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Gillis Berthout
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Gillis Berthout
Chamberlain of Flanders
Coat of arms
Blason ville be Keerbergen.svg
Argent, three pales gules
Detail
Titles and styles
Lord of Leffinge, Lichtervelde, and Oudenburg (by marriage)
Born 1175/80
Died 1241
Noble family
Berthout
Married
Catherina of Bailleul
Issue
Gillis, Louis, Elizabeth, Oda
Father Walter II Berthout
Mother Goda of Loon, daughter of Louis I, Count of Loon
Religion Catholic
Allegiance Crusader
Years of service 1218–19
Battles/wars
Fifth Crusade: Siege of Damietta (1218–19)
Gillis Berthout (1175/80–1241), was a nobleman who fought on the Fifth Crusade, a hereditary chamberlain of the County of Flanders, and a Teutonic Knight. He was the founder of Rozendaal Abbey.
Life[edit]
Gillis was the son of Walter II Berthout and Goda of Loon, daughter of Louis I, Count of Loon. The Berthout family held lands in Mechelen, and in the margraviate of Antwerp. Around 1205 he married the Flemish noble widow Catherina of Bailleul, daughter of Gerard, viscount of Oudenburg. They had two sons, Gillis II and Louis, and at least two daughters, Elizabeth and Oda. In 1227 he founded Rozendaal Abbey for his daughters. On behalf of his wife and step-children, Gillis from 1206 held the hereditary chamberlaincy of Flanders and lordships of Leffinge, Lichtervelde, and Oudenburg.
From 1207 he served the interests of John, King of England, receiving regular payments from him and attending upon his court. He may have fought in the battle of Bouvines. In 1219 he joined the Fifth Crusade and took part in the Siege of Damietta. He was back in Flanders in 1221, and in 1229 joined the Teutonic Order and turned over his step-children's patrimony to the Teutonic Knights.[1]
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