Background
He was the son of Hugh II, Count of Maine and succeeded his father as Count of Maine c. 991 He constructed the fortress at Sablé but by 1015 it ended up being held by the viscounts of Maine.
He was the son of Hugh II, Count of Maine and succeeded his father as Count of Maine c. 991 He constructed the fortress at Sablé but by 1015 it ended up being held by the viscounts of Maine.
He was a supporter of Richard II, Duke of Normandy. Allied with Odo, Count of Blois, he fought against the kings Hugh Capet and Robert II of France, but he was forced to acknowledge the Count of Anjou as his suzerain. During the siege of Tillières, Hugh narrowly escaped from the Norman forces pursuing him by disguising himself as a local shepherd.
Between 995 and 1015 Hugh III donated several properties including four vineyards and three mills in Le Mans to the monks of Mont Saint-Michel In Normandy.
When approached by Abbot Hildebert in 1014 in requesting more land in the area of Le Mans, Hugh III generously gave the land of Voivres and personally placed the offering on the altar at Mont Saint-Michel. Hugh died c. 1014–1015.
Their son was:
Herbert I, Count of Maine who succeeded him.