(Es Tu Séptimo Primo 8 Veces Removido)-is your 7th cousin 8 times removed de: Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo →René I d'Anjou, titular King of Naples is your 7th cousin 8 times removed.
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René I d'Anjou, titular King of Naples is your 7th cousin 8 times removed.of→ Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo→ Morella Álamo Borges
your mother → Belén Eloina Alamo
her mother → Belén de Jesús Ustáriz Lecuna
her mother → Miguel María Ramón de Jesús Uztáriz y Monserrate
her father → María de Guía de Jesús de Monserrate é Ibarra
his mother → Teniente Coronel Manuel José de Monserrate y Urbina
her father → Antonieta Felicita Javiera Ignacia de Urbina y Hurtado de Mendoza
his mother → Isabel Manuela Josefa Hurtado de Mendoza y Rojas Manrique
her mother → Juana de Rojas Manrique de Mendoza
her mother → Constanza de Mendoza Mate de Luna
her mother → Mayor de Mendoza Manzanedo
her mother → Juan Fernández De Mendoza Y Manuel
her father → Sancha Manuel
his mother → Sancho Manuel de Villena Castañeda, señor del Infantado y Carrión de los Céspedes
her father → Manuel de Castilla, señor de Escalona
his father → Saint Ferdinand III, king of Castile & León
his father → Eleanor of Castile, Queen consort of England
his daughter → Eleanor of England, Countess of Bar
her daughter → Edouard I, comte de Bar
her son → Henry de Bar, IV
his son → Robert I, Duc de Bar
his son → Violante de Bar, reina consorte de Aragón
his daughter → Iolanda di Aragona, regina consorte titolare di Napoli
her daughter → René I d'Anjou, titular King of Naples
her son
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René "le Bon" d'Anjou, titolare re di Napoli MP
French: René, titolare re di Napoli
Gender: Male
Birth: January 16, 1409
Angers, Maine-et-Loire, France
Death: July 10, 1480 (71)
Aix-en-Provence, Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur, France
Place of Burial: St-Maurice, Anger, Anjou, France
Immediate Family:
Son of Louis II d'Anjou, King of Naples and Iolanda di Aragona, regina consorte titolare di Napoli
Husband of Isabelle, duchesse de Lorraine and Jeanne de Montfort, de Laval
Ex-partner of Catherine d'Albertas, concubine and N.N. N.N.
Father of Louis Marquis de d'Anjou; Magdeleine d'Anjou; Jean d'Anjou, marquis de Pont-à-Mousson, seigneur de Saint-Rémy et de Saint-; René d'Anjou; Blanche d'Anjou and 9 others
Brother of Louis III d'Anjou, titular King of Naples; Marie d'Anjou, reine de France; Yolande of Brittany and Charles IV d'Anjou, comte du Maine
Added by: Bjørn P. Brox on June 24, 2007
Managed by: Noah Tutak and 42 others
Curated by: Günther Kipp
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René I d'Anjou, titular King of Naples in GenealogieOnline Family Tree Index
René I d'Anjou, titular King of Naples in GenealogieOnline Family Tree Index
René I d'Anjou, titular King of Naples in GenealogieOnline Family Tree Index
René I d'Anjou, titular King of Naples in GenealogieOnline Family Tree Index
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Aboutedit | history
René
'the Good', Duc d'Anjou
Duc de Lorraine in 1431.
Comte de Provence in 1434.
Duc d'Anjou in 1434.
King of Naples and Sicily.
Duc de Bar.
Links:
Thepeerage: http://thepeerage.com/p10292.htm#i102912
Geneall: http://www.geneall.net/F/per_page.php?id=45313
Wikipedia:
English: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ren%C3%A9_of_Anjou
Francais: http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ren%C3%A9_d%27Anjou
René of Anjou
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
René I of Naples (January 16, 1409 – July 10, 1480), also known as René d'Anjou and the Good King René (French Le bon roi René), was Duke of Anjou, Count of Provence (1434–1480), Count of Piedmont, Duke of Bar (1430–1480), Duke of Lorraine (1431–1453), King of Naples (1438–1442; titular 1442–1480), titular King of Jerusalem (1438–1480) and Aragon (1466–1480) (including Sicily, Majorca, Corsica). He was father to Margaret of Anjou, Queen Consort to King Henry VI of England, a key figure in the Wars of the Roses.
