Brief   lives of women who reigned or ruled in their own  right or by marriage   by providing their a)  proprietary titles, b)  parents/pedigree, c)   patrimony and properties,  d) persona or  personality, e) powers   exercised, f) patronages and g)  progeny or  posterity.
ADELAIS DE NORMANDY (1029-1087/90) 
Adeliza, Countess of Aumale, Adelaide of Aumale
Proprietary Title:  Countess of Aumale, c1082
Notes:    "Adeliza, Countess of Aumale was born   illegitimately in 1029. She  was  the daughter of Robert I, 6th Duc de   Normandie and Herleva de   Falaise. She married, firstly, Enguerrand III   d'Aumale, Comte de   Ponthieu, son of Hugues d'Aumale, Comte de Ponthieu   and Berthe (?),   before 1053. She married, secondly, Lambert II de   Boulogne, Comte de   Lens, son of Eustace I, Comte de Boulogne and Maud de   Louvain, circa   1053. She married, thirdly, Odo II, Comte de Champagne,   son of Stephen   II, Comte de Champagne and Adele (?), circa 1060. She   died between   1087 and 1090. 
ADELAIS DE VENISY (d.1221) 
Proprietary Title:  Lady of Venisy 
Parents/Pedigree:  Daughter of Anseau, Lord of Venisy 
Posterity/Progeny:    Married in 1167 (1) Andre de   Brienne, Lord of Ramerupt, with whom  she  had issue; married after 1180   (2) Gaucher de Jaoigny, Lord of   Chateau-Renard.  Her son Erard de   Brienne inherited Venisy from her   and Ramerupt from his father.
Adelasia di Torres (1207-1259) 
Proprietary Titles:  Judge of Logudoro, 1236-1259; Judge of Torres, 1236-1259; Judge of Gallura, 1238-1259
Notes:   "Adelasia of Torres, queen  of Sardinia in   the earlier half of the  thirteenth century. She was the  daughter of   Mariano, judge or lord of  Torres...and of Agnes, daughter  of Guglielmo,   marquis of Massa and  judge of Cagliari...By the death  of Mariano and   that of his son and  successor Barisone, who was killed  in a rebellion in   1236, and also  by a solemn election made according  to the customary   forms by the  clergy and the people, the sovereignty  of Torres passed to    Adelasia..." (Society for the Diffusion..., pp. 334-335)
Notes:   "...In   1259 Adelasia,  mistress of Torres, died without heirs;  her  judgeship   ceased to  exist, with the majority falling under the  lordship of the   Genoese signori on the island, while Sassari remained independent and moved in the orbit of Pisa, which sent it a podesta each year...."  (Abulafia, p. 457)
Notes:   "Frederick dismissed his  army, being only anxious to keep the    Germans;  he marched by way of  Soncino to Cremona.  At this time he    knighted his gallant son Enzio,  who thenceforward became his  right-hand.    A brilliant career of little  more than ten years was now  opening for   this ill-fated youth.  Enzio  was sent into Sardinia with  a body of   knights, there to marry  Adelasia, the heiress of that  Kingdom.  Her   former husband, Ubaldo,  Judge of Gallura, had done  homage to Rome,   acknowledging that he held  his rights, and those of  his wife, from the   Apostolic See...."  (Kington-Oliphant, p. 80) 
ADELE D'ANJOU 
Proprietary Title:  Co-Ruler of Vendome, c1017-1031 
Parents/Pedigree:  Daughter of Foulques III of Anjou and Elisabeth, eventual heiress of Bouchard I the Venerable, Count of Vendome.
Progeny/Posterity:    She married around 1005 Bodon of   Nevers who became Count of Vendome,   1017-1023, in her right.  Their son   was Bouchard II the Bald, Count  of  Vendome, 1023-1028.
