The l'Aigle family was a Norman family that derived from the town of L'Aigle, on the southeastern borders of the Duchy of Normandy. They first appear during the rule of Duke Richard II of Normandy, in the early 11th century, and they would hold L'Aigle for the Norman Dukes and Kings of England until the first half of the 13th century, when with the fall of Normandy to the French crown the last of the line was forced to abandon the ancestral French lands, only to die in England a few years later without surviving English heirs. Their position on the borderlands, and near the headwaters of three rivers, the Risle, Iton and Avre, gave their small holding a special importance, as did a set of marriage connections that provided this relatively minor Norman noble family with a more elevated hist
Attributes | Values |
---|
rdfs:label
| - Haus l’Aigle (de)
- L'Aigle family (en)
|
rdfs:comment
| - Das Haus l’Aigle (oder Laigle) ist eine Familie des normannischen Adels, die nach ihrem Hauptbesitz L’Aigle (Orne) benannt ist. Sie existierte im 11. und 12. Jahrhundert und spielte nach der normannischen Eroberung Englands auf der Insel sowie in der Normandie eine bedeutende Rolle, die weniger in ihren Titeln als in ihren familiären Verbindungen deutlich wird. (de)
- The l'Aigle family was a Norman family that derived from the town of L'Aigle, on the southeastern borders of the Duchy of Normandy. They first appear during the rule of Duke Richard II of Normandy, in the early 11th century, and they would hold L'Aigle for the Norman Dukes and Kings of England until the first half of the 13th century, when with the fall of Normandy to the French crown the last of the line was forced to abandon the ancestral French lands, only to die in England a few years later without surviving English heirs. Their position on the borderlands, and near the headwaters of three rivers, the Risle, Iton and Avre, gave their small holding a special importance, as did a set of marriage connections that provided this relatively minor Norman noble family with a more elevated hist (en)
|
dct:subject
| |
Wikipage page ID
| |
Wikipage revision ID
| |
Link from a Wikipage to another Wikipage
| - Robert of Bellême, 3rd Earl of Shrewsbury
- Rotrou III, Count of Perche
- Rudyard Kipling
- Sancho Ramírez
- List of dukes of Gaeta
- Battle of Hastings
- Bonsmoulins
- Breteuil, Eure
- Hugh d'Avranches, Earl of Chester
- John de Lacy, 2nd Earl of Lincoln
- John de Lacy, Earl of Lincoln
- John of England
- Juliane de Fontevrault
- Richard le Goz, Viscount of Avranches
- Risle
- Robert Curthose
- Saint-Sulpice-sur-Risle
- Geoffrey II, Count of Perche
- Empress Matilda
- García Ramírez of Navarre
- Geoffrey Plantagenet, Count of Anjou
- Thomas Becket
- William fitz Giroie
- Anselm of Canterbury
- Aragon
- Tatra Mountains
- Louis VI of France
- Hamelin de Warenne, Earl of Surrey
- Patrick, 1st Earl of Salisbury
- Avre (Eure)
- Companions of William the Conqueror
- White Ship
- William Clito
- William II of England
- William the Conqueror
- William the Lion
- Isabel de Warenne, Countess of Surrey
- Alfonso the Battler
- Duchy of Normandy
- Ermengarde de Beaumont
- Exmes
- Norman Conquest
- Nigel d'Aubigny
- Puck of Pook's Hill
- Henry III of England
- Henry II of England
- Henry I of England
- Iton
- Counts and dukes of Penthièvre
- Margaret of L'Aigle
- Abbey of Saint-Evroul
- Norman conquest of England
- L'Aigle
- Le Mans
- Sussex
- Henry the Young King
- William de Warenne, 3rd Earl of Surrey
- William de Warenne, 5th Earl of Surrey
- March (territory)
- Michelham Priory
- Mildenhall, Suffolk
- Orderic Vitalis
- Ramiro II of Aragon
- Rape of Pevensey
- Sessa Aurunca
- Witley
- Norman families
- Robert de Mowbray
- King of Navarre
- Scutage
- Siege of Sainte-Suzanne
- Robert de Beaumont, 2nd Earl of Leicester
- William of Salisbury, 2nd Earl of Salisbury
- Richard II of Gaeta
- Robert de Lacy
- Richard II of Normandy
- Stephen of England
- Norman people
|
sameAs
| |
dbp:wikiPageUsesTemplate
| |
title
| |
toggle
| |
has abstract
| - Das Haus l’Aigle (oder Laigle) ist eine Familie des normannischen Adels, die nach ihrem Hauptbesitz L’Aigle (Orne) benannt ist. Sie existierte im 11. und 12. Jahrhundert und spielte nach der normannischen Eroberung Englands auf der Insel sowie in der Normandie eine bedeutende Rolle, die weniger in ihren Titeln als in ihren familiären Verbindungen deutlich wird. (de)
- The l'Aigle family was a Norman family that derived from the town of L'Aigle, on the southeastern borders of the Duchy of Normandy. They first appear during the rule of Duke Richard II of Normandy, in the early 11th century, and they would hold L'Aigle for the Norman Dukes and Kings of England until the first half of the 13th century, when with the fall of Normandy to the French crown the last of the line was forced to abandon the ancestral French lands, only to die in England a few years later without surviving English heirs. Their position on the borderlands, and near the headwaters of three rivers, the Risle, Iton and Avre, gave their small holding a special importance, as did a set of marriage connections that provided this relatively minor Norman noble family with a more elevated historical visibility. Having been neighbors and benefactors of the Abbey of Saint-Evroul, the family receive mostly favourable coverage in the 12th-century chronicle of Orderic Vitalis. (en)
|