Turpion

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Turpion († October 4, 863 at Saintes ) was Count of Angoulême .

Life

His family affiliation results from the fact that Emenon, as the deposed Count of Poitou , fled to his brother in 839. He fell on October 4, 863 fighting the Vikings . His successor in Angoulême was his brother Emenon, who had been deposed in Poitiers.

It is not clear who the parents of Turpion and Emenon were. Michel Dillange sees Emenon (and thus also Turpion) as the son of Dietrich II, Count von Autun , or his brother Adalhelm (Alleaume), which would assign him to the Gellones . At Schwennicke, Bernhard von Gothien , the son of Emenons and Turpion's brother Bernhard von Poitiers , is expelled as Adalhelm's grandson, which in view of Bilichilde as mother or wife and Rorico von Maine as maternal grandfather forces Adalhelm to be the paternal grandfather. At web.genealogie he is referred to as the son of Rothaire / Rohier / Rathier / Ithier Graf von Limoges , X 841 and a daughter of Pippin I of Aquitaine, which is not possible in terms of time (Pippin married 822) (Ratger was probably a son-in-law Louis the Pious ).

swell

  • Annales Engolismenses 852, MGH SS XVI
  • Marchegay, P., and Mabille, E. (eds.) (1869) Chroniques des Eglises d'Anjou (Paris) Chronicon sancti Maxentii Pictavensis
  • Adémar de Chabannes III, Chavanon, J. (ed.), 1897

literature

  • Michel Dillange, Les comtes de Poitou Ducs d'Aquitaine (778-1204), La Crèche: Geste éditions, 1995, 303 pages ( ISBN 2-910919-09-9 )

Web links

Footnotes

  1. Adémar de Chabannes III, 16, p. 132
  2. Annales Engolismenses 852, MGH SS XVI, p. 486; Chronicon sancti Maxentii Pictavensis, Chroniques des Eglises d'Anjou, p. 369.
  3. Detlev Schwennicke , European Family Tables Volume III.4 (1989) Plate 731