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Robert fitz Guillaume comte d'Eû
- Preferred Name: Robert fitz Guillaume comte d'Eû[1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] [8]
- Alternate Name: Robert d'Eu
- Gender: M
- http://familysearch.org/v1/TitleOfNobility: Count of EuAFT 1057 in Eu, Seine-Maritime, Duché de Normandie at LATI: N0.0481 LONG: E0.4206 with note: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_I,_Count_of_Eu
- Birth: BET 1005 AND 1010 in Eu, Duché de Normandie at LATI: N0.0481 LONG: E0.4206 with note: Athough the Treaty of Verdun in 843 created the Kingdom of France, the western portions of the country remained independent feudal entities, ie., Normandie became part of the Kingdom in 1452.
- FSID: LR72-2LH
- Burial: 1093 in Abbey de St Michel du Treport, Seine-Maritime, Duché de Normandie at LATI: N0.0598 LONG: E0.3758
- Death: BEF 8 SEP 1093 in Caen, Basse-Normandie, France at LATI: N9.184 LONG: E0.368
- MilitaryService: Norman conquest of England1066 in England with note: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert,_Count_of_Eu
- Notes:
=== Life Sketch ===
Wikipedia
Robert, Count of Eu and Lord of Hastings (d. between 1089-1093), son of William I, Count of Eu, and his wife Lesceline.[1] Count of Eu and Lord of Hastings.
Robert commanded 60 ships in the fleet supporting the landing of William I of England and the Norman conquest of England.[2] Around 1068, Robert was given the Hastings Castle and the adjacent territories previously owned by Onfroy du Tilleul.[3] According to the Domesday Book, Robert and his son William each possessed lands in separate counties. The sum of the annual income generated by the lands of the two men amounted to about 690 pounds sterling.
In 1069 he was charged by the king to support Robert, Count of Mortain, to monitor the Danes,[4] whose fleet moored in the mouth of the Humber, while the latter was to repress the revolt initiated by Eadric the Wild the west. When the Danes left their sanctuary to plunder the neighbourhood, the two commanders and their army fell upon them unexpectedly, crushing them, and forcing them to flee by sea.
After the death of King William, Robert followed the party of Robert Curthose, Duke of Normandy. Dismayed by his softness and debauchery, he turned, along with several other Norman lords, towards the king William II the Red, from whom he received several garrisons for his castles. During the attempted intervention of the English king in Normandy in February 1091, he was one of his supporters. He died after this episode and his son William II succeeded him as count.
Robert married first Beatrix de Falaise,[5] sister of Arlette de Falaise. Robert and Beatrix had six children:
1) Raoul d'Eu (d. after 1036)
2) Robert d'Eu (d. 1149)[citation needed]
3) Condoha (Condor) (d. after 1087) married in 1058 to Fulk d'Angoulême, and was mother of William V d'Angoulême and grandmother of Wulgrin II d'Angoulême.
4) William II, who succeeded his father as Count of Eu and Lord of Hastings[6]
5) Eremburga of Mortain (possible), the second wife of Roger i, Count of Sicily.
6) Armand of Mortain (possible), married to Beatrix, daughter of Tancred of Hauteville.
Very devout, he made numerous donations to the Church, notably lands at Fécamp Abbey of Rouen in 1051. After being widowed, he remarried, to Mathilde de Hauteville, daughter of Roger I, Count of Sicily, and Judith of Evreux, a second cousin of William the Conqueror. He repudiated her, however, and in 1080 she was married to Raymond IV of Saint-Gilles, Count of Toulouse and Marquis of Provence.
He was buried in the Abbey of Saint-Michel du Tréport,[7] which he had founded in Tréport, near the town of Eu, between 1057 and 1066, in memory of his first wife.[8] Robert was assisted by the council of Duke William and Maurilius, archbishop of Rouen.
Robert was succeeded as Count of Eu and Lord of Hastings by his son William.
BIO
BIO: from http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/NORMAN%20NOBILITY.htm#RobertIEudied1089B as of 8/12/2016
ROBERT d'Eu, son of GUILLAUME Comte d'Hiémois et d'Eu & his wife Lesceline de Tourville ([1005/10]-
=== #Générale# Décès : 1089/1093 Comte d'Eu ===
#Générale# Décès : 1089/1093 Comte d'Eu Attesté à la bataille d'Arques en février 1054.
