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  1. Summarize this article for a 10 year old. 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 ...

  2. 17 de jun. de 2017 · Countess of Angoulême. For the next twenty years, Isabella and Hugh were the power couple of south-west France. Paris was a long way off, and they got used to their independence. That all changed in 1241 when King Louis IX of France decided to appoint his brother as overlord of the region.

  3. Eleanor of England (also called Eleanor Plantagenet and Eleanor of Leicester) (1215 – 13 April 1275) was the youngest child of John, King of England and Isabella of Angoulême. Early life [ edit ] At the time of Eleanor's birth at Gloucester , King John's London was in the hands of French forces, John had been forced to sign Magna Carta and Queen Isabella was in shame.

  4. 24 de nov. de 2019 · John had put aside his first wife, Isabella of Gloucester, in 1199. Isabella of Angoulême was twelve to fourteen years old at her marriage to John in 1200. In 1202, Isabella's father died, and Isabella became Countess of Angouleme in her own right. The marriage of Isabella and John was not an easy one. John was infatuated with his young and ...

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  6. Aymer's widow, Alice, ruled the city of Angoulême until March 1203, when John summoned her to court and granted her a monthly pension of 50 livres d'Anjou in return for her dower rights. She thereafter retired from public life to her estate at La Ferté-Gaucher , where she was living as late as July 1215, when she issued a charter at Provins using the title Countess of Angoulême.

  7. Joan, Queen of Scotland (22 July 1210 – 4 March 1238) 4. Isabella, Holy Roman Empress (1214 – 1 December 1241) 5. Eleanor, Countess of Pembroke (1215 – 13 April 1275) Issue With King John of England, five children, all of whom survived into adulthood: King Henry III of England (1 October 1207 – 16 November 1272).