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Topic: Joan Plantagenet Queen of Scotland


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In the News (Wed 9 Dec 09)

  
  25th Generation   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-19)
BIOGRAPHY: Joan Of Navarre, or (in French) Jeanne De Navarre was the queen consort of France (from 1285) and queen of Navarre (as Joan I, from 1274).
Joan was the sole daughter and heir of Henry I, king of Navarre, her brother Theobald (Thibaut) having died at an early age.
Henry Plantagenet, Third Earl of Lancaster, Earl of Leicester and Lord of Beaumont and Nogent "Henry Lancaster" was born circa 1281 in Grismond Castle, Monmouthshire County, Wales.
www.boazfamilytree.com /jbourchier/aqwg06.htm   (6351 words)

  
 Peterson Family - pafg525 - Generated by Personal Ancestral File
Joan of ENGLAND Makepeace [Parents] was born in Jul 1321 in Tower of London, Lndn, England.
Joan Kent PLANTAGENET Fair Maid of was born on 29 Sep 1328 in of, Woodstock, Oxford, England.
Blanche PLANTAGENET Duchess of Lancaster was born on 25 Mar 1345.
members.fortunecity.com /tuatha1/pafg525.htm   (803 words)

  
 CalendarHome.com - - Calendar Encyclopedia   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-19)
All freeholders in Scotland were required to swear an oath of homage to Edward, and he ruled Scotland like a province through English Viceroys.
His plan to conquer Scotland never came to fruition during his lifetime, however, and he died in 1307 at Burgh-by-Sands, Cumberland on the Scottish border, while on his way to wage another campaign against the Scots under the leadership of Robert the Bruce.
Joan of Acre born May 1271 and died 7 April 1307.
encyclopedia.calendarhome.com /cgi-bin/encyclopedia.pl?p=Edward_I_of_England   (3380 words)

  
 CalendarHome.com - John of England - Calendar Encyclopedia   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-19)
He was a younger brother of William, Count of Poitiers, Henry the Young King, Matilda of England, Richard I of England, Geoffrey II, Duke of Brittany, Leonora of Aquitaine and Joan of England.
They had no children, and John had their marriage annulled on the grounds of consanguinity, some time before or shortly after his accession to the throne, which took place on 6 April 1199, and she was never acknowledged as queen.
Eustace substituted a prostitute in her place when the king came to Margaret's bed in the dark of night; the next morning, when John boasted to Vesci of how good his wife was in bed, Vesci confessed and fled.
encyclopedia.calendarhome.com /cgi-bin/encyclopedia.pl?p=John_of_England   (4219 words)

  
 Plantagenet
Joan Plantagenet Queen of Scotland Joan was the first daughter and third child of Dorset.
Plantagenet Palliser Plantagenet Palliser is the main character in The Pallisers series of Anthony Trollope.
Richard Plantagenet Richard Plantagenet was the name of several members of the royal Plantagenet family of England, incl...
www.brainyencyclopedia.com /topics/plantagenet.html   (134 words)

  
 Branches and Leaves: Matilda of Scotland | ACO GENEALOGY   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-19)
Matilda the Empress, Queen of England, was the daughter of Matilda of Scotland and Henry I Beauclerc.
John Plantagenet was the Duke of Lancaster, Earl of Richmond, King of Castile and Leon, Lord of Bergerac, Nogent and Roche-sur-Yon, Earl of Derby and Lincoln, and the Duke of Aquitaine.
Joan was the daughter of John Plantagenet and Catherine of Roet.
www.ancuairt.org /genealogy/matilda.htm   (5403 words)

  
 Kings, Queens, Presidents and First Ladies
King Edward Plantagenet III-[18452] was born on 11-13-1312 in Winsdor, died on 6-21-1377 in Sheen Palace, Surrey, England at age 64, and was buried in Westminster Abbey, London.
Soon at variance with Queen Isabella and her lover, Roger Mortimer, Edmund was involved in a conspiracy to restore Edward II, who he was led to believe was still alive (he had been murdered in September 1327); Edmund was arrested and beheaded.
Countess Joan of Kent "The Fair Maid"-[18977] was born on 9-29-1328 and died on 8-8-1385 at age 56.
www.livelyroots.com /kings/d12.htm   (1730 words)

