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Count of Eu John d'Eu

Count of Eu John d'Eu

Male Abt 1113 - 1170  (57 years)

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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Count of Eu John d'Eu was born about 1113 in Leicestershire, England (son of Henry d'Eu and Margaret de Champagne); died on 26 Jun 1170.

    John married Alice d'Aubigny in 1141/1168. Alice was born about 1145 in Castle Arundell, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. Lord Hastings Henry d'Eu was born about 1145 in Leicestershire, England; died in Mar 1182/83.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Henry d'Eu was born about 1090 in Leicestershire, England (son of Count of Eu, Lord of Hastings William II d'Eu and Beatrice de Builly); died on 12 Jul 1140 in Foucaemont, France; was buried in Foucaemont Abbey.

    Henry married Margaret de Champagne. Margaret (daughter of Count of Chartres William de Blois and Agnes de Sully) was born about 1090 in Leicestershire, England; died on 15 Dec 1145. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Margaret de Champagne was born about 1090 in Leicestershire, England (daughter of Count of Chartres William de Blois and Agnes de Sully); died on 15 Dec 1145.
    Children:
    1. 1. Count of Eu John d'Eu was born about 1113 in Leicestershire, England; died on 26 Jun 1170.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Count of Eu, Lord of Hastings William II d'Eu was born in 1050 (son of Robert d'Eu and Beatrice de Falaise); died in 1095.

    William married Beatrice de Builly. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Beatrice de Builly
    Children:
    1. 2. Henry d'Eu was born about 1090 in Leicestershire, England; died on 12 Jul 1140 in Foucaemont, France; was buried in Foucaemont Abbey.

  3. 6.  Count of Chartres William de Blois was born in 1086 (son of Count of Blois Stephen Henry II (Etienne Henri) "The Sage" and Adela (Adelle)); died in 1150.

    William married Agnes de Sully. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 7.  Agnes de Sully
    Children:
    1. 3. Margaret de Champagne was born about 1090 in Leicestershire, England; died on 15 Dec 1145.


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  Robert d'Eu was born about 1028 in Thouars, Deux-Sevres, Poitou-Charentes, France; died on 8 Sep 1093.

    Notes:

    ROBERT, COMTE D'EU
    The Conqueror and His Companions
    by J.R. Planché, Somerset Herald. London: Tinsley Brothers, 1874..
    "E li Quens d'Ou bien i feri." Roman de Rou, 1. 13,828.

    The town of Eu, in the province of Caux, situated on the left bank of the river Eu or Ou, now called the Bresle, about half a league from Tréport,, is as well known to English tourists as to historians, from the memorable events connected with it, and the rank of the individuals who have borne the title of its counts, the first being Geoffrey, natural son of Richard I, Duke of Normandy, created by him Count of Eu and Brionne. The nuptials of William the Conqueror and Matilda of Flanders were celebrated at Eu, and Count Baldwin, her father, availed himself of the opportunity to obtain from the Duke of Normandy the restoration of Brionne to the sons of Gilbert son of Geoffrey, who had been dispossessed of his domains by his uncle, Richard II. Duke William so far consented that he gave the lordship of Bienfaite and Orbec to Richard, the eldest son, and those of Mole and Sap to his brother Baldwin; but the county of Eu had been given by Richard II to his half-brother William, who, by his wife Leceline, daughter of Turketil d'Harcourt, left three sons: Robert, Comte d'Eu, the subject of this memoir, William, surnamed Busac, Count of the Hiemois, and afterwards of Soissons, and Hugh, Bishop of Lisieux. The date of the death of the first William, Comte d'Eu, is not exactly known, but it was previous to 1054, when we find his son Robert one of the commanders of that division of the Norman army which defeated the French at Mortemer.

    In 1066, he contributed sixty ships to the invading fleet, and fought gallantly ("bien i feri") at Senlac, and for these services received large estates in Sussex and other counties in England, with the custody of the Castle of Hastings.

    In 1069, in conjunction with Robert, Comte de Mortain, he surprised the Danes in Lindsey, and drove them with great slaughter to their ships (vide p. 109, ante).

    After the death of the Conqueror, the Comte d'Eu espoused the cause of Robert Court-heuse, and maintained it for some time; but, disgusted by his capriciousness, levity, and debauchery, went over, with many other Norman lords, to the side of William Rufus, allowing his castles to be garrisoned by the royal forces.

