maximum test » Hugues III du Maine Comte du Maine (± 960-± 1016)

Persoonlijke gegevens Hugues III du Maine Comte du Maine 


Gezin van Hugues III du Maine Comte du Maine

Hij is getrouwd met Ermengarde de Vermandois.

Zij zijn getrouwd in het jaar 999 te Le Mans,Maine Et Loire,France.


Kind(eren):

  1. Mélisende du Maine  ± 980-± 1064 


Notities over Hugues III du Maine Comte du Maine

Name Prefix: Count
[s2.FTW]

[Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #1241, Date of Import: May 8, 1997]

!COUNT OF MAINE[Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #1241, Date of Import: May 8, 1997]

!COUNT OF MAINE
VI-19 (V-12-1)
1 Hugues III
Comte de Maine
Died 1014 / 1015
Married NN
Children, Generation VII-27
[3142] WSHNGT.ASC file (Geo Washington Ahnentafel) # 69743124 = 17473044
#Générale##Générale#Profession : Comte du Maine.
{geni:about_me} Was involved in Battle over the custody of the castle of Tillières in 1013/14.

James Bulkeley, La Hougue Bie de Hambie: a tradition of Jersey. Volume 2. London: Gilbert & Rivington, Whitaker & Company, 1837. (Google Books)

Notes to Vol. 1 pp. 195-202 "p. 75 (55.) The constable Gislebert Crispin' Based on Roman de Rou, which is interspersed throughout... summary:

* Count Eudes of Chartres married Maud, the sister of Duke Richard II, and received in dowry the seigneuries of Dreux and other domains. When Maud died with no children, Richard tried to retake the city Dreux and castle of Tillières back from Eudes by force.
* He "confided his defences" to Néel de Saint-Sauveur, to Ralph, and to this son Roger de Toesny and de Couches
* Eudes of Chartres allied himself to Valeran de Meulan, '''Hugh Count of Maine''', and a reinforcement of French troops
* Néel commanded the center, defending the main road into the castle; Ralph the right wing, and Roger the left.
* Three divisions of Eudes' troops: (1) the troops of Chartres and Blois led by Eudes, (2) those of France and Maine by '''Count Hugh of Maine''', and (3) those of Meulan by Valeran.
* Néel's column was attacked, but with the aid of Roger's and Ralphs' forces, the Normans routed the Counts of Chartres and Meulan, causing the '''Count of Maine to flee. When his horse died, he disguised himself as a peasant and was able to escape capture.'''

The castle of Tillières, as a gateway to Chartres and France, became "of couble consquence to [Duke] Robert," and he gave command of it to Gilbert Crispin, Lord of Bec-Crispin. Later, King Henry of France, along with a group of disaffected Norman barons, "advanced a powerful army on Dreux" to persuade Duke William to raze the fortress. Crispin, indignant, "increased the garrison of the castle" but "could not overcome the brave resistance of the beseiged, or the virtuous obstinacy of the faithful Gilbert Crispin," who had pledged to turn it over only to the Duke, which he died, and Duke William in turn delivered it to King Henry, who "enveloped it in flames." The castle was later ceded by Henry to William after the Battle of Veraville, who named Gilbert's second son, also named Gilbert, as constable in remembrance of his father's loyalty. This younger Gilbert followed Duke William to the Conquest.

William, Gilbert's eldest son, Lord of Bec-Crispin, along with Robert Count of Eu, commanded a division of Duke William's army on the Battle of Mortimer, for which he was rewarded since his second son Milon, in the Domesday Book (1086) held 88 manors and was Lord of Wallingford in Buckinghamshire (he died s.p.). His older brother William possessed the Norman estates, was faithful to Robert Courtheuse and espoused his son William's cause against Henry I. "Twice beneath William Crispin's arm, at the battle of Bremulle, that monarch fell: the importance of this single combat arrested both armies; till either severely wounded and drenched in gore, fortune at length sided with the king, and the noble Crispin became his prisoner. About the middle of the thirteenth century, William Crispin, fifth of that name, Marshal of France, and who attended St. Louis to the African crusade, became possessed of the great estates of the family of Mortimer and the barony of Varanquebec, to which estate was attached the hereditary title of Constable, by marriage with the young heiress, Jeanne de Mortimer of Normandy. Their son William died in 1330, leaving no male issue; the eldest daughter married William de Melun, Count of Tancarville, and carried to that family Varanquebec and other seignories."
=----------------------------------=
Roger

Hugues I (~929 - 955)

Hugues II (955 - 992)

Hugues III (992 - 1015/16) Foucoin Herbert Bacon

|

Herbert I (1015/6 - 1032-35)

Hugues IV (d. 26/2/1051) Gersent Paule Biote

(married Berthe)

| |

Hertbert II (d. 9/3/1062) Marguerite Foulque Hugues IV
--------------------
See "My Lines"

( http://homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~cousin/html/p334.htm#i14777 )

from Compiler: R. B. Stewart, Evans, GA

( http://homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~cousin/html/index.htm )
--------------------
Was involved in Battle over the custody of the castle of Tillières in 1013/14.

