domingo, 24 de julio de 2022

Robert II d'Oilly, Baron Of Hook Norton ★Bisabuelo n°26★ Ref: NA-1065 |•••► #REINO UNIDO 🏆🇬🇧 #Genealogía #Genealogy


 26 ° Bisabuelo/ Great Grandfather de: Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo →Robert II d'Oilly, Baron Of Hook Norton is your 26th great grandfather.


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(Linea Paterna) 

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Robert II d'Oilly, Baron Of Hook Norton is your 26th 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 → Vicente de Jesus Lecuna Salboch, Dr.

her father → Ramón Lecuna Sucre

his father → Josefa Margarita de Sucre y Márquez de Valenzuela

his mother → Vicente de Sucre y García de Urbaneja, Cnel.

her father → Coronel Antonio Mauricio Jacinto Tadeo Rosalio Sucre Pardo y Trelles

his father → Carlos Francisco Francois Sucre y Pardo, Sargento Mayor

his father → Charles Adrien de Sucre y D´Ives

his father → Adrianne D'Ives y D'Argenteau

his mother → Jacqueline D'Argenteau

her mother → Conrad d'Argenteau, seigneur de Ligny

her father → Renaud VII d'Argenteau, seigneur de Bossut

his father → Marie de Hamal, dame de Trazegnies

his mother → Sibylle de Ligne

her mother → Michel I, baron de Ligne

her father → Jean II, baron de Ligne

his father → Bertha von Schleiden

his mother → Johann von Schleiden

her father → Konrad III, Herr von Schleiden

his father → Johanna von Heinsberg-Valkenburg

his mother → Philippa van Gelre

her mother → Philippa de Dammartin

her mother → Simon II de Dammartin, Comte d'Aumale

her father → Aubry II, count of Dammartin

his father → Joan Bassett of Huntington

his mother → Edith Basset

her mother → Robert II d'Oilly, Baron Of Hook Norton

her fatherConsistency CheckShow short path | Share this path


Robert II d'Oilly, Baron Of Hook Norton MP

Gender: Male

Birth: circa 1065

Hook Norton, Oxfordshire, England

Death: September 1142 (72-81)

Abington Abbey, Berkshire, England

Place of Burial: Abington Abbey, Berkshire, England

Immediate Family:

Son of Nigel d'Oilly, 2nd Lord Hooknorton and Agnes d'Oilly

Husband of Algitha (Nmn-Robert) Oilly and Edith FitzForne, de Greystoke (Concubine #6 of Henry I Of England)

Father of Edith Basset; Gilbert d'Oyley, of Hook Norton; Henry D' Oyly and Alice d'Oilly

Brother of Fulk d'oilly; Roger D' Oyly; Nigell D' Oilly and Margery D'Oilly 


Added by: James Frederick Pultz on November 7, 2007

Managed by: Arthur Jackson and 43 others

Curated by: Pam Wilson (on hiatus)

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‎11 Barón de Hook Norton, Alto Sheriff de Oxfordshire, ordenó la construcción del Castillo de Oxford. Doomsday Book registra que en 1086 tenía una serie de mansiones.‎


‎Perfil fusionado ocupó el lugar de la muerte como Eynsham‎



http://opendomesday.org/place/SP3533/hook-norton/

‎entrada para Hook Norton:‎

‎Hundred: Condado de Shipton‎

‎: Oxfordshire‎

‎Población total: 84 hogares - muy grande. ‎

‎Impuesto total evaluado: 30 unidades geld - muy grande. ‎

‎Unidades imponibles: Valor imponible 30 unidades geld. ‎

‎Valor: Valor para señor en 1066 £ 30. Valor a señor en 1086 £ 30. Valor para lord c. 1070 £ 30. ‎

‎Hogares: 76 aldeanos. 3 pequeños agricultores. 5 esclavos. ‎

‎Arado: terreno para 30 arados. 5 equipos de arado del señor. 30 equipos de arado masculino. ‎

‎Otros recursos: 5.0 tierras del señor. Prado 140 acres. Pasto 5 * 2 furlongs. Bosque 2 * 0.5 furlongs. 2 molinos, valor 1.0. ‎

‎Señor en 1066: hermanos, tres. ‎

‎Señor en 1086: Robert d'Oilly. ‎

‎Inquilino en jefe en 1086: Robert d'Oilly. ‎

‎Referencia Phillimore: 28,6‎


‎extracto de ‎‎https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oxford_Castle‎


‎Según la Crónica de Abingdon, el castillo de Oxford fue construido por el barón normando Robert D'Oyly el viejo de 1071-73. D'Oyly había llegado a Inglaterra con Guillermo I en la conquista normanda de Inglaterra en 1066 y Guillermo el Conquistador le concedió extensas tierras en Oxfordshire. Oxford había sido asaltada en la invasión con daños considerables, y Guillermo ordenó a D'Oyly que construyera un castillo para dominar la ciudad. A su debido tiempo, D'Oyly se convirtió en el principal terrateniente de Oxfordshire y fue confirmado con un condestable real hereditario para el Castillo de Oxford. El castillo de Oxford no se encuentra entre los 48 registrados en el Domesday Book de 1086, pero no todos los castillos existentes en ese momento se registraron en la encuesta.‎


‎D'Oyly colocó su castillo en el lado oeste de la ciudad, utilizando la protección natural de un arroyo del río Támesis en el otro lado del castillo, ahora llamado Castle Mill Stream, y desviando el arroyo para producir un foso. Ha habido debate sobre si hubo una fortificación inglesa anterior en el sitio, pero aunque hay evidencia arqueológica de una habitación anglosajona anterior, no hay evidencia concluyente de fortificación. El castillo de Oxford era claramente un "castillo urbano", pero sigue siendo incierto si los edificios locales tuvieron que ser demolidos para hacer espacio para él. El Domesday Book no registra ninguna demolición, por lo que la tierra puede haber estado ya vacía debido a los daños causados por la toma normanda de la ciudad. Alternativamente, el castillo puede haber sido impuesto sobre un frente de calle existente que habría requerido la demolición de al menos varias casas.‎


‎El castillo inicial era probablemente un gran motte y bailey, copiando el plan del castillo que D'Oyly ya había construido a 12 millas de distancia en Wallingford. La mota era originalmente de unos 60 pies de alto y 40 pies de ancho, construida como el bailey a partir de capas de grava y reforzada con arcilla. Ha habido un debate sobre la secuencia del motte y el bailey: se ha sugerido que el bailey puede haber construido primero, lo que haría que el diseño inicial del castillo fuera un anillo en lugar de un motte y bailey.‎


‎https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Motte-and-bailey_castle‎

‎Un castillo motte-and-bailey es una fortificación con una torre del homenaje de madera o piedra situada en un movimiento de tierras elevado llamado motte, acompañado de un patio cerrado, o bailey, rodeado por una zanja protectora y empalizada.‎


‎A mediados del siglo 12 el castillo de Oxford se había extendido significativamente en piedra. El primer trabajo de este tipo fue la Torre de San Jorge, construida de piedra de trapo de coral en 1074, de 30 por 30 pies en la base y disminuyendo significativamente hacia la parte superior para mayor estabilidad. Esta era la más alta de las torres del castillo, posiblemente porque cubría el acceso a la antigua puerta oeste de la ciudad.‎


‎Dentro de las murallas, la torre incluía una capilla de cripta, que puede ser el sitio de una iglesia anterior. La capilla de la cripta originalmente tenía una nave, un presbiterio y un santuario absidal. Es un diseño típico de los primeros normandos con pilares sólidos y arcos. En 1074 D'Oyly y su amigo cercano, Roger d'Ivry dotaron una capilla con un colegio de sacerdotes. En una etapa temprana adquirió una dedicación a San Jorge.‎


‎A principios del siglo 13, la torre del homenaje de madera en la parte superior de la mota fue reemplazada por una torre del homenaje de concha de piedra de diez lados, de 58 pies, muy parecida a las de los castillos de Tonbridge y Arundel. La torre del homenaje encerraba una serie de edificios, dejando un patio interior de solo 22 pies de ancho. Dentro de la torre del homenaje, las escaleras conducían 20 pies hacia abajo a una cámara de piedra subterránea de 12 pies de ancho, con una bóveda hexagonal inglesa temprana y un pozo de 54 pies de profundidad que proporciona agua en caso de asedio.‎



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Aboutedit | history

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_D%27Oyly_%28Osney%29



11 Baron of Hook Norton, High Sheriff of Oxfordshire, ordered the building of Oxford Castle. Doomsday Book records that by 1086 he held a number of manors.


merged profile held place of death as Eynsham



http://opendomesday.org/place/SP3533/hook-norton/

entry for Hook Norton:

Hundred: Shipton

County: Oxfordshire

Total population: 84 households - very large.

Total tax assessed: 30 geld units - very large.

Taxable units: Taxable value 30 geld units.

Value: Value to lord in 1066 £30. Value to lord in 1086 £30. Value to lord c. 1070 £30.

Households: 76 villagers. 3 smallholders. 5 slaves.

Ploughland: land for 30 ploughlands. 5 lord's plough teams. 30 men's plough teams.

Other resources: 5.0 lord's lands. Meadow 140 acres. Pasture 5 * 2 furlongs. Woodland 2 * 0.5 furlongs. 2 mills, value 1.0.

Lord in 1066: brothers, three.

Lord in 1086: Robert d'Oilly.

Tenant-in-chief in 1086: Robert d'Oilly.

Phillimore reference: 28,6


excerpt from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oxford_Castle


According to the Abingdon Chronicle, Oxford Castle was built by the Norman baron Robert D'Oyly the elder from 1071-73. D'Oyly had arrived in England with William I in the Norman Conquest of England in 1066 and William the Conqueror granted him extensive lands in Oxfordshire. Oxford had been stormed in the invasion with considerable damage, and William directed D'Oyly to build a castle to dominate the town. In due course D'Oyly became the foremost landowner in Oxfordshire and was confirmed with a hereditary royal constableship for Oxford Castle. Oxford Castle is not among the 48 recorded in the Domesday Book of 1086, but not every castle in existence at the time was recorded in the survey.


D'Oyly positioned his castle to the west side of the town, using the natural protection of a stream of the River Thames on the far side of the castle, now called Castle Mill Stream, and diverting the stream to produce a moat. There has been debate as to whether there was an earlier English fortification on the site, but whilst there is archaeological evidence of earlier Anglo-Saxon habitation there is no conclusive evidence of fortification. Oxford Castle was clearly an "urban castle" but it remains uncertain whether local buildings had to be demolished to make room for it. The Domesday Book does not record any demolition, so the land may have already been empty due to the damage caused by the Norman seizure of the town. Alternatively the castle may have been imposed over an existing street front which would have required the demolition of at least several houses.


