{geni:job_title} Comte, de Bar-le-Duc, de Mousson, de Brie, de Verdun
{geni:job_title} Comte, de Dampierre, de Toul
Hij is getrouwd met Gisèle de Vaudémont.
Zij zijn getrouwd rond 1108 TO ABT 1134 te Vaudemont, France.
Kind(eren):
GIVN Renaud I Count
SURN von Bar-Le-Duc
REPO @REPO108@
TITL World Family Tree Vol. 9, Ed. 1
AUTH Bräerbund Software, Inc.
PUBL Release date: March 31, 1997
ABBR World Family Tree Vol. 9, Ed. 1
Customer pedigree.
PAGE Tree #0120
REPO @REPO108@
TITL World Family Tree Vol. 9, Ed. 1
AUTH Bräerbund Software, Inc.
PUBL Release date: March 31, 1997
ABBR World Family Tree Vol. 9, Ed. 1
Customer pedigree.
PAGE Tree #0120
1998 1998
DATE 9 SEP 2000
TIME 13:16:00
GIVN Renaud I Count
SURN von Bar-Le-Duc
REPO @REPO108@
TITL World Family Tree Vol. 9, Ed. 1
AUTH Bräerbund Software, Inc.
PUBL Release date: March 31, 1997
ABBR World Family Tree Vol. 9, Ed. 1
Customer pedigree.
PAGE Tree #0120
REPO @REPO108@
TITL World Family Tree Vol. 9, Ed. 1
AUTH Bräerbund Software, Inc.
PUBL Release date: March 31, 1997
ABBR World Family Tree Vol. 9, Ed. 1
Customer pedigree.
PAGE Tree #0120
1998 1998
DATE 9 SEP 2000
TIME 13:16:00
Name Prefix:Count Name Suffix: I, Of Bar-Le-Duc
Name Prefix:Count Name Suffix: I, Of Bar-Le-Duc
Count of Bar-le-Duc and Mousson; opponent of the Emperor Henry V; Crusader; went with Louis VII on Second Crusade, 1147; founded the Prioryof Moncon and the monastery at Rieval. [Roderick W. Stuart, Royalty for Commoners, 3rd ed., Genealogical Publishing Company, Baltimore MD, 1998]
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Barrois, ancient county, then duchy, on the western frontier of Lorraine, a territory of the Holy Roman Empire, of which Barrois was long afiefdom or holding before being absorbed piecemeal by France. The centre and capital was the town that later came to be known as Bar-le-Duc, in the modern French département of Meuse.
Because of its location between France and Germany, the dukedom was for many years of uncertain loyalty. In 951 the German emperor Otto I gave the countship of Barrois (i.e., the district of Bar), at the timea fief of the duchy of Lorraine, to Frederick of Ardenne. When Frederick's great-great-grandson Renaud (Reynald) inherited the countship, he founded the House of Bar. The counts of Bar increased their wealth and became the most powerful vassals of the dukes of Lorraine, with whom, however, they carried on endless struggles, usually fighting in the French ranks, while the dukes adhered to the Germans. Count Henry III made an alliance with Edward I of England and the German king Adolfof Nassau against France. Defeated in battle with the French, Henry III was forced in 1301 to do homage to the French king Philip IV for that part of the Barrois west of the Meuse River, which was claimed as being in the mouvance, or feudal dependency, of France and which from then on was called the "Barrois mouvant."
In 1354 Robert of Bar took the title of duke of Bar. In 1420 René of Anjou, who had inherited the dukedom, married Isabella, heiress of theDuke of Lorraine, so that on the death of the latter (1431) the Barrois and Lorraine were united. From then on the Barrois shared the fate of Lorraine, which was annexed to the French crown in 1766 on the death of Stanislaw Leszczynski, the former king of Poland, to whom it hadbeen granted in 1738. [Encyclopaedia Britannica CD '97]
Count of Bar-le-Duc and Mousson; opponent of the Emperor Henry V; Crusader; went with Louis VII on Second Crusade, 1147; founded the Prioryof Moncon and the monastery at Rieval. [Roderick W. Stuart, Royalty for Commoners, 3rd ed., Genealogical Publishing Company, Baltimore MD, 1998]
----------
Barrois, ancient county, then duchy, on the western frontier of Lorraine, a territory of the Holy Roman Empire, of which Barrois was long afiefdom or holding before being absorbed piecemeal by France. The centre and capital was the town that later came to be known as Bar-le-Duc, in the modern French département of Meuse.
