Werner, Count in Hesbaye


Count Werner died in 973 with his brother Rainald or Reginzo, near Mons in Hainaut, which is now in Belgium. The two brothers were reported to have been holding the lands that had been held by one Count Richer, who had recently died.
Werner and his brother were killed by another pair of brothers who attacked them, but failed to take Mons: Reginar IV, the future count of Mons, and Lambert I, the future count of Louvain. They claimed this same lordship by right of their dead rebel father, Reginar III.
Werner was a Count in Hesbaye, also now in Belgium, and he probably also held lands as far away as Zülpich which is now in Germany. All the areas he was associated with were part of the Kingdom of Lotharingia, which during this period was no longer independent, but mainly under the control of Germany.

Attestations

There are a small number of records for Werner, some of which are not definitely involving the same person:
This battle near Mons happened after, in October 972, a Count Richer who had been holding Mons was killed during an attack on his uncle, Bishop Wicfried of Verdun. Reginar and Lambert attacked from France, the next year. However, they failed to take control at this time, and instead Count Godfrey "the captive" is attested as count in Hainaut after this.

Family

Werner's exact parentage is unknown, but historian Eduard Hlawitschka has proposed that he was a member of the, and therefore closely related to his predecessors in Hainaut, Count Richer and Richer's uncle and predecessor Godfrey I, Duke of Lower Lorraine, who died in 964. It is possible Werner and Renaud were brothers of Richer, and cousins of Count Godfrey "the captive" through his mother, who was a Matfried.

Interpretations

Belgian historians, including Léon Vanderkindere and Jean Baerten, have traditionally connected the records involving Werner with other records to propose a narrative whereby Werner and his brother were longer term enemies of the Reginar family, a powerful Lotharingian family which had an alliance with France in this period.
Hlawitschka has proposed that Werner had a daughter, Godila, who married Liuthar, Margrave of the Nordmark.