  
 Royal Family Archives - Helene of Nassau to King James II of Scotland
NOTES: Mary became a prisoner of Queen Elizabeth I and in the ensuing intrigues to rescue her and place her on the throne of Elizabeth, the most famous was that of Mary's page, Anthony Babington, who plotted to assassinate Elizabeth.
Mary had given him the title of King, but he now demanded that the crown be secured to him for life and that, if the queen died without children, it should descend to his heirs.
NOTES: Queen consort (1538-42) of James V of Scotland and regent of Scotland (1554-60); also known as Mary of Lorraine.
www.scotlandroyalty.org /archives/r26.html   (744 words)

  
 September 21st
The account of the expenses of her household embraces, in distinct divisions, the queen's general daily expenses; sums given in alms; miscellaneous necessary expenses; disbursements for dress, purchases of plate and jewellery, gifts, payments to messengers, and imprests for various services.
the queen's oblations at the tomb of St. Thomas; here, too, are entered a payment to minstrels, her oblations in the church of St. Augustine, and her donations to various hospitals and religious houses in Canterbury.
Among the special presents by the queen are New-year's gifts to the ladies of her chamber, eight in number, of 100s.
www.thebookofdays.com /months/sept/21.htm   (2779 words)

  
 Montauk Historical Site - Clermont, Iowa
His marriage to Joan of Navarre (of whom it was rumored practiced necromancy) was highly unpopular - she was, in fact, convicted of witchcraft in 1419.
He had a daughter Joan, by Alice, daughter of Richard Fitz-Alan, Earl of Arundel, Joan married Sir Edward Stradling, of Wales, which is the lineage connection to the Appelmans and Larrabees.
Although she was unpopular and never managed to became a true Queen of England, she was the mother of the Plantagenets, a dynasty that remained in power for 350 years ending only with the Tudor victory at the Battle of Bosworth.
members.aol.com /montaukiowa/royals.htm   (3654 words)

  
 The Genealogy Website of Adams/Simpson - pafg627 - Generated by Personal Ancestral File   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-19)
Edward II Plantagenet King Of England [Parents] was born on 25 Apr 1284 in Carnarvon Castle,Carnarvon,Wales.
Joan Princess Of England [Parents] was born in Jul 1321 in Tower Of,London,Middlesex,England.
Joanna Of The Tower Of England Queen Of Scotland [Parents] was born in 1321 in Tower Of London,,.
users.kricket.net /RajinCajun/pafg627.htm   (1239 words)

  
 Plantagenet Family Genealogy   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-19)
She died on 10 Sep 1169 in Abbey of Notre Dame des Prés, Rouen and was buried in Fontevraud Abbey, Anjou, France.
Joan was thus the sole mistress of the inheritance and she controlled it with remarkable ability.
Among his most important and representative tomb monuments is that of the queen of England, made in London in 1367.
www.aritek.com /hartgen/htm/plantagenet_2.htm   (7656 words)

  
 British Isles, 1400–1600 A.D. | Timeline of Art History | The Metropolitan Museum of Art   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-19)
During the reign of his son Henry VI (1422–61; 1470–71), however, the English are expelled from France with the help of Joan of Arc, a French peasant girl, and political turmoil erupts at home when the king's frequent illnesses place England in the hands of a Protector, Richard, duke of York.
Scotland, facing similar civil unrest in the fifteenth century, forges an alliance with France through the marriage of James V to Marie of Guise (1515–1560) and earns the enmity of England.
The conversion of Scotland to Protestantism, led by John Knox (1513–1572), repairs the rift.
www.metmuseum.org /toah/ht/08/euwb/ht08euwb.htm   (1530 words)

  
 EIGHTEENTH GENERATION   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-19)
Princess Eleanor PLANTAGENET was born on 17 Jun 1264.
Alfonso PLANTAGENET Earl of Chester was born on 24 Nov 1273.
Isabella PLANTAGENET was born on 12 Mar 1279.
www.datasync.com /~woodward/staffora/d2208.htm   (218 words)

  
 reagenealogy - pafg38 - Generated by Personal Ancestral File
Edmund "Crouchback" Plantagenet, Earl of Leicester was born on 16 Jan 1244/1245.
Margaret, Princess of England, Queen of Scotland died in 1275.
John of Gaunt Plantagenet, Duke of Lancaster was born in Mar 1340.
www.members.cox.net /garyrea/pafg38.htm   (553 words)

  
 Scottish Monarchs - Kings and Queens of Scotland - James I.   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-19)
His marriage to Joan, a celebrated beauty, was said to have been a genuine love match rather than the political alliances favoured at the time.
The King's marriage to Joan Beaufort was a stable and happy one, the couple were to have two sons, the future James II and Alexander, who died in infancy.
Queen Joan was also wounded in her frantic attempts to protect her husband.
www.englishmonarchs.co.uk /stewart_3.htm   (808 words)