The initial castle was probably a large motte and bailey, copying the plan of the castle that D'Oyly had already built 12 miles away at Wallingford. The motte was originally about 60 feet high and 40 feet wide, constructed like the bailey from layers of gravel and strengthened with clay facing. There has been debate over the sequencing of the motte and the bailey: it has been suggested that the bailey may have built first, which would make the initial castle design a ringwork rather than a motte and bailey.


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Motte-and-bailey_castle

A motte-and-bailey castle is a fortification with a wooden or stone keep situated on a raised earthwork called a motte, accompanied by an enclosed courtyard, or bailey, surrounded by a protective ditch and palisade.


By the mid-12th century Oxford Castle had been significantly extended in stone. The first such work was St George's Tower, built of coral rag stone in 1074, 30 by 30 feet at the base and tapering significantly toward the top for stability. This was the tallest of the castle's towers, possibly because it covered the approach to the old west gate of the city.


Inside the walls the tower included a crypt chapel, which may be the site of a previous church. The crypt chapel originally had a nave, chancel and an apsidal sanctuary. It is a typical early Norman design with solid pillars and arches. In 1074 D'Oyly and his close friend, Roger d'Ivry endowed a chapel with a college of priests. At an early stage it acquired a dedication to Saint George.


Early in the 13th century the wooden keep on top of the motte was replaced with a ten-sided stone shell keep, 58 feet, closely resembling those of Tonbridge and Arundel Castles. The keep enclosed a number of buildings, leaving an inner courtyard only 22 feet across. Within the keep, stairs led 20 feet down to an underground 12 feet wide stone chamber, with an Early English hexagonal vault and a 54 foot deep well providing water in the event of siege.



http://opendomesday.org/name/446000/robert-doilly/ for list of properties


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Edith FitzForne, de Greystoke (C...

wife


Edith Basset

daughter


Gilbert d'Oyley, of Hook Norton

son


Henry D' Oyly

son


Alice d'Oilly

daughter


Algitha (Nmn-Robert) Oilly

wife


Agnes d'Oilly

mother


Nigel d'Oilly, 2nd Lord Hooknorton

father


Fulk d'oilly

brother


Roger D' Oyly

brother


Nigell D' Oilly

brother


Margery D'Oilly

sister


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


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Agatha Alice de Buci ★Bisabuela n°26★ Ref: AB-1079 |•••► #FRANCIA 🇫🇷🏆 #Genealogía #Genealogy


 26 ° Bisabuela/ Great Grandmother de: Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo →Agatha Alice de Buci is your 26th great grandmother.


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(Linea Paterna) 

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Agatha Alice de Buci is your 26th 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 → Vicente de Jesus Lecuna Salboch, Dr.

her father → Ramón Lecuna Sucre

his father → Josefa Margarita de Sucre y Márquez de Valenzuela

his mother → Vicente de Sucre y García de Urbaneja, Cnel.

her father → Coronel Antonio Mauricio Jacinto Tadeo Rosalio Sucre Pardo y Trelles

his father → Carlos Francisco Francois Sucre y Pardo, Sargento Mayor

his father → Charles Adrien de Sucre y D´Ives

his father → Adrianne D'Ives y D'Argenteau

his mother → Jacqueline D'Argenteau

her mother → Conrad d'Argenteau, seigneur de Ligny

her father → Renaud VII d'Argenteau, seigneur de Bossut

his father → Marie de Hamal, dame de Trazegnies

his mother → Sibylle de Ligne

her mother → Michel I, baron de Ligne

her father → Jean II, baron de Ligne

his father → Bertha von Schleiden

his mother → Johann von Schleiden

her father → Konrad III, Herr von Schleiden

his father → Johanna von Heinsberg-Valkenburg

his mother → Philippa van Gelre

her mother → Philippa de Dammartin

her mother → Simon II de Dammartin, Comte d'Aumale

her father → Aubry II, count of Dammartin

his father → Joan Bassett of Huntington

his mother → Sir Gilbert Basset, Lord of Headington

her father → Agatha Alice de Buci

his motherConsistency CheckShow short path | Share this path


Agatha Alice de Buci MP

Gender: Female

Birth: circa 1079

Normandy, France

Death: 1125 (41-51)

Drayton Basset, Staffordshire, England (United Kingdom)

Immediate Family:

Daughter of Robert de Buci

Wife of Ralph Bassett, Justiciar of England

Mother of Sir Gilbert Basset, Lord of Headington; Richard Bassett, Royal Justice; Sheriff Thomas Basset; Osmund de Bassett; Nicholas de Bassett and 3 others 


Added by: Lauren Mishkin Henry on May 10, 2007

Managed by: Andrew Dean Kemp and 75 others

Curated by: Janet Palo-Jackson

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Aboutedit | history

best information - name not known


also - first initial A.


first name Alice


daughter of Robert de Buci.


no clear connection to Robert de Brus of Cleveland, Annandale, or Scotland.


(Janet Palo-Jackson, curator, Mar 18, 2011)


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


http://www.mathematical.com/bassetthomas1099.html


Alice is not listed at http://www.geneajourney.com/basset.html#ralbasset


aka Alice Brusse, Alice De Buci, Alice De Bruce



http://opendomesday.org/place/SK1900/drayton-bassett/

Place: Drayton [Bassett]

Hundred: Offlow

County: Staffordshire


Total population: 20 households. (medium)

Total tax assessed: 2 geld units (quite small).

Taxable units: Taxable value 2 geld units.

Value: Value to lord in 1066 £4. Value to lord in 1086 £4.

Households: 9 villagers. 3 smallholders. 8 burgesses

Ploughland: 4 ploughlands (land for). 4.5 men's plough teams.

Other resources: Meadow 20 acres. Woodland 2 * 0.5 leagues. 2 mills, value 1.05.

Lord in 1066: Earl Algar.

Lord in 1086: King William.

Tenant-in-chief in 1086: King William.

Phillimore reference: 1,30



http://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Bruce-521


Agatha or Alice Basset formerly Bruce aka de Brusse, de Bruce Born about 1070 in Dumfriesshire, Scotlandmap Daughter of Robert (Brus) de Brus and Agnes (St Clair) de Braose Sister of Adam (Brus) de Brus, Philip (Braose) de Braose, Unknown (Braose) de Harcourt, John (Braiose) de Braose, Philena (Braiose) de Braose, Hortense (Bruce) de Braose and Robert (Brus) de Brus Wife of Thomas Basset — married [date unknown] [location unknown] Wife of Ralph Basset — married [date unknown] [location unknown] Mother of Ralph (Bassett) Basset, Richard Basset, Osmund Basset, Thurston Basset, Nicholas Basset and William Basset Died 1154 in Englandmap


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Ralph Bassett, Justiciar of England

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Sir Gilbert Basset, Lord of Head...

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Richard Bassett, Royal Justice

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Sheriff Thomas Basset

son


Osmund de Bassett

son


Nicholas de Bassett

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William de Bassett

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Joan de Bassett

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Thurstan de Bassett, Wallingford

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Robert de Buci

father

 


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


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Aubry II, count of Dammartin ★Bisabuelo n°23★ Ref: CD-1135 |•••► #FRANCIA 🇫🇷🏆 #Genealogía #Genealogy


 23° Bisabuelo/ Great Grandfather de: Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo →Aubry II, count of Dammartin is your 23rd great grandfather.


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(Linea Paterna) 

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Aubry II, count of Dammartin is your 23rd 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 → Vicente de Jesus Lecuna Salboch, Dr.

her father → Ramón Lecuna Sucre

his father → Josefa Margarita de Sucre y Márquez de Valenzuela

his mother → Vicente de Sucre y García de Urbaneja, Cnel.

her father → Coronel Antonio Mauricio Jacinto Tadeo Rosalio Sucre Pardo y Trelles

his father → Carlos Francisco Francois Sucre y Pardo, Sargento Mayor

his father → Charles Adrien de Sucre y D´Ives

his father → Adrianne D'Ives y D'Argenteau

his mother → Jacqueline D'Argenteau

her mother → Conrad d'Argenteau, seigneur de Ligny

her father → Renaud VII d'Argenteau, seigneur de Bossut

his father → Marie de Hamal, dame de Trazegnies

his mother → Sibylle de Ligne

her mother → Michel I, baron de Ligne

her father → Jean II, baron de Ligne

his father → Bertha von Schleiden

his mother → Johann von Schleiden

her father → Konrad III, Herr von Schleiden

his father → Johanna von Heinsberg-Valkenburg

his mother → Philippa van Gelre

her mother → Philippa de Dammartin

her mother → Simon II de Dammartin, Comte d'Aumale

her father → Aubry II, count of Dammartin

his fatherConsistency CheckShow short path | Share this path

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Aubry MP 

Gender: Male

Birth: 1135

Dammartin, Seine-et-Marne, Ile-de-France, France

Death: September 19, 1200 (64-65)

Lillebonne, Seine-Maritime, Normandy, France

Place of Burial: Abbaye De Jumieges, Jumieges, Seine-Maritime, France

Immediate Family:

Son of Aubri de Mello, chambrier de France, sieur de Dammartin and Joan Bassett of Huntington

Husband of Mathilda de Clermont, comtesse de Dammartin

Father of Renaud I, Count of Dammartin, Boulogne, Aumale and Mortain; Clemence de Saint Omer; Agnes de Dammartin; Raoul de Dammartin; Simon II de Dammartin, Comte d'Aumale and 3 others 


Added by: Virginia Lea Sooy on April 11, 2007

Managed by: Ric Dickinson and 122 others

Curated by: Pam Wilson (on hiatus)

