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Osbern de Crépon : ウィキペディア英語版 | Osbern the Steward Osbern the Steward, known in French as ''Osbern de Crépon''〔as Robert de Torigni called him.〕 († about 1040), was the Steward of two Dukes of Normandy and the father of William FitzOsbern, 1st Earl of Hereford, one of William the Conqueror's closest counsellors. ==Biography== Osbern was the son of Herfast and the nephew of Gunnora, Duchess of Normandy,〔David C. Douglas, ''William the Conqueror'', University of California Press, 1964, réédition 1992, p90, 145.〕〔C. P. Lewis, « William fitz Osbern, earl (d. 1071) », ''Oxford Dictionary of National Biography'', Oxford University Press, 2004.〕 first the mistress and then second wife of Richard I of Normandy. Under Robert the Magnificent (1027–1035), he had the role of Steward or Seneschal.〔David C. Douglas, ''op. cit.'', p35.〕 He kept this role after the Duke's death in 1035.〔 He became one of the legal protectors of the young successor to the duchy, William the Bastard, known later as William the Conqueror, then aged 8.〔David C. Douglas, ''op. cit.'', p37.〕 The young Duke William was in danger, as other members of the ducal family were trying to assassinate him to regain power in the duchy, and the Norman barons were rebelling. Osbern was murdered at Le Vaudreuil in the winter of 1040-1041, while protecting the young Duke in the child's bedroom.〔David C. Douglas, ''op. cit.'', p40.〕 According to Guillaume de Jumièges, his throat was cut by William, son of Roger I of Montgomery.〔Guillaume de Jumièges, Robert de Torigni, M. Guizot, ''Histoire des Normands'', Caen : Librairie Mancel, 1826, p168.〕 Barnon de Glos-la-Ferrières avenged the death of his lord by killing the murderer.〔David C. Douglas, ''op. cit.'', p42.〕 Historians of the Normans disagree on the origin of the benefices held by Osbern,〔Pierre Bauduin, David Douglas, David Bates, Élisabeth Van Houts.〕 specifically which of them came from his father Herfast and which via his marriage to Emma, daughter of the powerful Count Rodulf of Ivry and sister of Hugues, Bishop of Bayeux.〔Pierre Bauduin, ''La première Normandie'', Presses Universitaires de Caen, 2002, p.220-223. Hugues of Bayeux was the son of Rodulf of Ivry. He rebelled against the duke Robert the Magnificent and was exiled. The duke took the opportunity to give some of the exile's lands to his Steward.〕 He possessed land widely spread across Normandy: in the Bessin at Crépon, at Hiémois (near Falaise, near the confluence of the rivers Seine and Andelle, around Cormeilles, in Talou, in Pays d'Ouche at Breteuil, and at La Neuve-Lyre.
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