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Guillaume Ix Le Troubadour, Duc D'aquitaine ★ Ref: DA-439 |•••► #FRANCIA 🇫🇷🏆 #Genealogía #Genealogy

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19° Bisabuelo/ Great Grandfather de:
Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo
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Guillaume IX le Troubadour, duc d'Aquitaine is your 19th 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 → Manuel José de Monserrate y Urbina, Teniente Coronel
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 →  Mayor de Mendoza Manzanedo
her mother →  Juan Fernández De Mendoza Y Manuel
her father →  Sancha Manuel
his mother →  Sancho Manuel de Villena Castañeda, señor del Infantado y Carrión de los Céspedes
her father →  Manuel de Castilla, señor de Escalona
his father → Ferdinand "the Saint", king of Castile and León
his father →  Berenguela I la Grande, reina de Castilla
his mother →  Eleanor of England, Queen consort of Castile
her mother →  Eleanor d'Aquitaine, Queen Consort Of England
her mother →  William X, Duke of Aquitaine
her father →  Guillaume IX le Troubadour, duc d'Aquitaine
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Greve Guillaume 'le Troubadour' d'Aquitaine, IX duc d'Aquitaine et VII comte de Poitou MP
French: Guillaume d'Aquitaine, le Troubadour
Gender: Male
Birth: October 22, 1071
Bordeaux, Aquitania, France
Death: February 10, 1126 (54)
Poitiers, Poitou-Charentes, France
Place of Burial: Montierneuf, France
Immediate Family:
Son of Guillaume VIII Geoffroy d'Aquitaine, VIII duc d'Aquitaine et Vl comte de Poitou and Hildegarde of Burgundy
Husband of Philippa de Toulouse, comtesse de Poitiers; Ermengarde d'Anjou, Duchess of Aquitaine Fergant; Hildegarde of Marets and Berthe
Partner of Dangereuse de L'Île-Bouchard
Father of William X, Duke of Aquitaine; Inés de Poitou, reina consorte de Aragón; Adélaïde de Poitiers; Raymond of Poitiers, Prince of Antioch; Aimar d'Aquitaine, /i/ and 3 others
Brother of Agnes of Poitou; Hugues, infant d’Aquitaine and Beatrix de Aquitania, Reina consorte de León
Half brother of Inés de Aquitania
Added by: "Skip" Bremer on June 9, 2007
Managed by:   Guillermo Eduardo Ferrero Montilla and 253 others
Curated by: Pam Wilson, Curator (On Vacation)
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NOTE: Please keep his name as Guillaume "le Troubadour" IX Duke of Aquitaine, VII Comte de Poitou

From Foundation for Medieval Genealogy:

GUILLAUME d’Aquitaine, son of GUILLAUME VIII Duke of Aquitaine [GUILLAUME VI Comte de Poitou] & his third wife Hildegarde de Bourgogne [Capet] (22 Oct 1071-10 Feb 1126).

The Chronicle of Saint-Maxence records the birth "1071 XI Kal Nov" of "Goffredo duci…Guillelmus filius"[456]. "Willelmi filius eius" subscribed the donation by "Willelmus dux Aquitanorum" of property to St Cyprien, Poitiers by charter dated [1073/87][457]. "Goffredus…dux Aquitanorum et Guillelmus filius eius" set entry conditions for monks at Saint-Hilaire de Poitiers by charter dated 1078 or 1079[458].

He succeeded his father in 1086 as GUILLAUME IX Duke of Aquitaine, GUILLAUME VII Comte de Poitou. Albert of Aix records that "Guillaume comte et prince du Poitou de la famille d'Henri III empereur" crossed Hungary peacefully with Welf Duke of Bavaria and "la noble comtesse Ida de la marche d'Autriche", entered the territory of the Bulgars in which "le duc des Bulgares nommé Guzh" refused their passage into Adrianople, but that Guillaume captured "le duc des Bulgares" who was forced to allow the pilgrims to continue[459], undated but in a passage adjacent to text which records events in 1101.

According to Albert of Aix, after the army was dispersed in Asia Minor by the Turks, Duke Guillaume fled to Longinach near Tursolt, from where he was rescued and brought to Antioch by Tancred's forces[460].

He was a troubadour and composer of lyric poetry. The Chronicle of Saint-Maxence records the death "1126 IV Id Feb" of "Willelmus dux Aquitanorum" and his burial "Pictavis civitate apud Novum Monasterium"[461]. The necrology of the Prieuré de Fontaines records the death "10 Feb" of "Guillermus dux Aquitanorum"[462].

m firstly (1089, divorced 1090) as her first husband, ERMENGARDE d'Anjou, daughter of FOULQUES IV "le Rechin" Comte d'Anjou & his first wife Hildegarde de Baugency ([1068]-Jerusalem 1 Jun 1146). The Chronicle of Alberic de Trois-Fontaines refers to the daughter of "Fulco" as "comitissam Redonensem" but does not name her[463]. "Fulco Andegavensis comes" donated property to Angers with the consent of "filiis meis Gaufrido et Fulconello et filia mea Ermengarde" by charter dated 23 Jun 1096[464]. William of Tyre names her "Hermingerda", gives her father's name implying that she was born from his fifth marriage, and names her first husband "Pictaviensium comitis Willelmi", her divorce and her second husband "comes Brittaniæ"[465]. She married secondly ([1093]) as his second wife, Alain IV "Fergant" Duke of Brittany. The Gesta Consulum Andegavorum records that "comitissa Brittaniæ" was the daughter of Foulques & his first wife "filiam Lancelini de Baugenciaco", adding that she became a nun at "Jerusalem in ecclesia Sanctæ Annæ" after her husband died[466]. "Fulco Andecavorum comes nepos Goffridi Martelli…consulis" donated property to Angers with the consent of "Ermenjarde filia sua comitissa Brittaniæ" by charter dated 12 Apr 1109[467]. The necrology of Angers Cathedral records the death "Kal Jun" of "Ermengardis comitissa Britanniæ mater Conan ducis et soror Fulconis regis Hierosolymitani"[468]. The Annals of St Salvator Redon record that "Ermengardeque Alani conjugem, vere piam ac religiosam" was buried at the abbey of Redon[469].

m secondly (1094, divorced 1115) PHILIPPA [Mathilde] de Toulouse, daughter of GUILLAUME IV Comte de Toulouse & his second wife Emma de Mortain (-28 Nov 1117). The Chronicle of Saint-Maxence records the marriage of "Guillelmus" and "Philippam…filiam Willelmi comitis Tolosani et neptem Raimundi de Sancto Egidio"[470]. Robert of Torigny refers to, but does not name, "filiam unam" of "comes Tolosanus frater Raimundi comitis Sancti Ægidii" & his wife, who married "Guillermus comes Pictavensis et dux Aquitanorum"[471]. "Guillelmus…Aquitainie similiter et Vasconie dux et comes" confirmed donations to Sainte-Croix, Bordeaux by "genitor noster Guillelmus qui et Gaufridus vocatus est" with the consent of "Mathildis uxor…" by charter dated 23 Mar 1096[472]. It is assumed that Mathilde and Philippa refer to the same person. "Philippia" daughter of "Wilelmi comitis Tolose" and wife of Guillaume Comte de Poitou made a joint donation with her husband to Toulouse Saint-Sernin dated Jul 1098[473]. She is also named in an undated donation by Bertrand Comte de Toulouse which names her father but not her husband[474]. “Philippæ comitissæ…Emmæ filia” reached agreement with “Bernardus-Atonis filius Ermengardis” by charter dated 1114[475]. Orderic Vitalis recounts that "Hildegarde Ctss de Poitou" complained to the synod of Reims, held in Oct 1119 by Pope Calixtus II, that her husband had abandoned her for "Malberge wife of the vicomte de Châtellerault"[476]. This is inconsistent with the date of death of Philippa, shown above, not to mention the difference of first name. She became a nun. The necrology of the Prieuré de Fontaines records the death "28 Nov" of "Philippa monacha, Pictavensis comitissa"[477].

Mistress (1): AMAUBERGE [Dangerose], wife of AIMERY [I] Vicomte de Châtellerault, daughter of ---. She left her husband to live with Duke Guillaume, for which he was excommunicated. Orderic Vitalis recounts that "Hildegarde Ctss de Poitou" complained to the synod of Reims, held in Oct 1119 by Pope Calixtus II, that her husband had abandoned her for "Malberge wife of the vicomte de Châtellerault"[478].

Guillaume IX de Poitiers (Guilhem IX de Peitieus), né le 22 octobre 1071, mort le 10 février 1127, surnommé depuis le XIXe siècle le Troubadour, comte de Poitiers sous le nom de Guillaume VII et duc d'Aquitaine et de Gascogne de 1086 à sa mort. La forme limousine de son prénom est Guilhem. Il est également le premier poète connu en occitan. Il succède à son père Guillaume VIII à l'âge de 15 ans, ce qui lui vaut le surnom de Guillaume le Jeune au début de son règne. Son véritable nom en tant que duc d'Aquitaine devrait être en fait Guillaume VIII puisque son ancêtre Guillaume "Tête d'Etoupe", comte de Poitou de 936 à 963 n'a jamais porté - contrairement à une idée reçue - le titre de duc d'Aquitaine et ne fut donc pas le Guillaume III "Tête d'Etoupe", duc d'Aquitaine des listes traditionnelles des ducs d'Aquitaine depuis le XIXe siècle. Le titre de "duc des Aquitains" ne fut pris qu'en 965 par le fils de Tête d'Etoupe, Guillaume "IV" Fierabras (en réalité il devrait être Guillaume III), comte de Poitou (963-996).

Sommaire

1 Généalogie Ramnulfides

2 L'apogée de la principauté aquitaine

3 Un prince cultivé

3.1 Ami des artistes et troubadour lui-même

3.2 Exemple de chanson

4 Chronologie succincte

5 Voir aussi

6 Lien externe

Généalogie Ramnulfides
Fils de Guillaume VIII de Poitiers et d'Hildegarde de Bourgogne, il est brièvement marié à Ermengarde d'Anjou (fille de Foulque IV le Réchin, comte d'Anjou), avant d'épouser Philippe de Toulouse (fille de Guillaume IV, comte de Toulouse) ou Philippie en 1094, dont il a

Guillaume X de Poitiers, son héritier,

Agnès de Poitiers, future épouse du roi Ramire II d'Aragon,

Henri, abbé de Cluny,

Raymond de Poitiers, qui règne sur la principauté d'Antioche.

L'apogée de la principauté aquitaine
Il continue à développer l'embryon d'organisation administrative de ses prédécesseurs, avec l'ajout d'un prévôt à Surgères en 1087 et la création d'agents forestiers. Il prend et détruit le château de Blaye au comte Guillaume V d'Angoulême, afin de réfréner les entreprises de celui-ci en Saintonge.

Ayant acquis des droits sur Toulouse par sa femme Phillipa, il les fait valoir par les armes en prenant Toulouse en 1098. Guillaume le Troubadour rejoint la première Croisade, menée par Godefroy de Bouillon, après la chute de Jérusalem, en mars 1101. Il reste une année et demie en Orient, à combattre le plus souvent en Anatolie, où il est gravement battu deux fois.

Il est comte de Rouergue de 1110 à 1120.

Il s'empare de biens de l'Église en 1113 pour financer sa campagne contre Toulouse, et abandonne sa femme Philippie pour l'épouse de son vassal le vicomte de Châtellerault. Ces actes lui valent l'excommunication. Il marie néanmoins son fils Guillaume à la fille de sa maîtresse en 1121.

À la fin de sa vie, il participe à un épisode de la Reconquista : allié au roi de Castille et León, Alphonse le Batailleur, qui a épousé sa sœur Béatrice. De 1120 à 1123, ils guerroient pour la conquête du royaume de Valence, remportant notamment la bataille de Cutanda.

Un prince cultivé
Mais Guillaume IX de Poitiers marque surtout l'histoire comme un homme de lettres, qui sait entretenir une des cours les plus raffinées d'Occident.

Ami des artistes et troubadour lui-même
Il accueille ainsi à sa cour le barde Gallois Blédri ap Davidor, qui réintroduit sur le continent l'histoire de Tristan et Iseut.

Il est lui-même un poète, utilisant la langue d'Oc pour ses œuvres, poèmes souvent mis en musique.

C'est le premier poète médiéval, depuis saint Fortunat au VIe siècle (qui réside longtemps à l'abbaye Sainte-Croix de Poitiers), dont des œuvres, ni sacrées ni à la gloire de héros guerriers, soient conservées. Ses vers traitent le plus souvent des femmes, d'amour et de ses prouesses sexuelles. Sa poésie est parfois très crue (par exemple dans la chanson convenable, quand il demande à ses compagnons quel cheval il doit monter, d'Agnès ou d'Arsens), reflet d'une époque où l'Église n'a qu'une emprise limitée sur la société. Considéré comme un des précurseurs de l'amour courtois (fin amor en occitan), il est l'un des modèles influents de l'art des troubadours, dont la poésie va devenir plus galante.

À son retour de croisade, il répudie sa femme et prend pour maîtresse une femme mariée, qu'il invoque comme muse dans ses poèmes sous le nom de Dangereuse (la Maubergeonne). Il évoque aussi la fondation d'un couvent, dont les nonnes seraient choisies parmi les plus belles femmes du comté. À la bataille de Cutanda, il aurait combattu avec le corps de sa maîtresse peint sur son bouclier.

Il évoque également la guerre et des conséquences qu'elle a eu pour lui : selon Orderic Vital, il raconte sa captivité en Orient de manière plaisante.

Il fait de grosses donations à l'Église, dont certaines pour la fondations de monastères. Il reconstruit le palais des comtes de Poitiers.

Exemple de chanson
Voici une des œuvres composées par le comte duc, en langue d'oc, en limousin, accompagnée de la traduction française :

Je n'adorerai qu'elle ! (Chanson)

(occitan)

Farai chansoneta nueva,

Ans que vent ni gel ni plueva:

Ma dona m'assaya e-m prueva,

Quossi de qual guiza l'am;

E ja per plag que m'en mueva

No-m solvera de son liam.

