See also

Family of Boniface III and Beatrice of BAR

Husband: Boniface III (985-1052)
Wife: Beatrice of BAR (1017-1076)
Children: Matilda of TUSCANY (1046-1115)
Beatrice (c. 1047- )
Frederick (c. 1049- )
Marriage 1037

Husband: Boniface III

Name: Boniface III
Sex: Male
Father: Tedald of CANOSSA (c. 952-1012)
Mother: Willa (c. 957- )
Birth 0985
Death 6 May 1052 (age 66-67)

Wife: Beatrice of BAR

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Beatrice of BAR

Name: Beatrice of BAR
Sex: Female
Father: Frederick II (995-1026)
Mother: Matilda of SWABIA (988-1032)
Birth 1017
Title frm 1053 to 18 Apr 1076 (age 35-59) Marchioness of Tuscany
Occupation Marchioness of Tuscany
Death 18 Apr 1076 (age 58-59)

Child 1: Matilda of TUSCANY

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Matilda of TUSCANY

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Spouse: Godfrey IV

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Spouse: Welf V of BAVARIA

Name: Matilda of TUSCANY
Sex: Female
Nickname: The Grand Contessa
Spouse 1: Godfrey IV (1030-1076)
Spouse 2: Welf V of BAVARIA (1072-1120)
Birth 1046 Porcari, Lucca, Toscana, Italy
Death 24 Jul 1115 (age 68-69) Bondeno, Ferrara, Emilia-Romagna, Italy
Cause: Gout

Child 2: Beatrice

Name: Beatrice
Sex: Female
Birth 1047 (est)

Child 3: Frederick

Name: Frederick
Sex: Male
Birth 1049 (est)

Note on Husband: Boniface III

Boniface III (also Boniface IV or Boniface of Canossa) (c. 985 – 6 May 1052), son of Tedald of Canossa and the father of Matilda of Canossa, was the most powerful north Italian prince of his age. By inheritance he was Count (or lord) of Brescia, Canossa, Ferrara, Florence, Lucca, Mantua, Modena, Pisa, Pistoia, Parma, Reggio, and Verona from 1007 and, by appointment, Margrave of Tuscany[1] from 1027 until his assassination in 1052. He was the son of the Margrave Tedald and Willa of Bologna. The Lombard family's ancestral castle was Canossa and they had held Modena for several generations. They possessed a great many allodial titles and their power lay chiefly in Emilia.

 

Boniface was probably associated with his father before the latter's death. In 1004, with the title marchio, he donated land to the abbey of Polirone, and he appears in two documents of the same year as gloriosus marchio. He kept his court at Mantua, which he transformed into a city of culture:

 

“ With so many magnificent spectacles and feasts that all posterity and all their contemporaries marvelled thereat.[2] ”

 

In 1014, Boniface aided the Emperor Henry II in putting down Arduin, Margrave of Ivrea, self-styled King of Italy, a royal title that the Emperor did not recognise. His father nominated him as heir over his brothers and, in 1016, he was again fighting alongside the emperor, this time against the Margrave of Turin, Ulric Manfred II.

 

In 1020, he defeated a rebellion of his brother Conrad, but the two reconciled and both were later recorded as duces. In 1027, he supported the candidacy of Conrad II of Germany for the Iron Crown of Lombardy and the Imperial Crown against the other claimaints: William V of Aquitaine, Robert II of France, or Hugh Magnus. When Boniface's Lombard enemies tried to incite his brother against him, the two (Boniface and his brother Conrad) offered battle to them at Coviolo, near Reggio, and emerged victorious, though Conrad was killed.[3] When Conrad II finally succeeded in entering Italy, he was met with defiance at Lucca and he deposed the reigning margrave of Tuscany, Rainier, and gave his lands and titles to Boniface. This seems to be the probable scenario, though the exact date of Boniface's assumption of the Tuscan lordship is uncertain.[4]

 

Boniface subdued Pavia and Parma, in revolt against the Emperor, and the Emperor made a treaty with Boniface, an act which has been construed as recognition of Boniface's independence.[5] In 1032, he was at war with the rebel Odo II, Count of Blois, Chartres, Meaux, and Troyes. In 1037, he helped put down a revolt against the Emperor Conrad. In 1043, for services rendered the Empire, he received the Duchy of Spoleto and Camerino. He also acquired more land in Parma and Piacenza, and his chief residence in this time was at Mantua.

 

In 1039, he travelled to Miroalto to aid the Emperor Henry III against the rebellious Odo of Blois. While he was returning, he destroyed the grain fields of the region and the enraged populace retaliated and stole some of his retainers' horses. It was during his blood reprisal that Boniface made his most famous recorded statement. Preparing to hack off the ears and nose of a young man, Boniface was confronted by the youth's mother, who begged him be spared and promised him her son's weigh in silver. Boniface replied to his offer that he "was no merchant, but a soldier," adding:

 

“ Absit ut hostes ferro capti redimantur argento.

