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    • Eight children

      • The royal couple had eight children, including the future James II, and Margaret of Scotland, future spouse of Louis XI of France.
      en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Joan_Beaufort,_Queen_of_Scots
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  2. Joan's son Philip became a ward of the King. She had three children with King John, two girls and an unnamed son, all of whom died young. Joan died in 1360. Her possessions were inherited by her son. Issue. By her first husband, Philip, Joan had the following issue:

    • Marguerite d'Évreux
    • Auvergne
  3. Joan I (8 May 1326 – 29 September 1360, Chateau d'Argilly) was ruling Countess of Auvergne and Boulogne from 1332 to 1360 and Queen of France by her marriage to King John II. Life. She was the daughter of William XII, Count of Auvergne and Boulogne, by his wife, Margaret, a sister of Philip III of Navarre. She inherited the counties of ...

  4. Joan Beaufort (c. 1404 – 15 July 1445) was Queen of Scotland from 1424 to 1437 as the spouse of King James I of Scotland. During part of the minority of her son James II (from 1437 to 1439), she served as the regent of Scotland.

  5. Joan I of Auvergne was the daughter of William XII, Count of Auvergne and Boulogne, by his wife, Marguerite d'Évreux. She was Queen consort of France by her marriage to King John II. She inherited the counties of Auvergne and Boulogne after the death of her father.

  6. Blanche of Boulogne (13261360)Countess of Auvergne. Name variations: sometimes referred to as Jeanne of Boulogne or Joan of Boulogne. Born on May 8, 1326; died on September 29, 1360, at Château d'Argilly; daughter of Robert of Auvergne; married Philip Capet (d. 1346, son of Eudes IV of Burgundy), on September 26, 1338; became second wife of ...

  7. Joan I (14 January 1273 – 31 March/2 April 1305) (Basque: Joana, Spanish: Juana) was ruling Queen of Navarre and Countess of Champagne from 1274 until 1305. She was also Queen of France by marriage to King Philip IV. She founded the College of Navarre in Paris in 1305. Joan never ruled Navarre in person, it being overseen by French governors.

  8. Joan I (born 1326—died May 22, 1382, Lucania, Kingdom of Naples [Italy]) was the countess of Provence and queen of Naples (1343–82) who defended her claim as well as that of the house of Anjou to the throne of Naples, only to lose it to Charles of Durazzo ( Charles III of Naples). Beautiful and intelligent, she was also a patron of the ...

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