Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Lusignan dynasty" ¶ 16
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Hugh and X
Only in the time before Hugh Capet took the crown for himself and after the reign of Charles X is the term necessary to identify which.
* 1242 – Battle of Taillebourg: Louis IX of France puts an end to the revolt of his vassals Henry III of England and Hugh X of Lusignan.
From the time of Hugh Capet to Charles X ( 987 – 1830 ), the senior Capets were also the Kings of France.
Henry's advancement of foreign favourites, notably his wife's Savoyard uncles and his own Lusignan half-siblings, the children of his mother's second marriage to Hugh X of Lusignan, was unpopular with his subjects and barons.
In 1220, Isabella married Hugh X of Lusignan, Count of La Marche, by whom she had another nine children.
In the spring of 1220, she married Hugh X of Lusignan, " le Brun ", Seigneur de Luisignan, Count of La Marche, the son of Hugh IX, to whom she had been betrothed before her marriage to King John.
By Hugh X, Isabella had nine more children.
* With Hugh X of Lusignan, Count of La Marche: nine children, all of whom survived into adulthood, including:
Her mother Alice de Lusignan was daughter of Hugh X de Lusignan by Isabella of Angoulême, widow of King John of England, making Isabella niece, in the half-blood, of Henry III of England.
## Joan de Munchensi ( 1230 – 20 September 1307 ) married William of Valence, the fourth son of King John's widow, Isabella of Angoulême, and her second husband, Hugh X of Lusignan, Count of La Marche.
They were encouraged to recover Poitou by their stepfather, Hugh X of Lusignan, but the expedition turned into a military fiasco after Lusignan betrayed them.
After becoming a widow, Isabella subsequently married Hugh X of Lusignan in 1220, and the title was passed to the Lusignan family, counts of Marche.
At the cost of some of the crown's influence in Poitou, Blanche managed to keep the English Queen mother Isabelle, Countess of Angoulême and her second husband Hugh X of Lusignan from supporting the English side.
* Hugh X of Lusignan ( c. 1182 or c. 1195 – c. 1249 )
To counter this rising threat, in that year John X invited Hugh of Provence to be the next king of Italy, sending his envoy to Pisa to be among the first to greet Hugh as he arrived.
Remarried to Hugh X of Lusignan 1220.
│ │ │ │ X Marguerite, daughter of Hugh III, King of Cyprus
X Isabella of Lusignan, daughter of Hugh III of Cyprus
Valence was a half brother of Henry III of England ; his mother was Isabella of Angoulême, the second wife of King John, his father was Hugh X of Lusignan, the count of La Marche, whom Isabelle married in 1220.
He was the fourth son of Isabella of Angoulême, widow of king John of England, and her second husband, Hugh X of Lusignan, Count of La Marche, and was thus a half-brother to Henry III of England, and uncle to Edward I. William was born at Valence, near Lusignan, sometime in the mid-to-late 1220s ( his elder sister, Alice was born 1224, and two elder brothers followed her ).
Isabella of Lusignan ( 1234 – 14 January 1300 ) was a daughter of Hugh X of Lusignan and his wife Isabella of Angoulême, Dowager Queen of England.
She was a younger child of Hugh X de Lusignan, " le Brun ", Seigneur de Lusignan, Count of La Marche and Isabella of Angoulême, widowed Queen-Consort of King John of England.
** Hugh X of Lusignan ( 1220 – 1249 )

Hugh and died
The town's oldest building is the Maguire's stone castle, built by Hugh the Hospitable who died in 1428.
Robert II crowned his son — Hugh Magnus — as King of the Franks at age 10 to secure the succession, but Hugh Magnus rebelled against his father and died fighting him in 1025.
During Louis IX's stay in Acre, Henry I died in 1253, and was succeeded in Cyprus by his infant son Hugh II.
Hugh was technically regent of Jerusalem as well, both for Conrad and for Conrad's son Conradin after Conrad died in 1254.
Plaisance died in 1261, but as her son Hugh II was still underage, Cyprus passed to his cousin Hugh of Antioch-Lusignan, whose mother Isabella of Cyprus, Alice of Champagne and Hugh I of Cyprus ' daughter and Hugh II's aunt, took over the regency in Acre.
The regency in Acre was then claimed by Hugh of Antioch-Lusignan and his cousin Hugh of Brienne, and Hugh II died in 1267 before he reached the age of majority.
Hugh III attempted to re-assert his authority on the mainland by landing at Beirut in 1283, but this was ineffective and he died in Tyre in 1284.
He was succeeded briefly by his son John II, who died soon after in 1285, and was succeeded by his brother, Hugh III's other son Henry II.
From the 12th century Abbot Hugh of Semur ( died 1109 ), Peter Abelard ( died 1142 ), and Geoffrey of Vendome ( died 1132 ) all referred to Mary Magdalene as the sinner who merited the title apostolarum apostola, with the title becoming commonplace during the 12th and 13th centuries.
) He appointed as regents Hugh de Puiset, Bishop of Durham, and William de Mandeville, 3rd Earl of Essex — who soon died and was replaced by Richard's chancellor William Longchamp.
Richard ’ s chief biographer, Jean de Toulouse, writes that when Richard died in 1173 he was still young and so it therefore must be assumed that he entered the Order well into its second period of development, near the end of Hugh ’ s life.
Hugh Cressingham, Edward's treasurer in Scotland, died in the fighting and it is reputed that his body was subsequently flayed and the skin cut into small pieces as tokens of the victory.
His son, Louis the Blind ( 890 – 928 ) lost his sight trying to win the throne of Italy, after which his cousin, Hugh of Italy ( died 947 ) became the Duke of Provence and the Count of Vienne.
Hugh Gaitskell died in January 1963, aged 56, after a sudden flare of Lupus erythematosus, an autoimmune disease, just as the Labour Party had begun to unite and appeared to have a good chance of being elected to government, with the Macmillan government running into trouble.
When Hugh Gaitskell died in January 1963, Callaghan ran to succeed him but came third and the leadership contest was won by Harold Wilson.
This commission was in the hand of Hugh May, who died in February 1684, before the construction finished ; Wren assumed his post and finalized the works.
* Hugh, issue of Azzo's second marriage to Garsend of Maine, inherited the County of Maine, his mother's dowry, but sold it one year later and died without heirs.

Hugh and 1249
Their eldest son Hugh XI of Lusignan succeeded his father as Count of La Marche and Count of Angoulême in 1249.
* Hugh I, Count of Angoulême ( c. 1183 or c. 1195 – c. 1249 )
* Hugh I ( 1220 – 1249 )
* Hugh II ( 1249 – 1260 )
* Hugh I of Angoulême ( c. 1180 – 1249 ), a. k. a. Hugh X of Lusignan
* Hugh V ( 1219 – 1249 )
* Hugh VI ( 1249 – 1260 )
Following the death of Archambaud IX in 1249 on crusade, the title then passed through his daughters ; first, Matilda II ( also known as " Mahaut "), Countess of Nevers, Auxerre and Tonnerre, and second, Agnes of Bourbon, whose husband, John of Burgundy, was the second son of the Duke of Burgundy, Hugh IV, and therefore a male-line descendant of Hugh Capet.
Hugh X de Lusignan, Hugh V of La Marche or Hugh I of Angoulême or Hugues X & V & I de Lusignan ( c. 1183 or c. 1195 – c. 5 June 1249, Angoulême ) succeeded his father Hugh IX as Seigneur de Lusignan and Count of La Marche in November, 1219 and was Count of Angoulême by marriage.

1.236 seconds.