Renaud de Courtenay
Template:Short description Template:Use dmy dates Renaud de Courtenay, (d. 1160) was seigneur of Courtenay and fought in the Second Crusade with Louis VII of France. His fate is unknown, either losing his lands from an argument with Louis VII or dying on crusade and his lands going to his daughter Elizabeth's husband, Peter.
Life
Renaud was the son of Miles (Milo) de Courtenay, Seigneur of Courtenay and his wife Ermengard de Nevers.Template:Sfn He succeeded his father as Seigneur of Courtenay and fought in the Second Crusade with King Louis VII of France.Template:Sfn
According to Suger, Renaud argued with King Louis VII, who seized Renaud's possessions and gave them to his youngest brother, Pierre (Peter) of France, who thenceforth became known as Peter I of Courtenay.Template:Sfn Nicholas Vincent states that Renaud in all probability died on crusade and that his daughter Elizabeth married Peter who inherited Courtenay lands.Template:Sfn
Marriages and issue
Renaud and his first wife Helvise du Donjon had:
- Renaud II de Courtenay, (b. 1125 - d. 27 September 1194) who in 1172, accompanied King Henry II of England on the Irish Expedition to Wexford. He married Hawise de Curcy (d.1219), heiress of the feudal barony of Okehampton in Devon, and half sister to his father's second wife, Maud du Sap.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Through the marriage, he acquired Okehampton Castle.
- Elizabeth de Courtenay (b. 1127 - d. September 1205), who was given in marriage by the French King Louis VII (d.1180) to his youngest brother, Peter of France (d.1183), who thenceforth became known as "Peter I of Courtenay".Template:Sfn
- Adeline de Courtenay married Avalon de Seignelay
- Guillaume de Courtenay married Matilda daughter of Robert FitzEdith and Mathilde d’Avranches.
Renaud and his second wife Hawise d’Avranches had:Template:Efn
- Robert de Courtenay married Matilda FitzUrse
- Egeline de Courtenay married Gilbert Basset
Notes
References
Sources
Further reading
- Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America Before 1700 by Frederick Lewis Weis, Lines: 107-25-138-25.