William Taillefer I

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William "Taillefer" I (died Aug 962) was also known as William II of Angoulême (being the second William in this family since Wulgrin I. His uncle, William I, being the first). He was the Count of Angoulême from 926 to 945. He was the son of Alduin I.

According to one source,[1] his surname, or sobriquet, was acquired due "...from the way in which he cut down a Norman Sea-king through his coat of mail." This Norman sea-king is identified as Storis.[2] The name Taillefer was used by subsequent members of this family, especially holders of the title Count of Angoulême.

William was not married, but had at least one, and possibly two, illegitimate sons who would later claim the title of Count of Angoulême.


Sources

References

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  3. Adémar II was one of two known sons of William II, but his status as count is only supported by one possible reading of his father's will. André Debord notes that he might have become count. La société laïque dans les pays de la Charente, Xe-XIIe s. (Paris: Picard, 1984) 99–103. Luc Bourgeois rejects the possibility Une résidence des comtes d’Angoulême autour de l'an mil: le castrum d’Andone (Villejoubert, Charente); publication des fouilles d'André Debord (1971-1995) (Caen: Publications du CRAHM, 2009), 387 and 392. For William II's will, see: Paul Lefrancq, ed., Cartulaire de l’abbaye de Saint-Cybard (Angoulême: Imprimerie Ouvrière, 1930), #222.
  4. Bourgeois, 387.
Preceded by Count of Angoulême
926–945
Succeeded by
Bernard