lunes, 31 de enero de 2022

Arboleda Pombo Julio ★ Ref: AP-1817 |•••► #COLOMBIA 🏆 🇨🇴 #Genealogía #Genealogy


 is your 10th cousin 11 times remove de: Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo →Julio Arboleda Pombo, 45º Presidente Titular de la República de Colombia is your 10th cousin 11 times removed


____________________________________________________________________________



<---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->

 (Linea Materna)

<---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->

Julio Arboleda Pombo, 45º Presidente Titular de la República de Colombia is your 10th cousin 11 times removed.of→ Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo→  Morella Álamo Borges

your mother → Belén Borges Ustáriz

her mother → Belén de Jesús Ustáriz Lecuna

her mother → Miguel María Ramón de Jesus Uztáriz y Monserrate

her father → María de Guía de Jesús de Monserrate é Ibarra

his mother → Teniente Coronel Manuel José de Monserrate y Urbina

her father → Antonieta Felicita Javiera Ignacia de Urbina y Hurtado de Mendoza

his mother → Isabel Manuela Josefa Hurtado de Mendoza y Rojas Manrique

her mother → Juana de Rojas Manrique de Mendoza

her mother → Constanza de Mendoza Mate de Luna

her mother → Juan Fernández de Mendoza Y Mathé de Luna

her brother → Fernán Yáñez de Mendoza

his son → Juan Fernández de Mendoza

his son → Emilia de Mendoza

his daughter → Paula Sánchez Troncones

her daughter → Fernán Sánchez, I Señor de Barcarrota

her son → Garcí Sánchez de Badajoz, II Señor de Barcarrota

his son → Beatríz Sánchez de Badajoz Melo, señora de la Lapa, Carrascal y Bejaranas

his daughter → Mencía Suárez de Figueroa

her daughter → Mencia de Manjarrés

her daughter → Francisco Vásquez de Silva, I Señor de la Manchada

her son → Luis de Silva y Lobo, II Señor de la Manchada

his son → Gonzalo de Silva y Ulloa, 24 de Jerez de los Caballeros

his son → Arias de Silva Saavedra, Capitan

his son → Jacinto Silva Saavedra

his son → Antonia de Silva Saavedra y Quintero Principe

his daughter → Cristóbal de Mosquera y Figueroa y Silva

her son → Ignacia de Mosquera Figueroa y Prieto de Tobar

his daughter → Juana Francisca Arrachea y Mosquera

her daughter → Julián Francisco María de Arboleda y Arrachea

her son → José Rafael Arboleda y Arroyo

his son → Julio Arboleda Pombo, 45.º Presidente Titular de la República de Colombia

his sonConsistency CheckShow short path | Share this path


Julio Arboleda Pombo, 45.º Presidente Titular de la República de Colombia MP

Gender: Male

Birth: June 06, 1817

Timbiquí, Cauca, Colombia

Death: November 13, 1862 (45)

Sierra de Berruecos, Narino, Colombia

Immediate Family:

Son of José Rafael Arboleda y Arroyo and Matilde Josefa de Pombo y O'Donnell

Husband of Panchita Cortes and Sofía Mosquera Hurtado

Father of Enrique Arboleda Cortes; Rafael Arboleda Mosquera; Beatriz Arboleda Mosquera; Julián Arboleda Mosquera; Daniel Arboleda Mosquera and 6 others

Brother of Sergio Arboleda Pombo


Marriage: 12 01 1839 Popayan

Added by: Jaime Quintero Serpa on August 31, 2008

Managed by: Alba Susan Arboleda and 7 others

Curated by: Gustavo Latorre (c)

 68 Matches 

 0  1   67 

Research this Person

 Contact Profile Managers

 View Tree

 Edit Profile

Overview

Media (3)

Timeline

Discussions

Sources

Revisions

DNA

Aboutedit | history

http://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Julio_Arboleda_Pombo


Julio Arboleda Pombo (Timbiquí, Cauca, 9 de junio de 1817 - Sierra de Berruecos, Nariño, 13 de noviembre de 1862) fue un abogado, orador, poeta, militar, periodista, político, diplomático, parlamentario, académico, dramaturgo y estadista colombiano, elegido Presidente de la Confederación Granadina (actuales Repúblicas de Colombia y Panamá) en 1861.


Julio Arboleda Pombo Julio Arboleda Pombo Coat of arms of New Granada.svg Presidente de la Confederación Granadina 10 de junio de 1861-18 de julio de 1861 Predecesor Bartolomé Calvo Sucesor Tomás Cipriano de Mosquera Coat of arms of New Granada.svg Designado A La Presidencia De Nueva Granada 1857-1859 Predecesor Tomás Cipriano de Mosquera Sucesor Pedro Fernández Madrid Datos personales Nacimiento 9 de junio de 1817, Timbiquí, Cauca, Colombia Fallecimiento 13 de noviembre de 1862 (45 años) Sierra de Berruecos, Nariño, Colombia Partido Partido Conservador Colombiano Cónyuge Sofía Mosquera y Hurtado Profesión abogado, militar Ocupación Poeta y periodista Alma máter Universidad del Cauca


Julio Arboleda Pombo (Timbiquí, Cauca, 9 de junio de 1817 - Sierra de Berruecos, Nariño, 13 de noviembre de 1862) fue un abogado, orador, poeta, militar, periodista, político, diplomático, parlamentario, académico, dramaturgo y estadista colombiano, elegido Presidente de la Confederación Granadina (actuales Repúblicas de Colombia y Panamá) en 1861.1


Índice


1 Origen y circunstancias de su nacimiento

2 Vida militar

3 Escritor y periodista

4 Poeta

5 Vida familiar

6 Polémica por esclavismo

7 Elecciones presidenciales y muerte

8 In Memoriam

9 Notas

10 Bibliografía

Origen y circunstancias de su nacimiento


Nació en la localidad de Timbiquí, departamento del Cauca, el 9 de junio de 1817, del matrimonio de José Rafael Arboleda Arroyo y Matilde Pombo O'Donnell. Su padre, acaudalado aristócrata de Popayán, había huido hacia las extensas propiedades mineras que poseían en el Pacífico caucano con su esposa. Allí nació Julio, el primogénito de dicha unión. El segundo hijo del matrimonio Arboleda Pombo fue Sergio, quien nació en Popayán. Los Arboleda de origen español proceden de un condestable francés que pasó a la lucha contra los moros y participó en la batalla de las Navas de Tolosa y sus descendientes en la batalla del Salado, por cuyos hechos quedan rememorados en su escudo de armas que fue solicitado por su descendiente don Jacinto de Arboleda y Ortíz en Madrid en 1647.


«Yo nací en un desierto, en medio de las selvas incultas que orlan el mar Pacífico», decía Arboleda de su propio nacimiento. Se preciaba de ser sobrino de Miguel de Pombo, «cuya sangre derramada en la plaza de Bogotá fecundó el árbol de la libertad». Era primo suyo Francisco de Ulloa, Francisco José de Caldas era tío bisabuelo suyo y D. Enrique José O'Donnell, Conde de La Bisbal, era su tío abuelo. Por sangre y por tradición le venían a Arboleda los atributos excelsos de la inteligencia y ejemplos envidiables de sus mayores.2


Sus primeros conocimientos los adquirió en su casa en Popayán, donde se instruyó al amparo de su abuela materna Beatriz O'Donnell y Anethan, española de origen irlandés, y de su preceptor, Manuel María Luna. Los padres de Arboleda se esmeraron en brindarle una educación muy selecta y a los 11 años lo enviaron a Londres y a Oxford donde siguó estudios bajo un preceptor irlandés e hizo primeras publicaciones en periódicos británicos. Tras culminar sus estudios en Europa, regresa a Popayán en 1836 y estudia por dos años Jurisprudencia en la Universidad del Cauca sin culminarlos. Vida militar


Al estallar la guerra civil de 1840, tomó parte activa en defensa del gobierno. Se enlistó en las filas del ejército, donde alcanzó el rango de General, llegando a desempeñarse como Jefe de la VI División. Distinguióse en la guerra civil de 1860-1862 contra Tomás Cipriano de Mosquera, como su mayor enemigo, contra el cual libró importantes batallas. En 1862 derrotó al Presidente de Ecuador, Gabriel García Moreno, en la Batalla de Tulcán. En dicha batalla fue decisivo el desempeño de sus dos coroneles pastusos, José Antonio Eraso y José Francisco Zarama, quienes tomaron preso a García Moreno, acción por la cual Arboleda los ascendió a generales. Esta victoria cerró su última batalla en la vida: conocedor de los planes de Arboleda de regresar al Norte de Colombia por la vía de Berruecos, el General José Francisco Zarama hizo todo lo posible para evitar que su amigo corriera ese innecesario riesgo, atravesando el mismo sector en el cual había sido asesinado el Mariscal Antonio José de Sucre 30 años atrás, pero don Julio no oyó sus reiterados consejos ".3 Escritor y periodista


Su faceta de escritor, poeta y periodista se vio afectada en numerosas ocasiones por la agitada vida política de Colombia y por las luchas fratricidas que caracterizaron los enfrentamientos políticos del país durante el siglo XIX. Antes de tomar las armas, Arboleda había iniciado su incursión en el mundo de las letras con la creación del periódico El Independiente, que fundó durante su época de universitario en Popayán.


En 1842 publicó El Patriota y en 1843 El Payanés. Acompañó a su tío Lino de Pombo y a Florentino González en la redacción de El Siglo. Encabezó la oposición al presidente José Hilario López con El Misóforo. Durante su estadía en Lima también estuvo dedicado al periodismo, a través de la redacción de El intérprete del pueblo. Poeta


Arboleda pertenece a la generación de poetas del romanticismo literario, que cantaron al amor y a la naturaleza, en contraposición al racionalismo imperante pocos años antes.


Marcelino Menéndez y Pelayo describe a Arboleda de la siguiente manera: "Cuando regresó de Inglaterra a su tierra natal competían en él las dotes del scholar con las del gentleman, pero nunca pudo ser el cultivo de las letras su ocupación principal, salvo en el período relativamente pacífico de 1842 a 1850, en que vivió en sus haciendas de Popayán. Así es que de su obra literaria apenas tenemos más que reliquias. Sus poesías sueltas son casi todas de amor o de política, impregnadas las unas de una suavísima ternura, de una como devoción petrarquesca y espiritualista; rebosando las otras férvidas indignaciones, entusiasmo bélico, odio y execración a toda tiranía. Pero la gran reputación de Arboleda no descansa tanto en sus versos líricos cuanto en los fragmentos de su poema Gonzalo de Oyón que, incompleto y todo, es el más notable ensayo de la poesía americana en la narración épica." Vida familiar


Como era común entre las élites de su época, en las que predominaba la endogamia, Arboleda contrajo matrimonio con su parienta Sofía Mosquera y Hurtado, con quien tuvo 10 hijos: Rafael, casado con Paulina Cheyne Fajardo; Beatriz, casada con Gabriel Vengoechea; Julián, fallecido en Alemania a los 20 años de edad; Gonzalo, casado con Mercedes Ospina Camacho; Daniel (gemelo del anterior), casado con Emilia Umaña; Pedro Pablo, quien murió célibe en Nueva York; Sofía, casada con el maestro Alberto Urdaneta; Julio, casado con Manuelita Sanz de Santamaría y Valenzuela; Cecilia, casada con el Presidente Jorge Holguín Mallarino; y Hernando, fallecido en Bogotá a los 22 años de edad.


El historiador payanés Gustavo Arboleda Restrepo, habla de un hijo por fuera del matrimonio: El General de la Guerra de los Mil Días, Henrique Arboleda Cortés. Polémica por esclavismo


Una faceta que genera aguda controversia respecto de la figura de Arboleda es su papel en el seno de la sociedad esclavista de Popayán. Al enterarse de la inminencia de la entrada en vigor de la ley por la cual se decretaría la libertad de los esclavos en Colombia en 1852, Arboleda viaja presurosamente al Perú para vender los esclavos de su propiedad y así salvar la cuantiosa inversión realizada por su familia en ellos. Esta acción le significó fuertes cuestionamientos y ha empañado su figura hacia la posteridad, más aún cuando su propio tío abuelo D. Antonio de Arboleda y Arrachea, había sido uno de los firmantes de la primera ley de manumisión de esclavos en Antioquia en 1814, siendo gobernante don Juan del Corral. Elecciones presidenciales y muerte


Triunfó en las elecciones presidenciales para el período 1861-1865, para reemplazar a Mariano Ospina Rodríguez, pero por no haberse reunido el Congreso de 1861 tuvo que asumir la jefatura de Estado el procurador Bartolomé Calvo. Por ley, era atribución del Congreso escrutar las elecciones, proclamar al presidente electo y darle posesión el 1 de abril de 1861. Sin embargo, durante el cautiverio del procurador Calvo en Cartagena, Arboleda es nombrado nuevo procurador y en calidad de tal asume como Presidente de la Confederación Granadina.


