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Tancred of Hauteville

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Tancred of Hauteville
Seigneur of Hauteville-la-Guichard
Statue cathédrale Coutances Hauteville 2.JPG
Statue of Tancred outside Coutances Cathedral, dated to 1875
SuccessorSerlo I
Bornc. 980
Died1041
Noble familyHauteville
Spouse(s)Muriella
Fressenda
Issuesee below

Tancred of Hauteville (c. 980 – 1041[citation needed]) was an 11th-century Norman petty lord. Little is known about him, and he is best remembered by the achievements of his twelve sons. Various legends arose about Tancred, but they have no supporting contemporary evidence that has survived the ages.

Life and marriages

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Tancred was a petty landowner in Normandy. Goffredo Malaterra says that he was a knight of very noble lineage, who inherited the village of Hauteville (probably Hauteville-la-Guichard, north-west of Coutances, in Normandy) from his ancestors.[1][2][3] On the other hand, Anna Komnene, in the Alexiad, describes his son Robert as of insignificant origin.[4]

Tancred commanded a small group of ten knights on behalf of his liege, Robert I, Duke of Normandy. Little else is known about him, and he doesn't seem to have had any exceptional characteristic, aside from his persistent fecundity.[2]

His first wife was a certain Muriella, whom Malaterra records being "distinguished for her morals and noble birth". When Muriella died, Tancred remarried to Fressenda, whom, according to Malaterra, "in birth and morals was by no means inferior to his first wife". Malaterra specifies the reasons of Tancred's choice to remarry:[2]

Since he was not yet old, he did not feel ready to practice continence, but being an honest man and abhorring illicit relationships, he took a second wife. In fact, remembering the words of [ Paul ] the Apostle: "to avoid fornication, every man should have his own wife, and then the Lord will judge the libertines and adulterers", he preferred to content himself with a legitimate wife rather than be tainted by the embraces of concubines.[2]

Issue

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Coat-of-arms of Hauteville

With his first wife, Muriella, he had at least five sons:

With his second wife, Fressenda,[7] he had at least eight more sons and one daughter:

Finally, the Annals of Romoald state that Tancred had three daughters, but without naming them or stating by which marriage they were born. One of these daughters is the Fressenda named above, who married Richard I of Capua. One of the two remaining daughters is sometimes given the name Beatrice, and has been erroneously identified as the mother of Geoffrey, Count of Conversano. All of the informations regarding her are dubious.[8][9][10]

References

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  1. ^ Stanley Ferber, Islam and the Medieval West, vol. 2 (1979), p. 46: "the sons of Tancred of Hauteville-le-Guichard, a petty landowner in Normandy..."
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Norwich, John Julius; Rospigliosi, Elena Lante (2021-11-11). I normanni nel Sud: 1016-1130 (in Italian). Sellerio Editore. ISBN 978-88-389-4288-4.
  3. ^ Goffredo Malaterra – De rebus gestis: Rogerii Calabriae et Siciliae comitis et Roberti Guiscardi
  4. ^ "The Alexiad/Book I - Wikisource, the free online library". en.wikisource.org. Retrieved 2024-10-19.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n "SICILY". fmg.ac. Retrieved 2024-10-19.
  6. ^ a b c [https://archive.org/details/zeittafelnderdeu00rich "...Wilhelm, Drogo und Humfred, den 3 ältesten Söhnen Tancreds von Hauteville." Zeittafeln der deutschen Geschichte im Mittelalter von der Gründung des fränkischen Reichs bis zum Ausgang der Hohenstaufen mit durchgängiger Erläuterung aus den Quellen. Dr. Gustav Richter. Halle a. S., Verlag- der Buchhandlung des Waisenhauses. 1881. Page 58. Accessed 20 August 2023.
  7. ^ a b c The New Cambridge Medieval History: Volume 4, C.1024-c.1198, Part II, ed. David Luscombe and Jonathan Riley-Smith, (Cambridge University Press, 2004), 760.
  8. ^ Romoaldi Annales 1057, MGH SS XIX, p. 405
  9. ^ Guerrieri, G. ´I conti normanni di Bardò e di Brindisi (1092-1130)´, Archivio storico per le province Napoletane, Anno XXVI, Fascicolo II (Naples, 1901), p. 285.
  10. ^ Coniglio, Giuseppe. Goffredo normanno, conte di Conversano e signore di Brindisi (PDF) (in Italian).