Humbert I of Savoy
Encyclopedia : H : HU : HUM : Humbert I of Savoy
- For another person with the name, see Humbert I, King of Italy.
Surnamed Blanches-Mains or Biancamano (literally meaning white-handed - in the original sense this should have meant a very generous man), Humbert came of noble stock from either Saxony, Italy, Burgundy or Provence. Most likely, he came from Italy because the chances of a person (at that time) coming from a German Area living in northeast Italy and southwest France are very slim.
Humbert married Ancilla, Auxilia or Ancilia (Ancilia d'Aoste or Ancilia de Lenzbourg in French) (Austrian, daughter of the Master of Ceremonies of the House of Burgundy) and had at least four sons:
- Amedeo, later Amedeus I of Savoy
- Aimone (died 1054 or 1055), bishop of Sion
- Burcado, or Burcardo (died 1068 or 1069), bishop of Lyon
- Oddone
- Some authors believe that he had further sons.
Humbert in turn protected the right flank during the advance of the Holy Roman Empire into Italy. However the county was essentially autonomous after the fall of the Ottonian Dynasty of the Holy Roman Empire which was unconcerned about a minor power.
In 1032 he received the Maurienne, his native county, from Conrad II the Salian whom he had helped in his Italian campaigns against archbishop Aribert of Milan.
| Preceded by: — | Count of Savoy | Succeeded by: Amadeus I |
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