Cuando regresaba del sur del país, tras su victoria sobre el Ecuador en la Batalla de Tulcán, fue emboscado en la localidad de Berruecos, actual departamento de Nariño, donde murió asesinado el 13 de noviembre de 1862. Al pasar cerca al sitio del Arenal "tres de los bandidos que estaban ocultos, hicieron fuego sobre el general Arboleda y lo hirieron mortalmente".3 Nunca se logró esclarecer la autoría intelectual más se supo que el autor del crimen fue Juan López, individuo caucano, al que Tomás Cipriano de Mosquera habría recompensado con la suma de 200 pesos de esa época, hecho que nunca fue probado. Se puede concluir, en todo caso, que su sacrificio obedeció a enfrentamientos políticos y a la defensa airada de sus ideales conservadores, lo que le granjeó la enemistad de muchos.


Durante una conversación que Arboleda había sostenido alguna vez con varios de sus amigos, entre ellos, José Eusebio Caro, en la que habían decidido responder preguntas trascendentales, tales como ¿A qué le tiene usted más miedo? y ¿De qué muerte quisiera usted morir?, a esta cuestión respondió Arboleda: "Yo quisiera morir como Sucre". En efecto, una triste y premonitoria coincidencia hizo que tanto Arboleda como Sucre, el gran Mariscal de Ayacucho, murieran asesinados en la mismas sombrías montañas de Berruecos.


El cadáver de Julio Arboleda fue trasladado a Popayán, donde se le prodigó una multitudinaria despedida. "En medio del templo y sobre un catafalco velado por ocho ninfas vestidas de duelo, en representación de los ocho Estados de la República, se colocó en una urna el corazón del finado general, entre varios emblemas, como trofeos de sus virtudes y talentos".3


Los restos del Presidente Julio Arboleda reposan en el Panteón de los Próceres de Popayán. In Memoriam


Numerosos monumentos y lugares emblemáticos honran la memoria de Arboleda en Colombia:


Un parque lleva su nombre en la ciudad de Popayán, donde también se yergue su estatua.

En el centro histórico de esa misma ciudad se conserva la casa de sus padres, construida en el siglo XVIII. En ella se alojó en dos ocasiones el Libertador Simón Bolívar, gran amigo de los padres de Arboleda, en cuya hacienda Japio (al norte de Popayán) solía igualmente pasar temporadas de descanso.4

La residencia que hizo construir Arboleda junto a la de sus padres en la Calle de la Pamba también se conserva intacta y fue declarada monumento nacional. Una placa en la fachada principal anuncia el nombre de quien fuera su propietario y más ilustre residente.

Un retrato al óleo de Arboleda, obra de Ricardo Acevedo Bernal, orna las paredes del Concejo Municipal de Popayán, bellamente enmarcado en fina hojilla de ébano.

La Administración Postal Nacional de Colombia rindió tributo en 1966 a la memoria de Arboleda mediante la emisión de una estampilla o sello postal con su efigie.

Un busto en mármol de Arboleda fue donado por Popayán a Bogotá en 1910 y ubicado en el Parque de la Independencia. Desconocidos profanaron el monumento en el año 2003 y hurtaron el busto, sin que hasta la fecha se conozca su paradero ni la identidad de los vándalos.

Notas


Molano, Mariano (25-11-2004). Arboleda, Julio. Biblioteca Luis Ángel Arango. Consultado el 10 de noviembre de 2009.

Martínez Delgado, Luis (1959). Popayán, Ciudad Procera. Bogotá: Editorial Kelly, pp. 182-184

Zarama Delgado, Daniel. Don Julio Arboleda en el Sur de Colombia, (1917), en Imprenta Departamenta, Pasto.

Pocos meses antes de morir, el Libertador paso una última temporada con la familia Arboleda Pombo en la hacienda de Japio. Al despedirse de sus anfitriones y amigos, obsequió a Matilde Pombo de Arboleda su anillo de matrimonio y a José Rafael Arboleda Arroyo una espada y un retrato suyo pintado en Ecuador, todo lo cual se conserva piadosamente en el Museo Nacional de Colombia, por donación de sus descendientes los Arboleda Cheyne.

Bibliografía


Arboleda, Gustavo (1919). Historia contemporánea de Colombia (desde la disolución de la antigua república de ese nombre hasta la época presente) - Tomo II. Bogotá: Casa Editorial de Arboleda & Valencia.

Arboleda, Gustavo (1962). Diccionario biográfico y genealógico del antiguo departamento del Cauca. Bogotá: Editorial Guadalupe Ltda.

Carrizosa Argáez, Enrique (1990). Linajes y bibliografías de los gobernantes de nuestra Nación 1830-1990. Bogotá: Editorial Kelly. 958-9004-08-3

Casa de Poesía Silva (1991). Historia de la poesía colombiana. Bogotá: Editorial Presencia Ltda. 958-952-862-7

Castrillón Arboleda, Diego (1994). Muros de bronce - Popayán y sus estancias históricas. Cali: Editorial Feriva.

Echavarría, Rogelio (1998). Quién es quién en la poesía colombiana. Bogotá: Ministerio de Cultura - El Áncora Editores. 958-96244-1-3

dios mio959). Popayán, Ciudad Procera. Bogotá: Editorial Kelly.

show less

View All

Immediate Family

Text ViewAdd Family

Showing 12 of 16 people


Sofía Mosquera Hurtado

wife


Rafael Arboleda Mosquera

son


Beatriz Arboleda Mosquera

daughter


Julián Arboleda Mosquera

son


Daniel Arboleda Mosquera

son


Gonzalo Arboleda Mosquera

son


Pedro Pablo Arboleda Mosquera

son


Sofía Arboleda Mosquera

daughter


Cecilia Arboleda Mosquera

daughter


Julio Arturo Arboleda Mosquera

son


Inés Arboleda Mosquera

daughter


Panchita Cortes

wife


<---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->


Agregado por: Ing. Carlos Juan Felipe Urdaneta Alamo, MD.IG.


<---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->


domingo, 30 de enero de 2022

Sarmiento de Ayala Rojas y Sandoval Diego (1536) ★ Ref: FL-1536 |•••► #ESPAÑA 🏆🇪🇸★ #Genealogía #Genealogy


10° Bisabuelo/ Great Grandfather de: 

Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo

____________________________________________________________________________





<---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->

 (Linea Materna)

<---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->

Diego Sarmiento de Ayala Rojas y Sandoval is your 10th great grandfather.of→ Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo→  Morella Álamo Borges

your mother → Belén Borges Ustáriz

her mother → Belén de Jesús Ustáriz Lecuna

her mother → Miguel María Ramón de Jesus Uztáriz y Monserrate

her father → María de Guía de Jesús de Monserrate é Ibarra

his mother → Maria Manuela Ibarra y Galindo

her mother → Andres Eugenio Rafael Ibarra é Ibarra

her father → Juan Julián de Ibarra y Herrera

his father → Antonia Nicolasa Sarmiento de Herrera y Loaisa

his mother → Juan Sarmiento de Herrera y Fernández Pacheco, Alférez Mayor

her father → Agustín Herrera de Sarmiento y Rojas de Ayala

his father → Diego Sarmiento de Ayala Rojas y Sandoval

his fatherConsistency CheckShow short path | Share this path

You might be connected in other ways.


Show Me


 ADD PHOTO

Diego Sarmiento de Ayala Rojas y Sandoval  

Spanish: Diego Gómez Sarmiento de Rojas y Sandoval

Gender: Male

Birth: 1536

Teguise de Lanzarote, Isla de Lanzarote, Islas Canarias, España.

Death: 1607 (69-71)

Teguise de Lanzarote, Isla de Lanzarote, Islas Canarias, España.

Immediate Family:

Son of Pedro José ("El Mozo") Fernández de Saavedra y Escobar de las Roelas and Iseo de León

Husband of Inés de León y Pérez de Munguía and María de Herrera y Peraza de Ayala

Father of Agustín Herrera de Sarmiento y Rojas de Ayala; Fernando or Hernando de Saavedra y Rojas; Diego Sarmiento de Ayala and Juana Mendoza Sarmiento de Herrera y Rojas

Brother of Agustín de Herrera y Rojas Sarmiento, I Marqués de Lanzarote

Half brother of Alonso Perez de Saavedra

Added by: Juan Ramón Pacheco Zuloaga on June 8, 2007

Managed by: Doctor Leopoldo José Briceño-Iragorry Calcaño, MD and 6 others

 0 Matches 

Research this Person

 Contact Profile Managers

 View Tree

 Edit Profile

Overview

Media

Timeline

Discussions

Sources

Revisions

DNA

Aboutedit | history

Share some things about Diego Sarmiento de Ayala Rojas y Sandoval.

View All

Immediate Family

Text ViewAdd Family

Showing 11 people


María de Herrera y Peraza de Ayala

wife


Agustín Herrera de Sarmiento y ...

son


Fernando or Hernando de Saavedra...

son


Diego Sarmiento de Ayala

son


Juana Mendoza Sarmiento de Herre...

daughter


Inés de León y Pérez de Munguía

wife


Iseo de León

mother


Pedro José ("El Mozo") Fernánd...

father


Agustín de Herrera y Rojas Sarm...

brother


Alonso Perez de Saavedra

half brother


Constanza Sarmiento de Herrera

stepmother


____________________________________________________________________________




<---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->


Agregado por: Ing. Carlos Juan Felipe Urdaneta Alamo, MD.IG.


<---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->



sábado, 29 de enero de 2022

Bettencourt Jean III ★ Ref: BC-1339 |•••► #FRANCIA 🇫🇷🏆 #Genealogía #Genealogy




 17° Bisabuelo/ Great Grandfather de: Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo →JJean III de Bettencourt is your 17th great grandfather.


____________________________________________________________________________



<---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->

 (Linea Materna)

<---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->

JJean III de Bettencourt is your 17th great grandfather.

You→ Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo→   Morella Álamo Borges 

your mother →  Belén Borges Ustáriz 

her mother →  Belén de Jesús Ustáriz Lecuna 

her mother → Miguel María Ramón de Jesus Uztáriz y Monserrate 

her father →  María de Guía de Jesús de Monserrate é Ibarra 

his mother → Maria Manuela Ibarra y Galindo 

her mother →  Andres Eugenio Rafael Ibarra é Ibarra 

her father →  Juan Julián de Ibarra y Herrera 

his father → Antonia Nicolasa Sarmiento de Herrera y Loaisa 

his mother →  Juan Sarmiento de Herrera y Fernández Pacheco, Alférez Mayor 

her father → Agustín de Herrera Sarmiento de Rojas y Ayala 

his father →  Diego Gómez Sarmiento de Rojas y Sandoval 

his father →  Iseo de León 

his mother → Elvira Pérez de Munguía y Bethencourt 

her mother →  Margarita de Bethencourt Perdomo 

her mother →  Jean d'Ariette Prud'homme 

her father → Jean Arrriete de Bettencourt 

his father →  Regnault de Bettencourt 

his father →  Jean III de Bettencourt 

his father Show short path | Share this path

Shortest in-law relationship

Jean III de Bettencourt is your third great grandmother's husband's 12th great grandfather.


Jean III de Bettencourt (de Bethencourt) MP

Spanish: Jean III de Béthencourt

Gender: Male

Birth: 1339 

Duché de Normandie, France

Death: 1364 (25) 

Houlbec-Cocherel, Duché de Normandie, France (Killed in the Battle of Cocherel)

Place of Burial: Probably L’abbaye Saint-Martin-et-Saint-Vulgain, Sigy-en-Bray, Département Seine-Maritime, Région Haute-Normandie, France

Immediate Family:

Son of Jean II de Bettencourt, seigneur de Bettencourt and Isabeau de Clermont 

Husband of Marie de Bracquemont 

Father of Gallien de Bethencourt; Jean IV de Bethencourt, "Rey de las Canarias"; NN de Bethencourt and Regnault de Bettencourt 

Brother of Jeanne I de Bethencourt and NN de Bethencourt 

Half brother of Dompierre d'Auxy 

Added by: Rodrigo Mattos Costa on December 27, 2007

Managed by: Miguel Gorman and 15 others

Curated by: Ben M. Angel, still catching up

 0  Matches  

Research this Person

 Contact Profile Managers

 View Tree

 Edit Profile

Overview

Media (3)

Timeline

Discussions

Sources (1)

Revisions

DNA

About 

English (default)  edit | history

Jean III de Bethencourt born 1339 at Normandy, France, died March 13, 1364, buried at Sigy-en-Bray


Lord of Saint Vincent de Rouvray and Grainville and Baron of Saint-Martin le Gaillard.


