Louis VI the Fat VI King of FRANCE, HRH

Birth:
1081
France
Death:
1 Aug 1137
Paris, Seine, France, Bethizy Castle
Burial:
Abt Aug 1137
Saint Denis, Seine, France
Marriage:
Apr 1115
Paris, France
Notes:
                   Capeian King 1108 to 1137. He was at war almost continuously betweenhimself
and Henry I of England. Known as Louis The Fat.
Sources include but are not limited to;
Ancestral File and the IGI, International Genealogical Index,both
resource systems developed and solely owned by The Church of JesusChrist of
Latter Day Saints.Line in Record @I12397@ (RIN 41868) from GEDCOM file not recognized:
_FA1
He was called the Fair.  He was also a crusader.
See Note Page
BIOGRAPHY
Pierre Goubert:
The fifth king of the [Capetian]According to Edouard Perroy, [Louis
VI] was 'gluttonous, obese, sensual, and brutal.  But he was lucky
enough to be advised by Suger, abbot and rebuilder of Saint-Denis, who
wrote a laudatory biography of his master which impressed historians
for a long time.  Indeed, the king had some great designs, such as
rekindling the internal quarrels of the powerful Anglo-Norman
monarchy.  But it defeated him several times, and in 1113 even brought
the duchy of Brittany under its control.  Then, as luck would have it,
England was again troubled by anarchy, giving Louis VI a brief
respite.
He was more successful in moving twice to punish his vassal Guillaume
VI of Auvergne, who was persecuting the bishop of Clermont.  An even
better omen for the authority of the Capetians was the king's ability
to gather enough warriors from among the most powerful  lords, who put
a stop to their own quarrels long enough to rejoin the royal host
before Reims and discourage the attack of [Holy Roman] Emporer Henry
V.
But the real success of Louis VI was at last to pacify his own lands.
He devoted almost twenty years to quelling the hard-headed and
well-entrenched brigand lords who defied him.  His vassals gave him
little help, but several communal militias lent assistance.  It took
him seven years to subdue the lord of Puiset and close to thirty to
control the lord of Coucy.  He even had to fight against the family of
his favorite, Etienne de Garlande, who had confiscated almost all of
the royal household offices and held the royal seal.  Despite the
confiscation of lands and oaths of submission, there was always work
to be done.
Having pacified, united, and even somewhat extended his lands, Louis
VI ended his reign with a master stroke whose scope he was surely
unable to foresee.  He married his son Louis VII [#3134] to the sole
heiress of one of his greatest vassals: no less than Guillaume X of
Aquitaine [#3151], who died shortly before Louis VI and whose duchy,
spreading from the Loire River to the Dordogne, had been extended by
the acquisition of the duchy of Gascony, abutting the Pyrenees.
To be sure, husband and wife kept their inherited domains separate,
but at last the Capetians would venture forth under new skies where
they could foresee a considerable broadening of their power; which
took far more than a century to consolidate.
Facts about this person:
Record Change  December 08, 1999
                  
Alix (Adbelahide) Countess of SAVOY
Birth:
Abt 1092
Savoie
Death:
18 Nov 1154
Burial:
Abt Nov 1154
France, Montmartre Abbey
Notes:
                   	2  GIVN Adelaide (Alix) de Maurienne
	2  SURN DE SAVOIE


Source includes, but is not limited to:
Ancestral File and the IGI, International Genealogical Index,both
resource systems developed and solely owned by The Church of JesusChrist of
Latter Day Saints.
See Note Page
Facts about this person:
Record Change  October 30, 1999
                  
Children
Marriage
1
Philip Prince of FRANCE, BISHOP OF PARIS HRH
Birth:
29 Aug 1116
Reims, France
Death:
13 Oct 1131
Paris, Seine, France
 
Marr:
 
Notes:
                   Sources include but are not limited to;
Ancestral File and the IGI, International Genealogical Index,both
resource systems developed and solely owned by The Church of JesusChrist of
Latter Day Saints.
                  
