22° Bisabuelo/ Great Grandfather de: Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo →Jean I Montgommery, comte de Ponthieu is your 22nd great grandfather.
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Jean I Montgommery, comte de Ponthieu is your 22nd great grandfather.of→ Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo→ Enrique Jorge Urdaneta Lecuna
your father → Elena Cecilia Lecuna Escobar
his mother → Vicente de Jesus Lecuna Salboch, Dr.
her father → Ramón Lecuna Sucre
his father → Josefa Margarita Sucre y Márquez de Valenzuela
his mother → Coronel Vicente Vitto Luis Ramón de Sucre y García de Urbaneja
her father → Coronel Antonio Mauricio Jacinto Tadeo Rosalio Sucre Pardo y Trelles
his father → Carlos Francisco Francois Sucre y Pardo, Sargento Mayor
his father → Charles Adrien de Sucre y D´Ives
his father → Adrianne D'Ives y D'Argenteau
his mother → Jacqueline D'Argenteau
her mother → Conrad d'Argenteau, seigneur de Ligny
her father → Renaud VII d'Argenteau, seigneur de Bossut
his father → Marie de Hamal, dame de Trazegnies
his mother → Sibylle de Ligne
her mother → Bonne d'Abbeville, dame de Rély
her mother → Edmond d'Abbeville, seigneur de Boubers
her father → Girard III d'Abbeville, seigneur de Boubers
his father → Isabeau de Picquigny
his mother → Jean II de Picquigny, II
her father → Jean I de Picquigny, Gouverneur d'Artois
his father → Sire de Picquigny Vidame d' Amiens Gérard de Picquigny
his father → Marguerite de Ponthieu
his mother → Jean I Montgommery, comte de Ponthieu
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Jean I Montgommery, comte de Ponthieu MP
Gender: Male
Birth: circa 1142
Montreuil, Seine-Saint-Denis, Île-de-France, France
Death: June 30, 1191 (44-53)
Acre, Akko, North District, Palestine (Palestine, State of) (Died in battle at Siege of Acre, Palestine during his third crusade)
Place of Burial: Abbey of Saint-Josse-au-Bois, Saint-Josse-sur-Mer, Pas-de-Calais, Nord-Pas-de-Calais, France
Immediate Family:
Son of Guy II Talvas, Comte de Ponthieu and Ida de Saint Pol
Husband of Laurette de Saint-Valéry and Beatrice of Saint Pol
Father of Adèle de Ponthieu; Guillaume II Talvas, comte de Ponthieu; Marguerite de Ponthieu; Blandine de Maisnieres de Ponthieu and Agnès de Ponthieu
Brother of Rohese Of Ponthieu and Seigneur Guy de Ponthieu, III de Noyelle
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Jean Montgomery I, Count d’Ponthieu (1141 - 1191) was Count of Ponthieu from 1147 to the death of his father, Guy II of Ponthieu and the lifetime of his grandfather Wilhelm I of Ponthieu.
Son of Guy II of Ponthieu (1115 - 1147), Count of Ponthieu, son and grandson of Helen of Burgundy (1085 † 1141).
Biography
He donated a portion of its forests (the current timber Bonance on the town of Grand Laviers) to the leper Brothers Val, a leper hospital founded in Abbeville with the Abbots of Saint-Riquier.
He adopted similar coats of arms [1] to those of the dukes of Burgundy, who were his cousins by his maternal grandmother.
Barely in office, he had a war with Bernard III, Seigneur de St. Valery, because he had fortified the Crotoy Domart, Berneuil and Bernaville which housed looters and arsonists. After various hostilities, King Louis the Young ordered that the parties agree to its board. It was decided that the case, very confused, would be settled by a duel. Before the duel took place, the parties finally agreed in May 1150: Crotoy remained the count and Domart, Berneuil Bernaville and went to the lord of Saint-Valery.
In 1166, John agreed to surrender his grandfather had done to King Henry II of England, the castles of Alençon and the Roche-Mabille, to stationing garrisons Norman and English. In 1168, John having refused passage of the troops of Henry II of England on his land because it was at war with Louis the Younger, Henry II of England burned several possessions of John, whose Vimeu.
In 1173, John supported the party at Henry Court-Mantel, revolted against the King of England, his father.
On June 9, 1184, he confirmed the right of the common people of Abbeville granted in 1130 by his grandfather, William.
