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  1. John V of Armagnac (Fr.: Jean V, comte d'Armagnac) (1420 – 6 March 1473) was the penultimate Count of Armagnac of the older branch. He was the son of John IV of Armagnac and Isabella of Navarre.

  2. Jacques d'Armagnac, Duke of Nemours and Count John V were both targets of King Louis XI's deadly vengeance against the House of Armagnac. They were two of the last three grandsons and male heirs of Bernard VII, Count of Armagnac .

  3. John V (or VI) was the duke of Brittany from 1399, whose clever reversals in the Hundred Years’ War and in French domestic conflicts served to strengthen his duchy. John was on good terms with Philip the Bold, duke of Burgundy, who was his guardian. He began to favour the Armagnac faction in the.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. In John V (or VI) He began to favour the Armagnac faction in the French civil war, however, after the murder of its leader, Louis, duc d’Orléans, in 1407, though he did not fight the Burgundians. He allowed his subjects to fight the English, but he himself maintained a truce with Henry V of England,…

  5. Background. He was the son of John IV of Armagnac and Isabella of Navarre. Styled Viscount de Lomagne while his father lived, John succeeded him as Count of Armagnac when he died (5 November 1450).

  6. Arnauld-Bernard II (associated 1072 for about ten years) Bernard III 1095–1110. Gerald III 1110–1160. Bernard IV 1160–1188. Gerald IV Trancaléon 1188–1215. Gerald V 1215–1219. Bernart Arnaut d'Armagnac 1217–1226, in opposition. Pierre-Gerald 1219–1241. Bernard V 1241–1245.

  7. John V of Armagnac (Fr.: Jean V, comte d'Armagnac) (1420–1473), the penultimate Count of Armagnac of the older branch. He was the son of John IV of Armagnac and Isabella of Navarre.