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He was the fifth son of Hugh VIII of Lusignan and his wife, Burgundia of Rancon. [3] [4] His family had been noted for generations of crusaders in their native Poitou. His great-grandfather, Hugh VI of Lusignan, died in the Battle of Ramla in 1102; Aimery's grandfather, Hugh VII of Lusignan, took part in the Second Crusade. [5]
With his wife called Aremburge (or Ascelin), he had two children, Thibault Aimery and Aldegarde (Audéarde, Aldiarde), wife of Hugh IV of Lusignan. The Duke of Aquitaine and Count of Poitiers William the Great practiced a policy of balance (with a lot of duplicity) between Raoul and the Sire de Lusignan to neutralize them.
Aimery had also obtained the patronage of Agnes of Courtenay (the divorced mother of King Baldwin IV of Jerusalem and the wife of Reginald of Sidon), who held the county of Jaffa and Ascalon. Agnes appointed Aimery as Constable of Jaffa, and later as Constable of the Kingdom of Jerusalem. Hostile rumours alleged that Aimery was Agnes's lover ...
Aimery I de Châtellerault ... Aimery was born to Boson II de Châtellerault and his wife, Aleanor de Thouars. ... Sidney (1955). "The Houses of Lusignan and ...
Aimery of Poitiers-Lusignan (French: Aimery de Lusignan; (1275 – 1316), was a Cypriot nobleman. He was a member of the House of Poitiers-Lusignan, as he was the son of king Hugh III of Cyprus. He held the position of Constable of Cyprus in 1303.
Raynald of Châtillon Lord of Hebron and Montréal Raynald of Châtillon tortures Aimery of Limoges, Latin Patriarch of Antioch (from a late-13th-century manuscript of William of Tyre's Historia and its Continuation). Prince of Antioch together with Constance Reign 1153 to 1160 or 1161 Predecessor Constance Successor Constance Lord of Oultrejordain together with Stephanie of Milly Reign 1176 ...
Hugh was the youngest of the three sons of Aimery of Lusignan, Lord of Cyprus, and his first wife, Eschiva of Ibelin. [2] He was born between around 1194/1195 and 1199. [2] [3] Shortly after his birth, he lost his mother. [4]
Mary of Lusignan (French: Marie de Lusignan; before March 1215 – 5 July 1251 or 1253), was the wife of Count Walter IV of Brienne and Countess of Brienne from the time of her marriage in 1233 to her husband's death while on Crusade in 1244.