In 1190, he went to the Holy Land with King Philippe Auguste. He died at the Siege of Acre (1191) on his 3rd crusade. He was buried at the Abbey of Saint-Josse-au-Bois, Saint-Josse-sur-Mer, Pas-de-Calais, Nord-Pas-de-Calais, France
Marriage and children
He married:
1. Mahaut
2. Laura, daughter of Bernard III of St. Valery, which he broke, which earned him a threat of excommunication.
3. Beatrice, daughter of Anselm of Campdavaine, Comte de Saint-Pol and Eustache de Champagne
From these three wives, one Beatrix gave birth to children [2]:
* William II († 1221), Count of Ponthieu
* Adele, married to Thomas, lord of Saint-Valery and Domart
* Margaret, married to Enguerrand Piquigny, vidame Amiens hereditary or solicitor of the bishopric
* Helen, married to William of Estouteville
Sources
* Dantine Maur-Francois, Charles Clémencet, Saint-Allais (Nicolas Viton), Ursin Durand, François Clement - "The art of verifying dates of historical events, charters, chronicles and other ancient ... (1770), impr. G. Desprez, Paris, 1 vol. folio (xxxvii + 934) p.
* Florentine Lefils - "History civil, political and religious of St. Valery and County of Vimeu" (1858, Print. Lorisse; repr. "Monographs of cities and villages of France", 2005) - 1 vol. (VIII-254 p.) (ISBN 2-84373-746-X)
Notes and references [edit]
1. ↑ The Dukes of Burgundy were bandaged with gold and azure a bordure gules, while John I passed the three gold stripes of blue at the edge of the jaws.
2. ↑ Counts of Ponthieu [archive] on the website of the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy
http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jean_Ier_de_Ponthieu
Jean Montgomery I, Count d’Ponthieu (1141 - 1191) was Count of Ponthieu from 1147 to the death of his father, Guy II of Ponthieu and the lifetime of his grandfather Wilhelm I of Ponthieu.
Son of Guy II of Ponthieu (1115 - 1147), Count of Ponthieu, son and grandson of Helen of Burgundy (1085 † 1141).
Biography
He donated a portion of its forests (the current timber Bonance on the town of Grand Laviers) to the leper Brothers Val, a leper hospital founded in Abbeville with the Abbots of Saint-Riquier.
He adopted similar coats of arms [1] to those of the dukes of Burgundy, who were his cousins by his maternal grandmother.
Barely in office, he had a war with Bernard III, Seigneur de St. Valery, because he had fortified the Crotoy Domart, Berneuil and Bernaville which housed looters and arsonists. After various hostilities, King Louis the Young ordered that the parties agree to its board. It was decided that the case, very confused, would be settled by a duel. Before the duel took place, the parties finally agreed in May 1150: Crotoy remained the count and Domart, Berneuil Bernaville and went to the lord of Saint-Valery.
In 1166, John agreed to surrender his grandfather had done to King Henry II of England, the castles of Alençon and the Roche-Mabille, to stationing garrisons Norman and English. In 1168, John having refused passage of the troops of Henry II of England on his land because it was at war with Louis the Younger, Henry II of England burned several possessions of John, whose Vimeu.
In 1173, John supported the party at Henry Court-Mantel, revolted against the King of England, his father.
On June 9, 1184, he confirmed the right of the common people of Abbeville granted in 1130 by his grandfather, William.
In 1190, he went to the Holy Land with King Philippe Auguste. He died at the Siege of Acre (1191) on his 3rd crusade. He was buried at the Abbey of Saint-Josse-au-Bois, Saint-Josse-sur-Mer, Pas-de-Calais, Nord-Pas-de-Calais, France
Marriage and children
He married:
1. Mahaut
2. Laura, daughter of Bernard III of St. Valery, which he broke, which earned him a threat of excommunication.
3. Beatrice, daughter of Anselm of Campdavaine, Comte de Saint-Pol and Eustache de Champagne
From these three wives, one Beatrix gave birth to children [2]:
* William II († 1221), Count of Ponthieu
* Adele, married to Thomas, lord of Saint-Valery and Domart
* Margaret, married to Enguerrand Piquigny, vidame Amiens hereditary or solicitor of the bishopric
* Helen, married to William of Estouteville
Sources
* Dantine Maur-Francois, Charles Clémencet, Saint-Allais (Nicolas Viton), Ursin Durand, François Clement - "The art of verifying dates of historical events, charters, chronicles and other ancient ... (1770), impr. G. Desprez, Paris, 1 vol. folio (xxxvii + 934) p.
