In 1141, after a battle in 1140 at Fosses-la-Ville, a possession of the bishop near Namur, Henry made peace with Adalbero II "de Chiny" Bishop of Liège (died 1145), and helped lead his successful military expedition to take Bouillon under the secular control of the bishopric. Longwy was a personal possession of Henry's mother Ermensinde, who died 1141. It has been proposed that Durbuy had come to Henry's grandfather, Albert III of Namur, from his mother's father, Duke Gozelon and La Roche and the advocacy of Stavelot were part of inheritance of Duke Frederic, ancestor of the dukes of Limburg, which appears to have been split off from the main inheritance and granted to his widow Ida, the mother of Henry's father. Together with the lordship over La Roche came the advocacy of the abbey of Stavelot-Malmedy. By early 1153 he had inherited the lordship of La Roche-en-Ardenne from another cousin on his father's side, Henry II of La Roche. By 1151, Henry had inherited the lordship of Durbuy from his cousin Henry II of Durbuy. Under Henry's lordship, Luxembourg was joined by several smaller Ardennes possessions which the family had acquired earlier. The marriage of Henry's parents, whereby his father acquired the succession rights to the county of Luxembourg, has been described as a completion of this family project. The counts had however successfully accumulated control of some territories in the Ardennes region, which may have been a deliberate policy. įrom the 10th to 12th centuries, the counts of Namur had lost power due to the expansionary policy of the neighbouring prince-bishops of Liège, and the uncertainty of comital rights versus those of the emperor. After the death of his father in 1139, Henry inherited Namur. He therefore held the advocacies of the abbeys of Saint-Maximin at Trier and Saint-Willibrord at Echternach. Henry of Namur was eventually granted the feudal lordship and advocacies by the Emperor Lothair II, who thus prevented its passing to the French count of Grandpré. The allodial lands were divided between Henry and his maternal aunt's husband, Henry of Grandpré. Īlso in 1136, Conrad II of Luxembourg, a relative of his mother, died. In 1136 Henry was active in his father's conflict against Count Godfrey I of Louvain, which followed the death of Anselm, the abbot of Gembloux. His elder brother Albert died young, about 1127, leaving Henry as next in line, and he subsequently started being associated with the government of the county of Namur from 1131. He first appears in the written record in the foundation charter for the abbey of Floreffe in 1121. Henry was the second known son of Count Godfrey I of Namur and Ermesinde, and a daughter of Count Conrad I of Luxembourg. Modern historians use that byname in order to distinguish him from a later count Henry of Namur, Henry I, Count of Vianden. Henry lost the use of his eyes in 1182, but was not referred to as "the blind" until much later. His daughter, who was born when he was old, kept Luxembourg and the smaller Ardennes lordships, while descendants of his sister Alice, who were also counts of Flanders and Hainaut, added possession of Namur to their dominion. His important inheritances were divided again after his death, bringing Namur and Luxembourg to different families. He was especially important to the history of the county of Namur, where he was the last member of the first line of counts, and the most powerful of them. Henry is an important figure in the history of the southern Netherlands and the modern countries of Belgium and Luxembourg. He also inherited the smaller lordships of Longwy, La Roche-en-Ardenne and Durbuy. 1113 – 14 August 1196 French Henri l'Aveugle, Dutch Hendrik de Blinde), sometimes called Henry IV of Luxembourg, was his father's heir as count of Namur from 1136 until his death, and heir of his mother's family as count of Luxembourg from 1139 until his abdication in 1189.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
Details
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |