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  1. Charles IV, Duke of Anjou, also Charles of Maine, Count of Le Maine and Guise (1446 – 10 December 1481), was the son of the Angevin prince Charles of Maine, Count of Maine and Isabelle of Luxembourg-Saint-Pol.

  2. Charles I (early 1226/1227 – 7 January 1285), commonly called Charles of Anjou or Charles d'Anjou, was a member of the royal Capetian dynasty and the founder of the second House of Anjou.

  3. May 4, 2019 · Charles IV d' Anjou, Duke of Maine & Anjou, Comte de Guise & Provence, King of Sicily & Jerusalem married Jeanne of Lorraine, daughter of Frederick VI, Count Vaudemont, Baron Joinville, Seigneur de Lambesc, Suse, Verbenne, Rumigny, & Boves and Jolanta de Anjou, on 21 January 1474 at Troyes, France.

    • Male
    • Jeanne (Lorraine) D'anjou
  4. The Angevin kings of England ( / ˈændʒɪvɪn /; "from Anjou ") were Henry II and his sons, Richard I and John, who ruled England from 1154 to 1216. With ancestral lands in Anjou, they were related to the Norman kings of England through Matilda, the daughter of Henry I, and Henry II's mother.

  5. Summary. Charles of Anjou emphasises the losses which he would suffer as a result of his pious action. He indicates that the deficit will be made up by a set of taxes which the leading men of the country have agreed to. The technique of an ‘expulsion tax’ is, as Professor Chazan observed, new.

    • Robin R. Mundill
    • 1998
  6. Charles I (Charles of Anjou), 1227–85, king of Naples and Sicily (126685), count of Anjou and Provence, youngest brother of King Louis IX of France. He took part in Louis's crusades to Egypt (1248) and Tunisia (1270).

  7. Charles I (born March 1226—died Jan. 7, 1285, Foggia, Kingdom of Naples [Italy]) was the king of Naples and Sicily (1266–85), the first of the Angevin dynasty, and creator of a great but short-lived Mediterranean empire.

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