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About Judicaël Berenger de Rennes, comte de Rennes
Alternately, son of daughter of Berenguer
https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/brittnpr.htm
son of Berenger
JUDICAËL [Juhael] (-[970]). Comte de Rennes. "Alanus dux Britonum" donated property to Landevenec by undated charter, dated to [940/50], witnessed by "Alan dux, Iudhæel comes…Houuel comes…Iestin vicecomes, Diles vicecomes…"[520]. "Judhael comite" confirmed a donation to Landevenec by "vir…stemate regalium ortus…Moysen" by undated charter dated to the mid-10th century[521]. m GERBERGE, daughter of ---. The primary source which confirms her marriage has not yet been identified. Comte Judicaël & his wife had [three] children:
a) CONAN de Rennes (-killed in battle Conquereil 27 Jun 992). The Chronicle of Nantes names "Conano filio Judicael Berengarii Redonensi comite" when recording that he held a large part of Brittany from Thibaut [II] Comte de Blois[522]. Comte de Rennes. He succeeded in [970] as CONAN I "le Tort" Duke of Brittany.
- DUKES of BRITTANY.
b) [MEEN (-1020). The primary source which confirms his parentage has not yet been identified. Seigneur de Fougères. "Mainonis avi mei…Alfridus genitor meus" are named in the undated charter under which "Maino" donated property to Sainte-Trinité de Fougères[523].]
- SEIGNEURS de FOUGERES.
c) [ENOGUEN . Le Baud records that “Tristan”, after his expulsion, was welcomed by “Men...seigneur de Foulgeres” and married “une [de ses] seur nommée Ynoguen”, receiving “tout ce qu’il avoit en Vendelays outre le fleuve de Coaynon” as dowry [524]. A primary source which confirms this information has not been identified. "Robert I de Vitré fils d´Enoguen, époux de Berthe, père d´André et de Robert" donated property to Marmoutier by charter dated to [1064/76][525]. m TRISCAN de Vitré, son of RIVALLON de Vitré & his wife Junargonda --- (-[1045], bur [Marcill%C3%A9 Saint-Ouen]).]
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Judicael_Berengar
Judicaël, Comte de Rennes.
Spouse: Gerberge
Child: Conan 'le Tort' de Rennes, Duc de Bretagne
LINKS
http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/BRITTANY.htm#ConanIdied992
MEDIEVAL LANDS
CONAN de Rennes, son of JUDICAËL [Juhael] Comte de Rennes & his wife Gerberge --- (-killed in battle Conquereil 27 Jun 992).
The Chronicle of Nantes names "Conano filio Judicael Berengarii Redonensi comite" when recording that he held a large part of Brittany from Thibaut [II] Comte de Blois and fought with Hoël Comte de Nantes[120]. His parentage is confirmed by the Chronico Sancti Michaelis which records the death of his grandson "Gaufridus Dux Britanniæ filius Conani filii Juhelli Berengarii" in 1008[121]. Comte de Rennes. He succeeded in [970] as CONAN I "le Tort" Duke of Brittany. Rodulfus Glaber records that Conan "crowned himself with a royal diadem", was defeated by his brother-in-law Foulques Comte d'Anjou, and surrendered after his right hand had been cut off[122]. The Chronico Sancti Michaelis records that "Conanus Brito…filius Juhelli Berengarii" was killed in battle "V Kal Jul 992" against Foulques Comte d'Anjou[123]. The Chronicle of Nantes reports that he was killed at the battle of Conquereuil[124], dated "992 V Kal Jul" in the Chronicon britannicum[125]. The Chronicon Kemperlegiense records the death "in bello Conçurruç…V Kal Jul" of "Conanus comes, filius Iudicaëlis Berengarii Comitis Redonensis"[126].
Judicael Berengar[1] was Count of Rennes, son and successor to Berengar of Rennes.
Berengar brought Capetian influences to Brittany, which secured the place of Judicael's son by Gerberge, Conan I of Rennes who became Duke of Brittany. His brother-in-law was William I of Normandy.
