• Beatrice of Vermandois?

    From mike davis@21:1/5 to All on Tue Jul 26 01:42:17 2022
    This was prompted by an earlier discussion about the Robertians.

    Who was the mother of Hugh the Great [d956]?

    This seems like an easy q to answer, as in 931 Hugh names his late parents
    as Robert and Beatrice. Whats confusing me is that on many different
    websites including wiki, it says Roberts first wife was Aelis [ref to Europaische stamtafeln series, vol 2, 10] and his 2nd was Beatrice of Vermandois dau of Heribert I who was the mother of Hugh the Great.

    However the evidence suggests Beatrice was Roberts first wife, and Aelis of Vermandois his 2nd.

    That is Robert married firstly Beatrice who was the mother of both HG
    [d956] and presumably also a daughter who married Heribert II, and perhaps
    HGs sister Emma as well [d934] wife of King Raoul [d936], and then Robert married this Aelis, [although its seems her name was Adela] sometime
    around or before 907.

    As I understand it a number of sources say that Robert married a sister of Heribert II without naming her and that Heribert II married a daughter of Robert. This daughter was the mother of Heribert IIs children but her name
    is also never mentioned by contemporary sources but is assumed
    to be Adela like her daughter who married the count of Flanders. She was
    alive in 931.

    As many lines lead from these 2 women it seems important to sort this out,
    not least because if the reverse is true, then it means the Capetians had Carolingian ancestry in the Xe, something it seems chroniclers thought they lacked until Louis VIII [or was it VI?].

    Mike

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  • From Stewart Baldwin@21:1/5 to mike davis on Tue Jul 26 08:06:50 2022
    On Tuesday, July 26, 2022 at 3:42:18 AM UTC-5, mike davis wrote:
    This was prompted by an earlier discussion about the Robertians.

    Who was the mother of Hugh the Great [d956]?

    This seems like an easy q to answer, as in 931 Hugh names his late parents
    as Robert and Beatrice. Whats confusing me is that on many different
    websites including wiki, it says Roberts first wife was Aelis [ref to Europaische stamtafeln series, vol 2, 10] and his 2nd was Beatrice of Vermandois dau of Heribert I who was the mother of Hugh the Great.

    However the evidence suggests Beatrice was Roberts first wife, and Aelis of Vermandois his 2nd.

    That is Robert married firstly Beatrice who was the mother of both HG
    [d956] and presumably also a daughter who married Heribert II, and perhaps HGs sister Emma as well [d934] wife of King Raoul [d936], and then Robert married this Aelis, [although its seems her name was Adela] sometime
    around or before 907.

    As I understand it a number of sources say that Robert married a sister of Heribert II without naming her and that Heribert II married a daughter of Robert. This daughter was the mother of Heribert IIs children but her name
    is also never mentioned by contemporary sources but is assumed
    to be Adela like her daughter who married the count of Flanders. She was alive in 931.

    As many lines lead from these 2 women it seems important to sort this out, not least because if the reverse is true, then it means the Capetians had Carolingian ancestry in the Xe, something it seems chroniclers thought they lacked until Louis VIII [or was it VI?].

    This matter is discussed on the "Henry Project" pages for Robert I and Beatrix.

    https://fasg.org/projects/henryproject/data/rober101.htm https://fasg.org/projects/henryproject/data/beatr001.htm

    Stewart Baldwin

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  • From Peter Stewart@21:1/5 to mike davis on Wed Jul 27 09:57:36 2022
    On 26-Jul-22 6:42 PM, mike davis wrote:
    This was prompted by an earlier discussion about the Robertians.

    Who was the mother of Hugh the Great [d956]?

    This seems like an easy q to answer, as in 931 Hugh names his late parents
    as Robert and Beatrice. Whats confusing me is that on many different
    websites including wiki, it says Roberts first wife was Aelis [ref to Europaische stamtafeln series, vol 2, 10] and his 2nd was Beatrice of Vermandois dau of Heribert I who was the mother of Hugh the Great.

    However the evidence suggests Beatrice was Roberts first wife, and Aelis of Vermandois his 2nd.

    That is Robert married firstly Beatrice who was the mother of both HG
    [d956] and presumably also a daughter who married Heribert II, and perhaps HGs sister Emma as well [d934] wife of King Raoul [d936], and then Robert married this Aelis, [although its seems her name was Adela] sometime
    around or before 907.

    This confusion may be due to contradictory assertions in Christian
    Settipani's _La préhistoire des Capétiens_ (1993): on p. 389 Emma is described as "fille de Rodbert, duc des Francs, et de Béatrix de
    Vermandois", but on p. 408 Emma is placed as the second daughter "du
    premier lit", whose mother is given on p. 406 as "Ne, d'origine inconnue".

