Baldwin VI, Count of Flanders

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Baldwin VI of Flanders (c. 1030 – 17 July 1070) was briefly Count of Flanders, from 1067 to 1070. He was also (as Baldwin I) count of Hainaut from 1051 to 1070.

He was the eldest son of Baldwin V of Flanders and Adele Capet, a daughter of king Robert II of France.

[edit] History and Family

In 1051 he married Richilde, Countess of Mons and Hainaut, widow of count Herman of Mons. By this marriage Flanders took control of Hainaut (at that moment still a conglomerate of the county of Mons, the margraviate of Valenciennes and the southern part of the landgraviate of Brabant).

Baldwin's early death left Flanders and Hainaut in the hands of his young son Arnulf III, with Richilde as regent. The countship was soon usurped by Baldwin's brother Robert the Frisian, who became count Robert I of Flanders. The young Arnulf III was killed the next year at the Battle of Cassel (1071) and Baldwin's younger son eventually became Baldwin II of Hainaut.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  • Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America Before 1700 by Frederick Lewis Weis, Line 163-2
Preceded by
Baldwin V
Count of Flanders
1067–1070
Succeeded by
Arnulf I/III
Preceded by
Herman, Count of Mons
Count of Mons
1051–1070
Preceded by
Richilde, Countess of Mons and Hainaut
Count of Hainaut
1051–1070
Succeeded by
Arnulf III, Count of Flanders
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