See "My Lines"
( http://homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~cousin/html/p326.htm#i14685 )
from Compiler: R. B. Stewart, Evans, GA
( http://homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~cousin/html/index.htm )
Gift tre gånger
.
Maka: Princess Of Lorraine GERBERGE. Greven av Rennes Juhel Berenger och Princess Of Lorraine GERBERGE var gifta. Barn var: Hertig av Bretagne \ Conan LA KRÄNKNING jag, Martin Berenger, Seigneur De Acigné-Marcil Martin Vitre, Meen Berenger.
Maka: Queen Of Auceps Frankrike Gerberge Av FRANKRIKE. Greven av Rennes Juhel Berenger och drottning av Frankrike Gerberge Auceps av Frankrike gift. Barn var: Berenger MARTIN, Meen Berenger, Duke Of Bretagne Conan Jag Brittany jag.
Maka: Gerberge Béranger. Greven av Rennes Juhel Berenger och Gerberge Béranger gifte sig . Barn var: Duke Of Bretagne Conan Jag Brittany jag, Mien Jag De FOUGERS, Seigneur De Acigné-Marcil Martin Vitre.
Judicael alias Berengar[1] was Count of Rennes in the mid-to-late 10th century. There are conflicting accounts of his parentage, one popular solution making him son and successor to a count Berenger (sometimes identified with Berengar of Rennes, sometimes with that man's supposed maternal grandson of the same name[2]) by a daughter of Gurvand, Duke of Brittany. However, an 11th century collection of Anjevin genealogies shows him to be son of Pascweten, son of Alan I, King of Brittany.
He is first documented as count in 944. He witnessed charters of Alan II, Duke of Brittany, and on the latter's death apparently fell under the control of Wicohen, Archbishop of Dol, later sources reporting the rescue of Judicael and his (unnamed) wife by son Conan. He appears to have been dead by 979, when his son was at the court of Odo I, Count of Blois.
Notes
^ Juhel, Judhel, Judhael in Breton sources, Berengarius or Berengarii in Frankish, sometimes both names given together.
^ There is no primary evidence of a younger count Berengar, other than records that refer to Judicael himself using his Frankish alias.
Information Source:
1. Proceedings of the New Jersey Historical Society, Third Series, Vol. II, 1897, p.346.
Judicael Berengar was Count of Rennes, son and successor to Berengar of Rennes. Berengar brought Capetian influences to Brittany, which secured the place of Judicael's son by Gerberge, Conan I of Rennes who became Duke of Brittany. His brother-in-law was William I of Normandy.
Judicael alias Berengar[1] was Count of Rennes in the mid-to-late 10th century. There are conflicting accounts of his parentage, one popular solution making him son and successor to a count Berenger (sometimes identified with Berengar of Rennes, sometimes with that man's supposed maternal grandson of the same name[2]) by a daughter of Gurvand, Duke of Brittany. However, an 11th century collection of Angevin genealogies shows him to be son of Pascweten, son of Alan I, King of Brittany.
He is first documented as count in 944. He witnessed charters of Alan II, Duke of Brittany, and on the latter's death apparently fell under the control of Wicohen, Archbishop of Dol, later sources reporting the rescue of Judicael and his (unnamed) wife by son Conan. He appears to have been dead by 979, when his son was at the court of Odo I, Count of Blois.
From http://www.rpi.edu/~holmes/Hobbies/Genealogy/ps05/ps05_191.htm
Alternate: Judicael Berengar
Stuart's "Royalty For Commoners" (334:36) referes to him as Count of Rennes and a leader against the Norsemen.