(français)
Ferai chansonnette nouvelle

Avant qu'il vente, pleuve ou gèle

Ma dame m'éprouve, tente

De savoir combien je l'aime ;

Mais elle a beau chercher querelle,

Je ne renoncerai pas à son lien

Qu'ans mi rent a lieys e-m liure,

Qu'en sa carta-m pot escriure.

E no m'en tenguatz per yure,

S'ieu ma bona dompna am!

Quar senes lieys non puesc viure,

Tant ai pres de s'amor gran fam.

Je me rends à elle, je me livre,
Elle peut m'inscrire en sa charte ;

Et ne me tenez pour ivre

Si j'aime ma bonne dame,

Car sans elle je ne puis vivre,

Tant de son amour j'ai grand faim.

Per aquesta fri e tremble,

Quar de tam bon'amor l'am,

Qu'anc no cug qu'en nasques semble

En semblan del gran linh n'Adam.

Pour elle je frissonne et tremble,
Je l'aime tant de si bon amour !

Je n'en crois jamais née de si belle

En la lignée du seigneur Adam.

Que plus es blanca qu'evori,

Per qu'ieu autra non azori:

Si-m breu non ai aiutori,

Cum ma bona dompna m'am,

Morrai, pel cap sanh Gregori,

Si no-m bayza en cambr'o sotz ram.

Elle est plus blanche qu'ivoire,
Je n'adorerai qu'elle !

Mais, si je n'ai prompt secours,

Si ma bonne dame ne m'aime,

Je mourrai, par la tête de Saint Grégoire,

Un baiser en chambre ou sous l'arbre !

Qual pro-y auretz, dompna conja,

Si vostr'amors mi deslonja

Par que-us vulhatz metre monja!

E sapchatz, quar tan vos am,

Tem que la dolors me ponja,

Si no-m faitz dreg dels tortz q'ie-us clam.

Qu'y gagnerez-vous, belle dame,
Si de votre amour vous m'éloignez ?

Vous semblez vous mettre nonne,

Mais sachez que je vous aime tant

Que je crains la douleur blessante

Si vous ne faites droit des torts dont je me plains.

Qual pro i auretz s'ieu m'enclostre

E no-m retenetz per vostre

Totz lo joys del mon es nostre,

Dompna, s'amduy nos amam.

Lay al mieu amic Daurostre,

Dic e man que chan e bram.

Que gagnerez-vous si je me cloître,
Si vous ne me tenez pas pour vôtre ?

Toute la joie du monde est nôtre,

Dame, si nous nous aimons,

Je demande à l'ami Daurostre

De chanter, et non plus crier.

Précédé par Guillaume IX de Poitiers Suivi par

Guillaume VIII duc d'Aquitaine

comte de Poitiers

Guillaume X
Chronologie succincte
22 octobre 1071 : naissance ;

25 septembre 1086 : mort de son père Gui-Geoffroi-Guillaume et début de son règne ;

1094 : mariage avec Philippie de Toulouse ;

1097 : entrée à Toulouse ;

1099 : naissance de Guillaume le Toulousain ;

15 juillet : prise de Jérusalem ;

6 décembre : Guillaume IX prend la croix ;

5 septembre 1101 : l'armée poitevine est écrasé au Taurus ;

1102 : retour en Occident ;

1108 : accession au trône de Louis VI le Gros ;

1110 : Guillaume IX est blessé à Taillebourg ;

1115 : excommunication et rencontre avec la Maubergeon;

18 mai 1120 : participation à la victoire de Cutanda auprès d'Alphonse Ier d'Aragon ;

1121 : perte du Toulousain ;

1122 : naissance d'Aliénor d'Aquitaine ;

10 février 1126 : mort de Guillaume le Troubadour.

William IX, Duke of Aquitaine From Wikipedia http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_IX,_Duke_of_Aquitaine

William IX (French: Guillaume de Poitiers ; Occitan: Guilhèm de Peitieus) (22 October 1071 – 10 February 1126), called the Troubador, was the Duke of Aquitaine and Gascony and Count of Poitou (as William VII) between 1086 and his death. He was also one of the leaders of the Crusade of 1101. Though his political and military achievements have certain historical importance, he's best known as the earliest troubadour[1] — a vernacular lyric poet in the Occitan language — whose work survived.

Contents [hide] 1 Ducal career 1.1 Early career, 1088–1102 1.2 Conflict with Church and wife, 1102–1118 1.3 Later career, 1118–1126 2 Poetic career 3 See also 4 References 4.1 Notes 4.2 Bibliography 4.3 External links

[edit] Ducal careerWilliam was the son of William VIII of Aquitaine by his third wife, Hildegarde of Burgundy. His birth was a cause of great celebration at the Aquitanian court, but the Church at first considered him illegitimate because of his father's earlier divorces and his parents' consanguinity. This obliged his father to make a pilgrimage to Rome soon after his birth to seek Papal approval of his third marriage and the young William's legitimacy.

[edit] Early career, 1088–1102William inherited the duchy at the age of fifteen upon the death of his father. In 1088, at the age of only sixteen, William married his first wife, Ermengarde, the daughter of Fulk IV of Anjou. She was reputedly beautiful and well-educated, but also suffered from severe mood-swings, vacillating between vivacity and sullenness. She was considered a nag, and had a habit of retiring in bad temper to a cloister after an argument, cutting off all contact with the outside world until suddenly making a reappearance at court as if her absence had never occurred. Such behaviour, coupled with her failure to conceive a child, led William to send her back to her father and have the marriage dissolved (1091).

In 1094 he remarried to Philippa, the daughter and heiress of William IV of Toulouse. By Philippa, William had two sons and five daughters, including his eventual successor, William X. His second son, Raymond, eventually became the Prince of Antioch in the Holy Land, and his daughter Agnes married firstly Aimery V of Thouars and then Ramiro II of Aragon, reestablishing dynastic ties with that ruling house.

William invited Pope Urban II to spend the Christmas of 1095 at his court. The pope urged him to "take the cross" (i.e. the First Crusade) and leave for the Holy Land, but William was more interested in exploiting the absence on Crusade of Raymond IV of Toulouse, his wife's uncle, to press a claim to Toulouse. He and Philippa did capture Toulouse in 1098, an act for which they were threatened with excommunication. Partly out of a desire to regain favor with the religious authorities and partly out of a wish to see the world, William joined the Crusade of 1101, an expedition inspired by the success of the First Crusade in 1099. To finance it, he had to mortgage Toulouse back to Bertrand, the son of Raymond IV.

William arrived in the Holy Land in 1101 and stayed there until the following year. His record as a military leader is not very impressive. He fought mostly skirmishes in Anatolia and was frequently defeated. His recklessness led to his being ambushed on several occasions, with great losses to his own forces. In September 1101, his entire army was destroyed by the Seljuk Turks at Heraclea; William himself barely escaped, and, according to Orderic Vitalis, he reached Antioch with only six surviving companions.

[edit] Conflict with Church and wife, 1102–1118William, like his father and many magnates of the time, had a rocky relationship with the Church. He was excommunicated twice, the first time in 1114 for an alleged infringement of the Church's tax privileges. His response to this was to demand absolution from Peter, Bishop of Poitiers. As the bishop was at the point of pronouncing the anathema, the duke threatened him with a sword, swearing to kill him if he did not pronounce absolution. Bishop Peter, surprised, pretended to comply, but when the duke, satisfied, released him, the bishop completed reading the anathema, before calmly presenting his neck and inviting the duke to strike. According to contemporaries, William hesitated a moment before sheathing his sword and replying, "I don't love you enough to send you to paradise."

William was excommunicated a second time for "abducting" the Viscountess Dangereuse (Dangerosa), the wife of his vassal Aimery I de Rochefoucauld, Viscount of Châtellerault. The lady, however, appears to have been a willing party in the matter. He installed her in the Maubergeonne tower of his castle in Poitiers (leading to her nickname La Maubergeonne), and, as related by William of Malmesbury, even painted a picture of her on his shield.

Upon returning to Poitiers from Toulouse, Philippa was enraged to discover a rival woman living in her palace. She appealed to her friends at court and to the Church; however, no noble could assist her since William was their feudal overlord, and whilst the Papal legate Giraud (who was bald) complained to William and told him to return Dangereuse to her husband, William's only response was, "Curls will grow on your pate before I part with the Viscountess." Humiliated, Philippa chose in 1116 to retire to the Abbey of Fontevrault, where she was befriended, ironically, by Ermengarde of Anjou, William's first wife. While in residence she may have had direct conversations or correspondence with Countess Adela of Blois, who was in constant contact with Fontevrault from Marcigney abbey. Philippa did not remain there long, however: the abbey records state that she died on the 28 November 1118.

[edit] Later career, 1118–1126Relations between the Duke and his elder son William also became strained—although it is unlikely that he ever embarked upon a seven-year revolt in order to avenge his mother's mistreatment, as Ralph of Diceto claimed, only to be captured by his father. Other records flatly contradict such a thing. Ralph claimed that the revolt began in 1113; but at that time, the young William was only thirteen and his father's liaison with Dangereuse had not yet begun. Father and son improved their relationship after the marriage of the younger William to Aenor of Châtellerault, Dangereuse's daughter by her husband, in 1121.

William was readmitted to the Church around 1120, after making concessions to it. However, he was after 1118 faced with the return of his first wife, Ermengarde, who had, upon the death of Philippa, stormed down from Fontevrault to the Poitevin court, demanding to be reinstated as the Duchess of Aquitaine—presumably in an attempt to avenge the mistreated Philippa. In October 1119, she suddenly appeared at the Council of Reims being held by Pope Calixtus II and demanded that the Pope excommunicate William (again), oust Dangereuse from the ducal palace, and restore herself to her rightful place. The Pope "declined to accommodate her"; however, she continued to trouble William for several years afterwards, thereby encouraging him to join the Reconquista efforts underway in Spain.

Between 1120 and 1123 William joined forces with the Kingdoms of Castile and León. Aquitanian troops fought side by side with Castilians in an effort to take Cordoba. During his sojourn in Spain, William was given a rock crystal vase by a Muslim ally that he later bequeathed to his granddaughter Eleanor. The vase probably originated in Sassanid Persia in the seventh century.

In 1122, William lost control of Toulouse, Philippa's dower land, to Alfonso Jordan, the son and heir of Raymond IV, who had taken Toulouse after the death of William IV. He did not trouble to reclaim it. He died on 10 February 1126, aged 55, after suffering a short illness.

[edit] Poetic career William from a 13th-century chansonnier.William's greatest legacy to history was not as a warrior but as a troubadour - a lyric poet employing the Romance vernacular language called Provençal or Occitan. An anonymous 13th-century vida of William remembers him thus:

The Count of Poitiers was one of the most courtly men in the world and one of the greatest deceivers of women. He was a fine knight at arms, liberal in his womanizing, and a fine composer and singer of songs. He traveled much through the world, seducing women.

He was the earliest troubadour whose work survives. Eleven of his songs survive (Merwin, 2002). The song traditionally numbered as the eighth (Farai chansoneta nueva) is of dubious attribution, since its style and language are significantly different (Pasero 1973, Bond 1982). Song 5 (Farai un vers, pos mi sonelh) has two significantly different versions in different manuscripts. The songs are attributed to him under his title as Count of Poitou (lo coms de Peitieus). The topics vary, treating sex, love, women, his own sexual and literary prowess, and feudal politics. His frankness, wit and vivacity caused scandal and won admiration at the same time. He is among the first Romance vernacular poets of the Middle Ages, one of the founders of a tradition that would culminate in Dante, Petrarch, and François Villon. Ezra Pound mentions him in Canto VIII:

And Poictiers, you know, Guillaume Poictiers, had brought the song up out of Spain with the singers and viels...

In Spirit of Romance Pound also calls William IX "the most 'modern' of the troubadours":

For any of the later Provençals, i.e., the high-brows, we have to... 'put ourselves into the Twelfth Century' etc. Guillaume, writing a century earlier, is just as much of our age as of his own. —Ezra Pound, cited in Bond 1982, p. lxxvi William was a man who loved scandal and no doubt enjoyed shocking his audiences. In fact, William granted large donations to the church, perhaps to regain the pope's favour. He also added to the palace of the counts of Poitou (which had stood since the Merovingian era), later added to by his granddaughter Eleanor of Aquitaine and surviving in Poitiers as the Palace of Justice to this day.

One of William's poems, possibly written at the time of his first excommunication, since it implies his son was still a minor, is partly a musing on mortality: Pos de chantar m'es pres talenz (Since I have the desire to sing,/I'll write a verse for which I'll grieve). It concludes:

I have given up all I loved so much: chivalry and pride; and since it pleases God, I accept it all, that He may keep me by Him. I enjoin my friends, upon my death, all to come and do me great honour, since I have held joy and delight far and near, and in my abode. Thus I give up joy and delight, and squirrel and grey and sable furs. Orderic Vitalis refers to William composing songs (c. 1102) upon his return from the Crusade of 1101. These might be the first "Crusade songs".

[edit] See alsoDukes of Aquitaine family tree [edit] References[edit] Notes1.^ Joseph Anglade, Grammaire de l'ancien provençal ou ancienne langue d'oc, 1921, Part I, Chapter 1, p. 33: ... les poésies du premier troubadour, Guilhem de Poitiers ... ("the poems of the first troubadour, Guilhem de Poitiers"). [edit] BibliographyBiographies des troubadours ed. J. Boutière, A.-H. Schutz (Paris: Nizet, 1964) pp. 7-8, 585-587. Bond, Gerald A., ed., transl. intro. The Poetry of William VII, Count of Poitier, IX Duke of Aquitaine, (Garland Publishing Co.:New York) 1982 Duisit, Brice. Las Cansos del Coms de Peitieus (CD), Alpha 505, 2003 Harvey, Ruth E. The wives of the 'first troubadour', Duke William IX of Aquitaine (Journal of Medieval History), 1993 Meade, Marion. Eleanor of Aquitaine, 1991 Merwin, W.S. Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, 2002. pp xv-xvi. New York: Alfred A. Knopf. ISBN 0-375-41476-2. Owen, D.D.R. Eleanor of Aquitaine: Queen and Legend Parsons, John Carmi. Eleanor of Aquitaine: Lord and Lady, 2002 Pasero, Nicolò, ed.: Guglielmo IX d'Aquitania, Poesie. 1973 Verdon, J. La chronique de Saint Maixent, 1979. Waddell, Helen. The Wandering Scholars: the Life and Art of the Lyric Poets of the Latin Middle Ages, 1955 [edit] External linksComplete works (external link) Works, translated by James H. Donalson (external link) Smythe, Barbara. Trobador Poets: Selections from the Poems of Eight Trobadors Lyric allusions to the crusades and the Holy Land Preceded by William VIII (VI) Duke of Aquitaine 1088–1126 Succeeded by William X (VIII)

Title: Count of Poitou. William was a leader of the First Crusade, much admired for his prowess, generosity & handsome appearance. He was the first known troubadour &, as such, a key figure in the history of European literature.

