Counts of Montaigu

The Counts of Montaigu were 12th century nobles of Lower Lotharingia who were closely associated with the Counts of Duras and Clermont. Montaigu (Mons Acutus) was a castle located on the river Ourthe, opposite Marcourt near La Roche in the Ardennes. The castle of Montaigu has been mostly destroyed, but a chapel dedicated to Saint Thibaut still resides the mountain on which it was built. The Counts of Montage also held the title of Lord of Rochefort. Rochefort is a municipality in Namur, and these holdings passed by inheritance to the Walcourt family, who married into the family of Counts of Chiny, particularly Louis III.

The Counts of Montaigu were:

Cono I and his sons participated in the First Crusade with Godfrey of Bouillon. Thierry appears to have given up the countship of Montaigu although his great-grandson Thierry IV appears to have claimed dominion over three villages in the County of Montaigu.

The Counts of Clermont[1] appear to have originated with a Widrich (d. before 1062), father of Ermengarde, wife of Gozelo I, and passed on to the Counts of Montaigu through either marriage to a daughter of or sale by Giselbert, Count of Clermont.

References

Sources

Les Seigneurs et Comtes de Rochefort, 1893

Wolters, Mathias J., Notice Historique sur l’Ancien Comté de Duras en Hesbaie, Gyselinck, 1855 (available on Google Books)

Medieval Lands Project, Comtes de Montaigu

Runciman, Steven, A History of the Crusades, Volume I: The First Crusade and the Foundation of the Kingdom of Jerusalem, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1951

Murray, Alan V., The Army of Godfrey of Bouillon, 1096-1099: Structure and Dynamics of a Contingent on the First Crusade, Revue beige de philology et d'histoire, tome 70, fast. 2, 1992

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