Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Isabella, Countess of Vertus. Isabella of France (1 October 1348 – 11 September 1372) was a French princess and member of the House of Valois, as well as the wife of Gian Galeazzo Visconti, who after her death became Duke of Milan .

  2. Aug 15, 2020 · Isabella of Gloucester was finally allowed to remarry in 1214; a letters patent issued by John on 28 January 1214 informed all the knights and tenants of the honour of Gloucester that ‘we have given Isabella, countess of Gloucester, our kinswoman’ in marriage to Geoffrey de Mandeville, Earl of Essex. 5 Mandeville had to pay the massive sum of 20,000 marks for the privilege of marrying the ...

  3. People also ask

  4. Jun 4, 2020 · By Olivia Longueville In Angevin Blog, Medieval Blog Posted June 4, 2020 4 Comment (s) Isabella of Angoulême, second wife of King John of England, died on the 4th of June 1246 at Fontevraud Abbey, where she was buried in the abbey’s churchyard, as if seeking atonement for her misdeeds. Years after her death, her eldest son with John, King ...

  5. Dec 8, 2018 · A younger daughter of Robert de Brus, 6th Earl of Annandale, and Marjorie, Countess of Carrick in her own right. It may be that she took care of her brother’s daughter, Marjorie, after Robert’s first wife, Isabella of Mar, died giving birth to the baby girl. Her story has long been intertwined with that of her brother.

  6. Circa 1188 - 31 May 1246. Isabella of Angoulême was the daughter and heiress of Aymer Taillefer, Count of Angoulême and Alice of Courtenay, who was the sister of Peter II of Courtenay, Emperor of Constantinople and granddaughter of King Louis VI of France. Through her connections with the Courtenay family, Isabella was related to the kings of ...

  7. Isabella of France was a French princess and member of the House of Valois, as well as the wife of Gian Galeazzo Visconti, who after her death became Duke of Milan. Introduction Isabella, Countess of Vertus

  8. Jan 10, 2019 · Indeed, sources for Countess Isabella’s career are extremely limited: references to her in the History, which was commissioned by William the Younger, according to the poem, shortly after the Marshal’s death; Footnote 5 a very few acta, and references to her religious patronage, especially of Tintern Abbey in Wales and a number of religious ...

  1. People also search for