Sources:

The book, 'Richard the Lion-Hearted', by John Gillingham

The book, 'Kings & Queens of Great Britain'

The book, 'Eleanor of Aquitaine'

The book, 'An Autobiography of Eleanor'

William IX of Aquitaine (October 22, 1071 – February 10, 1126, also Guillaume or Guilhem d'Aquitaine), nicknamed the Troubador was Duke of Aquitaine and Gascony and Count of Poitou as William VII of Poitou between 1086 and 1126. He was also one of the leaders of the crusade of 1101 and one of the first medieval vernacular poets.

His Occitan name was Guilhèm de Peitieus.

WILLIAM IX OF AQUITAINE – THE TROUBADOUR: His role and that of his wife, Ermengarde, and his granddaughters - Eleanor of Aquitaine, and her daughter, Marie de Champagne – in the development of courtly love poetry and the Arthurian romances

Extract from Duby, Georges: 'The Knight, The Lady, And the Priest. The Making of Modern Marriage in Medieval France'. 1983, Allen Lane, London p159:

“ ..ERMENGARDE ..was given in marriage by her father Fouque Rechin, to William of Acquitaine. After William had repudiated her she was married to the count of Nantes. She tried to leave him for Fontevraud, asking that the marriage be annulled. But the bishops refused, and Robert of Arbrissel had to send her back to her husband, exhorting her to be obedient, to accept her lot in life, her “order” as a wife and a mother. (Patrologie Latinae 176, 987) She was to be patient and resigned, he said, and follow a little rule specially designed for her. It provided for much giving of alms, but neither too much prayer nor too much mortification, so that her body should remain healthy. What she was supposed to do was endure even under pain of death, even were she to be burned alive, as the wife of her great grandfather, Fouque Nerra had been burned for alleged adultery. But ERMENGARDE, the daughter of a prince, astounded the bishops at the Council of Reims in 1119 by appearing before them, widow at last, to accuse her first husband of bigamy. But then, had not she herself, they might have replied, in both her marriages, shown herself to be difficult and disobedient?”

“The intrusion of the churchmen into conjugal matters caused resentment on the parts of the husbands. WILLIAM OF AQUITAINE, supposed author of the earliest Occitan poems and the first exponent of courtly love, in the tenth song of the Jeanroy edition of his works makes fun of women who fall under the sway of priests and “frustrate the love of knights.” They commit mortal sin, he says, and should be burned at the stake, like wives who commit adultery. He then introduces the metaphor of the firebrand, with its obvious erotic connotation. True, the poem is supposed to be comic, to make men laugh amongst themselves. I interpret it not as a precursor to the chivalric debates between priest and knight that were to be popular a hundred years later, but as an angry expression of the animosity husbands felt against spiritual directors who challenged their power and encouraged their wives to be frigid. This is the only direct echo that has survived such feelings. At the point we have now reached, the beginning of the twelfth century, the voices of the servants of God drown out all other sounds.”

Extract from Tannahill, Reay: Sex in History. 1980, Hamish Hamilton, London p262-3: “The credit for that [breathing life into courtly love poetry], as far as is known belonged to a southerner, one of the most libertine seigneurs of his day, GUILHEM, SEVENTH COUNT OF POITIERS AND NINTH DUKE OF AQUITANE, the most powerful nobleman in western Christendom. Guilhem (1071-1127) must have been well acquainted with the Hispano-Arabic love poetry and philosophies of love. He was married to Phillipa of Aragon (even if he seems to have paid her little attention), while one of his sisters was the wife of Alfonso VI of Castile, and another of Pedro of Aragon. The story goes that, comfortably adjusted to a life of sensuality and seduction, GUILHEM found his activities seriously curtailed by the advent of a preacher, Robert d’Arbrissal, who succeeded in converting many of the ladies of his court to the belief that the fires of hell were being stoked for adulteresses. GUILHEM, deeply troubled, devoted his mind to the problem, and the result of his meditations soon became apparent in his poems. Frank eroticism had formerly been their style, but this now gave way to something that strongly resembled the ennobling love of Ibn Hazm – without the chastity. Love, GUILHEM argued, was not an abasement but an exaltation, not a sordid sin, but a divine mystery, and the lady within whose gift it lay was a goddess to be adored. Some scholars believe that his change of view came from the heart (eg Bezzola, ‘Guillaume IX et les origins de l’amour courtois’ Romania LXVI, 1940 pp145-237), although the aura of cynical expediency is not easy to dissipate, but whatever the truth he appears to have convinced his ladies, who were happy to take on the unfamiliar role of goddess. And even if, in cold fact, the new love was just as adulterous as the old, it sounded a good deal more refined. (Note – Love was considered in medieval times as a gift freely given (which remains true enough today) and this, by definition excluded it from marriage, a business contract in which personal considerations played no part.) GUILHEM’S blend of love-desire and ennobling love soon became a favourite theme of wandering scholars, singers, poets and jongleurs (general entertainers), and a kind of formula began to develop.”

Extract from Tannahill, Reay: Sex in History. 1980, Hamish Hamilton, London p266-7: “It was, appropriately enough GUILHELM’S [THE TROUBADOUR, OF ACQUITAINE] GRANDDAUGHTER, ELEANOR OF ACQUITAINE, who helped to establish the ideal of courtly love in northern France when she married Louis VII in 1137, but it did not entirely suit the northern temperament, which preferred good meaty adventure stories to undiluted sentiment. ELEANOR AND HER DAUGHTERS therefore turned their attention to encouraging a synthesis of the two. For some centuries, the north had relied for its entertainment on the chansoms de geste (songs of action), which were long assonant poems delivered as a kind of recitative to a simple musical instrument and dealt mainly with the exploits of warriors and heroes, feudal lords, and Christian chevaliers of the time of Charlemagne. In the early twelfth century, the roman (romance) also developed, a tale in rhymed verse designed to be declaimed to a small audience and usually taking for its theme a quest or voyage through a dream world which was the scene of marvellous adventures in love and war. The early romans, reflecting the rediscovery of the Classical World, were historical dramas with such titles as the Romance of Alexander, the Romance of Thebes, and the Romance of Troy, but for political reasons it became desirable to find subjects nearer home. ELEANOR, by this time (1170) married to Henry II of Normandy and England, was instrumental in bringing into fashion the Celtic myths of Arthur and his knights of the Round Table, an ‘ideal’ ancient society which lent itself admirably to being gilded with modern dreams and embroidered with the symbols of courtly love. She herself patronized many distinguished troubadours, including Bernart de Ventadorn, while her daughters, notably MARIE DE CHAMPAGNE, followed in the family tradition. It was MARIE’s chaplain, Andreas, who produced the famous Art of Courtly Love, a treatise that owed something to Ovid as well as to Aquitaine, and it was MARIE too, who urged Chretien de Troyes to fuse tales of love with tales of action, to turn love into an adventure, and the knight into a knight-errant. This was the real beginning of the institution of chivalry.”

Poetic Example
“Comrades, I shall write a decent poem

As I don't know where to turn without being upset

Because I have had so many bad receptions,

So I'll write a verse about nothing at all

I'll write a verse, while I'm dozing off.

I would like people to know

Since we see blossoming again

That I shall write a new little song

To celebrate that I begin to love

With the sweetness of springtime

And I feel like singing.”

William IX The Troubadour of Aquitaine

- compiled & translation Sharon Doubell
William IX "the Troubadour" Duke of Aquitaine

William IX "the Troubadour" Duke of Aquitaine was born on 22 October 1071. He was the son of William VIII Duke of Aquitaine and Hildegarde of Burgundy. William IX "the Troubadour" Duke of Aquitaine married Philippa of Toulouse, daughter of William IV Count of Toulouse and Emma of Mortain, in 1094. William IX "the Troubadour" Duke of Aquitaine died on 10 February 1126 at age 54.
William, like his father and many magnates of the time, had a rocky relationship with the Church. He was excommunicated twice, the first time in 1114 for an alleged infringement of the Church's tax privileges. His response to this was to demand absolution from Peter, Bishop of Poitiers. As the bishop was at the point of pronouncing the anathema, the duke threatened him with a sword, swearing to kill him if he did not pronounce absolution. Bishop Peter, surprised, pretended to comply, but when the duke, satisfied, released him, the bishop completed reading the anathema, before calmly presenting his neck and inviting the duke to strike. According to contemporaries, William hesitated a moment before sheathing his sword and replying, "I don't love you enough to send you to paradise."

William was excommunicated a second time for "abducting" the Viscountess Dangereuse (Dangerosa), the wife of his vassal Aimery I de Rochefoucauld, Viscount of Châtellerault. The lady, however, appears to have been a willing party in the matter. He installed her in the Maubergeonne tower of his castle in Poitiers (leading to her nickname La Maubergeonne), and, as related by William of Malmesbury, even painted a picture of her on his shield.

Upon returning to Poitiers from Toulouse, Philippa was enraged to discover a rival woman living in her palace. She appealed to her friends at court and to the Church; however, no noble could assist her since William was their feudal overlord, and whilst the Papal legate Giraud (who was bald) complained to William and told him to return Dangereuse to her husband, William's only response was, "Curls will grow on your pate before I part with the Viscountess." Humiliated, Philippa chose in 1116 to retire to the Abbey of Fontevraud, where she was befriended, ironically, by Ermengarde of Anjou, William's first wife. While in residence she may have had direct conversations or correspondence with Countess Adela of Blois, who was in constant contact with Fontevrault from Marcigney abbey. Philippa did not remain there long, however: the abbey records state that she died on the 28 November 1118.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_IX_of_Aquitaine

William IX (Occitan: Guilhèm de Peitieus; French: Guillaume de Poitiers) (22 October 1071 – 10 February 1126), called the Troubador, was the Duke of Aquitaine and Gascony and Count of Poitou (as William VII) between 1086 and his death. He was also one of the leaders of the Crusade of 1101. Though his political and military achievements have a certain historical importance, he is best known as the earliest troubadour — a vernacular lyric poet in the Occitan language — whose work survived.

Ducal career

William was the son of William VIII of Aquitaine by his third wife, Hildegarde of Burgundy. His birth was a cause of great celebration at the Aquitanian court, but the Church at first considered him illegitimate because of his father's earlier divorces and his parents' consanguinity. This obliged his father to make a pilgrimage to Rome soon after his birth to seek Papal approval of his third marriage and the young William's legitimacy.

Early career, 1088–1102

William inherited the duchy at the age of fifteen upon the death of his father. In 1088, at the age of only sixteen, William married his first wife, Ermengarde, the daughter of Fulk IV of Anjou. She was reputedly beautiful and well-educated, but also suffered from severe mood-swings, vacillating between vivacity and sullenness. She was considered a nag, and had a habit of retiring in bad temper to a cloister after an argument, cutting off all contact with the outside world until suddenly making a reappearance at court as if her absence had never occurred. Such behaviour, coupled with her failure to conceive a child, led William to send her back to her father and have the marriage dissolved (1091).

In 1094 he remarried to Philippa, the daughter and heiress of William IV of Toulouse. By Philippa, William had two sons and five daughters, including his eventual successor, William X. His second son, Raymond, eventually became the Prince of Antioch in the Holy Land, and his daughter Agnes married firstly Aimery V of Thouars and then Ramiro II of Aragon, reestablishing dynastic ties with that ruling house.

William invited Pope Urban II to spend the Christmas of 1095 at his court. The pope urged him to "take the cross" (i.e. the First Crusade) and leave for the Holy Land, but William was more interested in exploiting the absence on Crusade of Raymond IV of Toulouse, his wife's uncle, to press a claim to Toulouse. He and Philippa did capture Toulouse in 1098, an act for which they were threatened with excommunication. Partly out of a desire to regain favor with the religious authorities and partly out of a wish to see the world, William joined the Crusade of 1101, an expedition inspired by the success of the First Crusade in 1099. To finance it, he had to mortgage Toulouse back to Bertrand, the son of Raymond IV.

The Duchess was an admirer of Robert of Arbrissel and persuaded William to grant him land in Northern Poitou to establish a religious community dedicated to the Virgin Mary [2]. This became Fontevraud Abbey, which would enjoy the patronage of William's granddaughter Eleanor of Aquitaine and would remain important until its dissolvement during the French Revolution.

William arrived in the Holy Land in 1101 and stayed there until the following year. His record as a military leader is not very impressive. He fought mostly skirmishes in Anatolia and was frequently defeated. His recklessness led to his being ambushed on several occasions, with great losses to his own forces. In September 1101, his entire army was destroyed by the Seljuk Turks at Heraclea; William himself barely escaped, and, according to Orderic Vitalis, he reached Antioch with only six surviving companions.

Conflict with Church and wife, 1102–1118

William, like his father and many magnates of the time, had a rocky relationship with the Church. He was excommunicated twice, the first time in 1114 for an alleged infringement of the Church's tax privileges. His response to this was to demand absolution from Peter, Bishop of Poitiers. As the bishop was at the point of pronouncing the anathema, the duke threatened him with a sword, swearing to kill him if he did not pronounce absolution. Bishop Peter, surprised, pretended to comply, but when the duke, satisfied, released him, the bishop completed reading the anathema, before calmly presenting his neck and inviting the duke to strike. According to contemporaries, William hesitated a moment before sheathing his sword and replying, "I don't love you enough to send you to paradise."

William was excommunicated a second time for "abducting" the Viscountess Dangereuse (Dangerosa), the wife of his vassal Aimery I de Rochefoucauld, Viscount of Châtellerault. The lady, however, appears to have been a willing party in the matter. He installed her in the Maubergeonne tower of his castle in Poitiers (leading to her nickname La Maubergeonne), and, as related by William of Malmesbury, even painted a picture of her on his shield.

