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-http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/parcorroc.htm#GuyIMontlherydied1095
a) GUY [I] (-[24 Jul] 1095, bur abbaye de Longpont). The Historia of Monk Aimon names "Guidonem" as the son of "Theobaldus cognomina Filans-stupas, Forestarius [Roberti Regis]" stating that he held "Montem-Lethericum"[963]. Seigneur de Montlhéry. He founded the priory of Longpont [1061]: Geoffroy Bishop of Paris confirmed that "noster miles...Guido" founded the church of Notre-Dame de Longpont, under the abbey of Cluny, by charter dated to [1061][964]. "Guido de Monte Leterico eiusque uxor Hodierna" donated property to Notre-Dame de Longpont by charter dated to [1061], witnessed by "Wido filius eorum, Adam vicecomes..."[965]. "…Guido de Monte Letheri…" witnessed the charter dated 29 May 1067 under which Philippe I King of France confirmed the possessions of Saint-Martin-des-Champs[966]. "Guido de Monte Leherico" donated property to Notre-Dame de Longpont, confirmed by "filii mei Milo et Guido et conjux mea Hodierna", by charter dated to [1070], witnessed by “...Aymo vicecomes...”[967]. He became a monk at Longpont. The necrology of Longpont records the death "IX Kal Aug" of "Guido institutor hujus loci. Guido vicecomes; Adalaidis comitissa, uxor; Wido filius eius", a supplementary section adding a further reference to the anniversary of “donni Guidonis senioris hujus loci institutoris et Guidonis comitis filii eius...IX Kal Aug” as well as the anniversary of “donne Hodierne uxoris ipsius Guidonis senioris et Ermensendis de Sancto Galarico filie amborum...VII Kal Apr” with a reference to her visit to Cluny where “beato Hugoni abbati” gave her “calicem...aureum”[968].
m HODIERNE de Gometz-la-Ferté, daughter of --- (-26 Apr ---, bur ---, transferred 1641 to Longpont church). ... ... ... ... ... ...
Guy [I] & his wife had seven children:
In the 1728 source Histoire Genealogique et Chronologique de la Maison Royale de France -- Tome Trosième -- it states:
"THIBAUD surnommé Fille-Étoupe, seigneur de Bray and de Montlhéry, forestier du roi Robert, vivoit des le temps du roi Hugues Capet. Il semble avoir été frere de Bouchard I. Seigneur de Montmorency, sut surnommé Fille-Etoupe, peut-être à cause de ses cheveux blonds. Le roi Robert le fit son forestier ou garde de ses forêts. Cet office avoit toujours été commis aux plus grands du royaume. Il fortifia la tour ou château de Montlhéry à 7 lieuës de Paris.
"Femme, N...
"GUY I du nom, chevalier seigneur de Montlhéry and de Bray; fu ten grande estime auprès du roi Henry I servit aussi le roi Phillipe I en diverses occasions, and tenoit un des premier rangs entre les seigneurs de sa suite ès années 1067, 1069, and 1071. Il donna à la follicitation de sa femme à l’abbaye de S. Pierre de Bourgueil, les églises de Chevreuse avec leurs appurtenances, du consentement de Miles and de Guy leurs enfans, Raymond étant alors abbé de ce monastere. Sur la fin de sa vie il se rendit religieux à Longpont sous le prieur Etienne, et au jour qu’il prit l’habit, il leur donna le moulin de Grotel par une charte que Mlles et Guy ses enfans et sa femme poserent sur l’autel : ces religieux avoient été établis à Longpont à sa sollicitation auprés d’Hugues premier abbé de Cluny.
"Femme, HODIERNE heritiere des seigneuries de la Ferté et de Gommets, fille de Guillaume de gommets, senéchal de France, mentionnée en deux chartres des années 1053 et 1060."
Translation
THIBAUD nicknamed Fille-Étoupe, lord of Bray and Montlhéry, forester of king Robert, lived from the time of king Hugues Capet. He seems to have been the brother of Bouchard I. Seigneur de Montmorency, nicknamed Fille-Étoupe, perhaps because of his blond hair. King Robert made him his forester or guardian of his forests. This office had always been committed to the greatest of the kingdom. He fortified the tower or castle of Montlhéry 7 leagues from Paris.
Wife, name unknown
GUY I of the name, knight lord of Montlhéry and Bray; was held in great esteem by King Henry I also served King Phillip I on various occasions, and he held one of the first ranks among the lords of his retinue in the years 1067, 1069, and 1071. He gave at the request of his wife to the Abbey of S. Pierre de Bourgueil, the churches of Chevreuse with their appurtenances, with the consent of Miles and Guy their children, Raymond being then abbot of this monastery. At the end of his life, he became a monk at Longpont under the prior Stephen, and on the day that he took the habit, he gave them the mill of Grotel by a charter that Misses and Guy his children and his wife placed on the he altar: these monks had been established at Longpont at his request from Hugues, first abbot of Cluny.
Wife, HODIERNE heiress of the lordships of La Ferté and Gommets, daughter of Guillaume de Gommets, seneschal of France, mentioned in two charters of the years 1053 and 1060.
