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Statue of Isabella of Angoulême, in front of the city hall of Angoulême
'Isabella of Angoulême' (
Fr. ''Isabelle d'Angoulême'' ; c.
1187 –
May 31,
1246) was
countess of Angoulême and
queen consort of
England.
She was the only daughter and heir of Aymer Taillifer,
Count of Angoulême, by
Alix de Courtenay; her maternal great-grandfather was King
Louis VI of France. She became Countess of
Angoulême in her own right in
1202, by which time she was already queen of England. Her marriage to
King John took place on
August 24,
1200, at
Bordeaux, a year after he
annulled his first marriage. At the time of this marriage Isabella was aged about thirteen, and her beauty was renowned; she is sometimes called the "
Helen" of the
Middle Ages by historians.
It could not be said to have been a successful marriage, as Isabella was much younger than her husband and had a fiery character to match his. Before their marriage, she had been betrothed to
Hugh X of Lusignan[1], son of the then
Count of La Marche. As a result of John's temerity in taking her as his second wife, King
Philip II of France confiscated all his French lands, and armed conflict ensued.
When John died in
1216, Isabella was still in her twenties. She returned to
France and in
1220 proceeded to marry Hugh X of Lusignan, now Count of La Marche, her former fiancé.
Isabella was accused of plotting against the French king in
1244; she fled to
Fontevrault Abbey, where she died on
May 31,
1246, and was buried there. Afterwards most of her many children, having few prospects in France, set sail for England and the court of their half-brother King Henry III.
Issue
★ With King John of England: 5 children, all of whom survived into adulthood, including:
# the eldest, who became King
Henry III of England on his father's death
#
Richard, Earl of Cornwall and
King of the Romans
#
Joan, the wife of King
Alexander II of Scotland
#
Isabella, the wife of
Emperor Frederick II
# the youngest daughter,
Eleanor, who would marry
William Marshal, 2nd Earl of Pembroke
★ With
Hugh X of Lusignan, the
Count of La Marche: 9 children, all of whom survived into adulthood, including:
#
Hugh XII of Lusignan,
Count of La Marche and
Count of Angoulême (
1221–
1250)
#
Aymer de Valence,
Bishop of Winchester (
1222–1260)
# Agnès de Lusignan (
1223–
1269), married William II de Chauvigny
# Alice de Lusignan (
1224 –
February 9,
1256), married
John de Warenne, 7th Earl of Surrey
# Guy de Lusignan (d.
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 de Lusignan (d.
1274), married in
1259 Jeanne, Viscountess of
Châtellerault and had issue
#
William de Valence, 1st Earl of Pembroke (d.
1296)
# Marguerite de Lusignan (d.
1288), married 1243
Raymond VII of Toulouse, married c.
1246 Aimery IX de Thouars, Viscount of Thouars
# Isabelle de Lusignan (
1234 –
January 14,
1299), married
Geoffrey de Rancon
Notes
1. Hugues X of Lusignan
External links
★
COMTES d'ANGOULÊME et de la MARCHE (LUSIGNAN) in English
References
★ Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America Before 1700 by Frederick Lewis Weis, Lines: 1-25, 80-29, 117-27, 153A-28, 154-28, 258-27, 260-29, 275-27
★ ''Isabelle d'Angoulême, Reine d'Angleterre'', by Sophie Fougère
★ ''Isabella: Queen Without a Conscience'', by Rachel Bard (historical novel)