Upon returning to Poitiers from Toulouse, Philippa was enraged to discover a rival woman living in her palace. She appealed to her friends at court and to the Church; however, no noble could assist her since William was their feudal overlord, and whilst the Papal legate Giraud (who was bald) complained to William and told him to return Dangereuse to her husband, William's only response was, "Curls will grow on your pate before I part with the Viscountess." Humiliated, Philippa chose in 1116 to retire to the Abbey of Fontevraud, where she was befriended, ironically, by Ermengarde of Anjou, William's first wife. While in residence she may have had direct conversations or correspondence with Countess Adela of Blois, who was in constant contact with Fontevrault from Marcigney abbey. Philippa did not remain there long, however: the abbey records state that she died on the 28 November 1118.

Later career, 1118–1126

Relations between the Duke and his elder son William also became strained—although it is unlikely that he ever embarked upon a seven-year revolt in order to avenge his mother's mistreatment, as Ralph of Diceto claimed, only to be captured by his father. Other records flatly contradict such a thing. Ralph claimed that the revolt began in 1113; but at that time, the young William was only thirteen and his father's liaison with Dangereuse had not yet begun. Father and son improved their relationship after the marriage of the younger William to Aenor of Châtellerault, Dangereuse's daughter by her husband, in 1121.

William was readmitted to the Church around 1120, after making concessions to it. However, he was after 1118 faced with the return of his first wife, Ermengarde, who had, upon the death of Philippa, stormed down from Fontevrault to the Poitevin court, demanding to be reinstated as the Duchess of Aquitaine—presumably in an attempt to avenge the mistreated Philippa. In October 1119, she suddenly appeared at the Council of Reims being held by Pope Calixtus II and demanded that the Pope excommunicate William (again), oust Dangereuse from the ducal palace, and restore herself to her rightful place. The Pope "declined to accommodate her"; however, she continued to trouble William for several years afterwards, thereby encouraging him to join the Reconquista efforts underway in Spain.

Between 1120 and 1123 William joined forces with the Kingdoms of Castile and León. Aquitanian troops fought side by side with Castilians in an effort to take Cordoba. During his sojourn in Spain, William was given a rock crystal vase by a Muslim ally that he later bequeathed to his granddaughter Eleanor. The vase probably originated in Sassanid Persia in the seventh century.

In 1122, William lost control of Toulouse, Philippa's dower land, to Alfonso Jordan, the son and heir of Raymond IV, who had taken Toulouse after the death of William IV. He did not trouble to reclaim it. He died on 10 February 1126, aged 55, after suffering a short illness.

Poetic career

William's greatest legacy to history was not as a warrior but as a troubadour — a lyric poet employing the Romance vernacular language called Provençal or Occitan.

He was the earliest troubadour whose work survives. Eleven of his songs survive (Merwin, 2002). The song traditionally numbered as the eighth (Farai chansoneta nueva) is of dubious attribution, since its style and language are significantly different (Pasero 1973, Bond 1982). Song 5 (Farai un vers, pos mi sonelh) has two significantly different versions in different manuscripts. The songs are attributed to him under his title as Count of Poitou (lo coms de Peitieus). The topics vary, treating sex, love, women, his own sexual and literary prowess, and feudal politics.

An anonymous 13th-century vida of William remembers him thus:

The Count of Poitiers was one of the most courtly men in the world and one of the greatest deceivers of women. He was a fine knight at arms, liberal in his womanizing, and a fine composer and singer of songs. He traveled much through the world, seducing women.

It is possible, however, that at least in part it is not based on facts, but on literal interpretation of his songs, written in first person; in Song 5, for example, he describes how he deceived two women.

His frankness, wit and vivacity caused scandal and won admiration at the same time. He is among the first Romance vernacular poets of the Middle Ages, one of the founders of a tradition that would culminate in Dante, Petrarch, and François Villon. Ezra Pound mentions him in Canto VIII:

And Poictiers, you know, Guillaume Poictiers,

had brought the song up out of Spain
with the singers and viels...
In Spirit of Romance Pound also calls William IX "the most 'modern' of the troubadours":

For any of the later Provençals, i.e., the high-brows, we have to... 'put ourselves into the Twelfth Century' etc. Guillaume, writing a century earlier, is just as much of our age as of his own.

—Ezra Pound, cited in Bond 1982, p. lxxvi

William was a man who loved scandal and no doubt enjoyed shocking his audiences. In fact, William granted large donations to the church, perhaps to regain the pope's favour. He also added to the palace of the counts of Poitou (which had stood since the Merovingian era), later added to by his granddaughter Eleanor of Aquitaine and surviving in Poitiers as the Palace of Justice to this day.

One of William's poems, possibly written at the time of his first excommunication, since it implies his son was still a minor, is partly a musing on mortality: Pos de chantar m'es pres talenz (Since I have the desire to sing,/I'll write a verse for which I'll grieve). It concludes:

I have given up all I loved so much:

chivalry and pride;
and since it pleases God, I accept it all,
that He may keep me by Him.
I enjoin my friends, upon my death,

all to come and do me great honor,
since I have held joy and delight
far and near, and in my abode.
Thus I give up joy and delight,

and squirrel and grey and sable furs.
Orderic Vitalis refers to William composing songs (c. 1102) upon his return from the Crusade of 1101. These might be the first "Crusade songs":

Then the Poitevin duke many times related, with rhythmic verses and witty measures, the miseries of his captivity, before kings, magnates, and Christian assemblies.

Husband of Philippa of Toulouse Noble family House of Poitiers Father William VIII of Aquitaine Mother Hildegarde of Burgundy Born 22 October 1071 Died 10 February 1126 (aged 54)

French nobility, also called the young or the Troubadour, Duke of Aquitaine and Gascony as Guillaume VII also Count of Poitou. He was the only son of Guillaume VIII and his third wife Hildegarde de Bourgogne. He succeeded his father in 1088 and married Ermengarde de Anjou in the following year. The marriage seems to have been not very happy. Her mood swings and unpredictable behavior, coupled with the failure to conceive a child led to the dissolution of the marriage.

Around 1094 he married countess Philippa de Toulouse, heiress of Guillaume IV. With her he had two sons and five daughters. His reign was dominated by the conflict with the St-Gilles family for the power in Toulouse. After he had conquered Toulouse for the first time he sold his rights to Bertrand de St-Gilles to have enough money for a crusade. In March 1101 he started with Welf IV of Bavaria for the Holy Land. In September, after passing through Constantinople his army was defeated at Heraclea. He was able to flee and reached Antioch with only six men.

After visiting Jerusalem he returned home in fall 1102. He kidnapped the willing Dangereuse de l'Isle-Bouchard, wife of Aimery de Chatellerault and installed her in his castle in Poitiers. She became his mistress and bore him five children including Raimund of Antioch. When Philippa returned from Toulouse to find she had been replaced she appealed to the church and accused her husband openly of adultery. Even after being excommunicated he refused to part from Dangereuse. Philippa retired to Fontevrault where she died a year later.

Family links:

Parents: Guillaume VI de Poitou (1024 - 1086) Hildegarde de Bourgogne (1050 - 1120) Spouses: Hermengarde de Anjou Fergant (1068 - 1146)* Ermengarde de Anjou (1068 - 1146)*
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_IX,_Duke_of_Aquitaine

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William X, Duke of Aquitaine ★ Ref: DA-438 |•••► #FRANCIA 🇫🇷🏆 #Genealogía #Genealogy

Padre: Guillaume Ix Le Troubadour, Duc D'aquitaine
Madre: Philippa de Toulouse, comtesse de Poitiers


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18° Bisabuelo/ Great Grandfather de:
Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo
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William X, Duke of Aquitaine is your 18th 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 → 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 → Mayor de Mendoza Manzanedo
her mother → Juan Fernández De Mendoza Y Manuel
her father → Sancha Manuel
his mother → Sancho Manuel de Villena Castañeda, señor del Infantado y Carrión de los Céspedes
her father → Manuel de Castilla, señor de Escalona
his father → Ferdinand "the Saint", king of Castile and León
his father → Berenguela I la Grande, reina de Castilla
his mother → Eleanor of England, Queen consort of Castile
her mother → Eleanor d'Aquitaine, Queen Consort Of England
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Guillaume X 'le Toulousain' ou 'le Saint' d'Aquitaine, X Duc d'Aquitaine VIII Comte de Poitou  MP
Gender: Male
Birth: 1099
Toulouse, Haute-Garonne, Midi-Pyrénées, France
Death: April 09, 1137 (37-38)
Santiago de Compostela, A Coruña, Galicia, Spain (Illness)
Place of Burial: Compostela Cathedral, Galicia, Spain
Immediate Family:
Son of Guillaume IX le Troubadour, duc d'Aquitaine and Philippa de Toulouse, comtesse de Poitiers
Husband of Eleanor of Châtellerault, Duchess of Aquitaine and Emma de Limoges
Father of Eleanor d'Aquitaine, Queen Consort Of England; Petronilla d'Aquitaine and Guillaume d'Aquitaine
Brother of Inés de Poitou, reina consorte de Aragón; Adélaïde de Poitiers; Raymond of Poitiers, Prince of Antioch; Aimar d'Aquitaine, /i/ and Henri de Poitiers, Abbé de Cluny
Half brother of Reginald of Marets and Guillaume I de Poitiers, Comte de Valentinois
Added by: Randy Edwards on March 9, 2007
Managed by: Guillermo Eduardo Ferrero Montilla and 339 others
Curated by: Pam Wilson
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Foundation for Medieval Genealogy:

GUILLAUME d'Aquitaine (1099-Santiago de Compostela 9 Apr 1137, bur Santiago de Compostela). The Chronicle of Saint-Maxence records the birth in 1099 of "Willelmo comiti…filius æquivoce Guillelmus"[479]. William of Tyre names him and his father[480]. Robert of Torigny names "Guillermum…pater…Alienor reginæ Anglorum" as the son of "Guillermus comes Pictavensis et dux Aquitanorum" & his wife "filia [comitis Tolosani fratris Raimundi comitis Sancti Ægidii]"[481]. He succeeded his father in 1126 as GUILLAUME X Duke of Aquitaine, GUILLAUME VIII Comte de Poitou. “Guillelmus comes Pictaviensis et dux Aquitanorum” confirmed rights of “monachi Monasterii Novi Pictaviensis” granted by “Gaufredus avus et Guillelmus pater mei” by charter dated 1129[482]. “Willelmus…dux Aquitanorum” donated property to “ecclesiæ B. Hilarii de Cella” (La Celle, outside Poitiers) granted by “Gaufredus avus et Guillelmus pater mei” by charter dated 3 Mar 1130, subscribed by “Willielmi ducis Aquitanorum, Aenordis comitissæ, Alienordis filiæ eorum, Wilelmi Aigres filii eorum”[483]. The Chronique de Guillaume de Nangis records in 1136 that "Guillaume comte de Poitou et prince d'Aquitaine" died while on pilgrimage at "Saint-Jacques…la veille de Pâques" and was buried there[484].

m firstly ELEONORE de Châtellerault, daughter of AMAURY [I] Vicomte de Châtellerault & his wife Amauberge "Dangereuse"[485] --- (-after Mar 1130). “Willelmus…dux Aquitanorum” donated property to “ecclesiæ B. Hilarii de Cella” (La Celle, outside Poitiers) granted by “Gaufredus avus et Guillelmus pater mei” by charter dated 3 Mar 1130, subscribed by “Willielmi ducis Aquitanorum, Aenordis comitissæ, Alienordis filiæ eorum, Wilelmi Aigres filii eorum”[486]. The primary source which confirms her parentage has not so far been identified.

m secondly (1136) as her second husband, EMMA de Limoges, widow of BARDON de Cognac, daughter of ADEMAR [III] "le Barbu" Comte de Limoges & his [second wife Marie des Cars]. The Chronicon Gaufredi Vosiensis names "aliam filiam [Ademari]…Ennoa (seu Emma)" stating that she married "Guillermus Dux, frater Raymundi Antiochiæ principis" after the death of her earlier husband "Bardoni de Coniaco", before being abducted by "Willelmus Sector-ferri, filius Wlgrini Comitis Engolismensis"[487]. She married thirdly (after 1137) as his first wife, Guillaume d'Angoulême, who succeeded his father in 1140 as Guillaume VI "Taillefer" Comte d'Angoulême.