Notes:    "...Since Adele's mother was Elizabeth, daughter of Count Burchard    the  Venerable of Vendome, Bodo's wife was the heiress of the county of     Vendome.  When Burchard's son and heir, Bishop Rainald of Paris, died     sometime between 1016 and 1020, Adele became the sole heir to the     country.  Instead of Bodo receiving any rights to Vendome, however,     Adele transferred the whole honor of Vendome to her father, Fulk, during     the minority of Bodo's eldest son, Burchard II the Bald.  In 1031,     supposedly at the will of the 'boy' Burchard, his mother adele, and  King    Henry of France, the honor of Vendome was given to Fulk Nerra's  son,    Geoffrey Manrtel.  Burchard and his mother henceforth held the  county    from Geoffrey.  Shortly thereafter first Burchard and then his  father    Bodo died, leaving he second son, Fulk l'Oison, to hold  Vendome from    Geoffrey Martel.  Fulk l'Oison would eventually become  count of    Vendome.  (Jessee, p. 23)
ADELE DE SELVESSE
a.k.a. Adele de Furnes
[Fam1]
a.k.a. Adele de Furnes
[Fam1]
Proprietary Title:  Lady of Ardres
Parents/Pedigree: Daughter of Everard de Furnes 
Partner/Progeny:  Married about 1050 Eustache, Lord of Fiennes, with whom she had Conan.
Notes:  "The ancient fortress (i.e., Selvesse), together with the wide domain surrounding it, had, through the death ofher relations, come into the possession of a young demoiselle, named Adela, a descendant from the Seigneurs of Bourbourg, and niece at the time to De Framery, Bishop of Terouane.  Eustache, count of Guisnes, the Lord Paramount of Artois and Picardy, demanded the hand of the young heiress of Selvesse in marriage; but she, by the advice of her wily uncle, who deemed the interests of even his niece, as a matter of no moment, when compared to those of his church, was induced to keep him in dalliance and suspense...and, finally, to assign all her possessions to the church of Terouane, without reserve,she herself being placed under its special protection...."  (Calton, 1852, pp. 137-138) 
ADELINE DE MEULAN (1014/20-1081) 
Proprietary Title:  Countess of Meulan, Viscountess of Vitry & Lady of Norton, 1069-1081, succeeding her brother Hugues II of Meuand.
Parents/Pedigree:    Daughter  of Galeran III of Meulan  (d.1069), and of Oda de Conteville.  "...She was heiress of   Meulan after  the death of her brother  Hugues Comte de Meulan...."  (FMG) 
Posterity/Progeny:  She married, c1048, Roger de Beaumont (d.1094), a.k.a. Roger de Vieilles, or Roger the Bearded., Lord of Beaumont-le-Roger and of Pont-Audemer.  
Notesle-Roger after him), established himself and, about 1088,     founded a collegiate church there.  He took no part in the conquest of     England, being one of those left by William to watch over the security     of the duchy; though by the time of Domesday he had possessions --  not    of any great extent -- in Dorset and Gloucestershire.  Besides   fastening   his control upon the valley of the Risle, his great   contribution to  the  family's fortune was his marriage to Adeline,   daughter and heiress  of  the count of Meulan.  Since Meulan was in the   Vexin Francais---a   district then in dispute between te duke of   Normandy and the king of   France, though the king was winning---this   marriage soon gave him an   interest outside Normandy towards Paris;    and his father-in-law is said   to have had some connection with the   ducal family of Normandy.  It was   thus, in all respects, a most   profitable match...."  (Patourel, pp. 12-14)
Notes:    "Roger de Beaumont entered into a  marriage...with Adeline, sister   and  eventual heiress of Count Hugh of  Meulan.  On Hugh's childless  death   in late 1880, Robert acquired by  right of his mother the county  of   Meulan, which may not have been  particularly extensive, but which  made   up for it by being a strategic  object of desire for both  Normans and   Capetians.  Meulan, with its  bridge and island fortress  in the Seine   between Mantes and Poissy, and  its sprawling hillside  town on the right   bank of the great river, was  an independent power  which in 1080 had   already proved itself dangerous  to the  Capetians...."  (Fleming and Pope, p. 92)
ADELISA DE SOISSONS
[Gen1] 
Proprietary Title:  Countess of Soissons
Parents/Pedigree:  Daughter of Gui, Count of Soissons.