=== Second Count of Eu. With Roger de Mortim ===
Second Count of Eu. With Roger de Mortimer he commanded the Norman army at the battle of Mortimer in February 1053/54. He founded the Abbey of Le Treport and received from William the Conquerer the honour and rape of Hastings, Thurrock, Essex and Buckworth. In 1069 he and Robert, Count of Mortain, in command of Lincolnshire defeated Danish invaders. As did many Norman lords, he deserted Duke Robert in 1089 and placed his castles at the disposal of William Rufus [Complete Peerage V:152-53]
=== Yorks Pub A Vol 9, Chart p. 300. Archive ===
Yorks Pub A Vol 9, Chart p. 300. Archive Recprd - SLC, UT
=== Robert de Eu was count of Eu and Anglo-N ===
Robert de Eu was count of Eu and Anglo-Norman. He was the eldest son and successor of William de Eu, and Leceline de Harcourt. His father was the illegitimate son of Duke Richard I of Normandy.
Robert de Eu served William the conqueror in his various expeditions. The Duke married Mathilde of Flanders, daughter of Baldwin V, count of Flanders, in the castle of Robert de Eu. It is in the same castle of Eu that William the Conqueror makes an alliance, in 1065, with Harold, Earl of Kent. William would defeat Harold the following year at the battle of Hastings.
Robert sent 60 ships with the fleet which landed in England and the Norman Conquest of England. About 1068-1070, William the Conqueror entrusted to Robert de Eu, with the rape of Hastings. His son William II de Eu is one of the few soldiers that are known with certainty being present at the famous battle of Hastings. The father and the son are owners of estates producing an income of approximately 690 pounds sterling annually in the writing of the Domesday Book (1086).
In 1069, he was charged by the King with Robert of Mortain to monitor the Danes including the fleet in the mouth of the Humber, while he suppresses the revolt initiated by Eadric the wild. When the Danes return to plunder, the two men and their army attack them unexpectedly and crush them, forcing them to flee by sea.
After the death of William the Conqueror, the count of Eu follows some time Duke Robert Curthose. But rebuffed his weakness and his debauchery, the count with several other Norman lords, joined with William Rufus, which he receives the garrisons in castles. Very pious, he made donations throughout his life to the Church, including land to the Abbey of the Holy Trinity of Rouen (1051) and is witness to a Charter dated 1053.
A widower, he married Mathilde de Hauteville (1062 – 1094), daughter of Roger I, count of Sicily, and Judith of Évreux. But he repudiated her, and she remarried in 1080 to Raymond IV de Saint-Gilles (d. 1105), count of Toulouse and marquis of Provence.
Robert's first wife was Beatrix of Falaise, perhaps sister of Herleva de Falaise. Their children were:
Raoul, died before him, cited in 1036, in a Charter.
Robert
Condoha or Condor, daughter of the count of Eu, married in 1058 Fulk of Angoulême (en) mother of William V d ' Angoulême and grandmother of Wulgrin II of Angoulême.
William II of Eu, succeeds Robert Eu as count of Eu in 1089, lord of Hastings.
Count Robert died in 1089 and is buried in the Saint-Michel du Tréport Abbey. The Count founded the Abbey of le Tréport, near the town of Eu, between 1057 and 1066.
=== SORLEY'S PEDIGREES (GS NUMBER Q929.242 S ===
SORLEY'S PEDIGREES (GS NUMBER Q929.242 SO68) P.13, 22; YORKSHIRE PUBLICATION A, VOL 9 P.300; PUBLICATION AAC7, P.106; YORKSHIRE PUBLICATION A, VOL 2 P.144;
=== Second Count of Eu. With Roger de Morti ===
Second Count of Eu. With Roger de Mortimer he commanded the Normanarmy at the battle of Mortimer in February 1053/54. He founded theAbbey of Le Treport and received from William the Conquerer the honourand rape of Hastings, Thurrock, Essex and Buckworth. In 1069 he andRobert, Count of Mortain, in command of Lincolnshire defeated Danishinvaders. As did many Norman lords, he deserted Duke Robert in 1089and placed his castles at the disposal of William Rufus (From CompletePeerage, Vol V:152-53).
