Fulk III OF MAINE
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Fulk OF MAINE's sister: Ermengarde OF ANJOU ( - )

Fulk III OF MAINE ( -1040)

      picture    
      Fulk Nerra's castle keep at Loches.    
 
Name: Fulk III OF MAINE 1
Sex: Male
Nickname: "The Black"; "le Noir"
Father: Geoffroy I "Greymantle" OF ANJOU ( -987)
Mother: Adelaide DE VERMANDOIS (950-to978)

Individual Events and Attributes

Occupation frm 21 Jul 0987 to 21 Jun 1040 Count of Anjou
founded the great abbey at Beaulieu-lès-Loches
Group/Caste Membership Angevin Dynasty (Anjou)
Death 21 Jun 1040 Metz
Burial in the chapel of his monastery at Beaulieu-lès-Loches

Additional Information

Death while returning from his last pilgrimage

Marriage

Spouse Hildegarde OF SUNDGAU ( -1040)
Children Ermengarde OF ANJOU (1018?-1076)
Marriage aft 1000

Individual Note 1

Fulk III (972 – 21 June 1040), called Nerra (that is, le Noir, "the Black") after his death, was Count of Anjou from 21 July 987 to his death. He was the son of Geoffrey Greymantle and Adelaide of Vermandois.

 

Fulk III was the founder of Angevin power. He was only fifteen when he succeeded his father, and had a violent but also pious temperament, was partial to acts of extreme cruelty as well as penitence. In his most notorious act, he had his first wife (and cousin) Elisabeth of Vendôme burned at the stake in her wedding dress, after he discovered her in adultery with a goatherd in December 999. On the other hand, he made four pilgrimages to the Holy Land in 1002, 1008, and 1038 and, in 1007, built the great abbey at Beaulieu-lès-Loches. As a result, historiography has this to say about him:

 

“ Fulk of Anjou, plunderer, murderer, robber, and swearer of false oaths, a truly terrifying character of fiendish cruelty, founded not one but two large abbeys. This Fulk was filled with unbridled passion, a temper directed to extremes. Whenever he had the slightest difference with a neighbor he rushed upon his lands, ravaging, pillaging, raping, and killing; nothing could stop him, least of all the commandments of God.[1] …un des batailleurs les plus agités du Moyen Âge.[2] ”

 

Fulk fought against the claims of the counts of Rennes, defeating and killing Conan I of Rennes at the Battle of Conquereuil on 27 June 992. He then extended his power over the Counties of Maine and Touraine.

 

Fulk's enterprises came up against the no less determined and violent ambitions of Odo II of Blois, against whom he made an alliance with the Capetians. On 6 July 1016, he defeated Odo at the Battle of Pontlevoy. In 1025, after capturing and burning the city of Saumur, Fulk reportedly cried, "Saint Florentius, let yourself be burned. I will build you a better home in Angers." However, when the transportation of the saint's relics to Angers proved difficult, Fulk declared that Florentius was a rustic lout unfit for the city, and sent the relics back to Saumur.

 

Fulk also commissioned many buildings, primarily for defensive purposes. While fighting against the Bretons and Blesevins, protecting his territory from Vendôme to Angers and from there to Montrichard, he had more than a hundred castles, donjons, and abbeys constructed, including those at Château-Gontier, Loches (a stone keep), and Montbazon. He built the donjon at Langeais (990), one of the first stone castles. These numerous pious foundations, however, followed many acts of violence against the church.

 

Fulk died in Metz while returning from his last pilgrimage. He is buried in the chapel of his monastery at Beaulieu. By his first wife, Elisabeth, he left one daughter, Adela. By his second wife (1001), Hildegard of Sundgau, he had two children, Geoffrey Martel, his successor, and Ermengarde, through whom he was an ancestor of Geoffrey Plantagenet and the Plantagenet kings of England.

 

NOTES:

1 Erdoes.

2 Achille Luchaire.

 

SOURCES:

Bachrach, Bernard S. Fulk Nerra, the Neo-Roman Consul, 987-1040: a Political Biography of the Angevin Count. University of California Press, 1993.

Erdoes, Richard. AD 1000: Living on the Brink of Apocalypse, 1988

Fichtenau, Henry. Living in the Tenth Century, 1991.

Individual Note 2

A great abbey church named Belli Locus dedicated to the Holy Sepulchre was founded in the early 11th century by Fulk Nerra, Count of Anjou, who is buried in the chancel. In 1011 Pope Sergius IV donated some relics of Saints Chrysanthus and Daria and Fulk himself a piece of the Holy Sepulchre he stole from his visit to Jerusalem to the abbey. The pope settled a dispute over the abbey's consecration with the Archbishop of Tours by himself sending a legate to consecrate it.

 

Around the abbey, a town developed, with a charter of rights for a market and fairs. A mint was permitted at the abbey. Beaulieu was once the seat of a barony.

 

Here, Henry III of France signed the Edict of Beaulieu in 1576 to put an end to the fifth war of religion, granting Protestants better rights. Soon after, the sixth war of religion started.

 

SOURCE:

This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed (1911). Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.2

Sources

1"Wikipedia". http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fulk_III_of_Anjou.
2Ibid. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beaulieu-l%C3%A8s-Loches.