Historical records matching William I "the Great" count of Burgundy
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About William I "the Great" count of Burgundy
Guillaume I was Count Palatin of Burgundy (Comte Palatin de Bourgogne). See http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liste_des_comtes_palatins_de_Bourgogne.
William I, Count of Burgundy
http://www.friesian.com/lorraine.htm#franchecomte
http://genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00026527&tree=LEO
http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/BURGUNDY%20Kingdom.htm#GuillaumeIdi...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_I,_Count_of_Burgundy
Adapted from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
William I (1020 – 12 November 1087), called the Great (le Grand or Tête Hardie, "the Rash") was Count of Burgundy and Mâcon from 1057 to 1087. He was a son of Renaud I and Adelaide, daughter of Richard II, Duke of Normandy. William was the father of several notable children, including Pope Callistus II.
In 1057, he succeeded his father and reigned over a territory larger than that of the Franche-Comté itself. In 1087, he died in Besançon and was buried there in the cathedral of St John.
William married a woman named Stephanie.[1]
They had many children (not in order):
- * Renaud II, William's successor, died on First Crusade
- * Stephen I (Étienne), successor to Renaud II, Stephen died on the Crusade of 1101
- * Raymond, married (1090) Urraca, the reigning queen of Castile; successor to Étienne I, also was King of Leon and Galicia
- * Guy of Vienne, elected pope, in 1119 at the Abbey of Cluny. as Calixtus II
- * Sybilla (or Maud), married (1080) Eudes I of Burgundy
- * Gisela of Burgundy, married (1090) Humbert II of Savoy and then Renier I of Montferrat
- * Adelaide
- * Eudes
- * Hugh III, Archbishop of Besançon
- * Clementia married Robert II, Count of Flanders and was Regent, during his absence
- * Stephanie married Lambert, Prince de Royans (d.1119)
- * Ermentrude, married (1065) Theodoric I
- * (perhaps) Bertha wife of Alphonso VI of Castile
- * Guillaume
Preceded by Renaud I Count of Burgundy 1057 – 1087 Succeeded by Renaud II
Note
1. ^ She was identified as the daughter of Adalbert, Duke of Lorraine in an article by Szabolcs de Vajay in Annales de Bourgogne, XXXII:247-267 (Oct-Dec 1960), but the author subsequently made an unqualified retraction of this claim in "Parlons encore d'Etiennette" in Prosopographica et Genealogica, vol. 3: Onomastique et Parenté dans l'Occident medieval, K. S. B. Keats-Rohan and C. Settipani, eds. (2000), pp. 2-6.
References
- Portail sur Histoire Bourgogne et Histoire Franche-Comté, Gilles Maillet.
- FMG on William I, Comté de Burgundy
https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guillaume_Ier_de_Bourgogne
Guillaume Ier de Bourgogne dit Guillaume le Grand ou Tête Hardie (1020-1087) comte de Bourgogne, comte de Mâcon et père du Pape Calixte II
Biographie
Né le 1020, fils du comte Renaud Ier de Bourgogne et d'Adélaïde de Normandie (fille du duc Richard II de Normandie).
1057 il succède le 3 septembre 1057 à son père qui décède. Guillaume Ier de Bourgogne et ses fils aînés Renaud II de Bourgogne puis Étienne Ier de Bourgogne, sont des comtes de Bourgogne très puissants, régnant sur des terres dépassant largement les limites du puissant et vaste comté de Bourgogne. Ils sont vassaux contre leur gré de l'empire germanique suite au testament du roi Rodolphe III de Bourgogne mort en 1032 et à la guerre de succession de Bourgogne (1032-1034).
1039 l'archevêque de Besançon, Hugues Ier de Salins, devient l'homme de confiance favori du nouvel empereur germanique, Henri III du Saint-Empire (neveu du précédent). L'empereur accorde alors une certaine autonomie franche et le droit de s'auto-administrer par son propre gouvernement au comté de Bourgogne dont il est nommé chancelier et récompensé très largement pour sa totale et très dévouée collaboration et pour ses services de vassal à son suzerain.