Duke Guillaume X & his first wife had three children:

a) ELEONORE d'Aquitaine (Nieul-sur-Autize, Vendée or Château de Belin, Guyenne or Palais d’Ombrière, Bordeaux 1122-Abbaye de Fontevrault 1 Apr 1204, bur Abbaye de Fontevrault). The Chronicle of Alberic de Trois-Fontaines names "Alienor Guilielmi filia comits Pictavorum et Aquitanie ducis" as wife of "regi Francie Ludovico"[488]. “Willelmus…dux Aquitanorum” donated property to “ecclesiæ B. Hilarii de Cella” (La Celle, outside Poitiers) granted by “Gaufredus avus et Guillelmus pater mei” by charter dated 3 Mar 1130, subscribed by “Willielmi ducis Aquitanorum, Aenordis comitissæ, Alienordis filiæ eorum, Wilelmi Aigres filii eorum”[489]. She succeeded her father in 1137 as ELEONORE Dss d’Aquitaine, Ctss de Poitou, Ctss de Saintonge, Angoûmois, Limousin, Auvergne, Bordeaux et Agen. She left France with her husband in Jun 1147 on the Second Crusade[490]. She was crowned Queen Consort of England with her husband 19 Dec 1154 at Westminster Abbey. She supported the revolt of her sons against their father in 1173, was captured and imprisoned in the château de Chinon, later at Salisbury until 1179. The Continuator of Florence of Worcester records the death "XII Kal Apr" [1204] of "regina Alienor" and her burial "ad Fontem Ebraldi"[491]. The Chronicle of Alberic de Trois-Fontaines records the burial of "uxor [regis Henrici] regina Alienordis" in the same abbey as her husband[492]. m firstly (Bordeaux, Cathedral of Saint-André 22 Jul 1137, annulled for reasons of consanguinity Château de Beaugency 21 Mar 1152) as his first wife, LOUIS associate King of France, son of LOUIS VI "le Gros/le Batailleur" King of France & his wife Adélaïde de Maurienne [Savoy] (1120-Paris, Palais Royal de la Cité 18/19 Sep 1180, bur Abbaye cistercienne de Notre-Dame-de-Barbeaux near Fontainebleau, transferred 1817 to l'église de l'Abbaye royale de Saint-Denis). He succeeded his father in 1137 as LOUIS VII "le Jeune/le Pieux" King of France. He was crowned Duke of Aquitaine, in right of his first wife, 8 Aug 1137 at Bordeaux. m secondly (Poitiers or Bordeaux Cathedral 18 May 1152) HENRI Duke of Normandy, Comte d'Anjou et du Maine, son of GEOFFROY "le Bel/Plantagenet" Comte d'Anjou et de Maine & his wife [Empress] Matilda [Maud] of England (Le Mans, Anjou 5 Mar 1133-Château de Chinon 6 Jul 1189, bur Abbaye de Fontevrault). He was recognised as HENRY II King of England after the death of Stephen 25 Oct 1154, he was crowned in Westminster Abbey 19 Dec 1154.

b) GUILLAUME d'Aquitaine (-[3 Mar 1130/9 Apr 1137]). “Willelmus…dux Aquitanorum” donated property to “ecclesiæ B. Hilarii de Cella” (La Celle, outside Poitiers) granted by “Gaufredus avus et Guillelmus pater mei” by charter dated 3 Mar 1130, subscribed by “Willielmi ducis Aquitanorum, Aenordis comitissæ, Alienordis filiæ eorum, Wilelmi Aigres filii eorum”[493].

c) AELIS [Petronille] d'Aquitaine ([1125]-after 24 Oct 1151, bur St Arnould in Crépy). The Chronicle of Alberic de Trois-Fontaines specifies that "Alienor Guilielmi filia comits Pictavorum et Aquitanie ducis" had two sisters one of whom married "Radulfus…comes Perone et Veromandie", although he does not name them[494]. The Historiæ Tornacenses record the wife of "Radulfem comitem" as "germanam Alienore regine Francorum" but also do not name her[495]. Robert of Torigny refers to the mother of the infant children of "Radulfus de Perrona comes Viromandorum" as "iuniore filia Willelmi ducis Aquitanorum" but he does not name her either[496]. The Chronique de Guillaume de Nangis names "Eléonore et Pétronille" as the two daughters of "Guillaume comte de Poitou et prince d'Aquitaine", recording in 1142 that Pétronille married "Raoul comte de Vermandois" after he repudiated his first wife[497]. m (1142) as his second wife, RAOUL I "le Vaillant" Comte de Vermandois, son of HUGUES "le Maisné" de France Comte de Vermandois & his wife Adelais Ctss de Vermandois, de Valois et de Crépy ([1094]-13 Oct 1152, bur Priory of Saint-Arnoul de Crépy).

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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_X,_Duke_of_Aquitaine

and in French: http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guillaume_X_de_Poitiers

William X (1099 – 9 April 1137), called the Saint, was Duke of Aquitaine, Duke of Gascony, and Count of Poitou (as William VIII) between 1126 and 1137. He was the son of William IX by his second wife, Philippa of Toulouse.

William was born in Toulouse during the brief period when his parents ruled the capital. His birth is recorded in the Chronicle of Saint-Maixent for the year 1099: Willelmo comiti natus est filius, equivoce Guillelmus vocatus ("a son was born to Count William, named William like himself"). Later that same year, much to his wife's ire, Duke William mortgaged Toulouse to Philippa's cousin, Bertrand of Toulouse, and then left on Crusade.

Philippa and her infant son were left in Poitiers. Long after Duke William's return, he took up with Dangereuse, the wife of one of his vassals, and set aside his rightful wife, Philippa. This caused strain between father and son, until William married Aenor de Châtellerault, daughter of his father's mistress, in 1121. He had from her three children: Eleanor, who would later become heiress to the Duchy; Petronilla, who married Raoul I of Vermandois; and William Aigret, who died young.

As his father before him, William X was a patron of troubadours, music and literature. He was an educated man and strove to give his two daughters an excellent education, in a time when Europe's rulers were hardly literate.

When Eleanor succeeded him as Duchess, she continued William's tradition and transformed the Aquitanian court into Europe's centre of knowledge.

William was both a lover of the arts and a warrior. He became involved in conflicts with Normandy (which he raided in 1136, in alliance with Geoffrey le Bel of Anjou who claimed it in his wife's name) and France.

Even inside his borders, William faced an alliance of the Lusignans and the Parthenays against him, an issue resolved with total destruction of the enemies. In international politics, William X initially supported antipope Anacletus II in the schism of 1130, opposite to Pope Innocent II, against the will of his own bishops. In 1134 Saint Bernard of Clairvaux convinced William to drop his support to Anacletus and join Innocent.

In 1137 William joined the pilgrimage to Santiago de Compostela, but died of suspected food poisoning during the trip. On his deathbed, he expressed his wish to see king Louis VI of France as protector of his fifteen-year-old daughter Eleanor, and to find her a suitable husband. Louis VI naturally accepted this guardianship and married the heiress of Aquitaine to his own son, Louis VII.

--------------------
Guillaume X de Poitiers1, dit le Toulousain ou le Saint, né en 1099 à Toulouse est le dernier des comtes de Poitiers de la dynastie des Ramnulfides.

Il règne de 1126 à 1137 sous le nom de Guillaume VIII, comte de Poitiers et duc d’Aquitaine sous le nom de Guillaume X. Il est le fils de Guillaume le Troubadour, auquel il succède, et de Philippa, fille du comte de Toulouse Guillaume IV.

Il s’allie contre la Normandie au comte d’Anjou Geoffroy le Bel. Tranquille sur sa frontière nord, il doit par contre longtemps guerroyer au sud pour contraindre son vassal d’Aunis, Isembert de Châtelaillon.

Mal inspiré, il soutient avec le légat Girard d’Angoulême l’antipape Anaclet II, pendant cinq ans, à partir de 1130 et jusqu’à une entrevue avec Bernard de Clairvaux au château de Parthenay.

Il meurt le 9 avril (jour du Vendredi saint 1137) au cours d’un pèlerinage à Saint-Jacques-de-Compostelle, il prie dans ses dernières volontés le roi de France Louis VI le Gros de bien vouloir consentir à marier son fils Louis à sa fille aînée, Aliénor d'Aquitaine.

Il devient, à la fin du Moyen Âge, un personnage de légende, en partie confondu avec Guillaume de Gellone et saint Guillaume de Maleval, à l’origine de l’ordre des Guillemites. Unions et descendance

Il épouse en 1118 ou en 1121, Aénor de Châtellerault, fille d'Aymeric Ier.

Aliénor d’Aquitaine (1122 ou 1124-1204) Pétronille d’Aquitaine (1125-1153) Guillaume Aigret (1126-1130)
En secondes noces, il épouse Emma de Limoges, fille du vicomte Adémar III († 1139), dit "le Barbu", et veuve de Bardon de Cognac.

_____________________
William X of Aquitaine (1099 – April 9, 1137), nicknamed the Saint was duke of Aquitaine, duke of Gascony and count of Poitiers as William VIII of Poitiers between 1126 and 1137. He was the son of William, the troubadour by his second wife, Philippa of Toulouse.

William was born in Toulouse during the brief period when his parents ruled the capital. Later that same year, much to his wife's ire, Duke William mortgaged Toulouse to Philippa's cousin, Bertrand of Toulouse, and then left on Crusade.

Philippa and her infant son were left in Poitiers. Long after Duke William's return, he took up with Dangereuse, the wife of one of his vassals, and set aside his rightful wife, Philippa. This caused strain between father and son, until William married Ænor of Châtellerault, daughter of his father's mistress, in 1121.

He had from her three children:

Aliaenor, or Eleanor, who would later become heiress to the Duchy

Aelith, who married Raoul I of Vermandois

William Aigret, who died young

As his father before him, William X was a patron of troubadours, music and literature. He was an educated man and strove to give his two daughters an excellent education, in a time when Europe's rulers were hardly literate.

When Eleanor succeeded him as Duchess, she continued William's tradition and transformed the Aquitanian court into Europe's centre of knowledge.

William was both a lover of the arts and a warrior. He became involved in conflicts with Normandy (which he raided in 1136, in alliance with Geoffrey le Bel of Anjou who claimed it in his wife's name) and France.

Even inside his borders, William faced an alliance of the Lusignans and the Parthenays against him, an issue resolved with total destruction of the enemies. In international politics, William X initially supported antipope Anacletus II in the schism of 1130, opposite to Pope Innocent II, against the will of his own bishops. In 1134 Saint Bernard of Clairvaux convinced William to drop his support to Anacletus and join Innocent.

In 1137 William joined the pilgrimage to Santiago de Compostela, but died of suspected food poisoning during the trip. On his deathbed, he expressed his wish to see king Louis VI of France as protector of his fifteen-year-old daughter Eleanor, and to find her a suitable husband. Louis VI naturally accepted this guardianship and married the heiress of Aquitaine to his own son, Louis VII.

-------------------------------
http://www.languedoc-france.info/190202_aquitaine.htm

William X, Duke of Aquitaine "the Saint" (1099 – April 9, 1137)

The Name in Occitan. Click here to find out more about occitan. Guilhèm X duc d'Aquitània e de Gasconha, Guilhèm VIII comte de Peitieus

The Name in French Guilaume X duc d'Aquitaine

William was Duke of Aquitaine and Gascony and Count of Poitiers as William VIII of Poitiers between 1126 and 1137.

William was born in Toulouse during the brief period when his parents ruled the capital. Later that same year, 1126, his father William IX mortgaged Toulouse to his wife's cousin, Bertrand of Toulouse. His wife, Philippa of Toulouse was less than pleased, and less pleased still when he then left on Crusade. Philippa and her infant son were left in Poitiers.

Long after William IX's return, he took up with the wife of one of his vassals, and set aside his wife, Philippa. This caused strain between father and son, although the strife seems to have been resolved when the younger William married Ænor of Châtellerault (the daughter of his father's mistress) in 1121. The couple had three children:

* Aliaenor, or Eleanor, who would later become heiress to the Duchy;
* Aelith ( aka Petronilla), who married Raoul I of Vermandois;
* William Aigret, who died young.
William's wife Ænor and their son William Aigret both died in 1130.

Like his father before him, William X was a patron of troubadours, music and literature. He was an educated man and gave his two daughters an excellent education - just one example of the gap between the sophisticated culture of Occitania and the rest of western Christendom (It was rare enough to give boys a good education, and generally considered "unnatural" and even blasphemous to educated girls. Senior churchmen objected loudly and often).

William became involved in conflicts with Normandy and France. Inside his own borders he faced an alliance of the Lusignans and the Parthenays against him, happily resolved by total destruction of the enemies.

In 1137, Duke William X set out from Poitiers to Bordeaux, taking his daughters with him. In Bordeaux, he left Eleanor and Petronilla in the charge of the Archbishop of Bordeaux who could be entrusted with the safety of the Duke's daughters. The Duke then set out for the Shrine of Saint James of Compostela in North-western Spain, in the company of other pilgrims; however, on 9th April (Good Friday) 1137 he was stricken with sickness, probably food poisoning. He died that evening, having bequeathed Aquitaine to his fifteen-year-old daughter, Eleanor. On his deathbed, he expressed his wish to have King Louis VI of France as protector of Eleanor, and to charge him with finding her a suitable husband. Louis VI, putting his own interests first, as ever, married Eleanor the new Duchess of Aquitaine to his own son, also called Louis, later King Louis VII.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_X_of_Aquitaine

William X (1099 – 9 April 1137), called the Saint, was Duke of Aquitaine, Duke of Gascony, and Count of Poitou (as William VIII) between 1126 and 1137. He was the son of William IX by his second wife, Philippa of Toulouse.

William was born in Toulouse during the brief period when his parents ruled the capital. His birth is recorded in the Chronicle of Saint-Maixent for the year 1099: Willelmo comiti natus est filius, equivoce Guillelmus vocatus ("a son was born to Count William, named William like himself"). Later that same year, much to his wife's ire, Duke William mortgaged Toulouse to Philippa's cousin, Bertrand of Toulouse, and then left on Crusade.

Philippa and her infant son were left in Poitiers. Long after Duke William's return, he took up with Dangereuse, the wife of one of his vassals, and set aside his rightful wife, Philippa. This caused strain between father and son, until William married Ænor of Châtellerault, daughter of his father's mistress, in 1121. He had from her three children: Aliaenor, who would later become heiress to the Duchy; Aelith, who married Raoul I of Vermandois; and William Aigret, who died young.

As his father before him, William X was a patron of troubadours, music and literature. He was an educated man and strove to give his two daughters an excellent education, in a time when Europe's rulers were hardly literate.

When Eleanor succeeded him as Duchess, she continued William's tradition and transformed the Aquitanian court into Europe's centre of knowledge.

William was both a lover of the arts and a warrior. He became involved in conflicts with Normandy (which he raided in 1136, in alliance with Geoffrey le Bel of Anjou who claimed it in his wife's name) and France.

Even inside his borders, William faced an alliance of the Lusignans and the Parthenays against him, an issue resolved with total destruction of the enemies. In international politics, William X initially supported antipope Anacletus II in the schism of 1130, opposite to Pope Innocent II, against the will of his own bishops. In 1134 Saint Bernard of Clairvaux convinced William to drop his support to Anacletus and join Innocent.

In 1137 William joined the pilgrimage to Santiago de Compostela, but died of suspected food poisoning during the trip. On his deathbed, he expressed his wish to see king Louis VI of France as protector of his fifteen-year-old daughter Eleanor, and to find her a suitable husband. Louis VI naturally accepted this guardianship and married the heiress of Aquitaine to his own son, Louis VII.

