See also

Family of William III + of MONTFERRAT and Waza +

Husband: William III + of MONTFERRAT (970-1041)
Wife: Waza + (915- )
Children: Henry (c. 1000-1044)
Otto II + of MONTFERRAT (1015-1084)

Husband: William III + of MONTFERRAT

Name: William III + of MONTFERRAT
Sex: Male
Father: Otto of MONTFERRAT (c. 965-991)
Mother: Gerberga of ITALY (945- )
Birth 0970 Montferrat, Piedmont, Italy
Occupation Margrave of Montferrat
Title frm 0991 to 1042 (age 20-72) Margrave of Montferrat
Death 1041 (age 70-71)

Wife: Waza +

Name: Waza +
Sex: Female
Father: -
Mother: -
Birth 0915 Italy

Child 1: Henry

picture

Spouse: Adelaide + of SUSA

Name: Henry
Sex: Male
Spouse: Adelaide + of SUSA (1004-1091)
Birth 1000 (est)
Occupation Marquess of Montferrat
Death 1044 (age 43-44)

Child 2: Otto II + of MONTFERRAT

Name: Otto II + of MONTFERRAT
Sex: Male
Spouse: Constance + (c. 1015- )
Birth 1015 Montferrat, Piedmont, Italy
Occupation Margrave of Montferrat
Title frm 1042 to 1084 (age 26-69) Margrave of Montferrat
Death 20 Nov 1084 (age 68-69) Montferrat, Piedmont, Italy

Note on Husband: William III + of MONTFERRAT

William III (c. 970 – 1042) was the Margrave of Montferrat and Count of Vado from 991 to his death. He was the eldest son and successor of Otto I. William I and II were the father and son respectively of Aleram, the first margrave, but neither served as margrave himself.

 

William's religious policy was a continuation of Aleram's. He founded the monastery of Spigno. In 1014, he and his brother Riprando donated land to the abbey of Fruttuaria. Between his succession and 1002, he made other donations to Acqui Terme.

 

While following in the familiar policy of ecclesiastical patronage, William abandoned Aleram's support of the Holy Roman Emperors. Instead, he intervened in the wars of the Italian communes which characterised early eleventh-century Italy. He joined an anti-imperial alliance with Count Obert the Red, Margrave Ulric Manfred II of Turin, and Bishop Leo of Vercelli. The allies soon found themselves at odds and warring on each other. Leo besieged Santhià, where William was then residing, and William, to avenge himself on the bishop, besieged Vercelli and put it to flame. William signed a peace treaty with Ulric Manfred and married his son Henry to Manfred's daughter Adelaide.

 

Even after all his allies had been pacified by imperial troops, William continued to resist Conrad II, but he fared poorly. Conrad destroyed his fortress in the valley of Orba.

 

The Miracula sancti Bononii records William's wife as Waza. She prayed at the tomb of Saint Bononio, abbot of Santissimi Michele e Genuario di Lucedio. William died in 1041, probably before 29 January, when his son Henry cites him in an act donating land to the church in Turin.