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Les Très Riches Heures du duc de Berry, March: the Château de Lusignan. The Château de Lusignan (in Lusignan, Vienne département, France), of which hardly any traces remain, was the ancestral seat of the House of Lusignan, Poitevin Marcher Lords, who distinguished themselves in the First Crusade and became the royal family of the Kingdom of Jerusalem, the Kingdom of Cyprus and the Armenian ...
The House of Lusignan (/ ˈ l uː z ɪ n. j ɒ n / LOO-zin-yon; French:) was a royal house of French origin, which at various times ruled several principalities in Europe and the Levant, including the kingdoms of Jerusalem, Cyprus, and Armenia, from the 12th through the 15th centuries during the Middle Ages.
husband's death: after 1151 Raymond IV: Helie of Burgundy: Odo I, Duke of Burgundy 1080 June 1095 28 February 1105 husband's accession: 21 April 1112 husband's death: 28 February 1141 Bertrand: Faydive d'Uzès: Raymond, Lord of Uzès - before 16 September 1125 16 April 1148 husband's death - Alfonso Jordan: Constance of France: Louis VI of ...
Peter de Lusignan (bef. 1155 – aft. December, 1174), witnessed a charter in Antioch in 1174, but is otherwise not documented. He died probably as a priest. Guy of Lusignan, born about 1150, died 1194. He was regent and afterwards King of Jerusalem. After the loss of Jerusalem he became Lord of Cyprus. [2] Aimery of Lusignan, born about 1153 ...
A view of the gate tower of the Lusignan palace. The Lusignan Palace was a Gothic-style royal residence in Nicosia, Cyprus, built in the 15th century.Serving as the seat of power for the Kings of Cyprus, and later for Venetian and Ottoman governors, the palace stood prominently on the northwest side of Sarayönü Square.
Hugh III of Lusignan: 4. Hugh IV of Lusignan: 9. Arsende de Vivonne: 2. Hugh V of Lusignan: 5. Audearde: 1. Hugues VI "Le Diable" de Lusignan, Comte de la Marche: 12. Audebert I Comte de la Marche et du Perigord: 6. Bernard Comte de la Marché: 13. Adalmode de Limoges: 3. Almodis of La Marche: 14. Cadelon IV Vicomte d'Aulnay: 7. Amélie d ...
Opening of the Conventum in the earliest manuscript. The rubricated initial A begins the account.. The Conventum is a Latin text from around 1030 that narrates the relations between Duke William V of Aquitaine and Lord Hugh IV of Lusignan in the preceding twenty years.
The Lusignan coat of arms on the foundation inscription of the Cathedral of Saint John in Nicosia, Cyprus. He married twice, firstly in 1343 to Constance of Sicily (died after April 19, 1344), daughter of Frederick III of Sicily and Eleanor of Anjou, without issue, and secondly in 1350 to Alice of Ibelin, by whom he was the father of: