Immediate Family
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husband
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daughter
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husband
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About Emma di Loritello
daughter of Geoffroy of Hauteville, count of Loritello
Godefroi & his first wife had [six] children:
-http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/CENTRAL%20ITALY.htm#Emmadiedbefore1082
6. EMMA (-before 1082). The primary source which confirms her parentage and marriage has not yet been identified.
[m firstly as his third wife, RAINOLF "Drengot" Conte d'Aversa, son of --- (-Jun 1045). This marriage is recorded in Europäische Stammtafeln[153] but is improbable chronologically. Rainolf died in 1045, before Emma's father was first recorded in Italy. In any case, Emma could have been no more than an infant at the time of such a suggested marriage.]
m [secondly] WIMUND de Molis . 1067.
-https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/NEAPOLITAN%20NOBILITY.htm#RainulfD...
1. RAINULF "Drengot" (-Jun 1045). .. ... ....
m thirdly as her first husband, EMMA di Loritello, daughter of GODEFROI de Hauteville & his first wife ---. ... "…Robertus de Loritello…" was among the ...
A French Nun?
Another is from the family of Mulainaux in that Guitmund was a Spanish priest and Emma was a French nun. And the last is Guitmund comes from a line of Viking soldiers that invaded France with Rollo and produced Flour for the invading army.
The owner of Bons Moulin (forest) and La Marche just west of the city of Moulin and the owner of the Castle of Moulin in Oren and possible the one in La Marche
She is related to ; Gondolfus Bishop of Tongres aka. Mummolin des Francis Ripuaires Palatina of Angouleme 540 A.D.
Her husband Guitmund's father is Eol de Molins 940 A.D. She is from the house of Lemoges which mixed with the Limousin and eventually the la Marche What is interesting is Eol is a Greek name . All this takes place during the Roman occupation of Colonge ( Germania )
Research notes
https://soc.genealogy.medieval.narkive.com/ACkPVczI/st-john
From Suzanne St. John: The confusion I believe with the Italian charter evaluations is that there are two Wimunds (Wimund II and Wimund III) with wives named Emma (Emma [de Brittany] and Emma fitz Geoffrey d'Hauteville. And to make it worse, Ralph's 2nd wife was also an Emma. Emily Zack Tabuteau's 1992 paper "The Family of Moulins-la-Marche in the Eleventh Century," does a good job of explaining this. Unfortunately she doesn't match them up to their Norman counterparts and family beyond Moulins-la-Marche.
Emma di Loritello's Timeline
1082 |
1082
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France
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Normandy, France
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