Ermengarde Anjev (dugez Breizh) : diforc'h etre ar stummoù

Endalc’h diverket Danvez ouzhpennet
betegout
buan
Linenn 1:
*''Meur a [[Ermengarde Anjev]] zo bet.''
'''Ermengarde Anjev''' pe ''' Ervangarz Anjev '''<ref> [[Mikael Bodlore-Penlaez]], ''Breizh: Hil ar rouaned hag an duged'', Skol-Uhel ar Vro/Geobreizh, 2007. Ne seblant ket an anv Ermangarz bezañ bet anavezet a-raok 2007.</ref>, ganet en [[Anje]] en 1072 (pe 1068?), ha marvet d'ar [[1añ a viz Mezheven]] 1146, a oa merc'h henañ da [[Foulk IV]] Rekin (1043-1109), kont [[Anjev]], ha dabugel nemetañ e bried kentañ [[Hildegarde Beaugency]]. Dimezet Div wech e voe divdimezet wech,: da [[Gwilherm IX an Troubadour]], [[dug Akitania]], da gentañ, ha goude-se da [[Alan IV]], [[dug Breizh]] goude.
Brudet eo ivez evel gwarezourez madoù an [[Iliz]] hag [[abati Fontevraud]] en Anjev.
 
==He buhez==
Born in [[Angers]], she was the eldest child of Count [[Fulk IV of Anjou]] but the only one born by his first wife, [[Hildegarde of Beaugency]]. Having lost her mother in 1070, at only two years of age, she received a good education and grew to be pious and concerned about religious reform, especially the struggle against the secular appropriation of church property. She was also noted for her beauty in her youth.
 
 
==Poatev==
Linenn 14 ⟶ 18:
 
<!--
 
==Life==
===Early years===
Born in [[Angers]], she was the eldest child of Count [[Fulk IV of Anjou]] but the only one born by his first wife, [[Hildegarde of Beaugency]]. Having lost her mother in 1070, at only two years of age, she received a good education and grew to be pious and concerned about religious reform, especially the struggle against the secular appropriation of church property. She was also noted for her beauty in her youth.
 
===Duchess of Aquitaine===
In 1089, her marriage was arranged to the young Duke and poet, [[William IX of Aquitaine]]. However, this union proved a dismal failure. Her husband was a voracious philanderer, whose affairs infuriated his wife. She suffered from severe mood swings, vacillating between vivacity and sullenness, and would nag her husband. She also had a habit of retiring in bad temper to a cloister after an argument, cutting off all contact with the outside world, before suddenly making a reappearance in the court as if her absence had never occurred. Such behavior, coupled with her failure to conceive a child, led William to send her back to her father and have the marriage dissolved in 1091.