Adelaide of Brabant

Adelaide of Brabant (also known as Alix of Brabant, Aleyde de Brabant, Alix of Louvain or Adelheid van Brabant), born around 1190, died in 1265, was Countess of Boulogne from 1262 to 1265, the third reigning Countess in succession. She was the daughter of Henry I, Duke of Brabant and Matilda of Boulogne.

Marriages

She first married Arnoul III, Count of Rieneck and Looz (died 1221), around 1206, without issue.

Widowed, she remarried on 3 February 1225, William X of Auvergne (died 1247), by whom she had three children:

  • Robert V of Auvergne (1225–1277), count of Auvergne (1247–1277) and of Boulogne (1265–1277)
  • Marie of Auvergne (c. 1225–1280), x 1238 Gauthier VI Berthout (c. 1225–1286), Lord of Malines
  • Matilda of Auvergne (c. 1230–1280), married c. 1255 Robert II of Clermont

Widowed again, she married for a third time to Arnold II of Wezemaal in 1251.[1]

County of Boulogne

In 1259, her cousin Matilda II, Countess of Boulogne died, and she was one of the contenders for the rich county of Boulogne, in competition with her nephew Henry III, Duke of Brabant, with Joan of Dammartin, cousin of the countess, and with Louis IX of France, nephew of Matilda's first husband. Finally, the Parliament of Paris ruled in her favour.

She died a few years later, having passed the county of Boulogne to her son Robert and his descendents.

References

  1. Meredith P. Lillich, Rainbow Like an Emerald – Stained Glass in Lorraine in the Thirteenth and Early Fourteenth Centuries Adelaide of Brabant, p. 114, at Google Books


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