Tancred of Hauteville







Possible statue of Tancred of Hauteville on the north side of Coutances Cathedral. This is an 1875 replacement for a statue damaged in the French Revolution.


Tancred of Hauteville (980 – 1041) was an 11th-century Norman petty lord about whom little is known. His historical importance comes entirely from the accomplishments of his sons and later descendants. He was a minor noble near Coutances in the Cotentin.


Various legends arose about Tancred which have no supporting contemporary evidence that has survived the ages.




Contents






  • 1 Ancestors


  • 2 Family and descendants


  • 3 Other Tancred of Hauteville


  • 4 References





Ancestors


The Hauteville family was said by later traditions to descend from Hiallt, a Norseman active in 920, who is credited with founding the village of Hialtus Villa (Hauteville) in the Cotentin of Normandy.[1][2] Tancred is a supposed descendant of Hiallt, from whom the village of Hauteville and the family drew their name. This cannot be identified with certainty, and some modern scholarship favours Hauteville-la-Guichard over Hauteville in Cotentin.[3]



Family and descendants


With his two wives, he had twelve sons and several daughters, almost all of whom left Normandy for Southern Italy and acquired some prominence there.


With his first wife, Muriella, he had five sons and one daughter:




  • Serlo (stayed in Normandy)

  • Beatrix (d. 1101), married first to Armand de Mortain, son of Robert, Count of Eu, and second to a Roger (family unknown)


  • Geoffrey, lord of Hauteville, count of Loritello (d. 1063)


  • William Iron Arm, count of Apulia and Calabria (d. 1046)


  • Drogo, count of Apulia and Calabria (d. 1051)


  • Humphrey, count of Apulia and Calabria (d. 1057)


According to the Italian chronicler of the Norman feats in the south, Amatus of Montecassino, Tancred was a morally upright man, who would not carry on a sinful relationship and being unable also to live out his life in perfect celibacy, he remarried.




Coat-of-arms of Hauteville


With his second wife, Fressenda (or Fredesenda),[4] he had seven more sons and at least one daughter:




  • Robert Guiscard de Hauteville, count of Apulia and Calabria (1057), then duke of Apulia, Calabria and Sicily (d. 1085)[4]


  • Mauger, (d. 1064), count of the Capitanate (part of the Province of Foggia, within Apulia)


  • William, count of the Principate (d. 1080)

  • Aubrey (Alberic or Alvared, Alveredus in Latin, sometimes called Alvred or Alfred) (stayed in Normandy)

  • Humbert (Hubert) (stayed in Normandy)

  • Tancred (stayed in Normandy)


  • Roger de Hauteville, count of Sicily from 1062 (d. 1101)[4]

  • Fressenda, who married Richard I (dead in 1078), count of Aversa and prince of Capua



Other Tancred of Hauteville


Tancred's great-grandson, also bearing the same name, Tancred, Prince of Galilee, was a leader in the First Crusade. The line of descent was:



  • Tancred the elder

  • son Robert Guiscard (Duke Robert d'Hauteville)

  • granddaughter Emma of Hauteville

  • great-grandson Tancred of Hauteville, who became Prince of Galilee and regent of the Principality of Antioch



References





  1. ^ Hill, James S. The place-names of Somerset. St. Stephen's printing works, 1914, Princeton University. Page 256


  2. ^ Revue de l'Avranchin et du pays de Granville, Volume 31, Issue 174, Parts 3-4. Société d'archéologie, de littérature, sciences et arts d'Avranches, Mortain, Granville. the University of Michigan.


  3. ^ 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..."


  4. ^ abc 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.









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