Reginald III, Count of Burgundy explained

Renaud III, Count of Burgundy
Noble Family:Ivrea
Father:Stephen I, Count of Burgundy
Mother:Beatrice of Lorraine, Countess of Burgundy
Spouse:Agatha of Lorraine
Issue:Beatrice I
Death Date:1148

Reginald III (French: Renaud; c. 1087  - 1148), son of Stephen I and Beatrice of Lorraine, was the count of Burgundy between 1127 and 1148. Previously, he had been the count of Mâcon since his father's death in 1102, with his brother, William of Vienne. His mother, Beatrice of Lorraine, was the daughter of Gerard, Duke of Lorraine. Pope Callixtus II was Reginald's paternal uncle.Reginald proclaimed independence from Emperor Lothair III, but was defeated by King Conrad III of Germany and forced to relinquish all his lands east of the Jura. The name of the region Franche-Comté is derived from his title, franc-compte, meaning "free count".

About 1130, Reginald married Agatha, daughter of Duke Simon I of Lorraine. They had a daughter, Beatrice I.

In 1148, Reginald was traveling in France when he fell ill with multiple illnesses.[1] He died so suddenly that he could not even appoint a regent for his young daughter, Beatrice I, who succeeded him.

Sources

Notes and References

  1. https://books.google.com/books?id=hoUBAAAAQAAJ&dq=Reginald+III%2C+Count+of+Burgundy&pg=PA47 Chepmell, Havilland Le Mesurier. A short course of history, Volume 2 London. Whittaker and Co., 1857, p. 47