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  1. Jan 22, 2022 · The fact that Isabelle did not give birth to her first child until 1207, when she was in her late teens, puts the lie to these sources, suggesting that she and John did not consummate the marriage in the first few years.

  2. Jul 28, 2016 · John was the type to ignore political contracts when it suited his needs, and so he whisked her away to Angoulême where the couple was quickly married before returning to England for a formal crowning and anointing ceremony at Westminster. Hugh did not like this and complained to Philip Augustus about this breach of contract.

  3. Although the couple were happy together, this marriage caused problems for the two both in France and England, for former queens were not supposed to remarry without permission of the Parliament. However, the marriage stood, and they remained together for almost 30 years.

  4. Jun 4, 2020 · Isabella was still young, lovely, and full of life, and she was not inclined to spend the rest of her life as a widow. As she remarried without the consent of the Royal Council in England, the nobles confiscated her dower lands and ceased the regular payment of her pension from the state treasury.

  5. Isabella of Angoulême ( c. 1188–1246), queen of King John. Isabella was the second wife of King John and was about 12 at the time of their marriage in August 1200.

  6. Isabella’s seeming absence from the medieval sources that led historians to assume she was excluded from Johns court, restricted in her activities and unable to exercise power during his reign.

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  8. May 15, 2015 · In December, she was moved to Gloucester, then Winchester in May of 1215 and on to Marlborough and Bristol in 1216. Wales was in a state of rebellion and uprising during this time too and this could be why she needed to be carefully safeguarded and watched over by armed men.

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