Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. People also ask

  2. Mar 22, 2024 · Louis VII was a Capetian king of France who pursued a long rivalry, marked by recurrent warfare and continuous intrigue, with Henry II of England. In 1131 Louis was anointed as successor to his father, Louis VI, and in 1137 he became the sole ruler at his father’s death.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. On 6 January 1169, Henry and his two eldest sons, met with Louis VII at Montmirail, Maine. The resulting Treaty of Montmirail was to have long term consequences for all the members of Henry's family. In the treaty, Henry divided his domains between his sons and betrothed Prince Richard to Louis' daughter Alys .

  4. The reason for the rush had a lot to do with her ex. Eleanor had been married in 1137 to Louis VII, just days before he became King of France. She had brought the vast Aquitaine to the French crown, but after years of marriage, the royal couple had only produced two daughters; not the male heir Louis required.

  5. Mar 5, 2020 · Eleanor outlived most of her children: her two daughters with King Louis VII; her sons William, Henry, Geoffrey, and Richard; and her daughters Matilda and Joan—all died before their mother.

  6. Louis VII had been at odds with the English King since the spring of 1152, when Henry (then Count Henry of Anjou) married Eleanor of Aquitaine, the French King’s ex-wife. 68 In 1154, in addition to being the greatest landholder in France, Henry became the King of England.

  7. Eager to inherit, his three eldest sons rebelled against him with the help of king Louis VII of France. Henry emerged victorious and cemented his status in Western Europe.

  8. Mar 29, 2019 · Henry became king of England in 1154 CE and Eleanor his queen, but she was not able to dominate Henry as easily as she had Louis. Their marriage was a series of battles as Eleanor tried to control her husband and he resisted through countless affairs.