* Florentine Lefils - "History civil, political and religious of St. Valery and County of Vimeu" (1858, Print. Lorisse; repr. "Monographs of cities and villages of France", 2005) - 1 vol. (VIII-254 p.) (ISBN 2-84373-746-X)
Notes and references [edit]
1. ↑ The Dukes of Burgundy were bandaged with gold and azure a bordure gules, while John I passed the three gold stripes of blue at the edge of the jaws.
2. ↑ Counts of Ponthieu [archive] on the website of the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy
http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jean_Ier_de_Ponthieu
Jean Montgomery I, Count d’Ponthieu (1141 - 1191) was Count of Ponthieu from 1147 to the death of his father, Guy II of Ponthieu and the lifetime of his grandfather Wilhelm I of Ponthieu.
Son of Guy II of Ponthieu (1115 - 1147), Count of Ponthieu, son and grandson of Helen of Burgundy (1085 † 1141).
Biography
He donated a portion of its forests (the current timber Bonance on the town of Grand Laviers) to the leper Brothers Val, a leper hospital founded in Abbeville with the Abbots of Saint-Riquier.
He adopted similar coats of arms [1] to those of the dukes of Burgundy, who were his cousins by his maternal grandmother.
Barely in office, he had a war with Bernard III, Seigneur de St. Valery, because he had fortified the Crotoy Domart, Berneuil and Bernaville which housed looters and arsonists. After various hostilities, King Louis the Young ordered that the parties agree to its board. It was decided that the case, very confused, would be settled by a duel. Before the duel took place, the parties finally agreed in May 1150: Crotoy remained the count and Domart, Berneuil Bernaville and went to the lord of Saint-Valery.
In 1166, John agreed to surrender his grandfather had done to King Henry II of England, the castles of Alençon and the Roche-Mabille, to stationing garrisons Norman and English. In 1168, John having refused passage of the troops of Henry II of England on his land because it was at war with Louis the Younger, Henry II of England burned several possessions of John, whose Vimeu.
In 1173, John supported the party at Henry Court-Mantel, revolted against the King of England, his father.
On June 9, 1184, he confirmed the right of the common people of Abbeville granted in 1130 by his grandfather, William.
In 1190, he went to the Holy Land with King Philippe Auguste. He died at the Siege of Acre (1191) on his 3rd crusade. He was buried at the Abbey of Saint-Josse-au-Bois, Saint-Josse-sur-Mer, Pas-de-Calais, Nord-Pas-de-Calais, France
Marriage and children
He married:
1. Mahaut
2. Laura, daughter of Bernard III of St. Valery, which he broke, which earned him a threat of excommunication.
3. Beatrice, daughter of Anselm of Campdavaine, Comte de Saint-Pol and Eustache de Champagne
From these three wives, one Beatrix gave birth to children [2]:
* William II († 1221), Count of Ponthieu
* Adele, married to Thomas, lord of Saint-Valery and Domart
* Margaret, married to Enguerrand Piquigny, vidame Amiens hereditary or solicitor of the bishopric
* Helen, married to William of Estouteville
Sources
* Dantine Maur-Francois, Charles Clémencet, Saint-Allais (Nicolas Viton), Ursin Durand, François Clement - "The art of verifying dates of historical events, charters, chronicles and other ancient ... (1770), impr. G. Desprez, Paris, 1 vol. folio (xxxvii + 934) p.
* Florentine Lefils - "History civil, political and religious of St. Valery and County of Vimeu" (1858, Print. Lorisse; repr. "Monographs of cities and villages of France", 2005) - 1 vol. (VIII-254 p.) (ISBN 2-84373-746-X)
Notes and references [edit]
1. ↑ The Dukes of Burgundy were bandaged with gold and azure a bordure gules, while John I passed the three gold stripes of blue at the edge of the jaws.
2. ↑ Counts of Ponthieu [archive] on the website of the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy
http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jean_Ier_de_Ponthieu
Jean Montgomery I, Count d’Ponthieu (1141 - 1191) was Count of Ponthieu from 1147 to the death of his father, Guy II of Ponthieu and the lifetime of his grandfather Wilhelm I of Ponthieu.
Son of Guy II of Ponthieu (1115 - 1147), Count of Ponthieu, son and grandson of Helen of Burgundy (1085 † 1141).
Biography
He donated a portion of its forests (the current timber Bonance on the town of Grand Laviers) to the leper Brothers Val, a leper hospital founded in Abbeville with the Abbots of Saint-Riquier.
He adopted similar coats of arms [1] to those of the dukes of Burgundy, who were his cousins by his maternal grandmother.
