Guillaume d'Ercuis
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Guillaume d'Ercuis (1265 — 1314/15[1]) was the aumônier to Philip III of France and the tutor of Philip IV. He was a royal notary, and, as one of the King's men, a canon of the cathedrals of Laon, Noyon, Senlis, Mello, Marchais and of Reims, archdeacon of Laon and of Thiérache. He derived his name from his small seigneurie of Ercuis (Old French Arcuys or Erquez; Latin Arquetum) in the Beauvaisis between Neuilly-en-Thelle and Cires-lès-Mello, about 55 km from Paris. At Ercuis he erected a chapel dedicated to the Virgin Mary, served by the monks of the Abbey of Sainte-Geneviève, Paris.
Guillaume d'Ercuis kept a journal, his livre de raison[2] noting his expenses for the purchase of domains, of furnishings and books. Some annotations relate to his personal life and to court life.
His descendent, H.Coustant d'Yanville, published a Notice sur Guillaume d'Ercuis, precepteur de Philippe le Bel, (Baeuvais 1864).
[edit] Notes
- ^ His will is dated 1314.
- ^ Conserved in the Bibliothèque Sainte-Geneviève, Paris, ms. 2025; edited and published by Joseph Petit, De libro rationis Guillelmi de Erqueto, (Paris) 1900.