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‎AUBRY [II], hijo de AUBRY [I] y su esposa --- (-Lillebonne 20 Sep 1200, bur Jumièges). Señor de la Ferté-Alais. Conde de Dammartin. "Amalricus ... Silvanectensis episcopus" confirmó la donación de "usum... totius forestæ Espioniæ de Bealci" hecho a Charlieu por "Albericus camerarius et filius eius Albericus comes de Dammartin", con el consentimiento de "Johanne scancione regis et uxore sua Helisendi et Petro filio suo", por carta fechada en 1162[685]. "Albericus de Domnomartino eiusdem Feritatis dominus" fue testigo de la carta fechada en [1166] dada por el prior de La Ferté a la abadía de Yerres[686]. "Aubericus dominus Feritatis et uxor mea Mahaudis et filius meus Renaudus" donó madera muerta "de Amaro Nemore domui de Retollu" a la iglesia de Yerre por carta sin fecha[687]. Mathieu data esta carta en [1160/77] [688]: tal vez se pueda fechar más estrechamente en [1168/75]. Por carta fechada en 1171 Luis VII rey de Francia atestiguó que, después de una disputa entre el rey y "Albericum de Firmitate" sobre un siervo "Guillermo de Villiers" y su familia reclamada por Aubry después de que el rey le había concedido "castellum Firmitatis... in feodum", el siervo en cuestión había sido liberado[689]. "Aubri Conde de Dammartin" confirmó la concesión de Musewell a la abadía de Missenden hecha por "Guy y Joan de Ryhale", con el consentimiento de "su hijo y heredero Renaud", por carta fechada en [1175] [690]. Aubry devolvió La Ferté-Alais al rey [1171/76]: por una carta fechada en 1176, el rey Luis VII intercambió propiedades con Paris Hôtel-Dieu, señalando que, cuando había mantenido el castillo de Dammartin ("quando castri domni Martini dominium habebamus"), el rey había donado "grangiam inter Mintriacum et Moriacum sitam", pero que más tarde había devuelto el castillo [de Dammartin] y la grange a "Alberico" ("postquam vero Alberico predictum castrum cum predicta grangia reddidimus") (que había devuelto "Firmitate" [a el rey]) y necesitaba compensar a Hôtel-Dieu con otra propiedad[691]. "Albericus comes Domni Martini et Raynaldus filius meus comes Boloniæ et Matildis uxor mea comitissa" donó propiedad a Dammartin Saint-Pierre por carta de 1185[692]. El Libro Rojo del Tesoro se refiere a "Odo de Danmartin xx s, comes Albericus de Danmartin xx s, et in perdone xx s" en Norfolk, Suffolk en [1186/87] [693]. Lord of Piddington, Oxfordshire: el Pipe Roll 1186/87 nombra "Comes Albericus de Dammartin" con una tarifa de caballero "pro wasto in Pidinton" en Oxfordshire y "Odo de Dammartin, Comes Albericus de Dammartin" en entradas adyacentes en Norfolk y Suffolk, y en Surrey[694]. Señor de Lillebonne [en-Normandie]. "Radulfus comes Clarimontis" donó parte de la madera de Hez a la iglesia de Froidmont por carta fechada en 1190 atestiguada por "Alberico comite de Dammartin et Renaldo filio eius... Aelidis uxor mea et filie me Cathelina et Mathildis... Hugo frater meus primicerius ecclesie Mettensis..."[695]. El Libro Rojo del Tesoro, que enumera los pagos de recorte en [1190/91], registra "comes Albericus" pagando "iv s ix d" en Buckinghamshire, Bedfordshire y de "Willelmus de Danmartin, Albericus de Danmartin", cada uno pagando "x s, i militem" en Norfolk, Suffolk[696]. El Pipe Roll de 1194 registra los ingresos "de Pidinton que fuit comitis de Dammartin" en Oxfordshire y "terra que fuit comitis de Dammartin in Bichhamsteda" [otorgado a Eudes [II] de Dammartin en 1152/53] en Cambridgeshire y Huntingdonshire[697]. "Albericus comes Domnimartini" donó los ingresos de la cosecha "in grangia mea de Mintriaco" a Paris Hôtel-Dieu, confirmado y sellado por "Mathildis comitisse Domnimartini uxoris me et... Reginaldo comitis Bolonie filii mei", por carta de fecha 20 de septiembre de 1200[698]. "A. comes Domni Martini" donó propiedades a Saint-Leu d'Esserent por carta de fecha 20 de septiembre de 1200, firmada por "M. comitisse Dampni Martini uxoris me et... R. comitis Bolonie filii nostri", que registra la muerte del donante "hac... morir... apud Lilleboniam"[699]. Una continuación anónima de la Crónica de Roberto de Mont-Saint-Michel registra la muerte "XIII Kal Oct" en 1200 de "Albericus Dammartini Comes" y su entierro "apud Gemeticum"[700]. ‎


‎[m en primer lugar ([1159/60]%29 como su tercer marido, JOAN Basset, viuda en primer lugar de GUY FitzPain de Ridale, y en segundo lugar de SIMON de Gerardmoulins, hija de --- (-[1160/62]). Este posible primer matrimonio de Aubry [II] Conde de Dammartin está indicado por su posterior posesión de Piddington en Oxfordshire (ver arriba) que los documentos citados a continuación muestran que estaba en poder de Joan Basset. El tercer marido de Joan Basset no podría haber sido Aubry [I], padre del conde Aubry [II], como se llamaba a su marido "comes" en los documentos citados a continuación. Si esta identidad sugerida del tercer marido de Joan Basset es correcta, Joan debe haber muerto poco después [1160]. Malcolm IV Rey de Escocia donó "villam P[iddington] en Oxenfordscire" a Oxford St. Frideswide, señalando que "Iohanna... soror Thome Bassett" fue inquilino de por vida, por carta fechada en [1159] [701]. El rey Enrique II confirmó la donación de "villam de Pydentona en Oxenfordscira" a Oxford St. Frideswide hecha por el rey Malcolm IV, señalando a "Iohanna soror Thome Bassett" como inquilino de por vida, por carta fechada en [1160] [702]. William Reedy, en la introducción a su colección de cartas de Basset, afirma que Joan, hermana de Thomas Basset, se casó con Aubry de Dammartin como su tercer marido[703]. El primer matrimonio de Juana está confirmado por la carta fechada en [1160] bajo la cual el abad de Missenden entregó los derechos en Piddington, donados por "Albrici comitis de Damartyn & Iohane de Pidingtona, que fuit sponsa Guidonis de Riala", a Oxford St. Frideswide por carta fechada en [1160] [704]. La fuente primaria que confirma el segundo matrimonio de Joan no ha sido identificada. "Aubri Conde de Dammartin" confirmó la concesión de Musewell a la abadía de Missenden hecha por "Guy y Joan de Ryhale", con el consentimiento de "su hijo y heredero Renaud", por carta fechada en [1175] [705].] ‎


‎m [en segundo lugar] ([después de 1162]) MATHILDE de Clermont, hija de RENAUD Comte de Clermont-en-Beauvaisis y su segunda esposa Clémence de Bar (-después [mayo/julio] 1218). "... Matildis soror mea ..." consintió la donación de "Radulfus... viene Clarimontis" a la abadía de Notre-Dame d'Ourscamp por carta fechada en 1162[706]. "R ... viene Clarimontis et dominus Brituliensis... et Aeliz comitissam uxorem meam" confirmó la donación a la iglesia de Breteuil por "Sangalo de Garda Malgerii, Henricus filius eius" por carta sin fecha, atestiguada por "Albericus Domni Martini comes et Mahaux soror mea, Domni Martini comitissa, Rainaldus castellanus Britulii..."[707]. Aubericus dominus Feritatis et uxor mea Mahaudis et filius meus Renaudus" donó madera muerta "de Amaro Nemore domui de Retollu" a la iglesia de Yerre por carta sin fecha[708]. Mathieu data esta carta en [1160/77] [709]: tal vez se pueda fechar más estrechamente en [1168/75]. "A. comes Domni Martini" donó propiedades a Saint-Leu d'Esserent por carta de fecha 20 de septiembre de 1200, firmada por "M. comitisse Dampni Martini uxoris me et... R. comitis Bolonie filii nostri"[710]. El rey Felipe II confirmó la donación hecha por "Mathilde jadis comtesse de Dammartin" a las monjas de Parc cerca de Crespi de los ingresos de "la prévôté de Crespi", que el rey le había concedido previamente a cambio de sus derechos sobre el condado de Clermont después de la muerte de [su sobrino nieto] Thibaud VI Conde de Blois, por carta fechada [mayo/julio] 1218[711]. ‎


