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  1. Sancha de Provenza ( Aix-en-Provence, 1225 1 - castillo de Berkhamsted, Herfordshire, 9 de noviembre de 1261), 2 princesa francesa . Era la tercera hija de Ramón Berenguer V de Provenza, y de Beatriz de Saboya .

  2. la infanta Sancha de Provenza (1225-1261), casada en 1243 con Ricardo de Cornualles, hijo de Juan I de Inglaterra y hermano de Enrique III de Inglaterra. la infanta Beatriz de Provenza (1234-1267), condesa de Provenza y casada en 1246 con Carlos I de Anjou.

  3. Sancho I de Cerdaña, Sancho I de Rosellón o Sancho de Aragón [1] (1161-1223), príncipe de Aragón y Barcelona; gobernó el condado de Cerdaña (1168-1212) como Sancho I de Cerdaña, y el condado de Provenza (1181-1185). Hijo menor del conde de Barcelona Ramón Berenguer IV y Petronila, reina de Aragón.

    • Count of Cerdanya
    • Count of Provence
    • Count of Roussillon and Procurator of Provence
    • Procurator General of The Realm

    Sancho was a minor at the time of his father's death (1162) and he did not inherit lands or titles, but only the right of reversion should his elder brothers die without heirs. Thus, according to his father's will, he should have inherited Provence and Cerdanya only after his elder brother Raymond Berengar III, count of Provence, was assassinated i...

    When Sancho inherited the county of Provence in 1181, he probably also inherited the governing arrangement that had been set up by Alfonso. His power would have been heavily circumscribed by a council. His first responsibility as count was to defend the county from the claims of Count Raymond V of Toulouse. For the following four years, Sancho and ...

    In 1204, Sancho and his son, Nuño Sánchez, witnessed the donation of the county of Roussillon to Maria of Montpellier, the new wife of King Peter II, Sancho's nephew. Since Roussillon was a region in which Sancho had ambitions, his recognition of the donation to Maria was critical. In 1208, Peter finally granted Sancho the county of Roussillon. In ...

    Opposition and setbacks

    Since Peter had placed his kingdom under the authority of the Papacy, the papal legate arranged for James to be placed under the guardianship of Guillem de Montrodon, master of the Templars in Aragon, and for Sancho to be appointed procurator general, effectively regent. The exact date of Sancho's appointment is uncertain: it occurred either late in 1214 or early in 1215. James in his autobiographical Llibre dels fets, later accused Sancho of wanting to be king and of plotting to seize the th...

    War in Occitania

    Sancho did not completely abandon his policy towards the crusade because of the setbacks at the Lateran. There was a concerted effort by the houses of Toulouse and Aragon to restore their shaken authority in Provence at the same time as Raymond Berengar IV came of age and Sancho's second administration of Provence ended. Count Raymond VI of Toulouse, who had been deprived of his lands by the Lateran council, was granted refuge by Sancho. In April 1216, King Philip II of France formally grante...

  4. Sanchia of Provence (c. 1225 – 9 November 1261) was Queen of the Romans from 1257 until her death in 1261 as the wife of King Richard. Sanchia was the third daughter of Ramon Berenguer IV, Count of Provence, and Beatrice of Savoy. She was described as an "incomparable beauty".

  5. Sancha de Provenza (Aix-en-Provence, 1225 [1] - castillo de Berkhamsted, Herfordshire, 9 de noviembre de 1261), [2] princesa francesa. Sancha de Provenza Era la tercera hija de Ramón Berenguer V de Provenza , y de Beatriz de Saboya .

  6. Sancha de Castilla. Condesa de Barcelona y marquesa de Provenza. ?, 21.IX.1154 – Monasterio de Sijena (Huesca), 1206. Esposa de Alfonso II el Casto y reina consorte de Aragón, fundadora de la Orden de Comendadoras Sanjunistas o Madres Comendadoras de San Juan de Jerusalén, rama femenina de los Hermanos de San Juan de Jerusalén, sierva de Dios.