Godfrey the Hunchback
Godfrey IV, Duke of Lower Lorraine | |
---|---|
Died | 27 February 1076 |
Noble family | House of Ardennes-Verdun |
Spouse(s) | Matilda of Tuscany |
Father | Godfrey III, Duke of Lower Lorraine |
Mother | Doda |
Godfrey IV (died 26 or 27 February 1076), known as the Hunchback, was Duke of Lower Lorraine from 1069 until his death in 1076, succeeding his father Godfrey the Bearded.[1]
In the year of his accession, he married Margravine Matilda of Tuscany, daughter of his stepmother Beatrice of Bar, and thus became margrave of Tuscany. Godfrey and Matilda had only one child, Beatrice, who was born in 1071 and died the same year. From 1071 onwards, Godfrey lived apart from his wife. The two spouses were on opposite sides in the Investiture Controversy: Matilda was a partisan of Pope Gregory VII and Godfrey of Emperor Henry IV.[2]
He warred on Henry's behalf against Magnus, Duke of Saxony, in 1075 and on that of the bishop of Utrecht in 1076 against Counts Dirk V of Holland and Robert I of Flanders. He was assassinated by spear in Vlaardingen while "answering the call of nature".[3] Despite Matilda's opposition he nominated his nephew Godfrey of Bouillon to succeed him,[2] but the emperor instead appointed his own son, Conrad. Godfrey of Bouillon succeeded eventually in 1087 and gained fame on the First Crusade.
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Mickel 1999, p. 58.
- ^ a b Mickel 1999, p. 61.
- ^ Hay 2008, p. 35, 43-44.
Sources
[edit]- Hay, David (2008). The Military Leadership of Matilda of Canossa, 1046-1115. Manchester University Press.
- Mickel, Emanuel J., ed. (1999). The Old French Crusade Cycle:Les Enfances Godefroi and Le Retour de Cornumarant Les Enfances Godefroi and Le Retour de Cornumarant. Vol. III. The University of Alabama Press.
- 1076 deaths
- House of Limburg
- Margraves of Antwerp
- Margraves of Tuscany
- Dukes of Lower Lorraine
- Regents of Tuscany
- French royalty and nobility with disabilities
- 11th-century French nobility
- People murdered in the Netherlands
- Deaths by blade weapons
- Lords of Bouillon
- Matilda of Tuscany
- House of Ardenne–Verdun
- Jure uxoris officeholders
- European nobility stubs