Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Marie of Ponthieu (17 April 1199 – 21 September 1250) was suo jure Countess of Ponthieu and Countess of Montreuil, ruling from 1221 to 1250. Biography. Marie was the daughter of William IV of Ponthieu and Alys, Countess of the Vexin, and granddaughter of King Louis VII of France by his second wife Constance of Castile. [1] .

    • Biography
    • Biographie
    • Sources
    • Acknowledgments

    Marie was the daughter of William III, Count of Ponthieu and Alice, Countess of the Vexin, and granddaughter of King Louis VII of France by his second wife Constance of Castile.As her father's only surviving child, Marie succeeded him, ruling as Countess of Ponthieu and Montreuil from 1221 to 1251. She married before September 1208 Simon de Dammart...

    Marie de Ponthieu (av.1199 † 1250), fut comtesse de Ponthieu de 1221 à 1250. Elle était fille de Guillaume II, comte de Ponthieu, et d'Adèle de France. Probablement sous l'influence de Philippe II Auguste, elle épousa en septembre 1208 Simon de Dammartin (1180 † 1239), déjà comte d'Aumale. Vers 1211, Simon de Dammartin et son frère Renaud trahirent...

    G. W. Watson, "The Seize Quartiers of Eleanor (of Castile) Queen Consort to Edward I." The Genealogist New Series XI (1895) Internet Archive Table XIII p. 31, Additions to table XIII...
    Re: Alais de France. John Carmi Parsons, Soc Gen-Medieval, 18 Feb 1999.
    Re: Norman/Angevin queries. John Carmi Parsons, Soc Gen-Medieval, 17 Feb 1999.

    Thank you to Andrew Whitefor creating WikiTree profile Ponthieu-86 through the import of APW_2013-03-26.ged on Mar 26, 2013.

    • Female
  2. Apr 26, 2022 · Marie of Ponthieu (17 April 1199 – 1251) was the Countess of Ponthieu and Countess of Montreuil, ruling from 1221 to 1251. Marie was the daughter of William IV of Ponthieu and Alys, Countess of the Vexin, and granddaughter of King Louis VII of France by his second wife Constance of Castile.

    • "Jeanne", "de Alencon"
    • April 17, 1196
  3. Jan 10, 2019 · This article counters the standard, domesticating picture of female literary patronage in the Central Middle Ages by examining the patronage of an inheriting countess of a small, but strategically located, county: Marie, countess of Ponthieu, c. 1196–c. 1250.

    • Kathy M. Krause
    • 2019
  4. May 13, 2017 · The first was 1254, when Eleanor, the prospective countess, married an Englishman. The next was 1279, when she suc-ceeded to her inheritance, and her husband with her. The county now became a mere appendage of a kingdom, governed by an absentee. Eleanor's mother, Joan, was the child of Simon de Dammartin, count of Aumale, and Marie, countess of ...

  5. Marie was the daughter of William IV of Ponthieu and Alys, Countess of the Vexin, and granddaughter of King Louis VII of France by his second wife Constance of Castile. As her father's only surviving child, Marie succeeded him, ruling as Countess of Ponthieu and Montreuil.

  6. how artificial than narrative structure is, shaping and selecting, obscuring and freezing. This essay examines the medieval urge to refigure historical events by imposing a pre-existing narrative structure upon them, an act I will call. 'narratizing.'. As Sexton's poem shows, 'narratizing' is not merely a.

  1. People also search for