See also

Family of William I + and Marie of BRABANT

Husband: William I + (1167-1222)
Wife: Marie of BRABANT (c. 1173- )
Marriage "7/1220"

Husband: William I +

Name: William I +
Sex: Male
Father: Floris III + (1141-1190)
Mother: Ada + of HUNTINGDON (1146-1206)
Birth 1167 Gravenshage, Zuid-Holland, Netherlands
Occupation Count of Holland
Title Count of Holland
Death 4 Feb 1222 (age 54-55)

Wife: Marie of BRABANT

Name: Marie of BRABANT
Sex: Female
Father: -
Mother: -
Birth 1173 (est)

Note on Husband: William I +

William I (c. 1167, The Hague – 4 February 1222), Count of Holland from 1203 to 1222. He was the younger son of Floris III and Ada of Huntingdon.

 

William was raised in Scotland. He started a revolt against his brother, Dirk VII and became count in Friesland after a reconciliation. Friesland was considered as a part of Holland by the Counts of Holland. His niece, Ada, Countess of Holland inherited Holland in 1203, but William couldn't accept this. After a civil war (part of the Hook and Cod Wars), which lasted for several years, William won the war. Louis and Ada were supported by the bishop of Liège and bishop of Utrecht, and the count of Flanders. William was supported by the duke of Brabant and by the majority of the Hollanders.

 

Emperor Otto IV acknowledged him as count of Holland in 1203, because he was a supporter of the Welfs. He and many others changed allegiance to emperor Frederick II after the battle of Bouvines in 1214. He took part in a French expedition against king John of England. The pope excommunicated him for this.

 

Possibly because of this, William then became a fervent crusader. He campaigned in Prussia and joined in the conquest of Alcazer do Sal. In Europe, he came to be called William the Crazy for his chivalric and reckless behaviour in battle. William conquered the city of Damietta during the Fifth Crusade.

 

[edit] Evolution of the countyThere were great changes in the landscape of Holland in the end of the 12th and during the 13th century. Many colonists bought land to turn the swamps into polders. Most of the swamps had been sold, and irrigation had started during the reign of William. Huge infrastructural works were done; the island called Grote Waard was enclosed with dikes all around and a dam was built at Spaarndam. New governmental bodies were created, the so-called waterschappen and hoogheemraadschappen, which were charged with the task of protecting the polders against ever-present threat of flooding. Count William granted city rights to Geertruidenberg in 1213, to Dordrecht in 1217, to Middelburg in 1220 and perhaps also to Leiden. In this way he gave an impulse to trade.

 

[edit] Family

Coats of Arms of the Counts of Holland.Count William was married twice. First, he was married in 1197 at Stavoren to Adelheid of Guelders, daughter of Otto I, Count of Guelders and Richarde of Bavaria. Adelheid died on 12 February 1218 while William was away on crusade. On his return he married secondly, in July 1220, Marie of Brabant, daughter of Henry I, Duke of Brabant and Maud of Boulogne and Alsace. She was the widow of Emperor Otto IV. William and his first wife Adelaide had the following children:

 

1.Floris IV, Count of Holland (24 June 1210 The Hague–19 July 1234, Corbie, France).

2.Otto (d. 1249), Regent of Holland in 1238-1239, Bishop of Utrecht.

3.Willem (d. 1238), Regent of Holland in 1234-1238.

4.Richardis (d. 1262).

5.Ada (d. 1258), Abbess at Rijnsburg 1239.