lunes, 12 de abril de 2021

Laurentia de Tolosa ★ Ref: LT-133 |•••► #ESPAÑA 🏆🇪🇸★ #Genealogía #Genealogy

____________________________________________________________________________

20° Bisabuela/ Great Grandmother de: Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo →Laurentia de Tolosa is your 20th great grandmother.


____________________________________________________________________________



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

(Linea Paterna) 

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

Laurentia de Tolosa is your 20th great grandmother.of→ Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo→  Dr. Enrique Jorge Urdaneta Lecuna

your father → Elena Cecilia Lecuna Escobar

his mother → María Elena de la Concepción Escobar Llamosas

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

her mother → Cipriano Fernando de Las Llamosas y García

her father → José Lorenzo de las Llamozas Silva

his father → Joseph Julián Llamozas Ranero

his father → Manuel Llamosas y Requecens

his father → Isabel de Requesens

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

her father → Juan de Zúñiga Avellaneda y Velasco

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

his father → Aldonza Ochoa de Avellaneda, X Señora de Avellaneda

his mother → Constanza Ramirez De Arellano

her mother → Carlos Ramírez de Arellano y Manrique de Lara, Señor de los Cameros

her father → Juan "El Joven" Ramírez de Arellano, 3er Señor de los Cameros

his father → Juan Ramírez de Arellano, Señor de los Cameros y de Arellano

his father → Ramiro Ramirez de Arellano y Hurtado de Mendoza, 2 .º Señor de Arellano

his father → Sancho Ramírez de Arellano

his father → Ramiro Ramirez de Arellano y Hurtado de Mendoza

his father → Lorraine Comenge Diaz Muret Condesa

his mother → Laurentia de Tolosa

her motherConsistency CheckShow short path | Share this path

You might be connected in other ways.


Show Me



Laurentia de Tolosa MP

Spanish: Laurence de TOULOUSE

Gender: Female

Birth: estimated between 1108 and 1132 

Immediate Family:

Daughter of Alphonse I Jourdain, comte de Toulouse and Faydide (Faydite) d'Uzès

Wife of Bernard III de Samatan, comte de Comminges

Mother of Bernard IV, comte de Comminges; Lorraine Comenge Diaz Muret Condesa; Roger I, vicomte de Carcassonne and Guy de Comminges

Sister of Raymond V, comte de Toulouse; Pere Berenger; Fernando Berenger; Alphonse de Toulouse; Faydive de Toulouse and 1 other


Added by: Flemming Allan Funch on August 12, 2008

Managed by: Flemming Allan Funch and 6 others

Curated by: Victar

 2 Matches 

 0  2   0 

Research this Person

 Contact Profile Managers

 View Tree

 Edit Profile

Overview

Media

Timeline

Discussions

Sources

Revisions

DNA

Abouthistory

[Medlands] Her parentage and marriage are confirmed by an undated charter which names "comes Convenarum Bernardus nepos Ramundi de Sancto Egidio"[494], presumably referring to her son Comte Bernard [IV]. If this is correct, it is chronologically consistent to interpret "nepos" in this document as grandson, although this is not the only possibility. This interpretation is, however, confirmed by a charter dated Jan 1191 which names "Bernardus comes de Cominge, filius sororis comitis Tolosæ"[495], and a charter dated 1202 which names "B. lo comte de Comenge lo cal fo filh de la filha N Anfos"[496]. According to Père Anselme[497], she was the daughter of Raymond V Comte de Toulouse (which is contradicted by the last cited charter), and was named LAURENTIA, although the primary source on which this is based has not been identified. It is assumed that this daughter must have been illegitimate. m BERNARD [III] Comte de Comminges, son of BERNARD [I] Comte de Comminges & his wife Dias de Samatan (-after 1176).


read more

View All

Immediate Family

Text View

Showing 12 of 13 people


Bernard III de Samatan, comte de...

husband


Bernard IV, comte de Comminges

son


Lorraine Comenge Diaz Muret Condesa

daughter


Roger I, vicomte de Carcassonne

son


Guy de Comminges

son


Alphonse I Jourdain, comte de To...

father


Faydide (Faydite) d'Uzès

mother


Raymond V, comte de Toulouse

brother


Pere Berenger

brother


Fernando Berenger

brother


Alphonse de Toulouse

brother


Faydive de Toulouse

sister


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


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


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


 

Alphonse I Jourdain, Comte De Toulouse ★ Ref: CT-103 |•••► #LIBANO #Genealogía #Genealogy


 ____________________________________________________________________________

21° Bisabuelo/ Great Grandfather de: Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo →Alphonse I Jourdain, comte de Toulouse is your 21st great grandfather.


____________________________________________________________________________



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

(Linea Paterna) 

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

Alphonse I Jourdain, comte de Toulouse is your 21st great grandfather.of→ Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo→  Dr. Enrique Jorge Urdaneta Lecuna

your father → Elena Cecilia Lecuna Escobar

his mother → María Elena de la Concepción Escobar Llamosas

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

her mother → Cipriano Fernando de Las Llamosas y García

her father → José Lorenzo de las Llamozas Silva

his father → Joseph Julián Llamozas Ranero

his father → Manuel Llamosas y Requecens

his father → Isabel de Requesens

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

her father → Juan de Zúñiga Avellaneda y Velasco

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

his father → Aldonza Ochoa de Avellaneda, X Señora de Avellaneda

his mother → Constanza Ramirez De Arellano

her mother → Carlos Ramírez de Arellano y Manrique de Lara, Señor de los Cameros

her father → Juan "El Joven" Ramírez de Arellano, 3er Señor de los Cameros

his father → Juan Ramírez de Arellano, Señor de los Cameros y de Arellano

his father → Ramiro Ramirez de Arellano y Hurtado de Mendoza, 2 .º Señor de Arellano

his father → Sancho Ramírez de Arellano

his father → Ramiro Ramirez de Arellano y Hurtado de Mendoza

his father → Lorraine Comenge Diaz Muret Condesa

his mother → Laurentia de Tolosa

her mother → Alphonse I Jourdain, comte de Toulouse

her fatherConsistency CheckShow short path | Share this path

You might be connected in other ways.


Show Me



Anfos I Jordan de Tolosa, comte de Tolosa MP

Spanish: Conde Alfonse Jordain (Comte) de TOULOUSE, comte de Tolosa

Gender: Male

Birth: 1103

Mount Pèlerin, Tripoli

Death: April 16, 1148 (44-45)

Caesarea

Immediate Family:

Son of Raymond IV, comte de Toulouse and Elvira Alfonso, condesa de Tolosa

Husband of Faydide (Faydite) d'Uzès

Father of Raymond V, comte de Toulouse; Pere Berenger; Fernando Berenger; Alphonse de Toulouse; Laurentia de Tolosa and 2 others

Brother of Raymonde de Toulouse and Beltrán Raimúndez de Narbona, Señor de Benacazón y Benadrón

Half brother of Diego Fernández; García Fernández; Teresa Fernández de Villalobos and Bertrand, comte de Toulouse


Added by: Victar on July 3, 2008

Managed by: Amy Elizabeth Sicard and 25 others

Curated by: Victar

 7 Matches 

 0  7   0 

Research this Person

 4 Inconsistencies

 Contact Profile Managers

 View Tree

 Edit Profile

Overview

Media (2)

Timeline

Discussions

Sources

Revisions

DNA

Aboutedit | history

- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alfonso_Jordan


Alfonso Jordan (French: Alphonse Jourdain; 1103 – 1148) was the Count of Tripoli from 1105 until 1109 and thereafter Count of Toulouse (as Alfonso I) until his death. He was the son of Raymond IV of Toulouse by his third wife, Elvira of Castile, was born in the castle of Mont-Pelerin, Tripoli, in today's Lebanon. He was born while his father was on crusade, attempting to create the County of Tripoli on the Palestinian coast. He was surnamed Jordan after being baptised in the Jordan River.


