Nielsen Hayden genealogy

Guglielmo II del Vasto

Male - 1219


Generations:      Standard    |    Vertical    |    Compact    |    Box    |    Text    |    Text+    |    Ahnentafel    |    Fan Chart    |    Media

Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Guglielmo II del Vasto (son of Guglielmo I del Vasto); died in 1219.

    Notes:

    Also called Guglielmo di Ceva. Marquess of Ceva.

    Family/Spouse: (Unknown) del Vasto. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. Giorgio del Vasto was born in of Ceva, Cuneo, Piedmont, Italy; died in 1268.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Guglielmo I del Vasto (son of Anselmo del Vasto); died before 1190.

    Notes:

    Also called Guglielmo I di Ceva. Marquess of Ceva.

    Children:
    1. 1. Guglielmo II del Vasto died in 1219.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Anselmo del Vasto (son of Boniface del Vasto and Agnes de Vermandois); died after 1140.

    Notes:

    Marquis of Ceva.

    Children:
    1. 2. Guglielmo I del Vasto died before 1190.
    2. Boniface del Vasto


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  Boniface del Vasto was born about 1060 (son of Otto of Savona and Bertha of Turin); died between 1125 and 1130.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: Abt 1130

    Notes:

    Also called Boniface of Saluzzo, Bonifacio de Saluces, Bonifacio di Revello, Boniface de Clavesana, etc. Margrave of Savona and Western Liguria.

    Boniface married Agnes de Vermandois after 1111. Agnes (daughter of Hugues le Grand and Adèle de Vermandois) died after 1125. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 9.  Agnes de Vermandois (daughter of Hugues le Grand and Adèle de Vermandois); died after 1125.
    Children:
    1. Manfredo I del Vasto died in 1175.
    2. 4. Anselmo del Vasto died after 1140.
    3. Sybille de Saluzzo died before 11 Dec 1146.


Generation: 5

  1. 16.  Otto of Savona (son of Anselmo and Adila); died between Sep 1064 and 12 May 1065.

    Notes:

    Also called Teto; Teotone; Oddone. Margrave de Vasto. Margrave of Western Liguria.

    Otto married Bertha of Turin about 1036. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 17.  Bertha of Turin (daughter of Olderich II Manfredo and Berta of Este).

    Notes:

    Also called Berta de Susa.

    Children:
    1. Manfredo de Savona
    2. 8. Boniface del Vasto was born about 1060; died between 1125 and 1130.

  3. 18.  Hugues le Grand was born about 1057 (son of Henri I, King Of France and Anne of Kiev, Queen Consort of France); died on 18 Oct 1101 in Tarsus, Cilicia; was buried in Cathedral of St. Paul, Tarsus, Cilicia.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: 18 Oct 1102, Tarsus, Cilicia

    Notes:

    Count of Crépy. Count of Vermandois and Valois. Duke of France.

    Also called Hugh "Magnus".

    The place where he died, in what is now south-central Turkey, is the same Tarsus as in "Saul of Tarsus," before he turned into St. Paul.

    Post to SGM by Nathaniel Lane Taylor, 22 Jan 2004, about the battle in which Hugues died:
    [I]t was I who first first posted the death date & circumstances on Hugh of Vermandois when I started this whole messy thread. But the 1101 date is clearly correct, because Hugh died of wounds after the battle in which a Crusader force was annihilated at Heraklea (Asia Minor) in late September of 1101. There is no mistaking the year, in the chronology of the first Crusade's aftermath. Runciman (2:28-29) does not provide a precise date for that battle, but it was one of three major failures of Western forces the Summer and Fall of 1101. See generally his History of the Crusades, vol. 2, chapter 2, "The Crusades of 1101." On the battle at Heraklea, he says:

    "Early in September they [see below] entered Heraclea, which they found deserted as Konya had been. Just beyond the town flowed the river, one of the few Anatolian streams to flow abundantly throughout the summer. The Christian warriors, half-mad from thirst, broke their ranks to rush to the welcoming water. But the Turkish army lay concealed in the thickets on the river banks. As the crusaders surged on in disorder, the Turks sprang out on them and surrounded them. There was no time to reform ranks. Panic spread through the Christian army. Horsemen and infantry were mixed in a dreadful stampede; and as they stumbled in their attempt to flee they were slaughtered by the enemy. The duke of Aquitaine, followed by one of his grooms, cut his way out and rode into the mountains. After many days of wandering through the passes he found his way to Tarsus. Hugh of Vermandois was badly wounded in the battle; but some of his men rescued him and he too reached Tarsus. But he was a dying man. His death took place on 18 October and they buried him there in the Cathedral of St Paul. He never fulfilled his vow to go to Jerusalem. Welf of Bavaria only escaped by throwing away all his armor. After several weeks he arrived with two or three attendants at Antioch. Archbishop Thiemo [of Salzburg] was taken prisoner and martyred for his faith. The fate of the Margravine of Austria is unknown. Later legends said that she ended her days a captive in a far-off harem, where she gave birth to the Moslem hero Zengi. More probably she was thrown from her litter in the panic and trampled to death."

    Runciman cites Albert of Aachen, 8.34-40 (pp. 579-82 in the edition he cites); and Ekkehard, 24-26 (pp. 30-32), among other material on the legend of the the Margravine of Austria, etc.


    It is PNH's contention that this Hugh le Grand is the exact bellybutton of the Middle Ages. His father was a king of France; his mother was one of the daughters of Yaroslav the Wise, Grand Prince of Kiev; and his daughter Isabel married, as her first husband, one of the Conqueror's proven companions at Hastings. Another daughter, Agnes, married a marcher lord of northern Italy. Through his mother he was also descended from three canonized Kievan saints and two kings of Sweden. He married the last member of the Carolingian dynasty. He died on Crusade. He was called Hugues le Grand. Case closed.