(III) Barón de Saint-Martin-le-Gaillard, en "le Pays de Caux", Normandía; muerto en la batalla de Cocherel. Señor de Béthencourt y de Grainville la Tenturière, sirvió primero al lado de los ingleses, pero a la llamada del Delfín se unió en Nantes con Bertrand du Guesclin. Su heroico comportamiento hizo que el monarca francés levantase el secuestro que pesaba sobre sus bienes.


http://web.meganet.net/bettenco/


In the Battle of Cocherel in which the French routed the partisans of Charles the Bad, commanded by Captal de Buch. Bethencourt had previously switched from the side of the Burgundians, who were allied with the English, to the opposite side, joining the army of the king of France. The royal army divided into two parts. At the same time as Du Guesclin attacked the enemy from the right, the Lord of Béthencourt, with other nobles, enveloped the enemy from the left - and it was in this action that he lost his life. This heroic action led the king to lift the confiscation which previously affected his property There is a problem. James H. Guill presents a very different genealogy for this branch of the Bethencourt family. He seems to be basing his information on the Chronicle of Enguerrand de Monstrelet as well as other information which he combines. Monstrelet includes details of the Battle of Azincourt (Agincourt). Monstrelet, however, appears to be referring to a completely different line of Bethencourts which Guill merges with the current line. Monstrelet does not refer to the progenitor (Jean III) by name but by the title bailiff of Amiens. No other source refers to this title being ascribed to Jean III. Since Jean III must have been born no later than 1345, at the youngest, he would have been 70 at the Battle of Agincourt in 1415. It seems highly unlikely that he would participate in a battle at such an advanced age. It also seems clear from other sources that Jean III died in the Battle of Cocherel in 1364. Therefore, this cannot be the same person.


Also, Monstrelet mentions several of the bailiff's sons, but does not mention Gallien, Jean IV, or Regnault. He does mention Aubert as Lord of Betencourt, but there were other locations called Bethencourt, etc. in France. In the English edition of Monstrelet translated by Thomas Johnes, a note indicates that "there must be some mistake about" some of the comments that Monstrelet makes regarding the bailiff of Amiens.


Perhaps Monstrelet refers to a completely different branch of the family Blazon of arms: Argent, a lion sable, armed and langued gules. Em campo de prata, um leao do preto rompente, armado de vermelho. D'argent, un lion de sable, armé de gueules. The arms of France were confirmed for the Bettencourts of Portugal on 1 Apr 1505 by the king D. Manoel Genea Portugal lists Jean III's children as Joao de Bettencourt, rei das Canárias, Regnault de Bettencourt, and an unnamed son to whom is ascribed the children Jorge, Henri, and Maciot. There seems to be some confusion with Regnault who is the father of these sons One source, obviously in error, states that, in 1430, at the side of the


Burgundians allied with the English, he was in the siege of Compiègne (in which Joan of Arc was captured), having also been imprisoned, by the French, and subsequently ransomed.


Sources [S04820] http://web.meganet.net/bettenco/.


9. Jean de Bethencourt (III) (Jean, Jean, Regnault, Philippe, Jean) (suffix added for clarification) was also known as Jean de Béthencourt. He was also known as Josef de Bethancourt "Lord of Bethancourt and of Granville." He was also known as João de Bethancourt. He was also known as João de Bettencourt (III). He was also known as João de Betancur. He was also known as Jehan de Béthencourt (III). He was also known as Jean de Bettencourt. He was also known as Jhean de Bethancourt (III). He was also known as Jean de Bettencourt. He was born circa 1339 at Normandy, France. Several sources indicate that he was born circa 1340 at Picardy, France. Blazon of arms: Argent, a lion sable, armed and langued gules. Em campo de prata, um leão do preto rompente, armado de vermelho. D'argent, un lion de sable, armé de gueules. The arms of France were confirmed for the Bettencourts of Portugal on 1 Apr 1505 by the king D. Manoel; Blazon of amrsBlazon of arms


There is a problem. James H. Guill presents a very different genealogy for this branch of the Bethencourt family. He seems to be basing his information on the Chronicle of Enguerrand de Monstrelet as well as other information which he combines. Monstrelet includes details of the Battle of Azincourt (Agincourt). Monstrelet, however, appears to be referring to a completely different line of Bethencourts which Guill merges with the current line.

Monstrelet does not refer to the progenitor (Jean III) by name but by the title bailiff of Amiens. No other source refers to this title being ascribed to Jean III. Since Jean III must have been born no later than 1345, at the youngest, he would have been 70 at the Battle of Agincourt in 1415. It seems highly unlikely that he would participate in a battle at such an advanced age. It also seems clear from other sources that Jean III died in the Battle of Cocherel in 1364. Therefore, this cannot be the same person.

Also, Monstrelet mentions several of the bailiff's sons, but does not mention Gallien, Jean IV, or Regnault. He does mention Aubert as Lord of Betencourt, but there were other locations called Bethencourt, etc. in France. In the English edition of Monstrelet translated by Thomas Johnes, a note indicates that "there must be some mistake about" some of the comments that Monstrelet makes regarding the bailiff of Amiens. Perhaps Monstrelet refers to a completely different branch of the family.

After Jeanne's marriage to Pierre de Neuville, her brother Jean (III) granted to her an annual income of 50 libras from property situated in Béthencourt, a grant which he confirmed in 1362, the date of her second marriage. He married Marie de Bracquemont, daughter of Regnault de Braquemont (I), at the instigation of her brother (Jean's step-father), Mathieu de Braquemont in Jun 1358 at Normandy. He was Lord chamberlain of the Duke of Burgundy.

Genea Portugal lists Jean III's children as João de Bettencourt, rei das Canárias, Regnault de Bettencourt, and an unnamed son to whom is ascribed the children Jorge, Henri, and Maciot. There seems to be some confusion with Regnault who is the father of these sons. He was Lord of at Béthencourt , of Saint Vincent de Rouvray, and of Grainville, and Baron of Saint-Martin le Gaillard. On the side of the Burgundians, allies of the English Jean (III) was in the siege of Compiègne (where Jeanne d'Arc was imprisoned), having been also imprisoned, but by the French, and later rescued. Later, he passed to the contrary party, joining the army of the King of France, and, at about 25 years of age, died in the battle of Cocherel (13 of March of 1364), in which the French defeated the partisans of Charles the Bad, commanded by the Captal de Buch [feudal title in Gascony, in this case, specifically Jean III de Grailly, captal de Buch]. The royal army was divided in two parts: at the same time that Du Gesclin attacked the enemy from the right, the Lord.of Bethencourt, with other noblemen, surrounded him from the left – and it was in this action that he lost his life. This heroic behavior caused the King to lift the sequestration that previously affected his goods. He was buried at Sigy-en-Bray.11

Marie de Bracquemont was also known as Maria de Braquemont. She was also known as Marie de Braquemont. She was also known as Maria de Bracamonte. She was also known as Maria de Braquemont Florenville e Sedan. She was also known as Maria Bracamonte. She was born circa 1330 at Traversain, Normandy, France. She married Roger Suhart in 1375 at France.60 She and Roger Suhart resided after 1375 at Grainville-la-Teinturière, Cany-Barville, Dieppe, Seine-Maritime, France.


Children of Jean de Bethencourt (III) and Marie de Bracquemont were as follows:


* 13 i. Gallien de Bethencourt was born circa 1360 at Béthencourt, Sigy-en-Bray, Argueil, Dieppe, Seine-Maritime, France. He died young and is often forgotten by many authors.

* + 14 ii. Jean de Bethencourt (IV) was born in 1362 in the castle of Grainville-la-Teinturière, Cany-Barville, Dieppe, Seine-Maritime, France. He married Jeanne de Fayel, daughter of Guillaume de Fayel and Marguerite de Chatillon, on 30 Jan 1392 at Paris, France. He married Françoise de Calletot at France.

* + 15 iii. Regnault de Bethencourt (IV) was born at France before 1364 the year his father died. He married Marie de Breauté at France. He married Felipa de Troyes, daughter of Guillaume de Fayel and Marguerite de Chatillon, on 14 Jul 1422 at France.

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


Bettencourts 1200-2000 - Generation Six. Disp. em: http://web.meganet.net/bettenco/bett0006.htm#id19333


Died in the battle of Chocherel.


The Battle of Cocherel it fought on May 16, 1364 between the king of France and the forces of Charles II of Navarre, over the succession to the dukedom of Burgundy.

The king's forces were led by Bertrand du Guesclin, though Jean, Count of Auxerre was the highest-ranking noble present. There were knights from Burgundy (f. e. Jean de Vienne), Breton, Picard, Parisian and Gascon people. The forces of Navarre were commanded by the Gascon chief, Jean de Grailly, Captal de Buch and mainly consisted of 800 to 900 knights and 4000 to 5000 soldiers from Normandy, Gascony and England, including 300 English archers.


The result of the battle was the French king's victory. The Navarrese army was lined up in three battalions. It took up a defensive position, as was standard English tactics, forcing du Guesclin to be the aggressor. The French commander managed to break the defensive formation by attacking and then pretending to retreat, which tempted the enemy from their hill in pursuit. A flank attack by du Guesclin's reserve then won the day.


Bethencourt had previously switched from the side of the Burgundians, who were allied with the English, to the opposite side, joining the army of the king of France. The royal army divided into two parts. At the same time as Du Guesclin attacked the enemy from the right, the Lord of Béthencourt, with other nobles, enveloped the enemy from the left - and it was in this action that he lost his life.


read more

View All

Immediate Family

Text ViewAdd Family

Showing 12 of 12 people


Marie de Bracquemont

wife


Gallien de Bethencourt

daughter


Jean IV de Bethencourt, "Rey de ...

son


NN de Bethencourt

daughter


Regnault de Bettencourt

son


Jean II de Bettencourt, seigneur...

father


Isabeau de Clermont

mother


Jeanne I de Bethencourt

sister


NN de Bethencourt

sister


Mathieu de Bracquemont

stepfather


Pierre d'Auxy

stepfather


Dompierre d'Auxy

half brother

Jean III de Bethencourt born 1339 at Normandy, France, died March 13, 1364, buried at Sigy-en-Bray


Lord of Saint Vincent de Rouvray and Grainville and Baron of Saint-Martin le Gaillard.


(III) Barón de Saint-Martin-le-Gaillard, en "le Pays de Caux", Normandía; muerto en la batalla de Cocherel. Señor de Béthencourt y de Grainville la Tenturière, sirvió primero al lado de los ingleses, pero a la llamada del Delfín se unió en Nantes con Bertrand du Guesclin. Su heroico comportamiento hizo que el monarca francés levantase el secuestro que pesaba sobre sus bienes.


http://web.meganet.net/bettenco/


In the Battle of Cocherel in which the French routed the partisans of Charles the Bad, commanded by Captal de Buch. Bethencourt had previously switched from the side of the Burgundians, who were allied with the English, to the opposite side, joining the army of the king of France. The royal army divided into two parts. At the same time as Du Guesclin attacked the enemy from the right, the Lord of Béthencourt, with other nobles, enveloped the enemy from the left - and it was in this action that he lost his life. This heroic action led the king to lift the confiscation which previously affected his property There is a problem. James H. Guill presents a very different genealogy for this branch of the Bethencourt family. He seems to be basing his information on the Chronicle of Enguerrand de Monstrelet as well as other information which he combines. Monstrelet includes details of the Battle of Azincourt (Agincourt). Monstrelet, however, appears to be referring to a completely different line of Bethencourts which Guill merges with the current line. Monstrelet does not refer to the progenitor (Jean III) by name but by the title bailiff of Amiens. No other source refers to this title being ascribed to Jean III. Since Jean III must have been born no later than 1345, at the youngest, he would have been 70 at the Battle of Agincourt in 1415. It seems highly unlikely that he would participate in a battle at such an advanced age. It also seems clear from other sources that Jean III died in the Battle of Cocherel in 1364. Therefore, this cannot be the same person.


Also, Monstrelet mentions several of the bailiff's sons, but does not mention Gallien, Jean IV, or Regnault. He does mention Aubert as Lord of Betencourt, but there were other locations called Bethencourt, etc. in France. In the English edition of Monstrelet translated by Thomas Johnes, a note indicates that "there must be some mistake about" some of the comments that Monstrelet makes regarding the bailiff of Amiens.


Perhaps Monstrelet refers to a completely different branch of the family Blazon of arms: Argent, a lion sable, armed and langued gules. Em campo de prata, um leao do preto rompente, armado de vermelho. D'argent, un lion de sable, armé de gueules. The arms of France were confirmed for the Bettencourts of Portugal on 1 Apr 1505 by the king D. Manoel Genea Portugal lists Jean III's children as Joao de Bettencourt, rei das Canárias, Regnault de Bettencourt, and an unnamed son to whom is ascribed the children Jorge, Henri, and Maciot. There seems to be some confusion with Regnault who is the father of these sons One source, obviously in error, states that, in 1430, at the side of the


Burgundians allied with the English, he was in the siege of Compiègne (in which Joan of Arc was captured), having also been imprisoned, by the French, and subsequently ransomed.


Sources [S04820] http://web.meganet.net/bettenco/.


9. Jean de Bethencourt (III) (Jean, Jean, Regnault, Philippe, Jean) (suffix added for clarification) was also known as Jean de Béthencourt. He was also known as Josef de Bethancourt "Lord of Bethancourt and of Granville." He was also known as João de Bethancourt. He was also known as João de Bettencourt (III). He was also known as João de Betancur. He was also known as Jehan de Béthencourt (III). He was also known as Jean de Bettencourt. He was also known as Jhean de Bethancourt (III). He was also known as Jean de Bettencourt. He was born circa 1339 at Normandy, France. Several sources indicate that he was born circa 1340 at Picardy, France. Blazon of arms: Argent, a lion sable, armed and langued gules. Em campo de prata, um leão do preto rompente, armado de vermelho. D'argent, un lion de sable, armé de gueules. The arms of France were confirmed for the Bettencourts of Portugal on 1 Apr 1505 by the king D. Manoel; Blazon of amrsBlazon of arms


There is a problem. James H. Guill presents a very different genealogy for this branch of the Bethencourt family. He seems to be basing his information on the Chronicle of Enguerrand de Monstrelet as well as other information which he combines. Monstrelet includes details of the Battle of Azincourt (Agincourt). Monstrelet, however, appears to be referring to a completely different line of Bethencourts which Guill merges with the current line.