1043 l'empereur germanique Henri III vient à Besançon, pour se fiancer avec Agnès d'Aquitaine, nièce du comte Renaud Ier de Bourgogne, et fille du duc Guillaume V d’Aquitaine. Pour cette occasion, l’archevêque de Besançon, Hugues Ier de Salins, obtient des droits régaliens sur la ville de Besançon (droits juridiques, politiques, fiscaux et économiques ... ) Il est nommé prince de l’empire germanique (rang maximum avant empereur) et règne en souverain sur la cité lui et ses futurs successeurs avec l'empereur et le pape Grégoire VII pour seuls supérieurs. Il échappe au pouvoir des comtes de Bourgogne
1076 l'empereur germanique Henri IV du Saint-Empire s'oppose aux pouvoirs absolus du pape Grégoire VII et se voit excommunié par le Vatican ce qui le discrédite profondément dans l'Europe profondément chrétienne où le pape a un grand pouvoir sur les têtes couronnées d'alors. C'est le début de la lutte de pouvoir entre l'empereur germanique et le Vatican (querelle des Investitures).
1078 le comte Guy II de Mâcon se fait moine à l'Abbaye de Cluny et cède son titre et ses terres à son cousin Guillaume Ier de Bourgogne.
1085 Guillaume Ier de Bourgogne s’affirme comme le personnage le plus important du comté de Bourgogne et met la main sur le pouvoir ecclésiastique après le décès des puissants archevêques de Besançon, Hugues Ier de Salins et Hugues II en y faisant ordonner ses fils Hugues III de Bourgogne archevêque et Guy de Bourgogne (futur Pape sous le nom de Calixte II) administrateur du diocèse de son frère.
1087 il décède à Besançon à l'age de 67 ans et est inhumé à la cathédrale Saint-Étienne, remplacée au XVIIIe siècle par la Cathédrale Saint-Jean, où furent transférées les sépultures des comtes de Bourgogne.
Ses fils Renaud II de Bourgogne et Étienne Ier de Bourgogne lui succèdent et meurent en croisade en Terre Sainte, suivis en cela par leur frère Raymond de Bourgogne, roi de Leon et de Galice, ce qui affaiblira grandement le pouvoir de leur famille.
Mariages et enfants
Il se marie en secondes noces entre 1049 et 1057 avec Étiennette. Il a eu les enfants suivants1 :
- Eudes. Son père fait une donation à la cathédrale de Besançon en 1087 pour le repos de son âme.
- Renaud II († 1097 en croisade), comte de Bourgogne.
- Guillaume2.
- Ermentrude mariée en 1065 à Thierry Ier, comte de Montbéliard ,d'Altkirch et de Ferrette.
- Guy administrateur de l'Archevêché de Besançon puis élu 160 ème pape en 1119 sous le nom de Calixte II.
- Étienne Ier (†1102 à Ascalon) comte de Bourgogne.
- Sybille épouse en 1080 Eudes Ier, duc de Bourgogne
- Raymond de Bourgogne († 1107 en Espagne) marié en 1090 à Urraque Ire, reine de Castille et de Léon.
- Hugues († 1103).
- Gisèle mariée en 1090 à Humbert II, comte de Savoie
- Clémence (1078 † 1129) mariée en 1092 à Robert II, comte de Flandre, puis vers 1125 à Godefroid Ier, duc de Brabant.
- Étiennette, épouse le Lambert François, de Valence seigneur de Royans.
- Berthe († 1097) épouse en 1093 Alphonse VI (1040 † 1109), roi de Castille et de Léon.
Savoie (Savoy) is a region of southeastern France that extends from Lake Geneva to the Isère River and borders on the Italian frontier. Its command of the western Alpine passes into Italy enhances its strategic importance. Savoy was the original domain of the Savoy dynasty, which ruled Italy from 1861 to 1946.