=== !Duke of Bretagne and Earl of Richmond ! ===
!Duke of Bretagne and Earl of Richmond !The Oxford Illistrated History of the British Monarchy by Cannon and Griffith. !Royal Ancestors of Some American Families by Michel Call SLC 1989 #348. 490
=== bur. Abbey Le Treport, Normandy, France ===
bur. Abbey Le Treport, Normandy, France
=== !Europaische Stammtafeln Neue Folge(552) ===
!Europaische Stammtafeln Neue Folge(552)vol. 7 t 15; !#552-v-3-t-730;
Preferred Parents:
Father: Guillaume Ier d'Eu, b. BET 2 JAN 975 AND 980 in France d. 26 JAN 1057 in France
Mother: Lesceline de Turqueville de Harcourt, b. 986 in Harcourt, Eure, Haute-Normandie, France d. 26 JAN 1058 in Caen, Calvados, Basse-Normandie, France
Family 2: Beatrice De Falaise, b. ABT 1021 in Falaise, Calvados, Duchy of Normandy, France d. 10 APR 1085 in Le Treport, Seine Maritime, Duchy of Normandy, France
- Berthilde d'Eu de Falaise, b. 1047 in Eu, Seine-Maritime, Haute-Normandie, France d. 1109 in Foucarmont, Seine-Maritime, Haute-Normandie, France
- William Count of Eu II, b. ABT 1045 in Normandy, France d. 1095 in Hastings, Sussex, England
Sources:
- Title: Legacy NFS Source: Robert d'Eu -
Author: Complete Peerage of England, Scotland, Ireland, Great Britain, and the United Kingdom; GE Cokayne, Sutton Publishing Ltd, Page number: V:152-3
Note: Source Media Type: Book
Page: Migrated from user-supplied source citation: urn:familysearch:source:2736741118
- Title: The Normans
Author: Neveux, Francois. A Brief History of The Normans: The Conquests That Changed The Face of Europe. Howard Curtis, Translation. First Edition. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: Running Press Book Publishers, 2008., Page 127.
- Title: Wikipedia - Robert d'Eu
Author: Sources[edit] Barlow, Frank (2000). William Rufus. Yale University Press. Callender (2014). "The Monastery of Saint-Michel du Tréport and the Borderlands of Northeast Normandy, 1059-1270". Western Michigan University. Cownie, Emma (1998). Religious Patronage in Anglo-Norman England, 1066-1135. The Boydell Press. Crouch, David (2005). The Birth of Nobility: Constructing Aristocracy in England and France, 900-1300. Pearson Education Limited. Douglas, David (1946). "The Earliest Norman Counts". The English Historical Review. Oxford University Press. Vol. 61 No. 240 May. Hagger, Mark (2012). William: King and Conqueror. I.B. Tauris. Harper-Bill, Christopher, ed. (2000). Anglo-Norman Studies XXII: Proceedings of the Battle Conference 1999. The Boydell Press. Van Houts, Elizabeth, ed. (2000). The Normans in Europe. Manchester University Press.
Publication: Name: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert,_Count_of_Eu;
Note: Robert, Count of Eu and Lord of Hastings (d. between 1089-1093), son of William I, Count of Eu, and his wife Lesceline.[1] Count of Eu and Lord of Hastings.
Robert commanded 60 ships in the fleet supporting the landing of William I of England and the Norman conquest of England.[2] Around 1068, Robert was given the Hastings Castle and the adjacent territories previously owned by Onfroy du Tilleul.[3] According to the Domesday Book, Robert and his son William each possessed lands in separate counties. The sum of the annual income generated by the lands of the two men amounted to about 690 pounds sterling.
In 1069 he was charged by the king to support Robert, Count of Mortain, to monitor the Danes,[4] whose fleet moored in the mouth of the Humber, while the latter was to repress the revolt initiated by Eadric the Wild the west. When the Danes left their sanctuary to plunder the neighbourhood, the two commanders and their army fell upon them unexpectedly, crushing them, and forcing them to flee by sea.
After the death of King William, Robert followed the party of Robert Curthose, Duke of Normandy. Dismayed by his softness and debauchery, he turned, along with several other Norman lords, towards the king William II the Red, from whom he received several garrisons for his castles. During the attempted intervention of the English king in Normandy in February 1091, he was one of his supporters. He died after this episode and his son William II succeeded him as count.
