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  1. He succeeded his father as Count of Ponthieu before 1129; this was during William's lifetime. [2] Around 1137, he founded the Cistercian Valloires Abbey. [3] He joined the Second Crusade under King Louis VII of France, [3] and died of a disease on 25 December 1147 in Ephesus. [3] He was succeeded by his son John I of Ponthieu.

  2. He was Count of Ponthieu, ruler of a small province in northern France that fell under the suzerainty of the dukes of Normandy (later also kings of England) since at least the mid 11th century. He was son and heir of John I, Count of Ponthieu (d 1191) by his third wife Beatrice de St Pol. Contents 1 Family history and background

  3. Joan was born in France sometime before 1336, the youngest daughter of Jean II de Ponthieu, Count of Aumale (died 1343), and Catherine d'Artois (1296 – November 1368). Joan was a direct descendant of King Ferdinand III of Castile by his second wife Joan, Countess of Ponthieu. King Louis VIII of France and Blanche of Castile were also among ...

  4. Hugh I, Count of Ponthieu. Hugh I of Ponthieu, died 1000. He was also known as Hugo Miles . He was chosen by Hugh Capet, duke of France (not yet king ), to be "advocate of the abbey of Saint-Riquier and castellan of Abbeville ". He also married Hugh Capet's daughter.

  5. 1329–1346 : John IV (d. 1346), Count of Harcourt in 1338, son of John III married Isabeau de Parthenay, dame de Vibraye, de Montfort-le-Rotrou, d'Aspremont and de Bonnétable; 1346–1356 : John V (d. 5 April 1356, Rouen), son of John IV married Blanche de Ponthieu, Countess of Aumale, sister of Joan of Ponthieu, Dame of Epernon

  6. James I, Count of La Marche (1319 – 6 April 1362) was a French prince, the younger son of Louis I, Duke of Bourbon and the younger brother of Peter I, Duke of Bourbon. He was killed in 1362 at the Battle of Brignais , during the Hundred Years' War between the House of Plantagenet (which ruled over England and parts of France) and the House of Valois (which ruled over most of France). [2]