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Louis I, Count of Blois

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Noble family
  
House of Blois

Mother
  
Alix of France

Name
  
Louis Count


Louis I, Count of Blois

Spouse(s)
  
Catherine, Countess of Clermont-en-Beauvaisis

Father
  
Theobald V, Count of Blois

Died
  
April 14, 1205, Edirne, Turkey

Children
  
Theobald VI, Count of Blois

Parents
  
Alix of France, Theobald V, Count of Blois

Cousins
  
Otto IV, Holy Roman Emperor

Grandparents
  
Eleanor of Aquitaine, Louis VII of France, Theobald II, Count of Champagne, Matilda of Carinthia

Similar People
  
Marie of France - Countess, Boniface I - Marquess of Montfer, Louis VII of France, Henry I of France, Louis VI of France

Louis I, Count of Blois


Louis I of Blois (1172 – 14 April 1205) was Count of Blois from 1191 to 1205. He was the son of Theobald V and Alix of France. His maternal grandparents were Louis VII of France and his first wife, Eleanor of Aquitaine.

Contents

Louis promulgated a charter in 1196 abolishing serfdom in his domains.

Leadership in the Fourth Crusade

At the Tournament at Écry-sur-Aisne on 28 November 1199, count Louis and his cousin Theobald III of Champagne were the first major nobles to respond to Pope Innocent III's call for a Fourth Crusade. He left France in 1202. During the July 1203 siege of Constantinople, Louis was one of eight division commanders, the others including Boniface of Montferrat (the crusade leader), Doge Enrico Dandolo (leader of the Venetians), Baldwin of Flanders (who controlled the largest division and later became Latin Emperor of Constantinople), and Baldwin's brother Henry.

Louis was later afflicted with a severe fever for months, and missed participating in the capture of Constantinople in 1204. He was too ill to take part in the subsequent forays of his men into Asia Minor, where he had been created Duke of Nicaea, a title he never vindicated as the city was captured by Theodore I Laskaris, founder of the Empire of Nicaea.

He had just recuperated when he participated in the Battle of Adrianople, where he was slain by a force of Cumans led by Kaloyan of Bulgaria ("Johanitza"). Louis chased the enemy too far, exhausting his men and horses and stretching them over a broad plain, where he brought himself and the Emperor Baldwin I of Constantinople into a trap.

Family

He married Catherine, Countess of Clermont-en-Beauvaisis, who bore him 3 children:

  1. Raoul, who died young
  2. Jeanne, who died young
  3. Theobald VI, Count of Blois

References

Louis I, Count of Blois Wikipedia