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  2. Guy of Lusignan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guy_of_Lusignan

    Guy was a member of the House of Lusignan. [2] The family's holdings were in Poitou, which was a part of King Henry II of England's territories within the Kingdom of France. [3] Guy was the youngest son of Hugh VIII of Lusignan and Bourgogne of Rancon. [4]

  3. Guy of Lusignan (died 1343) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guy_of_Lusignan_(died_1343)

    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. [1]

  4. Sibylla, Queen of Jerusalem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sibylla,_Queen_of_Jerusalem

    Sibylla (Old French: Sibyl; c. 1159 – 25 July 1190) was the queen of Jerusalem from 1186 to 1190. She reigned alongside her husband Guy of Lusignan, to whom she was unwaveringly attached despite his unpopularity among the barons of the Kingdom of Jerusalem.

  5. Isabella of Angoulême - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isabella_of_Angoulême

    Alice of Lusignan (1224 – 9 February 1256). Married John de Warenne, 6th Earl of Surrey, by whom she had issue. Guy of Lusignan (c. 1225 – 1264), killed at the Battle of Lewes. (Tufton Beamish maintains that he escaped to France after the Battle of Lewes and died there in 1269.) Geoffrey of Lusignan (c. 1226 – 1274).

  6. Jeanne de Fougères, Countess of La Marche and of Angoulême

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeanne_de_Fougères...

    Hugh XIII of Lusignan, Count of La Marche and Angoulême (25 June 1259- 1 November 1303), on 1 April 1276 married Beatrice of Burgundy. Their marriage was childless. Guy I de Lusignan (died 1308), Count of La Marche and Angoulême, died unmarried and without legitimate issue.

  7. List of viscounts of Thouars - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_viscounts_of_Thouars

    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.

  8. Raynald of Châtillon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raynald_of_Châtillon

    Raynald was a firm supporter of Baldwin IV's sister, Sybilla, and her husband, Guy of Lusignan, during conflicts regarding Baldwin IV's succession. Sibylla and Guy were able to seize the throne in 1186 due to Raynald's co-operation with her uncle, Joscelin III of Courtenay. In spite of a truce between Saladin and the Kingdom of Jerusalem ...

  9. Yolande of Brittany - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yolande_of_Brittany

    Guy of Lusignan, (died 1288/89), Seigneur de Cognac, d'Archiac, and de Couhé; Seigneur de la Fère-en-Tardenois. Geoffroy of Lusignan (died 1264) 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.