 à Ide de Forez, héritière du comté de Forez

--------------------
A Monk a Cluny.

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

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

Guigues I of Albon

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This article may require copy editing for grammar. You can assist by editing it. (January 2009)

This article may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia's quality standards. Please improve this article if you can. (June 2007)

Guigues I Levieux, Vetus Veteris ("the Old") known as "dolphin", born c. 1000, died in 1070 at Cluny, was Count in Oisans, Grésivaudan and in Briançonnais. He was the son of Guigues d'Albon and Gotelana de Clérieux.

The “official” history written by George de Manteyer has caused him to be known as the first Dauphin, despite this name only appearing a century later. In fact, Guiges was an ambitious minor noble, who extended his domain between the Rhone and the Alps: in 1016, he is called count in a charter concerning possessions in Moirans. Thereafter, he is found to be a landowner in Champsaur (1027), in Oisans with the title of count (1035), Grésivaudan (towards 1050), Briançonnais (towards 1053) and in the valley of Oulx (1070).

From 1035, he was always dignified as "count". It is not known how Guigues took possession of these lands, but growing power already enabled him to impose family members as bishop, and to plunder and alienate church goods. Guy's uncle de Guigues was bishop of Grenoble, and succeeded Isarn. The episcopate then passed to a cousin, Mallen. His brother was bishop of Valence and the archbishop's palace at Vienne, attached to the most prestigious church of the province, was in the hands of a cousin by marriage.

Throughout eleventh century, it was always the elder son, Humbert, who was dedicated to becoming bishop; the second son, always Guigues (Guy), was intended to inherit the lay goods. Mallen undoubtedly systematized the transfer of the goods of church towards his cousin Guigues. The other lay lords did not seem able to oppose the expansionism.

At the end of his life, Guigues retired to Burgundy at Cluny where he died in 1070. He had married Adelaide, who seems to be of the family of the counts de Turin, and had had a son, Guigues II (1025 - 1079), who succeeded him.

[edit] Sources

* partie to him biographical: http://www.atelierdesdauphins.com/histo/guigues1.htm, with the authorization of the genealogical Workshop of the Dolphins *partie: http://genealogy.euweb.cz/french/albon1.html

Preceded by

beginning of the county comte in Grésivaudan

? Succeeded by

Guigues II

This page was last modified on 21 August 2009 at 22:09.
--------------------
# Name: Guigues D'ALBON

# Given Name: Guigues

# Surname: D'Albon

# Sex: M

# Birth: 995 in Albon, Rhone Alpes, France

# Death: 22 Apr 1063 in As A Monk At Cluny, France

# Title: (Count Albon & Grenoble)

Father: Guiges D'ALBON b: Abt 970 in Albon, Rhone Alpes, France

Mother: Gotelana DE CLERIEU b: Abt 971 in Clerieu, France

Marriage 1 Adelaide Of BEAUJEU b: Abt 1001 in France

Children

1. Adelaide D'ALBON b: Abt 1018 in France

2. Guigues D'ALBON b: Abt 1025 in Albon, Rhone Alpes, France
--------------------
Guigues Ier est le neveu de l'évêque de Valence, père d'un évêque de Grenoble. Ses liens de parenté expliquent pourquoi il fut en 1029 l'un des deux bénéficiaires de l'inféodation du Viennois qui fut l'acte de naissance du Dauphiné.

Fut le premier qui posséda quelques terres aux environs de Grenoble vers 1040. Il donna ce qu'il possédait dans la vallée de Sézane aux chanoines d'Oulx en Dauphiné en l'an 1053. Il fut revêtu de l'habit religieux à Cluny par Saint-Hugues en l'an 1075 & y fut enterré suivant la Chronique de l'Ordre de Cluny & la Vie de Saint-Hugues, abbé de Cluny, écrite par Hildebert, évêque du Mans.
852677976. Grev Guigo I (VII) den Gamle GUIGOSON av Vienne(19183) died on 10 May 107. (19184) He was a Greve in 1034 in Vienne. (19185) Han var den første greve i Vienne He was living in 1073.(19186) Han kalles Guigue VI. Det riktige er å kalle ham G.I. av Viennois eller G. VIII av Vion.
Da Rudolf, den siste greve av Vienne, var død uten barn i 1009/11, forlenet kongen av Burgund sin nye hustru Ermengarde med grevskapene Vienne og Sermorens som medgift. Hun beholdt grevskapet Sermorens og overgav grevskapet Vienne til Brochard, erkebiskop av Vienne. Dagen før sin død (sept 1029-okt 1030) delte Brochard dette grevskap i to deler. Nord-Vienne fikk Humbert II,. greva av Savoyen, erkebiskkoppens svoger og økonomiske administrator av Sermorenslandene, men det meriodale Viennois gigg til Guigo I (VII), som var økonomisk administrator av Grenobles bispesete og svoger av sønn til Humbert II av Savoyen. Da nyen Vinne ikke var innbefattet i denne forlening, antok Guigo ikke titelen greve over Vienne, men greve av Albon. Han nevnes i et dok. fra ca 1034 for St. Chaffre, hvori også hans hustru Adelaide, hans sønner Humbert og Viggo II (VIII) nevnes. Blandt underskriverne er biskop Mallenus av Grenoble. Han og hans sønns tilnavn framgår av et dok. av Cartulars av Oulx, hvori det heter "ego Guigo commes, qui nomine vocor senex et filius menus Guigo Pinguis". I et dokument av ca 1050 kaller han seg "gratianopolitanae provincial ppronceps". 1073 var han meget syk, og senere er han blitt munk av Cluny. Hans dødsdag angis slik: "X:Kal.Mai Guigo, comes qui cognominatus est Vetus".
I Frankrike kalles han Guigo I, mens tyskerne kaller ham Guigo IV. På tilsvarende måte angis hans efterfølgere av samme navn. Da kong Rudolf III døde, delte Guigo grevskapet Grenoble med biskop Mallenus som var sønn av hans farfars søster. He was married to Adelaide N.NSDTR.
867789484. Grev Guigo II den Tykke GUIGOSON av Vienne (20643) was living in 1034. (20644) He died about 1080.(20645) He was a Greve in Vienne.(20646) Han var den første som antok titelen greve av Albon etter et gods han eiet i Vienne. Han innstiftet i 1070 klostret St. Robert-de-Cornillon, hvor han innsatte teologer i "Guds stol" og sannsynligvis tilbragte sine siste år. Da han var den annen greve av Vienne, angis han her som Guigo II. Tyskerne kaller ham Viggo "V".

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Voorouders (en nakomelingen) van Guigues II 'Pinguis' d'Albon

Guigues de Vion
± 970-1009
Guigues d'Albon
± 995-1075
Guigues d'Albon

Guigues II 'Pinguis' d'Albon
± 1025-1106

Guigues II 'Pinguis' d'Albon

1050
Guigues d'Albon
± 1068-1125
Guigues d'Albon

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