    As I understand it a number of sources say that Robert married a sister of Heribert II without naming her and that Heribert II married a daughter of Robert. This daughter was the mother of Heribert IIs children but her name
    is also never mentioned by contemporary sources but is assumed
    to be Adela like her daughter who married the count of Flanders. She was alive in 931.

    As many lines lead from these 2 women it seems important to sort this out, not least because if the reverse is true, then it means the Capetians had Carolingian ancestry in the Xe, something it seems chroniclers thought they lacked until Louis VIII [or was it VI?].

    It was Louis VI. As for Beatrix, Stewart Baldwin has provided links to
    his concise discussion of the problem in Henry Project pages. A few
    further points may be of interest.

    First, the name Beatrix was not unexampled in this lady or exclusive to
    her descendants and it does not mean "she who blesses" - these old
    mistakes were unfortunately repeated by Constance Bouchard. Historians
    assuming that whatever they know is all that needs to be known on any
    subject can be a menace, although Bouchard usually does better than she
    did on this matter.

    Beatrix was the name of a Roman martyr of the fourth century whose
    relics were translated with those of her brothers from the Generosa
    cemetery to a new chapel of St Paul attached to the church of Santa
    Bibiana in February 683 under the papacy of Leo II. The name is derived
    from 'viatrix', meaning a female wayfarer. There was apparently a minor
    cult of St Beatrix in the Berry region, from where Robert's wife perhaps originated. A namesake of hers was the wife of Acfred II, viscount of Châtellerault, in the late 10th century - this lady was almost certainly
    not descended from Robert and his Beatrix, but may have been related to her.

    The charter dated 26 March 931 in which Robert's son Hugo Magnus named
    his mother as Beatrix also states that his allod at
    Châtillon(-sur-Loire) in the pagus of Bourges had been inherited through
    her ("alodum juris nostri, quem ex materna hereditate jure et legaliter
    nec non quieto ordine possidere videmur, Castellionum nomine ... situm
    in pago Biturigensi"). From Châtillon-sur-Loire it is roughly the same distance, approximately 80-100 km, to Bourges (south-west), Orléans (north-west) and Auxerre (north-east).

    The charter in which her name is abbreviated as "Be." concerns
    restitution by Ebbo of Déols (killed in battle 937) to Saint-Aignan d'Orléans, paying compensation and an annual rent for the return to him
    and his son until their deaths of a villa belonging to the abbey that he
    had unjustly taken. This villa had been given to Saint-Aignan by Robert
    for the souls of himself and his wife Beatrix along with the welfare of
    their son Hugo, suggesting that she and consequently her child may have
    had a family connection to the place which Ebbo of Déols later
    expropriated and wanted to retain.

    If speculation about the possible parentage of Robert's wife Beatrix is compelling for some, it may be a more plausible bet to guess that she
    was the sister or paternal aunt of Ebbo, the greatest lord in Berry of
    his time, than to persist in cobbling her together with the Vermandois
    family.

    Peter Stewart



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  • From mike davis@21:1/5 to Stewart Baldwin on Thu Jul 28 09:20:56 2022
    On Tuesday, July 26, 2022 at 4:06:52 PM UTC+1, Stewart Baldwin wrote:
    On Tuesday, July 26, 2022 at 3:42:18 AM UTC-5, mike davis wrote:
    This was prompted by an earlier discussion about the Robertians.

    Who was the mother of Hugh the Great [d956]?

    This seems like an easy q to answer, as in 931 Hugh names his late parents as Robert and Beatrice. Whats confusing me is that on many different websites including wiki, it says Roberts first wife was Aelis [ref to Europaische stamtafeln series, vol 2, 10] and his 2nd was Beatrice of Vermandois dau of Heribert I who was the mother of Hugh the Great.

    However the evidence suggests Beatrice was Roberts first wife, and Aelis of Vermandois his 2nd.

    That is Robert married firstly Beatrice who was the mother of both HG [d956] and presumably also a daughter who married Heribert II, and perhaps HGs sister Emma as well [d934] wife of King Raoul [d936], and then Robert married this Aelis, [although its seems her name was Adela] sometime
    around or before 907.

    As I understand it a number of sources say that Robert married a sister of Heribert II without naming her and that Heribert II married a daughter of Robert. This daughter was the mother of Heribert IIs children but her name is also never mentioned by contemporary sources but is assumed
    to be Adela like her daughter who married the count of Flanders. She was alive in 931.

