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William Marquis of Montferrat V
- Preferred Name: William Marquis of Montferrat V[1] [2] [3] [4] [5]
- Gender: M
- Death: 8 DEC 1191 in Soûr, South Lebanon, Lebanon at LATI: N3.2711 LONG: E5.1964
- Burial: DEC 1191
- Residence: "Castello di Gabiano" - Federico I granted the investiture to the Marquis Guglielmo II of Monferrato.1164
- http://familysearch.org/v1/TitleOfNobility: 7th Marquis de Montferrato (1136-1191), Croisé , 1183, IIe Croisade , IIIe Croisade , Combat pour la Foi
- Christening: in Monferrato, Alessandria, Piedmont, Italy at LATI: N4.55 LONG: E0.3667 with note:
- FSID: LC88-4B9
- http://familysearch.org/v1/TitleOfNobility: Marquess of Montferrat
- MilitaryService: accompanied his nephew King Louis VII of France on the Second Crusade1147
- Nickname:
- http://familysearch.org/v1/TitleOfNobility: 7th Marquis de MontferratBET 1136 AND 1191
- Birth: ABT 1115 in Montferrat Castle,Alessandria,Piemonte,Italy. at LATI: N4.8901 LONG: E0.6561
- Notes:
=== Life Sketch ===
William V of Montferrat (occ./piem. Guilhem, it. Guglielmo) (c. 1115 – 1191) also known regnally as William III of Montferrat while also referred to as William the Old or William the Elder, in order to distinguish him from his eldest son, William Longsword, was seventh Marquis of Montferrat from 1135 to his death in 1191. William was the only son of Marquis Renier I and his wife Gisela, a daughter of Count William I of Burgundy and widow of Count Humbert II of Savoy. It seems likely, given that he was still fit enough to participate in battle in 1187, that William was one of his parents' youngest children.
He was described by Acerbo Morena as of medium height and compact build, with a round, somewhat ruddy face and hair so fair as to be almost white. He was eloquent, intelligent and good-humoured, generous but not extravagant. Dynastically, he was extremely well connected: a nephew of Pope Callixtus II, a half-brother of Amadeus III of Savoy whose daughter, Matilda, was married to King Afonso I of Portugal, a brother-in-law of Louis VI of France (through his half-sister Adelasia of Moriana), a cousin of Alfonso VII of Castile, and his maternal great-grandmother was Alice of Normandy which made him a distant relative to the Norman monarchs of England.
William married Judith (or Ita) of Babenberg, daughter of Leopold III of Austria and Agnes of Germany, sometime before March 28, 1133. Judith was probably about 15 at the time. None of their surviving children seem to have been born before 1140 (there may have been older ones who died in infancy), and the youngest son was born in 1162. She died after 1168. They had five sons, four of whom became prominent in the affairs of the Kingdom of Jerusalem and of Byzantium, and three daughters::
. William Longsword, Count of Jaffa and Ascalon, father of Baldwin V of Jerusalem
. Conrad, King of Jerusalem
. Boniface, his successor to Montferrat and founder of the Kingdom of Thessalonica
. Frederick, who entered the Church and became Bishop of Alba (dates uncertain).
. Renier, married into the Byzantine imperial family
. Agnes, who married Count Guido Guerra III Guidi conte di Modigliana. The marriage was annulled on grounds of childlessness before 1180, when Guido remarried, and Agnes entered the convent of Santa Maria di Rocca delle Donne.
. Adelasia, or Azalaïs (d. 1232), who married Manfred II, Marquis of Saluzzo, c. 1182, and was regent for her grandson Manfred III.
. An unidentified daughter, who married Albert, Marquis of Malaspina.
The vida of the troubadour Raimbaut de Vaqueiras claims that there was another daughter, Beatrice, who m. Henry I del Carretto, Marquis of Savona, and that she is the Bel Cavalher (Fair Knight) of Vaqueiras's songs. However, the lyrics of Vaqueiras's songs (as opposed to the later vida) describe Beatrice as Boniface's daughter, and thus William's granddaughter.
Otto of Tonengo (d. 1251), who became Bishop of Porto, and Cardinal in 1227, has sometimes been identified as a son of William V, and confused with Frederick. However, his dates make it more likely that he was a son of William VI of Montferrat, whether legitimate or not is uncertain.
William and Judith's powerful dynastic connections created difficulties in finding suitable wives for his sons, and too many potential spouses were related within prohibited degrees. In 1167, he unsuccessfully tried to negotiate marriages for his eldest sons to daughters of Henry II, King of England—but the girls were very young at the time and were related through Judith's descent from William V of Aquitaine. He then applied for sisters of William I, King of Scotland, who were not related, but were already married.
