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Henry III Plantagenet (b. October 10, 1207, d. November 16, 1272)
Henry III Plantagenet (son of John I- "Lackland"PLANTAGENET, of England and of Angouleme De Taillefer Isabella)10350, 10351, 10352, 10353, 10354, 10355, 10356, 10357, 10358, 10359, 10360, 10361, 10362, 10363, 10364, 10365 was born October 10, 1207 in Winchester, Hampshire, England, GB10366, 10367, 10368, and died November 16, 1272 in Westminster, London, England, GB10369, 10370, 10371. He married EleanorBerenger (Provence, of Provence) on January 24, 1235/3610372, 10373, daughter of Raimond V (Raymond) Berenger and Beatrice of Savoy.
Notes for Henry III Plantagenet:
[15feb06abernethy.ged]
This individual was found on GenCircles at: http://www.gencircles.com/u sers/junemengland/1/data/9027
[v4t2728roucy.FTW]
1. AR 1-27, 17-27.
2. King of England 1216-1272.
Henry III.'s wife was Eleanor of Provence. Their son, Henry Plantaganet , Earl of Leicester, married Blanche, daughter of Robert, Earl of Artoi s, and granddaughter of Louis VIII. of France. They had a son, Henry, E arl of Leicester, who married Lady Maud, daughter of Patrick, third Bar on de Mowbray. Their son, John de Mowbray, married Elizabeth, the only c hild of John, Lord Segrave, and had a daughter, Margery de Mowbray, who m arried John, Baron de Welles, and had a son, Eudo de Welles, who marrie d Lady Maud, daughter of a Baron de Greystock. They had a son, Sir Lion el de Welles, who married Joan, daughter of Sir Robert Waterton, and ha d a daughter, Margaret de Welles, who married Sir Thomas Dymoke. They w ere the parents of Sir Lionel Dymoke, who married Joan, daughter of Ric hard Griffith of Stockford, and had a daughter, Alice, who married Sir W illiam Skipwith of Ormsby; and thus comes the royal blood of the Skipwi ths and Carters.
Through Matilda of Flanders, wife of William "The Conqueror,"This indiv idual was found on GenCircles at: http://www.gencircles.com/users/junem england/1/data/9027
[v4t2728roucy.FTW]
1. AR 1-27, 17-27.
2. King of England 1216-1272.
Henry III.'s wife was Eleanor of Provence. Their son, Henry Plantaganet , Earl of Leicester, married Blanche, daughter of Robert, Earl of Artoi s, and granddaughter of Louis VIII. of France. They had a son, Henry, E arl of Leicester, who married Lady Maud, daughter of Patrick, third Bar on de Mowbray. Their son, John de Mowbray, married Elizabeth, the only c hild of John, Lord Segrave, and had a daughter, Margery de Mowbray, who m arried John, Baron de Welles, and had a son, Eudo de Welles, who marrie d Lady Maud, daughter of a Baron de Greystock. They had a son, Sir Lion el de Welles, who married Joan, daughter of Sir Robert Waterton, and ha d a daughter, Margaret de Welles, who married Sir Thomas Dymoke. They w ere the parents of Sir Lionel Dymoke, who married Joan, daughter of Ric hard Griffith of Stockford, and had a daughter, Alice, who married Sir W illiam Skipwith of Ormsby; and thus comes the royal blood of the Skipwi ths and Carters.
Through Matilda of Flanders, wife of William "The Conqueror,"This indiv idual was found on GenCircles at: http://www.gencircles.com/users/junem england/1/data/9027
[v4t2728roucy.FTW]
1. AR 1-27, 17-27.
2. King of England 1216-1272.
Henry III.'s wife was Eleanor of Provence. Their son, Henry Plantaganet , Earl of Leicester, married Blanche, daughter of Robert, Earl of Artoi s, and granddaughter of Louis VIII. of France. They had a son, Henry, E arl of Leicester, who married Lady Maud, daughter of Patrick, third Bar on de Mowbray. Their son, John de Mowbray, married Elizabeth, the only c hild of John, Lord Segrave, and had a daughter, Margery de Mowbray, who m arried John, Baron de Welles, and had a son, Eudo de Welles, who marrie d Lady Maud, daughter of a Baron de Greystock. They had a son, Sir Lion el de Welles, who married Joan, daughter of Sir Robert Waterton, and ha d a daughter, Margaret de Welles, who married Sir Thomas Dymoke. They w ere the parents of Sir Lionel Dymoke, who married Joan, daughter of Ric hard Griffith of Stockford, and had a daughter, Alice, who married Sir W illiam Skipwith of Ormsby; and thus comes the royal blood of the Skipwi ths and Carters.
