William III TALVAS
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William III TALVAS (1179-1221)

Name: William III TALVAS 1
Sex: Male
Father: John I OF PONTHIEU (1140?-1191)
Mother: Beatrice Candavaine DE SAINT POL ( - )

Individual Events and Attributes

Birth 1179
Occupation frm 1191 to 1221 (age 11-42) Count of Ponthieu and Montreuil
Group/Caste Membership House of Belleme/Montgomery
Death 6 Oct 1221 (age 41-42)

Marriage

Spouse Alice OF FRANCE (1170?-1218)
Children Maria OF PONTHIEU (bef1199-1250)
Marriage 20 Aug 1195 (age 15-16) Meudon

Individual Note

William III Talvas (1179 – October 4, 1221) was William III, Count of Ponthieu and William IV (of the house of Belleme/Montgomery). He was Count of Ponthieu, ruler of a small province in northern France that fell under the suzerainty of the dukes of Normandy (later also kings of England) since at least the mid 11th century. He was son and heir of John I, Count of Ponthieu (d 1191) by his third wife Beatrice de St Pol.

 

Family history and background

His father Jean I, Count of Ponthieu (d 1191 was the son of Guy II, Count of Ponthieu (who died on the Second Crusade 1147) and grandson of William III of Ponthieu, also frequently called William III Talvas, and who represented the senior line of the lords of Montgomery, once trusted vassals and allies of William the Conqueror.

 

Marriage to Alys, Countess of the Vexin

Talvas was married on August 20, 1195 to Alys, Countess of the Vexin, the daughter of King Louis VII of France. She was some eighteen years older than he, and was said by some to have been seduced by King Henry II of England while betrothed to his son, King Richard the Lion-Hearted. Richard sent her back to her brother, King Philip II of France, refusing to marry his father's mistress.

 

Philip then arranged for Alys to marry William Talvas, with the intent that the couple would be childless, and he would thus gain control of Ponthieu, a small but strategically important county. However, Alys then gave birth to a daughter and heiress, Marie, in 1197/1198. This daughter was the maternal grandmother of Eleanor of Castile, first wife of Edward I, King of England, to whom Ponthieu and the disputed Vexin inheritance would eventually pass as Eleanor's dowry. William Talvas died in 1221, his daughter Marie being his heiress.

 

SOURCES:

Monicat, M.J. Recueil des Actes de Philippe Auguste Roi de France, 1996.2

Sources

1Weis, Frederick Lewis & Sheppard, Walter Lee, Jr, "Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America before 1700: Lineages from Alfred the Great, Charlemagne, Malcolm of Scotland, Robert the Strong, and other Historical Individuals". p 110, 109-28.
2"Wikipedia". http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_IV_of_Ponthieu.