William took part in the Second Crusade, alongside his half-brother Amadeus of Savoy (who died during the campaign), his nephew Louis VII of France, his brother-in-law Count Guido of Biandrate, and his wife's German and Austrian relatives.
As supporters of the imperial party (later known as the Ghibellines), he and his sons fought with the Emperor Frederick Barbarossa (Judith's nephew) in his lengthy struggle against the Lombard League. Following Barbarossa's capitulation with the Peace of Venice in 1177, William was left to deal with the rebellious towns in the area alone. Meanwhile, the Byzantine emperor Manuel I Komnenos sought support for his own politics in Italy.
William broke with Barbarossa and formed an alliance with Manuel. His eldest surviving son, Conrad, was taken prisoner by Barbarossa's chancellor, Archbishop Christian of Mainz, but then captured the chancellor in battle at Camerino. In 1179 Manuel suggested a marriage between his daughter Maria, second in line to the throne, and one of William's sons. As Conrad and Boniface were already married, the youngest son, Renier, was married off to the princess, who was ten years his senior. Renier and Maria were later killed during the usurpation of Andronikos, and the family rebuilt ties with Barbarossa.
In 1183, with the accession of his grandson Baldwin V, a minor, as co-king of Jerusalem, William, then probably in his late sixties, left the government of Montferrat to Conrad and Boniface, and returned to the east. He was granted the castle of St. Elias (present-day Taybeh). He fought in the Battle of Hattin in 1187, where he was captured by Saladin's forces. In the meantime, his second son, Conrad, had arrived at Tyre from Constantinople. Conrad was given the command of the defences. During the siege of Tyre in November that year, he is said to have refused to surrender as much as a stone of its walls to liberate his father, even threatening to shoot him with a crossbow himself when Saladin had him presented as a hostage. Eventually, Saladin withdrew his army from Tyre. In 1188, William was released unharmed at Tortosa, and seems to have ended his days in Tyre, with his son. He probably died in the summer of 1191: Conrad last describes himself as "marchionis Montisferrati filius" in a charter of May that year.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_V,_Marquis_of_Montferrat
_______________________________________________
Guillaume V de Montferrat de la famille des Alérame (Aleramici) (en occ. et en piem. Guilhem, en it. Guglielmo) (v. 1115 † 1191), également connu sous le nom de Guillaume l'ancien pour le distinguer de son fils aîné, Guillaume Longue Épée, est marquis de Montferrat de 1136 à sa mort en 1191. Guillaume est le fils unique du marquis Rénier Ier et de sa femme Gisèle, fille de Guillaume Ier, comte de Bourgogne et veuve du comte Humbert II de Savoie. Il est probable qu'il soit l'un des plus jeunes enfants de ses parents, car il combattait encore en 1187.
Il est décrit par Acerbo Morena (en) comme étant trapu et de taille moyenne, un visage de lièvre et les cheveux presque blancs. Il est éloquent, intelligent, d'une humeur souvent joyeuse sans être extravagant. Sa parenté est impressionnante : neveu du pape Calixte II, frère de Gisèle de Bourgogne, demi-frère d'Amédée III de Savoie, beau-frère de Louis VI de France (par sa demi-sœur Adèle de Savoie) et cousin d'Alphonse VII de Castille, fils de Raymond de Bourgogne, frère de Calixte II et de Gisèle de Bourgogne..
History of William V of Montferrat (1115-1191)
William V of Montferrat (occ./piem. Guilhem, it. Guglielmo) (c. 1115 – 1191) also known regnally as William III of Montferrat[1] while also referred to as William the Old or William the Elder,[1] in o
BIO
BIO: from http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/MONFERRATO,%20SALUZZO,%20SAVONA.htm#AdelasiaMonferratoMManfredoIISaluzzo as of 6/4/2016
GUGLIELMO di Monferrato, son of RANIERI III Marchese di Monferrato &
=== ! Europache Stamtafeln neu folge vol 3 t ===
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=== BECAME A CISTERCIAN MONK AT GRANDSELVER ===
BECAME A CISTERCIAN MONK AT GRANDSELVER.
=== Ancestral File Number: 978V-9Q From ===
Ancestral File Number: 978V-9Q From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996.
=== He was described by Acerbo Morena as of ===
He was described by Acerbo Morena as of medium height and compact build, with a round, somewhat ruddy face and hair so fair as to be almost white. He was eloquent, intelligent and good-humored, generous but not extravagant. Dynastically, he was extremely well-connected: a nephew of Pope Callixtus II, a half-brother of Amadeus III of Savoy, a brother-in-law of Louis VI of France (through his half-sister Adelasia of Moriana), and cousin of Alfonso VII of Castile.