Monstrelet does not refer to the progenitor (Jean III) by name but by the title bailiff of Amiens. No other source refers to this title being ascribed to Jean III. Since Jean III must have been born no later than 1345, at the youngest, he would have been 70 at the Battle of Agincourt in 1415. It seems highly unlikely that he would participate in a battle at such an advanced age. It also seems clear from other sources that Jean III died in the Battle of Cocherel in 1364. Therefore, this cannot be the same person.

Also, Monstrelet mentions several of the bailiff's sons, but does not mention Gallien, Jean IV, or Regnault. He does mention Aubert as Lord of Betencourt, but there were other locations called Bethencourt, etc. in France. In the English edition of Monstrelet translated by Thomas Johnes, a note indicates that "there must be some mistake about" some of the comments that Monstrelet makes regarding the bailiff of Amiens. Perhaps Monstrelet refers to a completely different branch of the family.

After Jeanne's marriage to Pierre de Neuville, her brother Jean (III) granted to her an annual income of 50 libras from property situated in Béthencourt, a grant which he confirmed in 1362, the date of her second marriage. He married Marie de Bracquemont, daughter of Regnault de Braquemont (I), at the instigation of her brother (Jean's step-father), Mathieu de Braquemont in Jun 1358 at Normandy. He was Lord chamberlain of the Duke of Burgundy.

Genea Portugal lists Jean III's children as João de Bettencourt, rei das Canárias, Regnault de Bettencourt, and an unnamed son to whom is ascribed the children Jorge, Henri, and Maciot. There seems to be some confusion with Regnault who is the father of these sons. He was Lord of at Béthencourt , of Saint Vincent de Rouvray, and of Grainville, and Baron of Saint-Martin le Gaillard. On the side of the Burgundians, allies of the English Jean (III) was in the siege of Compiègne (where Jeanne d'Arc was imprisoned), having been also imprisoned, but by the French, and later rescued. Later, he passed to the contrary party, joining the army of the King of France, and, at about 25 years of age, died in the battle of Cocherel (13 of March of 1364), in which the French defeated the partisans of Charles the Bad, commanded by the Captal de Buch [feudal title in Gascony, in this case, specifically Jean III de Grailly, captal de Buch]. The royal army was divided in two parts: at the same time that Du Gesclin attacked the enemy from the right, the Lord.of Bethencourt, with other noblemen, surrounded him from the left – and it was in this action that he lost his life. This heroic behavior caused the King to lift the sequestration that previously affected his goods. He was buried at Sigy-en-Bray.11

Marie de Bracquemont was also known as Maria de Braquemont. She was also known as Marie de Braquemont. She was also known as Maria de Bracamonte. She was also known as Maria de Braquemont Florenville e Sedan. She was also known as Maria Bracamonte. She was born circa 1330 at Traversain, Normandy, France. She married Roger Suhart in 1375 at France.60 She and Roger Suhart resided after 1375 at Grainville-la-Teinturière, Cany-Barville, Dieppe, Seine-Maritime, France.


Children of Jean de Bethencourt (III) and Marie de Bracquemont were as follows:


* 13 i. Gallien de Bethencourt was born circa 1360 at Béthencourt, Sigy-en-Bray, Argueil, Dieppe, Seine-Maritime, France. He died young and is often forgotten by many authors.

* + 14 ii. Jean de Bethencourt (IV) was born in 1362 in the castle of Grainville-la-Teinturière, Cany-Barville, Dieppe, Seine-Maritime, France. He married Jeanne de Fayel, daughter of Guillaume de Fayel and Marguerite de Chatillon, on 30 Jan 1392 at Paris, France. He married Françoise de Calletot at France.

* + 15 iii. Regnault de Bethencourt (IV) was born at France before 1364 the year his father died. He married Marie de Breauté at France. He married Felipa de Troyes, daughter of Guillaume de Fayel and Marguerite de Chatillon, on 14 Jul 1422 at France.

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


Bettencourts 1200-2000 - Generation Six. Disp. em: http://web.meganet.net/bettenco/bett0006.htm#id19333


Died in the battle of Chocherel.


The Battle of Cocherel it fought on May 16, 1364 between the king of France and the forces of Charles II of Navarre, over the succession to the dukedom of Burgundy.

The king's forces were led by Bertrand du Guesclin, though Jean, Count of Auxerre was the highest-ranking noble present. There were knights from Burgundy (f. e. Jean de Vienne), Breton, Picard, Parisian and Gascon people. The forces of Navarre were commanded by the Gascon chief, Jean de Grailly, Captal de Buch and mainly consisted of 800 to 900 knights and 4000 to 5000 soldiers from Normandy, Gascony and England, including 300 English archers.


The result of the battle was the French king's victory. The Navarrese army was lined up in three battalions. It took up a defensive position, as was standard English tactics, forcing du Guesclin to be the aggressor. The French commander managed to break the defensive formation by attacking and then pretending to retreat, which tempted the enemy from their hill in pursuit. A flank attack by du Guesclin's reserve then won the day.


Bethencourt had previously switched from the side of the Burgundians, who were allied with the English, to the opposite side, joining the army of the king of France. The royal army divided into two parts. At the same time as Du Guesclin attacked the enemy from the right, the Lord of Béthencourt, with other nobles, enveloped the enemy from the left - and it was in this action that he lost his life.


read more

View All

Immediate Family

Text ViewAdd Family

Showing 12 of 12 people


Marie de Bracquemont

wife


Gallien de Bethencourt

daughter


Jean IV de Bethencourt, "Rey de ...

son


NN de Bethencourt

daughter


Regnault de Bettencourt

son


Jean II de Bettencourt, seigneur...

father


Isabeau de Clermont

mother


Jeanne I de Bethencourt

sister


NN de Bethencourt

sister


Mathieu de Bracquemont

stepfather


Pierre d'Auxy

stepfather


Dompierre d'Auxy

half brother


<---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->


Agregado por: Ing. Carlos Juan Felipe Urdaneta Alamo, MD.IG.


<---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->


INDICE DE PARIENTES

INCLUYASE

jueves, 27 de enero de 2022

Villegas y Garcia Juan ★ Ref: LG-1509 |•••► #ESPAÑA 🏆🇪🇸★ #Genealogía #Genealogy


 12° Bisabuelo/ Great Grandfather de: Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo →Juan de Villegas is your 12th great grandfather.


____________________________________________________________________________



<---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->

 (Linea Materna)

<---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->

Juan de Villegas is your 12th great grandfather.of→ Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo→  Morella Álamo Borges

your mother → Belén Borges Ustáriz

her mother → Elías Felipe Borges Santamaría

her father → María Concepción Santamaría y Soublette

his mother → María Concepción Soublette de Xerez y Aristeguieta

her mother → Teresa de Jesús Ignacia Xerez, de Aristeguieta y Blanco

her mother → Miguel Gabriel Felipe Ignacio Xeréz de Aristeguieta y Lovera Otáñez

her father → Ana Francisca Lovera Otáñez y Bolívar

his mother → Josefa Maria de Bolívar Rebolledo y Martínez de Villegas

her mother → Capitán Luis de Bolívar y Rebolledo

her father → Leonor Rebolledo Maldonado de Almendariz

his mother → María Maldonado de Almendáriz y Villegas

her mother → Luisa de Villegas y Pacheco

her mother → Juan de Villegas

her fatherConsistency CheckShow short path | Share this path

You might be connected in other ways.


Show Me



Juan Ruiz de Villegas y Maldonado, Capitán   

Gender: Male

Birth: circa 1509

Segovia, Segovia, CL, Spain

Death: August 11, 1553 (39-48)

Nueva Segovia de Buría, Lara, Venezuela, Bolivarian Republic of

Immediate Family:

Son of Juan López de Villegas y Maldonado and Juana García de Segovia

Husband of Ana Pacheco

Father of Ana de Villegas y Pacheco; Luisa de Villegas y Pacheco; Agustina de Villegas y Pacheco; Bárbara de Villegas y Pacheco; Juan de Villegas, El Mozo and 3 others

Brother of Conquistador Luis de Villegas


Added by: Adrian Rodriguez Hurtado on March 27, 2008

Managed by: Guillermo Eduardo Ferrero Montilla and 16 others

 0 Matches 

Research this Person

 Contact Profile Managers

 View Tree

 Edit Profile

Overview

Media (1)

Timeline

Discussions

Sources (1)

Revisions

DNA

Aboutedit | history

Capitán, Conquistador y Poblador de altos méritos y uno de los que mayores servicios prestó al Rey en la penetración y conquista del territorio venezolano. Llegó a la Provincia con la primera expedición Welser en 1529, participándo en la primera expedición de Ambrosio Alfinger, en su entrada al lago de Coquibacoa (Maracaibo), campaña que se prolongó por dos años; con un alto número de expedicionarios muertos en los enfrentamientos contra los naturales o por las enfermedades sufridas, regresaron a Coro los pocos sobrevivientes hacia 1533.


Formó parte de varias de las expediciones de los Welser, incursionando en casi todo el territorio occidental de lo que sería Venezuela, para esta fecha regiones inexploradoradas por español alguno. Acompañó al Welser Jorge Spira en sus conquistas hacia los llanos occidentales y la Nueva Granada, durante los años de 1536 y 1537. Por su destacada actuación en esta campaña fue nombrado Alcalde Mayor y General en Jefe de Guerra. En ausencia del Gobernador Espira en 1539, fue encargado del Gobierno de la Provincia hasta 1540, cuando tomó el mando en diciembre el nuevo Gobernador y Capitán General Obispo Rodrigo de Bastidas. Coro se encontraba en situación crítica en estos años, con ánimo de todos sus vecinos de trasladarse al Nuevo Reino de Granada. Villegas lucha contra esta situación y logró del Gobernador Enrique Remboldt le responsabilizara de organizar expedición a Cubagua y Margarita en solicitud de vecinos para Coro.


En marzo de 1543 Villegas partió, en compañía de Diego de Losada, para establecer relaciones comerciales con la Provincia de Nueva Cádiz (Cumana, Margarita y Cubagua), y delimitarlos territorios entre ambas Provincias. En esa exploración llegaron a las salinas y ensenada que denominaron Borburata y establecieron relaciones pacificadoras con sus indígenas y su cacique Patanemo. Pasaron a Margarita, de donde trasladaron 96 personas y buena cantidad de ganado para Coro, luego de larga y penosa travesía por los llanos. Para fines de este año arribó el nuevo Gobernador Juan de Carvajal, quien designó a Villegas su Teniente de Gobernador y Alcalde Mayor. Carvajal fundó El Tocuyo en diciembre de 1545, como solución frente a los continuos ataques de los corsarios a Coro. Villegas participó en la fundación de El Tocuyo. Pasó con su familia a vivir a El Tocuyo, en abril de 1546, por orden del Gobernador Carvajal, quien trasladó la mayoría de la población de Coro para aquella nueva Villa. A consecuencia de los desafueros del Gobernador Carvajal, entre sus excesos ordenó decapitar al Welser Felipe de Hutten, por lo que fue nombrado el Licenciado Pérez de Tolosa en su sustitción, quien hizo Juicio de Residencia al Gobernador Carvajal y a su Teniente de Gobernador Villegas. Fue condenado Carvajal, Villegas absuelto de cargos y ratificado como Teniente del nuevo Gobernador Pérez de Tolosa y Capitán General de la Provincia y Alcalde Mayor.


En el año 1547, el Gobernador Juan Pérez de Tolosa organizó tres expediciones, una la confió al Capitán Diego Ruiz de Vallejo hacia las altas montañas, quienes llegaron a Boconó, donde se descubrió ricas minas de oro; otra segunda iva comandada por Alonso Pérez de Tolosa, su hermano, hacia el occidente, quienes llegaron hasta la zona de Cúcuta, y exploraron tierras de los Motilones. El tercer grupo fue capitaneada por Juan de Villegas, hacia el oriente, a tierras de los Nirguas y Jiraharas, las cuales exploró, descubrió minas de oro de Chirgua y luchó fieramente contra los naturales, no logrando establecer la paz; descubrió la laguna de Tacarigua (Valencia) en diciembre de 1547. Pasó luego a la costa para pacificar los indígenas de la zona de Borburata y explorarla en solicitud de minas de oro. Dió principio a la fundación del Puerto de Borburata, cuando lo hacía, recibió noticia de la muerte del Gobernador por lo que se trasladó de inmediato al Tocuyo, para suplirlo en el cargo. Como Teniente General del Gobernador Juan Pérez de Tolosa, al morir este, hacia septiembre de 1548, pasó a ser Gobernador encargado, con poderes ratificados por la Audiencia de Santo Domingo en 1549.