Partner/Progeny:  Nocher II, Count of Bar-sur-Aube, with whom she had Renaud I (d.1057), Count of Soissons.
ADRIENNE D'ESTOUTEVILLE (1512-1560) 
a. k. a. Adrienne de Bourbon 
Proprietary   Titles:   Duchess of Estouteville, Lady of Hambye, of Gace and of   Briquebec.   ["The family of Stuteville, or d'Estuteville, takes its   name from the   lordship of Stouteville, near Yvetot, in the Pays de   Caux...."] 
Progeny/Posterity:  Married, in  1534, to Francis de Bourbon, a   prince of the blood  royal, whose son  was created 'Duc et Pair,' under   the title of Duc  d'Etouteville...."  (Gurney, pp. 94-95)
ADVISA DE SABLE (1035-1067) 
a.k.a. Advisa the White, Hedwige de Sable, Blanche du Maine, Blanche de Beaumont-le-Vicomte 
Properietary Title:  Lady of Sable.
Parents/Pedigree:    Only daughter and eventual heiress of Geoffroy de Sable 988-1063),  Sire  de Sable and Vicomte du Mans, and of Berthe (de Craon?)  Montmorency. 
Partner/Progeny:  Married in 1040-1050 Robert de Nevers, Seigneur de Craon, and Seigneur de Sable, in right of his wife. 
Notes:    "In some unexplained fashion Robert's wife Advisa came to be the only   surviving heir to Sable.  Her father Geoffrey and his wife Adelais had   several sons, the eldest of whom, Drogo, authorized the donation to   Solesmes.  Two other brothers, Buchard and Lisiard, were with Drogo to   witness the count of Maine's confirmation of the donation. Robert and   Advisa later made a major donation for the soul of her brother   Geoffrey.  Aside from this last son Geoffrey, whom Angot identified as a   monk of Marmoutier, it is not known what became of the male heirs of   Sable.  Considering the heavy fighting in Maine in the late 1040s and   early 1050s it is quite possible that Drogo fell in combat.  It is   certain, however, that when Robert married Advisa he became the   uncontested dominus of Sable by virtue of his wife's hereditary claim."  (Jessee, p. 45) 
Notes:    "Robert's   continued devotion to Geoffrey Martel was splendidly   rewarded with the   gift of Sable.  The fortress, so crucial to Angevin   defense on the   northwestern march, came into Robert's possession when   he married the   castle's heiress, Advisa, called Blanca, 'the White.'    This was probably   done around 1052, but certainly before 29  December  1069...."  (Jessee, p. 43)
AENOR DE MONTFAUCON (d.1250) 
Proprietary Title:  Lady of Erry 
AENOR DE SULLY 
Proprietary Title:  Lady of La Motte
AELFGIFU OF NORTHUMBRIA
Power Exercised:  Queen Regent of Norway, c1029-1035; Queen Regent of England, 1035-1040.
AELFWYN OF MERCIA
Power Exercised:  Queen of Mercia, 918-919
Aethelflaed of Mercia (d.918) 
Proprietary Title:  Lady of the Mercians, 911-918 
Parents/Pedigree:    "Eldest   daughter of Alfred the Great, sister of Edward the Elder,   and aunt and   fosterer of Aethelstan, Aethelflaed of Mercia (d.918) led troops against   the Vikings, built forts, endowed churches, issued   charters, dealt   with Irish-Norwegian pressures, and received the   submission of the men   of York. When her husband Aethelred died (911),   she became the sole   political and military authority in Mercia... (In   fact, given   Aethelred's apparent illness and incapacity, Aethelflaed   was de facto in   power beginning c.902.)...." (Schaus, p. 10)
AGATHE DE PIERREFONDS 
Proprietary Title:  Lady of Pierrefonds 
AGNES DE BAUDEMONT (d.c1219) 
Proprietary Title:  Lady of Braine 
Parents/Pedigree:  Daughter of Guy de Baudemont, Lord of Braine, and Alice 
Progeny/Posterity:    Married (1) c1151 Milon III of   Bar, with whom she Walter of Bar,   William of Bar, and Perenolle   (d.1189), Countess of Bar; (2) Robert I   of France, Count of Dreux, with   whom she had Robert II of Dreux and   Alice of Dreux.
