lunes, 19 de agosto de 2019

Aymer, count of Angoulême ★ |•••► #France #Genealogia #Genealogy *

______________________________________
21° Bisabuelo de: Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo
______________________________________


<---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->
(Linea Paterna)
<---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->
Aymer, count of Angoulême is your 21st great grandfather.
You→ Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo→   Enrique Jorge Urdaneta Lecuna
your father →  Elena Cecilia Lecuna Escobar
his mother →  María Elena de la Concepción Escobar Llamosas
her mother →  Cecilia Cayetana de la Merced Llamosas Vaamonde de Escobar
her mother →  Cipriano Fernando de Las Llamosas y García
her father → José Lorenzo de las Llamozas Silva
his father →  Joseph Julián Llamozas Ranero
his father →  Manuel Llamosas y Requecens
his father → Isabel de Requesens
his mother →  Luis de Requeséns y Zúñiga, Virrey de Holanda
her father →  Juan de Zúñiga Avellaneda y Velasco
his father → Pedro de Zúñiga y Avellaneda, II conde de Miranda del Castañar
his father →  Diego López de Zúñiga y Guzmán, I conde de Miranda del Castañar
his father →  D. Pedro López de Zúñiga y García de Leyva, I Conde de Ledesma, Conde de Plasencia
his father → Dª. Juana García de Leyva, Señora de Hacinas, Quintanilla y Villavaquerín
his mother →  Juan Martínez de Leyva, III
her father →  Isabella Plantagenet
his mother →  Edward III, king of England
her father →  Edward II, king of England
his father →  Edward I "Longshanks", King of England
his father → Henry III, king of England
his father →  Isabella of Angoulême
his mother →  Aymer, count of Angoulême
her father Show short path | Share this path
You might be connected in other ways.

Show Me
______________________________________________________________________________

702 -Gerold, count in Kraichgau -K-376
729 -Udalrich I, Graf im Breisgau -K-375
756 -Udalrich II, Graf im Breisgau -K-374
783 -Wulfhard, count of Flavigny -K-373
828 -Wulgrin, count of Angoulême -K-372
866 -Alduin, count of Angoulême -K-371
895 -Guillaume I Taillefer count of Angoulême -K-370
927 -Arnaud Manzer count of Angoulême -K-369
960 -William II, count of Angoulême -K-368
990 -Geoffrey I, count of Angoulême -K-367
1015 -Fulk, count of Agoulême -K-366
1084 -William V Taillefer Count of Angoulême -K-365
1089 -Vulgrin II, comte d'Angoulême -K-364
1115 -Guillame Taillefer of Angouleme, Comte of Angouleme -K-363
1160 -Aymer, count of Angoulême -K-362
1188 -Isabelle of Angoulême, Queen Consort of England -182193
182193
______________________________________________________________________________

Aymer d'Angoulême, comte d'Angoulême   MP
Gender: Male
Birth: August 23, 1160
Angoulême, Charente, Poitou-Charentes, France
Death: June 16, 1202 (41)
Limoges, Haute-Vienne, Limousin, France
Place of Burial: L'abbaye Notre-Dame de La Couronne, Charente, Poitou-Charentes, France
Immediate Family:
Son of Guillame Taillefer of Angouleme, Comte of Angouleme and Marguerite de Turenne, comtesse d'Angoulême
Husband of Alice de Courtenay, comtesse d'Angoulême
Father of Isabella of Angoulême and Sir William Taillefer
Brother of Griset d'Angouleme; Foulques d'Angouleme; Isabelle d'Angoulême; Almodis d'Angoulême; Wulgrin "Taillefer" d'Angoulême, III and 3 others
Half brother of Matabrune de Ventadour and Ademar V Boson, Vicomte de Limoges
Added by: Conrad Kamaha'o Herrmann on May 23, 2007
Managed by:   Angus Wood-Salomon and 273 others
Curated by: Lúcia Pilla
 0  Matches
Research this Person
 Contact Profile Managers
 View Tree
 Edit Profile
Overview
Media (29)
Timeline
Discussions
Sources (9)
Revisions
DNA
About
English (default)  edit | history
Aymer III de Taillefer, Comte d'Angoulême (1160-1202)

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aymer_of_Angoul%C3%AAme

and in French: http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aymar_Taillefer

Aymer I (c. 1160–16 June 1202), the last Taillefer Count of Angoulême.

[edit] History

Aymer (or Aymar) was the third of the 6 children of William IV of Angoulême, the Count of Angoulême, and Marguerite of Turenne. His two elder brothers, Wulgrin III of Angoulême and William V of Angoulême became the Counts of Angoulême, respectively, after the death of their father in 1179 (Wulgrin first, then William V succeeding in 1181). Aymer succeeded his brother in 1186 as the Count of Angoulême.

