A possible ancestor of the English noble family, de Warenne.
Raoul Tourte is seen as the son of both Gautier, Bishop of Paris & Herfastus "The Knight"
He’s not discussed in Cawley’s Medlands.
Biography From German Wikipedia in translation:
https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raoul_Tourte
Raoul Tourte[1] was a Seneschall of the Duchy of Normandy during the minority of Duke Richard I in the years 942 to 946. It is to be distinguished from the monk Rodulfus Tortarius, who lived in Fleury Abbey around 1100.
Raoul Tourte is of unknown origin, he is also known as the father of Gauthier/Walter, Bishop of Paris (term of office 937–941). 2] He was appointed by the Carolingian King Ludwig IV as governor or baillistre of Normandy after the murder of Duke Wilhelm I in 942.
His tyranny, cruelty and greed provoked the discontent of the Normans. Raoul Tourte, who, according to Wilhelm von Jumièges, showed himself "worse than the pagans", destroyed several religious buildings, including the abbey of Jumièges (945),[3] to build fortresses from their remains and strengthen the walls of the capital Rouen. He levy high taxes, was particularly greedy,[4] and had the jugglers removed from the court to establish order in the ducal household, which led to general dissatisfaction.
Raoul Tourte, on the other hand, was chased away by Duke Richard in 946 when he had rid himself of Carolingian guardianship after the failure of the coalition that Ludwig IV had formed to attack Rouen.
Sources
- Dudo of Saint-Quentin, De moribus et actis primorum Normanniae ducum, around 990/1026
- William of Jumièges, Gesta Normannorum Ducum, around 1071/1072
- Wace, Roman de Rou, around 1160/1175]
Notes
- also Raoul Torte, Raoul Torta, Raoul La Tourte; Latin: Radulfus Torta, Radulphus Torta, Rodulfus, cujus agnomen Torta vocabatur..., (Dudo von Saint-Quentin)
- Jacques Choffel, Richard Sans-Peur, duc de Normandie (932-996), Fernand Lanore, Paris, 1999, ISBN 978-2-85157-177-9
- Wilhelm von Jumièges, IV 46
- Dudon de Saint-Quentin, edited by Jules Lair, 1865, p. 248–249