See also

Family of Jordan DRENGOT and Gaitelgrima

Husband: Jordan DRENGOT (c. 1042-1091)
Wife: Gaitelgrima (c. 1054- )
Children: Richard II DRENGOT (c. 1055-1105)
Robert DRENGOT (c. 1060-1120)
Jordan II DRENGOT ( -1127)

Husband: Jordan DRENGOT

picture

Jordan DRENGOT

Name: Jordan DRENGOT
Sex: Male
Father: Richard I of DRENGOT (1049-1078)
Mother: Fressenda of HAUTEVILLE (1022- )
Birth 1042 (est)
Title frm 1078 to 1091 (age 35-49) Prince of Capua
Occupation Prince of Capua
Death 1091 (age 48-49) Pipema, Rome, Italy
Burial Montecassino
Cassino, Italy

Wife: Gaitelgrima

Name: Gaitelgrima
Sex: Female
Father: Guaimar IV + of SALERNO (1013-1052)
Mother: Gemma + (1018- )
Birth 1054 (est)

Child 1: Richard II DRENGOT

Name: Richard II DRENGOT
Sex: Male
Birth 1055 (est)
Occupation Prince of Capua
Death 1105 (age 49-50)

Child 2: Robert DRENGOT

Name: Robert DRENGOT
Sex: Male
Birth 1060 (est)
Death 1120 (age 59-60)

Child 3: Jordan II DRENGOT

Name: Jordan II DRENGOT
Sex: Male
Occupation Lord of Nocera
Death 19 Dec 1127

Note on Husband: Jordan DRENGOT

Jordan I (Italian: Giordano) (after 1046 – died 1091), count of Aversa and prince of Capua from 1078 to his death, was the eldest son and successor of Prince Richard I of Capua and Fressenda, a daughter of Tancred of Hauteville and his second wife, also named Fressenda, and the nephew of Robert Guiscard, duke of Apulia, Calabria, and Sicily. He, according to William of Apulia, "equalled in his virtues both the duke and his father."[1]

 

In 1078, while his father was besieging Naples with Robert Guiscard, he and Robert, count of Loritello, were ravaging the Abruzzi, then papal territory. He, his father, and the duke were all excommunicated, when, suddenly, his father fell ill, retired to Capua, reconciled with the church, and died. Jordan, fearing to rule under the ban of the church, called off the siege of Naples and went to Rome to reconcile himself to Pope Gregory VII and rectify his relations with the church, of which his father had been both servant and protector. It appears that he intended to take up the position of his father vis-a-vis the papacy and to return to unfriendly relations with the duke of Apulia, for Gregory visited Capua a mere three months after Richard's death and Jordan, probably with papal prodding, began fomenting revolt in the Guiscard's lands. The revolt, the widely supported and well-organised, was ineffectual in really curbing Robert's influence and power.

 

One of his chief advisor was the abbot of Montecassino, Desiderius of Benevento, who mediated between the prince and the Emperor Henry IV on the latter's descent into Italy (1081). Jordan forsook his erstwhile papal ally in exchange for an imperial investiture. Though Robert Guiscard and his brother Roger marched against him, Roger was recalled to Sicily and the expedition fell apart.

 

In 1085, on Robert's death, Jordan supported Bohemond, the elder son, over Roger Borsa, the eldest by Sichelgaita, who was his own sister-in-law, he having married Gaitelgrima, another daughter of Prince Guaimar IV of Salerno. For the next three years, Bohemond held Apulia with the assistance of well-trained Capuan armies. In that same year, the pope died and the antipope Clement III continued to claim the papacy. In hopes of curbing the influence of Clement and united his interests with those of the papacy once again, he pressured the College of Cardinals to elect Desiderius of Montecassino as successor Gregory. At the same time, Roger Borsa freed the captured imperial prefect of Rome in opposition to the pretensions of Jordan and the Papal Curia, which had refused confirmation of Roger's archiepiscopal candidate for Salerno. The move backfired and Desiderius, under pressure from Jordan to accept, was elected pope as Victor III. With the aid of armies from Jordan and the Countess Matilda of Tuscany, Victor took the Vatican Hill from Clement on 1 July 1086. The pope remained lukewarm to his new job until Jordan suggested that only through decisive action could the good fortune of his beloved abbey of Montecassino be sustained. This led to an important synod at Benevento (1087), where Clement was excommunicated, lay investiture outlawed, and war with the Saracens of Africa declared.

 

The remainder of Jordan's career was not notable and he died in November 1090 or 1091 in Piperna (near Terracina) and was buried in the monastery he had long supported, Montecassino, leaving a young son named Richard who succeeded him. His other sons, Robert and Jordan, would also succeed to the Capuan throne some day, and he left one unnamed daughter.

Note on Wife: Gaitelgrima

Gaitelgrima was the daughter of Guaimar IV of Salerno and Gemma. She was married off by her brother Gisulf II of Salerno to Jordan I of Capua as was her sister, Sichelgaita, to Robert Guiscard.

 

After being widowed by Jordan, she took up the regency of her sons, Richard, Robert, and Jordan. She remarried to Alfred, Count of Sarno, and it was to Sarno that she retired eventually. She was expelled from Capua by the citizens, who elected one Count Lando as their prince, and she took her sons with her to Aversa. In Sarno, she sheltered her brother Gisulf in his final days and there he is buried.