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  1. Hace 4 días · Henry III, thanks to his mother Isabella of Angoulême‘s fertile second marriage to Hugh de Lusignan, had an extensive brood of foreign half-siblings to promote.

  2. Hace 5 días · After his death, Isabella worked with the regent William Marshal to reissue the charter and restore royal authority [10]. Following the end of her regency, Isabella returned to her native France and stirred up trouble by marrying Hugh X of Lusignan, a key Plantagenet vassal, without her son‘s permission [11].

  3. Hace 2 días · The new king, Henry of Champagne, died accidentally in 1197, and Isabella married for a fourth time, to Aimery of Lusignan, Guy's brother. Aimery had already inherited Cyprus from Guy, and had been crowned king by Frederick Barbarossa's son, Emperor Henry VI .

  4. 16 de may. de 2024 · In the summer of 1180, Baldwin IV married Sibylla to Guy of Lusignan, brother of the constable Amalric of Lusignan. Earlier historians claimed that Sibylla's second marriage was entirely due to the influence of the King's mother; however, Hamilton argues that this is to reflect uncritically the personal grievances of William of Tyre ...

    • "called the Leper or the Leprous"
    • March 16, 1185 (23-24)Jerusalem, Israel
    • 1161
    • Jerusalem
  5. 23 de may. de 2024 · Isabelle, who died in June 1340. Marguerite of Lusignan who married in 1337 and in 1347. She was widowed in 1359 1. In 1359 she married Philipp von Braunschweig-Grubenhagen 1, the son of Heinrich von Braunschweig, Duke of Saxony 6. Pope Urban V issued the papal dispensation for this wedding on 29 May 1368 1 6.

  6. Hace 5 días · However, Isabella had been betrothed to Hugh of Lusignan, and John's treatment of Hugh following the marriage, including the seizure of La Marche, led Hugh to appeal to Philip II. Philip summoned John to his court, and John's refusal resulted in the confiscation of John's continental possessions excluding Normandy in April 1202 and ...

  7. Hace 2 días · John's first wife, Isabella, Countess of Gloucester, was released from imprisonment in 1214; she remarried twice, and died in 1217. John's second wife, Isabella of Angoulême, left England for Angoulême soon after the king's death; she became a powerful regional leader, but largely abandoned the children that she had borne to John.