‎Aubry [II] y su [segunda] esposa tuvieron [ocho] hijos: ‎


‎1. RENAUD de Dammartin ([1165/70]-Château de Goulet 21 abr 1217, bur Boulogne). Su parentesco es confirmado por la continuación anónima de la Crónica de Roberto de Mont-Saint-Michel que registra que "filius eius Reginaldus Comes Boloniæ" donó propiedades a Jumièges para el alma de "Albericus Dammartini Comes"[712]. "Aubericus dominus Feritatis et uxor mea Mahaudis et filius meus Renaudus" donó madera muerta "de Amaro Nemore domui de Retollu" a la iglesia de Yerre por carta sin fecha[713]. Mathieu data esta carta en [1160/77] [714]: tal vez se pueda fechar más estrechamente en [1168/75]. "Albericus comes Domni Martini et Raynaldus filius meus comes Boloniæ et Matildis uxor mea comitissa" donó propiedad a Dammartin Saint-Pierre por carta de 1185[715]. "Radulfus comes Clarimontis" donó parte de la madera de Hez a la iglesia de Froidmont por carta fechada en 1190 atestiguada por "Alberico comite de Dammartin et Renaldo filio eius... Aelidis uxor mea et filie me Cathelina et Mathildis... Hugo frater meus primicerius ecclesie Mettensis..."[716]. Secuestró a su futura segunda esposa y la mantuvo en el castillo de Riste en Lorena, donde atrajo a su prometido (Arnoul de Guines Seigneur d'Ardres) y organizó su arresto por Albert de Hièrges Obispo de Verdún [717]. Le sucedió en 1192 como conde de Boulogne, de iure uxoris. "A. comes Domni Martini" donó propiedades a Saint-Leu d'Esserent por carta de fecha 20 de septiembre de 1200, firmada por "M. comitisse Dampni Martini uxoris me et... R. comitis Bolonie filii nostri"[718]. Sucedió a su padre en 1200 como conde de Dammartin. "Reginaldus comes Bolonie" donó propiedades a Jumièges, para el alma de "Alberici patris mei comitis Dampnimartini in eadem ecclesia sepulti", con el consentimiento de "Yde uxoris me comitisse Bolonie, Radulfi et Simonis fratrum meorum et sororum mearum", por carta fechada [19 Sep/Dec] 1200[719]. Felipe II rey de Francia lo instaló en 1205 como conde de Aumâle y en 1209 como conde de Mortain. Juró homenaje a Juan Rey de Inglaterra en 1212, y sus bienes en Francia fueron confiscados por el rey Felipe II. Fue capturado después de la batalla de Bouvines en 1214 y encarcelado en el castillo de Goulet, donde más tarde se suicidó[720]. m en primer lugar (divorciada antes de 1190) como su primer marido, MARIE, hija de [GUY [II] Seigneur de Châtillon-sur-Marne] y su esposa Alix de Dreux [Capet] (-después de mar 1242). La Historia Comitum Ghisnensium se refiere a la esposa de "Reinaldus filius Alberti de Dominio-Martini comitis" como "sorore Waltheri de Castellione", especificando que la dejó para casarse con "Boloniem comitissam Idam"[721]. Cabe señalar que ninguna de las fuentes citadas en esta sección especifica que Marie era la hija de Guy [II] Seigneur de Châtillon. Por lo tanto, es posible que haya nacido del tercer matrimonio de su madre. Se casó en segundas nupcias ([1197]%29 Robert de Vieuxpont Seigneur de Courville, y en tercer lugar (antes del 1 de octubre de 1213) con Jean [III] conde de Vendôme. "M. domina Curveville" se refería a "vivente domino meo R. de Veteri Ponte" en una carta fechada en [1205] [722]. "María domina de Corbavilla" dio seguridad para "forteritia de Lavardin... quamdiu neptis mea Aales ibidem habebit dotalitium suum" a Felipe IV Rey de Francia por carta fechada en febrero de 1212[723]. "Johannes comes Vindocinensis" cedió los derechos sobre "prepositos de Masengeio" a Chartres, con el consentimiento de "Marie uxoris me sororis comitis Sancti Pauli", por carta de septiembre de 1213[724]. "Maria domina Curveville quondam comitissa Vindocinensis" donó ingresos "in prepositura Curveville" al priorato de Saint-Nicolas de Courville, con el consentimiento de "Ivo de Veteri Ponte miles filius meus dominus Curveville", por carta fechada en marzo de 1242[725]. m en segundo lugar ([1185 o antes o abril de 1190]) como su cuarto marido, IDA de Flandre Ctss de Boulogne, esposa divorciada (en primer lugar) de MATHIEU ---, viuda (en segundo lugar) de GERHARD van Geldern y (tercero) de BERTHOLD IV Herzog von Zähringen, hija de MATTHIEU de Flandres Conde de Boulogne y su primera esposa Marie de Blois Ctss de Boulogne ([1160/61]-21 de abril de 1216, bur Boulogne). El Chronicon Hanoniense nombra "Idam... et Mathildem" como las dos hijas de "Matheus [comiti Boloniensi]" y su esposa, especificando que Ida se casó con "primus... Gerardo comiti de Ghelra, deinde Bertoldo Cheringiorum duci, postea Rainaldo comiti Dommi-Martini in Francia"[726]. La fecha de su cuarto matrimonio está indicada por la carta fechada en 1185 bajo la cual "Albericus comes Domni Martini et Raynaldus filius meus comes Boloniæ et Matildis uxor mea comitissa" donó propiedad a Dammartin Saint-Pierre[727], demostrando que el esposo de Ida ya llevaba el título de conde de Boulogne en esa fecha. Sin embargo, esta fecha es inconsistente con la fecha de muerte del tercer esposo de Ida, estimada en 8 de septiembre de 1186, lo que sugiere que la carta está mal fechada o que Berthold Herzog von Zähringen murió un año antes. La Chronica Andrensis registra la muerte en 1216 de "Ida Bolonie comitissa in Flandria" y su entierro en Boulogne[728]. El conde Renaud y su segunda esposa tuvieron un hijo: ‎


‎a) MATHILDE de Dammartin (-[9 oct 1261/8 feb 1263]). La Chronica Andrensis nombra "Mathilde... Filia... Reinaldi quondam comitis Bolonie" como la esposa de "Philippus frater Ludovici regis Gallie"[729]. Le sucedió en 1223 como Ctss de Dammartin y en 1227 como Ctss de Boulogne. "Mahaud comitissa Bolonie et Clarimontis... et Johanne filie nostre" donó propiedades a la abadía de Sainte-Hoïlde, para las almas de "bone memorie Philippi condam comitis Bolonie et liberorum nostrorum", por carta fechada en abril de 1239[730]. El De Rebus Hispaniæ de Rodericus Ximenes registra el matrimonio de "Aldefonsum", hijo de "Aldefonsum" y su esposa, y "Matillam... de partibus Franciæ, Boloniæ Comitissam"[731]. "Alfonso, filius... regis Portugaliæ, comes Bolonie" registró sus acuerdos con "Thomam comitem et Johannam eius uxorem comitissam Flandrensem" por carta fechada en noviembre de 1241 que nombra "... M. comitissa Bolonie uxor nostra"[732]. Su segundo matrimonio está confirmado por la carta fechada en junio de 1240 bajo la cual "Aufonsus filius regis Portigalis comes Bolonie et Matildis uxor sua comitissa Bolonie" confirmó una donación de "Johanni de Bello Monte domini regis cambellano et Ysabelli Buticularie uxori sue"[733]. El testamento de "Mathildis comitissa Boloniæ", fechado en marzo de 1241 (presumiblemente O.S.), legó la propiedad a "marito meo Alphonso filio... Regis Portugaliæ comiti... Boloniæ" y nombrado "ipsum comitem maritum meum, et... Robertum episcopum Belovacensem et... consanguineum meum dominum Matthæum de Tria... et dominum Philippum de Nantholio consanguineum meum" como sus albaceas, con la aprobación de "Gualtherus de Cestellione et... Joanna eius uxor"[734]. Una carta fechada en noviembre de 1242 registra una declaración de "Mathildis comtissa Bolonie... cum... marito nostro Alfonso filio... regis Portugalie comiti Bolonie" en relación con su testamento y nombres "Gaucherus de Castellione et Johanna filia nostra uxor eiusdem, heredes nostri"[735]. El Chronicon Savigniacense registra la muerte en 1258 (presumiblemente O. S.) de "Matildis Comitissa Boloniæ" y la reversión de su condado al rey[736]. El Breve Chronicon Alcobacense registra que "comitissa Bolonie" todavía estaba viva cuando nació "rex Dionisius" (9 de octubre de 1261, ver más abajo), pero había muerto antes del nacimiento de su hermano Afonso (8 de febrero de 1263, ver más abajo), y por lo tanto se afirmó que Diniz era ilegítimo pero Afonso legítimo [737]. m en primer lugar (contrato Compiègne, Oise Agosto 1201, contrato Saint-Germain-en-Laye Mayo 1210, 1216) PHILIPPE "Hurepel" de France, hijo de PHILIPPE II "Auguste" Rey de Francia y su tercera esposa Agnes von Andechs-Merano (Julio de 1200-asesinado en un torneo Corbie, Somme 14 o 18 de enero de 1234, bur église de l'Abbaye royale de Saint-Denis). m en segundo lugar (1235, divorciado en 1253) como su primera esposa, Infante dom AFONSO de Portugal, hijo de dom AFONSO II "o Gordo" Rey de Portugal y su esposa infanta doña Urraca de Castilla (Coimbra 5 de mayo de 1210-Lisboa 16 de febrero de 1279, bur monasterio cisterciense de Santa Maria de Alcobaça). Sucedió a su hermano en 1248 como AFONSO III "o Restaurador" Rey de Portugal y el Algarve. ‎


‎2. RAOUL de Dammartin (-después [19 Sep/Dic] 1200). "Reginaldus comes Bolonie" donó propiedad a Jumièges, para el alma de "Alberici patris mei comitis Dampnimartini in eadem ecclesia sepulti", con el consentimiento de "Yde uxoris me comitisse Bolonie, Radulfi et Simonis fratrum meorum et sororum mearum", por carta fechada [19 Sep/Dec] 1200[738]. ‎


‎3. SIMON de Dammartin (-21 sep 1239, bur Valoires). "Reginaldus comes Bolonie" donó propiedades a Jumièges, para el alma de "Alberici patris mei comitis Dampnimartini in eadem ecclesia sepulti", con el consentimiento de "Yde uxoris me comitisse Bolonie, Radulfi et Simonis fratrum meorum et sororum mearum", por carta fechada [19 Sep/Dec] 1200[739]. Los nombres de Chronicon Andrensis "viene Bolonie Reinaldus et Simon frater eius", especificando que Simón se casó con "filiam comitis Pontivi unicam"[740]. Conde de Aumâle 1205/11. Conde de Ponthieu y de Montreuil 1231. ‎


‎- CONDES DE PONTHIEU. ‎


‎4. ALIX de Dammartin (-después de 1237). La fuente primaria que confirma su paternidad y matrimonio no ha sido identificada. Su parentesco y matrimonio son indicados por una investigación en 1267 que juzgó la propiedad de "Philippus olim comes Bolonie et... Matildis" a "Matheus comes Domni-Martini, domini Guillelmus de Fienes, Baldoinus de Fienes, Michael de Fienes, Ingerannus de Pinquegniaco et Renaudus de Pinquegniaco, heredes comitisse Matildis Bolonie"[741]. Sus descendientes heredaron el condado de Dammartin. m (1190) JEAN [I] Châtelain de Trie, hijo de ENGUERRAND [II] "Aiguillon" de Trie Seigneur de Moncy y su esposa Heddiva [Basilie] de Moncy (-antes de 1237). ‎


‎5. AGNES de Dammartin (-después del 10 de abril de 1244). Su parentesco y matrimonio son indicados por una investigación en 1267 que juzgó la propiedad de "Philippus olim comes Bolonie et... Matildis" a "Matheus comes Domni-Martini, domini Guillelmus de Fienes, Baldoinus de Fienes, Michael de Fienes, Ingerannus de Pinquegniaco et Renaudus de Pinquegniaco, heredes comitisse Matildis Bolonie"[742]. "Willelmus filius Ingelrami dominus de Fielnes" donó propiedades a Andrés, con el consentimiento de "uxore mea Agnete et filio meo Ingelramno", por carta de fecha 1 de enero de 1203 atestiguada por "Radulfo de Fielnes patruo meo... Joanne de Tingri..."[743]. Una orden de fecha 10 de abril de 1244 relativa al "manerium de Marthoc... quod fuit Enger de Fenles", permitido "Agn. matrem ipsius Inger" para administrar aspectos de la propiedad[744]. m GUILLAUME de Fiennes, hijo de ENGUERRAND [I] de Fiennes y su esposa Sibylle de Tingry--- (-[17 Oct 1239/4 Jul 1240]). ‎


