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  1. 26 de abr. de 2022 · He attested a charter for Notre-Dame de Chartres of Robert I of France as "Signum Amalrici de Monteforti" on 4 February 1031. Amauri began the building of Montfort, the castle which took its name for him, Montfort-l'Amaury, described as a "castrum" at Yvelines, Île-de-France. Amauri died circa 1053.

  2. Bertrade de Montfort l'Amaury Countess of Anjou and Queen of France, living 1115×1117. Bertrade, a daughter of Simon I de Montfort, was the center of one of the major scandals of her time. Married to count Fulk IV of Anjou, she was carried off in 1092 by king Philippe I of France, who married her (illegally, as she was still married to Fulk).

  3. Bertrada de Montfort. 1 reference. retrieved. 7 August 2020. WeRelate person ID. Bertrade_de_Montfort_(1) 0 references. WikiTree person ID. Montfort-11. subject named as.

  4. 7 de mar. de 2021 · Bertrade de Montfort. Date of birth. c. 1070. Date of death. 14 February 1117 (statement with Gregorian date earlier than 1584) Fontevraud Abbey. Place of burial. Prieuré de Haute-Bruyère. Country of citizenship.

  5. Bertrada de Montfort (v 1070 - Abadia de Fontevrault 1117), reina consort de França (1092-1108). Orígens familiars [ modifica ] Filla de Simó I de Montfort i la seva segona esposa, la comtessa Agnès d'Evreux .

  6. Bertrada de Montfort is well known for provoking the wrath of senior churchmen in the late eleventh and twelfth centuries, for leaving her husband, Count Fulk IV of Anjou, and engaging in what they considered to be an illegitimate marriage to Philip I of France.