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Guillaume I de Normandie King of England (William I), Duc de Normandie
(Abt 1027/1028-1087)
Mathilde de Flandre
(Abt 1032-1083)
Máel Coluim mac Donnchada Dunkeld King Malcolm III of Scotland
(1031-1093)
Margaret of England
(Between 1046/1053-1093)
Henry I of England King of England, Duc de Normandie
(1068-1135)
Matilda Dunkeld
(1079-1118)
Matilda de Normandie Holy Roman Empress
(1102-1167)

 

Family Links

Spouses/Children:
1. Heinrich V Römisch-deutscher König und Kaiser
2. Geoffroy V d'Anjou Comte d'Anjou et du Maine, Duc de Normandie

Matilda de Normandie Holy Roman Empress 2 3

  • Born: 7 Feb 1102, Winchester, Hampshire, SO22, GB
  • Marriage (1): Heinrich V Römisch-deutscher König und Kaiser on 6 Jan 1114 in Mainz, Rheinland-Pfalz, DE 1
  • Marriage (2): Geoffroy V d'Anjou Comte d'Anjou et du Maine, Duc de Normandie on 17 Jun 1128 in Cathédrale Saint-Julien du Mans, Le Mans, Sarthe, Pays de la Loire, FR 1 2 3
  • Died: 10 Sep 1167 aged 65 4
  • BuriedFem: Cathédrale Notre-Dame de Rouen, Rouen, Seine-Maritime, Haute-Normandie, 76000, FR

   Other names for Matilda were Adelaide Beauclerc and Maud Beauclerc.

  General Notes:

MATILDA (Winchester or London 1102-Abbaye de Notre-Dame des Près, near Rouen 10 Sep 1167, bur Abbaye du Bec, Normandy, later moved to Rouen Cathedral). Orderic Vitalis names "Guillelmum Adelinum, et Mathildem imperatricem" as the children of King Henry I and his wife Matilda. The Chronicle of Gervase records the birth "secundo anno regni" of "filiam…Matildis". According to Weir, she was christened Adelaide but adopted the name Matilda on her first marriage. The primary source on which this is based has not yet been identified. The chronology of Matilda´s first marriage is complicated. Negotiations for the marriage started in 1109: Henry of Huntingdon records that ambassadors were sent by "Henrico imperatore Romano" to request "filiam regis" in marriage for "domini sui", that they were received in the English court "ad Pentecosten", and that "filia regis" was given ("data") to "imperatori" in the following year, dated to [1109/10] from the context. The English king's presence in London at that time is confirmed by the Regesta Regum Anglorum which lists three charters dated 13 June 1109 "Pentecost"issued at Westminster in King Henry's name. The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle records in 1109 that "before Whitsuntide" King Henry I returned to England from Normandy and "held his court at Westminster" where "the contracts were completed and the oaths sworn for the marriage of his daughter to the emperor" and in 1110 that "before Lent, the king sent his daughter oversea with innumerable treasures and gave her in marriage to the emperor". Florence of Worcester records that "rex Anglorum Henricus"granted "filiam suam...in conjugem" to "Heinrico regi Teutonicorum", dated to 1110 from the context. In a later passage, the same source records that "Matildis filia regis Anglorum" who was "Heinrico, Romanorum imperatori...desponsata" was consecrated empress "VIII Id Jan" (6 January) at Mainz, dated to 1114 from the context. The Continuatio of the Gesta Ducum Normannorum records that "Henricus quintus rex et quartus imperator Romanorum et Alemannorum" requested in marriage the daughter of the king of England who was brought to his kingdom, that the couple were betrothed ("desponsavit")in Utrecht at Easter, and that Matilda was consecrated queen in Mainz "in festivitate sancti Iacobi" (25 July) by the archbishop of Köln. Matilda was then carefully brought up ("studiose nutriri precepit") by Bruno archbishop of Trier, including learning the German language and customs, until the time for her marriage ("tempus nuptiarum"). Orderic Vitalis records that "Henricus rex Anglorum" gave "Mathildem filiam suam...in uxorem" to "Imperatori", that "Rogerius filius Ricardi [identified as Roger FitzRichard de Clare] cognatus regis, cum nobili comitatu in Anglia" escorted her to Germany, and that her dowry was 10,000 marks, undated but dated to [1110] from the context. The dating is confirmed approximately by a later passage in the same source, recording the death of Emperor Heinrich, which states that he married Matilda three years after succeeding his father (who died in August 1106). Another passage records that "Henricus rex" gave "Mathildem filiam suam...in conjugium" to "Karolo [error for Henrico] Henrici filio Imperatori Alemannorum", that she was led to her husband by "Burchardus præsul Cameracensium", in the presence of "Rogerius...filius Ricardi, aliique plures ex Normannis comitati". This last passage is dated to [1109] from the context. However, Burchard was not appointed bishop of Cambrai until 1114: the Annales Cameracensis record that "domnus Burgardus" was elected [as bishop] in 1114. The Annals of Winchester record that "rex" sent "filiam suam Matildem"for betrothal ("desponsandam") to "imperatori Henrico" with 5,000 marks of silver in 1110, adding that she was only 8 years and 15 days old. The Annals of Winchelcombe, Gloucestershire record in 1114 that "Matildis filia regis Anglorum Henrici" married ("desponsatur...sponsam suscepit") "Anglici regis filiam" and that the dowry was agreed ("more dotavit") in Utrecht at Easter. Simeon of Durham records in 1110 that "rex Anglorum Henricus" gave "filiam suam" in marriage ("in conjugem dedit") to "Henrico imperatori",adding that he sent her from Dover "usque ad Witsand" at the start of "Quadragesimæ...IV Id Apr". The same source records in 1114 that "Mathildis filia regis Anglorum Henrici" was married ("desponsata") to "Henrico Romanorum imperatori" and was consecrated empress at Mainz "VIII Id Jan". The Annales Hildesheimensis record a synod held "Non Mar" in 1110 by Pope Paschal who sent legates to Liège ("Leodium ad regem") and that there ("ibi") "rex" received as wife ("sponsam suscepit") "Anglici regis filiam" and that he granted her dower in accordance with the customs of the kingdom ("regio more dotavit") in Utrecht at Easter. The same source records in 1114 that Matilda married ("desponsatur") "Henrico Romanorum imperatori". The Annales Sancti Disibodi record in 1109 that "Rex" was betrothed ("desponsata") to "filia regis Anglorum" and in 1114 that "Imperator" passed Christmas at "Babinberg" and married ("nuptias fecit") at Mainz "post epiphaniam". Matilda was crowned empress again in 1117 with her husband at St Peter's Basilica, Rome. Her second marriage is recorded by Orderic Vitalis The Chronicle of Gervase records the second marriage of "filiam suam…viduam" to "Gaufrido comiti Andegaviæ". Matilda asserted the right to succeed after the death of her father and fought King Stephen in a civil war in which she was finally defeated 1 Nov 1141. Robert of Torigny records the death "1167…IV Id Sep Rothomagi" of "matris suæ [Henrici regis] Mathildis imperatricis" and her burial "Becci". The necrology of Angers Cathedral records the death "II Id Sep" of "Mathildis imperatrix filia Henrici regis uxor Goffredi comitis".

