Hugue Ier de Sillé

Hugue Ier de Sillé , lord of Sillé.

Biography

Hugue Ier de Sillé, wire of Guillaume Ier de Sillé and one of the principal lords of the country, had the castle and the ground of Sillé. Dom Piolin said, which the Abbé Angot does not see elsewhere, which it took party for Gautier III of Vexin, count de Vexin, husband of Biota of Maine, girl of Herbert Ier of Maine, against Guillaume Bastard the. He approved the gift made with the Seam by Guy de Saulges of the churches of Saulges, of Saint-Jean-on-Erve, Joué, and in same time, under the name of Hugolin, confirmed the purchase by Avesgaud, abbot of Saint-Vincent, the ground of Mauvière (1055 - 1065).

The most historical fact which announced its career is the hatred which it had attracted itself, it is not known why, of the commune of the Mans. The manceaux ones, bishop and clergy at the head, came in mass, 1070, ruer on its territory, to besiege its city, but at the time to give the attack, on a false noise of the occupation of Mans by the Normand S, relaxed themselves misérablement and left in their escape of the victims without number on all the ways. The Arnaud bishop was made prisoner, but Hugue, large in its easy victory, returned its prisoner honourably. It is not seen that this popular war had other continuations.

Hugue was less happy in 1073 against William the Conqueror which seized its fortress, or rather with which it gave it while requiring peace of him as had just made Hubert II of Beaumont-with-Maine, Viscount of Maine, for its castles of Beaumont and of Fresnay.

Hugue had as a Oldeburge woman, who survived her husband and had as wire:

  1. Guillaume II;
  2. Bérard de Sillé, which attended the sale of a place of house in Mans (1070), with the marriage of Herbert and Godeheut, that Cauvin took for a marriage of the Viscount Hubert (1085 - 1086); with an agreement between Julien and Saint-Vincent, and with the gift of the church of Dangeul (1096); with the transfer of the strongholds of Guy, Nicolas and Payen de Sarcé with the Abbey of Saint-Vincent, the same year, and with the gift of a vine with Saint-Aubin (1098), conceded itself in Saint-Vincent a ground located at Bazougers, in its stronghold. There is nothing there inside which relates to Sillé, but let us see we it at the end of its life, in 1124, with his/her children: Hugue, Richard, Macé, canon, Hubert and Simon, who gives to the canons Lucé (I nventaire of the titles of Beaulieu , No 1), or of NR. - D. of Luceau (D. Piolin, T. III, p. 599); who yields a ground close it Mans to found a monastery there; and Antoine de Beauvau, lord of Sillé, will be pressed on this title, in 1481, to be made recognize as founder of the Abbaye of Beaulieu which replaced the foundation of Berard. Berard thus belonged well to the family of Sillé. Richard, wire of Berard, disputed the donation of his father with Bazougers.
  3. Aubert de Sillé, that the Angot abbot believes also wire of Hugue, and who ratified with others, in 1087, the gift, authorized by their elder to the Mount-Saint-Michel of the habits which the monks owed him in its grounds, sold at the end of the 11th century a dîme in Saint-Vincent, Saint-Flaceau of Mans, and was pilot concession with the monks by Jean de Luché, of the right of burial. It had as a Eremburge woman, and had as children:
    1. Hugue,
    2. Guillaume,
    3. Richilde,
    4. Eremburge.
Like Berard, it was foreign at the town of Sillé, prerogative of the elder ones.

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