Nielsen Hayden genealogy

Raymond II des Baux

Male - 1279


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Raymond II des Baux (son of Guillaume II des Baux and Precieuse); died on 31 Oct 1279.

    Notes:

    Co-Prince d'Orange, Seigneur de Curthezon.

    Family/Spouse: Bigne. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. Bertrand III des Baux died in 1305 in Palestine.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Guillaume II des Baux was born about 1210 (son of Guillaumne I "au Cornet" des Baux and Alix Eloy); died before 1 Nov 1239.

    Notes:

    Co-Prince d'Orange. He is referred to as a troubador, but no records survive of any such activity.

    Guillaume married Precieuse. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Precieuse
    Children:
    1. 1. Raymond II des Baux died on 31 Oct 1279.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Guillaumne I "au Cornet" des Baux was born about 1150 (son of Bertrand of Baux and Tiburge d'Orange); died before 30 Jul 1218 in Avignon, Vaucluse, France.

    Notes:

    Prince d'Orange.

    From Wikipedia (accessed 14 Jun 2020):

    William I of Baux (Occitan: Guilhe?m dei Bauc?, archaic Guillem or Guilhem dels Baus), French: Guillaume des Baux or du Baus, Latin: Guillelmus de Balcio […] was the Prince of Orange from 1182 until his death. He was an important Provençal nobleman.

    William was the son of Bertrand of Baux, the first Prince of Orange, a major patron of Occitan poetry, and Tibors de Sarenom, a sister of Raimbaut d'Aurenga and herself a trobairitz. In 1215, when the Emperor Frederick II sought to make his power effective in the Kingdom of Burgundy, he granted to William at Metz the whole "Kingdom of Arles and Vienne", probably referring to the viceroyalty of the kingdom. William was imprisoned in Avignon in the summer of 1216 and remained there until his death in June 1218. William's descendants continued to claim the Kingdom of Arles until 1393.

    William was a man of letters and a troubadour, inheriting his love of lyric poetry from his patron-composer parents. Two coblas and a sirventes are preserved of William's writings. He was also in contact with other troubadours. The lone surviving sirventes of Gui de Cavalhon was written against William.

    An anecdotal razo is preserved describing how William robbed a French merchant, who subsequently took his case to the king, Philip Augustus, but was rejected because "it had taken place too far away" (i.e. out of French jurisdiction in Provence). The merchant subsequently counterfeited the royal seal and used it to lure William to his (unnamed) city with promises of rewards. When William and his companions arrived in the city the merchant had them arrested and imprisoned until he had made amends for what he had taken. On his return to Provence, William allegedly planned to annex a piece of land ("la Osteilla" or "Estella") belonging to Ademar II of Valentinois when he was captured by Ademar's fisherman in a small boat on the Rhône. This event inspired a cobla from the troubadour Raimbaut de Vaqueiras, who was nicknamed William Engles (the Englishman, for unknown reasons).

    William married Ermengarde, daughter of Raymond of Mévouillon, but divorced her on 21 March 1203. Their child, Raymond I of Baux, succeeded his father as Prince of Orange and King of Arles. William remarried to a woman named Alix. His sons by her, William II and Bertrand II, both later inherited Orange. William also had a daughter named Tibors who married Giraud III Amic, lord of Thor de Châteauneuf.

    From Leo van de Pas:

    Guillaume first made his name with his efforts to drive the Moors out of the Rhône valley, and he earned a place in the chansons de geste ("songs of deeds"), a group of epic poems of medieval France written from the 11th through to the 13th centuries.

    Guillaume was a son of Bertrand, sire de Baux, prince d'Orange, and of Tiburge, princess of Orange. He was first married to Ermengarde de Mévouillon, whom he divorced in November 1204 because of their degree of relationship. He then married Alix Eloy. By each wife he had a son who would have progeny. By Alix he also had a daughter who would have progeny, and a son who did not.

