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  1. A new truce was agreed on 31 March 1325. According to it, Charles IV was to be allowed to go into nominal occupation of what was left of the Duchy of Aquitaine, with French officials installed in the coastal towns of Aquitaine, and real control would remain with Edward II's garrisons. The parts that the French had conquered in the previous year ...

  2. Charles also renewed war with England by invading Aquitaine; the peace of 1327 was the great triumph of his reign, giving him a generous land settlement and 50,000 marks. This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica .

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
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  4. Apr 5, 2023 · Published: April 5, 2023 at 2:18 PM. When King Charles IV of France died in 1328 with no surviving children to his name, the Capetian dynasty that had ruled for more than 300 years came to an abrupt end.

  5. Background Family tree showing background to the dispute. When Charles IV of France died in 1328, the nearest male in line to the throne was Edward III of England. Edward had inherited his right through his mother Isabella, the sister of the dead king; but the question arose of whether she should be able to transmit a right that she, as a woman, did not possess as only men could be monarch.

  6. Charles IV, born on 18/19 June 1294, was the last monarch from the direct Capetian line to rule as King of France and Navarre, reigning from 1322 until his death in 1328. Known as ‘the Fair’ in France and ‘the Bald’ in Navarre, he was Philip IV’s third son and earned a reputation for being conservative and rigid in defending his ...

  7. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › PonthieuPonthieu - Wikipedia

    1836. Preceded by. Succeeded by. West Francia. Kingdom of France. Today part of. Hauts-de-France. Ponthieu ( [pɔ̃.tjø], Latin: Pagus Pontivi) was one of six feudal counties that eventually merged to become part of the Province of Picardy, in northern France. [1] Its chief town is Abbeville .

  8. 10 Henry III of England and Jeanne of Ponthieu; 11 Plaisance of Cyprus and Balian; 12 Alfonso III of Portugal and Mathilda of Boulogne; 13 Jaume I of Aragon and Teresa; 14 Charles IV of France and Blanche: the law of godparenthood; 15 Charles IV and Blanche: the annulment process; 16 Maximilian I, Anne of Brittany and Charles VIII of France

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