His father died when he was two years old and he remained under the guardianship of his cousin, Guillaume Jourdain, count of Cerdagne (d. 1109), until he was five. He was then taken to Europe and his brother Bertrand gave him the county of Rouergue. In his tenth year, upon Bertrand's death (1112), he succeeded to the county of Toulouse and marquisate of Provence, but Toulouse was taken from him by William IX, count of Poitiers, in 1114, who claimed it by right of his wife Philippa of Toulouse, daughter of William IV of Toulouse. He recovered a part in 1119, but continued to fight for his possessions until about 1123. When at last successful, he was excommunicated by Pope Callixtus II for having expelled the monks of Saint-Gilles, who had aided his enemies.


He next fought for the sovereignty of Provence against Raymond Berenger III, and not till September 1125 did the war end in an amicable agreement. Under it Jourdain became absolute master of the regions lying between the Pyrenees and the Alps, Auvergne and the sea. His ascendancy was an unmixed good to the country, for during a period of fourteen years art and industry flourished. About 1134 he seized the viscounty of Narbonne, only restoring it to the Viscountess Ermengarde (d. 1197) in 1143. The claim of the now deceased Philippa of Toulouse was pressed again when Louis VII besieged Toulouse in 1141, in right of his wife Eleanor of Aquitaine, the granddaughter of Philippa, but without result.


Next year Jourdain again incurred the displeasure of the church by siding with the rebels of Montpellier against their lord. A second time he was excommunicated; but in 1146 he took the cross at the meeting of Vezelay called by Louis VII, and in August, 1147 embarked for the East in the Second Crusade. He lingered on the way in Italy and probably in Constantinople. Alphonse might have met Eastern Roman Emperor Manuel I Comnenus during his visit there.


But in 1148 Alphonse had finally arrived at Acre. Among his companions he had made enemies and he was destined to take no share in the crusade he had joined. He was poisoned at Caesarea, either by Eleanor of Aquitaine, the wife of Louis, or Melisende, the mother of Baldwin III, king of Jerusalem suggesting the draught.


Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alphonse_I_of_Toulouse


Alphonse Jourdain (1103 † 1148), est un comte de Toulouse, de Rouergue , d'Albi, de l'Agenais et du Quercy, marquis de Gothie, de Provence et duc de Narbonne de 1108 à 1148. Il est fils de Raymond IV de Saint-Gilles, comte de Toulouse, …, puis comte de Tripoli et de sa troisième épouse, Elvire de Castille.


Sommaire


1 Biographie


2 Mariage et enfants


3 Annexes


3.1 Bibliographie


3.2 Notes et références


3.3 Articles connexe


Biographie

Après avoir constitué un ensemble territorial autour du comté de Toulouse, son père Raymond de Saint Gilles laisse sa baronnie à son fils aîné Bertrand et part en croisade avec son épouse Elvire. Après la prise de Jérusalem, Raymond se taille un fief en Orient, le comté de Tripoli, tandis que sa femme accouche en 1103[1] d’un fils, nommé Alphonse en l’honneur de son aïeul maternel, le roi Alphonse VI de Castille et surnommé Jourdain, car baptisé dans le fleuve de ce nom. Son père meurt en 1105 lui laissant ses terres par testament et Guillaume de Cerdagne, un lieutenant de Raymond de Saint-Gilles et le nouveau comte de Tripoli, raccompagne Elvire et Alphonse en Toulouse durant l’été 1108. Bertrand remet alors Toulouse à son frère, encore âgé de cinq ans, et part à son tour en Terre Sainte.


Il est élevé dans la partie orientale de ses États (comté de Saint-Gilles, marquisat de Provence, Beaucaire et la terre d'Argence). Guillaume IX, comte de Poitiers et duc d'Aquitaine, se met à revendiquer de nouveau[2] le comté de Toulouse au nom de sa femme[3] et l’occupe de 1113 à 1119. Il semble aussi que sa mère soit reparti en Castille durant cette époque, car elle est citée comme mariée à un noble castillan en 1117. Face au duc d’Aquitaine, une résistance passive s’organise, manifesté entre autres dans les actes privés qui ne mentionnent pas ne nom du comte[4] et aussi par quelques émeutes dans Toulouse. En 1119, les Almoravides menacent les royaumes chrétiens d’Espagne, et Guillaume d’Aquitaine lève une armée pour aider le roi de Castille à les combattre, en laissant Toulouse à la garde d’un gouverneur, Guillaume de Montmaur. Peu après le départ, les habitants de Toulouse prennent d’assaut le palais du gouverneur, le jettent au cachot et rappellent au pouvoir Alphonse Jourdain.


Alphonse avait également hérité d’une partie du comté de Provence. Ce comté jouissait d’une situation successorale particulière, puisqu’il était possédé en indivision par les descendants de Guillaume Ier le libérateur et de son frère Rotboald Ier, seules les filles dotées étant exclues de la possessions. Il y avait eu par la suite deux à quatre comtes simultanés, situation qui n’avait pas posé de gros problèmes au cours du XIe siècle. Puis la maison de Toulouse s’était éteinte en 1093, et d’autre familles étaient entrées dans l’indivision : la maison de Toulouse en 1063, celle d’Urgel en 1065, celle de Gévaudan de 1093 à 1115, puis celle de Barcelone en 1115. Le problème est que les maisons de Toulouse et de Barcelone sont rivales et se heurtent déjà dans leurs sphères d’influence, qui est l’actuel Languedoc. A cela d’ajoute les ambitions de la maison des Baux qui, étant issue d’Etiennette de Provence-Gévaudan, revendique une part du comté.


Les guerres dite baussenques ne tardent pas à éclater entre Raymond-Béranger III, comte de Barcelone, d’une part et Alphonse Jourdain et les seigneurs des Baux d’autre part. Défait, Alphonse se réfugie dans Orange en 1123, où il est assiégé par Raymond-Bérenger, mais la milice toulousaine se porte à son secours et force la levée du siège. Mais Alphonse doit renoncer à contrôler la totalité de la Provence et signe en 1125 un traité de partage de la Provence : Alphonse obtient ce qui est au nord de la Durance, qui devient le marquisat de Provence, tandis que Raymond Bérenger reçoit le comté de Provence, au sud de la Durance[5].


Dans les années qui suivent, il tente à plusieurs reprises d’étendre ses domaines vers l’est, mais sans vraiment réussir. La société médiévale est alors en pleine mutation, les franchises accordées aux Génois par Raymond de Saint-Gilles au cours de la première croisade favorisent le commerce et développe les cités et la bourgeoisie, et les châtelains se sont rendus compte qu’ils constituent la plus grande partie des ost des grands seigneurs et que sans eux, ces derniers n’ont que peu de pouvoir. Or si Alphonse a su se concilier la bourgeoisie naissante, il n’a pas vraiment perçu cette influence croissante des châtelains et ses différentes actions, bien que stratégiquement correctes, seront des échecs.


