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  1. Petronilla spent the next few years on her husband's estates in Aquitaine as they had made themselves unpopular by their marriages with the Crusaders and their own people. In 1230, Petronilla returned to Bigorre with her husband where public order had collapsed, as a result of her many years of absence, and restored it.

  2. Geoffrey (died 1048) was the Count of Angoulême from 1032. His brother Alduin II succeeded their father, William II, as Count in 1028, but the brothers quarrelled over their inheritance in the Bordelais. In a settlement that year, Alduin granted three quarters of the newer castle (the old one still stood) at Blavia ( Blaye) to Geoffrey in ...

  3. Wikipedia says: “Raoul divorced in 1151, as he remarried the next year. Petronilla remained a member of the French royal court and a constant companion to her sister Eleanor while she was imprisoned by her husband King Henry II in England and Wales. After Henry’s death, Eleanor was freed, and Petronilla planned on returning to France.

  4. Hafan; Porth y Gymuned; Y Caffi; Materion cyfoes; Newidiadau diweddar; Erthygl ar hap; Cymorth; Rhoi

  5. Eleonore, hertuginne av Aquitaine (født 1122 [2], død 1. april 1204) var en av de rikeste og mektigste kvinnene i Vest-Europa i løpet av høymiddelalderen. Hun var beskytter av diktere og forfattere som Wace, Benoît de Sainte-Maure og Chrétien de Troyes. Hun var gift med to konger, og ble selv mor til to konger.

  6. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › VermandoisVermandois - Wikipedia

    The eldest son of Hugh and Adela was count Raoul I (c. 1120–1152), who married Petronilla of Aquitaine, sister of the queen, Eleanor, and had by her three children: Raoul (Rudolph) II, the Leper (count from 1152–1167); Isabelle, who possessed from 1167 to 1183 the counties of Vermandois, Valois and Amiens conjointly with her husband, Philip, Count of Flanders; and Eleanor.