Alan IV, Duke of Brittany

Alan IV (c. 1063 – 13 October 1119) was Duke of Brittany from 1072 until his abdication in 1112. He was also Count of Nantes (from c. 1103) and Count of Rennes. His parents were Duchess Hawise and Duke Hoel II.[1] He is also known as Alan Fergant. Through his father, he was of the Breton House of Cornouaille dynasty (Breton: Kerne dynasty). He was the last Breton-speaking Duke of Brittany.[2]

Alan IV
Alan IV's seal
Duke of Brittany
Reign1072–1112
PredecessorHoel II & Hawise
SuccessorConan III
RegentHoel II (1072–1084)
Bornc. 1063
Died13 October 1119
Redon Abbey
Burial
Spouse
(m. 1086; died 1090)
    (m. 1093)
    Issue
    HouseCornouaille
    FatherHoel II, Duke of Brittany
    MotherHawise, Duchess of Brittany

    Conflict with Normandy

    A traditional rivalry between Brittany and Normandy continued at the close of the 11th century. The Breton-Norman war of 1064–1065 was the result of William the Bastard, Duke of Normandy (later to become known as William the Conqueror) support of rebels in Brittany against Alan's maternal uncle, Conan II.

    Conan II died in late 1066 during a campaign in Anjou, and was succeeded by Alan's parents, Conan's sister, Hawise, and her husband, Hoel II. Alan became Duke in 1072, but being a minor, Hoel ruled as regent from Hawise's death in 1072 until Alan reached his majority in 1084.[lower-alpha 1]

    To prevent further hostilities during his invasion of England, William I married his daughter Constance to the new duke Alan in 1087.[4] The marriage ceremonies may have taken place in Bayeux in Normandy. William of Malmesbury wrote that Constance was unpopular at the Breton court because of her "severe and conservative" manner. However, Orderic Vitalis wrote that as duchess Constance did all she could to further the welfare of the Bretons, who grieved deeply at her death in 1090.

    In 1092, Alan IV donated property to the abbey of Redon by charter, and by 1093 married Ermengarde of Anjou, as a political alliance with Fulk IV of Anjou to counter Anglo-Norman influence.

    Redon Abbey, Final resting place of Alan IV

    Duke Alan IV's cousin Geoffrey I Boterel (eldest brother of Alan Rufus) died on 24 August 1093 in battle at Dol while in rebellion against the Duke.

    Between 1101 and 1104, Alan's younger brother, Count Matthew II of Nantes, died without issue and his county passed to Alan.

    Alan IV abdicated as duke in 1112. The former duke retired to the monastery of Redon, where he died in 1119.

    Crusader

    In 1098 Alan went on the First Crusade,[5] as part of the army of Robert Curthose, leaving Ermengarde as his regent, and returned in 1101.

    Family

    Alan IV married Constance in 1087. Constance died in 1090. William of Malmesbury alleges that her husband, Alan, had their servants poison her.[6] They had no children.

    Alan's second marriage was to Ermengarde of Anjou in 1093.[4] With Ermengarde he had three children:

    • Geoffrey - died young;
    • Conan - his successor as Duke of Brittany[4]
    • Hawise - she married Count Baldwin VII of Flanders, also known as Hawise Fergant. They divorced and had no issue.

    Alan and Ermengarde were separated upon his abdication as duke in 1112.

    He had two illegitimate sons:

    Succession

    Alan IV died in 1119 at the monastery of Redon, where he had retired after his abdication in 1112, and separation from his wife Ermengarde. His only surviving son, Conan III succeeded him.

    See also

    Notes

    1. Following medieval examples given in Bailey et al., Alan may have been twenty-one years of age at that time.[3]

    References

    1. Everard 2004, p. xv.
    2. Piette 2008, p. 36.
    3. Bailey et al. 2008, pp. 41–60.
    4. Everard 2004, p. 10.
    5. Everard 2004, p. 12.
    6. Panton 2011, p. 110.
    7. Warren 1974, p. 74.

    Sources

    • Bailey, B. Gregory; Bernard, Meaghan E.; Carrier, Gregory; Elliott, Cherise L.; Langdon, John; Leishman, Natalie; Mlynarz, Michal; Mykhed, Oksana; Sidders, Lindsay C. (2008). "Coming of Age and the Family in Medieval England". Journal of Family History. SAGE. 33 (1): 41–60. doi:10.1177/03631990073084492008.
    • Everard, J. A. (2004). Brittany and the Angevins: Province and Empire 1158–1203. Cambridge University Press.
    • Panton, James (2011). Historical Dictionary of the British Monarchy. Scarecrow Press. ISBN 0810874970.
    • Piette, Gwenno (2008). A Concise History of Brittany. University of Wales Press.
    • Warren, W. L. (1974). Henry II. University of California Press.
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