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  1. William of Saint Omer was a French knight, descended from a Fauquembergues family who were castellans of the eponymous castle of Saint-Omer. His father, Nicholas I of Saint Omer, received lands in Boeotia in the aftermath of the Fourth Crusade.

  2. William of Saint Omer was a French knight, descended from a Fauquembergues family who were castellans of the eponymous castle of Saint-Omer. His father, Nicholas I of Saint Omer, received lands in Boeotia in the aftermath of the Fourth Crusade.

  3. William of Saint-Omer (French: Guillaume de Saint-Omer) can refer to several members of the House of Saint Omer: William I of Saint-Omer, castellan of Saint Omer. William II of Saint-Omer, castellan of Saint Omer. William III of Saint-Omer, castellan of Saint Omer.

  4. Nicholas I of Saint Omer was a French knight [citation needed] who in the aftermath of the Fourth Crusade became a lord in the Frankish Duchy of Athens. Nicholas was a younger son of William IV of Saint Omer, castellan of Saint-Omer then in Flanders, and Ida of Avesnes.

  5. William of Saint Omer was a French knight, descended from a Fauquembergues family who were castellans of the eponymous castle of Saint-Omer. His father, Nicholas I of Saint Omer, received lands in Boeotia in the aftermath of the Fourth Crusade.

  6. May 14, 2024 · Nicholas was a younger son of William IV of Saint Omer, castellan of Saint-Omer then in Flanders, and Ida of Avesnes.[1][2] Ida's brother James of Avesnes took part in the Fourth Crusade (1203–04) and accompanied Boniface of Montferrat in the conquest and partition of Greece in its aftermath.

  7. William of Saint Omer was a French knight, descended from a Fauquembergues family who were castellans of the eponymous castle of Saint-Omer. His father, Nicholas I of Saint Omer, received lands in Boeotia in the aftermath of the Fourth Crusade.

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