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  1. Simon I of Montfort or Simon de Montfort (c. 1025 – 25 September 1087) was a French nobleman. He was born in Montfort l'Amaury, near Paris, and became its lord. He was the son of Amaury I de Montfort and Bertrade.

  2. Simón I de Montfort (fallecido en 1087) fue el tercer señor de Montfort-l'Amaury. Era el hijo de Amalarico I , señor de Montfort, y de Bertrada de Gometz. Continuó el trabajo iniciado por su padre y su abuelo y construyó en el pueblo la iglesia de San Pedro y la capilla de San Lorenzo.

  3. Simón I de Montfort (fallecido en 1087) fue el tercer señor de Montfort-l'Amaury. Datos rápidos Señor de Montfort, Predecesor ... Cerrar. Era el hijo de Amalarico I, señor de Montfort, y de Bertrada de Gometz. Continuó el trabajo iniciado por su padre y su abuelo y construyó en el pueblo la iglesia de San Pedro y la capilla de San Lorenzo.

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    Montfort was a younger son of Alix de Montmorency and Simon de Montfort, 5th Earl of Leicester, a French nobleman, and leader of a Crusade against the Cathars in south-west France. His paternal grandmother was Amicia de Beaumont, the senior co-heiress to the Earldom of Leicester and a large estate owned by her brother Robert de Beaumont, 4th Earl o...

    Early life

    As a younger son, Simon de Montfort attracted little public attention during his youth, and the date of his birth remains unknown. He is first mentioned when his mother made a grant to him in 1217. As a boy, Montfort accompanied his parents during his father's campaigns against the Cathars. He was with his mother at the Siege of Toulouse in 1218, where his father died after being struck on the head by a stone pitched by a mangonel. In addition to Amaury, Simon had another older brother, Guy,...

    Royal marriage

    In January 1238, Montfort married Eleanor of England, daughter of King John and Isabella of Angoulême and sister of King Henry III. While this marriage took place with the king's approval, the act itself was performed secretly and without consulting the great barons, as a marriage of such importance warranted. Eleanor had previously been married to William Marshal, 2nd Earl of Pembroke, and she had sworn a vow of perpetual chastityupon his death, when she was sixteen, which she broke by marry...

    Expulsion of Jews from Leicester

    As Earl of Leicester, Montfort expelled the small Jewishcommunity from Leicester city in 1231, banishing them "in my time or in the time of any of my heirs to the end of the world". He justified his action as being "for the good of my soul, and for the souls of my ancestors and successors". His parents had shown a similar hostility to Jews in France, where his father was known for his bigoted Christianity, and his mother had given the Jews of Toulouse a choice of conversion, expulsion or deat...

    Following Montfort's death, he became the focus of an unofficial popular miracle cult, centred on his grave in Evesham Abbey. It was practised in secret for at least two years because of an official ban, but lasted until c.1280, with pilgrims continuing to visit his grave for some years thereafter. The so-called Evesham "miracle book" documents som...

    Simon de Montfort and Eleanor of England had seven children, many of whom were notable in their own right:[citation needed] 1. Henry de Montfort(November 1238–1265) 2. Simon de Montfort the Younger(April 1240–1271) 3. Amaury de Montfort(1242/3–1300) 4. Guy de Montfort, Count of Nola(1244–1288) 5. Joanna de Montfort (born and died in Bordeaux betwee...

    Beach, Chandler B., ed. (1914). "Montfort, Simon de" . The New Student's Reference Work . Vol. 3. Chicago: F. E. Compton and Co.
  4. Simón IV de Montfort (¿?, c. 1160/1165-Tolosa, 25 de junio de 1218) fue señor de Montfort-l’Amaury, quinto conde de Leicester, conde de Tolosa, vizconde de Béziers y del vizcondado de Carcasona, fue el principal protagonista de la Cruzada albigense.

  5. Simon de Montfort, earl of Leicester (born c. 1208, Montfort, Ile-de-France, France—died Aug. 4, 1265, Evesham, Worcestershire, Eng.) was the leader of the baronial revolt against King Henry III and ruler of England for less than a year.

  6. Simon de Montfort (born 1165?—died June 25, 1218, Toulouse, France) was a French leader of the Albigensian Crusade declared by Pope Innocent III against the Cathari, an unorthodox religious group in southern France.