En calidad deTeniente de Gobernador, Capitán General y Alcalde Mayor gobernaba la Provincia de Venezuela, resolvió completar la fundación del puerto de Borburata, por lo que envió a ello al Capitán Pedro Álvarez, quien no la consólidó. Villegas pasó en persona en enero de 1551, y lo hizo. Fundó Nueva Segovia de Barquisimeto, en mayo de 1552. Luego de Instituido el Cabildo y nombradas las autoridades de la villa, Villegas hizo lar epartición de las primeras encomiendas de la región, en septiembre de1552.


Gran defensor de los naturales, y conocedor de sus costumbres y delmedio , hizo reglamentaciones justas a favor de los indígenas, trató de hermanar la relación del natural con el conquistador español, e insistió en la libertad del indígena, manteniendo la obligatoriedad del honroso vasallaje del nativo a Su Magestad y su obligatoriedad al trabajo en las encomiendas. Su muerte sucedió en agosto de 1553, en una de las varias localizaciones de la recien fundada Barquisimeto, en Buría. Sus restos fueron sepultados en la pequeña iglesia de Nueva Segovia de Buría. Su familia permaneció en El Tocuyo.



Buría fue la sede de la primera fundación de Barquisimeto


https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Juan_de_Villegas

http://www.genealogiacolombiana.com/doc/6%20desc/6.76.pdf

http://dbe.rah.es/biografias/5777/juan-de-villegas-y-maldonado

show less

View All

Immediate Family

Text ViewAdd Family

Showing 12 of 13 people


Ana Pacheco

wife


Ana de Villegas y Pacheco

daughter


Luisa de Villegas y Pacheco

daughter


Agustina de Villegas y Pacheco

daughter


Bárbara de Villegas y Pacheco

daughter


Juan de Villegas, El Mozo

son


Francisca de Villegas y Pacheco

daughter


María de Villegas y Pacheco

daughter


Francisco Pacheco Ruiz de Villeg...

son


Juan López de Villegas y Maldonado

father


Juana García de Segovia

mother


Conquistador Luis de Villegas

brother


<---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->


Agregado por: Ing. Carlos Juan Felipe Urdaneta Alamo, MD.IG.


<---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->


Iñigo López de Mendoza IV Señor de Llodio, Zaitegui y Mendoza ★ Ref: LM-1178 |•••► #ESPAÑA 🏆🇪🇸★ #Genealogía #Genealogy


 18° Bisabuelo/ Great Grandfather de: Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo →Iñigo López de Mendoza, IV Señor de Llodio, Zaitegui y Mendoza is your 18th great grandfather.


____________________________________________________________________________



<---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->

(Linea Paterna) 

<---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->

Iñigo López de Mendoza, IV Señor de Llodio, Zaitegui y Mendoza is your 18th great grandfather.of→ Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo→  Dr. Enrique Jorge Urdaneta Lecuna

your father → Elena Cecilia Lecuna Escobar

his mother → María Elena de la Concepción Escobar Llamosas

her mother → Cecilia Cayetana de la Merced Llamosas Vaamonde de Escobar

her mother → Cipriano Fernando de Las Llamosas y García

her father → José Lorenzo de las Llamozas Silva

his father → Joseph Julián Llamozas Ranero

his father → Manuel Llamosas y Requecens

his father → Isabel de Requesens

his mother → Luis de Requeséns y Zúñiga, Virrey de Holanda

her father → Juan de Zúñiga Avellaneda y Velasco

his father → Pedro de Zúñiga y Avellaneda, II conde de Miranda del Castañar

his father → Diego López de Zúñiga y Guzmán, I conde de Miranda del Castañar

his father → Pedro López de Zúñiga y García de Leyva, 1st count of Ledesma and count of Plasencia

his father → Diego López de Zúñiga, Mariscal de Castilla

his father → Iñigo Ortiz de Zúñiga y Mendoza, I Señor de Escamilla y Cogolludo

his father → Toda Hurtado de Mendoza

his mother → Juan «el Barbudo» Hurtado de Mendoza, VI señor de Mendoza y Mendívil

her father → Diego López de Mendóza Hurtado

his father → Iñigo López de Mendoza, IV Señor de Llodio, Zaitegui y Mendoza

his fatherConsistency CheckShow short path | Share this path

You might be connected in other ways.


Show Me



Iñigo López de Mendoza, IV Señor de Llodio, Zaitegui y Mendoza 

Spanish: Diego López de Mendoza, IV señor de Mendoza

Gender: Male

Birth: 1178

Vizcaya, PV, España (Spain)

Death: 1266 (87-88)

Vizcaya, PV, España (Spain)

Immediate Family:

Son of Lope González de Mendoza y García Salvadores, 3er. Señor de Mendoza; Lope González de Mendóza; María García de Ayala and Maria García de Ayala

Husband of Leonor Hurtado Fernández de Lara, Señora de Mendivil

Father of Lope Díaz de Mendoza, V señor de Mendoza; Inés Hurtado de Mendoza; Diego Hurtado de Mendoza, señor de Mendivil y Rivera; Pedro Diaz Hurtado; Hurtada López de Mendoza Mendivil and 5 others

Brother of Ruy López de Mendoza, II Almirante de la Mar de Castilla; Emilia López de Mendoza y García de Ayala and HURTADO DIAZ de MENDOZA, Lord of Mendivil


Added by: Juan Carlos Griffin Albarracin on March 21, 2010

Managed by: Gabriel Bunster Betteley and 28 others

 0 Matches 

Research this Person

 2 Inconsistencies

 Contact Profile Managers

 View Tree

 Resolve Conflicts

 Edit Profile

Overview

Media (9)

Timeline

Discussions

Sources

Revisions

DNA

Aboutedit | history

Diego LÓPEZ DE MENDOZA, IV Señor de Mendoza, que nació hacia 1195 y murió en 1266. Casó con Doña Leonor HURTADO, Señora de Mendivil, Hueto, La Rivera y otros estados, hija de Fernán PÉREZ DE LARA, Señor de Mendívil, Ricohombre y Mayordomo Mayor de su sobrino el rey Don Sancho “El Deseado”; y de Doña Guiomar ALONSO.


Diego López de Mendoza era nieto de Gonzalo López de Mendoza e hijo de Lope González de Mendoza, que muriera en Arrato (hacia 1200) cuando su hijo tenía unos cinco años. Lo primero que pensó fue en vengar la muerte y la afrenta de que se vendiera el braguero de su padre muerto en el mercado de Vitoria.


Este señor de Mendoza y de las Hermandades de Alava fue llamado "mantolucea" por el largo manto bajo el que llegó, ya hombre, de vuelta a Alava con ánimos de venganza. Venció (Arrigorriaga) y acosó hasta su muerte a Íñigo de Guevara, contándose que cuando le cercara de noche en su castillo y empezara a golpear la puerta el de Guevara le dijo que "me parece justo que me queráis matar para vengar a vuestro padre pero esa no es razón para que me rompáis la puerta a golpes, que no soy hombre para morir escondido". Y salió con tanta furia a caballo a atacar al de Mendoza que se dio en la cabeza con el dintel de la puerta muriendo en el acto. Diego le corto la cabeza y la llevó al mercado de Vitoria. Por ello plantó en su escudo las panelas del escudo de los Guevara formando parte del primitivo blasón de los Mendoza.


En 1255 tomo parte en Aragón en las confederaciones entre Jaime de Aragón, el infante Enrique de Castilla y Lope Díaz de Haro. Vivió en los reinados de Alfonso VIII, Enrique I, Fernando III y Alfonso X.


Según una versión fue llamado "Hurtado" porque fue hurtado en su infancia y llevado a Álava para protegerle. De aquí viene el apellido "Hurtado de Mendoza". Otra versión más creíble dice que el apellido Hurtado viene por su esposa Leonor de Hurtado, señora de Mendívil y Martioda e hija de Fernán Pérez Hurtado, del que contaban que descendía de Fernando Hurtado, llamado así por ser el hijo de "hurtado" de un matrimonio secreto de la reina Urraca de Castilla y Pedro González, Conde de Lara, en los inicios del Siglo XII. En todo caso, no se ponen de acuerdo los cronistas de los Mendoza sobre sus orígenes, y el propio Salazar y Castro en el siglo XVII modifica su ascendencia de éstos en sucesivos tomos que fue publicando en vida.


http://www.uam.es/personal_pdi/ciencias/depaz/mendoza/diego1.htm



IV Señor de Llodio, Zaitegui y Mendoza, Vencedor de la batalla de Navas de Tolosa, 1212

El lugar de Mendoza en Alava ha sido cuna de uno de los linajes más ilustres y prolíficos de la historia española. Este linaje se extendió por toda España y América, dando lugar a más de veinte casas con títulos nobiliarios, integrantes de la aristocracia del siglo de oro español. El origen de esta linaje está en Íñigo López, señor de Vizcaya en la segunda mitad del siglo XI, cuyo nieto Lope Sánchez, fue el primer señor de Llodio y señor de Álava por la cofradía de Arriaga, casó con Sancha Díaz de Frías, que llevó en dote el solar de Mendoza y el de Frías. Su nieto Lope Íñiguez fue el primero en utilizar el apellido Mendoza. El hijo de este último, Íñigo López de Mendoza, fue quien construyó Torre de Mendoza a principios del siglo XIII. Asistió a la batalla de las Navas de Tolosa en el año 1212 y por haber contribuido a la rotura del cerco de las cadenas que custodiaban la tienda del almohade Muhammad An-Nasir el Miramamolin (1199-1213), añadió a su escudo de armas una orla con las cadenas. La rama principal de este linaje fue la de los duques del Infantado, en la que se mantuvo la posesión de la Torre de Mendoza hasta 1856 en que fue vendida al vitoriano Bruno Martínez de Aragón y Echánove. Esta rama abandonó muy pronto su solar de origen, pasando en el siglo XIV a la corte al servicio de los reyes castellanos, instalándose definitivamente en Guadalajara en el siglo XV. Fue el duque del Infantado uno de los personajes más poderosos de la corte, y de él se decía en 1625 que ejercía señorío sobre 800 villas y tenías más de 80.000 vasallos.


show less

View All

Immediate Family

Text ViewAdd Family

Showing 12 of 18 people


Leonor Hurtado Fernández de Lar...

wife


Lope Díaz de Mendoza, V señor ...

son


Inés Hurtado de Mendoza

daughter


Diego Hurtado de Mendoza, señor...

son


Pedro Diaz Hurtado

son


Hurtada López de Mendoza Mendivil

daughter


Iñigo Íñiguez de Mendoza, V S...

son


Furtado de Mendoza, señor de Za...

son


Fernán Iñíguez de Mendoza

son


Emilia de Mendoza

daughter


Diego López de Mendóza Hurtado

son


Lope González de Mendóza

father


<---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->


Agregado por: Ing. Carlos Juan Felipe Urdaneta Alamo, MD.IG.


<---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->


miércoles, 26 de enero de 2022

Baldwin V & Viii, Count Of Hainaut & Flanders ★ Ref: BB-1150 |•••► #FRANCIA 🇫🇷🏆 #Genealogía #Genealogy


 22° Bisabuelo/ Great Grandfather de: Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo →Baldwin V, count of Hainaut is your 22nd great grandfather.

____________________________________________________________________________


<---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->
(Linea Paterna) 
<---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->
Baldwin V, count of Hainaut is your 22nd great grandfather.ou→ Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo→  Enrique Jorge Urdaneta Lecuna
your father → Elena Cecilia Lecuna Escobar
his mother → María Elena de la Concepción Escobar Llamosas
her mother → Cecilia Cayetana de la Merced Llamosas Vaamonde de Escobar
her mother → Cipriano Fernando de Las Llamosas y García
her father → José Lorenzo de las Llamozas Silva
his father → Joseph Julián Llamozas Ranero
his father → Manuel Llamosas y Requecens
his father → Isabel de Requesens
his mother → Luis de Requeséns y Zúñiga, Virrey de Holanda
her father → D. Estefania de Requesens, III Condesa de Palamós
his mother → Hipòlita Roís de Liori i de Montcada
her mother → Beatriz de Montcada i de Vilaragut
her mother → Pedro de Montcada i de Luna, Señor de Villamarchante
her father → Elfa de Luna y de Xèrica
his mother → Pedro Martínez de Luna y Saluzzo, señor de Almonacid y Pola
her father → Pedro Martínez de Luna
his father → Violante de Alagon
his mother → D. Teresa de Aragón
her mother → Pedro III el Grande, rey de Aragón
her father → Violante de Hungría, reina consorte de Aragón
his mother → Yolande - Jolánta de Courtenay, Reina de Hongrie
her mother → Yolanda of Flanders
her mother → Baldwin V, count of Hainaut
her fatherShow short path | Share this path
You might be connected in other ways.