Through Matilda of Flanders, wife of William "The Conqueror,"
!Ascended to the throne at age 9.
1216 - French force lands in England
1217 - French defeated at Lincoln and Sandwich, leave England
1218 - Peace of Worcester between Henry III and Wales
1220 - Henry III crowned at Westminster
1227 - Henry declares himself of age
1255 - Buys Sicily from Pope for his son Edmund
[Timetables of History]
WAITE, FOSTER LINES
!King of England, 1216-72. Since he was a boy of 9 when he inherited t he throne, there was a long regency, during which he was under the prot ection of the papacy for the most part and a papal legate ruled. For a t ime Hubert de Burgh, who was hostile to the papacy, controlled affairs; b ut when Henry took over the government he soon (1232) dismissed him. [O utline History of Mankind]
!Henry was weak and willful, and tried to rule with personal favorites w hom he brought over from the Continent. He was extravagant and exacted h igh taxes and otherwise mismanaged affairs. He was always under the do mination of the pope and allowed him to take large amounts of money out o f England in the form of taxes on the English clergy. For all these re asons he was very unpopular, and the barons at length decided to take m atters into their own hands. They forced the king to submit to the Pro visions of Oxford (1258) which provided that all royal officials be res ponsible, not to the king but to a council of fifteen which represented t he barons. This system worked badly and soon there was war. The leader o f the barons was Simon de Montfort, a French and English noble who had v ery liberal ideas about reform and the rights of the middle class. In 1 264 he forced Henry to agree to the mist of Lewes which put the governm ent in a council of nine dominated by Simon. Simon called a great coun cil which was notable for the fact that representatives of both towns a nd rural districts were called to sit with the barons. But some of the b arons were alarmed at this liberalism and the next year Simon was kille d in battle. Thus the movement failed and the kingdom was at peace unt il Henry's death in 1272. [Outline History of Mankind]
!Devizes, 19 Oct 1216 -- 9-year-old Henry is proclaimed king.
London, 12 Sep 1217 -- Treaty of Lambeth brings peace between France, t he barons and the supporters of Henry.
Newcastle, 14 Aug 1244 -- Henry and Alexander II of Scots renew a truce .
Paris, 1259 -- Henry signs a treaty in which he gives up his claims to F rench lands.
England, 2 May 1264 -- Henry annuls the Provisions of Oxford.
Kenilworth, 24 Aug 1266 -- Parliament meets, and Henry is compelled to o ffer rebels who surrender a favorable deal.
Montgomery, 29 Jul 1267 -- Llywelyn ap Gruffudd, the ruler of Gwynedd, s eals a treaty with Henry
England, Feb 1271 -- Henry falls seriously ill
Westminster, 16 Nov 1272 -- Henry dies; son Edwards succeeds him.
[Chronicles of Royal Family, p. 56]
!Gloucester, 26 Oct 1216 -- In a makeshift ceremony where the queen's b racelet was substituted for the crown (which was lost in the Wash by Ki ng John with the rest of the royal regalia), Henry was hastily pulled f rom his playing to take the throne as the Welsh princes are attack in t he west and the French and rebel barons take control of much of SE Engl and. Seamstresses hastily put together some improvised coronation robe s. [Chronicles of the Royal Family, p. 56]
!London, 1256 -- Henry received a gift of an elephant from King Louis I X of France. The elephant resided in a manageris which Henry build in t he Tower of London. [Chronicle of the Royal Family, p. 59]
!Westminster, 1269 -- Henry is an exceptionally pious king, hearing mas s several times a day, and a man of sensitivity and taste who has spons ored a great boom in the arts and learning. His greatest memorial was t he rebuilding of Westminster abbey church at his own expense as a home f or the shrine of its royal founder, St. Edward the Confesor. He also f ounded Oxford University. He was notoriously mean. On his son Edward's b irth, messengers were dispatched to tell the news to the country's nobl es. Henry returned presents that he regarded as unsatisfactory and mad e his anger clear. His lack of trustworthiness was shown when he repud iated the Provisions of Oxford -- which limited royal power -- despite h is solemn oaths. But for all his faults, Henry was a pious and sensiti ve man who presided over a period of great intellectual and artistic ac hievement.[Chronicle of the Royal Family, p. 60-1]
Reigned as King of England from 1216 to 1277.
