Guy DE POITOU
Characteristics
Type | Value | Date | Place | Sources |
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name | Guy DE POITOU |
[1]
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Events
Type | Date | Place | Sources |
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death | 25. September 1086 | Chizé near Niort, Poitou, Duchy of Aquitaine
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[1]
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burial | église abbatiale de Saint-Jean, Poitiers, Duchy of Aquitaine
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[1]
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birth | 1023 |
[1]
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Parents
Guillaume DE POITOU | Agnes DE MÂCON |
Sources
1 | Foundation for Medieveal Geneology, Aquitaine, Dukes: Chapter 6: Dukes of Aquitaine, Comtes de Poitou
Author: Charles Cawley
Publication: Name: Medeival Lands; Location: Oak House, Vowchurch, Hereford, HR20RB, England; Date: 2001-2011;
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The first dukes of Aquitaine are recorded in primary sources in thelatter part of the 7th century, although it is unclear whether theirexistence is historically factual. From the early 8th century, we areon firmer ground, with the recording of the rebellion of Duke Eudesagainst Charles "Martel" in the Continuator of Fredegar, his deathbeing noted in [735]. His successor rulers in Aquitaine remainedrebellious during the succeeding decades, until their subjugation in768 by Pepin King of the Franks. The reconstruction of the family ofthese earliest dukes is based mainly on information contained in acharter of Charles II "le Chauve" King of the West Franks dated 30 Jan845, together with nine supposed later confirmation documents, whichpurports to confirm the possessions of the monastery of Sainte-Marie,Alarcon[1]. The details in these documents which recite earlierdonations to the monastery are unusually detailed and atypical ofother contemporary Carolingian charters, strongly suggesting that theyare spurious. If this is correct, the date of the fabrication is notknown. Jaurgain states that the document collection was firstpublished in 1694[2]. He highlights that Comte Vandregisile, supposedfounder of Alarcon, is first mentioned in Juan Tamayo de Salazar´swork on Spanish saints, published in 1658, and reports a suggestionthat Tamayo was the fabricator of the whole series of Alarcondocuments, the object being to assert a descent of the Gramont andBeaumont families from the Merovingians[3]. Jaurgain´s own view isthat the documents were fabricated in France, in the mid-17th century,to claim a Merovingian descent for the Mauléon-Barousse and Aspremontd´Orthe families[4]. Some of the genealogical information in theAlarcon documents is corroborated by other primary sources, includingthe Annales Metenses and the Continuator of Fredegar. Other parts ofthe data are clearly incorrect, for example the statement that BoggisDuke of Aquitaine was the son of Charibert II King of the Franks inAquitaine, the younger half-brother of the Merovingian King DagobertI. There remains a large part of the information in the documentswhich is uncorroborated elsewhere and whose accuracy cannot be judgeddefinitively. Because of this uncertainty, it has been decided toshow most of the relationships within the family of the first dukeswithin square brackets. The information so bracketed should thereforebe treated with considerable caution. The kingdom of Aquitaine was first created by the Carolingians in 781,when the future Emperor Louis I was crowned king, when still a smallchild, by Pope Hadrian I in Rome. Under the Ordinatio Imperiipromulgated by Emperor Louis in 817[5], his son Pepin was installed asking of Aquitaine. The Ordinatio specifies that the kingdom consistedof "Aequitaniam et Wasconiam et markam Tolosanam totam, et…comitatosquatuor…in Septimania Carcassensem, et in Burgundia Augustudunensem etAvalensem et Nivernensem". Viewed from our current perspective, thismay seem a small prize compared with the extensive territories insouthern Germany which were awarded to the emperor's third son Louis,but it gives some idea of the strategic importance of south-westernFrance at the time, particularly as the gateway to the Iberianpeninsula. The kingdom of Aquitaine became one of the pawns in theseries of rebellions by the sons of Emperor Louis against theirfather, parts of the territory being transferred back and forthbetween Pepin and his younger half-brother Charles during the 830s.Aquitaine was awarded to Charles II "le Chauve" King of the WestFranks under the 843 Treaty of Verdun, which partitioned theCarolingian Frankish territories between the three surviving sons ofEmperor Louis, although this allocation was challenged by the son ofthe deceased brother Pepin, who was proclaimed Pepin II King ofAquitaine and was recognised as such by his uncle in 845. Pepin IIwas deposed by his subjects in 848, and Aquitaine reverted to KingCharles. Aquitaine was combined with the French crown from theaccession of Louis II "le Bègue" King of France in 877. The extent to which the Carolingian kings of Aquitaine may havedelegated governing power to appointed dukes during the 9th century isuncertain. A reference has been found to "Bego" being appointed dukeof Aquitaine in 843. In addition, Rainulf I Comte de Poitou isrecorded as duke of Aquitaine in 852, and his son Rainulf II as dukein 888. Although it is not clear that these appointments amounted toa continuous series of dukes, they suggest that delegation to ducalappointees may have been the practice of the Carolingian rulers.Thereafter, no reference to a duke of Aquitaine has been identified inthe primary sources so far consulted until 909, when Guillaume, son ofBernard "Plantevelue" Marquis of Gothia, is recorded as duke. The present document also sets out the comtes de Poitou, whose historyis closely linked to the later dukes of Aquitaine. Abbon was thefirst recorded appointee as such in 778, when Charles I King of theFranks granted him jurisdiction over the towns of Poitiers andAngoulême. Poitou passed to Comte Rainulf in [839/44]. Control overthe duchy of Aquitaine settled into the family of the comtes de Poitouin [959]. The combined duchy of Aquitaine/county of Poitou evolvedinto a major international power on the European political scene inthe 11th century. This is demonstrated particularly by the marriageof Agnès de Poitou, sister of Guillaume VII Duke of Aquitaine, toEmperor Heinrich III in 1043, which represented a major boost ofprestige for the duchy. Geographic proximity meant that Aquitainealso became the natural ally of the kings of Castile and Aragon intheir struggle against the Moors, as demonstrated by several marriagesinto the Spanish royal families during the latter part of the 11thcentury. The same family continued to govern the county/duchy untilthe marriage of Eléonore heiress of Aquitaine to Henri Comte d'Anjou,who later succeeded as Henry II King of England, after which theterritory was ruled by the English kings until the Hundred Years War. [1] RHGF VIII, pp. 470-4, and Llorente, J. A. (1807) NoticiasHistóricas de las tres provincias vascongadas Álava, Guipúzcoa yVizcaya (Madrid), Vol. III, 7, pp. 38-80. [2] Jaurgain, J. de (1898) La Vasconie, étude historique et critique,première partie (Pau), p. 71, citing Cardinal de Aguirre (1693-94)Collectio Conciliorum Hispaniæ (Rome), t. III, p. 131. [3] Jaurgain (1898), p. 81, citing Tamayo de Salazar, J. (1651-59)Anamnesis sive commemoration omnium sanctorum Hispanorum (Lyon), t. V,p. 392. [4] Jaurgain (1898), p. 84. [5] MGH LL Capitularia regum Francorum, p. 198. |
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Title | Familienstammbaum Engelken |
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Id | 46985 |
Upload date | 2014-12-22 06:03:51.0 |
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