Notes:   "...Agnes,  daughter of Andrew de Baudemont, was lady in her own right  of  Braine-le-Comte (near Soissons); like Dreux, it indirectly acquired  the  status of a county through Agnes' first marriage to the count of   Bar-sur-Seine."  (Power, p. 214)
AGNES DE BEAUMONT-AU-MAINE (1225-1301)
Proprietary Titles:  Viscountess of Beaumont-au-Maine, Lady of La Fleche, Fresnay, Sainte-Suzanne and Chateau-Gontier
AGNES DE COURTENAY (1133-1185) 
Proprietary Title: Lady of Toron 
Parents/Pedigree: Daughter of Joscelin II de Courtenay, Count of Edessa 
Progeny/Posterity: Hugues d'Ibelin (d.1171), Lord of Ramlah. 
AGNES DE GARLANDE (c1100-1143) 
Proprietary Title:  Countess of Rochefort 
Parents/Pedigree: Anselme de Garlande, and of the daughter of Guy de Rochefort 
Progeny/Posterity:    Married   in 1127 Amaury III (c1070-1136-37), Count of Montfort and  of  Evreux,   with whom she had 1) Agnes (d.1181), Lady of Gournay; and  2)  Simon III   de Montfort (d. c1188).
Notes:    "...Through his third marriage, to Agnes   de Garlande, Amaury III de   Montfort (d. 1137-38) had acquired   Rochefort-en-Yvelines, whose   previous lord Hugh de Crecy had sometimes   been designated 'count'; by   inheritance he also became Count Amaury I of   Evreux.  At the death of   his son Count Simon in 1181, the cadet branch   received the French   lands including, so Robert of Torigni tells us,  the  'county' of   Rochefort, and thereafter this branch often appeared as   'counts of   Montfort'...."  (Power, p. 216)
Notes:    "...Amaury's own marriages reflected his   established French   position...  [H]is third wife was Agnes de Garlande,   niece of Stephen   de Garlande, chancellor and seneschal of France, and   this match   brought him Gournay-sur-Marne and Rochefort-en-Yvelines."  (Power, p. 229)
AGNES DE SULLY 
Proprietary Title:  Lady of Jars
AGNES DE CHALON (c1130-?) 
Proprietary Title:  Lady of Montpensier
Personal/Family Background:  Agnes was the daughter of Archambaud IX of Bourbon and of Yolande I, Comtesse de Nevers, Auxerre and Tonnerre.
Proprietary Title: Lady of Bourbon, 1262-1287
Proprietary Title: Lady of Bourbon, 1262-1287
Partner/Progeny:  She married, in 1247, Jean de Burgundy, Sire de Charolais (1231-1268) with whom she had an only childBeatrixde Bourbon.
"The male line of the ruling house of Bourbon-Dampierre came to an end in 1249 with the death of Archambaud IX, who was succeeded by his older sister Mahaut and then a younger sister, Agnes. The latter's daughter Beatrix married Robert, count of Clermont-en-Beauvaisis, the sixth son of Louis IX and Marguerite of Provence. The couple inherited the Bourbonnais at the death of Agnes in 1283. Their son Louis I (1280-1342) inherited the Bourbonnais from Beatrix in 1310 and Clermont from Robert in 1318...."