James Bulkeley, La Hougue Bie de Hambie: a tradition of Jersey. Volume 2. London: Gilbert & Rivington, Whitaker & Company, 1837. (Google Books)

Notes to Vol. 1 pp. 195-202 "p. 75 (55.) The constable Gislebert Crispin' Based on Roman de Rou, which is interspersed throughout... summary:

Count Eudes of Chartres married Maud, the sister of Duke Richard II, and received in dowry the seigneuries of Dreux and other domains. When Maud died with no children, Richard tried to retake the city Dreux and castle of Tillières back from Eudes by force.
He "confided his defences" to Néel de Saint-Sauveur, to Ralph, and to this son Roger de Toesny and de Couches
Eudes of Chartres allied himself to Valeran de Meulan, Hugh Count of Maine, and a reinforcement of French troops
Néel commanded the center, defending the main road into the castle; Ralph the right wing, and Roger the left.
Three divisions of Eudes' troops: (1) the troops of Chartres and Blois led by Eudes, (2) those of France and Maine by Count Hugh of Maine, and (3) those of Meulan by Valeran.
Néel's column was attacked, but with the aid of Roger's and Ralphs' forces, the Normans routed the Counts of Chartres and Meulan, causing the Count of Maine to flee. When his horse died, he disguised himself as a peasant and was able to escape capture.
The castle of Tillières, as a gateway to Chartres and France, became "of couble consquence to [Duke] Robert," and he gave command of it to Gilbert Crispin, Lord of Bec-Crispin. Later, King Henry of France, along with a group of disaffected Norman barons, "advanced a powerful army on Dreux" to persuade Duke William to raze the fortress. Crispin, indignant, "increased the garrison of the castle" but "could not overcome the brave resistance of the beseiged, or the virtuous obstinacy of the faithful Gilbert Crispin," who had pledged to turn it over only to the Duke, which he died, and Duke William in turn delivered it to King Henry, who "enveloped it in flames." The castle was later ceded by Henry to William after the Battle of Veraville, who named Gilbert's second son, also named Gilbert, as constable in remembrance of his father's loyalty. This younger Gilbert followed Duke William to the Conquest.

William, Gilbert's eldest son, Lord of Bec-Crispin, along with Robert Count of Eu, commanded a division of Duke William's army on the Battle of Mortimer, for which he was rewarded since his second son Milon, in the Domesday Book (1086) held 88 manors and was Lord of Wallingford in Buckinghamshire (he died s.p.). His older brother William possessed the Norman estates, was faithful to Robert Courtheuse and espoused his son William's cause against Henry I. "Twice beneath William Crispin's arm, at the battle of Bremulle, that monarch fell: the importance of this single combat arrested both armies; till either severely wounded and drenched in gore, fortune at length sided with the king, and the noble Crispin became his prisoner. About the middle of the thirteenth century, William Crispin, fifth of that name, Marshal of France, and who attended St. Louis to the African crusade, became possessed of the great estates of the family of Mortimer and the barony of Varanquebec, to which estate was attached the hereditary title of Constable, by marriage with the young heiress, Jeanne de Mortimer of Normandy. Their son William died in 1330, leaving no male issue; the eldest daughter married William de Melun, Count of Tancarville, and carried to that family Varanquebec and other seignories."

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

Roger

Hugues I (~929 - 955)

Hugues II (955 - 992)

Hugues III (992 - 1015/16) Foucoin Herbert Bacon

|

Herbert I (1015/6 - 1032-35)

Hugues IV (d. 26/2/1051) Gersent Paule Biote

(married Berthe)
| |
Hertbert II (d. 9/3/1062) Marguerite Foulque Hugues IV
-------------------- See "My Lines"

( http://homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~cousin/html/p334.htm#i14777 )

from Compiler: R. B. Stewart, Evans, GA

( http://homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~cousin/html/index.htm )

read more
_P_CCINFO 1-20792

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