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  1. John I of Ponthieu (c. 1140 – 1191) was the son of Guy II of Ponthieu and Ida. He succeeded his father as Count of Ponthieu in 1147.

    • John I, Count of Aumale

      John I of Ponthieu (d. July 11, 1302, Kortrijk, County of...

    • Count

      The County of Ponthieu (French: Comté de Ponthieu, Latin:...

    • John I

      This page was last edited on 18 December 2008, at 20:42...

  2. John I of Ponthieu (d. July 11, 1302, Kortrijk, County of Flanders, Kingdom of France) was Count of Aumale. He was son of Ferdinand II, Count of Aumale, and Laura of Montfort. After the death of his father in 1260, he became co-ruler in the County of Aumale with his grandmother Joan. They reigned together until her death in 1279.

  3. The County of Ponthieu (French: Comté de Ponthieu, Latin: Comitatus Pontivi), centered on the mouth of the Somme, became a member of the Norman group of vassal states when Count Guy submitted to William the Conqueror, Duke of Normandy after the battle of Mortemer.

  4. This page was last edited on 18 December 2008, at 20:42 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License 4.0; additional terms may apply.

    • Family
    • Marriage Negotiations
    • Queen of Castile
    • Rule in Ponthieu and Aumale
    • Sources

    Joan was born c. 1220. She was the eldest daughter of Simon of Dammartin, Count of Ponthieu (1180- 21 September 1239), and his wife Marie of Ponthieu, Countess of Montreuil (17 April 1199 – 1251). Her paternal grandparents were Alberic III, Count of Dammartin, and Mahaut de Clermont, daughter of Renaud de Clermont, Count of Clermont-en-Beauvaisis, ...

    After secret negotiations were undertaken in 1234, it was agreed that Joan would marry King Henry III of England. This marriage would have been politically unacceptable to the French, however, since Joan stood to inherit not only her mother's county of Ponthieu, but also the county of Aumale that was vested in her father's family. Ponthieu bordered...

    In November 1235, Blanche of Castile's nephew, King Ferdinand III of Castile, lost his wife, Elisabeth of Hohenstaufen, and Blanche's sister Berengaria of Castile, Ferdinand's mother, was concerned that her widowed son might involve himself in liaisons that were unsuited to his dignity as king. Berengaria determined to find Ferdinand another wife, ...

    Sometime between May 1260 and 9 February 1261, Joan took a second husband, Jean de Nesle, Seigneur de Falvy et de La Hérelle (died 2 February 1292). This marriage is sometimes said to have produced a daughter, Béatrice, but she was in fact a child of Jean de Nesle's first marriage. In 1263, Joan was recognized as countess of Aumale after the death ...

    Johnstone, Hilda (1914). "The County of Ponthieu, 1279-1307". The English Historical Review. 29(115). Oxford University Press.
    Parsons, John Carmi (1984). Brown, Virginia (ed.). "The Year of Eleanor of Castile's Birth and Her Children by Edward I". Mediaeval Studies. XLVI. Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies: 245-265...
    Parsons, John Carmi (1995). Eleanor of Castile, Queen and Society in Thirteenth-Century England. Palgrave Macmillan.
    Prestwich, Michael (1988). Edward I. University of California Press.
  5. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › PonthieuPonthieu - Wikipedia

    Ponthieu ( [pɔ̃.tjø], Latin: Pagus Pontivi) was one of six feudal counties that eventually merged to become part of the Province of Picardy, in northern France. [1] . Its chief town is Abbeville . History. Ponthieu played a small but important role in the politics that led up to the Norman invasion of England in 1066. [2] Norman conquest of England

  6. The County of Ponthieu (French: Comté de Ponthieu, Latin: Comitatus Pontivi), centered on the mouth of the Somme, became a member of the Norman group of vassal states when Count Guy submitted to William of Normandy after the battle of Mortemer.It eventually formed part of the dowry of Eleanor of Castile and passed to the English crown.