Il intervient d’abord dans le Nîmois qui lui permettrait de faire la jonction entre ses états toulousains et provençaux, mais se trouve en concurrence avec Bernard Aton Trencavel, vicomte de Carcassonne, qui a su se concilier ses châtelains. Alphonse, ne voulant pas entrer en conflit avec cet ancien allié n’insiste pas.


En 1132, le comte Bernard IV de Melgueil en laissant sa fille Béatrice, âgée de sept ans, sous la garde conjointe d’Alphonse et de Guilhem VI de Montpellier. Il est entendu que si Béatrice meurt au cours des six ans qui suivent sans s’être marié, le comté de Melgueil revient à Alphonse. En secret, le comte de Montpellier négocie les fiançailles de Béatrice avec Bérenger-Raymond de Barcelone, comte de Provence et Alphonse se trouve de nouveau écarté. Il se vengera du comte de Provence en soutenant la maison des Baux lors de la seconde guerre baussenque, mais sans succès.


En 1134, c’est le vicomte Aimery II de Narbonne qui meurt, un vieil ennemi d’Alphonse. Alphonse est duc de Narbonne et Aimery n’a jamais accepté cette suzeraineté. Pendant la première guerre baussenque, il prit les armes pour le comte de Barcelone, mais l’archevêque de Narbonne, un allié d’Alphonse, lui avait interdit de prendre part aux combats. Le vicomte a pour héritière une fille encore mineure, Ermengarde. Il se fiance à cette dernière, espérant acquérir ainsi la vicomté, mais une grande partie des barons de Septimanie[6] (le vicomte de Carcassonne, le comte de Montpellier et d’autres), soutenus par le comte de Barcelone, profitent d’une absence d’Alphonse en 1141, se soulèvent et obligent Alphonse à rompre les fiançailles. Ermengarde est mariée à Bernard d’Anduze.


En effet, en 1141, le roi Louis VII de France, marié à Aliénor, duchesse d’Aquitaine, petite-fille de Guillaume IX et de Philippe de Toulouse, intervient dans le Toulousain pour faire valoir les droits de sa femme sur la région, obligeant Alphonse à se défendre. Alphonse Jourdain accorde en 1141 des franchises communales à la ville de Toulouse, probablement en récompense de la fidélité de la ville pendant le siège de la ville par le roi. En 1143, Alphonse est fait prisonnier par un chevalier de Roger Trencavel, qui l’oblige à signer un traité de renonciation à Narbonne.


Le 2 septembre 1143 à Fourques, il reçoit en fief de Raimon de Montredon[7], l’Argence, un petit territoire entre Beaucaire et Saint-Gilles). En 1143, il se rend en Espagne pour soutenir son cousin le roi Alphonse VII de Castille en guerre contre le roi Garcia V de Navarre. En 1144, il fonde Montauban, la première bastide.


Cette même année, la ville orientale d’Édesse est prise par Zengi, atabeg de Mossoul, qui menace les états latins d’Orient. Le pape Eugène III décide d’organiser une nouvelle croisade pour secourir les Francs installés en Orient. Alphonse Jourdain décide de se croiser en 1146 à Vézelay, après le prêche de Bernard de Clairvaux. Contrairement à la majorité des croisés, qui ont choisi la voie terrestre pour rejoindre la Terre Sainte, Alphonse préfère suivre l’exemple de son frère Bertrand et s’embarque en août 1147 à la Tour-de-Bouc[8] et, après une étape en Italie, accoste à Saint-Jean-d’Acre en avril 1148. Il meurt empoisonné à Césarée le 16 août 1148. Comme Alphonse avait revendiqué le comté de Tripoli à son petit-neveu le comte Raymond II, ce dernier a été accusé du crime. Mais le chronique Guillaume de Nangis attribue le crime à la reine Mélisende de Jérusalem, sœur d’Hodierne, la femme (volage) de Raymond II.


Mariage et enfants

Il avait épousé avant 1125 Faydive, fille de Raymond, seigneur de Posquières et d’Uzès, qui donne naissance à :


Raymond V (1134 † 1194), comte de Toulouse


Alphonse, cité en 1155 et en 1177


Faydive († 1154), mariée en 1151 à Humbert II, comte de Savoie.


Alfonso Jordan


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


(Redirected from Alphonse I of Toulouse)

Alfonso Jordan (French: Alphonse Jourdain; 1103 – 1148) was the Count of Tripoli from 1105 until 1109 and thereafter Count of Toulouse (as Alfonso I) until his death. He was the son of Raymond IV of Toulouse by his third wife, Elvira of Castile, was born in the castle of Mont-Pelerin, Tripoli, in today's Lebanon. He was born while his father was on crusade, attempting to create the County of Tripoli on the Palestinian coast. He was surnamed Jordan after being baptised in the Jordan River.


His father died when he was two years old and he remained under the guardianship of his cousin, Guillaume Jourdain, count of Cerdagne (d. 1109), until he was five. He was then taken to Europe and his brother Bertrand gave him the county of Rouergue. In his tenth year, upon Bertrand's death (1112), he succeeded to the county of Toulouse and marquisate of Provence, but Toulouse was taken from him by William IX, count of Poitiers, in 1114, who claimed it by right of his wife Philippa of Toulouse, daughter of William IV of Toulouse. He recovered a part in 1119, but continued to fight for his possessions until about 1123. When at last successful, he was excommunicated by Pope Callixtus II for having expelled the monks of Saint-Gilles, who had aided his enemies.


He next fought for the sovereignty of Provence against Raymond Berenger III, and not till September 1125 did the war end in an amicable agreement. Under it Jourdain became absolute master of the regions lying between the Pyrenees and the Alps, Auvergne and the sea. His ascendancy was an unmixed good to the country, for during a period of fourteen years art and industry flourished. About 1134 he seized the viscounty of Narbonne, only restoring it to the Viscountess Ermengarde (d. 1197) in 1143. The claim of the now deceased Philippa of Toulouse was pressed again when Louis VII besieged Toulouse in 1141, in right of his wife Eleanor of Aquitaine, the granddaughter of Philippa, but without result.


Next year Jourdain again incurred the displeasure of the church by siding with the rebels of Montpellier against their lord. A second time he was excommunicated; but in 1146 he took the cross at the meeting of Vezelay called by Louis VII, and in August, 1147 embarked for the East in the Second Crusade. He lingered on the way in Italy and probably in Constantinople. Alphonse might have met Eastern Roman Emperor Manuel I Comnenus during his visit there.