In that same year, he married Alice of Courtenay, the daughter of Peter of Courtenay (the son of Louis VI of France) and Elizabeth of the House of Courtenay. In 1188, they had a daughter who would play an important role in the history of England and France: Isabella of Angoulême.

Aymer died in Limoges, France on June 16, 1202. His daughter and only child Isabella succeeded him as the ruler of the county of Angoulême. Her title, however, was largely empty since her husband John, king of England, denied Isabelle control of her inheritance as well as her marriage dowry and dower. John's appointed governor, Bartholomew le Puy, ran most of the administrative affairs of Angoulême until John's death in 1216. In 1217 Isabelle returned and seized her inheritance from le Puy, who appealed unsuccessfully to the English king for help.

Sources:

Plantagenet Chronicles p. 263

The book, 'Queens of England'

Comte d'Angoulême

Aymer (also Aymar, Adhemar or Adomar; c. 1160 – 16 June 1202) was the last Count of Angoulême of the House of Taillefer. He was the third of the six children of Count William IV and Marguerite de Turenne. His two elder brothers, Wulgrin III and William VII, became the Counts of Angoulême in succession after the death of their father in 1179. Aymer succeeded his brother in 1186, and soon after was at the court of Richard the Lionheart, then Duke of Aquitaine and thus Aymer's lord, to receive recognition of his accession.[1] By 1191, Aymer had married Alice of Courtenay, the daughter of Peter I of Courtenay and thus granddaughter of King Louis VI of France.[2] In 1188, they had a daughter, Isabella of Angoulême, who married King John of England in 1200. The marriage alliance was sealed by two treaties, one public, the other private between Aymer and John. The count remained a steady ally of the kings of England against the rebellious House of Lusignan. Aymer had a claim to the County of La Marche, where in 1199 or 1200 he was exercising authority, perhaps on behalf of his son-in-law, and issued a charter to some monks of Aubignac. In February 1202 when John was visiting Angoulême to negotiate a treaty with Sancho VII of Navarre, Aymer took him on a tour of the newly consecrated abbey church at La Couronne.[3] The role of Aymer's daughter in John's continued refusal to properly care for his brother Richard the Lionheart's widow, Berengaria of Navarre, may explain the Count of Angoulême's proximity to the negotiations between the two kingdoms. Aymer died in Limoges on 16 June 1202. His daughter and only child succeeded him as Countess of Angoulême. Her title, however, was largely empty since her husband denied her control of her inheritance as well as her marriage dowry and dower. John's appointed governor, Bartholomew de Le Puy (de Podio), ran most of the administrative affairs of Angoulême until John's death in 1216. In 1217 Isabella returned and seized her inheritance from Bartholomew, who appealed unsuccessfully to the English king for help. Aymer's widow, Alice, ruled the city of Angoulême until March 1203, when John summoned her to court and granted her a monthly pension of 50 livres d'Anjou in return for her dower rights. She thereafter retired from public life to her estate at La Ferté-Gaucher, where she was living as late as July 1215, when she issued a charter at Provins using the title Countess of Angoulême.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aymer_of_Angoulême

Aymer III de Taillefer, Comte d'Angoulême (1160-1202)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aymer_of_Angoul%C3%AAme

and in French: http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aymar_Taillefer

Aymer I (c. 1160–16 June 1202), the last Taillefer Count of Angoulême.

[edit] History

Aymer (or Aymar) was the third of the 6 children of William IV of Angoulême, the Count of Angoulême, and Marguerite of Turenne. His two elder brothers, Wulgrin III of Angoulême and William V of Angoulême became the Counts of Angoulême, respectively, after the death of their father in 1179 (Wulgrin first, then William V succeeding in 1181). Aymer succeeded his brother in 1186 as the Count of Angoulême.

In that same year, he married Alice of Courtenay, the daughter of Peter of Courtenay (the son of Louis VI of France) and Elizabeth of the House of Courtenay. In 1188, they had a daughter who would play an important role in the history of England and France: Isabella of Angoulême.

Aymer died in Limoges, France on June 16, 1202. His daughter and only child Isabella succeeded him as the ruler of the county of Angoulême. Her title, however, was largely empty since her husband John, king of England, denied Isabelle control of her inheritance as well as her marriage dowry and dower. John's appointed governor, Bartholomew le Puy, ran most of the administrative affairs of Angoulême until John's death in 1216. In 1217 Isabelle returned and seized her inheritance from le Puy, who appealed unsuccessfully to the English king for help.

