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Poitou (UK: /ˈpwʌtuː/ PWUH-too, US: /pwɑːˈtuː/ pwah-TOO, French: [pwatu]; Latin: Pictaviensis, Pictavia; Poitevin: Poetou) was a
province of west-central...
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Hilary of
Poitiers (Latin:
Hilarius Pictaviensis; c. 310 – c. 367) was
Bishop of
Poitiers and a
Doctor of the Church. He was
sometimes referred to as the...
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Roger the
Poitevin or
Roger de
Poitou (mid-1060s –
before 1140) was an Anglo-Norman
aristocrat possessing large holdings both in
England and
through his...
- The
County of
Poitou (Latin
comitatus Pictavensis) was a
historical region of France,
consisting of the
three sub-regions of Vendée, Deux-Sèvres and Vienne...
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William of
Poitiers (Latin:
Guillelmus Pictaviensis, French:
Guillaume de Poitiers; c. 1020 – 1090) was a
Norman priest who
served as the
chaplain of Duke...
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Compendium Historiae in
Genealogia Christi by
Peter of
Poitiers (Petrus
Pictavensis) —
Cotton Faustina B. VII
folio 42v C. 1230 m****cript of
Robert Grosseteste's...
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Constantinus Afric**** Casinensis,
Deusdedit Cardinalis,
Willelmus Pictavensis Archidiaconus,
Joannes De Garlandia,
Rufinus Episcopus 151 Urb**** II...
- was
described as a manor. Its 2,880
acres were
owned by
Count Roger Pictavensis and his family, and
afterwards the
title fell to ****ersand Abbey. The...
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Ganshof 1972, p. 15:
Hugonem rex
ducem constituit,
addito illi pago
Pictavensi ad
terram quam
pater eius tenuerat. . ..
Fanning 1995, p. 1250. Glenn...
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activity was philanthropy. In the
anonymous Chronicon Sancti Maxentii Pictavensis,
written before 1124, it was
stated that: In the same year it rained...