But in 1148 Alphonse had finally arrived at Acre. Among his companions he had made enemies and he was destined to take no share in the crusade he had joined. He was poisoned at Caesarea, either by Eleanor of Aquitaine, the wife of Louis, or Melisende, the mother of Baldwin III, king of Jerusalem suggesting the draught.


read more

View All

Immediate Family

Text ViewAdd Family

Showing 12 of 19 people


Faydide (Faydite) d'Uzès

wife


Raymond V, comte de Toulouse

son


Pere Berenger

son


Fernando Berenger

son


Alphonse de Toulouse

son


Laurentia de Tolosa

daughter


Faydive de Toulouse

daughter


Bertrand, de Toulouse

son


Elvira Alfonso, condesa de Tolosa

mother


Raymond IV, comte de Toulouse

father


Raymonde de Toulouse

sister


Beltrán Raimúndez de Narbona, ...

brother

 


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


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


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


domingo, 11 de abril de 2021

Raymond III Count of Toulouse ★ Ref: PG-901 |•••► #FRANCIA 🇫🇷🏆 #Genealogía #Genealogy


 ____________________________________________________________________________

23° Bisabuelo/ Great Grandfather de: Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo →Raymond III, Count of Toulouse and Prince of Gothia is your 23rd great grandfather.


____________________________________________________________________________



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

 (Linea Materna)

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

Raymond III, Count of Toulouse and Prince of Gothia is your 23rd 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 → Saint Ferdinand III, 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 → Philippa de Toulouse, comtesse de Poitiers

his mother → Guillaume IV comte de Toulouse

her father → Pons II Guillaume, comte de Toulouse

his father → Guillaume III Taillefer, comte de Toulouse

his father → Raymond III, Count of Toulouse and Prince of Gothia

his fatherConsistency CheckShow short path | Share this path

Shortest in-law relationship

Raymond III, Count of Toulouse and Prince of Gothia is your 22nd great grandmother's 2nd husband.


Raymond Toulouse, III, Count of Toulouse and Prince of Gothia 

Gender: Male

Birth: estimated between 910 and 970 

Death: 978

Immediate Family:

Husband of Adélaïde la Blanche d'Anjou, Reine consort d'Aquitaine

Father of Guillaume III Taillefer, comte de Toulouse


Added by: Jean-Jacques Chacun on February 8, 2007

Managed by: James Fred Patin, Jr. and 34 others

 0 Matches 

Research this Person

 Contact Profile Managers

 View Tree

 Edit Profile

Overview

Media (1)

Timeline

Discussions (2)

Sources

Revisions

DNA

Aboutedit | history

Adelaide's second marriage was to Raymond III, Count of Toulouse and Prince of Gothia,[2] in 975. He died in 978. She had by him at least one child:


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adelaide-Blanche_of_Anjou


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


See this site regarding lack of consensus on the general connections of the counts of Toulouse:


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raymond_III,_Count_of_Toulouse'''


Raymond III is the designation assigned to distinct or possibly-distinct Counts of Toulouse in the mid-to-late 10th century. Recent scholarship has overturned the traditional account of the counts during this period without consensus arising for a new reconstruction. IN OTHER WORDS - NO CONSENSUS ON HIS PARENTAGE


This consensus reconstruction was shown to be flawed by the discovery of a 992 charter of William III and his wife Emma which explicitly named William's mother as the still-living 'Adelaix'. While this document shows that William was not son of Raymond Pons and Garsenda, it does little to illuminate the true relationships, and several scholars have proposed alternative solutions. These are in agreement with regard to the identity of William's mother. She is identified with Adelaide of Anjou, who as widow of the deceased Raymond of Gothia, married to Louis V, King of France, divorcing him two years later and remarrying William III of Provence. Her husband, the 'Prince of Gothia', had previously gone unrecognized or had been dismissed as inaccurate, but given the historical association of this title with the County of Toulouse, the identification of William's mother with Adelaide of Anjou is now accepted. This means that William's father was a previously unrecognized Count Raymond of Toulouse, but his relationship to the previous documented count, Raymond Pons, remains a matter of debate, with several competing theories being proposed.


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

El título Príncipe de Gothia (princeps Gothiæ) o Príncipe de los godos (princeps Gothorum) era un título de nobleza, a veces asumido por su poseedor como un signo de supremacía en la región de Gothia y otras veces otorgado por el soberano de Francia Occidental al noble principal en el sur del reino, en los siglos IX y X. A veces hereditario y otras no, el título se ha traducido en inglés como Duque (o Margrave) de Septimania (dux Septimaniæ) o Duque (o Margrave) de Gothia (Gothiæ marchio). A menudo se llevaba a cabo un "cargo" similar o el mismo con el título comes marcæ Hispanicæ: "Conde (o Margrave) de la Marcha Española". El título también fue un recurso de un cronista y, como se presenta en algunas crónicas, es posible que nunca se haya utilizado en una capacidad oficial.


El primer empleador del título de "duque de Septimania" fue Guillermo de Gellone, quien actuó como principal funcionario y señora de Carlomagno en la región. Fue sucedido por Berengario el Sabio, quien también usó el título ducal-margravial. A su vez, fue sucedido por Bernardo de Septimania, a quien se llama comes marcæ Hispanicæ en los Annales Bertiniani. Gobernó tanto el condado de Toulouse como el de Barcelona, ​​al otro lado de los Pirineos. Toulouse fue la capital de Septimania, también llamada Gothia o más tarde Languedoc, mientras que Barcelona fue la capital de Cataluña. Tenían historias independientes después de la conquista árabe de Iberia, pero ambos eran visigodos en población. La Marca Hispanica correspondía a las tierras góticas del otro lado de los Pirineos al este de Navarra. Evidentemente, la marca se consideraba una unidad política compuesta por varios condados. En las guerras civiles en la región que siguieron a la caída y muerte de Bernard en 844, el título quedó en suspenso.


Alrededor de 858, Carlos el Calvo otorgó a Humfrid varios condados catalanes y el título de Gothiæ marchio, lo que significa la misma supremacía sobre la marcha hispana que Bernard había celebrado años antes. En 862, Humfrid fue depuesto y probablemente en esa época, Bernard Plantapilosa fue nombrado margrave de Gothia. En algún momento antes de 876, él también fue depuesto y reemplazado por Bernardo II de Poitou. Este Bernardo era conocido como "Bernardo de Gothia", pero su intento de usurpar la autoridad en Gothia fue recibido con un duro castigo por parte de su soberano y estaba fuera del poder en 877. A principios de la década de 880, Carlos el Gordo empleó a tres mariones para actuar virreyes en la mayor parte de su reino que no visitaba con regularidad. Bernard Plantapilos volvió al favor y volvió a gobernar en Gothia y probablemente también en Provenza y Cataluña, quizás toda Aquitania.


En 932, Rodolfo de Francia revivió el título y lo otorgó (princeps Gothiæ) a los hermanos Ermengol de Rouergue y Raymond Pons de Toulouse. El cambio de título de marchio a princeps fue indicativo del cambio en la estructura política y la creciente independencia de los grandes magnates del poder real en el siglo x. Los hermanos lograron transmitir los títulos princeps y marchio a sus descendientes, pero el título tuvo poco significado después de eso. Guillermo III de Toulouse, marchio prefatus in pago Tholosano ("prefecto margrave en el país de Toulousain"), también se convirtió en margrave de Provenza.