    In 1077 he attended the funeral of his estimable brother, Hugh, Bishop of Lisieux, who, being seized with what he felt was a fatal illness at the village of Pont l'Evesque, begged to be carried to Lisieux, that he might breathe his last in the Abbey of St. Peter there, the building of which, begun by his predecessor, Bishop Herbert, he had most liberally completed. Placed on a convenient hand-litter, he was carried from the village, the clergy of the highest rank and the most honourable of the laity bearing their beloved father on their shoulders; but while they were using their utmost efforts to reach Lisieux, some four leagues distance from Pont l'Evesque, it became evident the Bishop's last moments were approaching, and they therefore turned out of the road on to a piece of level turf by its side. There, laid in the bright sunshine, which "shrouded the dying prelate in its blaze," amid the prayers and tears of his attached friends, "the venerable Hugh, the gem of the priesthood, and the best of men," calmly expired, 17th of July, 1077. A cross was erected in the field near the road where the Bishop died, which is called to this day (circa 1127) "the Bishop's Cross." (Writing on this, the 25th July, 1873, it is impossible for me not to mention that on this day are consigned to the tomb the earthly remains of one of the most distinguished prelates of modern times, who nearly eight hundred years since the death of Bishop Hugh, in the same month and within forty-eight hours of the same day, died "in a field by the road side," by a lamentable accident it is true, but was, nevertheless, perhaps the only other bishop whose eyes have closed in death upon a spot of green turf, golden with a July sun, and. whereupon his family proposes to erect a cross in memoriam, such as did the devoted friends of the excellent Bishop of Lisieux.) The field has since retained, the name of "Le prée l'Evesque."

    The Count's other brother, William de Busac, does not occupy so honourable a place in Norman history. His rebellion against his namesake and sovereign was unjustifiable and ineffectual. Defeated and banished, his honourable reception by Henry, King of France and his marriage with the heiress of Reginald, Comte de Soissons, availed him but little. His name is all but unknown to the readers of English history, and his race dropped en quenouille after two generations.

    Robert I, Comte d'Eu, died circa 1090, leaving by Beatrix his wife, one of the many noble ladies of whose family we are left in lamentable ignorance, William, who succeeded him, and who, joining in the rebellion against Rufus in 1096, was taken prisoner, and deprived of sight, as well as horribly mutilated, and a younger son, named Robert. Of his "works of piety," as Dugdale phrases it, we may record the foundation, between 1057 and 1066, of the Abbey of Tréport, near Eu, by request of his wife, andd the advice of Duke William and Maurilliers, Archbishop of Rouen.

    Died:
    Abbey Le Treport, Normandy, France

    Robert married Beatrice de Falaise. Beatrice (daughter of Reynold de Falaise) was born in 1036; died in 1085. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 9.  Beatrice de Falaise was born in 1036 (daughter of Reynold de Falaise); died in 1085.
    Children:
    1. 4. Count of Eu, Lord of Hastings William II d'Eu was born in 1050; died in 1095.

  3. 12.  Count of Blois Stephen Henry II (Etienne Henri) "The Sage" was born about 1045 in Blois, Loir-et-Cher, France (son of Count of Blois and Champagne III Theobald and of Maine Garsende); died on 19 May 1102 in Ramula, Holy Land.

    Notes:

    BIOGRAPHY: http://www.dcs.hull.ac.uk/cgi-bin/gedlkup/n=royal?royal1517
    Count of Blois, Champagne, Chartres and Tourain, a crusader under Godfrey de Bouillon, who fell, gallantly fighting against the Infidels at Rames. (Battle of Ascalon actually). Count of Meaux.

    Stephen married Adela (Adelle) about 1081 in Chartres Cathedral, France. Adela (daughter of William I "The Conqueror", King of England and of Flanders Matilda) was born in 1062 in Normandy, France; died on 8 Mar 1137 in Marcigny-sur-Loire, France. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 13.  Adela (Adelle) was born in 1062 in Normandy, France (daughter of William I "The Conqueror", King of England and of Flanders Matilda); died on 8 Mar 1137 in Marcigny-sur-Loire, France.

    Notes:

    Became a Nun at Cluniac Priory in widowhood.

    Children:
    1. Count of Virtus Humbert de Blois was born about 1094.
    2. Count of Blois and Champagne Theobald IV de Blois was born on 2 Apr 1093 in Blois, Loir-et-Cher, France; died on 8 Jan 1151/52; was buried on 10 Jan 1152.
    3. Bishop of Winchester Henry de Blois was born about 1099; died on 6 Aug 1171.
    4. Matilda (Maud) de Blois was born in 1086; died on 25 Nov 1120 in Drowned in wreck of the White Ship near Barfleur, Manche, France.
    5. Lithiuse (Adele) de Blois was born about 1094.
    6. Agnes de Blois was born in 1088; died in 1129.
    7. Eléonore de Blois was born in 1104; died in 1147.
    8. Alice de Blois was born in 1091 in Blois, Loir-et-Cher, France.
    9. King of England Stephen de Blois was born about 1096 in Blois, France; died on 25 Oct 1154 in Dover Castle, Kent, England; was buried in Faversham Abbey, Kent, England.
    10. 6. Count of Chartres William de Blois was born in 1086; died in 1150.
    11. Count of Champagne and Brie Eudes (Odo) de Blois was born about 1092.
    12. Bishop of Chalon Phillip de Blois died in 1100.