Walter II of the Vexin
Walter II, the White (c. 955-c.1024), was a French Count of the Vexin, Amiens and Valois from 992 to around 1024.
He was the son of Count Walter I of the Vexin and Adèle, daughter of Count Fulk II the Good of Anjou.[1]
Around 1006, he exempted the abbeys of Jumièges and Saint-Wandrille from taxes, indicating good relations with the Duchy of Normandy and the Archbishopric of Rouen. He also negotiated the marriage of his son Drogo to Godgifu, sister of King Edmund Ironside of England, who had taken refuge at the court of Normandy in 1013.[2]
He died between 1017 and 1024 during a feud between King Robert II and Count Eudes II of Blois, which influenced the division of his counties between his sons: Amiens and Vexin went to Drogo, a Capetian loyalist, and Valois went to Ralph III, a supporter of the House of Blois.[3]
He married around 980 a certain Adèle, of whom nothing is known. Together they had:
- Fulk, Bishop of Amiens (d.1035)[3]
References
[edit]- ^ Philip Grierson: "L'origine des Comtes d'Amiens, Valois et Vexin", in Le Moyen Âge, Vol. 49, 1939, pp. 81–123
- ^ Pierre Bauduin: La première Normandie (Xe–XIe siècles): sur les frontières de la haute Normandie: identité et construction d’une principauté, Caen, Presses Universitaires de Caen, 2004, p. 474
- ^ a b c d Édouard de Sainte Phalle, "Les comtes de Gâtinais aux Xe et Xle siècle" in Onomastique et Parenté dans l'Occident médiéval, Oxford, Linacre College, Unit for Prosopographical Research, series Prosopographia et Genealogica / 3, 2000, pp. 230–246