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  1. Rotrou III (bef. 1080 – 8 May 1144), called the Great (le Grand), was the Count of Perche and Mortagne from 1099. He was the son of Geoffrey II, Count of Perche, and Beatrix de Ramerupt, daughter of Hilduin IV, Count of Montdidier.

  2. The lords of Perche were originally titled lords of Mortagne-au-Perche, until Rotrou III adopted the style of count of Perche in 1126, thus uniting the lordship of Mortagne-au-Perche, the viscountcy of Châteaudun and the lordship of Nogent-le-Rotrou in the countship of Perche and Montagne .

  3. When Rotrou III, Count of Perche was born about 1061, in Mortagne-au-Perche, Orne, France, his father, Geoffrey I. de Châteaudun Comte de Mortagne Et du Perche, was 21 and his mother, Beatrix de Ramerupt Comtesse de Perche, was 16. He married Matilda FitzRoy Countess of Perche in 1103.

  4. Abstract: The history of the counts of the Perche from c. 1066 to 1217 is considered. It is placed in the historiographical perspective of the disintegration into territorial principalities which took place in the kingdom of the Franks around the year 1000 and the subsequent emergence of small units such as the Perche in border zones, where the ...

  5. Routrou (Routrou III) "Comte du Perche" de Perche formerly Perche. Born about 1077 in Mortagne Au Perche, Orne, Normandy, France. Ancestors. Son of Geoffrey (Châteaudun) du Perche and Béatrix (Ramerupt) du Perche. Brother of Julianne (Perche) de l'Aigle, Mathilde (Perche) de Lastours and Marguerite (Perche) de Beaumont.

    • Male
  6. The counts of Perche that were from the House of Châteaudun were: Geoffrey II (1080–1100), count of Perche and Mortagne, son of Rotrou I of Châteaudun; Rotrou III (1100–1144), count of Perche and Mortagne, son of the previous; Rotrou IV (1144–1191), count of Perche, son of the previous; Geoffrey III (1191–1202), count of ...

  7. The rulers of the small northern French county of the Perche, the. crusading motivation over a number of generations. The family's earliest Count Rotrou II (1099-1 144), served in both the Holy Land and the Iberian. and was assigned an important role in crusading epics.