Barely in office, he had a war with Bernard III, Seigneur de St. Valery, because he had fortified the Crotoy Domart, Berneuil and Bernaville which housed looters and arsonists. After various hostilities, King Louis the Young ordered that the parties agree to its board. It was decided that the case, very confused, would be settled by a duel. Before the duel took place, the parties finally agreed in May 1150: Crotoy remained the count and Domart, Berneuil Bernaville and went to the lord of Saint-Valery.
In 1166, John agreed to surrender his grandfather had done to King Henry II of England, the castles of Alençon and the Roche-Mabille, to stationing garrisons Norman and English. In 1168, John having refused passage of the troops of Henry II of England on his land because it was at war with Louis the Younger, Henry II of England burned several possessions of John, whose Vimeu.
In 1173, John supported the party at Henry Court-Mantel, revolted against the King of England, his father.
On June 9, 1184, he confirmed the right of the common people of Abbeville granted in 1130 by his grandfather, William.
In 1190, he went to the Holy Land with King Philippe Auguste. He died at the Siege of Acre (1191) on his 3rd crusade. He was buried at the Abbey of Saint-Josse-au-Bois, Saint-Josse-sur-Mer, Pas-de-Calais, Nord-Pas-de-Calais, France
Marriage and children
He married:
1. Mahaut
2. Laura, daughter of Bernard III of St. Valery, which he broke, which earned him a threat of excommunication.
3. Beatrice, daughter of Anselm of Campdavaine, Comte de Saint-Pol and Eustache de Champagne
From these three wives, one Beatrix gave birth to children [2]:
* William II († 1221), Count of Ponthieu
* Adele, married to Thomas, lord of Saint-Valery and Domart
* Margaret, married to Enguerrand Piquigny, vidame Amiens hereditary or solicitor of the bishopric
* Helen, married to William of Estouteville
Sources
* Dantine Maur-Francois, Charles Clémencet, Saint-Allais (Nicolas Viton), Ursin Durand, François Clement - "The art of verifying dates of historical events, charters, chronicles and other ancient ... (1770), impr. G. Desprez, Paris, 1 vol. folio (xxxvii + 934) p.
* Florentine Lefils - "History civil, political and religious of St. Valery and County of Vimeu" (1858, Print. Lorisse; repr. "Monographs of cities and villages of France", 2005) - 1 vol. (VIII-254 p.) (ISBN 2-84373-746-X)
Notes and references [edit]
1. ↑ The Dukes of Burgundy were bandaged with gold and azure a bordure gules, while John I passed the three gold stripes of blue at the edge of the jaws.
2. ↑ Counts of Ponthieu [archive] on the website of the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy
http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jean_Ier_de_Ponthieu
John I of Ponthieu (c. 1140–1191) was the son of Guy II of Ponthieu and succeeded him as Count of Ponthieu in 1147. He married Beatrice of Saint-Pol, and was succeeded by his son William IV Talvas.
John I of Ponthieu (c. 1140–1191) was the son of Guy II of Ponthieu and succeeded him as Count of Ponthieu in 1147. He married Beatrice of Saint-Pol, and was succeeded by his son William IV Talvas.
John I of Ponthieu (c. 1140–1191) was the son of Guy II of Ponthieu and succeeded him as Count of Ponthieu in 1147. He married Beatrice of Saint-Pol, and was succeeded by his son William IV Talvas.
Jean Montgomery I, Count d’Ponthieu (1141 - 1191) was Count of Ponthieu from 1147 to the death of his father, Guy II of Ponthieu and the lifetime of his grandfather Wilhelm I of Ponthieu.
Son of Guy II of Ponthieu (1115 - 1147), Count of Ponthieu, son and grandson of Helen of Burgundy (1085 † 1141).
Biography
He donated a portion of its forests (the current timber Bonance on the town of Grand Laviers) to the leper Brothers Val, a leper hospital founded in Abbeville with the Abbots of Saint-Riquier.
He adopted similar coats of arms to those of the dukes of Burgundy, who were his cousins by his maternal grandmother.
Barely in office, he had a war with Bernard III, Seigneur de St. Valery, because he had fortified the Crotoy Domart, Berneuil and Bernaville which housed looters and arsonists. After various hostilities, King Louis the Young ordered that the parties agree to its board. It was decided that the case, very confused, would be settled by a duel. Before the duel took place, the parties finally agreed in May 1150: Crotoy remained the count and Domart, Berneuil Bernaville and went to the lord of Saint-Valery.
In 1166, John agreed to surrender his grandfather had done to King Henry II of England, the castles of Alençon and the Roche-Mabille, to stationing garrisons Norman and English. In 1168, John having refused passage of the troops of Henry II of England on his land because it was at war with Louis the Younger, Henry II of England burned several possessions of John, whose Vimeu.
