Odo the Good Marquis

Odo (or Eudes) the Good Marquis (fl. 11th century) was an Italo-Norman nobleman who ruled an unknown region of southern Italy. He married Emma, a daughter of Robert Guiscard, and they had at least three sons, Tancred and William, both famous crusaders, and Robert, as well as a daughter (name unknown) who married Richard of Salerno. Odo is known only in connection to his wife and sons.

Rank of marquis

There are many sources that identify Tancred's father as a margrave (Latin marchio or marchisus, whence marquis)—which is enough to confirm that he was an Italian—but do not name him. Many further identify a brother of Tancred's named William who was also a "marquis's son". According to William of Tyre, "Tancred [was] the son of William the Marquis",[lower-alpha 1] but the Latin word filium (son) is probably an error by later copyists where originally it read fratrem (brother). That Tancred possessed a brother named William is affirmed by the Gesta Dei per Francos, which records a "William, son of the marquis, brother of Tancred"[lower-alpha 2] among the followers of their uncle, Bohemond of Taranto, on the First Crusade. In that same document Tancred is referred to only as "the marquis's son".[lower-alpha 3] Robert the Monk, listing the crusaders who accompanied Bohemond, mentions "the most noble princes, namely Tancred, his [i.e., Bohemond's] nephew and the marquis's son. . .",[lower-alpha 4] confirming his father's rank but not his name. The archbishop Baldric of Dol records, with more proper Latin, that Tancred was Robert Guiscard's grandson and the son of a marquis.[lower-alpha 5] He also calls Tancred's brother William a marquis (marchisus). Guibert of Nogent, expressing some doubt that he has all his information correct, says that Tancred was the son of a certain marquis, accompanied his uncle Bohemond on the First Crusade, and that his brother William accompanied Hugh the Great.[lower-alpha 6][1]

Marriage and sons

There are other sources pertinent to the identity of Tancred's father, since they mention his relation to Bohemond through the latter's sister Emma. Albert of Aix, a contemporary, confirms that Tancred was a son of Bohemond's sister,[lower-alpha 7] but does not mention either his father or brother. He does, however, mention that Roger of Salerno was a "son of Tancred's sister",[lower-alpha 8] who must therefore have been the wife of Richard of Salerno.[2] Marino Sanuto the Elder records that Tancred was Bohemond's "nephew by his sister".[lower-alpha 9][3]

Two sources contradict the former, making Tancred a cousin and not a nephew of Bohemond, but do not name his father. The Gesta Francorum expugnantium Jerusalem of Fulcher of Chartres calls him "Bohemond's cousin"[lower-alpha 10] and Jacques de Vitry refers to "Bohemond with his cousin Tancred".[lower-alpha 11][3]

Tancred's earliest biography, Ralph of Caen's Gesta Tancredi (Deeds of Tancred), praises him as "the most famous son of a famous lineage, [having] choice parents, the margrave and Emma".[lower-alpha 12] He was "the son indeed of a father not in the least ignoble",[lower-alpha 13] even though this father remains unnamed by Ralph and most other authors. Throughout the Gesta Ralph calls Tancred Marchisides, using the Greek suffix -ides, meaning "son of", thus "son of the marquis". Elsewhere he lumps together Tancred and Bohemond as Wiscardides ("sons/descendants of Guiscard"),[lower-alpha 14] even though he mistakenly believed Emma to have been a sister and not a daughter of Robert Guiscard. He also gives Tancred a brother named Robert, otherwise unknown: "the Guiscardids, Tancred and his brother William and Robert".[lower-alpha 15][4]

Name

The only source to give Tancred's father the name Odo is Orderic Vitalis, who, like Ralph of Caen, believes him to be a brother-in-law and not son-in-law of Guiscard. In one passage, he writes that, seeing his end coming, "the magnanimous Robert [Guiscard], duke, count, etc., called around him Odo the Good, the marquis, his sister's [husband], and other relatives and nobles".[lower-alpha 16][5] When Orderic later lists the crusaders of 1096, he mentions "Tancred, son of the marquis Odo the Good".[lower-alpha 17] Orderic's known erudition, and his contemporaneity with Tancred, make his testimony the best available on the latter's paternity.[6] Only on the parentage of Odo's wife, Emma, does Orderic seem mistaken. Since Tancred and his brother William were both young at the time of the First Crusade,[lower-alpha 18] it is unlikely that their mother could have been a daughter of Tancred's namesake, Tancred of Hauteville.[7]

Notes

  1. Tancredum Wilhelmi marchisi filium.
  2. Wilhelmus, marchisi filius, frater Tancredi.
  3. marchisi filius.
  4. nobilissimi principes, Tancredus videlicet nepos suus and marchisi filius.
  5. marchionis filius.
  6. Tancredum marchionis cuiusdam ex Boemundi, nisi fallor, sorore filium; cuius frater cum Hugone magno praecesserat, cui Guillelmus erat vocabulum.
  7. Tankradus sororis filius Boemundi.
  8. Rotgerum ... filium sororis Tankradi.
  9. ex sorore nepos.
  10. Boiamundi cognatum
  11. Boamundus cum Tancredo cognato ipsius.
  12. clarae stirpis germen clarissimum, parentes eximios marchisum habuit et Emmam.
  13. a patre quidem haud ignobilis filius.
  14. Elsewhere Bohemond receives the epithet Wiscardigena, "born of Guiscard".
  15. Wiscardidas, Tancredum et fratres Willelmum Robertumque.
  16. Magnanimus itaque dux Robertum comitem, etc., Odonem quoque Bonum, marchisum, sororium suum aliosque cognatos proceresque suos convocavit ad se.
  17. Tancredum, Odonis Boni marchisi filium.
  18. Albert of Aix refers to Tancred as a tiro illustris (illustrious recruit) and William as juvenis pulcherrimus et tiro audacissimus (most beautiful youth and most brave recruit).

References

  1. Félicien de Saulcy, "Tancrède", Bibliothèque de l'École des chartes 4 (1842–43) 301–15.
  2. Saulcy, "Tancrède", 304.
  3. 1 2 Saulcy, "Tancrède", 306.
  4. Saulcy, "Tancrède", 309–10.
  5. Saulcy, "Tancrède", 312.
  6. Saulcy, "Tancrède", 312–13.
  7. Saulcy, "Tancrède", 307–8.
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