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Topic: Marguerite de Provence


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  NationMaster - Encyclopedia: Louis IX of France   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-12)
On May 27, 1234 Louis married Marguerite de Provence (1221–December 21, 1295), the sister of Eleanor, the wife of Henry III of England.
Marguerite of France (1282 – 14 February 1317) was a daughter of Philip III of France and Maria of Brabant.
In all these deeds, Louis IX tried to fulfill the duty of France, which was seen as "the eldest daughter of the Church" (la fille aînée de l'Église), a tradition of protector of the Church going back to the Franks and Charlemagne, who had been crowned in Rome in 800.
www.nationmaster.com /encyclopedia/Louis-IX-of-France   (6386 words)

  
 27th Generation (cont.)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-12)
Isabella de Taillefer, Queen of England and Countess of Angoulême was born 1188 in Angoulême, Charente département, Poitou-Charentes région, France and married 1220 in England.
John de Lacy, Earl of Lincoln, Lord of Pontefract and Blackburnshire, and Baron of Holton was born 1192 in Lincoln, Lincolnshire County, England and married 21 Jun 1221.
Beatrix de Savoie, Countess of Savoy was born 1198 or 1201 in Chambery, Savoie département, Rhône-Alpes region, France and married Jun 05 1219 or Dec 1220.
www.boazfamilytree.com /gneville/aqwg10.htm   (5869 words)

  
 Articles - Louis IX of France   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-12)
Born at Poissy, France, he was a member of the Capetian dynasty and the son of King Louis VIII and Blanche of Castile.
She continued as an important counsellor to the king until her death in 1252.
Louis was the elder brother of Charles I of Sicily (1227–1285), whom he created count of Anjou, thus founding the second Angevin dynasty.
www.zdiamond.net /articles/Louis_IX_of_France   (1577 words)

  
 CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: St. Louis IX
The regency of Blanche of Castile (1226-1234) was marked by the victorious struggle of the Crown against Raymond VII in Languedoc, against Pierre Mauclerc in Brittany, against Philip Hurepel in the Ile de France, and by indecisive combats against Henry III of England.
It was the legate who received the submission of Raymond VII, Count of Languedoc, at Paris, in front of Notre-Dame, and this submission put an end to the Albigensian war and prepared the union of the southern provinces to France by the Treaty of Paris (April 1229).
In 1263, St. Louis was chosen as arbitrator in a difference which separated Henry III and the English barons: by the Dit d'Amiens (24 January, 1264) he declared himself for Henry III against the barons, and annulled the Provisions of Oxford, by which the barons had attempted to restrict the authority of the king.
www.newadvent.org /cathen/09368a.htm   (1640 words)

  
 Online 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica
MANNY, SIR WALTER DE MANNY, BARON DE (d.
Maranon, the name given to the upper Amazon)
MARBOT, JEAN BAPTISTE ANTOINE MARCELIN, BARON DE (1782-18J4)
encyclopedia.jrank.org /MAL_MAR   (564 words)

  
 Joseph Marie Vien Online
Musée des Beaux-Arts de Caen, France (partly in French)
The Age of Enlightenment in the Paintings of France's National Museums
Louis and Marguerite of Provence Visiting St. Theobald
www.artcyclopedia.com /artists/vien_joseph_marie.html   (255 words)

  
 The University of Chicago Martin Marty Center
Dissertation: “Secrets from the Court of the King: Nobility and Annihilation in Marguerite Porete’s Mirror of Simple Souls”
Dissertation: “The Pleasure of Discernment: Marguerite de Navarre’s Heptameron as a Literary/Theological Response to Calvin’s Treatise Against the Spiritual Libertines”
Dissertation: “The Soul as Virgin Wife: Meister Eckhart and the Beguine Mystics Mechthild of Magdeburg and Marguerite Porete”
marty-center.uchicago.edu /fellows/former_fellows.shtml   (4876 words)

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