Savoy's early Celtic inhabitants were conquered by the Romans in 121 BC. During the 5th century AD the Burgundians gained control of the region, which passed in 534 to the Frankish kingdom of Burgundy. Savoy came under the suzerainty of the Holy Roman emperor in 1033. Count Humbert I aux Blanches Mains (the Whitehanded), founder of the House of Savoy and a vassal of the German emperor, then controlled much of the region. He settled in Chambéry and began extracting exorbitant tolls from neighboring kings who wanted to march through the pass. By the 14th century, this powerful kingdom included Nice, the Jura, Piedmonte, and Geneva.
The Savoy dukes increasingly favored their Italian lands, particularly since generations of French monarchs had expressed military designs on Savoy, which was largely French-speaking. The dukes transferred their capital to Piedmonte in 1563. France annexed Savoy in 1792, but it was restored to the House of Savoy in 1815. In 1860, however, after a plebiscite, the region was returned to France, and the French acquiesced to the rule of the House of Savoy over a kingdom in north central Italy.
Ivrea is a town and commune of the province of Turin in the Piedmont region of northwestern Italy. Situated on the road leading to the Aosta Valley (part of the medieval Via Francigena), it straddles the Dora Baltea and is regarded as the centre of the Canavese area. Ivrea lies in a basin that, in prehistoric times, formed a great lake. The town first appears in history as a cavalry station of the army of the Roman Empire, founded in 100 BC and set to guard one of the traditional invasion routes into northern Italy over the Alps. The Latin name of the town was Eporedia.
The Cathedral of Ivrea.
After the fall of the Western Roman Empire, Ivrea became seat of a duchy under the Lombards (6th-8th centuries). Alessandro Manzoni in his Adelchi, names one duke Guinigi of Ivrea, chosen by king Desiderius as defender of Pavia. Under the Franks (9th century), Ivrea was a county capital. In the year 1001, after a period of disputes with bishop Warmund, ruler of the city, Arduin conquered March of Ivrea. Later he became King of Italy and set a dynasty that lasted until the 11th century, when the city switched again to the bishops' suzerainty.
The following century Ivrea became a free commune, but succumbed in the first decades of the 13th century. In 1238 Emperor Frederick II put it under his domains. Later Ivrea was disputed between the bishops, the marquis of Monferrato and the House of Savoy. In 1356 Ivrea was acquired by Amadeus VI of Savoy. With the exception of the brief French conquest at the end of the 16th century, Ivrea remained under Savoy until 1800: on May 26 of that year Napoleon Bonaparte entered the city along with his victorious troops, establishing control that ended in 1814 after his fall.
Burgundy (French: Bourgogne; German: Burgund) is a region historically situated in modern-day France and Switzerland.
History
Burgundy was inhabited in turn by Celts, Romans (Gallo-Romans), and in the 4th century assigned by Romans to the Burgundians, a Germanic people, who settled there and established their own kingdom. This Burgundian kingdom was conquered in the 6th century by the Franks who continued the kingdom of Burgundy under their own rule.
Later, the region was divided between the Duchy of Burgundy (west of Burgundy) and the County of Burgundy (east of Burgundy). The Duchy of Burgundy is the more famous of the two, and the one which reached historical fame. Later, the Duchy of Burgundy became the French province of Burgundy, while the County of Burgundy became the French province of Franche-Comté, literally meaning free county.
The modern-day administrative région of Bourgogne comprises most of the former Duchy of Burgundy.
The Burgundians were one of the Germanic peoples who filled the power vacuum left by the collapse of the western half of the Roman Empire. In A.D. 411, they crossed the Rhine and established a kingdom at Worms. Amidst repeated clashes between the Romans and Huns, the Burgundian kingdom eventually occupied what is today the borderlands between Switzerland, France, and Italy. In 534, the Franks defeated Godomar, the last Burgundian king, and absorbed the territory into their growing empire.
