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  1. Hace 3 días · As the heiress of the House of Poitiers, which controlled much of southwestern France, she was one of the wealthiest and most powerful women in Western Europe during the High Middle Ages. Militarily, she was a leading figure in the Second Crusade, and in a revolt in favour of her son.

  2. Hace 1 día · Isabelle Laurenaudie, francesa de nacimiento y amante del polo, celebró en Francia una gran victoria: se adjudicó junto a Occitanie (Tedelou), la segunda edición de la Polo Nations Cup. El equipo, integrado asimismo por Jules Legoubin y por los hermanos Zavaleta, Simon y Ramiro, se destacó por un recorrido solo de triunfos y ninguna derrota […]

  3. Hace 3 días · Spain - Isabella II, Unification, Monarchy: The dynastic war between Isabelline liberalism and Carlism was a savage civil war between urban liberalism and rural traditionalism, between the poorly paid and poorly equipped regular army of the liberal governments, supporting Isabella, and the semi-guerrilla forces of the Carlists.

  4. Hace 2 días · Isabella of France c. 1295 –1358 Queen of England: King Edward II 1284–1327 r. 1307–1327 King of England: Alphonso 1273–1284 Earl of Chester: Margaret of England 1275–1333 Duchess of Brabant, Lothier and Limburg: John II 1275–1312 Duke of Brabant: Berengaria 1276–1278: Mary of Woodstock 1279–c. 1332: John I 1284–1299 Count of ...

  5. Hace 4 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.

  6. Hace 4 días · The reasons that led John II of Aragon to arrange the marriage of his son and heir, Ferdinand, with Isabella of Castile in 1469 were essentially tactical: he needed Castilian support against French aggression in the Pyrenees.

  7. Hace 3 días · There was, however, an almost sibling-like relationship between England and France: shaped by petty squabbles, violent episodes and competition mirrored in the rhetoric of Francis I and Henry VIII. There are three obvious themes within the book: comparison, cooperation and ecclesiastical involvement in government.