Article · Wikipedia archive · Last revised Jul 8, 2026

Counts of Eu

This is a list of the counts of Eu, a French county in the Middle Ages, disputed between France and England during parts of the Hundred Years' War.

Last revised
Jul 8, 2026
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≈ 3 min
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Citations
Source
Map of Normandy source ↗

This is a list of the counts of Eu, a French county in the Middle Ages (Eu is in the department of Seine-Maritime, in the extreme north of Normandy), disputed between France and England during parts of the Hundred Years' War.

House of Normandy

Arms of the Counts of Eu, House of Normandy
source ↗
  • 996–1015: Geoffrey, also Count of Brionne, illegitimate son of Duke Richard I of Normandy
  • 1015–1040: Gilbert, also Count of Brionne, son of the previous
  • 1040–1050 (approximate): William I, brother of Geoffrey
  • William Busac, son of the previous, 1050-1053 (approximate)
  • Robert I, also Lord of Hastings, son of William I, 1053-1093
  • William II, also Lord of Hastings, son of Robert, 1093-1096
  • Henry I, also Lord of Hastings, son of William II, 1096-1140
  • John, also Lord of Hastings, son of Henry I, 1140-1170
  • Henry II, also Lord of Hastings, son of John, 1170-1191
  • Alix, Countess of Eu and Lady of Hastings, daughter of Henry II, 1191-1246.

House of Lusignan

Arms of the Lusignan Counts of Eu source ↗

House of Brienne

Arms of the Brienne Counts of Eu source ↗

Raoul IV was accused of treason in 1350, and the county was confiscated. The county was then given to John of Artois.

House of Artois

Arms of the Artois Counts of Eu source ↗

House of Bourchier

Arms of the Bourchier Counts of Eu source ↗

House of Burgundy-Nevers

Burgundian Eu (lower left on map) 1472–1477 source ↗
Arms of the Nevers Counts of Eu source ↗

House of Cleves

Arms of the Cleves Counts of Eu source ↗

House of Guise

Arms of the Guise Counts of Eu source ↗

In 1660, he sold Eu to the Duchess of Montpensier.

House of Montpensier

She sold it in 1681 to the Duke of Maine.

House of Bourbon

The title was used by the House of Bourbon du Maine till 1775 when that house became extinct. It then passed over to the cousins of the du Maines: The House of Bourbon-Penthièvre

House of Orléans

Further reading

Further reading