House of Ingelger
Appearance
The House of Ingelger (French: Ingelgeriens) is the first dynasty in Anjou. It was founded by Ingelger (died 886), Viscount of Angers, whose son Fulk the Red made himself count of Anjou. By inheritance, the family came into the possession of the county Vendôme.
The family died out in the male line in 1060 with Geoffrey II of Anjou. He was succeeded in Anjou by his maternal nephew, Geoffrey the Bearded, son of the Count of Gâtinais.[1]
Counts
- Ingelger (870–898), father of
- Fulk I the Red (898–941), father of
- Fulk II the Good (941–960), father of
- Geoffrey I Greymantle (960–987), father of
- Fulk III the Black (987–1040), father of
- Geoffrey II Martel (1041–1060), maternal uncle of
Cognatic Descent (House of Plantagenet)
- Geoffrey III the Bearded (1060–1067), brother of
- Fulk IV the Ill-Tempered (1067–1109, jointly with his son Geoffrey IV) (1098–1106), father of
- Fulk V the Young (1106–1129), later king of Jerusalem as Fulk I, father of
- Geoffrey V Plantagenet (1129–1151), father of
- Henry Curtmantle (1151–1189), also king of England as Henry II, father of
- Richard Lionheart (1189–1199), also king of England
- Contested between Richard's nephew—Arthur (1199–1203)— and brother— John, King of England (1199–1215)
Family Tree
Family Tree
References
- ^ Anjou: Chapter 1. Comtes d'Anjou C. Comtes d'Anjou 1060-1189 (Comtes de Gatinais) at Medieval Lands Project