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William FitzEmpress

William FitzEmpress
Born (1136-07-22)22 July 1136
Argentan, Normandy
Died 30 January 1164(1164-01-30) (aged 27)
Rouen
Burial Cathedral of Notre-Dame, Rouen
House House of Plantagenet
Father Geoffrey Plantagenet, Count of Anjou
Mother Empress Matilda

William FitzEmpress (22 July 1136 at Argentan, Normandy, – 30 January 1164 at Rouen, Normandy) was the youngest of the three sons of Empress Matilda and Geoffrey Plantagenet, Count of Anjou.

His eldest brother was King Henry II of England, and his second brother was Geoffrey, Count of Nantes. William was Viscount of Dieppe. He was also known as William FitzEmpress and as William of Anjou.

In 1156, aged 20, William was with his brother Henry at the siege of Chinon. This siege was occasioned by the rebellion of their brother Geoffrey. He also conducted the siege at the castle of Mountreuil-Bellay. While doing so he had the writings of the Roman military theorist Vegetius read to him; he then did what Vegetius had done, and the siege ended the next day.

In September 1155, King Henry held a council at Winchester where he enthusiastically considered invading Ireland and giving it to William, making him king. The plans were abandoned when their mother, Empress Matilda, objected: she did not consider Ireland worth conquering. Henry did, however, make William one of the richest men in England, granting him seven manors (Maldon in Essex; Dartford, Hoo, and Shorne in Kent; Aylsham and Cawston in Norfolk; and Hintlesham in Suffolk). He also had land surrounding Dieppe, Normandy, of which he was made vicomte (viscount).

In 1162 William was to marry Isabel de Warenne, Countess of Surrey, one of the great heiresses in England. She was widow of William of Blois, count of Boulogne and Mortain, the son of King Stephen, and a cousin of William. Because of this relationship, the marriage required a dispensation from affinity; such dispensations were usually granted without difficulty, However Thomas Becket, Archbishop of Canterbury, refused to support the request for a dispensation and it was not granted because of that.


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