    As many lines lead from these 2 women it seems important to sort this out, not least because if the reverse is true, then it means the Capetians had Carolingian ancestry in the Xe, something it seems chroniclers thought they lacked until Louis VIII [or was it VI?].
    This matter is discussed on the "Henry Project" pages for Robert I and Beatrix.

    https://fasg.org/projects/henryproject/data/rober101.htm https://fasg.org/projects/henryproject/data/beatr001.htm

    Stewart Baldwin

    Yes this seems very clear. The trouble is that on the net, Beatrix mother of Hugo
    is assumed everywhere to be the unnamed daugther of Heribert II, and this has caused a terrible muddle.

    Mike

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  • From Peter Stewart@21:1/5 to mike davis on Fri Jul 29 10:23:38 2022
    On 29-Jul-22 2:20 AM, mike davis wrote:
    On Tuesday, July 26, 2022 at 4:06:52 PM UTC+1, Stewart Baldwin wrote:
    On Tuesday, July 26, 2022 at 3:42:18 AM UTC-5, mike davis wrote:
    This was prompted by an earlier discussion about the Robertians.

    Who was the mother of Hugh the Great [d956]?

    This seems like an easy q to answer, as in 931 Hugh names his late parents >>> as Robert and Beatrice. Whats confusing me is that on many different
    websites including wiki, it says Roberts first wife was Aelis [ref to
    Europaische stamtafeln series, vol 2, 10] and his 2nd was Beatrice of
    Vermandois dau of Heribert I who was the mother of Hugh the Great.

    However the evidence suggests Beatrice was Roberts first wife, and Aelis of Vermandois his 2nd.

    That is Robert married firstly Beatrice who was the mother of both HG
    [d956] and presumably also a daughter who married Heribert II, and perhaps >>> HGs sister Emma as well [d934] wife of King Raoul [d936], and then Robert >>> married this Aelis, [although its seems her name was Adela] sometime
    around or before 907.

    As I understand it a number of sources say that Robert married a sister of >>> Heribert II without naming her and that Heribert II married a daughter of >>> Robert. This daughter was the mother of Heribert IIs children but her name >>> is also never mentioned by contemporary sources but is assumed
    to be Adela like her daughter who married the count of Flanders. She was >>> alive in 931.

    As many lines lead from these 2 women it seems important to sort this out, >>> not least because if the reverse is true, then it means the Capetians had >>> Carolingian ancestry in the Xe, something it seems chroniclers thought they >>> lacked until Louis VIII [or was it VI?].
    This matter is discussed on the "Henry Project" pages for Robert I and Beatrix.

    https://fasg.org/projects/henryproject/data/rober101.htm
    https://fasg.org/projects/henryproject/data/beatr001.htm

    Stewart Baldwin

    Yes this seems very clear. The trouble is that on the net, Beatrix mother of Hugo
    is assumed everywhere to be the unnamed daugther of Heribert II, and this has caused a terrible muddle.

    Constance Bouchard wrongly thought that Robert I's wife Beatrix the
    first woman recorded with this name and that it was a version of the Carolingian Berta, which she is called in one source perhaps from the unfamiliarity of Beatrix. A tendency to link names and persons with the
    most familiar similarities/connections that spring to mind has plagued genealogy from medieval times and is not likely to stop any time soon.
    Bouchard claimed that Beatrix is derived from the past participle of the
    verb 'beare' (to bless), while noting that the male form of this,
    'beator', is absent from Latin sources; she considered that Beatrix was probably a late, post-classical form. but as pointed out upthread, it is actually a form of Viatrix that was used from the late-7th century for
    the Roman saint, quite probably from a facile association with blessing.

    As for the Vermandois muddle, this is now stuck fast in the dried mud of centuries and will perhaps never be corrected. It was taken up by Du
    Bouchet in the 17th century, perhaps from misunderstanding the
    early-12th century chronicle of Saint-Pierre-le-Vif from Sens where
    Robert is said to have married a sister of Heribert (without naming her)
    who was mother to Hugo Magnus ("Habebat enim ipse Rotbertus sororem
    istius Herberti in conjugio, de qua ortus est Hugo Magnus"). Robert of
    Torigni (not exactly the most reliable oracle for genealogies from the
    past) asserted that Hugo Magnus was born to a daughter of Heribert count
    of Peronne ("natus ex filia Herberti comitis Paronne").

    Although intermarriage between these two families is likely enough, a
    simple misunderstanding is plausible, for instance, if the later authors
    were taking their information from a document in which Robert was
    referred to as 'cognatus' of Heribert, interpreted as meaning
    'brother-in-law' when it could have meant his 'father-in-law' - the
    latter relationship, alone, is given on the better authority of Flodoard.

