Stamboom Snelder - Versteegh » Fulk III of Anjou (± 972-1040)

Persoonlijke gegevens Fulk III of Anjou 

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Gezin van Fulk III of Anjou

Hij heeft/had een relatie met Hildegarde of Sundgau.


Kind(eren):

  1. Ermengarde of Anjou  1018-1076 


Notities over Fulk III of Anjou

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fulk_III,_Count_of_Anjou

 

Fulk III, the Black (970-1040) (French: Foulque Nerra) was an early Count of Anjou celebrated as one of the first great builders of medieval castles. He constructed an estimated 100 of them, along with abbeys, across the Loire Valley in what is now France. He fought successive wars with neighbors in BrittanyBloisPoitou and Aquitaine and traveled four times to Jerusalem on pilgrimage during the course of his life. He had two wives and three children.

Fulk was a natural horseman and a fearsome warrior, with a keen sense of military strategy that saw him get the better of most of his opponents. He was allied with the goals and aims of the Capetians against the dissipated Carolingians of his era. With his county seat at Angers, Fulk’s bitter enemy was Eudes II of Blois, his neighbor 128 km east along the Loire River, at Tours. The two men traded towns, followers and insults throughout their lives.

Fulk finished his first castle at Langeais, 104 km east of Angers, on the banks of the Loire, in 994.[1] Like many of his constructions, it began as a wooden tower, and was eventually replaced with a stone structure, fortified with exterior walls, and equipped with a thick-walled tower called a donjon in French (source of the English dungeon, which however implies a cellar, rather than a tower). He built it in the territory of Eudes I, Count of Blois, and they fought a battle over it in 994. But Eudes I died of a sudden illness, and his son and successor, Eudes II, did not manage to evict him.

Fulk continued building more towers in a slow encirclement of Tours: Montbazon, Montrésor, Mirebeau, MontrichardLoches, and even the tower of Montboyau, erected just across the Loire from Tours in 1016. He also fortified the castles at AngersAmboise, Chateau-Gontier, Chinon, Mayenne and Semblançay, among many others. “The construction of castles for the purpose of extending a ruler’s power was part of Fulk Nerra’s strategy,” wrote Peter Fraser Purton, in A History of Medieval Siege, c. 450-1220.

Fulk was also a devout Christian, and built, enlarged or endowed several abbeys and monasteries, such as the Abbey of Beaulieu-les-Loches, Saint-Florent-le-Vieil, Saint-Aubin, and a convent, Notre Dame de la Charité at Ronceray in Angers. Although he never learned to write, he endowed a school with revenue to provide poor students with an education. Fulk also undertook four pilgrimages to Jerusalem.

He was the son of Geoffrey I of Anjou, also known as Geoffrey Grisegonelle, and Adélaide of Vermandois.[2] He had an older sister: Hermengarde (b. 960), who married Conan of Brittany and a younger brother Geoffrey.[2] A half-brother, Maurice, was born in 980.[3]

Fulk married Elisabeth de Vendôme (~979-999), daughter of Count Bouchard of Vendome,[4] and they had a daughter:

  • Adèle.,[2] married Bodon, son of Landry, count of Nevers. Their eldest son, Bouchard, inherited Vendôme.

Elisabeth’s death was recounted in the Chronicles of Saint-Florent: Elisabeth occupied the citadel at Anger with some supporter and while under siege from Fulk, she suffered a fall from a great height, and then was burnt at the stake for adultery.[5]

Fulk married Hildegarde de Sundgau, whose family was from Lorraine, around December 1005.[6] They had two children:

Fulk Nerra’s first victory was in June 992 at Battle of Conquereuil, where he managed to defeat Conan I, duke of Brittany. Conan’s territorial ambitions had been quashed by Geoffroy Grisgonelle in 980, and seven years later, he planned an ambush on Angers while Fulk was at the crowning of Robert the Pious. Fulk and his men foiled the ambush, killing Conan’s son, Alain, in the process. In 992 Fulk laid siege to Conan’s castle at Nantes, but he slipped away to Conquereuil. Conan was killed in the battle, and Fulk set up as governor a regent, as the succeeding count was a child.

While Fulk and Eudes II fought many skirmishes over territory and alliances, their biggest battle occurred in July 1016 at Battle of Pontlevoy. Eudes was marching a large troop of 10,000 men southward toward Fulk’s tower at Montboyau when Fulk and a much smaller group attacked him from behind. Fulk’s men were routed, and retreated, and Eudes, thinking the battle won, went for a swim in the Cher River. Reinforcements arrived to help Fulk, and they returned and slaughtered Eudes' men, who were then at rest. Several thousand were reported killed.[9]

Fulk also undertook four pilgrimages to Jerusalem, seeking forgiveness for his sins in at least two of the journeys. Fulk Nerra travelled to Jerusalem for his first pilgrimage in 1003, a few years after his wife Elisabeth’s death but at a moment of calm along the route. The journey was across the Alps at the Grand Bernard Pass in today’s Switzerland, over land to Bari in the southern Italian peninsula (a stop in Rome was usually made), by ship to the Holy Land. The travel took as long as six months, through deeply dangerous territory.[10]

Fulk made a second pilgrimage in 1008, obliged to do so by the king as punishment after Fulk ordered the murder of an enemy. For his third and fourth trips, Fulk determined he had a moral obligation to protect pilgrims in the years following the desecration of Jerusalem by the Mad Caliph, so had his armed entourage provide security against robbers, murderers and enslavers along the route. His third trip was in 1035, with Robert I, Duke of Normandy, and then a fourth pilgrimage was made in 1038. He died in Metz in 1040 on his return from that trip, and was buried in the chapel of his monastery at Beaulieu.

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    Verwantschap Fulk III of Anjou



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    1. WikiTree, via https://www.myheritage.nl/research/colle...
      Count Foulques d'Anjou (geboren Anjou)Geslacht: ManGeboorte: Ongeveer 972 - Anjou, Isere, Rhone-Alpes, FranceHuwelijk: 1000Overlijden: 21 jun 1040 - Metz, Moselle, Lorraine, FranceVader: Geoffroi d'Anjou (geboren Anjou)Moeder: Adelaide d'Anjou, de Chalons (geboren Unknown)Echtgenote(n/s): Elisabeth Anjou (geboren Vendôme)Hildegarde Anjou (geboren Metz)Kinderen: Adele Vendôme (geboren Anjou)Gerberge Anjou (geboren d'Anjou)Ermengarde de Poitou (geboren Anjou)Geoffrey Martel d'Anjou (geboren Anjou)Ermengarde Taillebois (geboren de Anjou)Broers/zusters: Dutchess Ermengarde Gerberga de Bretagne (geboren Anjou)Gerberga Angoulême (geboren Anjou)Maurice AnjouGeoffrey d'Anjou (geboren Anjou)
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    Over de familienaam Of Anjou

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    Wilt u bij het overnemen van gegevens uit deze stamboom alstublieft een verwijzing naar de herkomst opnemen:
    Roel Snelder, "Stamboom Snelder - Versteegh", database, Genealogie Online (https://www.genealogieonline.nl/stamboom-snelder-versteegh/I505645.php : benaderd 16 mei 2024), "Fulk III of Anjou (± 972-1040)".