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  1. Count of Anjou was a title first given to Ingelger. [1] His male line ended with Geoffrey II of Anjou. The next line of counts of Anjou were descended from Geoffrey's sister Ermengarde-Blanche and her husband Geoffrey II, Count of Gâtinais. [2] Their descendants include the Plantagenet kings of England. [3]

  2. Geoffroy, Comte Nantes. Guillaume X, Comte Poitou. Geoffroy V (24 Agustus 1113 – 7 September 1151), yang disebut si Ganteng ( bahasa Prancis: le Bel) dan Plantagenêt, merupakan seorang Comte Anjou, Comte Tours, dan Comte Maine melalui warisan dari tahun 1129 dan kemudian Adipati Normandia melalui penaklukan dari tahun 1144.

  3. 29 de jul. de 2018 · Geoffrey was born 24 August 1113, the eldest son of Foulques V d’Anjou and Eremburga de La Flèche and was known as, “the Handsome.”. Geoffrey was named after his great-grandfather Geoffrey II, Count of Gâtinais. King Henry I of England had two children, a son named William and a daughter Matilda.

  4. Fulk IV ( French: Foulques IV d'Anjou; 1043 – 14 April 1109), better known as Fulk le Réchin ( Latin: Fulco Rechin ), was the count of Anjou from around 1068 until his death. He was noted to be "a man with many reprehensible, even scandalous, habits" by Orderic Vitalis, who particularly objected to his many women and his influential footwear ...

  5. In 1128, the year when she took her vows, Matilda's brother Geoffrey Plantagenet, Count of Anjou, who was 15 years old, was married to her late husband's sister, the widowed Empress Matilda, who was twenty-six. From this marriage descended the Plantagenet dynasty, which ruled England from 1154 to 1485.

  6. Geoffrey IV was the count of Anjou (1131–51), Maine, and Touraine and ancestor of the Plantagenet kings of England through his marriage, in June 1128, to Matilda (q.v.), daughter of Henry I of England. On Henry’s death (1135), Geoffrey claimed the duchy of Normandy; he finally conquered it in 1144

  7. Geoffrey I, Count of Anjou. Mother. Adelaide of Vermandois. Fulk III, the Black ( c. 970–1040; Old French: Foulque Nerra was an early Count of Anjou celebrated as one of the first great builders of medieval castles. It is estimated Fulk constructed approximately 100 castles as well as abbeys throughout the Loire Valley in what is now France.