William I

duke of Normandy
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Also known as: Guillaume Longue-Épée, William Longsword
Quick Facts
Also called:
William Longsword
French:
Guillaume Longue-épée
Died:
Dec. 17, 942, Picardy [France]
Also Known As:
Guillaume Longue-Épée
William Longsword
Notable Family Members:
father Rollo
son Richard I

William I (died Dec. 17, 942, Picardy [France]) was the son of Rollo and second duke of Normandy (927–942). He sought continually to expand his territories either by conquest or by exacting new lands from the French king for the price of homage. In 939 he allied himself with Hugh the Great in the revolt against King Louis IV; through the mediation of the pope, the war ended, and Louis renewed William’s investiture of Normandy (940). William, however, continued his territorial ambitions, especially northward. Drawn to a conference on an island in the Somme River, he was assassinated on the orders of the count of Flanders, Arnulf I.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.