Burgundy's modern existence is rooted in the dissolution of the Frankish Empire. When the dynastic succession was settled in the 880s, there were four Burgundies:
1. the Kingdom of Upper (Transjurane) Burgundy around Lake Geneva,
2. the Kingdom of Lower Burgundy in Provence, and
3. the Duchy of Burgundy west of the Saône
4. the County of Burgundy east of the Saône
The two kingdoms of Upper and Lower Burgundy were reunited in 937 and absorbed into the Holy Roman Empire under Conrad II in 1032, as the Kingdom of Arles. The Duchy of Burgundy was annexed by the French throne in 1477. The County of Burgundy remained loosely associated with the Holy Roman Empire (intermittently independent, whence the name "Franche-Comté"), and finally incorporated into France in 1678, with the Treaties of Nijmegen.
During the Middle Ages, Burgundy was the seat of some of the most important Western churches and monasteries, among them Cluny, Citeaux, and Vézelay. During the Hundred Years' War, King John II of France gave the duchy to his younger son, rather than leaving it to his successor on the throne. The duchy soon became a major rival to the French throne, because the Dukes of Burgundy succeeded in assembling an empire stretching from Switzerland to the North Sea, mostly by marriage. The Burgundian territories consisted of a number of fiefdoms on both sides of the (then largely symbolic) border between the Kingdom of France and the Holy Roman Empire. Its economic heartland was in the Low Countries, particularly Flanders and Brabant. The court in Dijon outshone the French court by far, both economically and culturally. In Belgium and in the south of the Netherlands, a 'Burgundian lifestyle' still means 'enjoyment of life, good food, and extravagant spectacle'.
In the late 15th and early 16th centuries, Burgundy provided a power base for the rise of the Habsburgs, after Maximilian of Austria had married into the ducal family. In 1477 at the battle of Nancy during the Burgundian Wars the last duke Charles the Bold was killed in battle and Burgundy itself taken back by France. After the death of his daughter Mary her husband Maximilian moved the court first to Mechelen and later to the palace at Coudenberg, Brussels, and from there ruled the remnants of the empire, the Low Countries (Burgundian Netherlands) and Franche-Comté, then still an imperial fief. The latter territory was ceded to France in the Treaty of Nijmegen of 1678.
http://thepeerage.com/p383.htm#i3830
Guillaume I "Tête hardie", comte de Bourgogne & de Vienne also went by the name of William I "the Great" of Burgundy.
Also called Graf von Burgund Wilhelm I von Burgund German.2 Also called comte de palatin Bourgogne Guillaume II "le Grand" de Bourgogne.3
He was related to Pope Callistus II of the Roman Catholics; per Funk and Wagnalls, the fifth son of Count William of Burgundy.4
Guillaume I "Tête hardie", comte de Bourgogne & de Vienne was related to Pope Callistus II of the Roman Catholics; per the Catholic Encyclopedia, said to be the son of Count William of Burgundy, and both by his father's and mother's side was closely connected with nearly all the royal houses of Europe.5
Guillaume I "Tête hardie", comte de Bourgogne & de Vienne was the father of Pope Callistus II of the Roman Catholics; per a 1960 article by Szabolcs de Vajay, thought to be the son of Etiennette/Estefania/Stephanie, wife of
William, Count of Burgundy.6 Guillaume I "Tête hardie", comte de Bourgogne & de Vienne was born circa 1024. 1040? He was the son of Renaud I, comte de Bourgogne and Alix de Normandie. Guillaume I "Tête hardie", comte de Bourgogne & de Vienne was the successor of Renaud I, comte de Bourgogne; Count of Burgundy.
Guillaume I "Tête hardie", comte de Bourgogne & de Vienne married Etiennette de Barcelona in 1043.7 Count of Burgundy between 1057 and 1087.
Guillaume I "Tête hardie", comte de Bourgogne & de Vienne was the predecessor of Raymond, comte de Bourgogne; Count of Burgundy.
Guillaume I "Tête hardie", comte de Bourgogne & de Vienne died on 12 November 1087.
descendant of Charlemagne: http://homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~cousin/html/ui13.htm#a1304
Guilliaume l. le Grand oder Guillaume l. Tête Hardie war graf von Burgund und Mâcon. Er war der Sohn von Graf Rainald l. aus den Haus Burgund-Ivera und Adelheid von Normandie aus dem Haus der Rolloniden.