‎6. CLEMENCIA de Dammartin (-después de junio de 1218). La genealogía de finales del siglo 13 por Balduinus de Avennis registra que "castellano Sancti-Audomari domino Wilelmo... quartus filius Jacobus" se casó con "Constantiam, sororem comitis Renaldi de Dommartin" que murió sin hijos[745]. "Clémence femme de Jacques de Prisches" ratificó la venta de su marido a la abadía de Maroilles por carta fechada en junio de 1218[746]. m [como su primera esposa,] JACQUES de Saint-Omer, hijo de GUILLAUME [IV] Châtelain de Saint-Omer Seigneur de Fauquemberques y su esposa Ida d'Avesnes (-[1219/20]). ‎


‎7. --- de Dammartin . Su parentesco y matrimonio son indicados por una investigación en 1267 que juzgó la propiedad de "Philippus olim comes Bolonie et... Matildis" a "Matheus comes Domni-Martini, domini Guillelmus de Fienes, Baldoinus de Fienes, Michael de Fienes, Ingerannus de Pinquegniaco et Renaudus de Pinquegniaco, heredes comitisse Matildis Bolonie"[747]. Su esposo no ha sido identificado. m ---. Un niño: ‎


‎a) --- (-antes de 1267). La cronología sugiere una generación intermedia entre los hermanos Enguerrand y Renaud y su abuela sin nombre. No se sabe si su padre o su madre pertenecían a la familia Picquigny. m ---. Dos hijos: ‎


‎i) ENGUERRAND de Picquigny. Su ascendencia está indicada por una investigación en 1267 que juzgó la propiedad de "Philippus olim comes Bolonie et... Matildis" a "Matheus comes Domni-Martini, domini Guillelmus de Fienes, Baldoinus de Fienes, Michael de Fienes, Ingerannus de Pinquegniaco et Renaudus de Pinquegniaco, heredes comitisse Matildis Bolonie"[748]. Él y su hermano no han sido colocados en la familia principal picquigny que se muestra en la nobleza del norte de Francia. ‎

‎ ii) RENAUD de Picquigny. Su ascendencia está indicada por una investigación en 1267 que juzgó la propiedad de "Philippus olim comes Bolonie et... Matildis" a "Matheus comes Domni-Martini, domini Guillelmus de Fienes, Baldoinus de Fienes, Michael de Fienes, Ingerannus de Pinquegniaco et Renaudus de Pinquegniaco, heredes comitisse Matildis Bolonie"[749]. Él y su hermano no han sido colocados en la familia principal picquigny que se muestra en la nobleza del norte de Francia. ‎


‎8. [JULIANA de Dammartin (-después de 1202). "Hugo de Gornaco" donó propiedades a Fécamp, para las almas de "Juliane uxoris me et puerorum meorum", por carta fechada en 1202[750]. Su paternidad se indica solo por una carta que pretende ser de su nieta "Dame Julian Tresgoze ... desposar... a Sor Robert Tresgoos le Second" a "son frère St Thomas de Cantlow, Euesque... de Hereford" que da una versión confusa del linaje de la familia: "Sor Hugo de Gornaye" se casó con "la reyne Blanch" [viuda de Luis VIII Rey de Francia, siendo imposible cronológicamente tal segundo matrimonio] y tuvo "un fils... Hugh... nostre ayle", que se casó con "la soer le count Renaud de Boloyng"[751]. Los detalles genealógicos en otras partes de la carta pueden ser corroborados contra otras fuentes. Por lo tanto, es difícil decidir si la entrada relativa a la esposa de Hugues [V] debe desestimarse de la misma manera que el supuesto matrimonio de su padre con la viuda del rey Luis VIII o si es objetivamente correcta. La ausencia de los descendientes de Juliana de la investigación en 1267, que nombra a los herederos de Mathilde de Dammartin Ctss de Boulogne descendientes de sus tías paternas (ver arriba), sugiere que esta supuesta paternidad de la esposa de Hugues [V] de Gournay es incorrecta. m HUGUES [V] Señor de Gournay, hijo de HUGUES [IV] Señor de Gournay y su segunda esposa Mélisende de Coucy (-25 Oct [1214]).] ‎


‎FUENTES‎


[685] Gallia Christiana, Tome X, Instrumenta ecclesiæ Silvanectensis, XXI, col. 214.


‎[686] Estournet 'La Ferté-Alais' (1944), Documentos justificativos, II, p. 115. ‎


‎[687] Estournet 'La Ferté-Alais' (1944), Documentos justificativos, I, p. 115. ‎


‎[688] Mathieu «Comtes de Dammartin» (1996), p. 35, nota 114. ‎


[689] Tardif (1866), 629, p. 313.


‎[690] Evans 'Dammartin' (2003), p. 80, citando a Salter, H. E. & Cooke, A. H. (1930) Boarstall Cartulary (Oxford Record Society Vol. 88), no. 296, y Jenkins, J. G. (1962) Cartulary of Missenden Abbey (Buckinghamshire Record Society), Vol. III, no. 634 [aún no consultado]. ‎


‎[691] París Hôtel-Dieu, 8, p. 4. ‎


‎[692] Toussaint du Plessis (1731), Volumen II, CLX, p. 73. ‎


‎[693] Red Book Exchequer, Parte I, Honorarios de los Caballeros, p. 59. ‎


[694] Pipe Roll 33 Hen II (1186/87), Oxfordshire, p. 49, Norfolk & Suffolk, p. 59.


‎[695] Lépinois (1877), Documentos justificativos, XXXVIII, p. 448. ‎


‎[696] Libro Rojo Hacienda, Parte I, Anno secundo regis Ricardi... scutagium Walliæ assisum, pp. 71 y 76. ‎


[697] Pipe Roll 6 Ric I (1194), Cambridgeshire & Huntingdonshire, pp. 16, 22.


‎[698] Hôtel-Dieu de París, 900, p. 506. ‎


[699] Esserent Saint-Leu, XC, p. 94.


‎[700] Anonymi Continuatio appendicis Roberti de Monte ad Sigebertum, RHGF, Volumen XVIII, p. 341. ‎


[701] Oxford St. Frideswide, Vol. II, 786-7, p. 92.


[702] Oxford St. Frideswide, Vol. II, 788, p. 93.


‎[703] Basset Charters, Introduction, p. xiii, citando a Salter, H. E. & Cooke, A. H. (1930) The Boarstall Cartulary (Oxford Historical Society, Vol. 87) ("Boarstall Cartulary"), pp. 69, 100, 101 y notas 2 y 3 (aún no consultadas). ‎


[704] Oxford St. Frideswide, Vol. II, 793, p. 96.


‎[705] Evans 'Dammartin' (2003), p. 80, citando Boarstall Cartulary, no. 296, y Jenkins, J. G. (1962) Cartulary of Missenden Abbey (Buckinghamshire Record Society), Vol. III, no. 634 [aún no consultado]. ‎


[706] Ourscamp Notre-Dame CCLXII, p. 158.


‎[707] Lépinois (1877), Documentos justificativos, VII, p. 427. ‎


‎[708] Estournet 'La Ferté-Alais' (1944), Documentos justificativos, I, p. 115. ‎


‎[709] Mathieu 'Comtes de Dammartin' (1996), p. 35, nota 114. ‎


[710] Esserent Saint-Leu, XC, p. 94.


[711] Delisle (1856), 1825, 1826, pp. 401-2.


‎[712] Anonymi Continuatio appendicis Roberti de Monte ad Sigebertum, RHGF, Volumen XVIII, p. 341. ‎


‎[713] Estournet 'La Ferté-Alais' (1944), Documentos justificativos, I, p. 115. ‎


‎[714] Mathieu «Comtes de Dammartin» (1996), p. 35, nota 114. ‎


‎[715] Toussaint du Plessis (1731), Volumen II, CLX, p. 73. ‎


‎[716] Lépinois (1877), Pruebas documentales, XXXVIII, p. 448. ‎


[717] Poull, G. (1991) La Maison ducale de Lorraine (Nancy), p. 361.


[718] Esserent Saint-Leu, XC, p. 94.


‎[719] Jumièges, Tomo II, CCXVII, p. 179. ‎


‎[720] ES III 649 (Los condes de Dammartin-en-Goële). ‎


[721] Historia Comitum Ghisnensium 94, MGH SS XXIV, p. 605.


‎[722] Chartes Vendômoises p. 230 nota a pie de página, citando Lefèvre, E. (1870) Documents historiques et statistiques sur les communes du canton de Courville, p. 85-1870 [aún no consultado]. ‎


‎[723] Charters Vendômoises CXCII, p. 229. ‎


‎[724] Charters Vendômoises CC, p. 237. ‎


[725] Chartres Saint-Jean-en-Vallée, 271, p. 129.


[726] Gisleberti Chronicon Hanoniense, MGH SS XXI, pp. 515-16.


‎[727] Toussaint du Plessis (1731), Volumen II, CLX, p. 73. ‎


[728] Willelmi Chronica Andrensis 202, MGH SS XXIV, p. 758.


[729] Willelmi Chronica Andrensis 220, MGH SS XXIV, p. 763.


[730] Sainte-Hoilde, XCVII, p. 79.


‎[731] Roderici Toletani Archiepiscopi De Rebus Hispaniæ, Liber IX, VII, 5, RHGF, Tomo XII, p. 382. ‎


[732] Layettes du Trésor des Chartes II, 2947, p. 460.


‎[733] Delisle 'Comtes de Dammartin' (1869), Apéndice, VII, p. 247. ‎


[734] Sousa (1739), Tomo I, 29, p. 58.


‎[735] Delisle 'Comtes de Dammartin' (1869), Apéndice, VIII, p. 248. ‎


[736] Chronicon Savigniacense, Stephani Baluzii Miscellaneorum, Liber II, Collectio Veterum, p. 321.


‎[737] Breve Chronicon Alcobacense, Portugaliæ Monumenta Historica, Scriptores, Vol. I, pág. 21. ‎


‎[738] Jumièges, Tomo II, CCXVII, p. 179. ‎


‎[739] Jumièges, Tomo II, CCXVII, p. 179. ‎


[740] Willelmi Chronica Andrensis 194, MGH SS XXIV, p. 755.