  
 The Henry & Sarah Ballinger Chiles Family
Tancred had imprisoned William's widow, Queen Joan, who was Richard's sister, and did not give her the money she had inherited according to William's will.
Joan was to be released; receiving her inheritance along with the dowry her father had given to the deceased William.
Richard was the last of the Plantagenets, the last English king to die on the battlefield, and the last medieval king.
www.henrychiles.com /i533.html   (3983 words)

  
 Plantagenet Series
Henry was at the height of his powers but beset by frustration, most of which came from his own family, for his wife Eleanor of Aquitaine hated him and had sown discontent and resentment in their children.
The new Queen Isabella, accustomed to adulation, was at first nonplussed by the King's attitude and then bitterly humiliated; and she was not a woman to forget or forgive.
Even so, the Queen did not want him inquiring too deeply into the death of his father, who had been brutally murdered because of her and her lover, Roger de Mortimer.
jeanplaidy.tripod.com /id28.htm   (2726 words)

  
 ancestor   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-19)
Assumed the Crown and Royal Dignity of Scotland, thus bringing an end to Second interregnum in defiance of Edward I of England.
Went to England in 1050 as attendant to Queen Emma, daughter of Richard I of Normandy.
She set the agenda for the church in Scotland and as a result the Roman church made inroads into the Celtic Church in the north of the country.
www.munchkinsworld.com /ancestor.html   (5229 words)

  
 Order of the Garter   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-19)
It was early in the autumn of 1342, that David Bruce, King of Scotland, led an army across the Borders, and laid waste the towns and villages of Northumberland, as far as Newcastle.
The Earl was absent; but, on the highest turret of the Castle, stood his Countess, the peerless Joan Plantagenet, daughter of the Earl of Kent, and cousin of King Edward.
But there was one who welcomed Sir William Montague’s return with silent tears—the gentle Madeline Aubrey, the companion of Joan Plantagenet, and the orphan daughter of a valiant knight, who had won his golden spurs by the side of the first Edward, and laid down his life in defence of his imbecile son.
www.electricscotland.com /bordertales/vol1story51.htm   (4812 words)

  
 United Kingdom Heads of State with pictures
She was daughter of King Malcom III Ceanmera and Saint Margaret of Scotland, was mother of one daughter, Maud, later Empress of Germany and Lady Domina of England, and lived (1079-1118).
Eager to extend his own influence in Scotland, Edward arranged the Treaty of Birgham in 1290, by which Margaret was betrothed to his son the Prince of Wales (later Edward II of England), in return for an assurance of Scottish independence though he would serve as ward for the young queen.
After her husband, James IV of Scotland, was killed, she became regent for her infant son, James V, but her marriage in 1514 to Archibald Douglas, 6th earl of Angus, led to the loss of the regency to John Stuart, duke of Albany, who soon obtained custody of the king, and Margaret fled to England.
www.guide2womenleaders.com /womeninpower/United_Kingdom.htm   (8014 words)

  
 Articles - Edward III of England   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-19)
Upon their return from France, the powerful Queen and her lover, Roger Mortimer, forced the weak and unpopular Edward II to abdicate, installing Edward III as king in 1327.
His first major military success was the Battle of Halidon Hill in 1333, which he won in support of his puppet, the new Scottish king, Edward Balliol, in detriment to his own brother-in-law David II of Scotland, the Bruce claimant and husband of Edward's sister Joan of the Tower, princess of England.
Joan Plantagenet (1335-1348), died of the plague in Bordeaux, on her way to marry Peter I of Castile
www.oldion.com /articles/Edward_III_of_England   (1912 words)

  
 Amazon.com: Queen of Shadows: A Novel of Isabella, Wife of King Edward II: Books: Edith Felber   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-19)
The parts of Isabella's life portrayed in QUEEN OF SHADOWS were chosen to illuminate her strengths and weaknesses, and to pull back the curtain and show the reader a slice of her life and loves.
Isabella herself too often comes across as a modern, politically correct woman dropped into the fourteenth century, constantly bemoaning the fact that she, as a woman, is subject to her lord and doesn't have the freedom that he does to pursue extra-marital affairs.
There are frequent mentions of the fact that Isabella spent time in Scotland when Edward `abandoned' her, that she had a passionate affair, that she lost the great love of her life, that Edward III resulted from "an act of sorrow and rage and sympathy".
www.amazon.com /Queen-Shadows-Novel-Isabella-Edward/dp/045121952X   (2842 words)