William I (1020 – 12 November 1087), called the Great (le Grand or Tête Hardie, "the Stubborn"), was Count of Burgundy from 1057 to 1087 and Mâcon from 1078 to 1087. He was a son of Renaud I and Alice of Normandy, daughter of Richard II, Duke of Normandy. William was the father of several notable children, including Pope Callixtus II.
In 1057, he succeeded his father and reigned over a territory larger than that of the Franche-Comté itself. In 1087, he died in Besançon, Prince-Archbishopric of Besançon, Holy Roman Empire -- an independent city within the County of Burgundy. He was buried in Besançon's Cathedral of St John.
William married a woman named Stephanie before 1087.[1]
Children of Stephanie:
Renaud II, William's successor, died on First Crusade Stephen I, successor to Renaud II, Stephen died on the Crusade of 1101 Raymond of Burgundy who married Urraca of León and Castile and thus inherited the government of Galicia (Spain) (died 1107) Sybilla (or Maud), married (1080) Eudes I of Burgundy Gisela of Burgundy, married (1090) Humbert II of Savoy and then Renier I of Montferrat Clementia married Robert II, Count of Flanders and was Regent, during his absence. She married secondly Godfrey I, Count of Leuven and was possibly the mother of Joscelin of Louvain. William married a woman named Etiennette de Longuy circa 1040
Other children of either Stephanie or Etiennette:
Guy of Vienne, elected pope, in 1119 at the Abbey of Cluny, as Calixtus II William Eudes Hugh III, Archbishop of Besançon Stephanie married Lambert, Prince de Royans (died 1119) Ermentrude, married (1065) Theodoric I (perhaps) Bertha wife of Alphonso VI of Castile and maybe another daughter
Guillaume I de Bourgogne
Sosa : 45,364,192 Born in 1020 Deceased 12 November 1087 - Besançon, Doubs, Franche-Comté, France, aged 67 years old Buried - Besançon, Doubs, Franche-Comté, France
Parents sosa Renaud I de Bourgogne, born in 986 - Burgundy, France, deceased after 3 September 1057 - Burgundy, France , buried - Besançon, Doubs, Franche-Comté, France Married 19 September 1016 to sosa Adélaïde de Normandie, born about 1002 - Normandy, France, deceased
Spouses, children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren With sosa Étiennette de Bourgogne, born about 1035, deceased after 19 October 1088 (Parents : M sosa Adalbert x, Duke of Upper Lorraine 1004-1048 & F sosa Clemence de Foix de Bigorre 1015-1035) with M Hugues III de Bourgogne, Archbishop of Besançon 1047-1101 F Ermentrude of Burgundy 1058-1104 Married in 1076 to Theodoric I, Count of Montbéliard 1045-1105 with M Renaud I, Count of Bar-le-Duc Mousson, Brie and Verdun 1076-1149 Married before 1105, Of Meuse, Lorraine, France, to Gisèle de Vaudémont 1089-1141 with : F Clémence de Bar ca 1105-1185/ M Renaud II de Bar, Count of Bar 1115-1170 M Hughes de Bar ca 1120-1141 M Dietrich de Bar, III ca 1124-1171 F Stéphanie de Bar 1125-/1178 F X De Bar ca 1127- F Maria de Bar 1129- F Agnes Adelaide De Bar-le-Duc †1185 M Drogo de Bar † F Mathilde de Bar † M Friedric I de Montbéliard 1081-1160 With Pierrette de Zähringen 1095- with : M Louis de Ferrette 1115-1191
Friedric I de Montbéliard 1081-1160 With Stephanie De Vaudemont 1095-ca 1160 with : F Hilla von Pfirt x † F Agnes de Montbeliard 1082-ca 1147 With Hermann III de Salm ca 1105-1131 with : M Hendrik Henri I 1105-1166 M Conrad I Of Meissen 1111-1165 M Hermann von Salm 1128-1136 M Henri I de Salm 1133-1174 M Thierry von Salm †