[edit] See also

Dukes of Aquitaine family tree

[edit] Sources

Parsons, John Carmi. Eleanor of Aquitaine: Lord and Lady, 2002

French nobility

Preceded by

William IX Duke of Aquitaine

1126–1137 Succeeded by

Eleanor

Count of Poitiers

1126–1137

Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_X,_Duke_of_Aquitaine"

William X of Aquitaine (1099 – April 9, 1137), nicknamed the Saint was duke of Aquitaine, duke of Gascony and count of Poitiers as William VIII of Poitiers between 1126 and 1137. He was the son of William, the troubadour by his second wife, Philippa of Toulouse.

William was born in Toulouse during the brief period when his parents ruled the capital. Later that same year, much to his wife's ire, Duke William mortgaged Toulouse to Philippa's cousin, Bertrand of Toulouse, and then left on Crusade.

Philippa and her infant son were left in Poitiers. Long after Duke William's return, he took up with Dangereuse, the wife of one of his vassals, and set aside his rightful wife, Philippa. This caused strain between father and son, until William married Ænor of Châtellerault, daughter of his father's mistress, in 1121.

He had from her three children:

Aliaenor, or Eleanor, who would later become heiress to the Duchy

Aelith, who married Raoul I of Vermandois

William Aigret, who died young

wikipedia:

http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wilhelm_X._%28Aquitanien%29

William X, Duke of Aquitaine

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Coin of William X, 8.90g.

William X (1099 – 9 April 1137), called the Saint, was Duke of Aquitaine, Duke of Gascony, and Count of Poitou (as William VIII) between 1126 and 1137. He was the son of William IX by his second wife, Philippa of Toulouse.

William was born in Toulouse during the brief period when his parents ruled the capital. His birth is recorded in the Chronicle of Saint-Maixent for the year 1099: Willelmo comiti natus est filius, equivoce Guillelmus vocatus ("a son was born to Count William, named William like himself"). Later that same year, much to his wife's ire, Duke William mortgaged Toulouse to Philippa's cousin, Bertrand of Toulouse, and then left on Crusade.

Philippa and her infant son were left in Poitiers. Long after Duke William's return, he took up with Dangereuse, the wife of one of his vassals, and set aside his rightful wife, Philippa. This caused strain between father and son, until William married Aenor de Châtellerault, daughter of his father's mistress, in 1121. He had from her three children: Eleanor, who would later become heiress to the Duchy; Petronilla, who married Raoul I of Vermandois; and William Aigret, who died young.

As his father before him, William X was a patron of troubadours, music and literature. He was an educated man and strove to give his two daughters an excellent education, in a time when Europe's rulers were hardly literate.

When Eleanor succeeded him as Duchess, she continued William's tradition and transformed the Aquitanian court into Europe's centre of knowledge.

William was both a lover of the arts and a warrior. He became involved in conflicts with Normandy (which he raided in 1136, in alliance with Geoffrey le Bel of Anjou who claimed it in his wife's name) and France.

Even inside his borders, William faced an alliance of the Lusignans and the Parthenays against him, an issue resolved with total destruction of the enemies. In international politics, William X initially supported antipope Anacletus II in the schism of 1130, opposite to Pope Innocent II, against the will of his own bishops. In 1134 Saint Bernard of Clairvaux convinced William to drop his support to Anacletus and join Innocent.

In 1137 William joined the pilgrimage to Santiago de Compostela, but died of suspected food poisoning during the trip. On his deathbed, he expressed his wish to see king Louis VI of France as protector of his fifteen-year-old daughter Eleanor, and to find her a suitable husband. Louis VI naturally accepted this guardianship and married the heiress of Aquitaine to his own son, Louis VII.

[edit] See also

* Dukes of Aquitaine family tree
[edit] References

* Parsons, John Carmi. Eleanor of Aquitaine: Lord and Lady, 2002
French nobility

Preceded by

William IX Duke of Aquitaine

1126 – 1137 Succeeded by

Eleanor

Count of Poitiers

1126 – 1137

William X of Aquitaine (1099 – April 9, 1137), nicknamed the Saint was duke of Aquitaine, duke of Gascony and count of Poitiers as William VIII of Poitiers between 1126 and 1137. He was the son of William, the troubadour by his second wife, Philippa of Toulouse.

William was born in Toulouse during the brief period when his parents ruled the capital. Later that same year, much to his wife's ire, Duke William mortgaged Toulouse to Philippa's cousin, Bertrand of Toulouse, and then left on Crusade.

Philippa and her infant son were left in Poitiers. Long after Duke William's return, he took up with Dangereuse, the wife of one of his vassals, and set aside his rightful wife, Philippa. This caused strain between father and son, until William married Ænor of Châtellerault, daughter of his father's mistress, in 1121.

He had from her three children:

1. Aliaenor, or Eleanor, who would later become heiress to the Duchy
2. Aelith, who married Raoul I of Vermandois
3. William Aigret, who died young
As his father before him, William X was a patron of troubadours, music and literature. He was an educated man and strived to give his two daughters an excellent education, in a time when Europe's rulers were hardly literate.

When Eleanor succeeded him as Duchess, she continued William's tradition and transformed the Aquitanian court into Europe's centre of knowledge.

William was both a lover of the arts and a warrior. He became involved in conflicts with Normandy (which he raided in 1136, in alliance with Geoffrey le Bel of Anjou who claimed it in his wife's name) and France.

Even inside his borders, William faced an alliance of the Lusignans and the Parthenays against him, an issue resolved with total destruction of the enemies. In international politics, William X initially supported antipope Anacletus II in the schism of 1130, opposite to Pope Innocent II, against the will of his own bishops. In 1134 Saint Bernard of Clairvaux convinced William to drop his support to Anacletus and join Innocent.

In 1137 William joined the pilgrimage to Santiago de Compostela, but died of suspected food poisoning during the trip. On his deathbed, he expressed his wish to see king Louis VI of France as protector of his fifteen-year-old daughter Eleanor, and to find her a suitable husband. Louis VI naturally accepted this guardianship and married the heiress of Aquitaine to his own son, Louis VII.

See also: Dukes of Aquitaine family tree

BIOGRAPHY: General Notes:

Saint, Duke of AQUITAINE, Count of POITOU.

BOOKS

The Political History of England, Vol II, George Burton Adams Longmans Green and Co, 1905, Ch IX, p210:

"In September, 1136, central Normandy was the scene of another useless and savage raid of Geoffrey of Anjou, accompanied by William, the last duke of Aquitaine, William Talvas, and others. They penetrated the country as far as Lisieux, treating the churches and servants of God, says Orderic Vitalis, after the manner of theheathen, but were obliged to retreat; and finally, though he had been joined by Matilda, Geoffrey, badly wounded, abandoned this attempt also and returned to Anjou."

p212: "...When William, Duke of Aquitaine, returned from his expedition with Geoffrey, he seems to have been troubled in his conscience by his heathenish deeds in Normandy, and he made a pilgrimage to St James of Compostella to seek the pardon of heaven. In this he seemed to be successful, and he died there beforethe altar of the apostle, with all the comforts of religion. When he knew that his end was approaching, he besought his barons to carry out the plan which he had formed of conveying the duchy to the king of France, with the hand of his daughter and heiress Eleanor for his son Louis. The proposition was gladly accepted, the marriage took place in July at Bordeaux..."

Eleanor of Aquitaine the Mother Queen, Desmond Seward, 1978, Dorset Press, p17:

"William X, Eleanor's father, was almost as cultured as William IX, just as colourful and still more pugnacious. He was a patron of poets and there were many troubadours at his court, including foreigners from Aragon, Castile, and Navarre, and from Italy, and there was evena Welshman called Bledhri. When this duke died, his Gascon friend Cercamon wrote a lament that mourned his passing and the end of his munificence. However, William X was better known for quarrelling than for verses. A man of huge physique and enormous strength, he was an outsize personality in every way. He was said to eat enough for eight ordinary mortals at each meal. He was unwise enough to involve himself in the Church schism that began in 1130, supporting the anti-pope Anacletusagainst Innocent II; he menaced prelates and ignored excommunications and interdicts that stopped the bells ringing in entire dioceses. He was completely undaunted by the threats of divine punishment that issued from the redoubtable abbot of Clairvaux, St Bernard, and refused to remove a schismatic bishop. When Bernard deliberately entered his territory and publicly celebrated mass at Parthenay, the duke burst into the church in full armour, to teach the infuriating monk a lesson. However, William had met his match. Bernard advanced on him, holding up the consecrated Host, and spoke to such effect that the duke fell to the ground rigid with fear and foaming at the mouth. But although he had lost his battle with the Church, William in no way abated his quarrelsomeness when dealing with his vassals; only his death prevented the whole of the Limousin from rising in revolt...

"...William X seems to have been noticeably fond of his eldest daughter, making herhis constant companion. In consequence, Eleanor's childhood was passed under many roofs. Like all rulers of the high Middle Ages, her father was perpetually on progress- administering justice and bringing rebellious vassals to heel- and Eleanorwent with him..."

p21: "On Good Friday 1137, despite his strength, Duke William X died at Compostella, where he had gone to pray to St James the Apostle, and was buried under the high altar at Compostella..."

A History of the Plantagenets, Vol I, The Conquering Family, Thomas B Costain, Doubleday & Co, Garden City, 1949, p37:

"Duke William ruled Aquitaine and he was very old. He had one son who had gone to the Crusades and who was so good that the people called him St. William. The old man had not been a saint by any means but had spent a large part of his life wandering up and down his broad domain looking for romance, and always finding it. He now wanted to abdicate and spend his last years as a pilgrim andpenitent, having in full degree that fear of the hereafter and the torments of hell which motivated so much of what happened in those days. His saintly son had two daughters only, Eleanor and Petonille, both of whom took after their grandfather.

"When Eleanor was fifteen and already recognized as Queen of the Courts of Love, her father died..."

Guillermo el Tolosano, nació en 1099 y fue el último conde de Poitiers y de la dinastía de los Rammulfides.

Reinó de 1126 a 1137 con el nombre de Guillermo VIII, conde de Poitiers, duque de Aquitania con el nombre de Guillermo X.

Era hijo de Guillermo el Trovador, al que sucedió, y de Philippa, hija del conde de Toulouse, Guillermo IV.

Se alía contra Normandía, con el conde de Anjou Geoffroy el Bello que, mientras permanece sin problemas en su frontera, Guillermo tiene que luchar durante, mucho tiempo en el sur, para combatir a su vasallo Aunis, Isembert de Châtelaillon.

Mal aconsejado, desde 1130, apoya durante cinco años junto con el legado Girar d’Angulême al anti-Papa Anacleto II, actitud que depone tras una entrevista con san Bernardo de Claraval en el castillo de Parthenay.

Muerto en el transcurso de una peregrinación a Santiago de Compostela pidió, en sus últimas voluntades, al rey de Francia Luis VI el Gordo que consintiera el matrimonio entre su hijo Luis y su hija mayor Leonor de Aquitania.

A finales de la Edad Media se convirtió en un personaje de leyenda, en parte confundido con Guillermo de Gellone y Guillermo de Maleval, fundador de los guillemites.

William X, Duke of Aquitaine

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

William X (1099 – 9 April 1137), called the Saint, was Duke of Aquitaine, Duke of Gascony, and Count of Poitou (as William VIII) between 1126 and 1137. He was the son of William IX by his second wife, Philippa of Toulouse.

William was born in Toulouse during the brief period when his parents ruled the capital. His birth is recorded in the Chronicle of Saint-Maixent for the year 1099: Willelmo comiti natus est filius, equivoce Guillelmus vocatus ("a son was born to Count William, named William like himself"). Later that same year, much to his wife's ire, Duke William mortgaged Toulouse to Philippa's cousin, Bertrand of Toulouse, and then left on Crusade.

Philippa and her infant son were left in Poitiers. Long after Duke William's return, he took up with Dangereuse, the wife of one of his vassals, and set aside his rightful wife, Philippa. This caused strain between father and son, until William married Ænor of Châtellerault, daughter of his father's mistress, in 1121. He had from her three children: Aliaenor, who would later become heiress to the Duchy; Aelith, who married Raoul I of Vermandois; and William Aigret, who died young.

As his father before him, William X was a patron of troubadours, music and literature. He was an educated man and strove to give his two daughters an excellent education, in a time when Europe's rulers were hardly literate.

When Eleanor succeeded him as Duchess, she continued William's tradition and transformed the Aquitanian court into Europe's centre of knowledge.

William was both a lover of the arts and a warrior. He became involved in conflicts with Normandy (which he raided in 1136, in alliance with Geoffrey le Bel of Anjou who claimed it in his wife's name) and France.

Even inside his borders, William faced an alliance of the Lusignans and the Parthenays against him, an issue resolved with total destruction of the enemies. In international politics, William X initially supported antipope Anacletus II in the schism of 1130, opposite to Pope Innocent II, against the will of his own bishops. In 1134 Saint Bernard of Clairvaux convinced William to drop his support to Anacletus and join Innocent.

In 1137 William joined the pilgrimage to Santiago de Compostela, but died of suspected food poisoning during the trip. On his deathbed, he expressed his wish to see king Louis VI of France as protector of his fifteen-year-old daughter Eleanor, and to find her a suitable husband. Louis VI naturally accepted this guardianship and married the heiress of Aquitaine to his own son, Louis VII.

Guillaume VIII/X Duc d'Aquitaine was born in 1099 in Toulouse, Haute-Garonne, Midi-Pyrenees, France. He died on 9 Apr 1137 in Saint Jacques-de-Compostelle, Spain. He was married to Alienor de Chatellerault in 1121. Alienor de Chatellerault was born in 1103 in Chatellerault, Vienne, Poitou-Charentes, France. She died after Mar 1130. Nicknamed the Saint was Duke of Aquitaine and Gascony and Count of Poitiers as William VIII of Poitiers between 1126 and 1137. William was born in Toulouse. He was the son of William, the Troubador by his repudiated wife, Philippa of Toulouse. His younger brother was Raymond of Poitiers, ruler of the principality of Antioch, a crusader state. He married (Aenor) Eleanor of Chastellerault, daughter of his father's mistress, in 1121 and from her had three children: William Aigret, who died young; the heiress Eleanor of Aquitaine; and Petronilla of Aquitaine, who married Raoul I of Vermandois .As his father before him, William X was a patron of troubadours, music and literature . He was an educated man and strived to give his two daughters an excellent education in a time when Europe's rulers where hardly literate. When Eleanor succeeded him as Duchess, she continued William's tradition and transformed the Aquitanian court in of Europe's center of knowledge. Despite his love of the arts, William was not a peaceful man and was frequently involved in conflicts with the neighboring Normandy (which he raided in 1136) and France . Even inside his borders, William faced an alliance of the Lusignans and the Parthenays against him, an issue resolved with total destruction of the enemies. In international politics, William X initially supported antipope Anacletus II in the schism of 1130, opposite to Pope Innocent II, against the will of his own bishops. In 1134 Saint Bernard of Clairvaux convinced William to drop his support to Anacletus and join Innocent. In 1137 William joined the pilgrimage to Santiago de Compostela, but died of food poisoning during the trip. On his deathbed, he expressed his wish to see King Louis VII of France as protector of his fifteen year old daughter Eleanor. Louis VII accepted this wish and married the heiress of Aquitaine.