Crowned at Gloucester 28 Oct 1216;
also per Marlyn Lewis
On John the Scot's death, King Henry III (1216-72) acquired the earldom o f Chester, which included the castles of Chester itself, and that of Sh otwick which lay just across the Dee from the later Flint. Indeed, this w as to prove a significant tactical advantage since the Crown now had a d irect foothold on the borders of Wales. Chester provided the direct bas e from which the Crown might confront the power of Gwynedd and curb its a mbitions in the border zone. In 1241 Henry III built a new stone castle a t Dyserth. Henry III granted the earldom of Chester and its castles to h is eldest son, Edward (later King Edward I), in 1254. [Flint Castle/Ewl oe Castle, p. 6]
Nine days after King John's death, on 28 October, John's 9-year-old son H enry was crowned in Gloucester Abbey by Peter des Roches, bishop of Win chester, who became the boy's tutor. The Pope offered active support th rough his legate Gualo. The royalist barons stood firm behind William t he Marshal, the greatest soldier of his time and a man of untarnished r eputation: he was given the title and responsibility of 'governor of Ki ng and kingdom'. [Lincoln Castle, p. 34]
At Ludlow Castle in 1224 Henry III made a treaty with the rebel prince, L lewellyn, with Archbishop Langton as mediator. [Ludlow Castle, p. 2]
Beaulieu Abbey was finished in 1246, some 42 years after it was started . In June of that year Henry III and his family were present at the ded ication ceremony of what was the largest Cistercian Abbey in England, m easuring 3336 by 182 feet. Extra land had been given to the Abbey compl ex by King Henry and in all an area of 55 acres was contained with the A bbey's protection. The whole parcel of land that comprised the estate w as once part of the King's hunting ground. ["Place of the King" by Dere k Littlewood, REALM June 2002, pp. 44-49]
Henry III (October 1, 1207 - November 16, 1272) is one of the least-kno wn British monarchs, considering the great length of his reign. He was b orn in 1207, the son of the infamous King John, and succeeded to the th rone at the age of nine, with the result that the country was ruled by r egents until 1227. Henry married Eleanor of Provence, and they had nine c hildren, the eldest of whom succeeded Henry as Edward I of England.
Henry's reign was marked by civil strife, as the English barons demande d more say in the running of the kingdom. This led to the calling of th e first English Parliament by Simon de Montfort, who, besides being the l eader of opposition, was married to Henry's sister. At the Battle of Le wes in 1264, Henry was defeated and taken prisoner by de Montfort. Henr y's son, Edward, turned the tables on de Montfort in 1265 at the Battle o f Evesham, following which savage retribution was exacted on the rebels . From about 1270, Henry effectively gave up the reins of government to h is son. He died in 1272 and is buried in Westminster Abbey.
Henry was succeded by his son, Edward I of England.
source:
http://www.free-definition.com/Henry-III-of-England.html
Isabella De Taillefer 1 was born about 1180 in Of, Angouleme, Charente, F rance. She died on 31 May 1245/1246 in Fontevrault Abbey, Fontevrault, M aine-Et-Loire, France. She was buried in Fontevrault Abbey, Fontevrault , Maine-Et-Loire, France. She married John "Lackland" King Of England o n 26 Aug 1200 in , Bordeaux, Gironde, France.
They had the following children:
F i Joane Princess Of England 1 was born on 22 Jul 1210 in , C oucy, Alsne, France. She died on 4 Mar 1237/1238 in , London, Middlesex , England. She was buried in Tarrant, Keynstan, Dorsetshire, England.
