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Guy was the eldest son of King Hugh IV of Cyprus and his first wife Maria of Ibelin, who was the daughter of Guy, count of Jaffa. Guy lost his mother when he was a child in 1318, and his father, then constable of Cyprus, married his second wife Alice of Ibelin , a cousin of his first wife.
A character named Guy appears in Ironclad, played by Aneurin Barnard; he serves as squire to William d'Aubigny —in the sequel Battle for Blood, set five years after the events of the first film, he is played by Tom Austen—and his name is revealed to be Guy De Lusignan—it is unlikely that he is the historical Guy, who lived in the mid- to ...
Guy de Lusignan was the son of Isabella, daughter of Leo II of Armenia, and Amalric, [2] a son of Hugh III of Cyprus, [3] and was governor of Serres from 1328 until 1341. [4] When his cousin Leo IV, the last Hethumid monarch of Cilicia, was murdered by the barons, the crown was offered to his younger brother John, who urged Guy to accept it. [1]
Guy of Poitiers-Lusignan (1275/1280 – 1303) was constable of Cyprus from 1298. He was the youngest son of Hugh III of Cyprus (ruled in 1267–1284) and Isabella of Ibelin. [1] In 1303, Guy conspired against his brother Henry II of Cyprus (reigned 1285-1306) then (1310-1324); discovered, he was executed the same year.
Guy of Lusignan, Guy of La Marche or Guy of Angoulême or Guy I de Lusignan (c. 1260/1265 – Angoulême, 24 September/28 November 1308 and buried there), Seigneur de Couhé et de Peyrat c. 1282, succeeded his brother Hugh XIII as Seigneur de Lusignan, Count of La Marche and Count of Angoulême on 1 November 1303.
It remains unclear though whether Rubens used the depiction of King Saladin and King Guy de Lusignan as the basis for the Adoration of the Magi. Some scholars argue for the latter given the clear difference in skin colour between the Magi and the fact that one of the Magi is chained.
Alice of Lusignan (died May 1290), [10] married in 1253 as his first wife, Gilbert de Clare, 6th Earl of Gloucester, by whom she had two daughters. Marie of Lusignan (1242- after 11 July 1266), married Robert de Ferrers, 6th Earl of Derby. [11] She died childless. Isabelle of Lusignan, Dame de Belleville (1248–1304), married Maurice de Belleville
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: