Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- List of Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- 1 Historicity, Violence, and the Medieval Francophone World: Mémoire Hystérisée
- Part I Theorizing Violence
- Part II Institutions and Subversions
- 4 Vice, Tyranny, Violence, and the Usurpation of Flanders (1071) in Flemish Historiography from 1093 to 1294
- 5 Marvelous Feats: Humor, Trickery, and Violence in the History of the Counts of Guines and Lords of Ardres of Lambert of Ardres
- 6 Dismembered Borders and Treasonous Bodies in Anglo-Norman Historiography
- 7 The Good, the Bad, and the Beautiful: Violence in the Canso de la Crozada
- Part III Gender and Sexuality
- Part IV Trauma, Memory, and Healing
- Index
- Already Published
4 - Vice, Tyranny, Violence, and the Usurpation of Flanders (1071) in Flemish Historiography from 1093 to 1294
from Part II - Institutions and Subversions
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 April 2013
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- List of Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- 1 Historicity, Violence, and the Medieval Francophone World: Mémoire Hystérisée
- Part I Theorizing Violence
- Part II Institutions and Subversions
- 4 Vice, Tyranny, Violence, and the Usurpation of Flanders (1071) in Flemish Historiography from 1093 to 1294
- 5 Marvelous Feats: Humor, Trickery, and Violence in the History of the Counts of Guines and Lords of Ardres of Lambert of Ardres
- 6 Dismembered Borders and Treasonous Bodies in Anglo-Norman Historiography
- 7 The Good, the Bad, and the Beautiful: Violence in the Canso de la Crozada
- Part III Gender and Sexuality
- Part IV Trauma, Memory, and Healing
- Index
- Already Published
Summary
The earliest sources of the history of medieval Flanders do not agree on the origins of the counts. The earliest source, the so-called “Genealogy of Arnold [I],” credibly traces the counts’ origin to Baldwin I “Iron Arm,” who eloped with and then married Judith, the daughter of Charles the Bald, around 863, while other sources push their origin back three generations and about seventy years to the shadowy “forester” Lideric. The sources do agree, however, that once the line got started the succession proceeded with biblical regularity from father to son until the death of Count Baldwin VII in 1119. “Count Lideric of Harelbeke begat Enguerrand,” writes the author of the “Bertinian” genealogy of the counts of Flanders, “Enguerrand begat Audacer. Audacer begat Baldwin Iron Arm… Baldwin Iron Arm begat Baldwin the Bald… Baldwin the Bald begat Arnold the Great… Arnold the Great begat Baldwin… He begat Arnold,” and so on.
This succession from father to son for almost three hundred years was interrupted only once. In 1070, Count Baldwin VI of Flanders – who was also Count Baldwin I of Hainaut by virtue of his marriage to the Countess Richilda of Hainaut, widow of the previous count of Hainaut, Herman – died and left both counties to his older son, the adolescent Arnold III.
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- Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2013