Príncipes de Gothia

Guillermo de Gellone (abdicó en 806)

Berengario el Sabio (806-837)

Bernardo de Septimania (837 - 844)

Humfrid (858 - 862)

Bernard Plantapilosa (863 - 876)

Bernardo de Gothia (876 - 877)

Bernard Plantapilosa (884 - 885)

Ermengol de Rouergue (932 - 937)

Raymond Pons de Toulouse (932 - 950)

Raymond II de Rouergue (937 - 965)

Raimundo de Toulouse (950 - 978)

Raymond III de Rouergue (965-1008)

William Taillefer (978 - 1037)

Raymond IV (1041 - 1105) Príncipe de Gothia comenzó a ser llamado "Marqués de Gothia", título que llevaba como líder de la Primera Cruzada. [1] Como conde de Toulouse, pertenecía a la nobleza de Francia, que tenía el mismo rango que el rey de los francos.

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


https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raymond_%28IV%29_de_Toulouse


https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raymond_IV_de_Toulouse


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raymond_IV,_Count_of_Toulouse


Raymond IV or V? (Uncertain numerical designation, see below) Count of Toulouse Note: The William IV in Wikipedia was NOT the William married to Adelaide-Blanche!


Traditional reconstruction[edit] Until recently, Raymond III was the numerical designation assigned Raymond Pons, Count of Toulouse, who seems to have succeeded his father as count before 926, and who is last seen in 944, apparently being dead by 969. In that year his widow Garsenda appears, acting alone. It was thought that she then acted as guardian for Raymond's successor and (supposed) son, William III, Count of Toulouse, who appears along with his wife Emma in the early 11th century. This reconstruction was not without problems. Not only was the chronology of this single generation long, but it is at odds with a surviving contemporary source, the Códice de Roda. The surviving manuscript of this collection of genealogies is of a later date, but is thought to derive from a 10th-century original. In its account of the Counts of Toulouse, it shows Garsenda, daughter of García II Sánchez of Gascony, to have married (Raymond) Pons, having by him one son, Raymond, who in turn is given children Hugh and Raymond. William (III) is not mentioned. Likewise, the will of Garsenda fails to name William. Reevaluation[edit]


This consensus reconstruction was shown to be flawed by the discovery of a 992 charter of William III and his wife Emma which explicitly named William's mother as the still-living 'Adelaix'. While this document shows that William was not son of Raymond Pons and Garsenda, it does little to illuminate the true relationships, and several scholars have proposed alternative solutions. These are in agreement with regard to the identity of William's mother. She is identified with Adelaide of Anjou, who as widow of the deceased Raymond of Gothia, married to Louis V, King of France, divorcing him two years later and remarrying William III of Provence. Her husband, the 'Prince of Gothia', had previously gone unrecognized or had been dismissed as inaccurate, but given the historical association of this title with the County of Toulouse, the identification of William's mother with Adelaide of Anjou is now accepted. This means that William's father was a previously unrecognized Count Raymond of Toulouse, but his relationship to the previous documented count, Raymond Pons, remains a matter of debate, with several competing theories being proposed.


Reconstruction 1[edit] Thierry Stasser identified Adelaide's husband with the last-named family member appearing in the Roda pedigree, the brother of Hugh, both sons of an earlier Raymond and grandsons of Raymond Pons and Garsenda. This Stasser harmonized with the will of Garsenda, in which she names her nepotes (grandsons or nephews) Hugh and Raymond, children of Guidinilda. He would thus introduce two generations, both named Raymond, between Raymond Pons and William III. The first would be the husband of Guidinilda and the father of Hugh and Raymond, with the latter in turn being the husband of Adelaide and father of William III. Given that Garsenda referred to Hugh and Raymond only by the names of their mother, it may be that the elder of the new Raymonds had likewise died by 969. The addition of as many as three additional counts (Raymond, Hugh and Raymond) would displace the numbering of all subsequent counts named Raymond.


Stasser reconstruction of 10th century Toulouse counts Raymond Pons Count of Toulouse Garsenda


Raymond (III) Count of Toulouse


Guidinildis


Hugh (?) Count of Toulouse


Raymond (IV) Count of Toulouse


Adelaide of Anjou


William III Count of Toulouse


Reconstruction 2[edit] Martin de Framond suggested two alternatives, the first of which introduced just one intervening generation. He suggests that Raymond Pons and Garsenda were succeeded by a son Raymond, who as in the Codice de Roda had sons Hugh and Raymond, but that as widower of Guidinilda he subsequently married Adelaide, having younger son but eventual heir William. The addition of just a single additional count Raymond in this reconstruction has allowed the traditional numbering to be massaged - some subsequent compilers have used the byname to distinguish Raymond Pons, and then referred to the subsequent novel count as Raymond III, without changing the traditional numbering of subsequent counts of that name.


First Framond reconstruction of 10th century Toulouse counts


Raymond Pons

Count of Toulouse Garsenda


Guidinildis


Raymond (III) Count of Toulouse


Adelaide of Anjou


Raymond


Hugh


William III Count of Toulouse


Reconstruction 3[edit] In his second reconstruction, Martin de Framond placed more weight on the will of Garsenda, which could be read as implying that she left no children. He suggests that the nepotes Hugh and Raymond were children of Raymond II, Count of Rouergue, the nephew of Raymond Pons and his heir-male were he to die without sons. He suggests that Raymond of Rouergue may have succeeded his uncle as Count of Toulouse, and that the husband of Adelaide was son of this count, a like-named half-brother to Raymond III of Rouergue. [hide]Second Framond reconstruction of 10th century Toulouse counts


Raymond Pons Count of Toulouse


Garsenda


Ermengol Count of Rouergue


Bertha of Tuscany


Raymond II/(III) Count of Rouergue and Toulouse


Guidinildis


Raymond III Count of Rouergue


Adelaide of Anjou


Raymond (IV) Count of Toulouse


Hugh


Given the lack of consensus over possible reconstructions, the name Raymond III, originally referring to Raymond Pons, is now ambiguous. It can still refer to Raymond Pons, to a hypothesized son who married successively Guidinilda and Adelaide of Anjou, to a hypothesized son who was husband of Guidinilda and father-in-law of Adelaide, or to Raymond II, Count of Rouergue. No consensus has arisen regarding these alternative reconstructions, nor on how previous hypotheses identifying possible siblings of William III fit into these new rearranged pedigrees.


read more

View All

Immediate Family

Text ViewAdd Family

Showing 11 people


Adélaïde la Blanche d'Anjou, R...

wife


Guillaume III Taillefer, comte d...

son


Ermengarde de Toulouse

stepdaughter


Pons, comte de Gévaudan

stepson


Ermengarde / Humberge de Limoges...

stepdaughter


Almodis de Limoges de Gévaudan

stepdaughter


Eimilde de Gévaudan

stepdaughter


Constance of Arles, queen consor...

stepdaughter


Lucia de Provence, comtesse cons...

stepdaughter


Guillaume III le Pieux, comte de...

stepson


Ermengarde of Arles

stepdaughter


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


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


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


INDICE DE PARIENTES

INCLUYASE

Guillaume III Taillefer comte de Toulouse ★ Ref: CT-970 |•••► #FRANCIA 🇫🇷🏆 #Genealogía #Genealogy


 ____________________________________________________________________________

22° Bisabuelo/ Great Grandfather de: Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo →Guillaume III Taillefer, comte de Toulouse is your 22nd great grandfather.


____________________________________________________________________________



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

 (Linea Materna)

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

Guillaume III Taillefer, comte de Toulouse is your 22nd 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 → Saint Ferdinand III, 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 → Philippa de Toulouse, comtesse de Poitiers

his mother → Guillaume IV comte de Toulouse

her father → Pons II Guillaume, comte de Toulouse

his father → Guillaume III Taillefer, comte de Toulouse

his fatherConsistency CheckShow short path | Share this path

You might be connected in other ways.


Show Me



Guilllem III 'Taillefer' de Tolosa, comte de Tolosa MP 

Gender: Male

Birth: circa 970

Death: September 1037 (62-71) 

Place of Burial: Saint-Sernin, Toulouse, Haute-Garonne, Midi-Pyrénées, France

Immediate Family:

Son of Raymond III, Count of Toulouse and Prince of Gothia and Adélaïde la Blanche d'Anjou, Reine consort d'Aquitaine

Husband of Arsende; Emma and N.N.

Father of Raymond; Aialric; Constance De Toulouse; Pons II Guillaume, comte de Toulouse; Rangarda de Toulouse, comtesse consort de Carcassonne and 1 other

Half brother of Ermengarde de Toulouse; Pons, comte de Gévaudan; Ermengarde / Humberge de Limoges de Gévaudan, [daughter of Etienne II de Gévaudan and ADelais d'Anjou]; Almodis de Limoges de Gévaudan; Eimilde de Gévaudan and 4 others


Added by: Ricky Patterson on June 26, 2007

Managed by: Guillermo Eduardo Ferrero Montilla and 113 others

Curated by: Victar

 0 Matches 

Research this Person

 3 Inconsistencies

 Contact Profile Managers

 View Tree

 Edit Profile

Overview

Media (6)

Timeline

Discussions (3)

Sources (1)

Revisions

DNA

Aboutedit | history

Guilllem III 'Taillefer' de Tolosa, comte de Tolosa

-https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_III,_Count_of_Toulouse


From the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy page on Toulouse Kings, Dukes, and Counts: http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/TOULOUSE.htm#_Toc225040410


GUILLAUME de Toulouse, son of RAYMOND Comte de Toulouse & his wife Adelais d'Anjou ([970/75]-Sep 1037, bur Toulouse, Saint-Sernin).


His mother names her son Guillaume de Toulouse and his wife Emma in an act dated 1021[336]. He succeeded his father in [978] as GUILLAUME III “Taillefer” Comte de Toulouse.


"Dominus princeps et marchio istius provinciæ…Willelmus cum coniuge sua…Adelaix et filio suo…Willelmo" restored property to the abbey of Saint-Césaire d´Arles by charter dated 992, subscribed by "Domnus Rotbaldus comes…Willelmus comes filius Rotbaldi et uxor sua Lucia, Wilelmus comes Tolosanus et uxor sua Ema…"[337]. The list of subscribers of this document presents dating difficulties as the last two named couples appear from other primary sources to belong to a later period. The probable explanation is that two lists from two different documents were copied and incorrectly combined.


The testament of "Ermengaudus archipresul", dated to [1005], bequeathed property to "…Willelmo comiti Tolosano…"[338]. A charter dated to [1006] records the council of the archiepiscopal provinces of Narbonne and Auch held by "Raimundus episcopus Tolosanus et Guillelmus comes Albiensium ac Caturcensium et Tolosanorum" at Toulouse[339].


A bull of "Benedictus episcopus", warning against those who usurped the rights of the monastery of Saint-Gilles, names "Guilelmo comiti necnon matri sue Adelati"[340]. The compilation consulted assumes that this bull was issued by Pope Benedict IX, and therefore dated to [1033/44]. It is unlikely that this can be correct, considering the estimated birth date of Comte Guillaume's mother (see above). For chronological consistency, it is more probable that the document was issued by Pope Benedict VIII whose papacy ran from 1012 to 1024. Dating the document to the early years of this papacy would explain explain why the count's mother is named in place of his wife (on the assumption that Guillaume's first wife predeceased the bull, and that it was issued before his second marriage), and would also be consistent with his mother's supposed fifth marriage assuming that this is dated to [1014/16].


"Wilelmi comitis Tholosani…" witnessed the charter dated 18 Dec 1029 which records the foundation of the monastery of Sauve by "Garsindis et filius meus Bremundus et frater eius Almeradus"[341]. "Willelmo patri suo, Bertramno…" subscribed the charter dated 14 Sep 1037 under which "Poncius" donated property to "sponse mee Maiore" at the time of their marriage[342].


An epitaph in Toulouse Saint-Sernin records the burial of "Willelmus comes cognomine Taliafer atque Raimundus Bertrandi", undated[343].


[m firstly ARSENDE, daughter of ---.


The Liber miraculorum Sanctæ Fidæ names "Arsendis, uxor Vuillelmi Tholosani comitis, fratris…Pontii", the latter being identified as Pons de Gévaudun, son of Adelais d'Anjou by her first marriage and uterine brother of Comte Guillaume III, when recording that she sought the intervention of the saint because she was childless[344]. This passage, as quoted in translation in the Histoire Générale de Languedoc, also records that Arsende gave birth successively to two sons Raymond and Henri after her return from visiting the saint[345].


This version of events is, however, contradicted by the charter dated 999, quoted below, according to which all four of the sons of Comte Guillaume were born from his marriage to his wife Emma. In addition, Comte Guillaume and Emma are first named in a charter dated 992, which leaves little time for children to have been born from an earlier marriage, assuming that Guillaume´s birth date is correctly estimated as shown above.


It therefore seems doubtful whether the Liber, which represents the only reference so far found to this supposed first wife, can be an accurate report. Until more information comes to light, it is therefore prudent to show this first marriage in square brackets in the present document.]


m [secondly] (992 or before) EMMA de Provence, daughter of ROTBOLD [II] Comte de Provence, de Venaissin et de Forcalquier & his [first] wife Ermengarde --- ([975/80]-after 1063).


"Dominus princeps et marchio istius provinciæ…Willelmus cum coniuge sua…Adelaix et filio suo…Willelmo" restored property to the abbey of Saint-Césaire d´Arles by charter dated 992, subscribed by "Domnus Rotbaldus comes…Willelmus comes filius Rotbaldi et uxor sua Lucia, Wilelmus comes Tolosanus et uxor sua Ema…"[346]. "Wilelmus comes Tholose" donated "villam…Pertusus…in regno Provinciæ in pago Aquense" to the monastery of Saint-Pierre de Psalmody by charter dated 999 which names "Emam uxorem eius et…filios eorum…Raimundum et Aialricum et Pontium et Bertrannum"[347]. These two charters show that Emma was married much earlier than is generally shown in secondary sources.


"Ema comitissa filia Rotboldi comitis et Hermengardæ uxoris eius, matris meæ" donated property "ex hereditate…in comitatu Forojuliensi in castro…Favart" to the priory of Courrenz (in Provence) by charter dated 22 Apr 1015, signed by "Ema comitissa, Heldebertus de Castro-Rainaldo"[348]. "Emma comitissa et filius meus Pontius" donated property to Saint-André d´Avignon by charter dated Nov 1024[349]. "Wilelmus comes Tolosanus et uxor mea Ema" donated property to Saint-Victor de Marseille by charter dated 1024[350]. "Emma comitissa et filius meus Pontius" donated property in Avignon to "ecclesiæ sancti Martini in monte Andaone" by undated charter[351].