    Karl Ferdinand Werner noted that Hugo Magnus named his illegitimate son
    (later bishop of Auxerre) Heribert; however, it is far from certain that
    this bastard child was named for the father's maternal grandfather.
    Christian Settipani asserted that the name of Robert I's wife Beatrix
    and her filiation as a daughter of Heribert I of Vermandois were
    'parfaitement assurés ainsi que l'a montré depuis K.F. Werner'. But
    Werner had established only that the name Beatrix was correct, while
    failing to substantiate with any credible source his argument from
    assumption that she was a daughter of Heribert I of Vermandois. For
    evidence that Robert I married twice he relied on the highly dubious
    notion that 'germana' used alternately with 'soror' in an act of the
    chapter of Saint-Martin de Tours must have meant a paternal half-sister
    as opposed to a full sibling of Robert's son Hugo Magnus.

    However, examples of the same variation of terms for full siblings can
    be found in diplomatic from Touraine, for instance in the undated
    foundation charter of Saint-Martin-du-Vieux-Bellême priory: "Odo quoque,
    regis Francorum Henrici germanus ... Odo, frater regis Henrici" - Eudes
    was undoubtedly the full-brother of King Henri I. There is no solid
    evidence - or for that matter any good circumstantial reason from
    supposed comparative ages - to hold that Emma was other than a full
    sibling to Hugo Magnus, and to the wife of Heribert I of Vermandois.

    Peter Stewart


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  • From Peter Stewart@21:1/5 to Peter Stewart on Fri Jul 29 11:22:59 2022
    On 29-Jul-22 10:23 AM, Peter Stewart wrote:
    On 29-Jul-22 2:20 AM, mike davis wrote:
    On Tuesday, July 26, 2022 at 4:06:52 PM UTC+1, Stewart Baldwin wrote:
    On Tuesday, July 26, 2022 at 3:42:18 AM UTC-5, mike davis wrote:
    This was prompted by an earlier discussion about the Robertians.

    Who was the mother of Hugh the Great [d956]?

    This seems like an easy q to answer, as in 931 Hugh names his late
    parents
    as Robert and Beatrice. Whats confusing me is that on many different
    websites including wiki, it says Roberts first wife was Aelis [ref to
    Europaische stamtafeln series, vol 2, 10] and his 2nd was Beatrice of
    Vermandois dau of Heribert I who was the mother of Hugh the Great.

    However the evidence suggests Beatrice was Roberts first wife, and
    Aelis of Vermandois his 2nd.

    That is Robert married firstly Beatrice who was the mother of both HG
    [d956] and presumably also a daughter who married Heribert II, and
    perhaps
    HGs sister Emma as well [d934] wife of King Raoul [d936], and then
    Robert
    married this Aelis, [although its seems her name was Adela] sometime
    around or before 907.

    As I understand it a number of sources say that Robert married a
    sister of
    Heribert II without naming her and that Heribert II married a
    daughter of
    Robert. This daughter was the mother of Heribert IIs children but
    her name
    is also never mentioned by contemporary sources but is assumed
    to be Adela like her daughter who married the count of Flanders. She
    was
    alive in 931.

    As many lines lead from these 2 women it seems important to sort
    this out,
    not least because if the reverse is true, then it means the
    Capetians had
    Carolingian ancestry in the Xe, something it seems chroniclers
    thought they
    lacked until Louis VIII [or was it VI?].
    This matter is discussed on the "Henry Project" pages for Robert I
    and Beatrix.

    https://fasg.org/projects/henryproject/data/rober101.htm
    https://fasg.org/projects/henryproject/data/beatr001.htm

    Stewart Baldwin

    Yes this seems very clear. The trouble is that on the net, Beatrix
    mother of Hugo
    is assumed everywhere to be the unnamed daugther of Heribert II, and
    this has
    caused a terrible muddle.

    Constance Bouchard wrongly thought that Robert I's wife Beatrix the
    first woman recorded with this name and that it was a version of the Carolingian Berta, which she is called in one source perhaps from the unfamiliarity of Beatrix. A tendency to link names and persons with the
    most familiar similarities/connections that spring to mind has plagued genealogy from medieval times and is not likely to stop any time soon. Bouchard claimed that Beatrix is derived from the past participle of the
    verb 'beare' (to bless), while noting that the male form of this,
    'beator', is absent from Latin sources; she considered that Beatrix was probably a late, post-classical form. but as pointed out upthread, it is actually a form of Viatrix that was used from the late-7th century for
    the Roman saint, quite probably from a facile association with blessing.