Show Me


Baldwin V & VIII, count of Hainaut & Flanders MP 
Dutch: Boudewijn V & VIII, graaf van Henegouwen & Vlaanderen, French: Baudouin V & VIII, comte de Hainaut & Flandre, German: Balduin V & VIII, graf von Hennegau & Flandern, Italian: Baldovino V & VIII, conte di Hainaut & Fiandre
Gender: Male
Birth: circa 1150
Hainault, France
Death: December 17, 1195 (41-49)
Mons. Hainault, Belgium
Place of Burial: St. Waldthud Abbey,Mons,Hainault,Belgium
Immediate Family:
Son of Baldwin IV, count of Hainaut and Alice of Namur, Countess of Hainaut
Husband of Marguerite de Lorraine, Countess of Flanders
Partner of NN mistress of Badouin, mother of Marguerite and NN mistress of Badouin, mother of Godefroi
Father of Marguerite; Godefroi; Isabelle de Hainaut, Reine de France; Baldwin I, Latin Emperor of Constantinople; Yolanda of Flanders and 4 others
Brother of Yolande de Hainaut; Antoinette van Henegouwen; Agnes la Boiteuse de Hainaut; Godefroy de Hainaut, comte d'Ostrevant; Florence de Montmorency and 3 others
Added by: Adri Overgaauw on February 28, 2007
Managed by: Ric Dickinson and 138 others
Curated by: Bjørn P. Brox
 0 Matches 
Research this Person
 Contact Profile Managers
 View Tree
 Edit Profile
Overview
Media (9)
Timeline
Discussions (3)
Sources
Revisions
DNA
About 
English (default) edit | history
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baldwin_V,_Count_of_Hainaut

Baldwin V, count of Hainaut (1171–1195) He was the son of Baldwin IV.
Baldwin I, margrave of Namur (1189–1195) Namur was acquired from his mother Alice of Namur.
Baldwin VIII, count of Flanders (1191–1195) Flanders was acquired via his marriage to Margaret I of Flanders.
Baudouin de Hainaut (1150-Mons 17 Dec 1195)
Parents : Baudouin IV “le Bâtisseur” Comte de Hainaut & Alice de Namur

x Apr 1169 Marguerite de Flandre (do Thierry & Sibylle d'Anjou) ([1145]-15 Nov 1194, Bruges St Donat)

1. Isabelle de Hainaut (Valenciennes 23 Apr 1170-Paris 14/15 Mar 1190, Bur Notre Dame, Paris
2. Baudouin de Hainaut (Jul 1171-in prison in Bulgaria 11 Jun 1205).
3. Yolande de Flandre ([1175]-Constantinople 24 Or 26 Aug 1219).
4. Philippe de Hainaut (Valenciennes Mar 1174-15 Oct 1212, Bur Namur, Cathédrale de Saint-Aubin).
5. Henri de Hainaut ([1176]-Murdered Thessaloniki 11 Jul 1216).
6. Sibylle de Hainaut (-9 Jan 1217, Bur Cluny).
7. Eustache de Hainaut (-After 1217).
xx NN

8. Godefroi (-After 1202).
xxx NN

9. Marguerite (-After Mar 1237).
http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/FLANDERS,%20HAINAUT.htm#BaudouinVHainautB

BAUDOUIN de Hainaut, son of BAUDOUIN IV “le Bâtisseur” Comte de Hainaut & his wife Alice de Namur (1150-Mons 17 Dec 1195). The Flandria Generosa names "Balduinus comes Hainonie" as husband of "Margaretam sororem Philippi", specifying that he succeeded his brother-in-law as count of Flanders[499]. He succeeded his father in 1171 as BAUDOUIN V Comte de Hainaut, and as heir to Henri Comte de Namur et de Luxembourg. He supported Philippe II King of France when war broke out with Philippe Count of Flanders over the inheritance of the counties of Vermandois and Valois in 1183[500]. After the unexpected birth in 1186 of Ermesinde, daughter of Henri Comte de Namur et de Luxembourg, the latter revoked his assurance concerning Baudouin's succession in these two counties. In 1188, Comte Henri was obliged to reinstate Baudouin as his heir after a verdict in the latter's favour from Heinrich VI King of Germany. Comte Baudouin attacked Namur, captured Comte Henri and obtained a confirmation of his position from Emperor Friedrich I, who also secretly created him Marquis de Namur. Under a compromise reached in 1190, Baudouin received Namur immediately, and the expectation of Laroche and Durbuy after the death of Henri; the fate of Luxembourg was not mentioned. The creation of the Marquisate of Namur, and the elevation of Baudouin as Marquis de Namur, was announced at Worms in 1190[501]. Although designated as successor in Flanders by his brother-in-law Philippe Count of Flanders, Philippe II King of France claimed in 1191 that Flanders escheated to the French crown on the death of Count Philippe in default of male heirs. The settlement was mediated by the archbishop of Reims and formalised in the Treaty of Arras[502]. Comte Baudouin was eventually enfeoffed as BAUDOUIN VIII Count of Flanders 1 Mar 1192, on payment of 5,000 silver marks to the French king doing homage to Emperor Heinrich VI King of Germany for the imperial part of Flanders[503]. On the death of his wife in 1194, Baudouin lost Flanders which was inherited by their oldest son. The necrology of Brogne records the death "XVI Kal Jan" of "Balduinus comes Hannonie"[504]. http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/FLANDERS,%20HAINAUT.htm#BaudouinVHainautB

m (Apr 1169) as her second husband, MARGUERITE de Flandre, daughter of THIERRY I Count of Flanders & his second wife Sibylle d'Anjou ([1145]-15 Nov 1194, Bruges St Donat). The Flandria Generosa names (in order) "Gertrudem et Margaretam" as the two daughters of Count Thierry & his second wife[505]. The Annales Elnonenses records the wife of "Balduinus comes Hainonie" being "sororem [Philippus comes Flandrie]"[506]. The Flandria Generosa specifies that Marguerite married "Radulfo filio predicti comitis Radulfi" who contracted leprosy and from whom she was separated[507]. The Chronicon Hanoniense records the marriage "tempore Paschali mense April 1169" of "Balduinus" and "Margharetam…Mathie comitis Boloniensis sororem"[508]. Her second marriage was arranged by her brother Count Philippe in order to improve relations with the county of Hainaut. She succeeded her brother in 1191 as MARGUERITE I Ctss of Flanders. The Annales Blandinienses record the death in 1194 of "Margareta comitissa Flandriæ"[509]. The Chronicon Hanoniense records the death in 1194 of "comitissa Marghareta" and her burial at "Brugis in monasterio Sancti Donaciani"[510]. The necrology of Brogne records the death "XV Kal Dec" of "Margareta comitissa Hainonensis"[511]. The Flandria Generosa specifies that she was buried in Bruges St Donat[512]. http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/FLANDERS,%20HAINAUT.htm#BaudouinVHainautB

Count Baudouin VIII & his wife had seven children:

1. ISABELLE de Hainaut (Valenciennes 23 Apr 1170-Paris 14/15 Mar 1190, bur Notre Dame, Paris). The Chronicon Hanoniense records the birth "mense Aprili 1170" of "filiam Elizabeth" to "Balduinus [et] Margharetam…Mathie comitis Boloniensis sororem"[513]. The Chronicle of Alberic de Trois-Fontaines in 1191 names "Elizabeth Francie reginam…Hyolenz uxorem Petri Autisiodorensis et Sibiliam domnam Bellioci uxorem Wichardi" as the three daughters of "Balduinus [Haynaco]"[514]. The Chronicon Hanoniense records the betrothal in 1179 of "Elizabeth filia comitis Hanoniensis" and "Henrico filio comitis Trecensis"[515]. The Annales S. Benigni Divisionensis name the wife of Philippe II King of France as "Elisabeth regina que fuit soror Balduini comitis Flandrie", when recording the birth of their son Louis in 1187[516]. Her marriage was arranged by her maternal uncle Philippe Count of Flanders while he was adviser to Philippe II King of France in 1180 after the latter's accession, with Artois as her dowry[517]. She was crowned queen of France 29 May 1180 at the abbaye de Saint-Denis. King Philippe planned to repudiate her in 1186, for lack of a male heir. The Flandria Generosa records the death in 1189 of "Elisabeth Francorum regina" after giving birth to twins, specifying her burial "in eccleisa beatæ Mariæ Parisius"[518]. The Gestis Philippi II Augusti records the death "1189 Id Mar" of "Elysabeth regina uxor Philippi Francorum regis" and her burial "in ecclesiam beatissime virginis Marie Parisius"[519]. The necrology of the abbey of Saint-Denis records the death "II Id Mar" of "Isabel regina Francorum"[520]. Betrothed (1179) to HENRI de Champagne, son of HENRI I "le Libéral" Comte de Champagne & his wife Marie de France (29 Jul 1166-Acre 10 Sep 1197). He succeeded his father in 1181 as HENRI II Comte de Champagne. The Chronicon Hanoniense records the betrothal in 1179 of "Elizabeth filia comitis Hanoniensis" and "Henrico filio comitis Trecensis"[521]. According to Gade[522], Henri II Comte de Champagne was still betrothed to a daughter of Baudouin V Comte de Hainaut when his betrothal to Ermengarde de Namur was arranged. However, this could not have been Isabelle who was married in 1180. It is possible that the betrothal was to Isabelle's younger sister Yolande. m (Abbaye de la Sainte-Trinité, Bapaume, Pas-de-Calais 28 Apr 1180) as his first wife, PHILIPPE II “Auguste” King of France, son of LOUIS VII King of France & his third wife Alix de Champagne (Château de Gonesse, Val d’Oise 21 Aug 1165-Mantes, Yvelines 14 Jul 1223, bur église de l'Abbaye royale de Saint-Denis). http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/FLANDERS,%20HAINAUT.htm#BaudouinVHainautB

2. BAUDOUIN de Hainaut (Jul 1171-in prison in Bulgaria 11 Jun 1205). The Chronicon Hanoniense records the birth "1171 mense Iulio…Valencenis" of "filium…Balduinum" to "Balduinus [et] Margharetam…Mathie comitis Boloniensis sororem"[523]. He succeeded his mother in 1194 as BAUDOUIN IX Count of Flanders, and his father in 1195 as BAUDOUIN VI Comte de Hainaut. http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/FLANDERS,%20HAINAUT.htm#BaudouinVHainautB

3. YOLANDE de Flandre ([1175]-Constantinople 24 or 26 Aug 1219). The Chronicle of Alberic de Trois-Fontaines in 1191 names "Elizabeth Francie reginam…Hyolenz uxorem Petri Autisiodorensis et Sibiliam domnam Bellioci uxorem Wichardi" as the three daughters of "Balduinus [Haynaco]"[524]. The Chronicon Hanoniense records the marriage in 1181 of "Yolandem Balduini comitis Hanoniensis filiam" and "Henricus primus comitis Campanensis filius"[525], but this was presumably only a betrothal as such a marriage is unrecorded elsewhere. The Chronicle of Alberic de Trois-Fontaines names "Hyolenz…soror comitis Philippi Namucensis" as wife of "comes Petrus Autisiodorensis", specifying that her husband became Comte de Namur by right of his wife[526]. The Historia Episcoporum Autissiodorensium records that Pierre married "Yolandam sororem Henrici Constantinopolitani Imperatoris" as his second wife after the death of "Agnete uxore sua"[527]. She succeeded as YOLANDE Marquise de Namur in 1213. She was crowned Empress of Constantinople with her husband by the Pope 9 Apr 1217 at Rome[528]. She was appointed regent of the Latin Empire of Constantinople after arriving there safely by sea in 1217, in the absence of her husband whose fate at that time was unknown. She was able to stop the attacks of Theodoros Emperor in Nikaia, and arranged his marriage to her daughter Marie to seal the peace which was agreed[529]. Betrothed (1181, contract broken 1187) to HENRI II Comte de Champagne, son of HENRI I "le Libéral" Comte de Champagne & his wife Marie de France (29 Jul 1166-Acre 10 Sep 1197). The Chronicon Hanoniense records the marriage in 1181 of "Yolandem Balduini comitis Hanoniensis filiam" and "Henricus primus comitis Campanensis filius"[530], but this was presumably only a betrothal as such a marriage is unrecorded elsewhere. According to Gade[531], Henri II Comte de Champagne was still betrothed to a daughter of Baudouin V Comte de Hainaut when his betrothal to Ermengarde de Namur was arranged. Presumably this was Yolande. m (contract 24 Jul 1193, Soissons 1 Jul 1193) as his second wife, PIERRE [II] Seigneur de Courtenay, Comte de Nevers et d'Auxerre, son of PIERRE de France Seigneur de Courtenay & his wife Elisabeth de Courtenay (after 1158-Epirus after Jun 1219). He succeeded as Marquis de Namur in 1213, by right of his second wife. He was elected to succeed his brother-in-law Henri de Flandres in 1216 as PIERRE I Emperor of Constantinople. http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/FLANDERS,%20HAINAUT.htm#BaudouinVHainautB

