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Count Umberto of Savoy III
(1135-1189)
Beatrice of Viennois
(-1243)
Count William of Geneva I
(Cir 1132-1195)
Marguerite Beatrice de Faucigny
Thomas of Savoy
(1178-1233)
Margaret of Geneva
(-1252)
Count Peter of Savoy II
(1203-1268)

 

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Count Peter of Savoy II

  • Born: 1203
  • Died: 15 May 1268 aged 65
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bullet  General Notes:

Called the Little Charlemagne, was the Count of Savoy from 1263 until his death.

He travelled first with Eleanor to London. Henry made Peter Earl of Richmond in 1241 and gave him the land between the Strand and the Thames, where Peter built the Savoy Palace in 1263, on the site of the present Savoy Hotel. It was destroyed during the Peasants' Revolt of 1381. Though Peter was referred to by contemporary chroniclers as the earl of Richmond, the title seems not to appear in any official documents. By his will Richmond was left to his niece the queen, Eleanor, who transferred it to the crown.

Boston (a borough by 1279), on the river Witham, had over many years become an important port for Lincoln. The town was held by the dukes of Brittany until about 1200. In 1241, Peter obtained at the same time as he had Richmond the manor of Boston. It was restored to John I, Duke of Brittany, on Peter's death. Donington[disambiguation needed ] manor is also thought to have been passed from John de la Rye to Peter of Savoy about 1255 when a charter was granted for a market to be held at the Manor on Saturdays. A similar grant was made for the holding of a Fair on the 15 August, in the same year also to be held at the manor. A separate charter was issued to Peter to hold a market on a Monday and granted on the 8 April 1255 by the King.

In 1246 the king granted Peter the castle of Pevensey. Peter sided with the Simon de Montfort, Earl of Leicester, in the Second Barons' War; but he eventually left England for France with the queen.

When Peter's nephew Boniface, Count of Savoy, died without heirs in 1263, the question of the succession to Savoy lay unanswered. Besides Peter, there was another possible claimant, the fifteen-year-old Thomas III of Piedmont (1248\endash 82), the eldest son of Peter's elder brother Thomas, Count of Flanders. Peter returned to Savoy and was recognised as count over his nephew. This led to a dispute between Savoy and Piedmont that was to outlast Peter and Thomas.

Peter came into conflict with Rudolf of Habsburg, and Rudolf occupied Peter's lands in the canton of Vaud, including the Château of Chillon. Peter returned from Piedmont in time to lead his troops in retaking the chateau and his lands in 1266.

Already elderly, he died without a male heir in Pierre-Châtel and was succeeded by his remaining brother Philip, former Archbishop of Lyon.


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