Per "The Bretons" by Galliou and Jones, a 15 year remission from Viking raiders in Brittany brutally ended in 913. In the next few years several Viking states, similiar to the one forming in Normandy, were established in Brittany. The county of Nantes was abandoned to the Vikings in 921 by KING ROBERT I of France. WILLIAM LONGSWORD, Duke of the Normans, aqdvanced through the Contenin and the Avaranchin. About 936, WILLIAM assented to the return to Brittany of Alain
Barbetote, Count of Cournaille from England - the same year that LOUIS IV D"OUTREMER returned to France from England to reestablish Carolingian rule there. An earlier attempt by Alain to regain his inheritance in 931 had failed. While other Breton counts were seeking refuge at the English court, Berenger of Rennes alone remained to withstand the Viking onslaught. He was surrounded by them. Direct contact between the rulers of Brittany and the Kings of France gradually ceased in the course of the 10th century. No Duke of Brittany acknowledged fealty of performed homage directly to the King of France until 1099. Following Alain Barbatorte's death in 952, leaving no clear heir, a power vacuum in the duchy was filled by the Counts of Rennes.
"Todd A. Farmerie" posted to soc.genealogy.medieval on 22 Nov 1996 (in part): Subject: Re: ancestry of CONAN I, Duke of Brittany "I still follow the work of Lot and others from the turn of the century, who show Juhel/Judiceal Berenger as son of a Count Berenger, a Frank who rooted in Brittany toward the end of the 9th century, and who is perhaps identical with the Berenger of Bayeux that Rollo ran into. I am deeply suspicious of any attempt to harmonize all of the breton lines into a single royal family, suspecting instead that from the time of
Nominoe, there were several entities (i.e. Vannes, Nantes, etc.) of which the king/count was simply the most powerful at the time."
BERENGER, COUNT OF BAYEUX (RIN 1314), father of ROLLO's wife, POPPA, could, if Farmerie is correct, be his father.
References: [Theroff],[PlantagenetA],[ES],[Weis1],[AR7]
He was Count of Rennes (before 931) and a leader against the Northmen. Although he has been conjectured to belong to the old line of the Counts of Brittany, it seems likely that he was son of Count Bérenger, a Frank who settled in Brittany.
See http://www.rpi.edu/~holmes/Hobbies/Genealogy/ps05/ps05_191.htm
Judicael alias Berengar[1] was Count of Rennes in the mid-to-late 10th century. There are conflicting accounts of his parentage, one popular solution making him son and successor to a count Berenger (sometimes identified with Berengar of Rennes, sometimes with that man's supposed maternal grandson of the same name[2]) by a daughter of Gurvand, Duke of Brittany. However, an 11th century collection of Anjevin genealogies shows him to be son of Pascweten, son of Alan I, King of Brittany.
He is first documented as count in 944. He witnessed charters of Alan II, Duke of Brittany, and on the latter's death apparently fell under the control of Wicohen, Archbishop of Dol, later sources reporting the rescue of Judicael and his (unnamed) wife by son Conan. He appears to have been dead by 979, when his son was at the court of Odo I, Count of Blois.
[edit] Notes
1.^ Juhel, Judhel, Judhael in Breton sources, Berengarius or Berengarii in Frankish, sometimes both names given together.
2.^ There is no primary evidence of a younger count Berengar, other than records that refer to Judicael himself using his Frankish alias.
Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Judicael_Berengar"
Categories: Counts of Rennes
Birth: unknown
Departement d'Eure-et-Loir Centre, France Death: unknown Bretagne Departement de l'Indre Centre, France
"•ID: I13980 •Name: Judicaël Comte DE RENNES , Roi de Bretagne •Sex: M •Birth: ABT 860 in Vendôme, Loir-et-Cher, Orléanais, FRANCE •Death: 888 in Bretagne (Brittany), FRANCE •Event: Title (Facts Pg) BET 876 AND 888 Roi de Bretagne (King of Brittany) •Event: Note Judicaël Comte de Rennes, Roi de Bretagne and Gerberge de Bretagne are my maternal 28th great grandparents. •Reference Number: IND13980"
Family links:
Parents:
Gurvant Comte DE RENNES , Roi de Bretagne
Unknown "Princess of Brittany" DE Bretagne
Spouse:
Gerberge de Bretagne
Children:
Conan De Rennes*
*Calculated relationship
Burial: Unknown
References
Judicaël Berenger de Rennes, comte de Rennes's Timeline
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907
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Norse invasions of Brittany
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940 |
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Vitré, Ille-et-Vilaine, Bretagne, France
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