Robert married first Beatrix de Falaise,[5] sister of Arlette de Falaise. Robert and Beatrix had six children:
Raoul d'Eu (d. after 1036)
Robert d'Eu (d. 1149)[citation needed]
Condoha (Condor) (d. after 1087) married in 1058 to Fulk d'Angoulême, and was mother of William V d'Angoulême and grandmother of Wulgrin II d'Angoulême.
William II, who succeeded his father as Count of Eu and Lord of Hastings[6]
Eremburga of Mortain (possible), the second wife of Roger i, Count of Sicily.
Armand of Mortain (possible), married to Beatrix, daughter of Tancred of Hauteville.
Very devout, he made numerous donations to the Church, notably lands at Fécamp Abbey of Rouen in 1051. After being widowed, he remarried, to Mathilde de Hauteville, daughter of Roger I, Count of Sicily, and Judith of Evreux, a second cousin of William the Conqueror. He repudiated her, however, and in 1080 she was married to Raymond IV of Saint-Gilles, Count of Toulouse and Marquis of Provence.
He was buried in the Abbey of Saint-Michel du Tréport,[7] which he had founded in Tréport, near the town of Eu, between 1057 and 1066, in memory of his first wife.[8] Robert was assisted by the council of Duke William and Maurilius, archbishop of Rouen.
Robert was succeeded as Count of Eu and Lord of Hastings by his son William.
NOTE: there is an error on the list of Counts of Eu in Wikipedia showing his YOB as 1053, death 1093. His first child is shown as having died after 1036 -that would be a very big understatement.
- Title: Robert d'Eu, "Find A Grave Index"
Author: "Find A Grave Index," database, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:QVLW-9HYH : 6 February 2023), Robert d'Eu, ; Burial, Le Treport, Departement de la Seine-Maritime, Haute-Normandie, France, l'Abbaye Saint-Michel du Tréport; citing record ID 93523950, Find a Grave, http://www.findagrave.com.
Publication: Name: https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:QVLW-9HYH;
- Title: Robert, Count d'Eu in Our Royal, Titled, Noble, and Commoner Ancestors
Author: https://our-royal-titled-noble-and-commoner-ancestors.com/p274.htm#i8228
Publication: Name: https://our-royal-titled-noble-and-commoner-ancestors.com/p274.htm#i8228;
Note: Robert, Count d'Eu [1]
Last Edited 4 Apr 2020
M, #8228, d. 8 September 1093
Father Guillaume, Comte d' Eu & Exemia d. c 1040
Mother Lescelin de Turquerville d. bt 26 Jan 1057 - 1058
Charts Some Descendants of Charlemagne
Robert, Count d'Eu married Mathilde of Sicily, daughter of Roger I, Count of Sicily and Apulia and Judith d' Evreux, on 10 April 1085. Robert, Count d'Eu died on 8 September 1093.
Family: Mathilde of Sicily b. 1062, d. a 10 Apr 1085
Children:
Condohe Vagena+ d. a 1087
Guillaume II, Comte d'Eu, Lord Hastings+ b. b 1060, d. 1095
Citations:
1. [S2229] Unknown author, The Complete Peerage, by Cokayne, Vol. V, p. 152/3.
Page: Relationships
- Title: Legacy NFS Source: Count of Eu Robert -
Author: Stirnet.com, Peter Barns-Graham, Chairman, Name: http://www.stirnet.com;, Page number: Normans1
Note: Peter Barns-Graham, Chairman, Stirnet.com (http://www.stirnet.com).
Page: Migrated from user-supplied source citation: urn:familysearch:source:3246398939
- Title: Robert d'Eu (1020-1089) in The Peerage
Author: http://www.thepeerage.com/p10480.htm#i104791 [citations]
Publication: Name: http://www.thepeerage.com/p10480.htm#i104791;
Note: Robert I d'Eu, Comte d'Eu [1]
M, #104791, b. circa 1020, d. 9 April 1089
Last Edited=7 Jan 2015
Robert I d'Eu, Comte d'Eu was born circa 1020. [2] He was the son of Guillaume I d'Eu, Comte d'Eu et de Hiésmes and Lesceline de Pont-Audemer. [1] He married Béatrice de Falaise. [2] He died on 9 April 1089. [2]
He gained the title of Comte d'Eu. [1]
Children of Robert I d'Eu, Comte d'Eu and Béatrice de Falaise:
Condoha d'Eu+ [2] b. 1040
Guillaume II d'Eu, Lord Hastings+ [2] b. c 1045, d. c 1095
Citations
[S106] Royal Genealogies Website (ROYAL92.GED), online http://www.daml.org/2001/01/gedcom/royal92.ged. Hereinafter cited as Royal Genealogies Website.
