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  1. Enguerrand II was the eldest son and heir of Hugh II, Count of Ponthieu and his wife Bertha of Aumale, heiress of Aumale. [1] Enguerrand was married to Adelaide, daughter of Robert I, Duke of Normandy and sister of William the Conqueror. [2] But at the Council of Reims in 1049, when the proposed marriage of Duke William with Matilda of Flanders ...

  2. Hugh II of Ponthieu was count of Ponthieu and lord of Abbeville, the son of Enguerrand I of Ponthieu. [1] Evidently, Hugh II was the half-brother of Guy, who became the bishop of Amiens; Fulk, who became the abbot of Forest l'Abbaye; and Robert. However, it is possible that both Robert and Hugh II were the sons of Enguerrand's first wife, and ...

  3. William was son of Robert II of Bellême and Agnes of Ponthieu. [2] [3] He succeeded his father as count of Ponthieu some time between 1105 and 1111, when he alone as count made a gift to the abbey of Cluny. [2] His father Robert de Bellême had turned against Henry I on several occasions, had escaped capture at the battle of Tinchebrai in 1106 ...

  4. Count Rudolph (or Rudolf) of Ponthieu (died 866) was son of Welf (also Hwelf or Welf I) and brother of Judith of Bavaria, wife of Emperor Louis the Pious. Through Judith's influence her brother Rudolph acquired and became Lay Abbot of the Abbey's of Saint Riquier and Jumieges. In April 830 Frankish nobility revolted against Emperor Louis in ...

  5. Enguerrand married Adelaide, daughter of Arnulf, Count of Holland, they had: With his second wife, Adelvie, [3] widow of Count Arnold II of Boulogne, [a] they had: Enguerrand married Berta, daughter of Geurenfrid. [3] Enguerrand died around 1045 [3] "at a great age." [citation needed]

  6. Ida. John I of Ponthieu ( c. 1140 – 1191) was the son of Guy II of Ponthieu and Ida. [1] He succeeded his father as Count of Ponthieu in 1147. [2]

  7. Mother. Mathildis of Clermont. Simon of Dammartin (1180 – 21 September 1239) was count of Ponthieu. In 1214 he fought against Philip Augustus at the battle of Bouvines. With the Capetian victory at Bouvines, he was exiled. Through negotiations of his wife Marie, he was allowed back in Ponthieu and agreed to not allow his daughters to marry ...