Immediate Family
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About Radulf, heer van Rode
10. RALPH.
1189 (Ename, no. 94, p. 77) - 1235, May (Afflighem, pp. 530-531).
Lord of Schelderode (Bruges, Diocesan Archives, St. Salvator, cartul. f° 236 v°).
Lord of Melle (Liber fund. Drongen, no. SI, f° I3 r°).
nob. (St. Bavon, no. I9I, pp. I94-195).
Knight (Ename, no. I13, P. 93 (12I2, July 30)).
- Bertha (RA. Bruges, Blue no. 4527 (I220, June I8)).
Son:- Gerard II (D & F, I, Pp. 264-265, B. 395 (1226)) (Warlop, 1121)
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1216 Jeanne, countess of Flanders and Hainaut yields to Raoul de Rhodes her rights to Melle in Gontrode, in Lontsrode, in Bottelaere, in Munte, in Melsen, in Schelderode and in Gendbrugge, in exchange for the villages of Nieukerken and Meizelbeke (Wauters, A., Chronological Table, III, 461 ).
1218 March 14 The king of England enjoins the viscount of Nottingham to put Rudolph of Rhodes in possession of the lands of his father Gerard (Ibid., III. 490)
1219 July 16 Rodolp'e of Rhodes or Roden, with the consent of his mother Hildegarde and his wife Berthe, exempts the monks of Cambron from the obligation to pay the tonlieu that he collected at the Pout de Brabant, near Gant (Ibid., III, 496.)
1226 October 12 Rodolphe, lord of Rhode, cedes to the countess
Jeanne his goods and revenues of Niepeglise and Maerlebeke, in exchange for Gentrode and other villages (Ibid., VII 603).
1228 May 9 Count Ferrand and Countess Jeanne of Flanders.
cede to lord Rodolphe de Rhodes all that they possess in Melle and in several neighboring villages, in exchange for goods situated in Niepeylize ( Niepe ) and Merlebeke ( I b i d ., I V , 6 0 ) ( refering to De Potter Broeckaert, der gemeenten der Provincie Oost-Flanderen t.v. Schelderode).
1228 Berte, wife of Rudolf, knight of Rhode, approves the sale of a tithe from Hontave and other districts to the hospital of St. Jaen in Bruges (Wauters, Table chro. nologique, IV, 72).
1232, November Rudolf, sgr. of Rhodes, and his wife Berthe cede to the abbey of St. Peter's in Ghent their possessions in Zeeterghem and Swynaerde, in exchange for those which the monastery possessed in Munte and Baygem (Ibid., IV, 155).