Agnes de Montbeliard 1082-ca 1147 With Hermann II Zu Salm-Niedersalm(von Salm) 1075-1138 with : M Hermann III de Salm ca 1105-1131
Agnes de Montbeliard 1082-ca 1147 With Wiliam Loo, Earl of Kent ca 1090-1165 with : M Robert De Kent ca 1135-1179 F Ida Of Nordheim ca 1086-1147/ Married about 1115 to Wiliam Loo, Earl of Kent ca 1090-1165 with : M Steppo Willem Philip van Viggezele 1110-1154 M Richard Loo Of Kent 1140- M Guido Guy von Burgund, Papst Calixt II ca 1060-1124 F Bertha de Bourgogne de Toscane ca 1062-/1096 With Dirk Persijn 1070- F Sybilla of Burgundy x, Duchess of Burgundy 1062-1102 Married after 1070 to Hugh I ? 1057-1102
Sybilla of Burgundy x, Duchess of Burgundy 1062-1102 Married in 1080, Bourgogne, France, to Eudes I Borell Le Roux Red Crusader Bourgogne ca 1058-ca 1103
Sybilla of Burgundy x, Duchess of Burgundy 1062-1102 Married about 1088, Bourgogne, France, to Odo I of Burgundy ca 1060-1103 with F Helie of Burgundy x ca 1080-1141 With Bertrand of Toulouse ca 1095-1112 with : M Pons of Tripoli ca 1098-1137
Helie of Burgundy x ca 1080-1141 Married about 1115 to William Talvace, III ca 1090-1171 with : M John I, Count of Alençon †1191 M Guy II of Ponthieu x 1090-1147 F Ela Comet (d' Alencon) Belleme 1110-1174 F Jeanne De Ponthieu De Montgomery-De Bourgogne 1114-1165 M Guy Ponthieu 1115-1147 F Béatrice De Ponthieu De Montgomery-De Bourgogne 1117-1158 M Guillaume d'Alençon ca 1117-1166/ F Clemence De Ponthieu 1118-1189 F Adela de Talvas 1120-1174 F Blanche de Montgomery de Ponthieu 1125-ca 1180 F Emma De Bourgogne 1082-1162 Married about 1100, England, to Malgerus de Staunton 1070-ca 1130 with : M Geoffrey de Staunton †1257 M Robertus de Staunton † M Geoffrey (Galfridus) De Stanton ca 1101-ca 1140 M William de Staunton ca 1170-1216 F Florine De Boulogne 1083-ca 1097 With Svend Korsfarer ca 1050-1097 M Hugh II x, Duke of Burgundy 1085-1143 Married in 1115 to Matilda of Mayenne, Duchess of Burgundy 1082-1162 with : M Eudes III De Borgoña Duque de Borgoña † F Claudine De Bourgogne 1106- F Aigeline de Bourgogne x 1116-1163 F Clemence Capet de Bourgogne ca 1117-1164 M Eudes II Borel de Bourgogne 1118-1162 M Gauthier De Bourgogne 1120-1180 M Hughes De Bourgogne Lord of Chalon and Meursault 1121-1171 M Robert De Bourgogne (Burgundy) 1122-1140 M Henri Henry De Bourgogne (Burgundy) 1124-1170 M Raymond de Burgundy Comte de Grignon ca 1125-1156 F Sibylle Capet de Burgundy 1126-1150 F Ducissa of Burgundy 1128- F Mathilde Marguerite de Bourgogne et de Mayenne 1130-1172 F Aremburge de Bourgogne ca 1132-
Hugh II x, Duke of Burgundy 1085-1143 With Mahaud De Turenneg ca 1092-1162
Hugh II x, Duke of Burgundy 1085-1143 With ? ? with : F Matilda de BOURGOGNE 1138-1219 M Hughes II De Bourgogne-De Bourgogne 1085-1143 With Mathilda Felicia de Mayenne 1103-1162/ M Henri de Burgundy 1087-1130
Sybilla of Burgundy x, Duchess of Burgundy 1062-1102 With William I of Burgundy † F Clémence De Bourgogne 1065-1133 Married in 1092 to Robert Flanders, II ca 1065-1111 with M Robert of Moray x ca 1085-1111 With Ida De Namur 1073-1133