‎[741] Olim, Tomo I, VIII, p. 261. ‎


‎[742] Olim, Tomo I, VIII, p. 261. ‎


‎[743] Miraeus (Le Mire) (1723), Tomo I, Donaciones Belgas, Libre I, LXXXIII, p. 404. ‎


‎[744] Rollos finos, Vol. I 1216-1246, p. 415. ‎


‎[745] Balduinus de Avennis Genealogía, RHGF, Tomo XIII, p. 562. ‎


‎[746] Giry 'Les chàtelains de Saint-Omer' (1875), p. 95, citando Archives du Nord, Cartulaire de Maroilles, fol. 63. ‎


‎[747] Olim, Tomo I, VIII, p. 261. ‎


‎[748] Olim, Tomo I, VIII, p. 261. ‎


‎[749] Olim, Tomo I, VIII, p. 261. ‎


‎[750] Gurney (1858), Suplemento, 63, p. 756. ‎


‎[751] Gurney (1845), Parte I, Los Gournays en Normandía, p. 146, citando a Vitis Calthorpiana, Harl. 970, MS Museo Británico. ‎


‎(Alberico de Dammartin) ‎

‎Títulos: Conde de Dammartin, Señor de Lillebonne en Normandía‎




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Aboutedit | history

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


-http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/parclerdam.htm#AubryIIDammartindied... [updated Aug 2018]


AUBRY [II], son of AUBRY [I] & his wife --- (-Lillebonne 20 Sep 1200, bur Jumièges). Seigneur de la Ferté-Alais. Comte de Dammartin. "Amalricus...Silvanectensis episcopus" confirmed the donation of “usum...totius forestæ Espioniæ de Bealci” made to Charlieu by “Albericus camerarius et filius eius Albericus comes de Dammartin”, with the consent of “Johanne scancione regis et uxore sua Helisendi et Petro filio suo”, by charter dated 1162[685]. “Albericus de Domnomartino eiusdem Feritatis dominus” witnessed the charter dated to [1166] given by the prior of La Ferté to Yerres abbey[686]. “Aubericus dominus Feritatis et uxor mea Mahaudis et filius meus Renaudus” donated dead wood “de Amaro Nemore domui de Retollu” to the church of Yerre by undated charter[687]. Mathieu dates this charter to [1160/77][688]: maybe it can be dated more narrowly to [1168/75]. By charter dated 1171 Louis VII King of France attested that, after a dispute between the king and "Albericum de Firmitate" concerning a serf “Guillermo de Villiers” and his family claimed by Aubry after the king had granted him “castellum Firmitatis...in feodum”, the serf in question had been freed[689]. "Aubri Count of Dammartin" confirmed the grant of Musewell to Missenden abbey made by “Guy and Joan de Ryhale”, with the consent of “his son and heir Renaud”, by charter dated to [1175][690]. Aubry returned La Ferté-Alais to the king [1171/76]: by a charter dated 1176 King Louis VII exchanged property with Paris Hôtel-Dieu, noting that, when he had held the castle of Dammartin (“quando castri domni Martini dominium habebamus”), the king had donated “grangiam inter Mintriacum et Moriacum sitam” but that he had later returned the castle [of Dammartin] and grange to “Alberico” (“postquam vero Alberico predictum castrum cum predicta grangia reddidimus”) (who had returned “Firmitate” [to the king]) and needed to compensate Hôtel-Dieu with another property[691]. "Albericus comes Domni Martini et Raynaldus filius meus comes Boloniæ et Matildis uxor mea comitissa" donated property to Dammartin Saint-Pierre by charter dated 1185[692]. The Red Book of the Exchequer refers to "Odo de Danmartin xx s, comes Albericus de Danmartin xx s, et in perdone xx s" in Norfolk, Suffolk in [1186/87][693]. Lord of Piddington, Oxfordshire: the 1186/87 Pipe Roll names “Comes Albericus de Dammartin” with one knight’s fee “pro wasto in Pidinton” in Oxfordshire and "Odo de Dammartin, Comes Albericus de Dammartin" in adjacent entries in Norfolk and Suffolk, and in Surrey[694]. Seigneur de Lillebonne [en-Normandie]. "Radulfus comes Clarimontis" donated part of Hez wood to the church of Froidmont by charter dated 1190 witnessed by "Alberico comite de Dammartin et Renaldo filio eius…Aelidis uxor mea et filie mee Cathelina et Mathildis…Hugo frater meus primicerius ecclesie Mettensis…"[695]. The Red Book of the Exchequer, listing scutage payments in [1190/91], records "comes Albericus" paying "iv s ix d" in Buckinghamshire, Bedfordshire and of "Willelmus de Danmartin, Albericus de Danmartin", each paying "x s, i militem" in Norfolk, Suffolk[696]. The 1194 Pipe Roll records revenue “de Pidinton que fuit comitis de Dammartin” in Oxfordshire and "terra que fuit comitis de Dammartin in Bichhamsteda" [granted to Eudes [II] de Dammartin in 1152/53] in Cambridgeshire and Huntingdonshire[697]. “Albericus comes Domnimartini” donated revenue from harvest “in grangia mea de Mintriaco” to Paris Hôtel-Dieu, confirmed and sealed by “Mathildis comitisse Domnimartini uxoris mee et…Reginaldo comitis Bolonie filii mei”, by charter dated 20 Sep 1200[698]. "A. comes Domni Martini" donated property to Saint-Leu d’Esserent by charter dated 20 Sep 1200, signed by "M. comitisse Dampni Martini uxoris mee et…R. comitis Bolonie filii nostri", which records the donor’s death “hac...die...apud Lilleboniam”[699]. An anonymous continuation of the Chronicle of Robert of Mont-Saint-Michel records the death "XIII Kal Oct" in 1200 of "Albericus Dammartini Comes" and his burial "apud Gemeticum"[700].


[m firstly ([1159/60]%29 as her third husband, JOAN Basset, widow firstly of GUY FitzPain de Ridale, and secondly of SIMON de Gerardmoulins, daughter of --- (-[1160/62]). This possible first marriage of Aubry [II] Comte de Dammartin is indicated by his later holding of Piddington in Oxfordshire (see above) which the documents quoted below show was held by Joan Basset. The third husband of Joan Basset could not have been Aubry [I], father of Comte Aubry [II], as her husband was called “comes” in the documents quoted below. If this suggested identity of the third husband of Joan Basset is correct, Joan must have died soon after [1160]. Malcolm IV King of Scotland donated “villam P[iddington] in Oxenfordscire” to Oxford St. Frideswide, noting that “Iohanna...soror Thome Bassett” was tenant for life, by charter dated to [1159][701]. King Henry II confirmed the donation of “villam de Pydentona in Oxenfordscira” to Oxford St. Frideswide made by King Malcolm IV, noting “Iohanna soror Thome Bassett” as tenant for life, by charter dated to [1160][702]. William Reedy, in the introduction to his collection of Basset charters, states that Joan, sister of Thomas Basset, married Aubry de Dammartin as her third husband[703]. Joan’s first marriage is confirmed by the charter dated to [1160] under which the abbot of Missenden surrendered rights in Piddington, donated by “Albrici comitis de Damartyn & Iohane de Pidingtona, que fuit sponsa Guidonis de Riala”, to Oxford St. Frideswide by charter dated to [1160][704]. The primary source which confirms Joan’s second marriage has not been identified. "Aubri Count of Dammartin" confirmed the grant of Musewell to Missenden abbey made by “Guy and Joan de Ryhale”, with the consent of “his son and heir Renaud”, by charter dated to [1175][705].]


m [secondly] ([after 1162]) MATHILDE de Clermont, daughter of RENAUD Comte de Clermont-en-Beauvaisis & his second wife Clémence de Bar (-after [May/Jul] 1218). "…Matildis soror mea…" consented to the donation by "Radulfus…comes Clarimontis" to the abbey of Notre-Dame d'Ourscamp by charter dated 1162[706]. "R…comes Clarimontis et dominus Brituliensis…et Aeliz comitissam uxorem meam" confirmed the donation to the church of Breteuil by "Sangalo de Garda Malgerii, Henricus filius eius" by undated charter, witnessed by "Albericus Domni Martini comes et Mahaux soror mea, Domni Martini comitissa, Rainaldus castellanus Britulii…"[707]. “Aubericus dominus Feritatis et uxor mea Mahaudis et filius meus Renaudus” donated dead wood “de Amaro Nemore domui de Retollu” to the church of Yerre by undated charter[708]. Mathieu dates this charter to [1160/77][709]: maybe it can be dated more narrowly to [1168/75]. "A. comes Domni Martini" donated property to Saint-Leu d’Esserent by charter dated 20 Sep 1200, signed by "M. comitisse Dampni Martini uxoris mee et…R. comitis Bolonie filii nostri"[710]. King Philippe II confirmed the donation made by “Mathilde jadis comtesse de Dammartin” to the nuns of Parc near Crespi of revenue from “la prévôté de Crespi”, which the king had previously granted to her in return for her rights over the county of Clermont after the death of [her great-nephew] Thibaud VI Comte de Blois, by charter dated [May/Jul] 1218[711].


Aubry [II] & his [second] wife had [eight] children:


