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  1. Seal of Isabella of Angoulême (Municipal Archives, Angoulême) Isabella (French: Isabelle d'Angoulême, IPA: [izabɛl dɑ̃ɡulɛm]; c. 1186 / 1188 – 4 June 1246) was Queen of England from 1200 to 1216 as the second wife of King John, Countess of Angoulême in her own right from 1202 until her death in 1246, and Countess of La Marche from 1220 to 1246 as the wife of Count Hugh.

  2. Counts of Angoulême House of Guilhelmides (Williami) Turpio (839–863) Emenon of Poitiers (863–866), brother of Turpio Aymer of Poitiers (Aymer I of Angoulême) (916–926), son of Emenon; House of Taillefer Coat of arms of the counts of Angoulême. Wulgrin I (866–886), first hereditary count, appointed by Charles the Bald

  3. Added: May 27, 2013. Find a Grave Memorial ID: 111263946. Source citation. Of a long line of Count Angoulemes. Son of Wm Count Angouleme and his wife Emma Limoges. Aymer and his wife Alice were the parents of Queen Isabella, a great beauty, who married first King John I of England, and after his death Hugh de Lusignan.

  4. When Aymer Taillefer Count of Angoulême was born about 23 August 1160, in Angoulême, Charente, Poitou-Charentes, France, his father, William de Taillefer VI Count of Angouleme, was 45 and his mother, Marguerite de Turenne, was 40. He married Lady Alice de Courtenay in 1180, in Angoulême, Charente, Nouvelle-Aquitaine, France.

  5. Alice married twice; by her second husband, Count Aymer of Angoulême, she was the mother of the English queen Isabella of Angoulême. Family. Alice was born in 1160, the second-eldest daughter and one of the ten children of Peter I of Courtenay and Elisabeth of Courtenay, daughter of Renauld de Courtenay and Hawise du Donjon.

  6. 27 de abr. de 2022 · William V of Angoulême was the Count of Angoulême from 1140 to 1178. He inherited the territory from his father, Wulgrin II of Angoulême. It is from him, that the territory was split between the three brothers all sons of William IV: Wulgrin III of Angoulême who was the eldest, William VI of Angoulême and Aymer of Angoulême.

  7. 26 de abr. de 2022 · Alice de Courtenay, died Sep. 14, 1211. She married Aymer de Talliefer, Count of Angouleme, and they became the parents of Isabella of Angoulême, who married King John I "Lackland", King of England. Alice of Courtenay, Countess of Angoulême (1160 – 12 February 1218) was a French noblewoman of the House of Courtenay.