Jump to content

Andrew II, Baron of Vitré

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Andrew II
Baron of Vitré
Reign11 November 1173 – 9 June 1211
Bornc. 1150
Died1211 (aged 60–61)
SpouseMatilda of Mayenne, Enoguen of Léon, Eustacie of Rays, Luce Paynel
IssueEmma, Andrew, Eleanor, Constance
HouseHouse of Vitré
FatherRobert III of Vitré
MotherEmma of Dinan

Andrew II of Vitré (c. 1150 – 9 June 1211[1]) was Baron de Vitré from 1173 to 1210/11.

Life

[edit]

Andrew II of Vitré was the eldest son of Robert III, Baron of Vitré and his wife Emma of Dinan, daughter of Alan of Dinan.

He succeeded his father in 1173. He had already fought with King Henry II Plantagenet in 1168.

In the early 1180s, he took part to an armed pilgrimage to the Holy Land and came back to Brittany a few years later.

In 1185, he was one of the noblemen who were present at the Assise au Comte Geoffroy.

In 1196, the duchess of Brittany, Constance, was abducted and imprisoned by her husband Ranulf de Blondeville. Andrew rebelled along with several other Breton barons. He agreed to send his daughter Emma, who was his only heiress at the time, as an hostage to Richard the Lionheart, in exchange for de Constance's release. Emma and the other hostages were taken away but the duchess was not released.

Marriages and issue

[edit]

Andrew II of Vitré married four times:[2]

He first married, before 1173, Matilda of Mayenne, daughter of Geoffrey III, Lord of Mayenne, and Constance of Cornouaille (daughter of Duke Conan III, Duke of Brittany). They had no issue and the marriage was annulled in 1189 or 1190.

He married secondly Enoguen of Léon, daughter of Guihomar IV, Viscount of Léon and his wife Nobilis. They had:

  • Emma, who was hostage in August 1196 and married Alard IV, Lord of Château-Gontier in 1207;
  • Eleanor, who married John of Dol, Lord of Combourg in 1210.

Enoguen died at an unknown date and Andrew married Eustacie of Rays, daughter of Harscoët of Rays on 3 March 1199. They had:

Eustacie died before 7 December 1209 and Andrew soon married Luce Paynel, sister of Fulk Paynel. They had no issue.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Judith Everard & Michael Jones The Charters of Duchess Constance and her Family, 1171-1221 (1999), The Boydell Press, pp 195/96
  2. ^ Judith Everard & Michael Jones The Charters of Duchess Constance and her Family, 1171-1221 (1999), The Boydell Press, pp 195-196.

Sources

[edit]