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  1. Seal of Louis Louis I of Blois (1172 – 14 April 1205) was count of Blois from 1191 to 1205. He was the son of Theobald V and Alix of France. His maternal grandparents were Louis VII of France and his first wife Eleanor of Aquitaine.

  2. 26 de abr. de 2022 · As a guarantee for the payment of his ransom, John gave as hostages two of his sons, several princes and nobles, four inhabitants of Paris, and two citizens from each of the nineteen principal towns of France. Jean Châtillon, Comte de Porcien, was one of the nobles held as hostage. This treaty was ratified and sworn to by the two kings and by ...

  3. 6 de dic. de 2019 · King Stephen of England, often called Stephen of Blois, ruled from 1135 to 1154 CE. His predecessor Henry I of England (r. 1100-1135 CE) had left no male heir and his nominated successor, his daughter Empress Matilda, was not to the liking of many powerful barons who preferred Stephen, the wealthiest man in England and nephew of Henry I.

  4. John I (February 1346 – 23 September 1390) was the Duke of Lorraine from 1346 to his death. [1] As an infant of six months, he succeeded his father, Rudolph, who was killed in the Battle of Crécy. [2] His mother was Marie of Blois. [2]

  5. Guy III of Châtillon, Count of Saint-Pol (died 1289) was a French nobleman, and was a younger son of Hugh I, Count of Blois, and Mary, Countess of Blois. [1] While his elder brother John I of Châtillon succeeded to their mother's County of Blois , Guy was given their father's county of Saint-Pol-sur-Ternoise at his death in 1248.

  6. Guy I, Count of Blois. Guy I of Châtillon, Count of Blois (died 12 August 1342), son of Hugh II of Châtillon and Beatrix of Dampierre, was Count of Blois and Lord of Avesnes 1307–1342. In 1310, he married Margaret of Valois, [1] daughter of Charles of Valois and sister of Philip VI of France. [2] They had three children:

  7. After Charlemagne, Blois belonged to his successors, Charles the Bald (823-877), Louis-Le-Begue (846-879) and Eudes (died 898). Then the territory was passed (but we do not know how) to Thibault-Le-Tricheur the Elder (910 ca.-975), who became Count of Blois (924), founding a dynasty that ruled the city until the thirteenth century.