  
 Descendants of Geoffrey Plantagenet Count of Anjou
Reign: 1272-1307; Of the Plantagenets, House of Anjou.
Queen consort (1538-42) of James V of Scotland and regent of Scotland (1554-60); also known as Mary of Lorraine.
Mary became a prisoner of Queen Elizabeth I and in the ensuing intrigues to rescue her and place her on the throne of Elizabeth, the most famous was that of Mary's page, Anthony Babington, who plotted to assassinate Elizabeth.
www.womacknet.net /plantagenet.htm   (10230 words)

  
 The Montagues' as the Earls of Salisbury.   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-19)
Some have aligned the "Countess of Salisbury" with Joan "The Fair Maid of Kent" who married bigamously William Montague the 2nd earl of Salisbury but this seems unlikely as the marriage was immediately annulled in 1349 as she was already secretly betrothed to Thomas Holland [Earl of Kent].
Joan was much admired for her beauty and following her legal return to Thomas de Holland who died in 1360, she wed her 3rd husband the famed Edward Plantagenet, "The Black Prince", Joan's second cousin in 1361.
Joan Plantagenet,"Fair Maid of Kent", Edward [later III] and William Montacute [later 2nd earl of Salisbury] lived at Salisbury Castle [Old Sarum] as wards of the 1st earl Salisbury and Catherine [Alys] de Montacute.
members.tripod.com /~midgley/montague.html   (2140 words)

  
 English Monarchs - Kings and Queens of England - Edward III.   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-19)
Edward was determined to make an example of the unfortunate burghers of Calais, but the gentle Queen Phillipa, heavily pregnant, interceded with her husband, pleading for their lives.
(1) Blanche Plantagenet (2) Constance of Castille (3) Katherine Swynford.
(1) Isabel of Castille and Leon (2) Joan Holland
www.englishmonarchs.co.uk /plantagenet_7.htm   (1308 words)

  
 thePeerage.com - Henry V Plantagenet, King of England and others
     Henry V Plantagenet, King of England was born on 9 August 1387 in Monmouth Castle, Monmouth, Monmouthshire, Wales.
She married, firstly, Henry V Plantagenet, King of England, son of Henry IV, King of England and Lady Mary de Bohun, on 2 June 1420 in Troyes Cathedral, Troyes, Champagne, France.
He was responsible for buring Joan of Arc at the stake.
www.thepeerage.com /p10187.htm   (3356 words)

  
 Genealogy Documents   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-19)
Plantagenet, Geoffrey V (le Bon), Count of Anjou & Maine
Plantagenet, Joan (Fair Maid of Kent), Princess of Wales
Tudor, Mary I (Bloody Mary), Queen of England
www.thecleggfamily.com /genealogy2/clegg/persons/documents.html   (1120 words)

  
 Richard II of England Summary
Richard II (January 6 1367 – February 14, 1400) was the son of Edward the Black Prince, Prince of Wales, and Joan "The Fair Maid of Kent".
However, his tastes were before his time and many began to see him as another Edward II figure, somehow unworthy of his military Plantagenet heritage, given his delicate 'unkingly' tastes.
Richard also lacked the thirst for battle of his grandfather: his Scottish campaign in 1385 was not decisive, and he signed a 28-year truce with France in 1396 which was hugely unpopular at home in spite of the dividends that peace brought to the kingdom.
www.bookrags.com /Richard_II_of_England   (2464 words)

  
 I30120: Eleanor PLANTAGENET (of Lancaster) ( - 1372)
I30120: Eleanor PLANTAGENET (of Lancaster) ( - 1372)
Scotland, which he had begun shortly after 1305.
Lord of Gascony, of the house of Plantagenet.
www.oblevins.com /blevins/d0019/g0001914.html   (2531 words)

  
 Plantagenet Series
Henry was at the height of his powers but beset by frustration, most of which came from his own family, for his wife Eleanor of Aquitaine hated him and had sown discontent and resentment in their children.
The new Queen Isabella, accustomed to adulation, was at first nonplussed by the King's attitude and then bitterly humiliated; and she was not a woman to forget or forgive.
Even so, the Queen did not want him inquiring too deeply into the death of his father, who had been brutally murdered because of her and her lover, Roger de Mortimer.
members.tripod.com /jeanplaidy/id28.htm   (2726 words)

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