1. RENAUD de Dammartin ([1165/70]-Château de Goulet 21 Apr 1217, bur Boulogne). His parentage is confirmed by the anonymous continuation of the Chronicle of Robert of Mont-Saint-Michel which records that "filius eius Reginaldus Comes Boloniæ" donated property to Jumièges for the soul of "Albericus Dammartini Comes"[712]. “Aubericus dominus Feritatis et uxor mea Mahaudis et filius meus Renaudus” donated dead wood “de Amaro Nemore domui de Retollu” to the church of Yerre by undated charter[713]. Mathieu dates this charter to [1160/77][714]: maybe it can be dated more narrowly to [1168/75]. "Albericus comes Domni Martini et Raynaldus filius meus comes Boloniæ et Matildis uxor mea comitissa" donated property to Dammartin Saint-Pierre by charter dated 1185[715]. "Radulfus comes Clarimontis" donated part of Hez wood to the church of Froidmont by charter dated 1190 witnessed by "Alberico comite de Dammartin et Renaldo filio eius…Aelidis uxor mea et filie mee Cathelina et Mathildis…Hugo frater meus primicerius ecclesie Mettensis…"[716]. He kidnapped his future second wife and kept her at the château de Riste in Lorraine, where he lured her fiancé (Arnoul de Guines Seigneur d'Ardres) and arranged his arrest by Albert de Hièrges Bishop of Verdun[717]. He succeeded in 1192 as Comte de Boulogne, de iure uxoris. "A. comes Domni Martini" donated property to Saint-Leu d’Esserent by charter dated 20 Sep 1200, signed by "M. comitisse Dampni Martini uxoris mee et…R. comitis Bolonie filii nostri"[718]. He succeeded his father in 1200 as Comte de Dammartin. “Reginaldus comes Bolonie” donated property to Jumièges, for the soul of “Alberici patris mei comitis Dampnimartini in eadem ecclesia sepulti”, with the consent of “Yde uxoris mee comitisse Bolonie, Radulfi et Simonis fratrum meorum et sororum mearum”, by charter dated [19 Sep/Dec] 1200[719]. Philippe II King of France installed him in 1205 as Comte d'Aumâle and in 1209 as Comte de Mortain. He swore homage to John King of England in 1212, and his assets in France were confiscated in King Philippe II. He was captured after the battle of Bouvines in 1214 and imprisoned at the château de Goulet where he later committed suicide[720]. m firstly (divorced before 1190) as her first husband, MARIE, daughter of [GUY [II] Seigneur de Châtillon-sur-Marne] & his wife Alix de Dreux [Capet] (-after Mar 1242). The Historia Comitum Ghisnensium refers to the wife of "Reinaldus filius Alberti de Dominio-Martini comitis" as "sorore Waltheri de Castellione", specifying that he left her in order to marry "Boloniem comitissam Idam"[721]. It should be noted that none of the sources quoted in this section specify that Marie was the daughter of Guy [II] Seigneur de Châtillon. It is possible therefore that she was born from her mother’s third marriage. She married secondly ([1197]%29 Robert de Vieuxpont Seigneur de Courville, and thirdly (before 1 Oct 1213) Jean [III] Comte de Vendôme. "M. domina Curveville" referred to "vivente domino meo R. de Veteri Ponte" in a charter dated to [1205][722]. "Maria domina de Corbavilla" gave security for "forteritia de Lavardin...quamdiu neptis mea Aales ibidem habebit dotalitium suum" to Philippe IV King of France by charter dated Feb 1212[723]. "Johannes comes Vindocinensis" relinquished rights over "prepositos de Masengeio" to Chartres, with the consent of “Marie uxoris mee sororis comitis Sancti Pauli”, by charter dated Sep 1213[724]. "Maria domina Curveville quondam comitissa Vindocinensis" donated revenue “in prepositura Curveville” to the priory of Saint-Nicolas de Courville, with the consent of "Ivo de Veteri Ponte miles filius meus dominus Curveville", by charter dated Mar 1242[725]. m secondly ([1185 or before or Apr 1190]) as her fourth husband, IDA de Flandre Ctss de Boulogne, divorced wife (firstly) of MATHIEU ---, widow (secondly) of GERHARD van Geldern and (thirdly) of BERTHOLD IV Herzog von Zähringen, daughter of MATTHIEU de Flandres Comte de Boulogne & his first wife Marie de Blois Ctss de Boulogne ([1160/61]-21 Apr 1216, bur Boulogne). The Chronicon Hanoniense names "Idam…et Mathildem" as the two daughters of "Matheus [comiti Boloniensi]" & his wife, specifying that Ida married "primus…Gerardo comiti de Ghelra, deinde Bertoldo Cheringiorum duci, postea Rainaldo comiti Dommi-Martini in Francia"[726]. The date of her fourth marriage is indicated by the charter dated 1185 under which "Albericus comes Domni Martini et Raynaldus filius meus comes Boloniæ et Matildis uxor mea comitissa" donated property to Dammartin Saint-Pierre[727], demonstrating that Ida’s husband already bore the title comte de Boulogne at that date. However, this date is inconsistent with the date of death of Ida’s third husband, estimated to be 8 Sep 1186, which suggests that either the charter is misdated or that Berthold Herzog von Zähringen died a year earlier. The Chronica Andrensis records the death in1216 of "Ida Bolonie comitissa in Flandria" and her burial at Boulogne[728]. Comte Renaud & his second wife had one child:


a) MATHILDE de Dammartin (-[9 Oct 1261/8 Feb 1263]). The Chronica Andrensis names "Mathilde…filia…Reinaldi quondam comitis Bolonie" as the wife of "Philippus frater Ludovici regis Gallie"[729]. She succeeded in 1223 as Ctss de Dammartin and in 1227 as Ctss de Boulogne. "Mahaud comitissa Bolonie et Clarimontis…et Johanne filie nostre" donated property to the abbey of Sainte-Hoïlde, for the souls of "bone memorie Philippi condam comitis Bolonie et liberorum nostrorum", by charter dated Apr 1239[730]. The De Rebus Hispaniæ of Rodericus Ximenes records the marriage of "Aldefonsum", son of "Aldefonsum" & his wife, and "Matillam…de partibus Franciæ, Boloniæ Comitissam"[731]. “Alfonsus, filius…regis Portugaliæ, comes Bolonie” recorded his agreements with “Thomam comitem et Johannam eius uxorem comitissam Flandrensem” by charter dated Nov 1241 which names “…M. comitissa Bolonie uxor nostra”[732]. Her second marriage is confirmed by the charter dated Jun 1240 under which "Aufonsus filius regis Portigalis comes Bolonie et Matildis uxor sua comitissa Bolonie" confirmed a donation by "Johanni de Bello Monte domini regis cambellano et Ysabelli Buticularie uxori sue"[733]. The testament of “Mathildis comitissa Boloniæ”, dated Mar 1241 (presumably O.S.), bequeathed property to “marito meo Alphonso filio...Regis Portugaliæ comiti...Boloniæ” and appointed “ipsum comitem maritum meum, et...Robertum episcopum Belovacensem et...consanguineum meum dominum Matthæum de Tria...et dominum Philippum de Nantholio consanguineum meum” as her executors, with the approval of “Gualtherus de Cestellione et...Joanna eius uxor”[734]. A charter dated Nov 1242 records a declaration by "Mathildis comtissa Bolonie…cum…marito nostro Alfonso filio…regis Portugalie comiti Bolonie" relating to her testament and names "Gaucherus de Castellione et Johanna filia nostra uxor eiusdem, heredes nostri"[735]. The Chronicon Savigniacense records the death in 1258 (presumably O. S.) of "Matildis Comitissa Boloniæ" and the reversion of her county to the king[736]. The Breve Chronicon Alcobacense records that "comitissa Bolonie" was still alive when "rex Dionisius" was born (9 Oct 1261, see below), but had died before the birth of his brother Afonso (8 Feb 1263, see below), and it was therefore claimed that Diniz was illegitimate but Afonso legitimate[737]. m firstly (contract Compiègne, Oise Aug 1201, contract Saint-Germain-en-Laye May 1210, 1216) PHILIPPE "Hurepel" de France, son of PHILIPPE II "Auguste" King of France & his third wife Agnes von Andechs-Merano (Jul 1200-killed in a tournament Corbie, Somme 14 or 18 Jan 1234, bur église de l'Abbaye royale de Saint-Denis). m secondly (1235, divorced 1253) as his first wife, Infante dom AFONSO de Portugal, son of dom AFONSO II "o Gordo" King of Portugal & his wife Infanta doña Urraca de Castilla (Coimbra 5 May 1210-Lisbon 16 Feb 1279, bur Cistercian monastery of Santa Maria de Alcobaça). He succeeded his brother in 1248 as AFONSO III “o Restaurador” King of Portugal and the Algarve.


2. RAOUL de Dammartin (-after [19 Sep/Dec] 1200). “Reginaldus comes Bolonie” donated property to Jumièges, for the soul of “Alberici patris mei comitis Dampnimartini in eadem ecclesia sepulti”, with the consent of “Yde uxoris mee comitisse Bolonie, Radulfi et Simonis fratrum meorum et sororum mearum”, by charter dated [19 Sep/Dec] 1200[738].


3. SIMON de Dammartin (-21 Sep 1239, bur Valoires). “Reginaldus comes Bolonie” donated property to Jumièges, for the soul of “Alberici patris mei comitis Dampnimartini in eadem ecclesia sepulti”, with the consent of “Yde uxoris mee comitisse Bolonie, Radulfi et Simonis fratrum meorum et sororum mearum”, by charter dated [19 Sep/Dec] 1200[739]. The Chronicon Andrensis names "comes Bolonie Reinaldus et Simon frater eius", specifying that Simon married "filiam comitis Pontivi unicam"[740]. Comte d'Aumâle 1205/11. Comte de Ponthieu et de Montreuil 1231.


- COMTES de PONTHIEU.


4. ALIX de Dammartin (-after 1237). The primary source which confirms her parentage and marriage has not been identified. Her parentage and marriage are indicated by an enquiry in 1267 which adjudged property of “Philippus olim comes Bolonie et...Matildis” to “Matheus comes Domni-Martini, domini Guillelmus de Fienes, Baldoinus de Fienes, Michael de Fienes, Ingerannus de Pinquegniaco et Renaudus de Pinquegniaco, heredes comitisse Matildis Bolonie”[741]. Her descendants inherited the county of Dammartin. m (1190) JEAN [I] Châtelain de Trie, son of ENGUERRAND [II] "Aiguillon" de Trie Seigneur de Moncy & his wife Heddiva [Basilie] de Moncy (-before 1237).


5. AGNES de Dammartin (-after 10 Apr 1244). Her parentage and marriage are indicated by an enquiry in 1267 which adjudged property of “Philippus olim comes Bolonie et...Matildis” to “Matheus comes Domni-Martini, domini Guillelmus de Fienes, Baldoinus de Fienes, Michael de Fienes, Ingerannus de Pinquegniaco et Renaudus de Pinquegniaco, heredes comitisse Matildis Bolonie”[742]. “Willelmus filius Ingelrami dominus de Fielnes” donated property to Andres, with the consent of "uxore mea Agnete et filio meo Ingelramno", by charter dated 1 Jan 1203 witnessed by "Radulfo de Fielnes patruo meo…Joanne de Tingri…"[743]. An order dated 10 Apr 1244 relating to “manerium de Marthoc...quod fuit Enger de Fenles”, permitted “Agn. matrem ipsius Inger” to administer aspects of the property[744]. m GUILLAUME de Fiennes, son of ENGUERRAND [I] de Fiennes & his wife Sibylle de Tingry--- (-[17 Oct 1239/4 Jul 1240]).


6. CLEMENCE de Dammartin (-after Jun 1218). The late 13th century genealogy by Balduinus de Avennis records that "castellano Sancti-Audomari domino Wilelmo…quartus filius Jacobus" married "Constantiam, sororem comitis Renaldi de Dommartin" who died childless[745]. "Clémence femme de Jacques de Prisches" ratified her husband’s sale to the abbey of Maroilles by charter dated Jun 1218[746]. m [as his first wife,] JACQUES de Saint-Omer, son of GUILLAUME [IV] Châtelain de Saint-Omer Seigneur de Fauquemberques & his wife Ida d’Avesnes (-[1219/20]).