Comte Guillaume III & his [first/second] wife had two children:


1. RAYMOND ([990/95]-before Nov 1024). The Liber miraculorum Sanctæ Fidæ, as quoted in translation in the Histoire Générale de Languedoc, records that Arsende, first wife of Comte Guillaume, "accoucha successivement de deux fils…Raimond et…Henri" after her return from visiting the saint[352]. "Wilelmus comes Tholose" donated "villam…Pertusus…in regno Provinciæ in pago Aquense" to the monastery of Saint-Pierre de Psalmody by charter dated 999 which names "Emam uxorem eius et…filios eorum…Raimundum et Aialricum et Pontium et Bertrannum"[353].


These two sources are contradictory concerning the identity of the mother of Comte Guillaume´s two older children. Raymond presumably died before the charter dated Nov 1024 in which Emma names her son Pons (see below).


2. AIALRIC [Henri?] ([993/96]-before Nov 1024). The Liber miraculorum Sanctæ Fidæ, as quoted in translation in the Histoire Générale de Languedoc, records that Arsende, first wife of Comte Guillaume, "accoucha successivement de deux fils…Raimond et…Henri" after her return from visiting the saint[354]. "Wilelmus comes Tholose" donated "villam…Pertusus…in regno Provinciæ in pago Aquense" to the monastery of Saint-Pierre de Psalmody by charter dated 999 which names "Emam uxorem eius et…filios eorum…Raimundum et Aialricum et Pontium et Bertrannum"[355].


These two sources are contradictory concerning the identity of the mother of Comte Guillaume´s two older children. This son presumably died before the charter dated Nov 1024 in which Emma names her son Pons (see below).


Comte Guillaume III & his second wife had two children:


3. PONS GUILLAUME ([995/97]-1060, bur Toulouse, Saint-Sernin). "Wilelmus comes Tholose" donated "villam…Pertusus…in regno Provinciæ in pago Aquense" to the monastery of Saint-Pierre de Psalmody by charter dated 999 which names "Emam uxorem eius et…filios eorum…Raimundum et Aialricum et Pontium et Bertrannum"[356]. He succeeded his father in 1037 as PONS Comte de Toulouse.


4. BERTRAND ([997/98]-after 23 Apr 1040, [bur Toulouse, Saint-Sernin]). "Wilelmus comes Tholose" donated "villam…Pertusus…in regno Provinciæ in pago Aquense" to the monastery of Saint-Pierre de Psalmody by charter dated 999 (although the date appears impossible) which names "Emam uxorem eius et…filios eorum…Raimundum et Aialricum et Pontium et Bertrannum"[357]. "Willelmus comes Provincie et uxor mea…Lucia" donated property to Saint-Victor, Marseille by charter dated 1030, signed by "Poncius comes, filius Tolosani, Bertrannus frater eius"[358]. The Histoire Générale de Languedoc states that Bouche claimed that Bertrand, son of Comte Guillaume III, inherited Forcalquier from his mother and that he was ancestor of the later comtes de Forcalquier, but adds that this hypothesis was refuted by Ruffi[359]. "Willelmo patri suo, Bertramno…" subscribed the charter dated 14 Sep 1037 under which "Poncius" donated property to "sponse mee Maiore" at the time of their marriage[360]. "Bertrannus comes" donated property "in comitatu Avenionensi in villis Laurata et Grevesone…in comitatu Arausico…in comitatu Cavilico in villa Avellanico…in comitatu Aquense in villa Pertuso…in comitatu Tolonense in villa Gerildæ…in villa Albinoseo…partem meam in castello novo quod Gualterius construxit" to Monmajour by charter dated 23 Apr 1040[361]. [m ---. The name of Bertrand´s wife is not known. Bertrand & his wife had one child].


Comte Guillaume III had one [illegitimate] child by [an unknown mistress]:


5. [EMMA] ([1010/30]-). The Vita Sancti Bertrandi names "Ato Raymundus…oriundus e castello Ictio…castrum…Insula" and "filia…Vileumi comitis Tholosæ…cognomine…Scindens-ferrum" as the parents of "Bertrandus"[365]. The Histoire Générale de Languedoc suggests that this daughter was born either from Comte Guillaume´s first or second marriage[366]. However, her son Bertrand was installed as bishop of Comminges in [1073] and died in 1123. This is unlikely to place his birth much earlier than [1140/50]. If that is correct, his mother would have been born in [1010/30]. This would be much later than Comte Guillaume´s other known children by his second marriage. If she was indeed Comte Guillaume´s daughter, it seems more likely that she was illegitimate. She is named "Emme de Toulouse" by Père Anselme[367]. According to the Histoire Générale de Languedoc, this is the only supposed reference to her name, which is in fact not known[368]. According to another volume in the same series, she was named "Gervaise" and the daughter of "Raimond-Taillefer comte de Toulouse" (no primary source reference cited)[369]. It is not known to whom "Raimond-Taillefer comte de Toulouse" may refer, but it would be chronologically impossible for Odon Raymond´s wife to have been the daughter of Raymond IV Comte de Toulouse. m ([1030/50]) ODON RAYMOND Seigneur de l'Isle-Jourdain, son of ---. -------------------------- From the English Wikipedia page on William III, Count of Toulouse: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_III,_Count_of_Toulouse


William III Taillefer (also spelled Tallefer or Tallifer; 975 – September 1037) was the Count of Toulouse, Albi, and Quercy from 972 or 978 to his death. He was the first of the Toulousain branch of his family to bear the title marchio, which he inherited (c.975) from Raymond II of Rouergue.


His parentage has been subject to reevaluation. He has traditionally been called son of Raymond III Pons and Garsinda.[1] However, recent research has revealed that William was instead son of Adelais of Anjou, known to have married a Raymond, "Prince of Gothia". This discovery has required a complete reevaluation of the succession to the County of Toulouse during this period, and no scholarly consensus has developed.[2]


He and his vassals were notorious usurpers of church property. He stole from the abbey of Lézat, but gave it back between 1015 and 1025. Pope John XIX ordered him to stop his vassals from taking the lands of Moissac, a problem later remedied by his successor, Pons, who gave Moissac to Cluny.


William became the most powerful prince in western Languedoc and he saw the rise of the House of Capet in France and a corresponding decrease in royal authority recognised in the south. He bore the title of marchio prefatus in pago Tholosano: "prefect margrave in the Toulousain country." His influence extended into the Narbonensis and even Provence, on behalf of his wife. His power did not remain undiminished in his own city of Toulouse, where he was forced by a council of local noblemen and clerics to give up dues imposed on the market there.


Before 992, William married Emma, daughter of Rotbold III of Provence. From her he gained titles and lands to Provence. From a prior marriage, he had two sons, Raymond and Hugh, who died young. His eldest son by Emma, Pons, inherited Toulouse and the title of Margrave of Provence. His second son Bertrand became Count of Forcalquier, a Provençal fief. He had two daughters: Rangarda, wife of Peter Raymond of Carcassonne by Emma, and Ildegarda Elisa, wife of Fulk Bertrand of Provence by Emma. He had an illegitimate daughter that married Otto Raymond of L'Isle-Jourdain.


Notes


1. ^ e.g., Lewis, p 341.