Life
René was born in the castle of Angers, and was the second son of Louis II of Anjou, King of Sicily (i.e. King of Naples), and of Yolande of Aragon. He was the brother of Marie d'Anjou, who married the future Charles VII of France and became Queen of France.
Louis II died in 1417, and his sons, together with their brother-in-law, afterwards Charles VII of France, were brought up under the guardianship of their mother. The elder, Louis III, succeeded to the crown of Sicily and to the duchy of Anjou, René being known as the Count of Guise. By his marriage treaty (1419) with Isabel, elder daughter of Charles II, Duke of Lorraine, he became heir to the Duchy of Bar, which was claimed as the inheritance of his mother Yolande, and, in right of his wife, heir to the Duchy of Lorraine. René, then only ten, was to be brought up in Lorraine under the guardianship of Charles II and Louis, cardinal of Bar, both of whom were attached to the Burgundian party, but he retained the right to bear the arms of Anjou.
He was far from sympathizing with the Burgundians, and, joining the French army at Reims in 1429, was present at the coronation of Charles VII. When Louis of Bar died in 1430 René came into sole possession of his duchy, and in the next year, on his father-in-law's death, he succeeded to the duchy of Lorraine. But the inheritance was claimed by the heir-male, Antoine de Vaudemont, who with Burgundian help defeated René at Bulgneville in July 1431. The Duchess Isabel effected a truce with Antoine de Vaudemont, but the duke remained a prisoner of the Burgundians until April 1432, when he recovered his liberty on parole on yielding up as hostages his two sons, Jean and Louis of Anjou.
His title as duke of Lorraine was confirmed by his suzerain, the Emperor Sigismund, at Basel in 1434. This proceeding roused the anger of the Burgundian duke, Philip the Good, who required him early in the next year to return to his prison, from which he was released two years later on payment of a heavy ransom. He had succeeded to the throne of the Kingdom of Naples through the deaths of his brother Louis III and of Joan II, queen of Naples, the last heir of the earlier dynasty. Louis had been adopted by her in 1431, and she now left her inheritance to René.
The marriage of Marie de Bourbon, niece of Philip of Burgundy, with John, duke of Calabria, René's eldest son, cemented peace between the two princes. After appointing a regency in Bar and Lorraine, he visited his provinces of Anjou and Provence, and in 1438 set sail for Naples, which had been held for him by the Duchess Isabel.
René's captivity, and the poverty of the Angevin resources due to his ransom, enabled Alfonso V of Aragon, who had been first adopted and then repudiated by Joan II, to make some headway in the kingdom of Naples, especially as he was already in possession of the island of Sicily. In 1441 Alfonso laid siege to Naples, which he sacked after a six-month siege. René returned to France in the same year, and though he retained the title of king of Naples his effective rule was never recovered. Later efforts to recover his rights in Italy failed. His mother Yolande, who had governed Anjou in his absence, died in 1442. René took part in the negotiations with the English at Tours in 1444, and peace was consolidated by the marriage of his younger daughter, Margaret, with Henry VI of England at Nancy.
René now made over the government of Lorraine to John, Duke of Calabria, who was, however, only formally installed as Duke of Lorraine on the death of Queen Isabel in 1453. René had the confidence of Charles VII, and is said to have initiated the reduction of the men-at-arms set on foot by the king, with whose military operations against the English he was closely associated. He entered Rouen with him in November 1449, and was also with him at Formigny and Caen.
After his second marriage with Jeanne de Laval, daughter of Guy XIV, Count of Laval, and Isabel of Brittany, René took a less active part in public affairs, and devoted himself more to artistic and literary pursuits. The fortunes of his house declined in his old age:
In 1466, the rebellious Catalonians offered the crown of Aragon to René, and the Duke of Calabria, unsuccessful in Italy, was sent to take up the conquest of that kingdom. However, he died, apparently by poison, at Barcelona on December 16, 1470
The Duke of Calabria's eldest son Nicholas perished in 1473, also under suspicion of poisoning.
In 1471, René's daughter Margaret was finally defeated in the War of the Roses. Her husband and her son were killed and she herself became a prisoner and had to be ransomed by Louis XI of France in 1476.