m firstly (betrothed Utrecht Easter 1110, Mainz 6 Jan 1114) Emperor HEINRICH V, son of Emperor HEINRICH IV & his first wife Berthe de Savoie (1081-Utrecht 23 May 1125, bur Speyer Cathedral).

m secondly (Le Mans Cathedral, Anjou 17 Jun 1128) GEOFFROY d'Anjou, son of FOULQUES V Comte d'Anjou & his first wife Aremburge de Maine (24 Aug 1113-Château du Loire 7 Sep 1151, bur Le Mans Cathedral, Anjou). He succeeded on the abdication of his father in 1129 as GEOFFROI V "le Bel/Plantagenet" Comte d'Anjou. He was proclaimed Duke of Normandy 19 Jan 1144.

Matilda & her second husband had three children.


Matilda married Heinrich V Römisch-deutscher König und Kaiser, son of Heinrich IV Römisch-deutscher König und Kaiser and Berthe de Savoie, on 6 Jan 1114 in Mainz, Rheinland-Pfalz, DE.1 (Heinrich V Römisch-deutscher König und Kaiser was born in 1081,1 died on 23 May 1125 in Utrecht, Utrecht, 3450, NL 1 4 and was buried in Domkirche St. Maria und St. Stephan, Speyer, 67346, DE 1.)


Matilda next married Geoffroy V d'Anjou Comte d'Anjou et du Maine, Duc de Normandie, son of Foulques [V] d'Anjou Comte d'Anjou et de Tours, King of Jerusalem and Erembourg du Maine Comtesse du Maine, Dame de Château-du-Loir, on 17 Jun 1128 in Cathédrale Saint-Julien du Mans, Le Mans, Sarthe, Pays de la Loire, FR.1 2 3 (Geoffroy V d'Anjou Comte d'Anjou et du Maine, Duc de Normandie was born on 24 Aug 1113,3 died on 7 Sep 1151 in Château-du-Loir, Sarthe, Pays de la Loire, 72500, FR 5 and was buried in Cathédrale Saint-Julien du Mans, Le Mans, Sarthe, Pays de la Loire, FR 6.)


Sources


1 Charles Cawley, <i>Medieval Lands</i>.

2 Frederick Lewis Weis, Jr. Walter Lee Sheppard, William Ryland Beall, Kaleen E. Beall, <i>Ancestral Roots Of Certain American Colonists Who Came To America Before 1700: Lineages from Alfred the Great, Charlemagne, Malcolm of Scotland, Robert the Strong, and Other Historical Individuals</i> (Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc., 2004 (Reprint)), 1:24.

3 Alison Weir, <i>Britain's Royal Families: The Complete Genealogy</i> (Random House, 2011), p. 59.

4 Frederick Lewis Weis, Jr. Walter Lee Sheppard, William Ryland Beall, Kaleen E. Beall, <i>Ancestral Roots Of Certain American Colonists Who Came To America Before 1700: Lineages from Alfred the Great, Charlemagne, Malcolm of Scotland, Robert the Strong, and Other Historical Individuals</i> (Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc., 2004 (Reprint)), 1:24, p. 3.

5 Frederick Lewis Weis, Jr. Walter Lee Sheppard, William Ryland Beall, Kaleen E. Beall, <i>Ancestral Roots Of Certain American Colonists Who Came To America Before 1700: Lineages from Alfred the Great, Charlemagne, Malcolm of Scotland, Robert the Strong, and Other Historical Individuals</i> (Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc., 2004 (Reprint)), 1:23.

6 Alison Weir, <i>Britain's Royal Families: The Complete Genealogy</i> (Random House, 2011), p. 50.

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