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Page "Eleanor, Fair Maid of Brittany" ¶ 6
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1213 and John
He spent time in England ( John of England knighted him at Clerkenwell Priory in 1213 ) before succeeding to the kingdom on the death of his father on 4 December 1214, being crowned at Scone on 6 December the same year.
John hoped to exploit this advantage by invading himself late in 1213, but baronial discontent again delayed his invasion plans until early 1214, in what would prove to be his final Continental campaign.
John simply tightened his existing measures and accrued significant sums from the income of vacant sees and abbeys: one 1213 estimate, for example, suggested the church had lost an estimated 100, 000 marks ( equivalent to £ 66, 666 at the time ) to John.
By 1213, though, John was increasingly worried about the threat of French invasion.
John finally negotiated terms for a reconciliation, and the papal terms for submission were accepted in the presence of the papal legate Pandulph in May 1213 at the Templar Church at Dover.
Pope Innocent III ( d. 1216 ; mural 1219 ) Some barons began to conspire against King John in 1209 and 1212 ; promises made to the northern barons and John's submission to universal rule of the papacy in 1213 delayed a French invasion.
No sooner had the treaty been ratified in May 1213 than Pandolfo announced to Philip that he would have to abandon his expedition against John, since to attack a faithful vassal of the Holy See would constitute a mortal sin.
In March 1208, Pope Innocent III placed England under interdict and at the close of 1212, after repeated negotiations had failed, he passed sentence of deposition against John, committing the execution of the sentence to Philip II of France in January 1213.
In May 1213 King John yielded and thus in July, Stephen ( who since his consecration had lived at Pontigny Abbey in Burgundy ) and his fellow exiles returned to England.
The Interdict would stand until 1213 when John finally accepted Innocent's choice of Stephen Langton as Archbishop of Canterbury.
# John ( b. and d. Lorrez-le-Bocage, 23 January 1213 ), twin of Alphonse.
King John visited Shern Hall ( Shernhall Street ), in 1213 ; the building survived until 1896.
In 1209 he became governor of Ireland for John, and spent until 1213 attempting to impose royal government on the Anglo-Norman barons and the native Irish in that country.
In May 1213, John and Innocent finally resolved the dispute over Langton's election to Canterbury, and part of the settlement was that John gave Ireland and England to Innocent and received them back from the pope, making John a papal vassal.
The first English monarch to be recorded as giving gifts of small silver coins to the poor is John who in 1213 gave 13 pence to each of 13 poor men at a ceremony in Rochester — the number being symbolic of the Twelve Apostles together with either Jesus or an angel.
In 1213 Walter de Lacy wrote to John asking to return to England, and by 1214 his property in England and Wales ( which had been under the control of Engelard de Cigogné ) except for the borough and castle of Ludlow had been returned to him.
In 1213 King John granted them a fair to celebrate the feast of St Nicholas ( May 8 – 9 ).
The village gets its name from the de Bosco family ( the French version of which was ' de Bois ') and by 1213 in the reign of King John a William du Bois was holding the manor.
Local folklore suggests it was King John who provided the name ; there is certainly evidence of King John granting the manor at Kingshill to Hugh de Gournay in 1213, although this same document states that the land was previously possessed by Geoffrey fitzPeter.
The hamlet name ' Kingshill ' means a hill in possession of the king, which local folklore suggests was King John ; there is certainly evidence of King John granting the manor at Kingshill to Hugh de Gournay in 1213, although this same document states that the land was previously possessed by Geoffrey fitzPeter.

1213 and took
Due to pressure from the Pope and from Ingeborg's brother, King Valdemar II of Denmark ( ruled 1202 – 41 ), Philip finally took Isambour back as his Queen in 1213.
The invasion was abandoned, and in 1213 Llywelyn took the castles of Deganwy and Rhuddlan.
In 1213 he took part in the siege of the castle of Este, which belonged to his father's archenemy, marquis Azzo VI of Este, who died in 1212, and later to his son Aldobrandino.