Robert of Moray x ca 1085-1111 With ? ? F Rosamunda Van Vlaanderen ca 1090-1114 With Beerwout II Van Egmond 1080-1158 with : M Dodo Van Egmond † M Wasboldt Van Egmond † M Allard Van Egmond 1110-1168 M Baldwin VII of Flanders Fleming 1091-1119 M Baldwin VII x, Count of Flanders 1093-1119 With Agnes Or Anne de Bretagne 1096-1116 M Freskin of Moray x 1107-/1166 With (Unknown) MacHeth ca 1109- with : M Hugh de Moravia ca 1132- M Andrew de Moravia ca 1134- M William Sutherland 1138-1204 F sosa Gisela of Burgundy x, [Marchioness of Montferrat] 1075-1135 With Fernando Perez de Trava Conde de Trastamara †
Gisela of Burgundy x, [Marchioness of Montferrat] 1075-1135 Married in 1090, Chambéry, Savoie, Rhone-Alpes, France, to sosa Humbert II x, [Count of Maurienne] 1066-1103 with F Adela Maurienne 1085- M Reginald de Savóie 1091-1150 F Adélaïde de Savoie, Reine des Francs 1092-1154 Married 3 August 1115, Paris, to Louis VI Le Gros x, Roi des Francs 1081-1137 with : M Philippe x, of France 1116-1131 M Louis VII x, Roi des Francs 1120-1180 M Henri de France, archevêque de Reims ca 1121- F Constance x, of France Countess of Toulouse 1122-1176 M Hugues ?, de France 1122-1188 M Robert of France x, [Count of Dreux] ca 1123-1185 M Philippe de France, archidiacre de Paris ca 1125-1161 M Pierre Ier x, de Courtenay 1126-1183
Adélaïde de Savoie, Reine des Francs 1092-1154 With Mathieu I de Montmorency, (Seigneur de Montmorency) ca 1090-1160
Adélaïde de Savoie, Reine des Francs 1092-1154 Relationship with ? ? M William de Savóie, of Liege ca 1094-1130 M Amédée III (Dit Le Croisé) De Savoie-De Bourgogne 1095-1148 With Mahaut D'Albon-De Hauteville 1108-1145 with : M Humbert III Graf von Maurienne 1136-1188 M Amadeus III de Bourgogne 1095-1148 M sosa Amadeo III x, Comte de Savoya 1095-1148 Married, Between July 1134 and 1135, to sosa Mahaut Mathilde d'Albon Comtesse d'Albon & Vienne 1108-1145 with : M Guillaume de SAVOIE † F Matilda de Maurienne Of de Savoy † F Elisa Savoia ca 1120-1172 F sosa Mafalda de Saboya, Reina consorte de Portugal 1125-1157 F Alix de Savoie Maurienne 1125- F Margarete Comtessa De Savoie ca 1130-1157 M Pedro Afonso 1134-1205 F Isabella Comtessa av Savoyen 1134- M sosa Umberto de Savoy, III 1136-1189 M Johann Comte De Savoie 1137- F Agnès Savoie 1138-1177 F Julienne (Giuliana) Abbess of St Andrews de Savoie 1139-1194 F Alix De Savoy ca 1139-
Amadeo III x, Comte de Savoya 1095-1148 With Adelaide Albon ca 1015- M Humbert de Savoy ca 1096-1131 M Guy De Savóie 1098-1130 F Adelaide De Maurienne 1100-1154 With Louis Capet 1081-1137 F Agnes Maurienne Princess Of Savoy 1102- Married about 1149, France, to Archambaud VII Bourbon 1100-1171 with : F Agnès (Guiberge) de Bourbon 1139-1170 M X Archambault 1140-1169 F Agnès Savoie ca 1103-1183 F Mathilde De Montferrat ca 1115- Married after 1121 to Alberto Marques De Parodi &Gavi ca 1112-/1166 F Agnes De Savoy dite de Maurienne † With Archambaud III Seigneur de Bourbon † F Donella de SAVOIE † With Othon Ier de VINTIMILLE † M Rinaldo de Savoy, provost of Saint-Maurice d'Aguno † F Berthe x †1095 With Living ? † M Raymond ? †1108 M sosa Raimundo de Borgoña, Conde 1065-1107 Married in 1091, Toledo, Castilla-La Mancha, Spain, to sosa Urraca I de León, Reina 1079-1126 with F Sancha Raimunda De León 1095-1159 F Sancha Princess Of Castile And Leon 1102/-1159 M sosa Alfonso VII de León, Rey 1105-1157 Married (1127/8), Castillo de Saldaña, to sosa Berenguela de Barcelona, Reina 1116-1149 with : M Ramón de Castilla 1136- M sosa Sancho III El Deseado de Castilla, Rey 1136-1158 F Constanza de Castilla 1136-1160 M sosa Fernando II de León, Rey 1137-1188 M García de Castilla 1142-1146 M Alfonso de Castilla 1144-1149 F Sancha de Castilla 1154-1208
