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  1. Ingeborg of Denmark ( French: Ingeburge; 1174 – 29 July 1237) was Queen of France by marriage to Philip II of France. She was a daughter of Valdemar I of Denmark and Sofia of Minsk. [1] Marriage. Ingeborg was married to Philip II Augustus of France on 14 August 1193, [2] after the death of Philip's first wife Isabelle of Hainaut (d. 1190).

  2. Princess Ingeborg of Denmark (Ingeborg Charlotte Caroline Frederikke Louise; 2 August 1878 – 12 March 1958), was a Princess of Sweden by marriage to Prince Carl, Duke of Västergötland. Princess Ingeborg was a daughter of Frederick VIII of Denmark and Louise of Sweden, she grew up in Copenhagen as a Danish princess.

  3. Apr 20, 2015 · Ingeborg was born circa 1175 as the daughter of Valdemar I of Denmark and Sofia of Minsk. In 1193 she was married to Philip II of France. He had been married before and was about ten years older than her. His first wife was Isabella of Hainaut, who had died at the age of just 19 after giving birth to her second and third child, twin boys, who ...

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  5. Ingeborg Eriksdotter (c. 1244 – 24/26 March 1287) was Queen of Norway and the wife of King Magnus VI. She was born a Danish princess, daughter of Eric IV of Denmark . As queen dowager , she played an important part in politics during the minority of her son King Eirik II of Norway in 1280-82.

    • 11 September 1261
    • Estridsen
  6. Apr 1, 2016 · Philip selected Ingeborg of Denmark. Ingeborg was born circa 1175, the daughter of King Valdemar I the Great of Denmark and his second wife, the Russian Princess Sofia, daughter of Volodar Glevoitz, Prince of Minsk. Ingeborg’s brothers would in turn become Kings of Denmark, Knut VI and Valdemar II. We know little of Ingeborg’s upbringing.

  7. Aug 14, 2018 · A Danish princess by birth and a Queen of France by marriage, Ingeborg of Denmark tends to be forgotten about. The great Royal marriage battle between King and Queen that most people remember, is the one between King Henry VIII of England and his first wife Catherine of Aragon. But Ingeborg's own battle was not only far more protracted, it was ...

  8. These words, recorded in the Gesta Innocentii III Papae, are perhaps the most famous of Ingeborg of Denmark, queen of France (1174–1237). They were exclaimed in a moment of anguish at the ecclesiastical council of Compiègne on 5 November 1193, when her marriage to Philip II Augustus, king of France (1165–1223), was deemed illegitimate.

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