enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Hugh X of Lusignan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugh_X_of_Lusignan

    Hugh X de Lusignan or Hugh V of La Marche (c. 1183 – c. 5 June 1249, Angoulême) was Seigneur de Lusignan and Count of La Marche in November 1219 and was Count of Angoulême by marriage. He was the son of Hugh IX .

  3. Hugh of Lusignan (claimant) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugh_of_Lusignan_(claimant)

    Hugh was thus disinherited by this action. [3] When Hugh IV died in October 1359, Hugh brought the matter of his claim before Pope Innocent VI, notably with the support of the Dauphin Charles, then regent of the Kingdom of France (and husband of Joanna of Bourbon his first cousin). The Pope received him favorably and sent ambassadors to Cyprus ...

  4. Hugh VIII of Lusignan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugh_VIII_of_Lusignan

    Hugh and Burgondie had: Hugh de Lusignan, Co-Seigneur de Lusignan in 1164 (c. 1141–1169), [2] married before 1162 Orengarde N, who died in 1169, leaving two sons who were infants at the time of his death Hugh IX of Lusignan [2] Raoul I de Lusignan, Count of Eu [2] Robert de Lusignan, died young c. 1150

  5. Hugh IX of Lusignan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugh_IX_of_Lusignan

    Hugh IX "le Brun" of Lusignan (1163/1168 – 5 November 1219) [1] was the grandson of Hugh VIII. His father, also Hugh (b. c. 1141), was the co-seigneur of Lusignan from 1164, marrying a woman named Orengarde before 1162 or about 1167 and dying in 1169.

  6. Hugh of Lusignan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugh_of_Lusignan

    Hugh IX (died 1219) Hugh X (died 1249) Hugh XI (died 1260) Hugh XII (died btw. 1270–1282) Hugh XIII (died 1303) Hugh IX (died 1219) Hugh X (died 1249) Hugh XI (died 1260) Hugh XII (died 1282) Hugh XIII (died 1303) Hugh of Lusignan (claimant) (died 1385), Prince of Galilee and claimant to the Kingdom of Cyprus. Hugues Lancelot de Lusignan ...

  7. Hugh XI of Lusignan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugh_XI_of_Lusignan

    Hugh XI de Lusignan or Hugh VI of La Marche (c. 1221 – 6 April 1250) was a 13th-century French nobleman. He succeeded his mother Isabelle of Angoulême, former queen of England, as Count of Angoulême in 1246. He likewise succeeded his father Hugh X as Count of La Marche in 1249. Hugh XI was the half-brother of King Henry III of England. [1]

  8. Hugh III of Lusignan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugh_III_of_Lusignan

    He confirmed the donation by one of his vassals of the church of Mezeaux to the abbey of Saint-Cyprien and himself granted the abbey the woodland and the public road between Lusignan and Poitiers. He may have been intimate with the comital court of Poitou , for the Duchess Emma , wife of William IV of Aquitaine , imposed a tax on the abbey of ...

  9. Hugh I of Lusignan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugh_I_of_Lusignan

    Hugh I (est. 885-930) (fl. early tenth century), called Venator (Latin for the Hunter), was the first Lord of Lusignan.He is mentioned in the Chronicle of Saint-Maixent.In later years the Lusignans held the forest from the east of their castle from the Bishop of Poitiers suggest that he held his office from that prelate.