Conon, Count of Montaigu

For the later count of Montaigu, see Conon, Count of Montaigu and Duras.

Conon (also Cono or Cuno;[lower-alpha 1] died 1 May 1106) was a Lotharingian nobleman and military leader of the First Crusade. He was one of the most prominent lords of the Ardennes, being the count of Montaigu, lord of Rochefort and advocate (defender) of the city of Dinant from 1064.[lower-alpha 2] He was also one of the most important vassals of bishop of Liège, holding the county of Huy from the church. His chief seat was the castle of Montaigu, while the castle at Huy was the redoubt of the bishops.[1]

Family

Conon was the eldest son of Gozelo, count of Montaigu, and Ermentrude. His younger brother Henry was the dean of the cathedral of Saint Lambert in Liège. Conon's only known wife was named Ida. According to the English historian Orderic Vitalis, Conon married a sister of Godfrey of Bouillon. Godfrey is not otherwise known to have had a sister, but his mother was Ida of Lorraine. The Cantatorium, the chronicle of the abbey of Saint-Hubert, records that Conon's wife was the daughter of Lambert the Old, a Liègeois nobleman who was buried at Saint-Hubert.[1] Conon and his wife Ida had four children, in order of birth:[1]

The name of his father and eldest son[lower-alpha 3] suggests that Conon was related in some way to the Ardennes-Verdun dynasty, the family of Godfrey of Bouillon.[1]

Succession

Conon first appears in 1055 alongside his father and his brother Rudolf confirming the diploma by which the Emperor Henry III transferred the church of Longlier to the abbey of Florennes. In 1064, Conon, his father and his brother witnessed the confirmation of the foundation of the priory at Longlier by Duke Frederick of Lower Lorraine.[2]

The Cantatorium of Saint-Hubert, in recording Conon's father's death in 1064, only accords him the title "count of Behogne" and not of Montaigu. It has been hypothesised that the elder Gozelo had already ceded the castle of Montaigu to his eldest son and moved his residence to the more secure and central village of Behogne, where he proceeded to erect the castle later known as Rochefort. Whatever the case, Conon inherited his father's lands and titles after his death. A document dated 1 January 1071 in the archives of the abbey of Waulsort records Conon as count under Duke Godfrey IV and under the Emperor Henry IV.[2]

Crusade

In 1083, Bishop Henry of Liège gave Conon the advocacy of the domain of Nandrin, a possession of the church of Saint Paul of Liège in the county of Montaigu, because it had repeatedly suffered the depredations[lower-alpha 4] of the neighbouring count of Clermont. In 1095, Henry's successor, Bishop Otbert, purchased the county of Clermont from its count, Giselbert, and enfeoffed Conon's son Lambert with it.[1]

Conon participated in the First Crusade, along with his sons Gozelo and Lambert and their erstwhile enemies Giselbert of Clermont and his ally Fredelo. They travelled with the army of Godfrey of Bouillon. Conon's lord, Bishop Otbert, had purchased the castle of Bouillon from Godfrey to finance the latter's crusade. Thirty-four marks for the purchase came from the poor church of Saintes-Marie-et-Perpétue in Dinant. In compensation, Otbert transferred some rents and tolls to the church and apparently persuaded Conon to transfer one of his rents as well.[3]

The army of Godfrey of Bouillon, with Conon's smaller retinue, was one of the first to arrive in Constantinople. There the Byzantine emperor Alexios I and Godfrey had different views of the goals of the crusade, and Godfrey was unwilling to commit to the emperor's demands until the remaining crusaders arrived. He camped outside the city, while Conon, Baldwin of Le Bourg (Godfrey's cousin) and Godfrey of Esch (Fredelo's son) met with Alexios in the palace.[4] Conon and Baldwin subsequently received Alexios' representative, John Komnenos of Dyrrhachium. Conon's son Gozelo died in the East, but he and his son Lambert continued on to Jerusalem, after they considered their vows fulfilled and returned to Montaigu before the end of the year 1099.[1]

Alberic of Trois-Fontaines and Giles of Orval record the tradition that Conon was returning on a ship with Peter the Hermit and some men of Huy when they encountered a severe storm and vowed to build a church if they survived. The storm immediately subsided, and the promise was kept when Conon and Peter founded the Augustinian canonry of Neumoustier, dedicated to the Holy Sepulchre and John the Baptist. According to the tradition kept at Neumoustier, Peter lived there until his death in 1115.[3]

Notes

  1. This name is a diminutive form of Conrad (German Konrad > Kuno) and is unrelated to the Breton name Conan, although both may be spelled "Conon".
  2. Lotharingia, part of the Holy Roman Empire at the time, was divided into two duchies, Upper Lorraine and Lower Lorraine. Conon's lands lay in Lower Lorraine, in what is now Belgium.
  3. Gozelo is a diminutive of Godfrey and both forms were Leitnamen ("lead names") among the Ardennes-Verdun.
  4. This would have been the bishop's view; the count of Clermont probably saw himself as collecting tolls he was legally owed from riverine traffic.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Alan V. Murray (1992), "The Army of Godfrey of Bouillon, 1096–1099: Structure and Dynamics of a Contingent on the First Crusade" (PDF), Revue belge de philologie et d'histoire, 70 (2): 301–29.
  2. 1 2 C. G. Roland (1893), "Les seigneurs et comtes de Rochefort", Annales de la Société archéologique de Namur, 20: 63–141.
  3. 1 2 Jonathan Riley-Smith (1998), The First Crusaders, 1095–1131, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 94, 126, 148, 154, 203.
  4. Steven Runciman (1951), A History of the Crusades, Volume I, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, p. 150.
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