Because of its location between France and Germany, the dukedom was for many years of uncertain loyalty. In 951 the German emperor Otto I gave the countship of Barrois (i.e., the district of Bar), at the timea fief of the duchy of Lorraine, to Frederick of Ardenne. When Frederick's great-great-grandson Renaud (Reynald) inherited the countship, he founded the House of Bar. The counts of Bar increased their wealth and became the most powerful vassals of the dukes of Lorraine, with whom, however, they carried on endless struggles, usually fighting in the French ranks, while the dukes adhered to the Germans. Count Henry III made an alliance with Edward I of England and the German king Adolfof Nassau against France. Defeated in battle with the French, Henry III was forced in 1301 to do homage to the French king Philip IV for that part of the Barrois west of the Meuse River, which was claimed as being in the mouvance, or feudal dependency, of France and which from then on was called the "Barrois mouvant."
In 1354 Robert of Bar took the title of duke of Bar. In 1420 René of Anjou, who had inherited the dukedom, married Isabella, heiress of theDuke of Lorraine, so that on the death of the latter (1431) the Barrois and Lorraine were united. From then on the Barrois shared the fate of Lorraine, which was annexed to the French crown in 1766 on the death of Stanislaw Leszczynski, the former king of Poland, to whom it hadbeen granted in 1738. [Encyclopaedia Britannica CD '97]
Count of Bar-le-Duc and Mousson; opponent of the Emperor Henry V; Crusader; went with Louis VII on Second Crusade, 1147; founded the Prioryof Moncon and the monastery at Rieval. [Roderick W. Stuart, Royalty for Commoners, 3rd ed., Genealogical Publishing Company, Baltimore MD, 1998]
----------
Barrois, ancient county, then duchy, on the western frontier of Lorraine, a territory of the Holy Roman Empire, of which Barrois was long afiefdom or holding before being absorbed piecemeal by France. The centre and capital was the town that later came to be known as Bar-le-Duc, in the modern French département of Meuse.
Because of its location between France and Germany, the dukedom was for many years of uncertain loyalty. In 951 the German emperor Otto I gave the countship of Barrois (i.e., the district of Bar), at the timea fief of the duchy of Lorraine, to Frederick of Ardenne. When Frederick's great-great-grandson Renaud (Reynald) inherited the countship, he founded the House of Bar. The counts of Bar increased their wealth and became the most powerful vassals of the dukes of Lorraine, with whom, however, they carried on endless struggles, usually fighting in the French ranks, while the dukes adhered to the Germans. Count Henry III made an alliance with Edward I of England and the German king Adolfof Nassau against France. Defeated in battle with the French, Henry III was forced in 1301 to do homage to the French king Philip IV for that part of the Barrois west of the Meuse River, which was claimed as being in the mouvance, or feudal dependency, of France and which from then on was called the "Barrois mouvant."
In 1354 Robert of Bar took the title of duke of Bar. In 1420 René of Anjou, who had inherited the dukedom, married Isabella, heiress of theDuke of Lorraine, so that on the death of the latter (1431) the Barrois and Lorraine were united. From then on the Barrois shared the fate of Lorraine, which was annexed to the French crown in 1766 on the death of Stanislaw Leszczynski, the former king of Poland, to whom it hadbeen granted in 1738. [Encyclopaedia Britannica CD '97]
GIVN Renaud I Count
SURN von Bar-Le-Duc
REPO @REPO108@
TITL World Family Tree Vol. 9, Ed. 1
AUTH Bräerbund Software, Inc.
PUBL Release date: March 31, 1997
ABBR World Family Tree Vol. 9, Ed. 1
Customer pedigree.
PAGE Tree #0120
REPO @REPO108@
TITL World Family Tree Vol. 9, Ed. 1
AUTH Bräerbund Software, Inc.
PUBL Release date: March 31, 1997
ABBR World Family Tree Vol. 9, Ed. 1
Customer pedigree.
PAGE Tree #0120
1998 1998
DATE 9 SEP 2000
TIME 13:16:00
#Générale#Fit le voyage en Terre Sainte en 1147 après avoir été libéré par l'Empereur Henri V qui l'avait fait prisonnier et avait voulu le pendre en 1113.
#Générale#1ʻ mari
s:ds06.29
note couple : s:ds07.5 ; DamSethi
note couple : s:ds01.223 ; Auréjac
{geni:occupation} Comte, de Bar-le-Duc, de Mousson, de Brie, de Verdun, aka Reinauld I `Eenoog' van BAR-MOUSSON; Count de MOUSSON; `le Borgne'; `the One-eyed'
{geni:about_me} http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reginald_I,_Count_of_Bar
=Reginald I, Count of Bar=
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Reginald I of Bar)
Reginald I (also called "the One-eyed", Reinald I, Renaud I) was Count of Bar (1105–1149). Barrois, during the Middle Ages, was the territory of the counts and dukes of Bar, in the eastern part of present-day France, bordering Lorraine.
