2. William II's negotiations with Duke William IX of Aquitaine

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  • Created by: Alasdair
  • Created on: 15-06-17 18:01
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  • 2. William II's negotiations with Duke William IX of Aquitaine
    • Background
      • William's negotiations with Duke William IX of Aquitaine were significant due to Duke's status, interests, family connections and what he could offer Rufus
    • Who was Duke William IX of Aquitaine
      • Seems Rufus forced alliance with him when he was in Maine
      • Nobleman of some standing
      • By time Duke formed alliance with Rufus, already gained reputation as poet and troubadour (better known in these fields than for military prowess)
    • Why did Rufus enter negoitations with Duke?
      • In many ways Rufus was antithesis of Duke
      • Partnership made sense as they were linked by marriage
      • 1094, Duke William married Phillipia, widow of Sancho Ramirez, King of Navarre and Aragon, and heiress of Count of Toulouse who died in 1093 in Holy Land
      • Phillipia's mother was Emma, one of daughters of Robert, Count of Mortain (William II's  half-cousin)
      • July 1098, Duke William pushed forward his wife's claim to Toulouse despite protests and opposition from her cousin Betrand
      • In winter of 1098-99, Duke of Aquitaine had combined forces with King William in Normandy
        • Duke was possibly compelled to do so by prospect of his wife gaining Mortain's wealth
        • Duke may have thought Rufus would look more favourably on this, given King's link to Mortain, if he supported him
        • Also possible Duke William of Aquitaine simply wished to show allegiance to very important member of extended family
      • Both Duke of Aquitaine and William 'Rufus' had common enemy in form of Fulk of Anjou
        • Duke had broken off first marriage to Fulk's daughter, Ermengarde
        • Fulk wa foe of Rufus as result of threat he posed towards Maine
      • Both had no allegiance to King Philip of France (Philip was seen as enemy and one who sought to impinge on authority of both Duke and King whenever opportunity arose
    • Consequences of negotiations
      • Help given to Rufus at Maine
      • Main consequence
        • Duke persuaded King to finance him to go crusading
          • Duke claimed he needed to take army of 300,000 (surprisingly high figure for time)
          • In return for money to pay and equip force, Duke prepared to agree for Rufus to take over duchy of Aquitaine
          • William had produced money by June 1100 and ready to depart to complete transaction
            • Unnecessary as Duke had made similar agreement with Bertrand, Count of St. Gilles and temporary Count of Toulouse (holding principality for father, Raymond, who was on First Crusade)
      • No indication how Rufus reacted to deal collapsing
        • As Duke probably wanted to mortgage off whole of Aquitaine, Rufus might have seen it as difficult to administer to both England and Normandy so possibly had already declined
      • By time of William II's death in August 1100, agreement between Duke and interested parties had not be finalised
        • Impossible to tell after 1099 value King placed on relationship with Duke

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