4. PHILIPPE de Hainaut (Valenciennes Mar 1174-15 Oct 1212, bur Namur, cathédrale de Saint-Aubin). The Flandria Generosa names (in order) "Balduinum, Philippum et Henricum" as the three sons of Count Baudouin & his wife Marguerite, specifying that Philippe was later Comte de Namur[532]. He succeeded as PHILIPPE I "le Noble" Comte de Namur in 1195, under the will of his father. Emperor Heinrich VI transformed Namur into a Marquisate in 1196. Marquis Philippe was captured by the French in 1199, his brother Count Baudouin being obliged to agree the Treaty of Péronne to secure his release[533]. A charter dated Nov 1209 records that “Philippus marchio Namurcensis” swore homage to "Henricus dux Lotharingie" for "terra Alost", after the death of "avunculi mei…Philippi…comitis Flandriæ, comitis Hannoniensis Balduinus pater meus et mater mea Margareta dicti Philippi soror"[534]. He was a member of the council of regency in Flanders during the absence of his brother Count Baudouin IX on Crusade, and during the minority of his niece Ctss Jeanne until Jan 1212. He swore allegiance to Philippe II King of France in 1206, his marriage to the king's daughter being arranged at the same time[535]. The necrology of Brogne records the death "VIII Id Oct" of "Philippus comes Namurcensis" who donated "ecclesiam de Flavion"[536]. [537]Betrothed (1193) to MATHILDE de Courtenay Ctss de Nevers, d'Auxerre et de Tonnerre, daughter of PIERRE II Seigneur de Courtenay & his first wife Agnès Ctss de Nevers et d'Auxerre ([1188]-29 Jul 1257, bur Abbaye de Réconfort, near Monceaux-le-Comte). m (contract Aug 1206) as her first husband, MARIE de France, daughter of PHILIPPE II "Auguste" King of France & his third wife Agnes von Andechs-Merano (after 1197-15 Aug 1238, bur Louvain, église Saint Pierre). The Chronicle of Alberic de Trois-Fontaines names "filium unum Philippum…et filiam unam Mariam" as children of "Philippus [rex]" and "Mariam filiam ducis Meranie et marchionis Histrie", and in a later passage records their legitimation[538]. The Chronique de Guillaume de Nangis records the marriage in 1212 of "Philippe roi de France…Marie sa fille, veuve de Philippe comte de Namur" and "le duc de Brabant"[539]. She married secondly (Soissons, Aisne 22 Apr 1213) as his second wife, Henri I Duke of Brabant. The Annales Parchenses record the marriage in 1204 of "Heinricus dux Lotharingie" and "filiam regis Francie", naming her "Maria uxor Henrici ducis" in a later passage[540]. http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/FLANDERS,%20HAINAUT.htm#BaudouinVHainautB

5. HENRI de Hainaut ([1176]-murdered Thessaloniki 11 Jul 1216). The Flandria Generosa names (in order) "Balduinum, Philippum et Henricum" as the three sons of Count Baudouin & his wife Marguerite, specifying that Henri later succeeded his brother Baudouin as Emperor of Constantinople[541]. He succeeded as HENRI I Emperor of Constantinople in 1206. http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/FLANDERS,%20HAINAUT.htm#BaudouinVHainautB

6. SIBYLLE de Hainaut (-9 Jan 1217, bur Cluny). The Chronicle of Alberic de Trois-Fontaines in 1191 names "Elizabeth Francie reginam…Hyolenz uxorem Petri Autisiodorensis et Sibiliam domnam Bellioci uxorem Wichardi" as the three daughters of "Balduinus [Haynaco]"[542]. "Guichardus Belli Joci dominus" names "uxor et amica nostra Sibilla" in his testament dated 18 Sep 1216[543]. m ([1196/98]) GUICHARD [V] "le Grand" Seigneur de Beaujeu, son of HUMBERT [IV] Seigneur de Beaujeu & his wife Agnès de Thiern, dame de Montpensier-en-Auvergne (-27 Sep 1216). http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/FLANDERS,%20HAINAUT.htm#BaudouinVHainautB

7. EUSTACHE de Hainaut (-after 1217). Villehardouin names "the Emperor's brother Eustache" when recording that Emperor Henri sent him "across the straits to Spiga" after a truce was agreed with Theodoros Laskaris[544]. Military commander 1206/1209. Regent of the kingdom of Thessaloniki 1210/16. m (betrothed [Jun/Jul] 1209) --- Angelina, daughter of MIKAEL Komnenos Dukas [Angelos] Lord of Epirus & his [first wife --- Melissene]. The primary source which confirms her parentage and marriage has not yet been identified. Her marriage was arranged by her father to seal his alliance with the Latin Empire of Constantinople[545]. http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/FLANDERS,%20HAINAUT.htm#BaudouinVHainautB

Count Baudouin VIII had one illegitimate child by an unknown mistress:

8. GODEFROI (-after 1202). The primary source which confirms his parentage has not yet been identified. Provost of St Audomar and St Donat at Bruges 1196. Provost at Mechelen. Archdeacon of Cambrai 1198. Provost of Saint-Amé de Douai 1202.http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/FLANDERS,%20HAINAUT.htm#BaudouinVHainautB

Count Baudouin VIII had [one probably illegitimate] child [by an unknown mistress]:

9. MARGUERITE (-after Mar 1237). The charter dated Mar 1236 quoted below indicates that Marguerite was the sister of Philippe de Hainaut Comte de Namur (see above). The obscurity of her husband (who is not even described in the sources identified below as a knight) and the high profile marriages of Comte Baudouin VIII’s other known children suggest that Marguerite was illegitimate. The chronology of her life (based, it is true, only on three data points) suggests that she may have been born towards the end of her father’s life. Perhaps she was left, while still a child, in the custody of Philippe Comte de Namur when their father died. A charter of “Simon van Harelbeke” dated 1234 records that he and his wife left on pilgrimage to Santiago de Compostela in Spain[546]. Maybe Simon died during the journey as the following document describes him as “late”. “Bauduin héritier de l’Empire Romain et Comte de Namur” declared that, “feu Philippe Comte de Namur son oncle seigneur d’Harlebeke” having granted “le Gavene [type of tax] de Harlebeke” to “Marguerite sa sœur et à feu Simon de Harlebeke son mari” and their heirs for ever, “Marie fille desdits Simon et Marguerite” had donated it to Marquette on entering the abbey and that he now confirmed the donation to prevent “Marguerite sa sœur comtesse de Vienne” from disturbing the abbey’s possession, by charter dated Mar 1236 (presumably O.S.)[547]. m (before 15 Oct 1212) SIMON van Harelbeke, son of --- ([1234/Mar 1237]). http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/FLANDERS,%20HAINAUT.htm#BaudouinVHainautB

http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/FLANDERS,%20HAINAUT.htm#BaudouinVHainautB

______________________

Baudouin V de Hainaut

http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baudouin_V_de_Hainaut

http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/HAINAUT.htm#BaudouinVHainautA

BAUDOUIN de Hainaut (1150-Mons 17 Dec 1195). The Chronicon Hanoniense names "Balduinum primum, Godefridum secundum, Balduinum tercium, Heinricum quartam" as the sons of "Alidis comitissa Hanonensis …cum viro Balduino comite"[255]. The Genealogica comitum Buloniensium names "Balduinum" as son of "Hainoensi comiti Balduino" and his wife Alice, specifying that he married "Margaretam filiam Theoderici Flandrensis comitis" and had children (unnamed)[256]. The Chronicle of Alberic de Trois-Fontaines names (in order) "comitem Balduinum, Henricum de Seburgo et quatuor sorores" as children of "comiti Balduini de Haynaco"[257]. "Comite Hanoniensis nepote suo [=[Heinricum] comes Namurencis] ex sorore" is referred to, but not named, in a contemporary report on the fire at the abbey of Gembloux[258].

He succeeded his father in 1171 as BAUDOUIN V Comte de Hainaut. "Ludovici advocate Hasbanie" sold the advocacy of Flône, and other rights relating to churches of Liège, to "domino comiti Hainoensi…Balduino", by charter dated 1190, witnessed by "Wilhelmus frater comitis Hainoensis, Alardus de Cimai, Nicholaus de Barbentione…"[259]. He succeeded in 1191, in right of his wife, as BAUDOUIN VIII Count of Flanders.

m (Apr 1169) as her second husband, MARGUERITE de Flandre, widow of RAOUL [II] Comte de Vermandois, daughter of THIERRY I Count of Flanders & his second wife Sibylle d'Anjou ([1145]-15 Nov 1194). The Chronicon Hanoniense records the marriage "tempore Paschali mense April 1169" of "Balduinus" and "Margharetam…Mathie comitis Boloniensis sororem"[260]. She succeeded her brother in 1191 as MARGUERITE I Ctss of Flanders.

BAUDOUIN de Hainaut, son of BAUDOUIN IV “le Bâtisseur” Comte de Hainaut & his wife Alice de Namur (1150-Mons 17 Dec 1195). He succeeded his father in 1171 as BAUDOUIN V Comte de Hainaut, and as heir to Henri Comte de Namur et de Luxembourg. He supported Philippe II King of France when war broke out with Philippe Count of Flanders in 1183 over the inheritance of the counties of Vermandois and Valois[272]. After the unexpected birth in 1186 of Ermesinde, daughter of Henri Comte de Namur et de Luxembourg, the latter revoked his assurance concerning Baudouin's succession in these two counties.

In 1188, Comte Henri was obliged to reinstate Baudouin as his heir after a verdict in the latter's favour from Heinrich VI King of Germany. Comte Baudouin attacked Namur, captured Comte Henri and obtained a confirmation of his position from Emperor Friedrich I who also secretly created him Marquis de Namur. Under a compromise reached in 1190, Baudouin received Namur immediately, and the expectation of Laroche and Durbuy after the death of Henri; the fate of Luxembourg was not mentioned. The creation of the Marquisate of Namur, and the elevation of Baudouin as Marquis de Namur, was announced at Worms in 1190[273].

Although designated as successor in Flanders by his brother-in-law Philippe Count of Flanders, Philippe II King of France claimed in 1191 that Flanders escheated to the French crown in default of male heirs on the death of Count Philippe. The settlement was mediated by the Archbishop of Reims and formalised in the Treaty of Arras[274].

Comte Baudouin was eventually enfeoffed as BAUDOUIN VIII Count of Flanders 1 Mar 1192, by right of his wife, on payment of 5,000 silver marks to the French king and doing homage to Emperor Heinrich VI King of Germany for the imperial part of Flanders[275]. On the death of his wife in 1194, Baudouin lost Flanders which was inherited by their oldest son. The necrology of Brogne records the death "XVI Kal Jan" of "Balduinus comes Hannonie"[276].

m (Apr 1169) as her second husband, MARGUERITE de Flandre, widow of RAOUL [II] Comte de Vermandois, daughter of THIERRY I Count of Flanders & his second wife Sibylle d'Anjou ([1145]-15 Nov 1194).

The Chronicon Hanoniense records the marriage "tempore Paschali mense April 1169" of "Balduinus" and "Margharetam…Mathie comitis Boloniensis sororem"[277]. She succeeded her brother in 1191 as MARGUERITE I Ctss of Flanders. The necrology of Brogne records the death "XV Kal Dec" of "Margareta comitissa Hainonensis"[278].

Count Baudouin VIII & his wife had seven children:

1. BAUDOUIN de Hainaut (Jul 1171-in prison in Bulgaria 11 Jun 1205). The Chronicon Hanoniense records the birth "1171 mense Iulio…Valencenis" of "filium…Balduinum" to "Balduinus [et] Margharetam…Mathie comitis Boloniensis sororem"[279]. He succeeded his mother in 1194 as BAUDOUIN IX Count of Flanders, and his father in 1195 as BAUDOUIN VI Comte de Hainaut.

2. other children: see FLANDERS. http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/FLANDERS,%20HAINAUT.htm#BaudouinVHainautB

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

Baudouin V de Hainaut (vers 1150 - 17 décembre 1195 à Mons), dit Baudouin le Courageux,

fut comte de Hainaut de 1171 à 1195,

comte de Flandre sous le nom de Baudouin VIII de Flandre de 1191 à 1194 et

marquis de Namur sous le nom de Baudouin Ier de 1187 à 1195.

Il est le fils du comte Baudouin IV de Hainaut et d'Alix de Namur.

Sa vie

Il épouse en 1169 au Quesnoy la fille du puissant comte de Flandre Thierry d'Alsace, Marguerite. Le mariage permet de régler le contentieux qui existait à propos de Douai ; la ville est gardée à la Flandre en échange d'une partie de la dot.

Baudouin s'efforce de mater avec fermeté les querelles de ses barons. Il se rapproche de son beau-frère Philippe d'Alsace par un traité d'alliance (1177) qui le désigne comme héritier putatif de la Flandre. Philippe l'incite à donner sa fille Isabelle en mariage au roi de France Philippe II, dotée somptueusement de l'Artois (1180).

Le conflit qui éclate peu après entre le roi et le comte de Flandre met Baudouin dans une situation rapidement inconfortable. D'abord fidèle à l'alliance flamande (1180-1184), il se voit obligé de lutter contre le duc de Brabant Henri le Guerroyeur, allié du roi, puis doit préserver les intérêts de sa fille au bord de la répudiation. Le comte de Flandre refuse finalement de le soutenir contre Henri. C'est la rupture. D'autant que, subtilement, le roi l'a désigné (à son insu) exécuteur de la trève qu'il a signée à Compiègne en 1185 avec le comte de Flandre, provoquant la fureur de celui-ci. La paix est finalement conclue en 1186 après une invasion du Hainaut, Philippe d'Alsace craignant désormais être à son tour pris en étau.

