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  1. Isabella II (1212 – 4 May 1228), sometimes erroneously called Yolanda, was a princess of French origin, the daughter of Maria, the queen-regnant of Jerusalem, and her husband, John of Brienne. She was reigning Queen of Jerusalem from 1212 until her death in 1228.

  2. Apr 30, 2024 · Isabella II was the queen of the Latin kingdom of Jerusalem (1212–28) and consort of the Holy Roman emperor Frederick II. The daughter of John of Brienne and Mary (Marie) of Montferrat, Isabella inherited the throne on her mother’s death in 1212, but her father ruled as regent and guardian and even.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. Mar 28, 2016 · By 1223 Isabella was already the subject of marriage negotiations. Frederick II, King of Germany and Sicily, later Holy Roman Emperor, agreed to go on a crusade but only as the King of Jerusalem. Isabella was then around 13 years old, Frederick was a 29-year-old widower.

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  5. Apr 28, 2022 · Genealogy for Isabella II / Yolande de Brienne (Brienne), Queen of Jerusalem, Holy Roman Empress (c.1212 - 1228) family tree on Geni, with over 250 million profiles of ancestors and living relatives.

  6. Sep 10, 2018 · Frederick was finally made Holy Roman Emperor in 1220 CE and he acquired a more personal connection to the Middle East when, in November 1225 CE, he married Isabella II, the heiress to the throne of the Kingdom of Jerusalem. The emperor would, after all, travel to the Levant and take the Kingdom of Jerusalem, throne and all, for himself ...

    • Mark Cartwright
  7. Isabella II (1212 – 4 May 1228), sometimes erroneously called Yolanda, was a princess of French origin, the daughter of Maria, the queen-regnant of Jerusalem, and her husband, John of Brienne. She was reigning Queen of Jerusalem from 1212 until her death in 1228.

  8. Dec 2, 2016 · Shortly after her sister’s death, in the middle of a November night, Isabella, Princess of Jerusalem, was dragged from the tent and bed she shared with her husband Humphrey de Toron, and taken into the custody of the leading prelates of the church present at the siege of Acre.

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