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Topic: Henry III of Champagne


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  Champagne - LoveToKnow 1911
Formed at random by the acquisitions of the counts of the houses of Vermandois and Blois, Champagne reckoned among its dependencies, from 1152 to 1234, the countship of Blois and Chartres, of which Touraine was a fief, the countship of Sancerre, and various scattered fiefs in the Bourbonnais and in Burgundy.
In 1197 Theobald III., younger son of Henry I., became count, and was succeeded in 1201 by Theobald IV., "le Chansonnier" (the singer), who was the son of Theobald III.
Henry was succeeded in 1274 by his only daughter, Joan of Navarre, under the tutelage of her mother, Blanche of Artois, and afterwards of Edmund, earl of Lancaster, her mother's second husband.
www.1911encyclopedia.org /Champagne   (1294 words)

  
 Columbia Encyclopedia- Champagne - AOL Research & Learn
In the center is the Champagne Pouilleuse [Champagne badlands], a bleak and eroded plain, traditionally used for sheep grazing; however, Troyes and Châlons-en-Champagne, its principal towns, are located in fertile valleys and are centers of the wool industry.
In 1286 the daughter and heir of Henry III, Count of Champagne and King of Navarre, married Philip IV of France.
Champagne declined in prosperity thereafter; however, the enduring popularity of its sparkling wine, which was developed at the end of the 17th cent., somewhat revitalized its economy.
reference.aol.com /columbia/_a/champagne/20051205214809990014   (513 words)

  
 Henry I of Navarre - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In December 1270, Henry succeeded his eldest brother Theobald II as King of Navarre and Count of Champagne.
In 1269 Henry married Blanche, daughter of Robert, Count of Artois, and niece of King Louis IX.
Henry is not named directly, but is referred to as "the kindly-faced" and "the father in law of the Pest of France".
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Henry_III_of_Champagne   (318 words)

  
 26th Generation   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-03)
Henry Plantagenet III, King of England [scrapbook] was born 1 Oct 1207 in Winchester, Hampshire County, England.
Henry was the youngest son of Theobald I of Navarre by Margaret of Foix.
King Henry died in 1274; both the English princes died in the next decade, and Joan was married in 1284 to the future Philip IV of France.
www.boazfamilytree.com /jbourchier/aqwg07.htm   (2497 words)

  
 1270
Henry III of England effectively relinquishes rule of England to his son, Edward I
Philip III of France is crowned king of France upon the death of his father, Louis IX
Henry III of Champagne is made king of Navarre and count of Champagne
www.guajara.com /wiki/en/wikipedia/1/12/1270.html   (217 words)

  
 The Reformation In France During The Reign Of Henry II. (1547-1559)
Henry II., who succeeded Francis I., was more distinguished for skill in bodily exercises than for strength either of intellect or character.
Connection with royalty was established by the marriage of Mary, the eldest daughter of Claude, with James V. of Scotland, and later by the marriage of her daughter, the famous Queen of Scots, to the heir of Henry II.
Near the beginning of Henry's reign, Paris was diverted with a renewal of the spectacle of 1535.
www.edwardtbabinski.us /sheldon/reformation_henry_ii.html   (2593 words)

  
 Tudor Monarchs - Henry VII, one
Henry VI wanted to wed her to his half-brother Edmund Tudor so, at the age of twelve, she was married again.
Instead, Henry VI restored his old favorites to their former positions, notably the hated Somerset (who was the uncle of Edmund Tudor's wife.) The duke of York and his allies left London in apparent disgust.
Henry was sending letters to England during the winter of 1484-5 to inspire potential supporters (since many were dissatisfied with Richard's rule, for reasons outlined in previous pages.) Richard was aware of these letters and ordered the mayors and sheriffs throughout England to arrest anyone receiving or distributing them.
englishhistory.net /tudor/monarchs/henry7.html   (14120 words)

  
 Europe's 13th-Century Progress by Sanderson Beck
King Henry III was distracted from the Castilian crusade against the Moors and a Palestine crusade when he accepted the crown of Sicily for his son Edmund.
Henry began negotiating peace with France and asked for taxes for the huge papal debt of 135,541 marks he had to pay or have an interdict laid on England; but Sicily was taken over by Manfred, who was crowned at Palermo in 1258.
Henry's brother Richard of Cornwall was elected king of the Romans in 1257 and oversaw the negotiations with Louis IX that were conducted by Earl Simon de Montfort, Peter of Savoy, Hugh Bigod, and Henry's half brothers Geoffrey and Guy of Lusignan.
www.san.beck.org /AB21-Europe13thCentury.html   (23696 words)