    As for the Vermandois muddle, this is now stuck fast in the dried mud of centuries and will perhaps never be corrected. It was taken up by Du
    Bouchet in the 17th century, perhaps from misunderstanding the
    early-12th century chronicle of Saint-Pierre-le-Vif from Sens where
    Robert is said to have married a sister of Heribert (without naming her)
    who was mother to Hugo Magnus ("Habebat enim ipse Rotbertus sororem
    istius Herberti in conjugio, de qua ortus est Hugo Magnus"). Robert of Torigni (not exactly the most reliable oracle for genealogies from the
    past) asserted that Hugo Magnus was born to a daughter of Heribert count
    of Peronne ("natus ex filia Herberti comitis Paronne").

    Although intermarriage between these two families is likely enough, a
    simple misunderstanding is plausible, for instance, if the later authors
    were taking their information from a document in which Robert was
    referred to as 'cognatus' of Heribert, interpreted as meaning 'brother-in-law' when it could have meant his 'father-in-law' - the
    latter relationship, alone, is given on the better authority of Flodoard.

    Karl Ferdinand Werner noted that Hugo Magnus named his illegitimate son (later bishop of Auxerre) Heribert; however, it is far from certain that
    this bastard child was named for the father's maternal grandfather.
    Christian Settipani asserted that the name of Robert I's wife Beatrix
    and her filiation as a daughter of Heribert I of Vermandois were 'parfaitement assurés ainsi que l'a montré depuis K.F. Werner'. But
    Werner had established only that the name Beatrix was correct, while
    failing to substantiate with any credible source his argument from
    assumption that she was a daughter of Heribert I of Vermandois. For
    evidence that Robert I married twice he relied on the highly dubious
    notion that 'germana' used alternately with 'soror' in an act of the
    chapter of Saint-Martin de Tours must have meant a paternal half-sister
    as opposed to a full sibling of Robert's son Hugo Magnus.

    However, examples of the same variation of terms for full siblings can
    be found in diplomatic from Touraine, for instance in the undated
    foundation charter of Saint-Martin-du-Vieux-Bellême priory: "Odo quoque, regis Francorum Henrici germanus ... Odo, frater regis Henrici" - Eudes
    was undoubtedly the full-brother of King Henri I. There is no solid
    evidence - or for that matter any good circumstantial reason from
    supposed comparative ages - to hold that Emma was other than a full
    sibling to Hugo Magnus, and to the wife of Heribert I of Vermandois.

    Make that "to the wife of Heribert II of Vermandois" - and, earlier in
    the post above, that "Robert was referred to as 'cognatus' of Heribert
    II, interpreted as meaning 'brother-in-law' when it could have meant his 'father-in-law'".

    Peter Stewart


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  • From mike davis@21:1/5 to pss...@optusnet.com.au on Fri Aug 5 04:45:52 2022
    On Friday, July 29, 2022 at 2:23:02 AM UTC+1, pss...@optusnet.com.au wrote:
    On 29-Jul-22 10:23 AM, Peter Stewart wrote:
    On 29-Jul-22 2:20 AM, mike davis wrote:
    On Tuesday, July 26, 2022 at 4:06:52 PM UTC+1, Stewart Baldwin wrote:
    On Tuesday, July 26, 2022 at 3:42:18 AM UTC-5, mike davis wrote:
    This was prompted by an earlier discussion about the Robertians.

    Who was the mother of Hugh the Great [d956]?

    This seems like an easy q to answer, as in 931 Hugh names his late
    parents
    as Robert and Beatrice. Whats confusing me is that on many different >>>> websites including wiki, it says Roberts first wife was Aelis [ref to >>>> Europaische stamtafeln series, vol 2, 10] and his 2nd was Beatrice of >>>> Vermandois dau of Heribert I who was the mother of Hugh the Great.

    However the evidence suggests Beatrice was Roberts first wife, and
    Aelis of Vermandois his 2nd.

    That is Robert married firstly Beatrice who was the mother of both HG >>>> [d956] and presumably also a daughter who married Heribert II, and
    perhaps
    HGs sister Emma as well [d934] wife of King Raoul [d936], and then
    Robert
    married this Aelis, [although its seems her name was Adela] sometime >>>> around or before 907.

    As I understand it a number of sources say that Robert married a
    sister of
    Heribert II without naming her and that Heribert II married a
    daughter of
    Robert. This daughter was the mother of Heribert IIs children but
    her name
    is also never mentioned by contemporary sources but is assumed
    to be Adela like her daughter who married the count of Flanders. She >>>> was
    alive in 931.