    Hugues married Adèle de Vermandois about 1080. Adèle (daughter of Herbert IV and Adela of Vexin) died in 1120; was buried on 28 Sep 1120 in Vermandois, Aisne, Picardy, France. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 19.  Adèle de Vermandois (daughter of Herbert IV and Adela of Vexin); died in 1120; was buried on 28 Sep 1120 in Vermandois, Aisne, Picardy, France.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: Between 1120 and 1124

    Notes:

    Countess of Vermandois. Last member of the Carolingian dynasty.

    According to Royal Ancestry, she died "28 September, between 1120 and 1124."

    Children:
    1. Isabel de Vermandois died before Jun 1147.
    2. Beatrice de Vermandois died after 1144.
    3. 9. Agnes de Vermandois died after 1125.
    4. Mathilde de Vermandois was born about 1080.


Generation: 6

  1. 32.  Anselmo died before 1055.

    Notes:

    Margrave de Vasto.

    Anselmo married Adila. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 33.  Adila
    Children:
    1. 16. Otto of Savona died between Sep 1064 and 12 May 1065.

  3. 34.  Olderich II Manfredo was born in 992 (son of Manfred I of Turin and Prangardia di Canossa); died on 29 Oct 1034 in Turin, Torino, Piedmont, Italy; was buried in Turin Cathedral, Turin, Torino, Piedmont, Italy.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: 1035

    Notes:

    Also called Ulric Manfredo. Count of Susa. Margrave of Turin.

    Olderich married Berta of Este before 1014. Berta (daughter of Oberto Obizzo II of Este and Railende du Como) died in 1029. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 35.  Berta of Este (daughter of Oberto Obizzo II of Este and Railende du Como); died in 1029.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: Aft 4 Nov 1037
    • Alternate death: Aft 29 Dec 1037

    Notes:

    From Wikipedia:

    Bertha of Milan or Bertha of Luni (c. 997-c. 1040), was a member of the Obertenghi dynasty. Bertha was married to Ulric Manfred II of Turin. She is sometimes identified with the Bertha who was married to Arduin of Ivrea.

    Although it is known that Bertha was a member of the Otbertenghi dynasty, there is some debate about who her parents were. Her father is often said to be Oberto II, but others argue that Bertha's father was in fact Otbert III of Milan.

    By 1014 at the latest, Bertha had married Ulric Manfred (that year, Emperor Henry II confirmed their joint donation to the abbey of Fruttuaria). Her dowry included lands in the counties of Tortona, Parma and Piacenza.

    In May 1028 with her husband, Ulric Manfred, Bertha founded the convent of Santa Maria at Caramagna. The following year, in July 1029, along with her husband and his brother, Bishop Alric of Asti, Bertha founded the Benedictine abbey in of S. Giusto in Susa, which housed the relics of Saint Justus of Novalesa. The church of the Abbey of San Giusto is now Susa Cathedral.

    After Ulric Manfred's death (in December 1033 or 1034), Bertha briefly acted as regent for their daughter, Adelaide of Susa.

    In 1037 Bertha captured envoys who wished to cross the Alps from Piedmont to Champagne, thus foiling a conspiracy against Emperor Conrad II. Conrad II rewarded Bertha for her part in suppressing the rebellion against him by issuing an imperial diploma which confirmed her donations to the abbey of S. Giusto in Susa.

    Children:
    1. 17. Bertha of Turin
    2. Irmingard de Susa died on 28 Jan 1078.
    3. Adelaide of Susa was born about 1015; died on 27 Dec 1091 in Canischio, Turino, Piedmont, Italy.

  5. 36.  Henri I, King Of France was born before 17 May 1008 (son of Robert II, King of France and Constance of Provence, Queen Consort of France); died on 4 Aug 1060; was buried in Abbey of Saint-Denis, Saint-Denis, France.

    Henri married Anne of Kiev, Queen Consort of France on 19 May 1051 in Rheims, Marne, Champagne-Ardenne, France. Anne (daughter of Yaroslav I "The Wise", Grand Prince of Kiev and Ingegerd (St. Anna) of Sweden) was born in 1036 in Kiev, Ukraine; died after 1075. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  6. 37.  Anne of Kiev, Queen Consort of France was born in 1036 in Kiev, Ukraine (daughter of Yaroslav I "The Wise", Grand Prince of Kiev and Ingegerd (St. Anna) of Sweden); died after 1075.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Alternate death: Bef 1079

    Notes:

    Also known as Agnes of Kiev and Anna Yaroslavna.

    According to Royal Ancestry, she died "5 Sept., between 1075 and 1078."

    Children:
    1. Philippe I, King of France was born before 23 May 1053; died on 29 Jul 1108 in Château Melun, Seine-et-Marne, Île-de-France, France; was buried in Abbey of Saint-Benoît-sur-Loire, Centre-Val de Loire, France.
    2. 18. Hugues le Grand was born about 1057; died on 18 Oct 1101 in Tarsus, Cilicia; was buried in Cathedral of St. Paul, Tarsus, Cilicia.

  7. 38.  Herbert IV was born about 1032 (son of Otto and Parvi); died after 30 Sep 1080.

    Notes:

    Count of Vermandois and Valois.

    Herbert married Adela of Vexin before 1068. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  8. 39.  Adela of Vexin (daughter of Raoul III of Valois and Adele de Bar-sur-Aube).

    Notes:

    Also called Adelaide of Vermandois; Adele of Valois.

    Children:
    1. 19. Adèle de Vermandois died in 1120; was buried on 28 Sep 1120 in Vermandois, Aisne, Picardy, France.