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  1. Hugh I, Count of Blois, also known as Hugh I of Châtillon (c. 1198 – 9 April 1248) was jure uxoris Count of Blois from 1230 to 1241, and Count of Saint Pol (as Hugh V) from 1226 to 1248. Hugh was son of Gaucher III of Châtillon and Elisabeth, daughter of Hugo IV, Count of Saint-Pol.

  2. 11 de feb. de 1993 · Genealogy for Comte de Champagne Hugues de Blois, Count (c.1074 - 1125) family tree on Geni, with over 260 million profiles of ancestors and living relatives.

    • Grand Est
    • Grand Est, France
    • circa 1074
    • 1125 (46-56)
  3. Hugh ( c. 1074 – c. 1125) was the Count of Champagne from 1093 until his death. Hugh was the third son of Theobald III, Count of Blois and Adele of Valois, [1] bearing the title Count of Bar-sur-Aube.

  4. Daughter of Countess Margaret and Lord Walter II of Avesnes, she inherited all her parents' domains, and thus became Countess of Blois and Châteaudun, and Lady of Avesnes, Bohain, and Guise. She married Count Hugh I of St Pol who was the jure uxoris Count during her reign.

    Portrait
    Name
    Reign
    Other Titles
    Theobald I of Blois, aka Theobald the ...
    940–977
    Count of Tours Count of Chartres Count of ...
    Son of Theobald the Elder and Richilde.
    Odo I of Blois (c. 950 – died in 996)
    977–996
    Count of Tours Count of Chartres Count of ...
    Second son of Count Theobald I and ...
    Theobald II of Blois (c. 983 – 11 July ...
    996–1004
    Count of Tours Count of Chartres Count of ...
    Elder son of Count Odo I, her reign was ...
    Odo II of Blois (c. 985 – 15 Nov.
    1004–1037
    Count of Tours Count of Chartres Count of ...
    Younger brother of Count Theobald II, he ...
  5. Hugh I, Count of Blois, also known as Hugh I of Châtillon (c. 1198 – 9 April 1248) was jure uxoris Count of Blois from 1230 to 1241, and Count of Saint Pol (as Hugh V) from 1226 to 1248. Hugh was son of Gaucher III of Châtillon and Elisabeth, daughter of Hugo IV, Count of Saint-Pol.

  6. Hugh I, Count of Blois, also known as Hugh I of Châtillon was jure uxoris Count of Blois from 1230 to 1241, and Count of Saint Pol from 1226 to 1248.

  7. Hugh was educated at Tiron Abbey, where noblemen sent their sons for schooling, according to the Vita Bernardi? Thibaut, then count of Blois and Chartres, paid in 1117 for major embellishments of Tiron Abbey, twenty-five miles southwest of Chartres, including the con struction of an infirmary. The improvements might have been related