    Guillaume had been on good terms with Raymond VI, count of Toulouse and marquis of Provence. However, after the Battle of Muret on 12 September 1213, early in the Albigensian Crusade, when Simon V de Montfort defeated Raymond VI, Raymond was deprived of his county and marquisate, and Guillaume took over the marquisate, pretending to act on the order of the pope. Pope Innocent III ordered him to turn it over to his legate Cardinal Pierre de Benevento, so as not to prejudice the disposal he would make of it later. Guillaume was very disappointed when the Lateran Council in 1215 instead conferred the marquisate on the young son of Raymond VI, to whom Innocent III had taken a liking.

    To end the anarchy in Provence, Emperor Friedrich II in 1215 considered creating some viceroys there who were devoted to him. One of these was Guillaume, who on 8 January 1215 was created viceroy of the kingdom of Vienne and Arles (Burgundy), with the promise that he would be crowned, which never took place. The appointment was only to an empty title with no authority or influence. However Guillaume's descendants continued to claim the kingdom of Arles until 1393.

    Later in the Albigensian Crusade, Guillaume took the side of the Crusaders, no doubt because he thought it more favourable to his interests, and in Provence he took over the leadership of the Catholic lords. This action brought him to grief. In the summer of 1216 he fell into the hands of the Cathars who imprisoned him at Avignon. Two years later he was said to have been skinned alive before 30 July 1218. His sons Raymond I and Guillaume II from his two marriages succeeded him as co-princes of Orange.

    Guillaumne married Alix Eloy. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Alix Eloy

    Notes:

    Mentioned 1219.

    Children:
    1. 2. Guillaume II des Baux was born about 1210; died before 1 Nov 1239.


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  Bertrand of Baux was born about 1120 (son of Raymond de Baux and Stéphanette de Gevaudan); died between Apr 1180 and 5 Apr 1181.

    Notes:

    Lord of Baux. Prince d'Orange. A major patron of Occitan poetry.

    Bertrand married Tiburge d'Orange. Tiburge (daughter of Guillem d'Omelaz and Tiburge d'Orange) was born about 1130; died between 1181 and 1198. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 9.  Tiburge d'Orange was born about 1130 (daughter of Guillem d'Omelaz and Tiburge d'Orange); died between 1181 and 1198.

    Notes:

    Also called Tibors de Sarenom. She was the earliest known trobairitz, female troubador, active during the classical period of medieval Occitan literature.

    Children:
    1. Bertrand de Baux died in 1201.
    2. Tiburge de Baux
    3. 4. Guillaumne I "au Cornet" des Baux was born about 1150; died before 30 Jul 1218 in Avignon, Vaucluse, France.


Generation: 5

  1. 16.  Raymond de Baux (son of Guillaume-Hugues de Baux and Vierne); died before Sep 1150 in Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain.

    Raymond married Stéphanette de Gevaudan. Stéphanette (daughter of Gilbert of Gévauden and Gerberga of Provence) died after 1160. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 17.  Stéphanette de Gevaudan (daughter of Gilbert of Gévauden and Gerberga of Provence); died after 1160.
    Children:
    1. 8. Bertrand of Baux was born about 1120; died between Apr 1180 and 5 Apr 1181.

  3. 18.  Guillem d'Omelaz was born about 1100 (son of Guillem V de Montpellier and Ermesenda); died before May 1156.

    Notes:

    Lord of Omelaz and Mont-Arnaud. "Omelas or Olmet was a maisonfort in the diocese of Lodève." [James Westfall Thompson, citation details below]

    Guillem married Tiburge d'Orange between 1129 and 1130. Tiburge (daughter of Raymbaud II d'Orange) died after 7 Nov 1136. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 19.  Tiburge d'Orange (daughter of Raymbaud II d'Orange); died after 7 Nov 1136.

    Notes:

    Heiress of Orange.

    Children:
    1. 9. Tiburge d'Orange was born about 1130; died between 1181 and 1198.


Generation: 6

  1. 32.  Guillaume-Hugues de Baux (son of Hugues de Baux and Inauris); died before 1110.

    Guillaume-Hugues married Vierne. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 33.  Vierne

    Notes:

    Mentioned 1046.

    Children:
    1. 16. Raymond de Baux died before Sep 1150 in Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain.

