Fressenda's early life is unknown but at some point she married
Tancred of Hauteville in Normandy. He was a widower petty lord of
Hauteville-la-Guichard in western Normandy. Tancred's first wife was close to him but died when he was still young enough to remarry.
Family With Tancred, Fressenda had at least seven sons and one daughter. Tancred had already got five sons from his first marriage. She is said to have raised all her sons and stepsons fairly. Since Tancred’s
patrimony was too small to divide equally between all of their 12 sons, it became necessary for them to seek fortune elsewhere. At first Fressenda's older stepsons left for Italy in 1035. Upon hearing of their success in securing the
county of Apulia and Calabria, her oldest son
Robert Guiscard was called to join them soon followed by
Mauger,
William, the youngest son
Roger. Her daughter Fressenda also left with the brothers and married a Norman lord,
Richard I of Capua. Her remaining sons, Aubrey, Humbert, and Tancred appears to have stayed behind in Normandy and faded out of history. Fressenda herself left for Italy after the death of her husband at an unknown date.
Death It is unknown when Fressenda died, but she was buried in the Abbey of
Sainte-Eufemia that Duke Robert, her son, founded in 1062 for the abbot
Robert de Grandmesnil who fled from Normandy. Fressenda's legacy survived through her sons,
Robert Guiscard and
Roger I of Sicily, both remembered as rulers in mainland Italy and the island of
Sicily respectively.
Issue •
Robert Guiscard (d. 1085),
duke of Apulia and Calabria •
Mauger (d. 1064) •
William (d. 1080) • Aubrey • Humbert • Tancred • Frumentin •
Roger (d. 1101),
grand count of Sicily • Fressenda (d. 1078), wife of
Richard I of Capua ==References==