Far be it that what was captured by steel should be redeemed with silver.[6]

 

In 1046, Henry III entered Italy to be crowned Emperor. Boniface received the emperor and his empress, Agnes of Poitou, with honour and munificence on their arrival at Piacenza and his governor did so at Mantua on their return journey. The relationship between Boniface and Henry, however, soon deteriorated in 1047. The reasons for this are debated. Henry may have been fearful of Boniface's wealth and power, and on several subsequent occasions tried to arrest him.[7] On the other hand, Boniface may have allied with the Counts of Tusculum, their relatives the Popes, and Guaimar IV of Salerno.[8] Thus, despite his quashing revolts on Henry's behalf, Henry came to resent his power, as he did with Guaimar.

 

In 1048, he supported the abdicated Pope Benedict IX when he tried to retake his throne and he extended his domains at the expense of ecclesiastic lands. In fact, his habit of cheating the church of land, especially the Diocese of Reggio, by offering some small farm land and an annual rent in turn for it was legendary. He rarely paid the promised rents. However, Boniface eventually joined the reform party of Leo IX and was present at the Synod of Pavia in 1049.

 

In his later years, he kept the Abbey of Pomposa well-endowed for the sake of his soul and even confessed to simony and permitted Guido of Pomposa to flagellate him in punishment for it.

 

He tried to restrict the rights of his valvassores, despite Conrad's imperial edict of 1037. It was this action against his undertenants which got him killed in 1052, during a hunting expedition. This version of Boniface's death is disputed. Some have alleged that Henry played a part in his assassination. It is also held by some that in 1044 there was an attempt made on the margrave's life at Brescia and that the conspirators fled to Verona, which Boniface subsequently sacked before expelling some Veronese conspirators from Mantua as well. One Scarpetta Carnevari apparently nursed a grudge for this act and years later, while Boniface was preparing a galley for a pilgrimage to Jerusalem, shot him with a poisoned arrow on the river Oglio, near Martino dall'Argine in the region of Spineta while on the hunt.[9]

 

Boniface's first marriage (before 1015) was to Richilda, daughter of Giselbert II, Count Palatine of Bergamo. Richilda took little part in Boniface's government and was dead by 1034, leaving him no children. In 1037, he married Beatrice, daughter of Frederick II, Duke of Upper Lorraine and Count of Bar, and niece of the Empress Gisela, wife of Conrad II. They celebrated their marriage in high style, keeping court at Marengo for three months afterwards. Beatrice also had but a small role in the rule of Tuscany, but she did bear her husband three children. The eldest, Beatrice, died in 1053, shortly after Boniface. The only son, Frederick, succeeded his father, but died soon after. The youngest child was Matilda, who inherited the great patrimony from Frederick. Beatrice remarried in 1054 to Godfrey III, Duke of Lower Lorraine, who ruled until his death in 1069.

Note on Wife: Beatrice of BAR

Beatrice of Bar (also Beatrix) (c. 1017 – 18 April 1076) was the marchioness of Tuscany from 1053 to her death as the wife of Boniface III of Tuscany. She was the daughter of Frederick II, Duke of Upper Lorraine, who was also count of Bar, and Matilda of Swabia.

 

In 1037, she became the second wife of Boniface III of Tuscany in a splendid ceremony. She bore him the following children:

 

Beatrice (died 17 December 1053)

Frederick (died July 1055), briefly successor before imprisonment

Matilda (1046 – 24 July 1115), successor as marchioness of Tuscany

With Boniface' death on 6 May 1052, Beatrice assumed the regency for her son Frederick. In 1054, to give her son the protection she could not militarily provide, she married Godfrey, former duke of Lower Lorraine. However, in 1055, the Emperor Henry III arrested Beatrice for marrying a traitor. She was brought to Germany a prisoner while Frederick was summoned to Henry's court at Florence. He refused to go and died before any action was taken against him. The heir of Boniface was now his youngest daughter Matilda, who was imprisoned with her mother.

 

On the death of Henry, Godfrey was reconciled with his heir, Henry IV, and exiled to Italy with his wife and stepdaughter. In January 1058, as a partisan of the newly-elected Pope Nicholas II, Leo de Benedicto had the gates of the Leonine City thrown open for Godfrey and Beatrice. Godfrey immediately possessed the Tiber Island and attacked the Lateran, forcing Benedict X to flee on January 24. Beatrice and Godfrey were allied with the reformers, including Hildebrand and Pope Alexander II, against the emperor. In 1062, Beatrice tried to stop the Antipope Honorius II from reaching Rome, but she failed.

 

In 1069, Godfrey died. Matilda was of age, yet Beatrice continued to exercise government in her name until the day she died. She was buried in the Cathedral of Pisa, where the Late Roman sarcophagus, bearing reliefs illustrating the story of Hippolytus and Phaedra, from which Nicola Pisano adapted nude figures for his pulpit in the cathedral,[1] reused for her sepulture can still be seen. The added 11th-century inscription reads:

 

Quamvis peccatrix sum domna vocata Beatrix

In tumulo missa iaceo quæ comitissa

On 29 August 1071, Beatrice founded the monastery Frassinoro at the Apennine pass of Foce della Radici.