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  1. Louis, Count of Soissons. English: Louis de Bourbon (1 May 1604 – 6 July 1641) was Count of Soissons. He was the son of Charles de Bourbon, Count of Soissons and Anne de Montafié. He was the second cousin of King Louis XIII of France and a held the rank of prince of the blood.

  2. After this, he was persistently disloyal to the King, conspiring with Charles, Count of Charolais, and with Edward IV of England (the husband of his niece, Elizabeth Woodville). The final treason came in 1474 when Saint-Pol approached Charles the Bold , Duke of Burgundy , who had already entered into a compact with Edward IV of England to dismember France in a renewal of the Hundred Years' War.

  3. Isabella of England. Marie I de Coucy (April 1366 – after 3 March 1405) was Dame de Coucy and d'Oisy, and Countess of Soissons from 1397. She succeeded suo jure to the title of Countess of Soissons upon the death of her father, Enguerrand VII de Coucy, on 18 February 1397. In addition to her titles, she also possessed numerous estates in ...

  4. J. Jeanne of Hainault. John I, Count of Soissons. John II, Count of Soissons. John III, Count of Soissons. John IV, Count of Soissons. John of Luxembourg, Count of Soissons. John V, Count of Soissons.

  5. Dormay, C., Histoire de la ville de Soissons et de ses rois, ducs, comtes et gouverneurs, Soissons, 1664 (available on Google Books) Galbert de Bruges, The Murder, Betrayal, and Slaughter of the Glorious Charles, Count of Flanders, translated by John Jeffrey Rider, Yale University Press, 2013. References

  6. With Eugene Jean's death, the title "Count of Soissons" became extinct and reverted to the French crown. The huge inheritance of Prince Eugene, who died intestate two years later, fell to his closest surviving relative, Eugene Jean's aunt, Anna Victoria of Savoy. [5] In 1772, upon the death of Eugene Jean's mother, the duchy of Troppau returned ...

  7. 11 de may. de 2010 · A first cousin of King Henry IV of France, he was the son of the Huguenot leader Louis I de Bourbon, prince de Condé and his second wife, Françoise d'Orléans-Longueville (5 April 1549-1601). [1] [2] He gave his name to the Hotel de Soissons after his title Count of Soissons. Career.