=== BETHAMIS GENEALOGICAL TABLES (GS NUMBER ===
BETHAMIS GENEALOGICAL TABLES (GS NUMBER ESQ929.2 B465C) TAB 573; THE PLANTAGENET ANCESTRY (GS NUMBER Q940 D2T) P.61, 99, 109, 110, 177;
=== #Générale# Mariage : avant le 28 mars 1 ===
#Générale# Mariage : avant le 28 mars 1133
=== !NAME:Guillaume VI, Margrave Of MONTFERR ===
!NAME:Guillaume VI, Margrave Of MONTFERRAT !TITLE:Margrave Of MONTFERRAT From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996.
=== NAME: Guillaume VI, Count Of MONTPELLIER ===
NAME: Guillaume VI, Count Of MONTPELLIER
=== SORLEY'S PEDIGREES (GS NUMBER Q929.242 S ===
SORLEY'S PEDIGREES (GS NUMBER Q929.242 SO68) P.16, 18; THE PLANTAGENET ANCESTRY (GS NUMBER Q940 D2T) P.58;
=== Markgf. v. Montferrat 1140-1180 (resigni ===
Markgf. v. Montferrat 1140-1180 (resigniert)
=== Profession : Seigneur d'Omélas. ===
Profession : Seigneur d'Omélas.
=== Ancestral File Number: 978V-9Q ===
Ancestral File Number: 978V-9Q
=== #Générale# Mariage : avant le 28 mars 11 ===
#Générale# Mariage : avant le 28 mars 1133
=== ! Europache Stamtafeln neu folge vol 3 t ===
! Europache Stamtafeln neu folge vol 3 tafel 445; ! Europache Stamtafeln neu folge vol 3 tafel 445;
=== !NOTE: The Church of Jesus Christ of Lat ===
!NOTE: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Ancestral File (TM); ; June 1998 (c), data as of 5 JAN 1998; ; , Family History Library, 35 N West Temple Street, Salt Lake City, UT 84150 USA
Preferred Parents:
Father: Rainier Marquis of Montferrat, b. 1075 in Monferrato, Alessandria, Piemonte, Italy d. MAY 1135 in Montferrat, Var, Provence-Alpes-Cote d'Azur, France
Mother: Gisela de Burgundy, b. 1072 in Burgundy, France d. MAY 1135 in Chambéry, Savoie, Rhône-Alpes, France
Family 1: Judith von Babenberg, b. 1115 in Klosterneuburg, Wien-Umgebung, Lower Austria, Austria d. 22 NOV 1164 in Klosterneuburg, Wien-Umgebung, Lower Austria, Austria
- m. 28 MAR 1133 in Monferrato, Alessandria, Piemonte, Olaszország
- Béatrice DE MONTFERRAT-DE BABENBERG, b. 1142 in Montferrato, Asti, Piedmont, Italy d. ABT 1228 in Grenoble, Isère, Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes, France
- Boniface Marquis of Montferrat I, b. 1150 in Monferrato, Alessandria, Piemonte, Olaszország d. 4 SEP 1207 in Mosynopolis, Rhodope Mountains, Greece
Sources:
- Title: Foundation for Medieval Genealogy - GUGLIELMO di Monferrato, son of RANIERI III Marchese di Monferrato & his wife Gisèle de Bourgogne-Comté (1110-1191)
Author: FMG Projects/MedLands
Publication: Name: https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/MONFERRATO,%20SALUZZO,%20SAVONA.htm#BeatriceMonferratoMEnricoICarrettoSavona;
Note: GUGLIELMO di Monferrato, son of RANIERI III Marchese di Monferrato & his wife Gisèle de Bourgogne-Comté (1110-1191). "Marchio Ragnerius filius quondam Willielmi et Gisla jugalis filia quondam Vialii, sive Willielmus filius iam dicti Ragnerii nec non et Julitta jugalis filia Lupaldi, atque Ardezonus filius quondam item Ardezonii" donated property to the monastery of Locedio by charter dated 28 Mar 1133 "in castro…Monsbellus"[88]. His parentage is suggested by William of Tyre who names him "Wilelmus marchio de Monteferrato eiusdem domini imperatoris sororius" when recording his presence with Konrad III King of Germany in Palestine in 1148[89], and "avunculus" of Louis VII King of France when referring to the marriage of his son Guglielmo in 1176[90]. He succeeded his father in [1137] as GUGLIELMO V "il Vecchio" Marchese di Monferrato. Leader of the Ghibellin party in Italy. William of Tyre names him "Wilelmus marchio de Monteferrato eiusdem domini imperatoris sororius" when recording his presence with Konrad III King of Germany in Palestine in 1148[91], and "avunculus" of Louis VII King of France when referring to the marriage of his son Guglielmo in 1176[92]. "Guilelmus marchio filius quondam Rainerii…marchionis et Julita jugalis filia quondam marchionis Leopoldi de Austria" donated property to the monastery of Grassano by charter dated [15/16] Mar 1156[93]. He quarrelled with Emperor Friedrich I "Barbarossa" King of Germany and lent support to the Italian policy of Emperor Manuel I[94]. "Dominus Wilielmus Montisferrati marchio…et Bonefacius eius filius" renounced their rights in property in Cinaglio in favour of the church of Ca sale by charter dated 3 Sep 1184[95]. He arrived in Palestine in 1185 and was given a small fief in Galilee[96]. Saladin captured him and threatened to kill him unless his son Corrado surrendered Tyre but spared his life when his son refused[97]. He was released and allowed to return to his son at Tyre in Jul 1188[98].
