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  1. Beatrice of Falkenburg (c. 1254 – 17 October 1277), also referred to as Beatrix of Valkenburg, was the third spouse of Richard of Cornwall, and as such nominally queen of Germany. She was 15 years old when she married the 60-year-old English prince, who proved to be a very devoted husband.

  2. 102008159. Source citation. Daughter of Dietrich II de Falkenburg, seigneur of Montjoye and his first wife, Berta, daughter of Walram IV, Duke of Limburg. Third and last wife of Richard of England, Plantagenet, of Cornwall, married June 16th of 1269 in Kaiserslautern, Germany, when she was 16 years old and Richard was 60. They had no children....

  3. Falkestein, Beatrice von (c. 1253–1277) Queen of the Romans. Name variations: Beatrix of Falkenburg; queen of Germany. Born around 1253 at Falkenburg Castle, Germany; died on October 17, 1277; buried at Church of Franciscan Friars Minor, Oxford, Oxfordshire, England; daughter of Theodore von Falkestein, count of Falkenburg, or William de ...

  4. Beatrice of Falkenburg (c. 1254 – 17 October 1277), also referred to as Beatrix of Valkenburg, was the third spouse of Richard of Cornwall, and as such nominally queen of the Romans. She was 15 years old when she married the 60-year-old English prince, who proved to be a very devoted husband.

  5. first lord of Falkenburg, whilst Heinsberg was given to his daughter Agnes, who married Henry of Sponheim and died in 1267. It is not clear whether Isalda or Beatrice was the mother of Dietrich I of Falkenburg, but Engelbert of Falkenburg, arch-bishop of Cologne from 1261 to 1274, was definitely an issue of the second marriage.2

  6. Beatrice of Falkenburg (c. 1254 – 17 October 1277), also referred to as Beatrix of Valkenburg, was the third spouse of Richard of Cornwall, and as such nominally queen of Germany. She was 15 years old when she married the 60-year-old English prince, who proved to be a very devoted husband.

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  8. It represents Beatrix of Falkenburg, wife of Richard, Earl of Cornwall, King of the Romans and brother of King Henry III; and it is a very valuable example of English art of the thirteenth century.

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