2
Birth:
1119
Reimes, Marne, France
Death:
18 Sep 1180
Paris, Seine, France
Notes:
                   King of France in 1137, married Eleanor of Aquitaine, daughter ofWilliam for
her second marriage to Henry II, King of England.  He divorced herafter she
bore him two daughters.
Louis supported Thomas a Becket in his controversy with Henry II,whose
marriage with Eleanor precipitated recurrent warfare over herinheritance of
Aquitaine.
Sources include but are not limited to;
Ancestral File and the IGI, International Genealogical Index,both
resource systems developed and solely owned by The Church of JesusChrist of
Latter Day Saints.Line in Record @I12345@ (RIN 41816) from GEDCOM file not recognized:
_FA1
See Note Page
BIOGRAPHY
Pierre Goubert:
Louis VII does not have a good reputation among those historians who
deem it their duty to pass judgment.  However, he had some character
traits that were found later in his saintly great-grandson Louis IX
[#3149] - quick intelligence, great desire for justice, and profound
piety; nevertheless he was quite young and remained rather immature,
imprudent, and lacking any great perseverance.  A bit too devoted to
the interests of the church, he cut a poor figure as a husband.
...Eleanor pushed her husband to intervene openly in the appointment
of bishops and in other affairs of the Church, for which she had
little love.  She also incited him to attack his dangerous neighbor
Thibaut of Champagne; the encounter was bloody and ended badly.  Louis
fell back under the influence of the clerics while his wife became
more and more estranged from him.  At the same time and far away, the
Turks who had been contained for half a century by the Christian
kingdoms established in Syria and Palestine attacked vigorously and
took back Edessa in 1144.  From then on, the pious king thought only
about the Crusade that he would lead, after being urged on by the
influential preaching of Saint Bernard of Clairvaux and by the
decision of [the Holy Roman] Emperor Conrad III to accompany him.
By contrast [from the corrupt First Crusade, fifty years earlier],
Louis VII's Christian zeal cannot be doubted.  He departed from
Vezelay on the Second Crusade in 1147.  His failure to take Damascus
the following year and his return to France in 1149 tarnished the
history of the Crusades.  In his absence he had left the kingdom in
the hands of Abbot Suger, who died in 1151.  But for the future of the
monarchy and the kingdom of France, Louis VII's having dragged the
queen along had a more important consequence, for rumor had it she had
behaved very badly, or rather had been too good to a handsome Saracen
who, to make matters worse, was a slave.
Whether or not the affair took place, the frivolous lady from Poitou
had produced only two daughters for the king, and he was tired of her.
In spite of Suger and the pope, he found several bishops who were
accommodating enough to annul the marriage, although it had been
consummated.  After a second and sterile union, a third wife, from
Champagne, at last gave the king a son: the future Philip Augustus
[#3132].
[Eleanor chose as her next husband Henry Plantagenet [#2960, our
ancestor].] Already the count of Anjou and Maine as well as effective
master of Normandy..., he became King of England in 1154.  As vassals
of the king of France, the couple held lands stretching from Dieppe to
the Pyrenees.  Furthermore, they had three sons:  Henry [#2962],
Richard the Lion-Hearted [#2963], and John Lackland [#2958, our
ancestor].  A storm was brewing.
In the face of impending disaster, Louis VII adopted the safe policy
of sowing dissension and avoiding confrontation.  He stirred up
quarrels between Henry II and Eleanor (now herself disappointed), and
between the father and his sons; he also received with great fuss the
chancellor and primate of England Thomas a Becket, who had been exiled
by his master.
Moreover, his piety gave Louis VII a certain distinction.  In Sens he
welcomed Pope Alexander III and his court when they were exposed to
the hostility of the [Holy Roman] Emperor Frederick Barbarossa.
Approaching the lands of Aquitaine from the rear, Louis VII helped
prelates and monks fight warring and brigand lords.  He made his
presence felt at Vezelay, Cluny, and Macon; in Beaujolais, in Forez,
and even in Le Puy against the Polignacs, and in Mende where the
count-bishop of Gevaudan swore homage to him.  Undoubtedly the royal
warriors did not always shine, but the many homages they received were
good omens, and above all, these expeditions foreshadowed the future
penetration of the lands along the Rhone and the border of Languedoc.
All in all, in spite of the false starts and misfortunes (the most
monumental of these was Eleanor, but who could have foreseen that?),
this pious and often wise king deserves more credit than he is usually
given for introducing the thirteenth century: the greatest century of
the Capetians and of the Middle Ages as a whole.
Facts about this person:
Record Change  December 10, 1999
                  
