Stamboom van Wincoop - Sandkuijl » Boso di Toscana (Tuscia, Tuscany) Margrave (????-> 940)

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Gezin van Boso di Toscana (Tuscia, Tuscany) Margrave

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Voorouders (en nakomelingen) van Boso di Toscana (Tuscia, Tuscany)

Hucbert
± 820-864

Boso di Toscana (Tuscia, Tuscany)
????-> 940


Willa de Bourgogne
± 900-> 936


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    Verwantschap Boso di Toscana (Tuscia, Tuscany) Margrave



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    1. Wikipedia, accessed 22-02-2020), https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boso,_Margrave_of_Tuscany
      Boso, Margrave of Tuscany
      From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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      Boso (Italian: Bosone; died after 940?) was a Burgundian nobleman who spent much of his career in Italy, where he became Margrave of Tuscany about 932. He ruled semi-autonomously and was a benefactor of the churches of his region. He lost his office in 936 and probably returned to Burgundy.


      Contents
      1 Years in Provence
      2 Early years in Italy
      3 Margrave of Tuscany
      4 Later years
      5 References
      Years in Provence
      Boso was the second son of Count Theobald of Arles and Bertha, illegitimate daughter of King Lothair II.[1] His elder brother Hugh was born in 880/1.[1] His family belonged to the highest ranks of the aristocracy of the Carolingian Empire and were related by marriage to the Carolingian dynasty and the Bosonids, the ruling family of Provence.[1]

      After Theobald's death (895), Boso's mother remarried to Adalbert the Rich, then margrave of Tuscany.[1] Boso and Hugh inherited their father's counties. After the Emperor Louis III was blinded by his foes in 905, Hugh assumed the regency in Provence and the county of Arles, while Boso took over the county of Avignon.[1] In 907, Hugh and Boso entered Italy with an army in support of their mother.[a] In 926, after Hugh had become King of Italy, he appointed Boso regent of Provence.[1] In 931 he brought Boso to Italy at the same time as he made his son, Lothair, co-ruler in order to strengthen his position against the powerful margrave Lambert of Tuscany.[1] Lambert was the reputed son of Adalbert and Bertha and half-brother of Hugh and Boso. According to Liutprand of Cremona, the rumours of the time had it that Bertha, unable to conceive, in order to safeguard her second husband's succession, had feigned pregnancy and presented as her own two sons, Lambert and Guy, who were actually the children of others.[1][b]

      Early years in Italy
      In his earliest documented presence in Italy, Boso is found intervening on behalf of the Patriarchate of Aquileia on 17 October 931.[1] The first document recording his rank of "margrave" (marchio) dates to 1 July 932, when he persuaded the king to make a donation to the church of Saint Martin in Lucca.[1]

      According to Liutprand of Cremona, when Hugh forbade Lambert of Tuscany to call himself a half-brother of the king, the margrave challenged Hugh to a judicial duel, which he won. In order to obtain the march of Tuscany for himself, Boso convinced Hugh to arrest Lambert; who was subsequently blinded in prison.[1] A more likely explanation than Liutprand's is that Lambert refused give up his quasi-independence and as a result Tuscany was taken from him.[1][2]

      Margrave of Tuscany
      Few notices from Boso's rule in Tuscany have survived. Most deal with his interventions with the king on behalf of the churches of Lucca and Arezzo.[1] The last reference to Boso as margrave of Tuscany comes from 17 September 936, when he sent representatives to oversee an exchange of property by the diocese of Lucca.[1] Later that year, Hugh removed his brother from the march and placed his own illegitimate son, Hubert, there instead.[1][2]

      Liutprand claims that Boso was arrested on suspicion of plotting against the king at the instigation of his wife, Willa of Burgundy.[3][c] Another possible explanation is that he continued to act as autonomously as Lambert had and Hugh removed him in favour of a more pliant margrave.[1][2] Boso had married his daughter Willa, named for her mother, to Berengar of Ivrea, one of the most powerful margraves in the kingdom. This aristocratic axis may have seemed like a threat to Hugh, precipitating Boso's downfall.[1][4]

      Later years
      In 940 a certain "illustrious count Boso" (inclitus comes Boso) made a donation to the monastery of Saint-Barnard-de-Romans. This is probably the same person as the margrave of Tuscany, since the monastery is known to have been patronised by Hugh and there were family possessions in the region.[1] By his wife, Willa, perhaps a daughter of Rudolph I of Upper Burgundy, Boso left behind four daughters: Richilda, Gisla, Willa and Bertha. This last married first Boso, son of Duke Richard of Burgundy, and second Raymond, the duke of Aquitaine.[1] It was to her that Hugh bequeathed his huge personal wealth and his Provençal possessions.[1][5]

      References
      Notes
      This campaign has been dated to as late as between 917 and 923.
      Hugh does not seem to have questioned the legitimacy of Guy's birth when he married Guy's widow, Marozia.
      Liutprand adds that Willa was exiled to Burgundy as a punishment.
      Citations
      Keller 1971.
      Wickham 1981, p. 178.
      Bouchard 1988, p. 419, accepts Liutprand's account..
      Bouchard 1988, p. 419, suggests that "ill feeling between the brothers was doubtless linked" to this marital alliance..
      Previté-Orton 1917, p. 347.
      Sources
      Bouchard, Constance B. (1988). "The Bosonids or Rising to Power in the Late Carolingian Age". French Historical Studies. 15 (3): 407– 31. doi:10.2307/286367.
      Keller, Hagen (1971). "Bosone di Toscana". Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani. 13. Rome: Istituto dell'Enciclopedia Italiana.
      Previté-Orton, C. W. (1917). "Italy and Provence, 900– 950". The English Historical Review. 32 (127): 335– 47. doi:10.1093/ehr/xxxii.cxxvii.335.
      Wickham, Chris (1981). Early Medieval Italy: Central Power and Local Society, 400– 1000. London: Macmillan.
      Preceded by
      Lambert Margrave of Tuscany
      931– 936 Succeeded by
      Humbert
      Preceded by
      Count of Arles
      934– 936 Succeeded by
      Categories: Margraves of TuscanyHouse of Boso

    Over de familienaam Di Toscana (Tuscia, Tuscany)


    Wilt u bij het overnemen van gegevens uit deze stamboom alstublieft een verwijzing naar de herkomst opnemen:
    Chris van Wincoop, "Stamboom van Wincoop - Sandkuijl", database, Genealogie Online (https://www.genealogieonline.nl/stambooom-van-wincoop-sandkuijl/I4283.php : benaderd 20 juni 2024), "Boso di Toscana (Tuscia, Tuscany) Margrave (????-> 940)".