In 1173, John supported the party at Henry Court-Mantel, revolted against the King of England, his father.
On June 9, 1184, he confirmed the right of the common people of Abbeville granted in 1130 by his grandfather, William.
In 1190, he went to the Holy Land with King Philippe Auguste. He died at the Siege of Acre (1191) on his 3rd crusade. He was buried at the Abbey of Saint-Josse-au-Bois, Saint-Josse-sur-Mer, Pas-de-Calais, Nord-Pas-de-Calais, France
Marriage and children
He married:
1. Mahaut
2. Laura, daughter of Bernard III of St. Valery, which he broke, which earned him a threat of excommunication.
3. Beatrice, daughter of Anselm of Campdavaine, Comte de Saint-Pol and Eustache de Champagne
From these three wives, one Beatrix gave birth to children:
William II († 1221), Count of Ponthieu
Adele, married to Thomas, lord of Saint-Valery and Domart
Margaret, married to Enguerrand Piquigny, vidame Amiens hereditary or solicitor of the bishopric
Helen, married to William of Estouteville
John I of Ponthieu (c. 1140–1191) was the son of Guy II of Ponthieu and succeeded him as Count of Ponthieu in 1147. He married Beatrice of Saint-Pol, and was succeeded by his son William IV Talvas.
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Beatrice of Saint Pol
wife
Adèle de Ponthieu
daughter
Guillaume II Talvas, comte de Po...
son
Marguerite de Ponthieu
daughter
Blandine de Maisnieres de Ponthieu
daughter
Agnès de Ponthieu
daughter
Laurette de Saint-Valéry
wife
Guy II Talvas, Comte de Ponthieu
father
Ida de Saint Pol
mother
Rohese Of Ponthieu
sister
Seigneur Guy de Ponthieu, III de...
brother
Helene de Ponthieu
stepdaughter
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Agregado por: Ing. Carlos Juan Felipe Urdaneta Alamo, MD.IG.
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RANGO HISTORICO
✺- 1142→Reino de Galicia - Fundación del primer monasterio cisterciense. (Monasterio de Sobrado)→
→Reino de Aragón -En el mes de noviembre de este año fue otorgado el Fuero de Daroca por Ramón Berenguer, conde de Barcelona→
→Reino de León - El rey Alfonso VII reconquista definitivamente la ciudad de Coria (junio de 1142) y restablece su obispado.
✺- 1152→Divorcio de Luis VII de Francia y de Leonor de Aquitania
→Fundación de Kasímov por Yuri Dolgoruki.
→ Fallece: 15 de febrero - Conrado III, emperador del Sacro Imperio.
✺- 1162→Amalarico I, rey de Jerusalén→
→Primera Feria del Ajo en Santa Marina del Rey.
→ Nace: 16 de abril: Gengis Kan, fundador del Imperio Mongol.1
→ Fallece: 10 de febrero: Balduino III, rey de Jerusalén.
→ Fallece:Eudes II, rey borgoñón.
→ Fallece:Haakon II, rey noruego.
→ Fallece:Ramón Berenguer IV, conde barcelonés.
✺- 1172→Saladino se apodera del puerto de Ayla sobre el mar Rojo, para atacar Siria→
→1 de marzo : Inicio del reinado de Bela III, rey de Hungría (hasta 1196)→
→Establecemiento de la orden de Santiago en Portugal, se le conceden las localidades de Arruda dos Vinhos y, posteriormente, Alcácer do Sal, Almada y Palmela→
→El rey D. Afonso Henríquez asocia a su hijo D. Sancho en el gobierno del reino de Portugal→
→Creación en el reino de Aragón del obispado de Albarracín, (hoy en Teruel)→
→Gerardo II de Rosellón dona su condado al rey de Aragón Alfonso II el Trovador.
→ Nace: Gebra Maskal Lalibela, rey de Etiopía.
→ Nace: Balduino I de Constantinopla, futuro emperador latino de Bizancio, conde de → Nace: Flandes y Hennegau, dirigente de la IV Cruzada (m. 1205)
✺- 1182→Alejo IV, emperador bizantino (1203-1204) (m. 1204).
Leonor, princesa aragonesa y condesa tolosana (m. 1226).
26 de septiembre: Francisco de Asís, religioso y santo italiano (m. 1226).
García Fernández de León, hijo ilegítimo del rey Fernando II de León y de Urraca López de Haro.
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Agregado por: Ing. Carlos Juan Felipe Urdaneta Alamo, MD.IG.
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