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Fulbert ? (of Falaise) b. 970 d. 1016
From Rodovid EN
Lineage | Tonnerre |
Sex | Male |
Full name (at birth) | Fulbert Tonnerre |
Other last names | Tonniere |
Other given names | Fulberht, Fuhlbert |
Parents
♂ Guy II de Tonnerre [Tonnerre] d. between 970 and 975 |
Events
marriage: ♀ Doda (Duxia) ? [?] b. about 980
1003 child birth: Falaise (Calvados), ♀ Herleve (Arletta) ? (of Falaise) [?] b. 1003 d. 1050
Notes
Although traditionally presented to be a common tradesman (a Tanner), Fuhlburt appears to have been a minor son of Guy I de Tonnerre and employed as the Duke's Chamberlain at the castle of Falaise. Thus the story Duke William's bastardy by the daughter of a common "Tanner" was in actuality not as common as represented in modern romantic literature. Although his mother is yet unidentified, the name Fulbert is Frankish in origin and he likely had a Sahlien mother. His sister's mother is identified as Adele de Sahlien.
The shame of William the Conquerer's low birth would have had more to do with the fact that his parent's "Common Law Marriage" was unrecognized by the church and he himself was labeled a bastard by the Pope, rather than the shame of his mother's "low birth". The Scottish clan histories of MacEth and MacBeth indicate Fulbert Tanner's widow (Doda) returned to Scotland from Normandy following his death and that Doada subsequently married the Mormaer of Moray. This would indicate that that Tonnerre's daughter Arlette (a noble name) was likely the half sister of Macbeth.
The Nickname Tanner
Like Henry the Fowler, it is possible that Fuhlbert may have been the butt of a long running joke involving a play on word with this surname "Tonnerre" being rendered "Tanner" by the tongue of the Norman nobles.
Sources
- ↑ History of the Anglo-Saxons - Francis Palgrave - Indicates the Fulhburht de Falaise was the King's Chamberlain.
- ↑ Macbeth Research Bibliography - #The Book of Deer
- The Chronicon Scotorum
- The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle
- The Chronicle of the Kings of Alba [Duan Albanach]
- The Prophecy of Berchan
- The Domesday Registry
- Tranter, Nigel MacBeth the King Hodder & Stoughton, 1978.
- Barrow, G.W.S., Kingship and Unity: Scotland 1000–1306. Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh, (corrected ed.) 1989.
- Byrne, Francis John, Irish Kings and High-Kings. Batsford, London, 1973.
- Duncan, A.A.M., The Kingship of the Scots 842–1292: Succession and Independence. Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh, 2002.
- Hudson, Benjamin T., The Prophecy of Berchán: Irish and Scottish High-Kings of the Early Middle Ages. Greenwood, London, 1996.
- McDonald, R. Andrew, Outlaws of medieval Scotland: Challenges to the Canmore kings, 1058–1266. Tuckwell, East Linton, 2003.
- Sellar, W.D.H., "Moray: to 1130" in Michael Lynch (ed.), The Oxford Companion to Scottish History. Oxford UP, Oxford, 2001.
From grandparents to grandchildren
title: Comte de Tonnerre
marriage: ♀ Ingeltrude Montreuil (de Brienne)
death: before 998
title: Vicomte de Conteville
marriage: ♀ Herleve (Arletta) ? (of Falaise)
death: about 1066
burial: Fatouville-Grestain, Abbaye de Grestain
engagement: ♀ w Estrid Sweynsdotter (Knytling)
title: from 6 August 1027 - 22 June 1035, Duke of Normandy
death: 22 July 1035, İznik, Bithynia, Anatolia, (Nicaea)
burial: 1088, reburied in Italy
marriage: ♂ w Enguerrand de Ponthieu (Picard)
marriage: ♂ w Lambert van Boulogne
title: from 1053 - 1080, comtesse d'Aumale
death: about 1083, Aumale, France
marriage: ♂ William I FitzRobert (The Conqueror) , Eu (Seine-Maritime), Normandy, France
title: 1050, Caen, Normandy, France, St. Stephen's
title: 14 October 1066, Hastings (England), Queen of England
other: 25 December 1066, London, Sacre
physical description: 1083, 1.52m, très mince.
death: 2 November 1083, Caen, Normandy, France, Abbaye aux Dames
burial: Caen (14), Abbaye aux Dames