William X of Aquitaine (1099 – April 9, 1137), nicknamed the Saint was duke of Aquitaine, duke of Gascony and count of Poitiers as William VIII of Poitiers between 1126 and 1137. He was the son of William, the troubadour by his second wife, Philippa of Toulouse.

William was born in Toulouse during the brief period when his parents ruled the capital. Later that same year, much to his wife's ire, Duke William mortgaged Toulouse to Philippa's cousin, Bertrand of Toulouse, and then left on Crusade.

Philippa and her infant son were left in Poitiers. Long after Duke William's return, he took up with Dangereuse, the wife of one of his vassals, and set aside his rightful wife, Philippa. This caused strain between father and son, until William married Ænor of Châtellerault, daughter of his father's mistress, in 1121.

He had from her three children:

Aliaenor, or Eleanor, who would later become heiress to the Duchy

Aelith, who married Raoul I of Vermandois

William Aigret, who died young

William X (1099 – 9 April 1137), called the Saint, was Duke of Aquitaine, Duke of Gascony, and Count of Poitou (as William VIII) between 1126 and 1137. He was the son of William IX by his second wife, Philippa of Toulouse.

William was born in Toulouse during the brief period when his parents ruled the capital. His birth is recorded in the Chronicle of Saint-Maixent for the year 1099: Willelmo comiti natus est filius, equivoce Guillelmus vocatus ("a son was born to Count William, named William like himself"). Later that same year, much to his wife's ire, Duke William mortgaged Toulouse to Philippa's cousin, Bertrand of Toulouse, and then left on Crusade.

Philippa and her infant son were left in Poitiers. Long after Duke William's return, he took up with Dangereuse, the wife of one of his vassals, and set aside his rightful wife, Philippa. This caused strain between father and son, until William married Aenor de Châtellerault, daughter of his father's mistress, in 1121. He had from her three children: Eleanor, who would later become heiress to the Duchy; Petronilla, who married Raoul I of Vermandois; and William Aigret, who died young.

As his father before him, William X was a patron of troubadours, music and literature. He was an educated man and strove to give his two daughters an excellent education, in a time when Europe's rulers were hardly literate.

When Eleanor succeeded him as Duchess, she continued William's tradition and transformed the Aquitanian court into Europe's centre of knowledge.

William was both a lover of the arts and a warrior. He became involved in conflicts with Normandy (which he raided in 1136, in alliance with Geoffrey le Bel of Anjou who claimed it in his wife's name) and France.

Even inside his borders, William faced an alliance of the Lusignans and the Parthenays against him, an issue resolved with total destruction of the enemies. In international politics, William X initially supported antipope Anacletus II in the schism of 1130, opposite to Pope Innocent II, against the will of his own bishops. In 1134 Saint Bernard of Clairvaux convinced William to drop his support to Anacletus and join Innocent.

In 1137 William joined the pilgrimage to Santiago de Compostela, but died of suspected food poisoning during the trip. On his deathbed, he expressed his wish to see king Louis VI of France as protector of his fifteen-year-old daughter Eleanor, and to find her a suitable husband. Louis VI naturally accepted this guardianship and married the heiress of Aquitaine to his own son, Louis VII.

[edit] See also

* Dukes of Aquitaine family tree
[edit] References

* Parsons, John Carmi. Eleanor of Aquitaine: Lord and Lady, 2002
William X of Aquitaine (1099 – April 9, 1137), nicknamed the Saint was duke of Aquitaine, duke of Gascony and count of Poitiers as William VIII of Poitiers between 1126 and 1137. He was the son of William, the troubadour by his second wife, Philippa of Toulouse.

William was born in Toulouse during the brief period when his parents ruled the capital. Later that same year, much to his wife's ire, Duke William mortgaged Toulouse to Philippa's cousin, Bertrand of Toulouse, and then left on Crusade.

Philippa and her infant son were left in Poitiers. Long after Duke William's return, he took up with Dangereuse, the wife of one of his vassals, and set aside his rightful wife, Philippa. This caused strain between father and son, until William married Ænor of Châtellerault, daughter of his father's mistress, in 1121.

He had from her three children:

Aliaenor, or Eleanor, who would later become heiress to the Duchy

Aelith, who married Raoul I of Vermandois

William Aigret, who died young

As his father before him, William X was a patron of troubadours, music and literature. He was an educated man and strived to give his two daughters an excellent education, in a time when Europe's rulers were hardly literate.

When Eleanor succeeded him as Duchess, she continued William's tradition and transformed the Aquitanian court into Europe's centre of knowledge.

William was both a lover of the arts and a warrior. He became involved in conflicts with Normandy (which he raided in 1136, in alliance with Geoffrey le Bel of Anjou who claimed it in his wife's name) and France.

Even inside his borders, William faced an alliance of the Lusignans and the Parthenays against him, an issue resolved with total destruction of the enemies. In international politics, William X initially supported antipope Anacletus II in the schism of 1130, opposite to Pope Innocent II, against the will of his own bishops. In 1134 Saint Bernard of Clairvaux convinced William to drop his support to Anacletus and join Innocent.

In 1137 William joined the pilgrimage to Santiago de Compostela, but died of suspected food poisoning during the trip. On his deathbed, he expressed his wish to see king Louis VI of France as protector of his fifteen-year-old daughter Eleanor, and to find her a suitable husband. Louis VI naturally accepted this guardianship and married the heiress of Aquitaine to his own son, Louis VII.

William X of Aquitaine, nicknamed "the Saint," was Duke of Aquitaine, Duke of Gascony, and Count of Poitiers (as William VIII of Poitiers) between 1126 and 1137.

As his father before him, William X was a patron of troubadours, music and literature. He was an educated man and strove to give his two daughters an excellent education, in a time when Europe's rulers were hardly literate.

William was both a lover of the arts and a warrior. He became involved in conflicts with Normandy (which he raided in 1136, in alliance with Geoffrey le Bel of Anjou who claimed it in his wife's name) and France.

Even inside his borders, William faced an alliance of the Lusignans and the Parthenays against him, an issue resolved with total destruction of the enemies. In international politics, William X initially supported antipope Anacletus II in the schism of 1130, opposite to Pope Innocent II, against the will of his own bishops. In 1134 Saint Bernard of Clairvaux convinced William to drop his support to Anacletus and join Innocent.

See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_X_of_Aquitaine for more information.

AKA: Count of Poitou & William the Toulousan. William was a spirited man, whose vast domains covered a quarter of what would now be France. Resided in a castle at Poitiers on the river Clain. Was excommunicated in 1135 due to his support of the French candidate for pope. Died Saint Jacques-de-Compostelle. William died from polluted water (developed a fever), in the early spring while on a pilgrimage to Compostella.

Sources:

The book, 'Richard the Lion-Hearted', by John Gillingham.

Funk & Wagnalls New Encyclopedia.

The book, 'Kings & Queens of Great Britain'.

The book, 'Eleanor of Aquitaine'.

The book, 'Kings & Queens of Europe'.

The book, 'Medieval Queens'.

DUQUES DE AQUITANIA

1) Significado: La palabra "Aquitania" procede de "Occitania", es decir, la región más occidental de la Galias durante la dominación romana.

2) Casa solar: Aquitania, Francia. Ver mapa de Aquitania. Era una de las partes en las que se hallaba dividida la Galia, al sur oeste. Antiguamente estaba constituida por más de 20 pueblos o gentes, ninguno muy numeroso. Los aquitani siempre fueron considerados más afines a los iberos de España que a los galos. La lengua tenía una clara afinidad con la onomástica vasca. Gascuña, al sur del Garona, formaba parte de la Aquitania. Los romanos, entorno al año del nacimiento de Cristo, la dividieron en tres "Aquitanias". Durante la administración visigótica (a partir del año 416 d.C.) la Aquitania forma una unidad con su centro en Clermont Ferrand. Durante la dominación franca Aquitania pierde unidad por ser considerada como tierra de disputa entre los descendientes de Clodoveo. A principios del siglo VII el rey Dagoberto I entrega la Aquitania a su hermano Cariberto II como un "glacis aquitánico" que comprendía los condados de Tolosa, Cahors, Agen, Perigueux y Sanites, con capital en Toulouse. Estos condados desgajados volvieron a las manos de Dagoberto por la muerte de su hermano a mediados del siglo VII. Sin embargo, un hijo de Cariberto II de Neustria, llamado Boggis, se convierte en el primer duque de Gascuña (ver Duques de Gascuña) y principal señor de Aquitania. El bisabuelo de Carlomagno, Pipino de Hiristal, tuvo que luchar con Eudes (hijo de Boggis) por el dominio de la Aquitania. En época de Carlomagno, Aquitania fue constituida como reino e incluido en la Marca Hispánica. Luis "el Piadoso" gobernó Aquitania y luego también Carlos "el Calvo", que dividió el territorio de la antigua Aquitania dando una parte, en feudo, al duque de Poitiers y conde de Auvernia, Gerardo I, que estaba casado con una hermanastra suya, Rotruda. Los territorios desgajados por Carlos "el Calvo" (Poitou, Angomois, Saintogne) formaron el segundo ducado de Aquitania (el primero, la Guyena, quedó en la corona francesa de los capetos), que permaneció durante tres siglos en la Casa de Auvernia. Este territorio se enriqueció en el siglo XI con la anexión de la Gascuña. En 1137, al morir Guillermo VIII (ó X), último duque de Aquitania, Leonor su hija, casó con Enrique Plantagenet, rey de Inglaterra. De esta manera, el ducado de Aquitania quedó anexionado oficialmente a la corona inglesa, el año de 1203.

3) Armas: En campo de gules un leopardo de oro (De gueules, au léopard d'or). Es el blasón del Ducado de Guyena.

4) Antepasados:

I. Luis "el Piadoso" de Aquitania nació en Casseneuil-sur-Garonne, Francia, el 9-X-778. Murió en Ingelheim, Rhinehessen, Hesse, el 27-VIII-840. Casó tres veces (todos los descendientes que señalamos son antepasados de nuestra familia): 1) con Teodolinda de Sens (ver nota 1), de la cual, antes de 794, tuvo por hija a Alpaïs de Francia; 2) con Ermengarda de Haspengau (ver nota 2) casó en 798 y tuvo tres hijos: Lotario I de Francia (795), Rotruda de Aquitania (803, que sigue) y Luis "el Germánico" de Alemania (806); 3) con Judith de Baviera (ver nota 3) casó en febrero de 718/19 y también tuvo tres hijos: Gisela de Francia (c.818-820), Carlos II "el Calvo" (20-VIII-823) y Adelaida de Francia (824). Para la descendencia de cada uno de los hijos y nietos de Ludovico Pío, ver Carolingios.

II. Rotruda de Aquitania nació el año de 803. Murió el 2-X-860. Casó, en 819, con Gerardo I de Auvernia (ver nota 4). Carlos "el Calvo", hermanastro de Rotruda, dió en feudo parte del territorio de Aquitania, a Gerardo de Auvernia, de tal modo que los condes de Auvernia y duques de Poitiers, recibieron el llamado segundo ducado de Aquitania (el primero era la Guyena, que quedó anexionado a la corona desde el año 967). Gerardo y Rotruda tuvieron por hijo a

III. Ranulfo I, duque de Poitiers nació hacia el año de 818. Casó con Aldetruda de Maine (ver nota 5). Tuvieron por hijo a

IV. Ranulfo II, duque de Poitiers nació en 835 y murió el 12-X-890. Casó con Ermengarda y tuvieron por hijo a

V. Ebles Manzer, duque de Aquitania nació en 889 y murió en 935. Casó en 911 con Emiliana. Tuvieron por hijo a

VI. Guillermo III, duque de Aquitania y conde de Poitou nació en el año de 915. Murió el 27-VI-963. Casó, en 935, con Adela de Normandía, hija de Roberto I, duque de Normandía (ver Duques de Normandía), y Poppa de Bayeux de Senlis , condesa de Valois (ver nota 6). Tuvo por hijos a Guillermo IV "Fierabras" (935, que sigue), Alicia (o Adela) de Poitou (945, que casó con Hugo Capeto, rey de Francia, entre junio y agosto del 968: ver Reyes Capetos) y a otra hija, que nació hacia el año 950 (que casó en 972 con Gilberto I de Roucy: ver nota 7).

VII. Guillermo IV "Fierabras", duque de Aquitania nació el año 935. Murió el 28-IV-996. Casó con Emma de Blois (de Champagne) (ver nota 8). Tuvieron por hijo a

VIII. Guillermo V de Poitou, duque de Aquitania nació el año de 969. Murió el 13-V-1030 en Maillezais, Francia. Casó con Inés de Borgoña (ver nota 9). Tuvieron tres hijos que son antepasados de nuestra familia: 1) Inés de Poitou (c.1020, ver nota 10), 2) Guillermo VI de Aquitania (c.1024-1027, que sigue) y 3) Beatriz de Aquitania (c.1030, ver nota 11).

IX. Guillermo VI, duque de Aquitania nació entre 1024 y 1027. Murió el 5-I-1086/87. Casó hacia 1068 con Hildegarda (Aldegarda) de Borgoña (ver nota 12). Tuvieron por hijo a

X. Guillermo VII, duque de Aquitania nació el año de 1071. Murió en 1127. Casó con Philipe (Matilde Maud) (Regent) de Toulouse (ver nota 13). Tuvieron por hijo a

XI. GUILLERMO VIII, DUQUE DE AQUITANIA nació en 1099 en Toulouse, Francia. Murió el 6-VIII-1137 en Santiago de Compostela, España. Casó con LEONOR DE CHASTELLERAULT DE ROCHEFOUCAU (ver nota 14).