2. ^ Some historians have suggested a single additional generation (referred to as Raymond III of Toulouse, his father Raymond Pons being stripped of an ordinal), while others follow the Codice de Roda in giving Raymond Pons a son Raymond who in turn had sons Hugh and Raymond. Identifying the last with the husband of Adelais inserts two generations, making William the great-grandson of Raymond Pons. Yet another reconstruction suggests that Raymond and Garsinda died childless, and that Toulouse passed to kinsman Raymond II of Rouergue, from whom the husband of Adelais would descend. See Martin de Framond, "La succession des comtes de Toulouse autour de l'an mil(940--1030): reconsidérations", Annales du Midi 204 (1993), pp 461--488; Thierry Stasser, "Adélaïde d'Anjou. Sa famille, ses mariages, sa descendance", Le Moyen Age 103,1 (1997): 9-52; FMG for different reconstructions.


Sources


Lewis, Archibald R. The Development of Southern French and Catalan Society, 718–1050. University of Texas Press: Austin, 1965.


Foundation for Medieval Genealogy: Toulouse. http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/TOULOUSE.htm


Thierry Stasser, "Adélaïde d'Anjou. Sa famille, ses mariages, sa descendance", Le Moyen Age 103,1 (1997): 9-52


From Darryl Lundy's Peerage page on Guillaume III Taillefer: http://www.thepeerage.com/p11358.htm#i113577

Guillaume III Taillefer, Comte de Provence1 M, #113577, b. circa 947, d. September 1037


Last Edited=11 Jul 2005


Guillaume III Taillefer, Comte de Provence was born circa 947. He is the son of Raimond III Pons, Comte de Toulouse and Gersende (?).


He married, firstly, Adelaide d'Anjou, daughter of Fulk II d'Anjou, Comte d'Anjou and Gerberge de Tours. He married, secondly, Emma of Venaissin, daughter of Rotbold of Venaissin, Count of Venaissin and Ermengarde (?), circa 990.


He died in September 1037.


Guillaume III Taillefer, Comte de Provence succeeded to the title of Comte de Provence. He succeeded to the title of Comte de Toulouse in 960.[2]


Child of Guillaume III Taillefer, Comte de Provence and Adelaide d'Anjou:


1. Constance d'Arles+1 b. c 973, d. 25 Jul 1032


Child of Guillaume III Taillefer, Comte de Provence and Emma of Venaissin:


2. Pons, Comte de Toulouse+[3] b. c 990, d. c 1061


Citations


1. [S16] Jirí Louda and Michael MacLagan, Lines of Succession: Heraldry of the Royal Families of Europe, 2nd edition (London, U.K.: Little, Brown and Company, 1999), table 64. Hereinafter cited as Lines of Succession.


2. [S45] Marcellus Donald R. von Redlich, Pedigrees of Some of the Emperor Charlemagne's Descendants, volume I (1941; reprint, Baltimore, Maryland, U.S.A.: Genealogical Publishing Company, 2002), page 63. Hereinafter cited as Pedigrees of Emperor Charlemagne, I.


3. [S38] John Morby, Dynasties of the World: a chronological and genealogical handbook (Oxford, Oxfordshire, U.K.: Oxford University Press, 1989), page 88. Hereinafter cited as Dynasties of the World.


William III Taillefer (also spelled Tallefer or Tallifer; 975 – September 1037) was the Count of Toulouse, Albi, and Quercy from 972 or 978 to his death. He was the first of the Toulousain branch of his family to bear the title marchio, which he inherited (c.975) from Raymond II of Rouergue.

His parentage has been subject to reevaluation. He has traditionally been called son of Raymond Pons and Garsinda.[1] However, recent research has revealed that several historical Counts of Toulouse have been overlooked, and that William was actually the son of Raymond III of Toulouse, whom he succeeded in 978, and Adelais of Anjou.[2]


He and his vassals were notorious usurpers of church property. He stole from the abbey of Lézat, but gave it back between 1015 and 1025. Pope John XIX ordered him to stop his vassals from taking the lands of Moissac, a problem later remedied by his successor, Pons, who gave Moissac to Cluny.


William became the most powerful prince in western Languedoc and he saw the rise of the House of Capet in France and a corresponding decrease in royal authority recognised in the south. He bore the title of marchio prefatus in pago Tholosano: "prefect margrave in the Toulousain country." His influence extended into the Narbonensis and even Provence, on behalf of his wife. His power did not remain undiminished in his own city of Toulouse, where he was forced by a council of local noblemen and clerics to give up dues imposed on the market there.


Before 992, William married Emma, daughter of Rotbold III of Provence. From her he gained titles and lands to Provence. From a prior marriage, he had two sons, Raymond and Hugh, who died young. His eldest son by Emma, Pons, , inherited Toulouse and the title of Margrave of Provence. His second son Bertrand became Count of Forcalquier, a Provençal fief. He had two daughters: Rangarda, wife of Peter Raymond of Carcassonne by Emma, and Ildegarda Elisa, wife of Fulk Bertrand of Provence by Emma. He had an illegitimate daughter that married Otto Raymond of L'Isle-Jourdain.


William III Taillefer (also spelled Tallefer or Tallifer; 975 – September 1037) was the Count of Toulouse, Albi, and Quercy from 972 or 978 to his death. He was the first of the Toulousain branch of his family to bear the title marchio, which he inherited (c.975) from Raymond II of Rouergue.

His parentage has been subject to reevaluation. He has traditionally been called son of Raymond Pons and Garsinda. However, recent research has revealed that several historical Counts of Toulouse have been overlooked, and that William was actually the son of Raymond III of Toulouse, whom he succeeded in 978, and Adelais of Anjou.


He and his vassals were notorious usurpers of church property. He stole from the abbey of Lézat, but gave it back between 1015 and 1025. Pope John XIX ordered him to stop his vassals from taking the lands of Moissac, a problem later remedied by his successor, Pons, who gave Moissac to Cluny.


William became the most powerful prince in western Languedoc and he saw the rise of the House of Capet in France and a corresponding decrease in royal authority recognised in the south. He bore the title of marchio prefatus in pago Tholosano: "prefect margrave in the Toulousain country." His influence extended into the Narbonensis and even Provence, on behalf of his wife. His power did not remain undiminished in his own city of Toulouse, where he was forced by a council of local noblemen and clerics to give up dues imposed on the market there.


Before 992, William married Emma, daughter of Rotbold III of Provence. From her he gained titles and lands to Provence. From a prior marriage, he had two sons, Raymond and Hugh, who died young. His eldest son by Emma, Pons, , inherited Toulouse and the title of Margrave of Provence. His second son Bertrand became Count of Forcalquier, a Provençal fief. He had two daughters: Rangarda, wife of Peter Raymond of Carcassonne by Emma, and Ildegarda Elisa, wife of Fulk Bertrand of Provence by Emma. He had an illegitimate daughter that married Otto Raymond of L'Isle-Jourdain.


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

read more

View All

Immediate Family

Text ViewAdd Family

Showing 12 of 26 people


N.N.

wife


Emma

daughter


Emma

wife


Pons II Guillaume, comte de Toul...

son


Rangarda de Toulouse, comtesse c...

daughter


Arsende

wife


Raymond

son


Aialric

son


Constance De Toulouse

daughter


Raymond III, Count of Toulouse a...

father


Adélaïde la Blanche d'Anjou, R...

mother


Ermengarde de Toulouse

half sister


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


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


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