Daniel I of Adelon
Daniel I of Adelon or Daniel of Termonde (born before 1204; died after 1225) was Lord of Adelon in the Kingdom of Jerusalem.
Life
A son of Thierry de Termonde (died 1206), constable of Constantinople, and Agnese of Gibelet-Besmedin, Lady of Adelon, he inherited the Lordship of Adelon via his mother. In 1225 he accompanied Isabella II of Jerusalem on her journey from Tyre to Brindisi to marry Frederick II.
Marriage and issue
His first marriage was to Isabella, daughter of Thomas of Maugasteau and sister of Philip, husband to Daniel's sister Margaret. Daniel and Isabella's marriage proved childless and after her death he married Agnes of Francleu, daughter of Gerard of Franco loco, with whom he had:
- Daniel II, his successor as Lord of Adelon
- Agnes, married Garnier l'Aleman (the Younger), son of Haimo l’Aleman
- Isabella (died after 1260), married Hugo l’Aleman (died before 1241), son of Garnier l’Aleman (the Elder)
Bibliography
- Charles du Cange: Les Familles d'outre-mer. Publiées par Emmanuel-Guillaume Rey. Imprimerie Impériale, Paris 1869, S. 169 ff.
gollark: I dislike your Memetics War article. This is not what I meant.
gollark: And obviously standard units of ineffability and their application to the Gods and Constituents Transparency Report.
gollark: Hmm, we should have a page on ineffability.
gollark: I was thinking that hepta*grams* should be dangerous somehow, but the obvious way of "it lets you summon demons" is kind of overplayed?
gollark: I should do apioforms next, or expand on the Royal Astrothaumic Institute, engineers, Memetics War, heptagrams or wheels.
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