    As many lines lead from these 2 women it seems important to sort
    this out,
    not least because if the reverse is true, then it means the
    Capetians had
    Carolingian ancestry in the Xe, something it seems chroniclers
    thought they
    lacked until Louis VIII [or was it VI?].
    This matter is discussed on the "Henry Project" pages for Robert I
    and Beatrix.

    https://fasg.org/projects/henryproject/data/rober101.htm
    https://fasg.org/projects/henryproject/data/beatr001.htm

    Stewart Baldwin

    Yes this seems very clear. The trouble is that on the net, Beatrix
    mother of Hugo
    is assumed everywhere to be the unnamed daugther of Heribert II, and
    this has
    caused a terrible muddle.

    Constance Bouchard wrongly thought that Robert I's wife Beatrix the
    first woman recorded with this name and that it was a version of the Carolingian Berta, which she is called in one source perhaps from the unfamiliarity of Beatrix. A tendency to link names and persons with the most familiar similarities/connections that spring to mind has plagued genealogy from medieval times and is not likely to stop any time soon. Bouchard claimed that Beatrix is derived from the past participle of the verb 'beare' (to bless), while noting that the male form of this, 'beator', is absent from Latin sources; she considered that Beatrix was probably a late, post-classical form. but as pointed out upthread, it is actually a form of Viatrix that was used from the late-7th century for
    the Roman saint, quite probably from a facile association with blessing.

    As for the Vermandois muddle, this is now stuck fast in the dried mud of centuries and will perhaps never be corrected. It was taken up by Du Bouchet in the 17th century, perhaps from misunderstanding the
    early-12th century chronicle of Saint-Pierre-le-Vif from Sens where
    Robert is said to have married a sister of Heribert (without naming her) who was mother to Hugo Magnus ("Habebat enim ipse Rotbertus sororem
    istius Herberti in conjugio, de qua ortus est Hugo Magnus"). Robert of Torigni (not exactly the most reliable oracle for genealogies from the past) asserted that Hugo Magnus was born to a daughter of Heribert count of Peronne ("natus ex filia Herberti comitis Paronne").

    Although intermarriage between these two families is likely enough, a simple misunderstanding is plausible, for instance, if the later authors were taking their information from a document in which Robert was
    referred to as 'cognatus' of Heribert, interpreted as meaning 'brother-in-law' when it could have meant his 'father-in-law' - the
    latter relationship, alone, is given on the better authority of Flodoard.

    Karl Ferdinand Werner noted that Hugo Magnus named his illegitimate son (later bishop of Auxerre) Heribert; however, it is far from certain that this bastard child was named for the father's maternal grandfather. Christian Settipani asserted that the name of Robert I's wife Beatrix
    and her filiation as a daughter of Heribert I of Vermandois were 'parfaitement assurés ainsi que l'a montré depuis K.F. Werner'. But Werner had established only that the name Beatrix was correct, while failing to substantiate with any credible source his argument from assumption that she was a daughter of Heribert I of Vermandois. For evidence that Robert I married twice he relied on the highly dubious notion that 'germana' used alternately with 'soror' in an act of the chapter of Saint-Martin de Tours must have meant a paternal half-sister
    as opposed to a full sibling of Robert's son Hugo Magnus.

    However, examples of the same variation of terms for full siblings can
    be found in diplomatic from Touraine, for instance in the undated foundation charter of Saint-Martin-du-Vieux-Bellême priory: "Odo quoque, regis Francorum Henrici germanus ... Odo, frater regis Henrici" - Eudes was undoubtedly the full-brother of King Henri I. There is no solid evidence - or for that matter any good circumstantial reason from
    supposed comparative ages - to hold that Emma was other than a full sibling to Hugo Magnus, and to the wife of Heribert I of Vermandois.
    Make that "to the wife of Heribert II of Vermandois" - and, earlier in
    the post above, that "Robert was referred to as 'cognatus' of Heribert
    II, interpreted as meaning 'brother-in-law' when it could have meant his 'father-in-law'".
    Peter Stewart


    Many people rely on the tables in Europaisches Studien, and that has enshrined Beatrix as dau of Heribert I
    [the ref from wiki is Vol 2, tafel10/11] as well as wiki. Is it correct to say that as neither of Roberts wives
    appear in his existing charters and documents, they both must have died by the time he was elected king
    in 922? Some seem to believe that Beatrix/Beatrice was still alive in 931, because the charter where she
    is named by her son only uses quondam for Robert I.

