Mathieu de Trie

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Mathieu de Trie († November 26, 1344 ) was Seigneur de Vaumain , d ' Araines , de Ronquerolles et de Liancourt, and Marshal of France .

Life

Mathieu de Trie was the eldest son of Renaud de Trie, Seigneur de Vaumain and Jeanne de Hodenc. His father was killed in the Battle of Spurs in 1302 . In 1315 he had a dispute with Jean II. Count of Aumale , which could only be settled through the intervention of the king. In 1320 he succeeded Jean IV. De Beaumont Marshal of France, in 1321 a member of the Conseil étroit and took part in the coronation of King Charles IV of France on February 21, 1322 in Reims , who made him his executor . From 1324 to 1326 he was Charles IV's representative in Gascony during the war against the English and the Flemings. He was also royal commissioner in the peace treaty with England , which was signed on March 31, 1326 in Paris .

On May 29, 1328 he took part in the coronation of Philip VI. part performed by his brother or cousin Guillaume de Trie , Archbishop of Reims ; In 1334 Mathieu de Trie became his heir. On June 6, 1329 he was one of the witnesses in the homage of Edward III. of England in Amiens for the Duchy of Guyenne . Mathieu de Trie was appointed one of the plenipotentiaries who in Cambrai the differences between Count Ludwig I of Flanders and Duke Johann III. of Brabant should clarify regarding the city of Mechelen (Peace Treaty of Cambrai of August 2, 1334). In 1337 he, together with other great lords of Normandy, offered the king to provide a certain number of armed men for the conquest of England. In 1342 he was appointed " Lieutenant-General for the Borders of Flanders". Matthieu de Trie died on November 26, 1344.

Marriages

His first marriage before May 17, 1320, was Jeanne, Dame d'Araines, attested in 1300/24, widow of Raoul de Soissons, Seigneur d ' Ostel ( House Nesle ), and his second marriage (with a marriage contract of September 2, 1332 Ide Mauvoisin-Rosny († 1375), daughter of Gui VII, Seigneur de Rosny , and Laure de Ponthieu, widow of Jean III. , Count of Dreux . The marriages remained without offspring.

literature

Web links

  • Charles Cawley, Medieval Lands, Comtes de Dammartin (Trie) ( online , accessed August 1, 2019)
  • Étienne Pattou, Seigneurs de Trie ( online ), accessed August 1, 2019

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Père Anselme and Moréri: around 1320
  2. Trie was Beaumont's successor, Jean II. De Barres that of Jean de Corbeil, Seigneur de Grez ( Jean-Baptiste-Pierre Jullien de Courcelles , Dictionnaire historique et biographique des généraux français , Volume 2, 1821, p. 9, footnote 1)
  3. Cawley, Pattou
  4. Schwennicke
  5. ^ Cawley; Schwennicke: before 1316