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  2. Jeanne of Bar, Countess of Marle and Soissons - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeanne_of_Bar,_Countess_of...

    Jeanne was born in 1415, the only child of Robert of Bar, Count of Marle and Soissons, Sire d'Oisy (1390- 25 October 1415), [1] whose own mother was Marie de Coucy, Countess of Soissons, granddaughter of English King Edward III of England. Her mother was Jeanne de Béthune, Viscountess of Meaux (c.1397- late 1450). [2]

  3. Siege of Soissons - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Siege_of_Soissons

    Soissons had already fallen to the Prussians in 1814 during the Napoleonic Wars. [5] After the Battle of Sedan, the Maas Group of Germany has continued on in its way to Paris, and the money infantry of Corps No. IV of Prussia, a portion of the general Army Group, this came before the siege of the fortress Soissons on September 11, 1870.

  4. Jacquetta of Luxembourg - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jacquetta_of_Luxembourg

    Jacquetta of Luxembourg (1415 or 1416 – 30 May 1472) was a prominent figure in the Wars of the Roses.Through her short-lived first marriage to the Duke of Bedford, brother of King Henry V, she was firmly allied to the House of Lancaster.

  5. Counts of Soissons - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Counts_of_Soissons

    This is a list of those who bore the title Count of Soissons (French: Comte de Soissons) and ruled Soissons and its civitas or diocese as a county in the Middle Ages. The title continued in use into modern times , but without ties to the actual Soissonnais.

  6. Battle of Agincourt - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Agincourt

    King Henry V at the Battle of Agincourt, 1415, by Sir John Gilbert in the 19th century. Despite advancing through what the French monk of Saint Denis described as "a terrifying hail of arrow shot", the plate armour of the French men-at-arms allowed them to close the distance to the English lines after the English longbowmen started shooting ...

  7. Kingdom of Soissons - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kingdom_of_Soissons

    The Kingdom or Domain of Soissons is the historiographical name [2] for the de facto independent Roman [3] remnant of the Diocese of Gaul, which existed during late antiquity as a rump state of the Western Roman Empire until its conquest by the Franks in AD 486. Its capital was at Noviodunum, today the town of Soissons in France.

  8. Lyudmila Pavlichenko - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lyudmila_Pavlichenko

    Once she had recovered from her injuries, instead of being sent back to the front, she became a propagandist for the Red Army, [5] where she was nicknamed "Lady Death." [ 14 ] [ 5 ] [ 2 ] (The Germans called her "the Russian bitch from hell.") [ 15 ] She also trained snipers for combat duty until the end of the war in 1945.

  9. John Lydgate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Lydgate

    Manuscript of Damage and destruction in realmes by John Lydgate, ca. 1450, in the Houghton Library at Harvard University.. Having literary ambitions (he was an admirer of Geoffrey Chaucer and a friend to his son, Thomas) he sought and obtained patronage for his literary work at the courts of Henry IV of England, Henry V of England and Henry VI of England.

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