    Clearly Hugo was not a child in 922 as he was offered the crown and had been married since c914,
    and this seems to have led a number of historiansc into a further muddle, that of the identity of
    the Countess Adela who appears with Robert in 907. I dunno if Settipani is alone in this, but making this
    Countess Adela the daugther rather than the 2nd wife of Robert I, has created a 2nd muddle.

    Mike

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  • From Peter Stewart@21:1/5 to mike davis on Fri Aug 5 22:41:15 2022
    On 05-Aug-22 9:45 PM, mike davis wrote:
    On Friday, July 29, 2022 at 2:23:02 AM UTC+1, pss...@optusnet.com.au wrote:
    On 29-Jul-22 10:23 AM, Peter Stewart wrote:
    On 29-Jul-22 2:20 AM, mike davis wrote:
    On Tuesday, July 26, 2022 at 4:06:52 PM UTC+1, Stewart Baldwin wrote: >>>>> On Tuesday, July 26, 2022 at 3:42:18 AM UTC-5, mike davis wrote:
    This was prompted by an earlier discussion about the Robertians.

    Who was the mother of Hugh the Great [d956]?

    This seems like an easy q to answer, as in 931 Hugh names his late >>>>>> parents
    as Robert and Beatrice. Whats confusing me is that on many different >>>>>> websites including wiki, it says Roberts first wife was Aelis [ref to >>>>>> Europaische stamtafeln series, vol 2, 10] and his 2nd was Beatrice of >>>>>> Vermandois dau of Heribert I who was the mother of Hugh the Great. >>>>>>
    However the evidence suggests Beatrice was Roberts first wife, and >>>>>> Aelis of Vermandois his 2nd.

    That is Robert married firstly Beatrice who was the mother of both HG >>>>>> [d956] and presumably also a daughter who married Heribert II, and >>>>>> perhaps
    HGs sister Emma as well [d934] wife of King Raoul [d936], and then >>>>>> Robert
    married this Aelis, [although its seems her name was Adela] sometime >>>>>> around or before 907.

    As I understand it a number of sources say that Robert married a
    sister of
    Heribert II without naming her and that Heribert II married a
    daughter of
    Robert. This daughter was the mother of Heribert IIs children but
    her name
    is also never mentioned by contemporary sources but is assumed
    to be Adela like her daughter who married the count of Flanders. She >>>>>> was
    alive in 931.

    As many lines lead from these 2 women it seems important to sort
    this out,
    not least because if the reverse is true, then it means the
    Capetians had
    Carolingian ancestry in the Xe, something it seems chroniclers
    thought they
    lacked until Louis VIII [or was it VI?].
    This matter is discussed on the "Henry Project" pages for Robert I
    and Beatrix.

    https://fasg.org/projects/henryproject/data/rober101.htm
    https://fasg.org/projects/henryproject/data/beatr001.htm

    Stewart Baldwin

    Yes this seems very clear. The trouble is that on the net, Beatrix
    mother of Hugo
    is assumed everywhere to be the unnamed daugther of Heribert II, and
    this has
    caused a terrible muddle.

    Constance Bouchard wrongly thought that Robert I's wife Beatrix the
    first woman recorded with this name and that it was a version of the
    Carolingian Berta, which she is called in one source perhaps from the
    unfamiliarity of Beatrix. A tendency to link names and persons with the
    most familiar similarities/connections that spring to mind has plagued
    genealogy from medieval times and is not likely to stop any time soon.
    Bouchard claimed that Beatrix is derived from the past participle of the >>> verb 'beare' (to bless), while noting that the male form of this,
    'beator', is absent from Latin sources; she considered that Beatrix was
    probably a late, post-classical form. but as pointed out upthread, it is >>> actually a form of Viatrix that was used from the late-7th century for
    the Roman saint, quite probably from a facile association with blessing. >>>
    As for the Vermandois muddle, this is now stuck fast in the dried mud of >>> centuries and will perhaps never be corrected. It was taken up by Du
    Bouchet in the 17th century, perhaps from misunderstanding the
    early-12th century chronicle of Saint-Pierre-le-Vif from Sens where
    Robert is said to have married a sister of Heribert (without naming her) >>> who was mother to Hugo Magnus ("Habebat enim ipse Rotbertus sororem
    istius Herberti in conjugio, de qua ortus est Hugo Magnus"). Robert of
    Torigni (not exactly the most reliable oracle for genealogies from the
    past) asserted that Hugo Magnus was born to a daughter of Heribert count >>> of Peronne ("natus ex filia Herberti comitis Paronne").