  
 Reformation: Religious Wars
By the mid-1580's, the Catholic League was in control of France and, after Henry III attempted to attack the League in 1588, the League drove him from Paris and embarked on a systematic massacre of non-combatants that rivalled the earlier St. Bartholomew's Massacre.
Before the two Henrys could attack Paris, however, Henry III was stabbed to death by a fanatical, fury-driven Dominican friar in 1589.
In 1559 Frederick III became the Elector of the Palatinate (north of Bavaria) and converted to Calvinism.
www.wsu.edu /~dee/REFORM/WARS.HTM   (2551 words)

  
 Louis VII of France   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-03)
Louis became involved in a war with Theobald II of Champagne, by permitting Raoul I of Vermandois and seneschal of France, to repudiate his wife, Theobald's niece, and to marry Petronilla of Aquitaine, sister of the queen of France.
As part of a peace process with Henry II of England, Louis imprudently pledged his daughter, Marguerite, in the treaty of Gisors (1158) to Henry, Henry's eldest son, promising as a dowry the Norman Vexin and Gisors.
Henry II, to counterbalance the advantage this would give the king of France, had the marriage of their children celebrated at once.
homepage.mac.com /janmobley/ps05/ps05_183.html   (1374 words)

  
 The Henry & Sarah Ballinger Chiles Family
Henry had appropriated Princess Alys (not the same Alix as Richard's half-sister), the daughter of the French king and Richard's betrothed, as his mistress.
Richard III was the eleventh son of his father, Richard, Duke of York, and his mother, Cecily of Neville.
Henry VII attempted to accuse soldiers at the battle of Bosworth of treason by predating his reign a single day.
www.henrychiles.com /i533.html   (3983 words)

  
 CHAMPAGNE - Online Information article about CHAMPAGNE
Theobald (Thibaud) I., count of Blois and Meaux, eldest son of Odo I., became count of Champagne.
Henry the Liberal, eldest son of Theobald II., became count of Champagne; he married See also:
Fair, to whom she brought the countship of Champagne as well as the kingdom of Navarre.
encyclopedia.jrank.org /CAU_CHA/CHAMPAGNE.html   (1650 words)

  
 earlyBlazon.com
The county of Champagne was one of the geatest counties of France.
The House of Champagne stems from the House of Blois.
Seigneur de Châtillon (sur Marne), Grand-Butler of France and of Champagne (nominated by Thibaut III) and Seneschal of Burgundy (nominated by Eudes III).
perso.wanadoo.fr /earlyblazon/nation/france/champagne.htm   (464 words)

  
 A Review of Méthode Champenoise Production
The Geisenheim strain of champagne Epernay does not produce SO during fermentation, does not stick to the bottle, ferments at relatively low temperatures, and is sandy in its agglutinating ability (Becker, 1978).
A bubble forming in or on a beverage; used to mean CO bubbles in general or sometimes to the ring of bubbles around the edge of the liquid.
Champagne made from the juice of Pinot noir; may impart a light salmon color to the wine.
www.ext.vt.edu /pubs/viticulture/463-017/463-017.html   (14546 words)

  
 Ferdinand of Castile and Leon - Eustache de Champagne
King Ferdinand III of Castile and Leon and Countess Jeanne (Joan) de Dammartin.
She was married to King Sancho III the Great of Castile.
King Sancho III Alfonsez of Castile was born in 1135 in Castile, Spain.
www.geocities.com /jerry_l.geo/d79.htm   (1040 words)

  
 RoyaList Online - Royal Genealogy - Theobald I, King of Navarre (Theobald IV of Champagne)
Theobald I, King of Navarre (Theobald IV of Champagne)
Theobald II, King of Navarre (Theobald V of Champagne)
Henry I, King of Navarre (Henry III of Champagne)
www.royalist.info /execute/biog?person=2335   (668 words)

  
 King Henry
This refers to a much disputed line of kings that have in one way or another dominated Germany since the time of Charlemagne.
Henry III (1039-1056), see Henry II, Holy Roman Emperor
(1270 - 1274), aka Henry III of Champagne
www.ebroadcast.com.au /lookup/encyclopedia/ki/King_Henry.html   (136 words)

  
 Flanders, Brittany, Burgundy, Anjou, Normandy, Blois, Champagne, Toulouse, etc.
One notable exception is the fortune of Henry, son of Robert I, who acquires a county in Spain, marrying an illegitimate daughter of Alfonso VI of León and Castile.
His son Geoffrey then marries the daughter, Matilda, of King Henry I of England, who had recently lost her husband, the Emperor Henry V -- so she is often called the "Empress." There was a dispute over the Kingship of her cousin Stephen -- she had disputed it herself in 1141.
Hugh I is of the House of Châtillon, and is a relative of Reynald of Châtillon, Prince of Antioch.
www.friesian.com /flanders.htm   (10740 words)

  
 The Saintonge War (July 1242)
She was not alone in resenting the title of comte de Poitou not going to her son, the earl of Cornwall and brother to king Henry III of England.
King Louis IX's struggle with the English king Henry III must also be seen in context with the on-going events of the Albigsenian Crusades at the time.
Jean de Jonville was a native of Champagne, born to nobility, and became lord of Jonville upon his father's death (his older brother was already dead).
xenophongroup.com /montjoie/taillebr.htm   (1941 words)

