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  1. Most sources state that Herbert married Emma, half-sister of King Stephen and Henry of Blois, Bishop of Winchester, and that she was an illegitimate daughter of Stephen II, Count of Blois, Stephen's father. New research, however, suggests that Emma might have been a daughter of Hunger fitzOdin, who held lands in Dorset in the Domesday survey.

  2. Emma van Blois. Emma van Blois (ca. 950 - 27 december 1003) was hertogin van Aquitanië. Zij is bekend doordat ze zich fel verzette tegen de buitenechtelijke escapades van haar man Willem IV van Aquitanië . Emma en Willem trouwden in 968, Emma bracht Chinon mee als bruidsschat. Emma ontdekte al snel dat Willem er meerdere minnaressen op na hield.

  3. Bourgueil, France. Coordinates. 47°16′46″N 0°10′18″E. /  47.27944°N 0.17167°E  / 47.27944; 0.17167. Bourgueil Abbey ( French: Abbaye Saint-Pierre de Bourgueil-en-Vallée) was a Benedictine monastery located at Bourgueil, historically in Anjou, currently in Indre-et-Loire and the diocese of Angers. The founder was Emma of Blois ...

  4. William IV, Duke of Aquitaine. Mother. Emma of Blois. William the Great ( French: Guillaume le Grand; 969 – 31 January 1030) was duke of Aquitaine (as William V) and count of Poitou (as William II or III) from 990 until his death. [1] Upon the death of the emperor Henry II, he was offered the kingdom of Italy but declined to contest the title ...

  5. Emma av Blois, född 950, död 1003, var en hertiginna av Akvitanien; gift med hertig Vilhelm IV av Akvitanien. Hon var regent som förmyndare för sin son hertig Vilhelm V av Akvitanien mellan 996 och 1003.

  6. Brief Life History of Emma. When Emma de Blois was born in 0949, in Forcalquier, Basses-Alpes, France, her father, Thibaud le Tricheur de Blois vicomte de Tours, was 41 and her mother, Luitgarde de Vermandois, was 29. She married William Duke of Aquitiane Poitiers IV in 0968. She died on 27 December 1003, in Aquitaine, France, at the age of 54 ...

  7. Richildis. Theobald I (before 913 – 16 January 975, 976 or 977), [1] called the Trickster (known as le Tricheur – meaning “cheater”– in French), was Count of Blois, Tours, Chartres and Châteaudun, as well as Lord of Vierzon and Provins. He was a loyal and potent vassal of Hugh the Great, duke of the Franks.