Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Isabella of Lusignan (c.1224 – 14 January 1300) was a daughter of Hugh X of Lusignan and his wife Isabella of Angoulême, Dowager Queen of England. Isabella was half-sister to King Henry III of England .

  2. 31 de ene. de 2024 · Explore genealogy for Isabella (Angoulême) de Lusignan born abt. 1188 Angoulême, Angoumois, France died 1246 Fontevrault-l'Abbaye, Anjou, France including ancestors + descendants + 2 photos + 14 genealogist comments + more in the free family tree community.

  3. The lords of the castle at Lusignan became counts of La Marche in the 12th century. They added the county of Angoulême to their holdings in 1220, when Hugh X of Lusignan married Isabella of Angoulême, daughter of Count Aymer of Angoulême and widow of John, King of England. These acquisitions produced complicated titles.

  4. 27 de abr. de 2022 · Isabelle de Craon, Dame de Fougères (born 1212), was a French noblewoman, being the daughter of Amaury I, Sire de Craon, a wealthy baron who was the possessor of many lordships in Anjou and Maine. She was the wife of Raoul III, Sire de Fougères, by whom she had one daughter, Jeanne de Fougères, who became the heiress to her father's seigneury.

  5. In 1200 his fiancée, Isabella of Angoulême, was taken for wife by his feudal lord, King John of England. This outrage caused Hugh to turn to the king of France, Philip II Augustus, forming an alliance that culminated in John’s loss of his continental possessions.

  6. 11 de ene. de 2023 · In 1220, Isabella shocked the world when she announced that she had taken Hugh X Lusignan, her daughter’s betrothed, as her second husband! Isabella wrote to her eldest son, now King Henry III, announcing the marriage and justifying it as being in Henry’s best interests.

  7. 17 de may. de 2023 · Sally Spong. Part of the book series: Queenship and Power ( (QAP)) 183 Accesses. Abstract. As a consort active at the turn of the thirteenth century, Isabella of Angoulême occupies a position in a period of history in which academic argument has focussed on the changing nature of queenship.