"The male line of the ruling house of Bourbon-Dampierre came to an end in 1249 with the death of Archambaud IX, who was succeeded by his older sister Mahaut and then a younger sister, Agnes. The latter's daughter Beatrix married Robert, count of Clermont-en-Beauvaisis, the sixth son of Louis IX and Marguerite of Provence. The couple inherited the Bourbonnais at the death of Agnes in 1283. Their son Louis I (1280-1342) inherited the Bourbonnais from Beatrix in 1310 and Clermont from Robert in 1318...."
AGNES DE DONZY (1199-1225)
Proprietary Title:  Lady of Donzy, 1222-1225 
Property:
Parents/Pedigree:  Daughter of Herve IV of Donzy and Mahaut de Courtenay 
Partner/Progeny:    Married (1)   Philippe of France, son of Louis VIII of France and   Blanche of Castile;   married (2) Guy de Chatillon, son of Gaucher III   de Chatillon and   Elisabeth d'Avesnes, Countess of Saint-Pol, with who,   she had a daughter   Yolande de Chatillon, who inherited Donzy. 
AGNES OF DUNBAR
a.k.a. Black Agnes 
Proprietary Title:  Countess of March, c1338
AGNES DE FAUCIGNY
Notes:    "...Peter married Agnes, heiress of the barony of Faucigny which     province ultimately became annexed to the dominions of the counts of     Savoy...."  (SDUK, Vol. 1-2, pp. 385-386)
Notes:    "...Peter II, son of Thomas I had, in 1233, married Agnes, heiress    of  Faucigny, so that there was good hope that her estates, which were     encompassed on all sides by Savoy, should be added to the possession  of    the latter house.  Peter however had no other issue than a  daughter,    named Beatrix; and this, in an evil hour, he gave to the  Dauphin,  Guigues   VII.  The latter had a son, John, who died in 1281;  and a  daughter,   Anne, who had married Humbert, Lord of La Tour du  Pin.  The  heritage of   Faucigny not only thus escaped from the grasp  of Savoy,  but was added  to  the estates of an hereditary foe...."  (Gallenga, p. 258)
AGNES DE POITOU (1024-1077) 
Parents/Pedigree: Guillaume V the Pious, Duke of Aquitaine and Count of Poitou, and Agnes of Burgundy 
Power Exercised:   Duchess of   Bavaria, Duchess of Swabia, Queen of Burgundy, Queen of   Germany, Holy   Roman Empress, 1043-1056, as the wife of Emperor   Heinrich III (called   the Black or the Pious); Duchess of Bavaria,   1056-1061; Regent for her   son the Holy Roman Emperor Heinrich IV,   1056-1062
AGNES VON VELDENZ (1258-?) 
Proprietary Title:      Countess of Veldenz, 1260-1277.  She inherited the County of  Veldenz    when the male-line died out with her father, Gerlach V of  Veldenz, in    1260.
Progeny/Posterity:   She    married Heinrich of Geroldseck with whom she founded the second  line of    the Counts of Veldenz known as Veldenz-Geroldseck.
AGNES I DE NEVERS (1170-1192)
[Bio1] 
Proprietary Titles:  Countess of Nevers, of Auxerre and of Tonnerre, 1181-1192.
Parents/Pedigree:  Guy, Count of Nevers, of Auxere and of Tonnerre, and of Mathilde de Bourgogne.
Partner/Progeny:  Married 1184 Pierre II de Courtenay.
Notes:    "...When the male line of the counts of Nevers died out in 1181, the     king exercised wardship over the county and took the young heiress,     Agnes, into his custody at the royal court.  In 1184 he married her to     his cousin, Pierre de Courtenay, taking as his recompense the fief of     Montargis in the Gatinais...."  (Baldwin, pp. 26-27)
AGNES II DE DONZY
(1199-1225) 
Proprietary Title:  Lady of Donzy, 1222-1225; Countess of Nevers, Auxerre and Tonnerre.
REFERENCES 
Freeman, Edward (1869).  The History of the Norman Conquest of England, Its Causes and Its Results (Vol. III). Oxford: Clarendon Press.
 
No comments:
Post a Comment