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  1. Isabella of Lusignan (c.1224 – 14 January 1300) was a daughter of Hugh X of Lusignan and his wife Isabella of Angoulême, Dowager Queen of England. Isabella was half-sister to King Henry III of England. She was Dame de Beauvoir-sur Mer et de Mercillac. Lineage. Isabella's year of birth is unknown.

    • 14 January 1300 (aged 73-76)
  2. 31 de ene. de 2024 · Biography. Birth and Parents. Isabella (as she is usually known) was the daughter of Aymer/Audemar, Count of Angolême, France and Alix/Alice, daughter of Pierre (son of Louis VI of France). [1] [2] She was said to be about 12 at the time her 1200 marriage to King John, pointing to a birth year of about 1188. [3] .

    • Female
  3. In 1220, Isabella married Hugh X of Lusignan, Count of La Marche, by whom she had another nine children. Some of Isabella's contemporaries, as well as later writers, claim that she formed a conspiracy against King Louis IX of France in 1241, after being publicly snubbed by his mother, Blanche of Castile , for whom she harbored a deep-seated ...

    • 8 October 1200
    • 24 August 1200 – 19 October 1216
    • 16 June 1202 – 4 June 1246
    • Aymer
  4. Nine children were born to Isabella and Hugh X, five of whom went to England at the invitation of their half brother, Henry III. There they were rewarded with lands, riches, and distinctions at the expense of the English barons, who eventually revolted against Henry and forced the exile of the Lusignan brothers from England in 1258.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  5. The lords of the castle at Lusignan became counts of La Marche in the 12th century. They added the county of Angoulême to their holdings in 1220, when Hugh X of Lusignan married Isabella of Angoulême, daughter of Count Aymer of Angoulême and widow of John, King of England. These acquisitions produced complicated titles.

    • None; extinct
    • James III
    • 10th century
    • Poitou, France
  6. 17 de may. de 2023 · First Online: 17 May 2023. 157 Accesses. Part of the book series: Queenship and Power ( (QAP)) Abstract. As a consort active at the turn of the thirteenth century, Isabella of Angoulême occupies a position in a period of history in which academic argument has focussed on the changing nature of queenship.

  7. 12 de mar. de 2023 · In 1220, Isabella shocked the world when she announced that she had taken Hugh X Lusignan, her daughter’s betrothed, as her second husband! Isabella wrote to her eldest son, now King Henry III, announcing the marriage and justifying it as being in Henry’s best interests.