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  1. Philip of Alençon ( French: Philippe; 1339–16 November 1397) was a French cardinal who was a member of the Valois dynasty. He was the second son of Count Charles II of Alençon (grandson of King Philip the Bold and younger brother of King Philip VI of France ), who was killed in the Battle of Crécy, and of Maria de La Cerda y de Lara (great ...

  2. Raoul II (1152–1167), Count of Vermandois and of Valois, son of Raoul I and of Petronilla of Aquitaine. Philip of Alsace (1167–1185), Count of Flanders (1168–1191), Count of Vermandois and of Valois by marriage; To the royal domain by king Philip II. Blanche of Castile (1240–1252) Jean-Tristan (1269–1270) Valois counts In royal domain

  3. House of Valois. The House of Valois was a younger branch of the Capetian dynasty that ruled France in the late Middle Ages and the Renaissance from 1328 to 1529. The kings of the House of Valois were descended from Charles of Valois who was the third son of Philip III of France. They claimed the Salic law put them ahead of Edward III of ...

  4. Henry II of France. Mother. Catherine de' Medici. Elisabeth of France, or Elisabeth of Valois ( Spanish: Isabel de Valois; French: Élisabeth de Valois) (2 April 1546 [1] – 3 October 1568), was Queen of Spain as the third wife of Philip II of Spain. She was the eldest daughter of Henry II of France and Catherine de' Medici.

  5. Signature. Philip II [note 1] (21 May 1527 – 13 September 1598), also known as Philip the Prudent ( Spanish: Felipe el Prudente ), was King of Spain [note 2] from 1556, King of Portugal from 1580, and King of Naples and Sicily from 1554 until his death in 1598. He was also jure uxoris King of England and Ireland from his marriage to Queen ...

  6. House. Orléans. Father. Philippe, Duke of Orléans. Mother. Henrietta of England. Philippe Charles d'Orléans, petit-fils de France, Duke of Valois (16 July 1664 – 8 December 1666) was a French prince and Grandson of France. He was styled Duke of Valois at the time of his birth. He was a short lived nephew of Louis XIV .

  7. Philip the Bold ruled as Duke Philip II of Burgundy from 1363 to 1404. In 1369 he himself married the widowed Margaret of Dampierre, and when his father-in-law Count Louis II of Flanders died in 1384, he succeeded him not only in the French counties of Flanders , Artois , Rethel , and Nevers , but also in the Free County of Burgundy, becoming a direct vassal of the Holy Roman Emperor .