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Marie (Blois) Boulogne (1137 - 1183)

Princess Marie Boulogne formerly Blois aka Countess of Boulogne and Mortain
Born in Blois, Loir-et-Cher, Centre, Francemap
Ancestors ancestors
Wife of — married [date unknown] [location unknown]
Wife of — married 1160 in Boulogne, Pas-De-Calias, Francemap
Descendants descendants
Died at about age 46 in St Austrebert, Eure-et-Loir, Centre, Francemap
Problems/Questions
Profile last modified | Created 18 Feb 2011
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Contents

Biography

Notables Project
Marie (Blois) Boulogne is Notable.

Marie I or Mary (1136 – 25 July 1182 in St Austrebert, Montreuil, France) was the suo jure Countess of Boulogne from 1159 to 1170. She also held the post of Abbess of Romsey for five years until her abduction by Matthew of Alsace, who forced her to marry him.[1]

Name

Marie I, Countess of Boulogne[1]

Name: Mary /of BOULOGNE/


Name: Marie /Mortain/
Given Name: Marie
Surname: Mortain
Name Suffix: [Countess of]

The suffix [Countess of] is non-traditional and may be too long for the WikiTree suffix.

Birth and Parentage

Father Stephen, King of England Mother Matilda I, Countess of Boulogne Born 1136 Died 25 July 1182 (aged c. 46) St Austrebert, Montreuil Burial St Austrebert[1]

Marie was the youngest daughter of King Stephen of England and his wife Matilda I, Countess of Boulogne.[1] She was born in 1136,[1] one year after her father had succeeded to the English throne. His reign was to be marked by the civil war known as "The Anarchy" during which he fought a series of battles to retain the crown which was claimed by his cousin Empress Matilda. She had three brothers, Eustace, William, Baldwin, and one sister, Matilda. She also had three illegitimate half-siblings by her father's relationship with a Norman lady known only as Dameta.[1][1]

Occupation

Succeeded as Countess Marie I of Boulogne

Reign 11 October 1159–1170. Predecessor William I. Successor Matthew. [1]

Occupation: after divorce, a nun

Early Religious Life

She became a novice at the Priory of Lillechurch in Kent, but later transferred to Romsey Abbey in Hampshire.[1] The abbey had been rebuilt by her uncle Henry of Blois, Bishop of Winchester. It was at Romsey that she became a nun sometime between 1148 and 1155. She was elected Abbess of Romsey in 1155,[1] the year following her father's death and the subsequent ascension to the English throne of Empress Matilda's son Henry II. Her brother William had been passed over in the succession. [1]

Countess

About four years later, on 11 October 1159, her brother William died in Toulouse. As his marriage to Isabel de Warenne, Countess of Surrey had been childless, Marie, his only surviving sibling, succeeded as the suo jure Countess of Boulogne.[1] [1]

House

House House of Blois (by birth) House of Metz (by marriage)

Marriage

Matthew of Alsace abducted Marie from the abbey in 1160, and forced her to marry him in defiance of her religious vows.[1] He therefore became jure uxoris Count of Boulogne and co-ruler. On 18 December 1161, Pope Alexander III wrote a letter to the Archbishop of Rheims in which he discussed Marie's abduction by Matthew of Alsace and her subsequent constrained marriage.[1][1]

The couple had two daughters:

  1. Ida, Countess of Boulogne (1160/1161 – 21 April 1216), married firstly Gerard of Guelders; secondly Berthold IV of Zahringen; and thirdly Count Renaud de Dammartin, by whom she had one daughter, Matilda II of Boulogne, who succeeded her as countess.
  2. Mathilde of Flanders (1170 – 16 October 1210), married in 1179 Henry I, Duke of Brabant, by whom she had seven children. Six of these children lived to adulthood.

Marie's marriage to Matthew was annulled in 1170.[1] This was the same year that she gave birth to their youngest daughter, Mathilde in Louvain.

Later Religious Life

Following the annulment, Marie re-entered the religious life as a Benedictine nun at St. Austrebert, Montreuil, where she died on 25 July 1182 at the age of about 46.[1][2]

Matthew's Later Life

Her former husband Matthew continued to reign as Count of Boulogne until his death in 1173, when their eldest daughter Ida succeeded as countess. Following the death of Ida's daughter, Matilda II, the county of Boulogne eventually passed to Adelaide of Brabant, daughter of Marie's second daughter, Mathilde.

Wiki References

[1]Cawley, Charles. Medieval Lands, Kings of England, 1066-1603). Retrieved 22 September 2011 [2]Weir, Alison. Britain's Royal Families: The Complete Genealogy. Vintage Books, 2008.

Sources

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 1.7 Marie I, Countess of Boulogne, Wikipedia. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marie_I,_Countess_of_Boulogne
  • Royal Ancestry by Douglas Richardson Vol. I. page 499

See also:

  • S. P. Thompson (2004) Mary (Mary of Blois), suo jure countess of Boulogne (d. 1182), Online Oxford Dictionary of National Biography




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What is the husband "de Romsey"? Perhaps a misunderstanding coming from her having been Abbess of Romsey?
posted by Andrew Lancaster

B  >  Blois  |  B  >  Boulogne  >  Marie (Blois) Boulogne

Categories: France, Notables | Notables