1213 and Eleanor
* Eleanor, Countess of Vermandois ( 1148 / 49 – 1213 ), married four times.

1213 and Pierre
Pierre Mauclerc ( c. 1190 – 6 July 1250 ), also known as Peter of Dreux or Pierre de Dreux, was duke of Brittany jure uxoris from 1213 to 1221, then regent of the duchy ( for his minor son ) from 1221 to 1237 as well as Earl of Richmond from 1219 to 1235.
Pierre married Alix, and on 27 January 1213, paid homage to the king for Brittany.
File: Blason Pierre Ier de Bretagne. svg | Coat of arms from 1213 onwards ( Checky or and azure within a bordure gules, a canton ermine ).

1213 and I
** Peter I ( 1213 – 1237 )
At a council of churchmen at Westminster on 25 August 1213, to which certain barons were invited, he read the text of the charter of Henry I and called for its renewal.
James I the Conqueror ( Catalan: Jaume el Conqueridor, Aragonese: Chaime lo Conqueridor, Spanish: Jaime el Conquistador, Occitan: Jacme lo Conquistaire ; 2 February 1208 – 27 July 1276 ) was the King of Aragon, Count of Barcelona, and Lord of Montpellier from 1213 to 1276.
Peter II the Catholic ( Huesca, 1178 – Murèth 12 September 1213 ) was the King of Aragon ( as Pedro II ) and Count of Barcelona ( as Pere I ) from 1196 to 1213.
In 1213, Sint Geertruidenberg ( English: " Saint Gertrude's Mountain ") received city rights from Count William I of Holland.
A document dating from 1213 AD proves the presence of Henry I, Duke of Brabant, possibly in a wooden fortification.
* Count Peter I of Barcelona = Catalonia, i. e. King Peter II the Catholic of Aragon ( 1178 – 1213 )
* Peter II of Aragon ( I of Barcelona ), b. 1174, killed at the Battle of Muret, September 12, 1213
Geoffrey Fitz Peter, Earl of Essex ( c. 1162 – 1213 ) was a prominent member of the government of England during the reigns of Richard I and John.
In mid-January 1213, William I of Cagliari led a coalition of anti-Visconti forces to victory in battle near Massa over the combined forces of Lucca and the Visconti under Ubaldo.
* James I of Aragon ( 1208 – 1276 ), surnamed the Conqueror, was the king of Aragon, count of Barcelona and Lord of Montpellier from 1213 to 1276
Frederick II ( died October 10, 1213 ) was the duke of Lorraine from 1206 to his death, son of Frederick I and Ludmilla, daughter of Mieszko III the Old, of the Piast Dynasty.
Theobald I () ( c. 1191 – February 17, 1220 ) was the duke of Lorraine from 1213 to his death.
* James I of Aragon ( 1213 – 1276 ): Peire Cardinal, Bernart Sicart de Maruejols, Guiraut Riquier, At de Mons
# Casimir I of Kuyavia ( born between 1210 and 1213 – died 14 Dec 1267 ) Prince of Kuyavia ( 1247 – 1267 )
# Siemowit I of Masovia ( c. 1213 – 24 June 1262 ), succeeded eldest brother as Duke of Masovia ( 1248 – 1262 )
King John I of England ( reigned 1199-1216 ) is credited with having erected a castle at Roscrea in 1213, of which a circular tower and some sections of wall are still extant ; such castles were built as part of a policy to consolidate the Norman conquest of the midlands.
* Muireadhach I, Earl of Menteith ( d. 1213 )
* William I, Lord of Douglas ( b. b. 1174 – c. 1213 )
* James I of Aragon 1213 – 1276
Bishop Bruno II from 1213 to 1218 established the monastery St. Petri in Bautzen, which was richly endowed by king Přemysl Otakar I and his successors ; Queen Kunigunda in 1234 donated the Cistercian monastery of St. Marienthal, which was subjected to the diocese of Prague in 1244, and Bernhard Kamenz in 1248 founded the second Cistercian monastery of St. Marienstern in Kamenz.

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