7. --- de Dammartin . Her parentage and marriage are indicated by an enquiry in 1267 which adjudged property of “Philippus olim comes Bolonie et...Matildis” to “Matheus comes Domni-Martini, domini Guillelmus de Fienes, Baldoinus de Fienes, Michael de Fienes, Ingerannus de Pinquegniaco et Renaudus de Pinquegniaco, heredes comitisse Matildis Bolonie”[747]. Her husband has not been identified. m ---. One child:


a) --- (-before 1267). The chronology suggests an intervening generation between the brothers Enguerrand and Renaud and their unnamed grandmother. It is not known whether their father or mother belonged to the Picquigny family. m ---. Two children:


i) ENGUERRAND de Picquigny . His ancestry is indicated by an enquiry in 1267 which adjudged property of “Philippus olim comes Bolonie et...Matildis” to “Matheus comes Domni-Martini, domini Guillelmus de Fienes, Baldoinus de Fienes, Michael de Fienes, Ingerannus de Pinquegniaco et Renaudus de Pinquegniaco, heredes comitisse Matildis Bolonie”[748]. He and his brother have not been placed in the main Picquigny family which is shown in NORTHERN FRANCE NOBILITY.

ii) RENAUD de Picquigny . His ancestry is indicated by an enquiry in 1267 which adjudged property of “Philippus olim comes Bolonie et...Matildis” to “Matheus comes Domni-Martini, domini Guillelmus de Fienes, Baldoinus de Fienes, Michael de Fienes, Ingerannus de Pinquegniaco et Renaudus de Pinquegniaco, heredes comitisse Matildis Bolonie”[749]. He and his brother have not been placed in the main Picquigny family which is shown in NORTHERN FRANCE NOBILITY.


8. [JULIANE de Dammartin (-after 1202). "Hugo de Gornaco" donated property to Fécamp, for the souls of "Juliane uxoris mee et puerorum meorum", by charter dated 1202[750]. Her parentage is indicated only by a letter which purports to be from her granddaughter "Dame Julian Tresgoze…espouse…a Sr Robert Tresgoos le Second" to "son frère St Thomas de Cantlow, Euesque…de Hereford" which gives a confused version of the family’s lineage: "Sr Hugh de Gornaye" married "la reyne Blanch" [widow of Louis VIII King of France, such a second marriage being impossible chronologically] and had "un fils…Hugh…nostre ayle", who married "la soer le count Renaud de Boloyng"[751]. Genealogical details in other parts of the letter can be corroborated against other sources. It is therefore difficult to decide whether the entry relating to the wife of Hugues [V] should be dismissed in the same way as the supposed marriage of his father to the widow of King Louis VIII or whether it is factually correct. The absence of Juliane’s descendants from the enquiry in 1267, which names the heirs of Mathilde de Dammartin Ctss de Boulogne descended from her paternal aunts (see above), suggests that this alleged parentage of the wife of Hugues [V] de Gournay is incorrect. m HUGUES [V] Seigneur de Gournay, son of HUGUES [IV] Seigneur de Gournay & his second wife Mélisende de Coucy (-25 Oct [1214]).]


SOURCES


[685] Gallia Christiana, Tome X, Instrumenta ecclesiæ Silvanectensis, XXI, col. 214.


[686] Estournet ‘La Ferté-Alais’ (1944), Pièces Justificatives, II, p. 115.


[687] Estournet ‘La Ferté-Alais’ (1944), Pièces Justificatives, I, p. 115.


[688] Mathieu 'Comtes de Dammartin' (1996), p. 35, footnote 114.


[689] Tardif (1866), 629, p. 313.


[690] Evans 'Dammartin' (2003), p. 80, citing Salter, H. E. & Cooke, A. H. (1930) Boarstall Cartulary (Oxford Record Society Vol. 88), no. 296, and Jenkins, J. G. (1962) Cartulary of Missenden Abbey (Buckinghamshire Record Society), Vol. III, no. 634 [not yet consulted].


[691] Paris Hôtel-Dieu, 8, p. 4.


[692] Toussaint du Plessis (1731), Tome II, CLX, p. 73.


[693] Red Book Exchequer, Part I, Knights fees, p. 59.


[694] Pipe Roll 33 Hen II (1186/87), Oxfordshire, p. 49, Norfolk & Suffolk, p. 59.


[695] Lépinois (1877), Pièces justificatives, XXXVIII, p. 448.


[696] Red Book Exchequer, Part I, Anno secundo regis Ricardi…scutagium Walliæ assisum, pp. 71 and 76.


[697] Pipe Roll 6 Ric I (1194), Cambridgeshire & Huntingdonshire, pp. 16, 22.


[698] Paris Hôtel-Dieu, 900, p. 506.


[699] Esserent Saint-Leu, XC, p. 94.


[700] Anonymi Continuatio appendicis Roberti de Monte ad Sigebertum, RHGF, Tome XVIII, p. 341.


[701] Oxford St. Frideswide, Vol. II, 786-7, p. 92.


[702] Oxford St. Frideswide, Vol. II, 788, p. 93.


[703] Basset Charters, Introduction, p. xiii, citing Salter, H. E. & Cooke, A. H. (1930) The Boarstall Cartulary (Oxford Historical Society, Vol. 87) (“Boarstall Cartulary”), pp. 69, 100, 101 and notes 2 and 3 (not yet consulted).


[704] Oxford St. Frideswide, Vol. II, 793, p. 96.


[705] Evans ‘Dammartin’ (2003), p. 80, citing Boarstall Cartulary, no. 296, and Jenkins, J. G. (1962) Cartulary of Missenden Abbey (Buckinghamshire Record Society), Vol. III, no. 634 [not yet consulted].


[706] Ourscamp Notre-Dame CCLXII, p. 158.


[707] Lépinois (1877), Pièces justificatives, VII, p. 427.


[708] Estournet ‘La Ferté-Alais’ (1944), Pièces Justificatives, I, p. 115.


[709] Mathieu 'Comtes de Dammartin' (1996), p. 35, footnote 114.


[710] Esserent Saint-Leu, XC, p. 94.


[711] Delisle (1856), 1825, 1826, pp. 401-2.


[712] Anonymi Continuatio appendicis Roberti de Monte ad Sigebertum, RHGF, Tome XVIII, p. 341.


[713] Estournet ‘La Ferté-Alais’ (1944), Pièces Justificatives, I, p. 115.


[714] Mathieu 'Comtes de Dammartin' (1996), p. 35, footnote 114.


[715] Toussaint du Plessis (1731), Tome II, CLX, p. 73.


[716] Lépinois (1877), Pièces justificatives, XXXVIII, p. 448.


[717] Poull, G. (1991) La Maison ducale de Lorraine (Nancy), p. 361.


[718] Esserent Saint-Leu, XC, p. 94.


[719] Jumièges, Tome II, CCXVII, p. 179.


[720] ES III 649 (Les Comtes de Dammartin-en-Goële).


[721] Historia Comitum Ghisnensium 94, MGH SS XXIV, p. 605.


[722] Chartes Vendômoises p. 230 footnote, quoting Lefèvre, E. (1870) Documents historiques et statistiques sur les communes du canton de Courville, p. 85-1870 [not yet consulted].


[723] Chartes Vendômoises CXCII, p. 229.


[724] Chartes Vendômoises CC, p. 237.


[725] Chartres Saint-Jean-en-Vallée, 271, p. 129.


[726] Gisleberti Chronicon Hanoniense, MGH SS XXI, pp. 515-16.


[727] Toussaint du Plessis (1731), Tome II, CLX, p. 73.


[728] Willelmi Chronica Andrensis 202, MGH SS XXIV, p. 758.


[729] Willelmi Chronica Andrensis 220, MGH SS XXIV, p. 763.


[730] Sainte-Hoilde, XCVII, p. 79.


[731] Roderici Toletani Archiepiscopi De Rebus Hispaniæ, Liber IX, VII, 5, RHGF, Tome XII, p. 382.


[732] Layettes du Trésor des Chartes II, 2947, p. 460.


[733] Delisle ‘Comtes de Dammartin’ (1869), Appendice, VII, p. 247.


[734] Sousa (1739), Tomo I, 29, p. 58.


[735] Delisle ‘Comtes de Dammartin’ (1869), Appendice, VIII, p. 248.


[736] Chronicon Savigniacense, Stephani Baluzii Miscellaneorum, Liber II, Collectio Veterum, p. 321.


[737] Breve Chronicon Alcobacense, Portugaliæ Monumenta Historica, Scriptores, Vol. I, p. 21.


[738] Jumièges, Tome II, CCXVII, p. 179.


[739] Jumièges, Tome II, CCXVII, p. 179.


[740] Willelmi Chronica Andrensis 194, MGH SS XXIV, p. 755.


[741] Olim, Tome I, VIII, p. 261.


[742] Olim, Tome I, VIII, p. 261.


[743] Miraeus (Le Mire) (1723), Tome I, Donationes Belgicæ, Liber I, LXXXIII, p. 404.


[744] Fine Rolls, Vol. I 1216-1246, p. 415.


[745] Balduinus de Avennis Genealogia, RHGF, Tome XIII, p. 562.


[746] Giry ‘Les chàtelains de Saint-Omer’ (1875), p. 95, quoting Archives du Nord, Cartulaire de Maroilles, fol. 63.


[747] Olim, Tome I, VIII, p. 261.


[748] Olim, Tome I, VIII, p. 261.


[749] Olim, Tome I, VIII, p. 261.


[750] Gurney (1858), Supplement, 63, p. 756.


[751] Gurney (1845), Part I, The Gournays in Normandy, p. 146, quoting Vitis Calthorpiana, Harl. 970, MS British Museum.


(Albéric de Dammartin)

Titres: Comte de Dammartin, Seigneur de Lillebonne en Normandie


http://gw.geneanet.org/nobily?lang=fr;pz=elisabeth+therese+marie+he...


Alberic II of Dammartin From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Alberic II of Dammartin (Aubry de Dammartin) (died 1200 AD) was a French count. He married Marie, heiress to the county of Clermont. They had four children:[1] Renaud I, Count of Dammartin (c. 1165–1227), married 1) Marie de Châtillon and 2) Ide de Lorraine. Simon of Dammartin (1180 – 21 September 1239), married Marie, Countess of Ponthieu Julia of Dammartin, married Hugh de Gournay Agnes of Dammartin, married William de Fiennes [2] References[edit source | editbeta]


^ Lindy Grant, Architecture and society in Normandy 1120-1270, Yale University Press, 2005 ^ John Woodward in Notes and queries Oxford Journals, Oxford University Press, 1871, pp 437-428


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


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