m (before 28 Mar 1133) JUDITH of Austria, daughter of LEOPOLD III "der Heilige" Markgraf of Austria [Babenberg] & his second wife Agnes of Germany [Staufen] (-after 1178). The wife of Marchese Guglielmo is recorded by William of Tyre as sister of Konrad III King of Germany[99]. The Continuatio Claustroneoburgensis names "Iuta" as fifth daughter of "Liupoldus marchio Austrie" and "Agnetem imperatoris Heinrici IV filiam", specifying that she married "marchio de monte Phetran Regengerus"[100], although this appears chronologically impossible and presumably refers to Marchese Guglielmo. The Cronica Alberti de Bezanis refers to the wife of "Gulielmus marchio Montisferati" as "sororem domini Conradi regis Romanorum et domini Frederici ducis Suevorum"[101]. "Marchio Ragnerius filius quondam Willielmi et Gisla jugalis filia quondam Vialii, sive Willielmus filius iam dicti Ragnerii nec non et Julitta jugalis filia Lupaldi, atque Ardezonus filius quondam item Ardezonii" donated property to the monastery of Locedio by charter dated 28 Mar 1133 "in castro…Monsbellus"[102]. "Guilelmus marchio filius quondam Rainerii…marchionis et Julita jugalis filia quondam marchionis Leopoldi de Austria" donated property to the monastery of Grassano by charter dated [15/16] Mar 1156[103].
Marchese Guglielmo & his wife had [nine] children:
1. GUGLIELMO "Longa-Espia" di Monferrato ([1135/45]-Jun 1177).
2. [BEATRICE (-bur Notre Dame de Grenoble).
3. CORRADO di Monferrato ([1145/47]-murdered Tyre 28 Apr 1192).
4. BONIFAZIO (1150-killed in battle 4 Sep 1207).
5. FEDERIGO .
6. RANIERI di Monferrato (1163-poisoned [19/31] Aug 1182).
7. AGNESE (-1202).
8. ALASIA (-[after 24 Jun 1231]).
9. daughter .
Page: Source record for GUGLIELMO di Monferrato, son of RANIERI III Marchese di Monferrato & his wife Gisèle de Bourgogne-Comté (1110-1191).
- Title: Guglielmo V del Monferrato - Wikipedia
Publication: Name: https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guglielmo_V_del_Monferrato;
- Title: Legacy NFS Source: VI William , Margrave Of Montferrat - birth: 1110; France
Author: 160010.GED, Not Given
Note: birth: 1110; France
Source Media Type: Other
death:
Source Media Type: Other
Source Media Type: Other
Page: Migrated from user-supplied source citation: urn:familysearch:source:2737222791
- Title: Foundation for Medieval Genealogy - GUGLIELMO (1110-1191)
Author: FMG Projects/MedLands
Publication: Name: https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/MONFERRATO,%20SALUZZO,%20SAVONA.htm#GugliemoVdied1191A;
Note: 2. GUGLIELMO (1110-1191). "Marchio Ragnerius filius quondam Willielmi et Gisla jugalis filia quondam Vialii, sive Willielmus filius iam dicti Ragnerii nec non et Julitta jugalis filia Lupaldi, atque Ardezonus filius quondam item Ardezonii" donated property to the monastery of Locedio by charter dated 28 Mar 1133 "in castro…Monsbellus"[86]. He succeeded his father in [1137] as GUGLIELMO V "il Vecchio" Marchese di Monferrato.
Page: Source record for GUGLIELMO (1110-1191).
- Title: Page Wikipedia
Publication: Name: https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guillaume_V_de_Montferrat;
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