He was the son of Thierry de Mousson and Ermentrude of Bourgogne, the daughter of William I the Great, Count of Burgundy.
Reginald was one of the leaders of the Second Crusade in 1145. He was drowned somewhere in the Mediterranean Sea on his return voyage to Europe on or before 10 March 1149.
Reginald I of Bar succeeded Theodoric II of Bar (r. 1092–1105) and was succeeded by Reginald II of Bar (r. 1150–1170) in 1150.
[edit]Source
Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America Before 1700 by Frederick Lewis Weis, Line 144-24.
Foundation for Medieval Genealogy on Renaud (Reginald) de Bar
--------------------
http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/BAR.htm#ThierryIdied1105B
=RENAUD de Mousson ([1075/77]-1149).=
*Father: THIERRY de Mousson, son of LOUIS Comte de Mousson & his wife Sophie of Upper Lotharingia ([1045]-1/2 Jan 1103, bur Autun Cathedral). m ([1065])
*Mother: ERMENTRUDE de Bourgogne heiress of Montbéliard, daughter of GUILLAUME I "le Grand" Comte Palatin de Bourgogne & his wife Etiennette --- ([1050/55][74]-1106 or after, bur Autun Cathedral).
*Siblings:
# FREDERIC de Mousson ([1074/78]-19 Jul [1160], bur Oelenberg).
# THIERRY de Mousson ([1076/78]-[mid-Jan] 1163).
# LOUIS de Mousson ([1077/79]-murdered 1102).
# ETIENNE de Mousson (-Metz 29 Dec 1162, bur Metz Cathedral).
# GUILLAUME de Mousson (-before 8 Mar 1105).
# HUGUES de Mousson (-before 8 Mar 1105).
# GUNTHILDE de Mousson (-21 Feb 1131).
# AGNES de Mousson (-after 1140).
# MATHILDE de Mousson .
http://our-royal-titled-noble-and-commoner-ancestors.com/p177.htm#i5306
'''Renaud I, Count of Bar-le-Duc, Mousson, Brie, & Verdun'''1
*M, b. circa 1090, d. 10 April 1149
*Father '''Thibaud III, Count of Bar''' b. c 1045, d. bt 2 Feb 1102 - 1105
*Mother '''Ermentrude of Burgundy''' b. c 1060, d. a 8 Mar 1105
*Charts Descendants of Charlemagne
* Renaud I, Count of Bar-le-Duc, Mousson, Brie, & Verdun Founded the Priory of Moncon and the monastery at Rieval.
*He His 1st wife's name is '''unknown'''. He was born circa 1090 at of Bar-le-Duc, Meuse, France.
*He married '''Gisela of Vaudemont''', daughter of Gerhard I, Count Vaudemont and Heilwig of Egisheim, in 1120.
*Renaud I, Count of Bar-le-Duc, Mousson, Brie, & Verdun died on 10 April 1149.
*Family 1 '''Gisela of Vaudemont''' b. c 1090, d. b 26 Dec 1127
*Children
# ◦Agnes von Bar+1 d. a 1185
# ◦Stephanie von Bar+1 d. b 12 Mar 1178
# ◦Dietrich von Bar1 d. 8 Aug 1171
# ◦Clemence von Bar-le-Duc+1 d. a 20 Jan 1183
# ◦Hugo, Graf von Bar1 b. 1120, d. 22 Sep 1141
# ◦Renaud II, Count of Bar, Mousson, & Brie, Seigneur de Ligny+1 b. c 1125, d. 25 Nov 1170
# ◦Mathilde von Bar-le-Duc+1,2 b. c 1127
*Family 2
*Child
# ◦(Mr.) von Bar1 b. 1113, d. 1120
*Citations
# [S2] Detlev Schwennicke, Europaische Stammtafeln, New Series, Vol. I/2, Tafel 227.
# [S2] Detlev Schwennicke, Europaische Stammtafeln, New Series, Vol. XXVI, Tafel 95.
"GENEAL MAG" V.15 #2 P.53-63 & V.21 #3 P.187-8
Ancestral File Number:9QVT-9H
Ancestral File Number:9QVT-9H
Reinald de Mousson | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
± 1134 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Gisèle de Vaudémont |
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