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  1. Noble family. House of Hohenstaufen. Father. Otto I, Count of Burgundy. Mother. Margaret, Countess of Blois. Joan I (1191–1205), also called Joanna of Hohenstaufen, was ruling Countess of Burgundy from 1200 to 1205. She was daughter of Otto I, Count of Burgundy, and Margaret, Countess of Blois .

  2. Joan I: 1191 1205 13 January 1200 to 1205 his daughter Beatrice II: 1192 7 May 1231 1205 to 7 May 1231 her sister Otto II: 1180 7 May 1234 21 June 1208 to 7 May 1231 her husband and co-ruler

  3. Joan of Burgundy, or variants, may refer to: Joan I, Countess of Burgundy (1191-1205) Jeanne de Bourgogne (1200–1223), daughter of Odo III, Duke of Burgundy; Joan II, Countess of Burgundy (c.1291–1330), Queen of France; Joan the Lame (1293–1349), Queen of France; Joan III, Countess of Burgundy (1308–1347)

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  5. Joan was the daughter of Duke Robert II of Burgundy and Agnes of France. Her older sister, Margaret, was the first wife of King Louis X of France. Joan married Philip of Valois, Louis's cousin, in July 1313. From 1314 to 1328, they were Count and Countess of Maine; from 1325, they were also Count and Countess of Valois and Anjou.

  6. Joan of Burgundy (June 24, 1293 – September 12, 1348), also known as Joan the Lame, Queen consort of France, and first wife of Philip VI. While Philip VI fought in the Hundred Years War, Joan acted as Regent. From 1330, she was Countess of Burgundy in her own right.

  7. / / First there was Rome. The history of Burgundy as a ‘wine region’ dates back two millennia to the Roman conquest of Gaul (roughly modern-day France) in 52 B.C. The Gaul’s were already producing wine and the Romans quickly recognized the region as highly suitable for grape cultivation.

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