Baudouin avait été également désigné successeur du comté de Namur par son titulaire, Henri l'Aveugle, sans postérité. L'accord avait été entériné formellement par l'empereur Frédéric Barberousse en 1184 à Mayence. Le comte reçoit même en 1187 la titulature du comté érigé en marquisat. Or, en 1186 naît une fille à Henri l'Aveugle. Le comte de Namur dénonce alors l'accord précédent pour faire de sa fille Ermesinde son héritière. S'ensuit une guerre que remporte Baudouin lors de la bataille de Noville-sur-Mehaigne (1er août 1194), où, malgré une forte infériorité numérique, ses troupes écrasent celles des comtes de Namur, Hollande, Juliers et Dagsbourg, des ducs de Brabant et de Limbourg. Henri garde le marquisat en viager, mais l'héritage passe à sa mort (1196) à Baudouin.

Entre temps, Baudouin était devenu comte de Flandre à la mort de Philippe d'Alsace (1191). Succession délicate parce que la veuve de Philippe, Mathilde de Portugal, déjà pourvue d'un douaire important, s'agite pour l'agrandir davantage, et que l'opération s'est déroulée en l'absence du roi de France alors en Orient. Finalement Mathilde est déboutée de ses prétentions et Philippe Auguste accepte l'hommage du nouveau comte de Flandre, prenant au passage un relief féodal de 5000 marcs d'argent.

Le 15 novembre 1194 meurt Marguerite d'Alsace et le comté de Flandre (amputé désormais de l'Artois) passe à leur fils Baudouin IX de Flandre. Baudouin détache le marquisat de Namur pour un fils puîné, Philippe le Noble, le Namurois restant dorénavant fief lige du Hainaut (il le restera jusqu'à Philippe le Bon).

Baudouin V meurt le 18 décembre 1195 à Mons. Il est enterré dans l'église Sainte-Waudru.

Descendance

De son mariage avec Marguerite Ière de Flandre il eut 7 enfants :

* Isabelle (°1170- †1190), mariée avec le roi Philippe II de France
* Baudouin (°1171- †1205), comte de Flandre, de Hainaut et empereur latin de Constantinople
* Yolande (°1175- †1219), mariée avec Pierre II de Courtenay, empereur latin de Constantinople
* Philippe Ier le Noble, marquis de Namur (°1175- †1212)
* Henri (°1176- †1216), empereur latin de Constantinople
* Sybille (°1179- †1217) , mariée à Guichard IV sire de Beaujeu
* Eustache (†1219), régent du royaume de Thessalonique
Sources et bibliographie

* Le Glay Edward: Histoire des comtes de Flandre jusqu'à l'avènement de la Maison de Bourgogne, Comptoir des Imprimeurs-unis, Paris, MDCCCXLIII
* Dumont Georges-Henri: Histoire de la Belgique, Histoire/Le Cri, Bruxelles 1977, ISBN 2-87106-182-3
* Douxchamps Cécile et José: Nos dynastes médiévaux, Wepion-Namur 1996, José Douxchamps, éditeur; ISBN 29600078-1-6
http://worldroots.com/brigitte/famous/b/baudouin5-8flandersdesc1150.htm

Baldwin V of Hainaut (1150 – December 17, 1195) was count of Hainaut (1171–1195), count of Flanders as Baldwin VIII (1191–1195) and margrave of Namur as Baldwin I (1189–1195).

He was the son of Baldwin IV, Count of Hainaut. Flanders was acquired via his marriage to Margaret I of Flanders in 1169. Namur was acquired from his mother Alice of Namur

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baldwin_V,_Count_of_Hainaut

Baldwin V, Count of Hainaut

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search

Baldwin V of Hainaut (1150 – 17 December 1195) was count of Hainaut (1171–1195), count of Flanders as Baldwin VIII (1191–1195) and margrave of Namur as Baldwin I (1189–1195).

[edit] History

He was the son of Baldwin IV, Count of Hainaut. Flanders was acquired via his marriage to Margaret I of Flanders in 1169. Namur was acquired from his mother Alice of Namur.

[edit] Family

With Margaret, Baldwin had the following issue:

* Isabelle of Hainaut (Valenciennes, April 1170 – 15 March 1190, Paris), married king Philip II of France
* Baldwin VI of Hainaut (1171–1205), also count of Flanders and Latin Emperor
* Yolanda of Flanders (1175–1219), married Peter II of Courtenay, Latin Emperor
* Philip I, Marquis of Namur (1175–1212)
* Henry of Flanders (1176–1216), Latin Emperor
* Sybille of Hainault (1179 – 9 January 1217), married c. 1197 Guichard IV, Sire de Beaujeu (d. 1216)
* Eustace of Hainault (d. 1219), regent of the Kingdom of Thessalonica
* Godfrey of Hainault
[edit] See also

* Counts of Hainaut family tree
* Counts of Flanders family tree
Preceded by

Philip Count of Flanders Blason Comte-de-Flandre.svg

1191–1194

With: Margaret I Succeeded by

Baldwin VI/IX

Preceded by

Baldwin IV Count of Hainaut Blason fr Hainaut ancien.svg

1171–1195

Preceded by

Henry Marquis of Namur Namur Arms.svg

1189–1195 Succeeded by

Philip I

This page was last modified on 1 June 2010 at 02:28.

Baldwin V of Hainaut (1150 – 17 December 1195) was count of Hainaut (1171–1195), count of Flanders as Baldwin VIII (1191–1195) and margrave of Namur as Baldwin I (1189–1195).

[edit] History

He was the son of Baldwin IV, Count of Hainaut. Flanders was acquired via his marriage to Margaret I of Flanders in 1169. Namur was acquired from his mother Alice of Namur.

[edit] Family

With Margaret, Baldwin had the following issue:

Isabelle of Hainaut (Valenciennes, April 1170 – March 15, 1190, Paris), married king Philip II of France

Baldwin VI of Hainaut (1171–1205), also count of Flanders and Latin Emperor

Yolanda of Flanders (1175–1219), married Peter II of Courtenay, Latin Emperor

Philip I, Marquis of Namur (1175–1212)

Henry of Flanders (1176–1216), Latin Emperor

Sybille of Hainault (1179 – 9 January 1217), married c. 1197 Guichard IV, Sire de Beaujeu (d. 1216)

Eustace of Hainault (d. 1219), regent of the Kingdom of Thessalonica

Godfrey of Hainault

[edit] See also

Counts of Hainaut family tree

Counts of Flanders family tree

Preceded by

Philip Count of Flanders

1191 – 1194

With: Margaret I Succeeded by

Baldwin VI/IX

Preceded by

Baldwin IV Count of Hainaut

1171 – 1195

Preceded by

Henry Marquis of Namur

1189 – 1195 Succeeded by

Philip I

This biographical article of a European noble is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.
v • d • e

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baldwin_V,_Count_of_Hainault

Baldwin V of Hainaut (1150 – December 17, 1195) was count of Hainaut (1171–1195), count of Flanders as Baldwin VIII (1191–1195) and margrave of Namur as Baldwin I (1189–1195).

He was the son of Baldwin IV, Count of Hainaut. Flanders was acquired via his marriage to Margaret I of Flanders in 1169. Namur was acquired from his mother Alice of Namur.

With Margaret, Baldwin had the following issue:

Isabelle of Hainaut (Valenciennes, April 1170 – March 15, 1190, Paris), married king Philip II of France

Baldwin VI of Hainaut (1171–1205), also count of Flanders and Latin Emperor

Yolanda of Flanders (1175–1219), married Peter II of Courtenay, Latin Emperor

Philip I, Marquis of Namur (1175–1212)

Henry of Flanders (1176–1216), Latin Emperor

Sybille of Hainault (1179 – January 9, 1217), married c. 1197 Guichard IV, Sire de Beaujeu (d. 1216)

Eustace of Hainault (d. 1219), regent of the Kingdom of Thessalonica

Godfrey of Hainault

Baldwin V of Hainaut was Count of Hainaut (1171–1195), Count of Flanders as Baldwin VIII (1191–1195), and Margrave of Namur as Baldwin I (1189–1195). Flanders was acquired via his marriage to Margaret I of Flanders in 1169. Namur was acquired from his mother Alice of Namur.

Baldwin V of Hainaut (1150 – December 17, 1195) was count of Hainaut (1171–1195), count of Flanders as Baldwin VIII (1191–1195) and margrave of Namur as Baldwin I (1189–1195).

He was the son of Baldwin IV, Count of Hainaut. Flanders was acquired via his marriage to Margaret I of Flanders in 1169. Namur was acquired from his mother Alice of Namur.

With Margaret, Baldwin had the following issue:

Isabelle of Hainaut (Valenciennes, April 1170 – March 15, 1190, Paris), married king Philip II of France

Baldwin VI of Hainaut (1171–1205), also count of Flanders and Latin Emperor

Yolanda of Flanders (1175–1219), married Peter II of Courtenay, Latin Emperor

Philip I, Marquis of Namur (1175–1212)

Henry of Flanders (1176–1216), Latin Emperor

Sybille of Hainault (1179 – January 9, 1217), married c. 1197 Guichard IV, Sire de Beaujeu (d. 1216)

Eustace of Hainault (d. 1219), regent of the Kingdom of Thessalonica

Godfrey of Hainault

Baldwin V, Count of Hainaut
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Baldwin V of Hainaut (1150 – December 17, 1195) was count of Hainaut (1171–1195), count of Flanders as Baldwin VIII (1191–1195) and margrave of Namur as Baldwin I (1189–1195).

[edit]History

He was the son of Baldwin IV, Count of Hainaut. Flanders was acquired via his marriage to Margaret I of Flanders in 1169. Namur was acquired from his mother Alice of Namur.

Family

With Margaret, Baldwin had the following issue:

Isabelle of Hainaut (Valenciennes, April 1170 – March 15, 1190, Paris), married king Philip II of France

Baldwin VI of Hainaut (1171–1205), also count of Flanders and Latin Emperor

Yolanda of Flanders (1175–1219), married Peter II of Courtenay, Latin Emperor

Philip I, Marquis of Namur (1175–1212)

Henry of Flanders (1176–1216), Latin Emperor

Sybille of Hainault (1179 – January 9, 1217), married c. 1197 Guichard IV, Sire de Beaujeu (d. 1216)

Eustace of Hainault (d. 1219), regent of the Kingdom of Thessalonica

Godfrey of Hainault

________________________

How Baldwin V acquired his brother Philip's lands

Philip I, count of Flanders and Elisabeth of Vermandois were childless. In 1175, Philip discovered that Elisabeth was committing adultery[5][6] and had her lover, Walter de Fontaines, beaten to death.[5] Philip then obtained complete control of her lands in Vermandois from King Louis VII of France. In 1177, when Philip left for the Holy Land, he designated his sister Margaret and her second husband, Baldwin V, Count of Hainaut, as his heirs.

[5] Gislebertus (of Mons), Chronicle of Hainaut, transl. Laura Napran, (The Boydell Press, 2005), 34 note138 _________

- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baldwin_V,_Count_of_Hainaut

Baldwin V, count of Hainaut (1171–1195)
Baldwin I, margrave of Namur (1189–1195)
Baldwin VIII, count of Flanders (1191–1195)
December 17, 1195 - Baldwin V, Count of Hainaut died. He was born in 1150. He was Baldwin V of Hainaut, Baldwin VIII of Flanders and Baldwin I of Namur.

He was the son of Baldwin IV, Count of Hainaut.
Flanders was acquired via his marriage to Margaret I of Flanders in 1169.
Namur was acquired from his mother Alice of Namur.
With Margaret, Baldwin had the following issue:

Isabelle of Hainaut(Valenciennes, April 1170 – 15 March 1190, Paris), married king Philip II of France
Baldwin VI of Hainaut(1171–1205), also count of Flanders and Latin Emperor
Yolanda of Flanders (1175–1219), married Peter II of Courtenay, Latin Emperor
Philip I, Marquis of Namur (1175–1212)
Henry of Flanders (1176–1216), Latin Emperor
Sybille of Hainault (1179 – 9 January 1217), married c. 1197 Guichard IV, Sire de Beaujeu (d. 1216)
Eustace of Hainault (d. 1219), regent of the Kingdom of Thessalonica
Godfrey of Hainault
read more
View All
Immediate Family
Text View
Showing 12 of 23 people

Marguerite de Lorraine, Countess...
wife

Isabelle de Hainaut, Reine de Fr...
daughter

Baldwin I, Latin Emperor of Cons...
son

Yolanda of Flanders
daughter

Philippe I de Hainaut, comte de ...
son

Henry, Latin Emperor of Constant...
son

Sybille de Hainaut
daughter

Eustache de Flanders
son

NN mistress of Badouin, mother o...
partner

Godefroi
son

NN mistress of Badouin, mother o...
partner

Marguerite
daughter

<---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->

Agregado por: Ing. Carlos Juan Felipe Urdaneta Alamo, MD.IG.

<---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->

INDICE DE PARIENTES

INCLUYASE