enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. 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

  3. Hugh X of Lusignan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugh_X_of_Lusignan

    Hugh's father, Hugh IX of Lusignan, was betrothed to marry 12-year-old Isabel of Angoulême in 1200, [2] but King John of England married her instead. As a result, the entire de Lusignan family rebelled against the English king. [3] Hugh IX married Agathe de Preuilly instead. [citation needed] Hugh was born in 1183.

  4. 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 ...

  5. Hugh - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugh

    Hugh V of Lusignan (died 1060) Hugh VI of Lusignan (died 1110) ... English actor; Hugh V. Perkins (1918–1988), American human development and education author, ...

  6. Hugh VII of Lusignan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugh_VII_of_Lusignan

    Hugh VII the Brown of Lusignan or Hugues II de La Marche (French: Hugues le Brun) (1065–1151), Sire de Lusignan, Couhé and Château-Larcher and Count of La Marche, was the son of Hugh VI of Lusignan. He was one of the many notable Crusaders in the Lusignan family.

  7. Hugh of Lusignan (claimant) - Wikipedia

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

    The young Hugh of Lusignan accompanied his mother to Naples, where she married Robert of Taranto, the Latin Emperor. They then went to the Papal court of Avignon, and then to France. [2] Hugh returned to settle in Naples in 1352 with his step-father who had recently been released from a Hungarian prison. [2]

  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 Cyprus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugh_I_of_Cyprus

    Isabella (1216–1264), who married Henry of Antioch, and who was the mother of Hugh III of Cyprus and ancestress of the line named later as the second dynasty of Lusignan. Henry I (1217–1253), namesake of his maternal grandfather, who became King of Cyprus upon his father's death in 1218, with his mother acting as regent.