Guglielmo "the Pagan", conte di Torresana & signore del Monferrato

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Guglielmo "the Pagan", conte di Torresana & signore del Monferrato's Geni Profile

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Guglielmo "the Pagan", conte di Torresana & signore del Monferrato

Also Known As: "Wilielmus"
Birthdate:
Death: between 924 and 933
Savona, Italy
Immediate Family:

Son of Aliverto de Montferrat
Husband of .... ....
Father of Aleram, 1st marquis of Montferrat

Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:

About Guglielmo "the Pagan", conte di Torresana & signore del Monferrato

Most sources say documentary evidence is lacking for the parents of Guglielmo
No serious trace of the nickname used in plebiscite only by every DIY online. But Wiki mention he "of Salic law" (*which is not inspired by Christian culture) [ "the Pagan" = perspicacious poetic license?]

3. GUGLIELMO, son of ---. Comes. Maybe of Frankish origin. 961/967.
m ---. The name of Guglielmo's wife is not known. Guglielmo & his wife had one child:
a) ALERAMO (-[967/91]). .... ...



Guiglielmo "the Pagan" di Torresana, fl. about 880-925. He was a Frank or Burgundian who came to Italy at the time of the contest between the houses of Friuli and Spoleto. He became Count of Torresana, Signiore di Monferrato (Montferrat), and a great lord in the Piedmont and Liguria.


William I (floruit 921) stands at the head of the Aleramici family which ruled Montferrat for four centuries. He was the father of the first Marquess Aleram.

According to the Gesta Berengarii Imperatoris, William was a Frank who crossed the Alps leading 300 armed retainers in 888–889 to fight alongside Guy III of Spoleto against Berengar of Friuli for the Iron Crown of Lombardy. He apparently established himself in northwestern Italy, probably supported by Guy, where he eventually received the title of comes. It is also probable that he gave his support to Berengar after Guy's death, for he appears, in 921, along with Lambert, Archbishop of Milan, and two other counts, Giselbert and Samson, as dilectissimi fideles of the Emperor. The counts were also cited as illustres comites. They stood opposed to Adalbert of Ivrea and others in rebellion against Berengar.

William transferred his allegiance again following the death of Berengar. He appears for the last time alive in 924, intervening on behalf of the bishop of Piacenza with Rudolf II of Burgundy, a claimant for the Italian crown. Never again does he appear in history and a diploma of his son's dating to around 933 fixes his death sometime between those two years (924 – 933). Nonetheless, some, including 18th-century historian Malaspina and 20th-century historians Usseglio and Cognasso (writing in 1960), consider him to have been alive in 961, based on a faulty reading and interpretation of the foundation charter of the monastery of Grazzano, founded that year by Aleram and his family.

Various legendary assertions about his Saxon and Kentish origins and the origins of his wife have been met by the definitive Dizionario Biografico with the pronouncement: Ma tali asserzioni non sono ancora state seriamente coinprovate da documenti: "But such assertions are not yet seriously backed up by the documents."

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Guglielmo "the Pagan", conte di Torresana & signore del Monferrato's Timeline

904
904
Sezzadio, Provincia di Alessandria, Piemonte, Italy
924
924
Savona, Italy
????