  3. 34.  Gilbert of Gévauden (son of Berenger and Adele de Carlat); died in 1111.

    Notes:

    Count of Gévauden; Viscount of Millau and Lodeve; Count of Provence. Also called Gilbert of Millau.

    Gilbert married Gerberga of Provence. Gerberga (daughter of Geoffrey I and Etiennette) was born about 1060; died in 1115. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 35.  Gerberga of Provence was born about 1060 (daughter of Geoffrey I and Etiennette); died in 1115.

    Notes:

    Countess of Provence; Countess of Arles.

    Ancestral Roots [111:26] gives her as a daughter of Fulk (Bertrand), Count of Provence, citing Europäische Stammtafeln, but the discussion in this SGM thread suggests that this is an error on ES's part and that she was, as most other sources have her, a daughter of Fulk (Betrand)'s father, Geoffrey I of Provence.

    Children:
    1. 17. Stéphanette de Gevaudan died after 1160.
    2. Dulce de Gévauden was born after 1092; died between 28 Nov 1127 and 1130.

  5. 36.  Guillem V de Montpellier was born about 1073 (son of Guillem IV de Montpellier and Ermengarde de Melgueil); died in 1121.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate birth: Abt 1074
    • Alternate birth: Abt 1075
    • Alternate death: Bef 21 Feb 1122

    Notes:

    Seigneur de Montpellier.

    From Wikipedia:

    At the call of Pope Urban II, William took up the cross of the First Crusade under the banner of Raymond IV of Toulouse. He served notable at the capture of the small Syrian village of Ma'arrat al-Numan in 1098. After the fall of Jerusalem in 1099, William remained in the Holy Land for a while. He remained at the side of Godfrey de Bouillon and accompanied him to the siege of Antioch in December 1097. He did not return to Montpellier until 1103, bringing with him a relic of Saint Cleopas.

    When William returned, he found that the Aimoin brothers to whom he had confided the administration of the lordship in his absence had usurped many seigniorial rights and that he was obligated to recognise much of their newfound authority, which diminished his own, in order to retain his position.

    William participated in the army of Raymond Berengar III of Barcelona which captured Majorca from the Moors in 1114. The rest of his reign was marked by the important acquisition of nearby territories, which greatly recouped his power: Montarnaud, Cournonsec, Montferrier, Frontignan, Aumelas, Montbazin, Popian.

    Guillem married Ermesenda between 1086 and 1087. Ermesenda died after 21 Feb 1122. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  6. 37.  Ermesenda died after 21 Feb 1122.

    Notes:

    Or Ermesindis, etc. She was not, contrary to many sources, a daughter of Pierre of Melgueil and Almodis de Toulouse.

    From Peter Stewart, soc.genealogy.medieval, 27 Mar 2020:

    Ermensenda's husband Guillaume V of Montpellier married his daughter Guilelma to Bernard IV of Melgueil, a grandson of Pierre. Consequently, if Ermensenda had been the daughter of Pierre in question, a first-cousin marriage would have taken place in the early-12th century, which is beyond implausible.

    At the time Pierre of Melgueil settled his dispute with Guillaume V of Montpellier the latter was apparently still very young — Pierre died in the late 1080s and (according to Claudie Duhamel-Amado) Guillaume V was born in 1073 or 1074. Given this, it seems likely that a marriage between Pierre's daughter and Guillaume did not last long and that in any event she was not Ermensenda, who outlived him and was the mother of his children including Guilelma married in 1120 to Bernard of Melgueil.

    Children:
    1. Guilelma de Montpellier
    2. Bernard of Cluny was born in Murles, Hérault, Occitan, France.
    3. Guillem VI de Montpellier was born about 1095; died after 11 Dec 1146 in Grandselve Abbey, Bouillac, Tarn-et-Garonne, France.
    4. 18. Guillem d'Omelaz was born about 1100; died before May 1156.

  7. 38.  Raymbaud II d'Orange was born about 1070 (son of Betrand Raimbaud and Gilberte); died about 1121.

    Notes:

    Count of Orange.

    Children:
    1. 19. Tiburge d'Orange died after 7 Nov 1136.