    Although intermarriage between these two families is likely enough, a
    simple misunderstanding is plausible, for instance, if the later authors >>> were taking their information from a document in which Robert was
    referred to as 'cognatus' of Heribert, interpreted as meaning
    'brother-in-law' when it could have meant his 'father-in-law' - the
    latter relationship, alone, is given on the better authority of Flodoard. >>>
    Karl Ferdinand Werner noted that Hugo Magnus named his illegitimate son
    (later bishop of Auxerre) Heribert; however, it is far from certain that >>> this bastard child was named for the father's maternal grandfather.
    Christian Settipani asserted that the name of Robert I's wife Beatrix
    and her filiation as a daughter of Heribert I of Vermandois were
    'parfaitement assurés ainsi que l'a montré depuis K.F. Werner'. But
    Werner had established only that the name Beatrix was correct, while
    failing to substantiate with any credible source his argument from
    assumption that she was a daughter of Heribert I of Vermandois. For
    evidence that Robert I married twice he relied on the highly dubious
    notion that 'germana' used alternately with 'soror' in an act of the
    chapter of Saint-Martin de Tours must have meant a paternal half-sister
    as opposed to a full sibling of Robert's son Hugo Magnus.

    However, examples of the same variation of terms for full siblings can
    be found in diplomatic from Touraine, for instance in the undated
    foundation charter of Saint-Martin-du-Vieux-Bellême priory: "Odo quoque, >>> regis Francorum Henrici germanus ... Odo, frater regis Henrici" - Eudes
    was undoubtedly the full-brother of King Henri I. There is no solid
    evidence - or for that matter any good circumstantial reason from
    supposed comparative ages - to hold that Emma was other than a full
    sibling to Hugo Magnus, and to the wife of Heribert I of Vermandois.
    Make that "to the wife of Heribert II of Vermandois" - and, earlier in
    the post above, that "Robert was referred to as 'cognatus' of Heribert
    II, interpreted as meaning 'brother-in-law' when it could have meant his
    'father-in-law'".
    Peter Stewart


    Many people rely on the tables in Europaisches Studien, and that has enshrined Beatrix as dau of Heribert I
    [the ref from wiki is Vol 2, tafel10/11] as well as wiki. Is it correct to say that as neither of Roberts wives
    appear in his existing charters and documents, they both must have died by the time he was elected king
    in 922? Some seem to believe that Beatrix/Beatrice was still alive in 931, because the charter where she
    is named by her son only uses quondam for Robert I.

    There is only one existing act of Robert I's reign, and it's hardly
    surprising that his wife does not occur in a single document - assuming
    he had one living at the the time (January 923). As for Beatrice not
    being qualified as 'quondam', her death would not have been a matter of official concern in 931 if she had died before Robert occurred along
    with Adela in 907. Hugo called his father 'Robertus quondam rex',
    probably meaning 'Robert the former king' rather than 'the deceased king Robert'. He called his mother simply 'domina Beatrix', not 'Beatrix
    regina' as she would have been if surviving until Robert had become king
    in 922.

    Clearly Hugo was not a child in 922 as he was offered the crown and had been married since c914,
    and this seems to have led a number of historiansc into a further muddle, that of the identity of
    the Countess Adela who appears with Robert in 907. I dunno if Settipani is alone in this, but making this
    Countess Adela the daugther rather than the 2nd wife of Robert I, has created a 2nd muddle.

    The wording of Charles the Simple's charter dated 907 to me implies
    clearly enough that Robert and Adela were husband and wife at that time: "interventu quorundam principum vicinius nobis assistentium, Frederune˛ videlicet conjugis carissime necnon et dilecte Gisle abbatisse, atque
    venerandi comitis Rotberti et Adele comitisse". I can't think of a royal
    act in which a father and daughter are named together in a similar way.
    The idea that this was the absent Heribert's wife acting on his behalf
    is a rather strained rationalisation.

    Hugo may have been ca 25 at the time of the battle of Soissons in June
    923 when his father was killed: Richer represented that he had barely
    attained maturity at that time and did not take part in the fighting but
    was conducted onto the field afterwards by Heribert of Vermandois.
    However, Flodoard named Hugo along with Heribert as responsible for the
    victory over Charles on the day. According to Flodoard he conducted
    important affairs and had the charge of 2,000 men for his father, who
    summoned him for consultation in April/May 922. Opposition led by Hugo
    was seen as a threat by Charles the Simple in the same year. This along
    with his marriage ca 914 seems consistent with his birth by ca 900. If
    Beatrix was dead before 907 (when I think Robert was married to Adela)
    Hugo may not have known her beyond his infancy.

    Peter Stewart



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