Guillaume d'Ercuis
Guillaume d'Ercuis (1265 – 1314/15Abbey of St Genevieve, Paris.
His parents were Guillaume d’Ercuis (1240-1302) and Helisende. His brother was called Jean; he was a servant to Philip IV.
Guillaume d'Ercuis kept a journal, his livre de raison[5] noting his expenses for the purchase of domains, of furnishings and books. Some annotations relate to his personal life and to court life.
His descendant, H. Coustant d'Yanville, published a Notice sur Guillaume d'Ercuis, précepteur de Philippe le Bel (Beauvais 1864).[6]
Notes
- ^ His will is dated 1314.
- ^ Margaret Bent, Andrew Wathey: Fauvel studies: allegory, chronicle, music, and image in Paris, Bibliothèque nationale de France.
- ^ Lalou Élisabeth, Les notaires du Roi sous Philippe le Bel, un milieu social parisien?
- ^ The Middle Ages by Frantz Funck-Brentano. 1925, p. 854.
- ^ Conserved in the Bibliothèque Sainte-Geneviève, Paris, ms. 2025; edited and published by Joseph Petit, De libro rationis Guillelmi de Erqueto, (Paris) 1900.
- ^ Coustant d'Yanville H., Notice sur Guillaume d'Ercuis, précepteur de Philippe le Bel, Beauvais, 1864