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  1. 1154 - 1216 The Angevins (The first Plantagenet kings) 1216 - 1399 Plantagenets. 1399 - 1461 The House of Lancaster. 1461 - 1485 The House of York. 1485 -1603 The Tudors. 1603 - 1649 and 1660 - 1714 The Stuarts. 1714 -1901 The House of Hanoverians. 1901 -1910 and 1910 - Today Saxe-Coburg-Gotha and The Windsors.

  2. KING Richard I died outside the castle of Chalus-Chabrol in the Limousin on 7 April 1199. There were two candidates for the succession: his younger brother, John, and his nephew Arthur of Brittany. Arthur, however, was only twelve years old and was the protégé of Philip Augustus, the Capetian king of France. John, on the other hand, was in ...

  3. 13 de feb. de 2024 · Plantagenet ancestry of seventeenth-century colonists: the descent from the later Plantagenet kings of England, Henry III, Edward I, and Edward III, of emigrants from England and Wales to the North American colonies before 1701

  4. A compromise was eventually decided, under the terms of the Treaty of Westminster Matilda’s son Henry Plantagenet would succeed to the throne when Stephen died. PLANTAGENET KINGS. HENRY II 1154-1189 Henry of Anjou was a strong king. A brilliant soldier, he extended his French lands until he ruled most of France.

  5. 28 de jun. de 2017 · The Angevins. Henry II, the son of Geoffrey Plantagenet, Count of Anjou, and Henry I's daughter Matilda, was the first in a long line of 14 Plantagenet kings, stretching from Henry II's accession through to Richard III's death in 1485. Within that line, however, four distinct Royal Houses can be identified: Angevin, Plantagenet, Lancaster and York.

  6. 24 de jun. de 2021 · According to calculations made by Ian Mortimer in his biography of Edward III, somewhere between 80 and 95 per cent of the living English-descended population of England shares some ancestry with the Plantagenet kings of the 14th century and before. In other words, there’s a pretty good chance that you are, on some level, a Plantagenet.

  7. 12 de mar. de 2024 · Henry II was king of England from 1154 to 1189. The first of three Angevin kings of England, he expanded the Anglo-French domains and strengthened the royal administration. His quarrels with the archbishop of Canterbury, Thomas Becket, and with various family members (including his son, Richard the Lionheart) ultimately brought about his defeat.