Robert, Count of Eu
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Robert, Count of Eu and Lord of Hastings (d. between 1089 and 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 Beatrix de Falaise.[5] They had:
- Raoul d'Eu (d. after 1036)[6]
- Robert d'Eu (d. 1149),[6] married Matilda, daughter of Roger I, Count of Sicily and Eremburga of Mortain[7]
- 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.[citation needed]
- William II, who succeeded his father as Count of Eu and Lord of Hastings[8]
Very devout, he made numerous donations to the Church, notably lands at Fécamp Abbey of Rouen in 1051. He was buried in the Abbey of Saint-Michel du Tréport,[9] which he had founded in Tréport, near the town of Eu, between 1057 and 1066,[10] in memory of his first wife. 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.
Sources
[edit]- Barlow, Frank (2000). William Rufus. Yale University Press.
- Callender, Eric (2014). The Monastery of Saint-Michel du Tréport and the Borderlands of Northeast Normandy, 1059-1270 (Masters Thesis). Western Michigan University.
- Cownie, Emma (1998). Religious Patronage in Anglo-Norman England, 1066-1135. The Boydell Press. ISBN 978-0-86193-232-0.
- 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. 61 (240 May). Oxford University Press: 129–156.
- 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.
- Loud, Graham (2013). The Age of Robert Guiscard: Southern Italy and the Northern Conquest. Routledge.
- Power, Daniel (2004). The Norman Frontier in the Twelfth and Early Thirteenth Centuries. Cambridge University Press.
- Van Houts, Elizabeth, ed. (2000). The Normans in Europe. Manchester University Press.
References
[edit]- ^ Douglas 1946, p. 135.
- ^ Van Houts 2000, p. 130.
- ^ Harper-Bill 2000, p. 91.
- ^ Hagger 2012, p. 96.
- ^ Cownie 1998, p. 214.
- ^ a b Power 2004, p. 497.
- ^ Loud 2013, p. 178.
- ^ Barlow 2000, p. 469.
- ^ Crouch 2005, p. 164.
- ^ Callender 2014, p. 1.