Sources:

Plantagenet Chronicles p. 263

The book, 'Queens of England'

Comte d'Angoulême

Aymer (also Aymar, Adhemar or Adomar; c. 1160 – 16 June 1202) was the last Count of Angoulême of the House of Taillefer. He was the third of the six children of Count William IV and Marguerite de Turenne. His two elder brothers, Wulgrin III and William VII, became the Counts of Angoulême in succession after the death of their father in 1179. Aymer succeeded his brother in 1186, and soon after was at the court of Richard the Lionheart, then Duke of Aquitaine and thus Aymer's lord, to receive recognition of his accession.[1] By 1191, Aymer had married Alice of Courtenay, the daughter of Peter I of Courtenay and thus granddaughter of King Louis VI of France.[2] In 1188, they had a daughter, Isabella of Angoulême, who married King John of England in 1200. The marriage alliance was sealed by two treaties, one public, the other private between Aymer and John. The count remained a steady ally of the kings of England against the rebellious House of Lusignan. Aymer had a claim to the County of La Marche, where in 1199 or 1200 he was exercising authority, perhaps on behalf of his son-in-law, and issued a charter to some monks of Aubignac. In February 1202 when John was visiting Angoulême to negotiate a treaty with Sancho VII of Navarre, Aymer took him on a tour of the newly consecrated abbey church at La Couronne.[3] The role of Aymer's daughter in John's continued refusal to properly care for his brother Richard the Lionheart's widow, Berengaria of Navarre, may explain the Count of Angoulême's proximity to the negotiations between the two kingdoms. Aymer died in Limoges on 16 June 1202. His daughter and only child succeeded him as Countess of Angoulême. Her title, however, was largely empty since her husband denied her control of her inheritance as well as her marriage dowry and dower. John's appointed governor, Bartholomew de Le Puy (de Podio), ran most of the administrative affairs of Angoulême until John's death in 1216. In 1217 Isabella returned and seized her inheritance from Bartholomew, who appealed unsuccessfully to the English king for help. Aymer's widow, Alice, ruled the city of Angoulême until March 1203, when John summoned her to court and granted her a monthly pension of 50 livres d'Anjou in return for her dower rights. She thereafter retired from public life to her estate at La Ferté-Gaucher, where she was living as late as July 1215, when she issued a charter at Provins using the title Countess of Angoulême. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aymer_of_Angoulême

Aymer III de Taillefer, Comte d'Angoulême (1160-1202)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aymer_of_Angoul%C3%AAme

and in French: http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aymar_Taillefer

Aymer I (c. 1160–16 June 1202), the last Taillefer Count of Angoulême.

[edit] History

Aymer (or Aymar) was the third of the 6 children of William IV of Angoulême, the Count of Angoulême, and Marguerite of Turenne. His two elder brothers, Wulgrin III of Angoulême and William V of Angoulême became the Counts of Angoulême, respectively, after the death of their father in 1179 (Wulgrin first, then William V succeeding in 1181). Aymer succeeded his brother in 1186 as the Count of Angoulême.

In that same year, he married Alice of Courtenay, the daughter of Peter of Courtenay (the son of Louis VI of France) and Elizabeth of the House of Courtenay. In 1188, they had a daughter who would play an important role in the history of England and France: Isabella of Angoulême.

Aymer died in Limoges, France on June 16, 1202. His daughter and only child Isabella succeeded him as the ruler of the county of Angoulême. Her title, however, was largely empty since her husband John, king of England, denied Isabelle control of her inheritance as well as her marriage dowry and dower. John's appointed governor, Bartholomew le Puy, ran most of the administrative affairs of Angoulême until John's death in 1216. In 1217 Isabelle returned and seized her inheritance from le Puy, who appealed unsuccessfully to the English king for help.

Sources:

Plantagenet Chronicles p. 263

The book, 'Queens of England'

read more
View All
Immediate Family
Text ViewAdd Family
Showing 12 of 21 people

Alice de Courtenay, comtesse d'A...
wife

Isabella of Angoulême
daughter

Sir William Taillefer
son

Guillame Taillefer of Angouleme,...
father

Marguerite de Turenne, comtesse ...
mother

Griset d'Angouleme
sister

Foulques d'Angouleme
brother

Isabelle d'Angoulême
sister

Almodis d'Angoulême
sister

Wulgrin "Taillefer" d'Angoulême...
brother

Guiillaume Taillefer de Anguleme, V
brother

Helie Taillefer
sister

No hay comentarios:

Publicar un comentario