René II, Duke of Lorraine, Rene's grandson and only surviving male descendant, was gained over to the party of Louis XI, who suspected the king of Sicily of complicity with his enemies, the Duke of Brittany and the Constable Saint-Pol.
René retired to Provence, and in 1474 made a will by which he left Bar to his grandson René II, Duke of Lorraine; Anjou and Provence to his nephew Charles, count of Le Maine. King Louis XI seized Anjou and Bar, and two years later sought to compel René to exchange the two duchies for a pension. The offer was rejected, but further negotiations assured the lapse to the crown of the duchy of Anjou, and the annexation of Provence was only postponed until the death of the Count of Le Maine. René died on July 10, 1480 in Aix-en-Provence. He was buried in the cathedral of Angers.
His charities having earned him the title of "the good." He founded an order of chivalry, the Ordre du Croissant, which preceded the royal foundation of St Michael, but did not survive René.
René and the arts
The King of Sicily's fame as an amateur painter[1] formerly led to the optimistic attribution to him of many paintings in Anjou and Provence, in many cases simply because they bore his arms. These works are generally in the Early Netherlandish style, and were probably executed under his patronage and direction, so that he may be said to have formed a school of the fine arts in sculpture, painting, goldsmith's work and tapestry. He employed Barthélemy d'Eyck as both painter and varlet de chambre for most of his career.
Two of the most famous works formerly attributed to René are the triptych of the Burning Bush of Nicolas Froment of Avignon, in the cathedral of Aix, showing portraits of René and his second wife, Jeanne de Laval, and an illuminated Book of Hours in the Bibliothèque nationale, Paris. Among the men of letters attached to his court was Antoine de la Sale, whom he made tutor to his son, the Duke of Calabria. He encouraged the performance of mystery plays; on the performance of a mystery of the Passion at Saumur in 1462 he remitted four years of taxes to the town, and the representations of the Passion at Angers were carried out under his auspices.
He exchanged verses with his kinsman, the poet Charles of Orleans. The best of his poems is the idyl of Regnault and Jeanneton, representing his own courtship of Jeanne de Laval. Le Livre des tournois, a book of ceremonial, and the allegorical romance, "Conquests qu'un chevalier nommé le Cuer d'amour espris feist d'une dame appelée Doulce Mercy", with other works ascribed to him, were perhaps dictated to his secretaries, or at least compiled under his direction.
[edit]Marriages and issue
René married:
Isabelle de Lorraine (1410–February 28, 1453) in 1420
Jeanne de Laval, on September 10, 1454, at the Abbey of St. Nicholas in Angers
His legitimate children by Isabelle were:
John II, Duke of Lorraine (1425–1470)
René (b. 1426)
Louis of Anjou (1427, Nancy – 1443), Marquis of Pont-à-Mousson
Nicolas (b. 1428, Nancy), d. young
Yolande de Bar (November 2, 1428 – March 23, 1483), married 1445, Nancy, Frederick, Count of Vaudémont
Margaret (March 23, 1430 – August 25, 1482), married Henry VI of England.
Charles (1431–1432), Count of Guise
Isabelle, d. young
Louise (b. 1436), d. young
Anne (b. 1437), d. young
He also had several illegitimate children:
John, Bastard of Anjou (d. 1536), Marquis of Pont-à-Mousson, married 1500 Marguerite de Glandeves-Faucon
Jeanne Blanche (d. 1470), Lady of Mirebeau, married in Paris 1467 Bertrand de Beauvau (d. 1474)
Madeleine (d. aft. 1515), Countesss of Montferrand (+after 1515), married in Tours 1496 Louis Jean, seigneur de Bellenave
References
Wikimedia Commons has media related to:
René I of Naples
^ A letter from the Neapolitan humanist Pietro Summonte to Marcantonio Michiel, of 20 March 1524, reporting on the state of art in Naples, and works there by Netherlandish painters, states that "King René was also a skilled painter and was very keen on the study of the discipline, but according to the style of Flanders"; the letter was published by Fausto Niccolini, L'arte napoletana del Rinascimento (Naples) 1925:161-63. It is translated in Carol M. Richardson, Kim Woods and Michael W. Franklin, Renaissance Art Reconsidered: An Anthology of Primary Sources (2007:193-96).
This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.