  
 Henry I King Of Navarre
July 22, 1274, Pamplona, Navarre), king of Navarre (1270-74) and count (as Henry III) of Champagne.
By his marriage (1269) to Blanche, daughter of Robert I of Artois and niece of Louis IX of France, he had one daughter, Joan, whom, by the Convention of Bonleiu (30 Nov 1273), he promised to one of the two sons of Edward I of England, Henry and Alfonso.
Henry married Blanche D' Artois Queen Of Navarre, daughter of D' Artois and Unknown, in 1269.
freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com /~yewenyi/4/21282.htm   (391 words)

  
 Crusades in the Levant (1097-1291)
Pope Innocent III raised a crusade in France with the objective of attacking the center of Moslem power in Egypt.
Henry VI dies in Sicily - crusade collapses; German crusaders however support Amalric as new King of Jerusalem; Germans recover Beirut and other towns.
Richard of Cornwall, brother of Henry III sails to Holy Land.
xenophongroup.com /montjoie/crusade2.htm   (7678 words)

  
 More info about the poet: Thibaut de Champagne - references bibliography
Thibaut IV, count of Champagne and King of Navarre, a French poet, b.
Thibaut de Champagne in his palace listening to a song as depicted in Jean...
THIBAUT de Champagne, son of HENRI I "le Libéral" Comte de Champagne and his wife Marie de France (13 May 1179-24/25 May 1201, bur Troyes Saint-Etienne).
www.poemhunter.com /thibaut-de-champagne/resources/poet-34979/page-1   (742 words)

  
 Blanche of Artois   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-03)
Henri, Henry I, K of Navarre; Henry III, C of Champagne and Brie
Father: Henry III, K of England Mother: Eleanor of Provence
Henry, E of Lancaster and Leicester, †1345 = Matilda, dau of Sir Patrick de Chaworth »
website.lineone.net /~pgrhowarth/atc11.htm   (281 words)

  
 ~Henry "the Liberal" "Count" of Champagne/~Mary "Princess" of France   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-03)
Born: 1127 at: 29-1506 Married: at: Died: 1181 at: Father:~*Theobald III "Count" of Blois & Champagne Mother:~*Maud of Carinthia Other Spouses: ~Mary of France NOTES
Name: ~Marie de Champagne Born: 1174 at: 28-778 Married: at: Died: 1204 at: Spouses: ~Baldwin IX "Count" of Flanders
Name: ~Theobald III "Palatine" of Champaigne Born: 1177 at: 28-753 Married: at: Died: 1201 at: Spouses: ~Blanche "Queen" of Navarre NOTES
mariah.stonemarche.org /famfiles/fam02740.htm   (128 words)

  
 Medieval Sourcebook: Ernoul: The Battle of Hattin, 1187
He captured the king, the Master of the Temple, Prince Raynald, Marquis Boniface, Aimery the constable, Humphrey of Toron, Hugh of Gibelet, Plivain, lord of Botron, and so many other barons and knights that it would take too long to give the names of all of them; the Holy Cross also was lost.
Pope Urban III (1185-7) governing the apostolic see of the church of Rome, Frederick (I Barbarossa) being emperor in Germany, Philip (II Augustus), son of Louis (VII), king of France, Henry (II) au Cort Mantiau, king of England, and Isaac (II), emperor in Constantinople.
When Saladin had left the field with great joy and great victory and was in his camp, he ordered all the Christian prisoners who had been captured that day to be brought before him.
www.fordham.edu /halsall/source/1187ernoul.html   (1805 words)

  
 Democracy An American Novel by Henry Adams : Chapter III
Her parlour was a favourite haunt of certain men and women who had the art of finding its mistress at home; an art which seemed not to be within the powers of everybody.
He appeared ten years younger than usual; his face was illuminated; his eyes glowed; he seemed bent on proving his kinship to the immortal Webster by rivalling his convivial powers.
Gore, who was not wont to hide his light under any kind of extinguisher, made no attempt to claim the floor, and applauded with enthusiasm the conversation of his opposite neighbour.
www.classicreader.com /Adams_Henry/Democracy_An_American_Novel/3.html   (4034 words)

  
 Henry III - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Henry III of Navarre, later Henry IV of France
Henry III, Duke of Saxony ("Henry the Lion")
This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the same human name.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Henry_III   (81 words)

  
 My Family
Parents: Count Theobald II BLOIS and Mathilda VON SPONHEIM.
Children were: Marie DE CHAMPAGNE, Count Henry II CHAMPAGNE, Count Theobald III BRIE.
Parents: Count Henry I CHAMPAGNE and Princess Marie FRANCE.
gordonrosalynd.tripod.com /green/d59.htm   (550 words)

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