XII. Leonor, duquesa de Aquitania y reina de Inglaterra nació el año de 1122. Murió el 28-VII-1204. Casó con Enrique II Plantagenet, duque de Normandía y rey de Inglaterra (ver Casa de Anjou). Tuvieron por hijos a Guillermo (1156), Enrique el Jóven (1183; casado con Margarita de Francia, hija de Luis VII), Matilde (casada con Enrique el León, duque de Sajonia), Ricardo Corazón de León (1199; casado con Berenguela de Navarra, hija de Sancho el Sabio), Geofredo (1187; casado con Constanza de Bretaña), Leonor (casada con Alfonso VIII de Castilla), Juana (casada con Guillermo II de Sicilia y luego con Raimundo VI de Tolosa), y Juan sin Tierra (1216; padre de Enrique III, 1272). Nuestra familia desciende de Leonor de Inglaterra (ver Casa de Anjou).

NOTAS:

[1] Teodolinda de Sens nació hacia el año de 775. Murió hacia el 794. Sus padres fueron Gainfroy de Sens y Teolodlina de Blisgau. Hermano suyo fue Giselberto de Maasgau, también antepasado de nuestra familia, que fue padre de Giselberto I de Maasgau, casado con Ermengarda de Alemania (hija de Lotario I de Francia y Enmengarda de Tours; ver Carolingios). Teodolinda de Sens fue madre, antes de 794, de Alpaïs de Francia (794-852), casada con el conde de París, Begón.

[2] Ermengarda de Haspengau nació el año de 780 en Hesbaye, Lieja, Bélgica. Casó con Ludovico Pío en 798. Murió el 10-XII-818 en Angers. Su padre fue el conde Ingermar de Hesbaye, natural de Lieja, Bélgica.

[3] Judith von Altdorf, de Baviera nació el año de 805. Casó en Aquisgrán, en febrero de 818/19, con Ludovico Pío. Murió en Tours, el 26-VI-843, tres años después de su marido. Sus pares fueron Welf de Suabia, conde de Andech y Baviera, y Heilwig de Sajonia. Tuvo dos hermanos también antepasados nuestros: Conrado I de Auxerre (que casó con Adelaida de Tours, hija de Hugo I de Tours) y Emma von Altdorf (casada con Luis el Germánico). Ver la Casa de Welf.

[4] Gerardo I de Auvernia fue hijo de Geroldo III de Vitzgau y nieto de Imma de Alemania, que era biznieta de Teodorico III de Neustria y Santa Clotilde de Metz: ver Reyes Francos.

[5] Aldetruda de Maine fue hija de Roricon II de Maine y Bilechilda; Roricon era nieto de Carlomagno a través de su madre: ver Carolingios.

[6] Poppa de Bayeux de Senlis fue hija de Pipino III Beranger de Senlis, y de una hija de Gurwant de Rennes (hijo de Nominoe, duque de Bretaña). Pipino III era hijo de Pipino II "Quintin", conde de Vermandois, y de Rothaïde de Bobbio. A su vez, Pipino II de Vermandois, era hijo de Bernardo de Lombardía (nieto de Carlomagono) y Cunegunda de Gellón, hija de San Guillermo de Gellón y, por tanto, biznieta de Carlos Martel. Ver Carolingios. Rothaïe de Bobbio también era nieta de San Guillermo Gellón conde Toulouse, que casó en segundas nupcias con Witburge de Hornbach, descendiente de los condes de Tréveris.

[7] Gilberto I de Roucy (951) era hijo del conde Renaud de Roucy (917 a 8-VI-973) y de Aubree de Lorena (930 a c.993). Tuvo una hermana llamada Ermetruda de Roucy que casó con el conde Otón Guillermo Macon de Borgoña (ver Condes de Borgoña). Renaud de Roucy era hijo de Heriberto II de Vermandois (ver Vermandois) e Hildebranda de Neustria (hija de Roberto, rey de Francia: ver Capetos). Aubree de Lorena era hija de Giselberto de Hainaut (hijo de Raniero I de Hainaut: ver Condes de Flandes y Hainaut) y Gerberga de Sajonia (hija de Enrique I de Sajonia, emperador —ver Casa de Sajonia— y santa Matilde de Ringelheim).

[8] Emma de Blois (953, de Champagne) era hermana de Eudes I de Blois (945, que casó con Berta de Borgoña, hija de Conrrado III "el Pacífico" y Matilde de Francia: ver Casas de Borgoña y Carolingia). Emma y Eudes fueron hijos de Teobaldo II de Blois (915 a 11-IV-975, hijo de Teobaldo "el Viejo" de Blois y Richilda Capeto: ver Capetos) y Liutgarda de Vermandois (ver Vermandois).

[9] Inés de Borgoña nació en el año 1000 y murió el 18-II-1068/69. Fue hija de Oton Guillermo Macon de Borgoña y Ermetruda de Roucy, condesa de Reims (como ya hemos visto, hermana de Gilberto I de Roucy: ver nota 7).

[10] Inés de Poitou nació en 1020 y murió el 26-III-1078. Casó con Enrique III de Franconia, emperador del Sacro Imperio Germánico (ver Casa de Franconia).

[11] Beatriz de Aquitania nació antes del 1030. Murió en 1109. Casó antes del 1055 con Raimundo II de Substantion. La Casa de Substantion tiene su origen en Bernardo I de Substantion (nacido en 885), hijo de Roberto de Maguelone y Guillermina de Aquitania (hija de Guillermo I de Aquitania y nieta de Bernardo de Septimania y Dhouda de Gascuña: ver Duques de Gascuña). A Bernardo I de Substantion le sucedieron Berenguer I (895), Berardo II (920), Raimundo I (c.960), Bernardo III (c.989) y Raimundo II (c.1010), que fue esposo de Beatriz de Aquitania y tuvieron por hijo a Pedro I de Melgueil. La dinastía Melgueil enlaza con la de Narbona-Pelet, y luego con los señores de Anduze.

[12] Hildegarda de Borgoña nació hacia 1050 y murió después de 1104. Casó hacia 1068 con Guillermo VI de Aquitania. Sus padres fueron Roberto I "el Viejo" de Borgoña (ver Duques de Borgoña de la dinastía capeta) y Ermengarda de Anjou (hija de Folco III e Hildegarda de Sundgau: ver Casa de Anjou).

[13] Philipe (Matilde o Maud) de Toulouse nació hacia 1075. Fue hija de Guillermo IV de Toulouse y Ema de Mortaigne (hija de Roberto de Burgo Mortaigne y Maud Montgomery). Guillermo IV de Toulouse fue hermano del primer cruzado Raimundo IV "Saint Gilles", conde de Toulouse (ver Condes de Toulouse).

[14] Leonor de Châtellerault de Rochefoucau nació en 1102 en Châtellerault, Vienne, Francia, y murió en 1130. Era hija de Aimery de Châtellerault y Dangereuse de L'Isle Bouchard. El primer vástago de la dinastía de L'Isle-Bouchard fue Bouchard y nació hacia 865. El primero del linaje de Châtellerault nació hacia 920. Una abuela de Leonor de Châtellerault se llamaba Leonor (Aénor) de Thouars (1050), y una abuela de esta se llamaba Leonor (Aénor) de Blois (996). Leonor (Aénor) de Riviere es la más antigua Aénor y nació en 975. Fue tatarabuela de Dangereuse. El nombre de "Leonor" se hizo popular en España por Leonor de Inglaterra (ver Casa de Anjou), esposa de Alfonso VIII, hija de Enrique II de Inglaterra, nieta de Leonor de Aquitania y biznieta de Leonor de Châtellerault.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_X,_Duke_of_Aquitaine
William X (1099 – 9 April 1137), called the Saint, was Duke of Aquitaine, Duke of Gascony, and Count of Poitou (as William VIII) between 1126 and 1137. He was the son of William IX by his second wife, Philippa of Toulouse.

William was born in Toulouse during the brief period when his parents ruled the capital. His birth is recorded in the Chronicle of Saint-Maixent for the year 1099: Willelmo comiti natus est filius, equivoce Guillelmus vocatus ("a son was born to Count William, named William like himself"). Later that same year, much to his wife's ire, Duke William mortgaged Toulouse to Philippa's cousin, Bertrand of Toulouse, and then left on Crusade.

Royal Family - Ramnulfids Father William IX, Duke of Aquitaine Mother Philippa of Toulouse Born 1099 Toulouse Died 9 April 1137
http://homepages.rootsweb.com/~cousin/html/p364.htm#i4620
Guillaume X "le Toulousain", duc de Guyenne, comte de Poitiers was called a handsome giant.3 Arms: De gueules, au léopard d'or.4 Guillaume X "le Toulousain", duc de Guyenne, comte de Poitiers also went by the name of William VIII "the Toulousian" of Poitou. He was the successor of Guillaume IX "le Troubadour", duc de Guyenne, comte de Poitiers; Count of Poitou.3 Guillaume X "le Toulousain", duc de Guyenne, comte de Poitiers was born in 1090? At Toulouse, Aquitaine, France. He was the son of Guillaume IX "le Troubadour", duc de Guyenne, comte de Poitiers and Ermengarde d' Anjou.2,1 Guillaume X "le Toulousain", duc de Guyenne, comte de Poitiers was the successor of Guillaume IX "le Troubadour", duc de Guyenne, comte de Poitiers; Duke of Aquitaine, Gascony, and Toulouse.5,3 Guillaume X "le Toulousain", duc de Guyenne, comte de Poitiers married Ænor de Châtellerault, daughter of Aymeric I, vicomte de Châtellerault and Dangereuse "Maubergeonne" de l'Isle Bouchard, vicomtesse de Châtellerault, in 1121; His 1st.3,1 Guillaume X "le Toulousain", duc de Guyenne, comte de Poitiers married Emma de Limoges, daughter of Ademer de Limoges, after 1123; His 2nd. Count of Poitou at France between 1126 and 1137.3 Duke of Aquitaine and Gascony at France between 1126 and 1137.2,3 Guillaume X "le Toulousain", duc de Guyenne, comte de Poitiers recognized the antipope Anaclet in 1131.2 He supported the antipope Anaclet between 1131 and 1134.2 He ravaged Normandy in 1136.2 He died on 9 April 1137 at Santiago de Compostela, Galicia, Spain, at age 47 years. Died while on a pilgramage to St. Iago de Campostela.2

Only son of Guillaume IX and his second wife Philippa of Toulouse. He married Aenor of Chatellerault in 1121 who bore him three children. He succeeded his father in 1126.
From:
William X (1099 – 9 April 1137), called the Saint, was Duke of Aquitaine, Duke of Gascony, and Count of Poitou (as William VIII) from 1126 to 1137. He was the son of William IX by his second wife, Philippa of Toulouse.

William was born in Toulouse during the brief period when his parents ruled the capital. His birth is recorded in the Chronicle of Saint-Maixent for the year 1099: Willelmo comiti natus est filius, equivoce Guillelmus vocatus ("a son was born to Count William, named William like himself"). Later that same year, much to Philippa's ire, Duke William IX mortgaged Toulouse to Philippa's cousin, Bertrand of Toulouse, and then left on Crusade.

Philippa and her infant son William X were left in Poitiers. When Duke William IX returned from his unsuccessful crusade, he took up with Dangerose, the wife a vassal, and set aside his rightful wife, Philippa. This caused strain between father and son, until 1121 when William X married Aenor de Châtellerault, a daughter of his father's mistress Dangerossa by her first husband, Aimery.

William had three children with Aenor:

Eleanor, who later became heiress to the Duchy; Petronilla, who married Raoul I of Vermandois; William Aigret, who died at age 4 in 1130, about the time their mother Aenor de Châtellerault died.
He possibly had one natural son, William. For a long time it was thought that he had another natural son called Joscelin and some biographies still erroneously state this fact, but Joscelin has been shown to be the brother of Adeliza of Louvain. The attribution of Joscelin as a son of William X has been caused by a mistaken reading of the Pipe Rolls pertaining to the reign of Henry II, where 'brother of the queen' has been taken as Queen Eleanor, when the queen in question is actually Adeliza of Louvain. William, called of Poitiers in the Pipe rolls may have been a half brother of Eleanor. Chronicler John of Salisbury tells us that Petronella died in 1151 or 1152, after which her husband Raoul of Vermandois briefly remarried.

William administered his Aquitaine duchy as both a lover of the arts and a warrior. He became involved in conflicts with Normandy (which he raided in 1136, in alliance with Geoffrey V, Count of Anjou who claimed it in his wife's name) and for France.

Even inside his borders, William faced an alliance of the Lusignans and the Parthenays against him, an issue resolved with total destruction of the enemies. In international politics, William X initially supported antipope Anacletus II in the papal schism of 1130, opposite to Pope Innocent II, against the will of his own bishops. In 1134 Saint Bernard of Clairvaux convinced William to drop his support to Anacletus and join Innocent.

In 1137 William joined the pilgrimage to Santiago de Compostela, but died of suspected food poisoning during the trip. On his deathbed, he expressed his wish to see king Louis VI of France as protector of his fifteen-year-old daughter Eleanor, and to find her a suitable husband. Louis VI naturally accepted this guardianship and married the heiress of Aquitaine to his own son, Louis VII.

Reference: Ancestry Genealogy - SmartCopy: Aug 23 2017, 13:28:39 UTC
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Emma de Limoges
wife

Eleanor of Châtellerault, Duche...
wife

Eleanor d'Aquitaine, Queen Conso...
daughter

Petronilla d'Aquitaine
daughter

Guillaume d'Aquitaine
son

Philippa de Toulouse, comtesse d...
mother

Guillaume IX le Troubadour, duc ...
father

Inés de Poitou, reina consorte ...
sister

Adélaïde de Poitiers
sister

Raymond of Poitiers, Prince of A...
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Aimar d'Aquitaine, /i/
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Henri de Poitiers, Abbé de Cluny
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