See posted document in Sources
“These men were all descended from Guy I of Montlhéry in the Île-de-France and his wife, Hodierna of Gometz. Guy had been pious and attracted to Cluniac monasticism, had founded the priory of Longpont-sous- Montlhéry, where he ended his days as a monk. Very typically, a streak of religiosity ran in the family alongside a tendency to extreme violence. Perhaps this explains why two of Guy and Hodierna’s sons, the husbands of two of their daughters, six grandsons, and granddaughter and her husband, and the husband of another granddaughter, a great-grandson, and the husband of a great-granddaughter to part in the First Crusade. This extraordinary record was due largely to the offspring of Guy and Hodierna’s four daughters, the legendary Montlhéry sisters, whose procreativity was mentioned with awe by the twelfth-century historian William of Tyre. They were married into the families of St Valéry and Le Puiset-Breteuil, which each sent three first crusaders, Bourcq of Rethel, which sent two, including Baldwin II himself, and Courtenay, which provided one. If one adds to this the contribution from the closely related families of Chaumont-en-Vexin, Broyes and Pont-Echanfray, two generations of this clan produced 26, perhaps 28, crusaders to and settlers in the East. They demonstrate how a kindred could respond almost en bloc to a summons that appealed to them.”
Riley-Smith, Jonathan. “Who Were the Crusaders?” Chapter. In What Were the Crusades? 4th ed., 74–75. Palgrave Macmillan, 2009. [https://www.google.com/books/edition/What_Were_the_Crusades/6-QcBQA...]
Note 1: Seigneur de Chevreuse
Note 2: Lord of Chateaufort
Note 3: Founded the Abbey at Longpont and served as a monk
Note 4: Was chatelain de Rochefort-en-Yvelines
Note 5: He was a monk when he died
AKA (Facts Page):
Gui (Guy) I, Seigneur of Montlhery and Bray
Guy I (died 1095) was the second lord of Bray and the second lord of Montlhéry. He was probably the son of Thibaud of Montmorency, but some sources say that his father was named Milo. Thibaud may instead have been his grandfather.
He married Hodierna of Gometz, daughter of William, lord of Gometz. They had seven children:
Guy died in 1095, the same year Pope Urban II launched the First Crusade. Many of his descendants had illustrious careers in the Holy Land, through the Montlhéry, Courtenay, and Le Puiset branches of his family [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guy_I_of_Montlh%C3%A9ry]
List of known children:
Guy I, seigneur de Montlhéry, married Hodierne de Gommets, daughter of Guillaume de Gommets, senechal de France, after 1030, during the reign of Henry I.
Guy died in 1095 at the abbey in Longpont, France, as a monk in the abbey he had founded, and in which he was buried.
Guy was our ancestor through two distinct descent lines--one through his son Guy and the other through his daughter Elizabeth, each of whom was independently our ancestor.
See "My Lines"
( http://homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~cousin/html/p354.htm#i5676 )
from Compiler: R. B. Stewart, Evans, GA
( http://homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~cousin/html/index.htm )
Gui de Montlhéry
BIRTH unknown
Montlhery, Departement de l'Essonne, Île-de-France, France
DEATH 1095
France
BURIAL
Basilique Notre-Dame-de-Bonne-Garde de Longpont-sur-Orge
Longpont-sur-Orge, Departement de l'Essonne, Île-de-France, France
MEMORIAL ID 104556437
Guy I was the second lord of Bray and the second lord of Montlhéry. He was probably the son of Thibaud of Montmorency, but some sources say that his father was named Milo. Thibaud may instead have been his grandfather.
He married Hodierna of Gometz, daughter of William, lord of Gometz.
Together with his wife and with the support of the Bishop of Paris Guido 1061 founded the Benedictine Priory of Notre-Dame of Longpont-sur-Orge, which they handed over to twenty-two monks from the Abbey of Cluny. Longpont thus became the first branch of the Association of clunizianischen monastery in the region around Paris. According to legend his wife with own hands participated in the construction.
Gui and Hodierna had seven children:
Milo I the Great, (also called Milon I) lord of Monthléry, married Lithuaise, sister of Stephen of Blois.
Melisende of Montlhéry, married Hugh I, count of Rethel, mother of Baldwin II of Jerusalem (died 1118)
Elizabeth of Montlhéry, married Joscelin, lord of Courtenay, mother of Joscelin I, Count of Edessa
Guy II the Red (died 1108), lord of Rochefort
Beatrice of Rochefort, married Anseau of Garlande (1069–1117)
Hodierna of Montlhéry, married Walter of Saint-Valéry
Alice of Montlhéry (also called Adele & Alix) (1040–1097), married Hugh I, lord of Le Puiset (1035–1094)
Guy died in 1095, the same year Pope Urban II launched the First Crusade. Many of his descendants had illustrious careers in the Holy Land, through the Montlhéry, Courtenay, and Le Puiset branches of his family.
Family Members
Spouse
Hodierna de Gometz
unknown–1074
Children
Elizabeth of Montlhéry de Courtenay
ometz/, Seigneur and Unknown. (Hodierne De /Gometz/ was born about 1014 in Normandy, France.)
1009 |
1009
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Montlhery, Seine Et Oise, France
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1020 |
1020
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Normandie, France
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1030 |
1030
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Longpont, Oise, Picardie, France
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1032 |
1032
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Corbeil, Marne, Champagne-Ardenne, France
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1037 |
1037
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Montlhéry, Seine-Et-Oise, France
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1040 |
1040
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Montlhéry, Essonne, Île-de-France, France
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1044 |
1044
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Montlhery,Seine-Et-Oise, France
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1044
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Ferte-sur-Ourcy, France
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1045 |
1045
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Montlhéry, Essonne, IDF, France
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