[S3268] Hans Harmsen, "re: Chester Family," e-mail message to Darryl Roger Lundy, 21 August 2008. Hereinafter cited as "re: Chester Family."
Page: Relations and 2 sources
- Title: Foundation for Medieval Genealogy
Author: [1418] Willelmi Gemmetencis Historiæ (Duchesne, 1619), Liber V, III, p. 250. [1419] Orderic Vitalis (Chibnall), Vol. II, Book III, p. 141. [1420] Tréport Saint-Michel, 1, p. 1, and Round (1899) 230, p. 80. [1421] Rouen Sainte-Trinité, II, p. 425. [1422] Rouen Sainte-Trinité, LXIX, p. 457. [1423] Orderic Vitalis (Prévost), Vol. II, Liber III, XI, p. 121. [1424] Rouen Sainte-Trinité, VII, p. 426. [1425] Rouen Sainte-Trinité, XLIII, p. 444. [1426] Robert de Torigny, Vol. II, p. 200. [1427] Brevis Relatio de Origine Willelmi Conquestoris, p. 22. [1428] Orderic Vitalis (Prévost), Vol. III, Liber VIII, IX, p. 319. [1429] Obituaires de Sens Tome II, Prieuré de Saint-Nicaise de Meulan, p. 240. [1430] RHGF XXIII, Ex Obituario monasterio ulteriores portus, p. 452. [1431] Tréport Saint-Michel, 1, p. 1, and Round (1899) 230, p. 80. [1432] Rouen Sainte-Trinité, 43, p. 444. [1433] RHGF XXIII, Ex Obituario monasterio ulteriores portus, p. 452. [1434] The date of Mathilda 2nd (m)
Publication: Name: https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/normacre.htm#_Toc66516064;
Note: ROBERT d'Eu, son of GUILLAUME Comte d'Hiémois et d'Eu & his wife Lesceline de Tourville ([1005/10]-8 Sep [1089/93], bur Le Tréport). Guillaume of Jumièges names “Rodbertum...Willelmum Suessionensem comitem atque Hugonem Luxoviensem præsulem” as the three sons of “ducis uno ex patre fratrem progenitum Willelmum” and his wife Lezscelinam filiam Turchetilli, adding that Robert succeeded to his father’s county[1418].
He is named as the son of Guillaume Comte d'Eu by Orderic Vitalis[1419]. Robert’s date of birth is estimated from his having three sons who are named in a charter dated 1036. The date is consistent with his father’s estimated birth date, although it means that he must have been extremely old when he died. "Robertus comes Augensis…uxore Beatrice et filiis meis Radulfo, Willermo atque Roberto" made donations to the abbey of St Michel, Tréport by a charter dated 1036, witnessed by "Hugo vicecomes"[1420]. An undated charter, dated to the [1035/50], records the donation of "predium Heltonis quod possedit Gozelinus vicecomes" to the abbey of Sainte-Trinité at Rouen, with the support of "Willelmus comes Normanniæ, et Willelmus, filius Willelmi comitis, qui et hæres Heltonis, et Robertus comes frater eius…Niellus…et Turstinus vicecomites", subscribed by "…filii Turchitilli Hugo et Goffridus necnon Walerannus comes", signed by "Gozelini vicecomitis, Heltonis, Willelmi heredis Heltonis, Walberti fratris Heltonis, Waleranni comitis, Alberici comitis, Heltæ filii Heltonis…"[1421].
An undated charter, dated to [1049], records that "Lezelina comitissa…cum filiis suis" was expelled "de castro Ou" and donated land on the banks of the Seine to Sainte-Trinité de Rouen, with the consent of "filiis suis Hugone, Willelmo, Rotberto"[1422].