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Jeanne de Montfort, de Laval
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Isabelle, duchesse de Lorraine
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Isabelle de Lorraine
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Jean II d'Anjou, duc de Lorraine...
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Louis de Pont a Mousson
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Nicolas de Lorraine
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Yolande de Bar d'Anjou, Duchess ...
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Marguerite d'Anjou, Queen consor...
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Charles de Lorraine
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Florent Jousselin
adopted son
N.N. N.N.
ex-partner
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Agregado por: Ing. Carlos Juan Felipe Urdaneta Alamo, MD.IG.
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Linaje N°1 FAMILIA |•••► RENÉ |
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1.- 1409 RENÉ I DANJOU TITULAR KING OF NAPLES |•••► Pais:Francia PADRE: Louis II dAnjou King of Naples
MADRE: Iolanda di Aragona regina consorte titolare di N |
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2.- 1377 LOUIS II DANJOU KING OF NAPLES |•••► Pais:Francia PADRE: Padre: Louis I de France duc dAnjou
MADRE: Marie de BloisChtillon |
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3.- 1339 LOUIS I DE FRANCE DUC DANJOU |•••► Pais:Francia PADRE: Padre: Jean II le Bon de Valois roi de France
MADRE: Bonne de Luxembourg reine consort de France |
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4.- 1319 JEAN II LE BON DE VALOIS ROI DE FRANCE |•••► Pais:Francia PADRE: Padre: King Philippe VI de de Valois
MADRE: Jeanne de Bourgogne, reine de France |
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5.- 1293 KING PHILIPPE VI DE DE VALOIS |•••► Pais:Francia PADRE: Padre: Carlos de Valois (Charles of France, Count of Valois)
MADRE: Marguerite dAnjou comtesse dAnjou et du Maine |
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6.- 1270 CARLOS DE VALOIS (CHARLES OF FRANCE, COUNT OF VALOIS) |•••► Pais:Francia PADRE: Padre: Philip Iii (The Bold) Capet, King Of France
MADRE: Isabella De Aragon |
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7.- 1245 PHILIP III (THE BOLD) CAPET, KING OF FRANCE |•••► Pais:Francia PADRE: Padre: Louis IX the Saint, King of France MADRE: |
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8.- 1214 LOUIS IX THE SAINT, KING OF FRANCE |•••► Pais:Francia PADRE: Padre: Louis Viii Le Lion, Roi De France
MADRE: Blanche De Castille, Reine Consort De France |
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9.- 1187 LOUIS VIII LE LION, ROI DE FRANCE |•••► Pais:Francia PADRE: |
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10.- 1165 PHILIP II AUGUSTUS, KING OF FRANCE |•••► Pais:Francia PADRE: |
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11.- 1120 LOUIS VII LE JEUNE, ROI DE FRANCE |•••► Pais:Francia PADRE: Padre: Louis VI the Fat, king of France
MADRE: Adelaide of Maurienne |
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12.- 1081 LOUIS VI THE FAT, KING OF FRANCE |•••► Pais:Francia PADRE: Padre: Philip I, King Of France
MADRE: Bertha De Holanda, |
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13.- 1052 PHILIP I, KING OF FRANCE |•••► Pais:Francia PADRE: Padre: Henry I, King Of France
MADRE: Anna of Kiev, Queen Consort of the Franks |
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14.- 1009 HENRY I, KING OF FRANCE |•••► Pais:Francia PADRE: Padre: Robert II Capet, King of the France MADRE: |
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15.- 0972 ROBERT II CAPET, KING OF THE FRANCE |•••► Pais:Francia PADRE: |
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16.- 0940 HUGUES CAPET, ROI DES FRANCS |•••► Pais:Francia PADRE: Padre: Hugh (Magnus) of Paris, count of Paris, duke of the Franks
MADRE: Hedwige of Saxony |
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17.- 0898 HUGH (MAGNUS) OF PARIS, COUNT OF PARIS, DUKE OF THE FRANKS |•••► Pais:Francia PADRE: Padre: Robert I, King of France
MADRE: Béatrice de Vermandois |
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18.- 0866 ROBERT I, KING OF FRANCE |•••► Pais:Francia PADRE: Padre: Robert IV (the Strong), Margrave of Neustria
MADRE: Adelaide of Tours |
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