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  1. William VIII (in Occitan: Guilhem; died 1202) was Lord of Montpellier, the son of William VII and Matilda of Burgundy (1135?-1173?) . William VIII married Eudokia Komnene, grand-niece of the Byzantine emperor Manuel I Komnenos. [1] They had one daughter: Marie of Montpellier.

  2. Guillermo VIII de Montpellier (en occitano: Guilhem VIII; m. en 1202) fue Señor de Montpellier. Era hijo de Guillermo VII de Montpellier y de Matilde de Borgoña y Mayenne. Se casó con Eudoxia Comnena, hija de Isaac Comnenos y por lo tanto sobrina carnal del emperador bizantino Manuel I Comneno. [1] Tuvieron una hija: María de ...

  3. 21 de ene. de 2024 · William VIII of Montpellier (died 1202) was Lord of Montpellier, the son of William VII. He married Eudoxie or Eudokia Komnene, niece of the Byzantine emperor Manuel I Komnenos. A condition of the marriage was that the firstborn child, boy or girl, would succeed to the lordship of Montpellier on William's death.

    • Montpellier, Languedoc-Roussillon
    • Flemming Allan Funch
    • 1158
    • Early History of Montpellier
    • 16Th-Century Wars of Religion
    • Edict of Nantes
    • Louis XIII's Military Campaigns
    • The Siege of Montpellier
    • Conclusion

    The region of Montpellier is an ancient land of settlement and passage where Phoenicians, Greeks, Iberians, and Celts left an imprint. Roman domination and influence began in 123 BCE when Languedoc became a Roman colony. The Roman general and senator Gnaeus Domitius (d. c. 104 BCE) left his mark on the country by creating the road that bears his na...

    City records dating to 1560 show the rapid progression of Protestantism among foreign university students and influential professors like Guillaume Rondelet (l. 1507-1566) and Jean Bocaud (l. 1511-1561). Protestants grew in strength and began seizing Catholic churches in 1561. They consolidated their power after the Edict of January in 1562, which ...

    Henry IV of France and the Edict of Nantes in 1598 ended the armed conflict of the French Wars of Religion and established an uneasy coexistence. The application of this edict of pacification was complicated in many regions since the king's authority was limited in Protestant-controlled cities distant from Paris. The re-establishment of Catholic wo...

    Louis XIII led a punitive expedition against Protestant Béarn in 1620 and broke the fragile religious peace in the kingdom. He ordered the restitution of possessions to the Catholic Church and reestablished Catholicism in Protestant regions. In response to the king's actions, in December 1620, the Huguenot general assembly at La Rochelle, a Protest...

    Louis XIII arrived in Bas-Languedoc early in July 1622 to prepare for the siege of Montpellier. The army began tightening its grip on the surrounding areas. Béziers, Bédarieux, Mauguio, Marsillargues, Sommières, and Aigues-Mortes all fell before the royal troops. Lunel offered the most resistance, and the battle ended in a bloodbath. Louis XIII pre...

    Montpellier's capitulation marked the city's integration with the French monarchy, from a Huguenot bastion to the capital of Languedoc, faithful to the king and Catholicism. The peace signed between the two parties confirmed the Edict of Nantes, with a return to the religious status quo where political gatherings were forbidden without royal author...

  4. Eudokia Komnene. Marie of Montpellier (adapted from Occitan: Maria de Montpelhièr) (1182 – 21 April 1213) was Lady of Montpellier and by her three marriages Viscountess of Marseille, Countess of Comminges and Queen of Aragon. She was the daughter of William VIII, Lord of Montpellier, by his wife Eudokia Komnene, a niece of ...

  5. Born in 1181 (some sources cite 1182); died in 1213 (some sources cite 1219); daughter of Guillaume or Guillem or William VIII, lord of Montpellier, and Eudocia of Byzantium (niece of the Byzantine emperor Manuel I Comnenus); married Barral, viscount of Marseilles, in 1192 (died 1192); married Bernard IV, count of Comminges, in 1197 (Maria was r...