Petronella of Coutrai
Petronella of Coutrai (Petronille) (? — after 1214) was a Dutch regent and noblewoman.[1] She ruled during the absence of her husband and when he died, during the minority of her son.
She was a daughter of a woman named Sarah and her husband, lord Roger I of Courtrai.
Petronella was a wife of Lord Zeger II[2] and with him, mother of:
- Zeger III of Ghent[3]
- Daniel[4]
- Arnold
- Gilles (he was married and he fathered a son named Arnold)
- Dirk
- Bernhard
- Walter (Woutre) [5]
- Beatrix
Her husband Zeger II was a templar from 1200 and in 1202 he died, and she continued as regent for their son Zeger. She remained influential after her son took over the government and donated some lands to an abbey. When signing documents she used the titulature of Burgravine.[6]
References
- PETRONILLE de Courtrai
- Du Chesne (1631), Guines, Preuves, p. 459.
- "Sigerus castellanus de Gandavo" donated property to Los abbey near Lille, in the presence of "uxore nostra Petronilla et filiis nostris...Sigero et Daniele."
- Historia Comitum Ghisnensium
- Miraeus (1723), Tome I, Notitia Ecclesiarum Belgii, CLXXXII, p. 758
- Women in power
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.