::''For other uses, see
Adela (disambiguation).
:::''also
Adelaide of Normandy sister of
William I of England''.
'Adela of Normandy' also known as 'Adela of Blois' and 'Adela of England' (c. 1062 or 1067 –
March 8,
1137?) was by marriage countess of
Blois,
Chartres, and
Meaux. She was a daughter of
William the Conqueror and
Matilda of Flanders. She was also the mother of both
Stephen, King of England and
Henry of Blois,
Bishop of Winchester.
Her birthdate is generally believed to have been between
1060 and
1064; however, there is some evidence she was born after her father's accession to the
English throne in
1066. She was the favorite sister of King
Henry I of England; they were probably the youngest of the Conqueror's children. She was a high-spirited and educated woman, with a knowledge of
Latin.
She married
Stephen Henry, son and heir to the
count of Blois, sometime between
1080 and
1084, probably in
1083. Stephen inherited Blois, Chartres and Meaux in
1089, and owned over 300 properties, making him one of the wealthiest men of his day. He was a proud and self-indulgent man, who had no intention of taking the cross until Adela insisted upon it. Stephen reluctantly left to join the
First Crusade, along with his brother-in-law
Robert Curthose. He was accused of cowardice on the battlefield and was sent back on a foray to Ramelah in 1102 where he died in an ill fated attack.
Adela and Stephen's children listed here as follows, birth order not certain:
# Guillaume (William)(d. 1150), Count of Chartres married Agnes of Sulli (d. aft 1104) and had issue.
#
Theobald II, Count of Champagne
# Odo of Blois, died young.
#
Stephen of Blois
#
Lucia-Mahaut, married
Richard d'Avranches, 2nd Earl of Chester. Both drowned on
25 November 1120.
# Agnes of Blois, married Hugh III of Le Puiset
#
Eléonore of Blois (d. 1147) married
Raoul I of Vermandois (d.1152) & had issue they were divorced in 1142.
# Alix of Blois (d. 1145) married Renaud (d.1134)III of Joigni & had Issue
#
Lithuise of Blois (d. 1118) married
Milo I of Montlhéry(Divorced 1115)
#
Henry of Blois
# Humbert died young.
# Philip (d. 1100)
Bishop of Châlons-sur-Marne
Adela was regent for her husband during his extended absence as a leader of the
First Crusade (
1095-
1098), and when he returned in disgrace it was at least in part at her urging that he returned to the east to fulfill his vow of seeing
Jerusalem. She was again regent in
1101, continuing after her husband's death on this
second crusading expedition in
1102, for their children were still minors. Orderic Vitalis praises her as a "''wise and spirited woman''" who ably governed her husband's estates in his absences and after his death.
She employed tutors to educate her elder sons, and had her youngest son Henry pledged to the Church at
Cluny. Adela quarrelled with her eldest son Guillaume, "''deficient in intelligence as well as degenerate''", and had his younger brother Theobald replace him as heir. Her son Stephen left Blois in
1111 to join his uncle's court in England.
Adela retired to
Marcigny in 1120, secure in the status of her children. Later that same year, her daughter
Lucia-Mahaut, was drowned in the wreck of the
White Ship alongside her husband. She lived long enough to see her son Stephen seize the English throne, and took pride in the ascension of her youngest child Henry Blois to the bishophric of Winchester, but died soon after.
References
★ Kimberly LoPrete, "The Anglo-Norman Card of Adela of Blois", ''Albion'' 22 (1990)
★ Kimberly LoPrete, "Adela of Blois and Ivo of Chartres: Piety, Politics, and the Peace in the Diocese of Chartres", ''Anglo-Norman Studies'' 19
★ Parsons, John Carmi. ''Medieval Mothering (New Middle Ages)'', 1996