Alfonso VII de León, Rey 1105-1157 Married in 1152, Soria, España, to Riquilda de Polonia, Castile 1140-1185 with : F Sancha of Castile Queen of Aragon 1155-1208 F Sancha De Castilla y Polonia Reine Consorte de Aragon † F Sancha de Castilla x †
Alfonso VII de León, Rey 1105-1157 With Gontroda Pérez 1106-1187 with : F Urraca "La Asturiana" Alfonso de Castilla 1132-1164
Alfonso VII de León, Rey 1105-1157 With Urraca Fernandez de Castro with : F Estefanía La Desdichada Alfonso †1180
Siblings M Gui de Brionne 1025-1069 F Alberada di Buonalbergo ca 1033-1122 Married after 1051 to sosa Robert Guiscard ca 1025-1085 M Hugues de Bourgogne 1037-1086 With Aldeberga De Scey † M Falcon de Bourgogne †
Paternal grand-parents, uncles and aunts M sosa Otte-Guillaume de Bourgogne ca 958-1026 married (974) F sosa Ermentrude de Roucy 958-1005 F Mathilde de Bourgogne 978-1005 married (989) F sosa Gerberga of Burgundy 985-1023 married (1002) 3 children M sosa Renaud I de Bourgogne 986-1057/ married (1016) 5 children M Guido Guy I Comte Macon De Burgundy ca 994-1006 with
F sosa Ermentrude de Roucy 958-1005 with M sosa Aubry II of Mâcon x ca 935-ca 982 F sosa Beatrice de Macon, Countess of Macon ca 980-1040 married (999) 2 children
Maternal grand-parents, uncles and aunts M sosa Richard II "Le Bon" of Normandy ca 970-1026 married F sosa Judith de Bretagne 982-1017 M Richard III of Normandy, (Duc de Normandie) ca 999-1027 married (1027) 1 child M sosa Robert I "The Magnificent" of Normandy, Duke 1000-1035 with 1 child F sosa Adélaïde de Normandie ca 1002- married (1016) 5 children F Mathilde of Normandy 1003- not married, Without posterity M Guillaume of Normandy, (Monk at Fecamp) ca 1007-1025 not married, Without posterity F X of Normandy 1010/-ca 1071 married (1031) 1 child
Sources Individual: FamilySearch Family Tree
William I "the Great" count of Burgundy's Timeline
1028 |
1028
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Bourgogne-Franche-Comté, France
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1047 |
1047
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Normandie, France
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1050 |
1050
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Burgundy, Bourgogne-Franche-Comté, France
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1050
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Poitou-Charentes,, Vienne, Nouvelle-Aquitaine, France
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1052 |
1052
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Bourgogne, France
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1057 |
1057
Age 29
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Count of, BURGUNDY, , France
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1057
Age 29
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Count of, BURGUNDY, , France
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1057
Age 29
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Count of, BURGUNDY, , France
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1060 |
1060
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Dijon, Cote d'Or, Bourgogne, France
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