He succeeded his father as Comte d'Eu, indicating presumably that he was the eldest son. Orderic Vitalis names “...Rodbertus comes, Willermi Aucensis Satrapæ filius...” among the leading lords under Guillaume II Duke of Normandy[1423]. "Rotbertus comes de Ou et Beatrix conjux eius" donated "jure hereditario silvam de Spinei" to Sainte-Trinité de Rouen, with the consent of "filiis suis", by undated charter dated to "tempore que discordia cepit inter [Willelmus comes Normanniæ] et Henricum regem Francorum", witnessed by "…Willelmi filii Osberni, Rodulfi camerarii…Goisfredi filii Osberni de Ou, Ansfredi fratris eius, Widonis filii Amalrici, Rainaldi de Sancto Martino, Osberti de Albert Villa…"[1424]. "Rotberti comitis de Auco" witnessed a charter of "Rogerius de Buslei" dated 1053[1425].
Robert of Torigny's De Immutatione Ordinis Monachorum records that "Lecelina comitissa Aucensis relicta Willermi comitis" founded "mon. Sancti Petri super Divam virorum et mon. fem. ante urbem Lexoviensem" with "filiis suis Roberto comite Aucensi et Hugone episcopo Lexoviensi"[1426].
The Brevis Relatio de Origine Willelmi Conquestoris records that "Roberto comite Augiensi" contributed 60 ships towards the invasion of England in 1066[1427]. Orderic Vitalis records that “Rodbertus Aucensium comes et Gauterius Gifardus et Radulfus de Mortuomari” and nearly all the seigneurs who lived “trans Sequanam usque ad mare” joined King William II against his brother Robert Duke of Normandy and received considerable sums to fortify their castles, dated to [1089/90][1428].
The necrology of Saint-Nicaise de Meulan records the death of "Robertus comes Aucensis", undated but listed among deaths recorded in early September[1429]. The necrology of Ulterioris Portus monastery records the death "8 Sep" of "Robertus comes Augensis hujus ecclesiæ fundator"[1430].
m firstly BEATRIX, daughter of --- (-10 Apr ----). "Robertus comes Augensis…uxore Beatrice et filiis meis Radulfo, Willermo atque Roberto" made donations to the abbey of St Michel, Tréport by a charter dated 1036, witnessed by "Hugo vicecomes"[1429]. "Rotbertus comes de Ou et Beatrix conjux eius" donated "jure hereditario silvam de Spinei" to Sainte-Trinité de Rouen, with the consent of "filiis suis", by undated charter dated to "tempore que discordia cepit inter [Willelmus comes Normanniæ] et Henricum regem Francorum"[1430]. The necrology of Ulterioris Portus monastery records the death "10 Apr" of "comitissa Beatrix, loci hujus...fundatrix"[1431]. This entry must be linked to the wife of Comte Robert as the latter is described as "nostri monasterii fundatoris" in the entry which relates to their son Guillaume (see below) and also in his own entry in the same necrology.
m secondly (repudiated before [1080][1432]) as her first husband, MATHILDE of Sicily, daughter of ROGER I Count of Sicily & his first wife Judith d'Evreux (1062-before 1094). The primary source which confirms her parentage and first marriage has not yet been identified. According to Houben[1433], Mathilde who married Robert Comte d'Eu was the daughter of Roger I Count of Sicily by his second wife, and a different person from Mathilde his daughter by his first wife who married Raymond Comte de Saint-Gilles. No source is quoted, but this seems unlikely from a chronological point of view as Roger's second marriage took place in [1077], and Robert Comte d'Eu died in [1089/93]. In addition, it seems unlikely that Roger, at the height of his power as Count of Sicily in the late 1080s, would have agreed to his daughter's marriage to an obscure count in northern France at the same time as arranging royal marriages for his other daughters. She married secondly ([1080], divorced [1088]) as his second wife, Raymond de Toulouse, who later succeeded as Raymond IV Comte de Toulouse. Malaterra records the marriage of "Raimundus comes Provinciarum" and "Matildem filiam suam [Rogerii Siculorum comitis]…de prima uxore" which he dates to 1080[1434].
Comte Robert & his first wife had six children:
1. RAOUL d'Eu .
2. GUILLAUME d'Eu (-2 Jan after 1096).
3. ROBERT d'Eu .
4. ARMAND de Mortain .
5. EREMBURGE de Mortain (-[1087]).
6. [CONDOHA (-after 1087).
Additional Sources
[1435] Houben (2002), p. xxv, Table 2.
[1436] Malaterra, III.22, p. 70.
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