3
Henri Prince of FRANCE, ARCHBISHOP OF RHEIMS HRH
Birth:
Abt 1121
Reims, France
Death:
13 Nov 1175/76
Reims, France
 
Marr:
 
Notes:
                   Archbishop of Rheims, France.
Sources include but are not limited to;
Ancestral File and the IGI, International Genealogical Index,both
resource systems developed and solely owned by The Church of JesusChrist of
Latter Day Saints.
                  
4
Birth:
Abt 1123
Reims, France
Death:
11 Oct 1184/85
Braine, France
Notes:
                   Source includes, but is not limited to:
Ancestral File and the IGI, International Genealogical Index,both
resource systems developed and solely owned by The Church of JesusChrist of
Latter Day Saints.
See Note Page
BIOGRAPHY
Comte de Dreux, du Perche, de Braine-sur-Vesle.
Facts about this person:
Record Change  November 08, 1999
                  
5
Hugues de FRANCE
Birth:
1123
Reims, Champagne, France
Death:
 
Marr:
 
Notes:
                   Prince of France and later, Emperor of Constaninople. Recorded asbeing a
Seigneur de Courtenay.
Source includes, but is not limited to:
Ancestral File and the IGI, International Genealogical Index,both
resource systems developed and solely owned by The Church of JesusChrist of
Latter Day Saints.
Peter was a CRUSADER. He was a Prince of France.
He was a crusader in 1147, was in England in 1178.
                  
7
Birth:
Abt 1124
Reims, Champagne, France
Death:
16 Aug 1176
Rheims, Marne, France
Notes:
                   Source includes, but is not limited to:
Ancestral File and the IGI, International Genealogical Index,both
resource systems developed and solely owned by The Church of JesusChrist of
Latter Day Saints.
                  
FamilyCentral Network
Louis VI the Fat VI King of France, Hrh - Alix (Adbelahide) Countess of Savoy

Louis VI the Fat VI King of France, Hrh was born at France 1081. His parents were Philip I Capet King of France, Hrh and Bertha Countess of Holland Queen of France, Hrh.

He married Alix (Adbelahide) Countess of Savoy Apr 1115 at Paris, France . Alix (Adbelahide) Countess of Savoy was born at Savoie Abt 1092 daughter of Humbert II Count Maurienne Savoie and Gisela (Gille) Bourgogne, Countess of Burgundy Lady .

They were the parents of 7 children:
Philip Prince of France, Bishop of Paris Hrh born 29 Aug 1116.
Louis VII the Young King of France, Hrh born 1119.
Henri Prince of France, Archbishop of Rheims Hrh born Abt 1121.
Robert I Dreux, Count of Dreux Prince of France Hrh born Abt 1123.
Hugues de France born 1123.
Pierre (Peter) Courtenay, Prince of France Crusader Emperor of Constantinople Hrh
Constance Princess of France, Hrh born Abt 1124.

Louis VI the Fat VI King of France, Hrh died 1 Aug 1137 at Paris, Seine, France, Bethizy Castle .

Alix (Adbelahide) Countess of Savoy died 18 Nov 1154 .