M ii Henry III King Of England
M iii Richard Prince Of England 1 was born on 5 Jan 1208/1209 i n , Winchester, Hampshire, England. He died on 2 Apr 1272 in Berkhampst ed, Berkhampsted, Hertfordshire, England. He was buried on 13 Apr 1272 i n Hailes Abbey, Hailes, Gloucestershire, England.
F iv Isabel Princess Of England 1 was born in 1214 in Of, Win chester, Hampshire, England. She died on 1 Dec 1241 in , Foggia, Apulia , Italy. She was buried in Andria, Bari, Apulia, Italy.
F v Eleanor Princess Of England 1 was born in 1215 in , Winch ester, Hampshire, England. She died on 13 Apr 1275 in , Montargis, Loir et, France. She was buried in , Montargis, Loiret, France.
source page:
http://www.geocities.com/kevingecowets/pafg79.htm#5194
added:
03/26/05
Henry III King Of England [Parents] [scrapbook] 1 was born on 1 Oct 120 6 in , Winchester, Hampshire, England. He died on 16 Nov 1272 in , West minster, Middlesex, England. He was buried on 20 Nov 1272 in Westminste r Abbey, Westminster, Middlesex, England. He married Elbeonore (Lbeonor ) Countess Of Provence on 14 Jan 1236 in Cathedral, Canterbury, Kent, E ngland.
Henry III, the first monarch to be crowned in his minority, inherit ed the throne at age nine. His reign began immersed in the rebellion cr eated by his father, King John. London and most of the southeast were i n the hands of the French Dauphin Louis and the northern regions were u nder the control of rebellious barons - only the midlands and southwest w ere loyal to the boy king. The barons, however, rallied under Henry's f irst regent, William the Marshall, and expelled the French Dauphin in 1 217. William the Marshall governed until his death in 1219; Hugh de Bur gh, the last of the justiciars to rule with the power of a king, govern ed until Henry came to the throne in earnest at age twenty-five.
A variety of factors coalesced in Henry's reign to plant the first s eeds of English nationalism. Throughout his minority, the barons held f irm to the ideal of written restrictions on royal authority and reissue d Magna Carta several times. The nobility wished to bind the king to sa me feudal laws under which they were held. The emerging class of free m en also demanded the same protection from the king's excessive control. B arons, nobility, and free men began viewing England as a community rath er than a mere aggregation of independent manors, villages, and outlyin g principalities. In addition to the restrictions outlined in Magna Car ta, the barons asked to be consulted in matters of state and called tog ether as a Great Council. Viewing themselves as the natural counselors o f the king, they sought control over the machinery of government, parti cularly in the appointment of chief government positions. The Exchequer a nd the Chancery were separated from the rest of the government to decre ase the king's chances of ruling irresponsibly.
Nationalism, such as it was at this early stage, manifested in the f orm of opposition to Henry's actions. He infuriated the barons by grant ing favors and appointments to foreigners rather than the English nobil ity. Peter des Roches, the Bishop of Winchester and Henry's prime educa tor, introduced a number of Frenchmen from Poitou into the government; m any Italians entered into English society through Henry's close ties to t he papacy. His reign coincided with an expansion of papal power Đ the C hurch became, in effect, a massive European monarchy Đ and the Church b ecame as creative as it was excessive in extorting money from England. E ngland was expected to assume a large portion of financing the myriad o fficials employed throughout Christendom as well as providing employmen t and parishes for Italians living abroad. Henry's acquiescence to the d emands of Rome initiated a backlash of protest from his subjects: layme n were denied opportunity to be nominated for vacant ecclesiastical off ices and clergymen lost any chance of advancement.
Matters came to a head in 1258. Henry levied extortionate taxes to p ay for debts incurred through war with Wales, failed campaigns in Franc e, and an extensive program of ecclesiastical building. Inept diplomacy a nd military defeat led Henry to sell his hereditary claims to all the A ngevin possessions in France except Gascony. When he assumed the consid erable debts of the papacy in its fruitless war with Sicily, his barons d emanded sweeping reforms and the king was in no position to offer resis tance. Henry was forced to agree to the Provisions of Oxford, a documen t placing the barons in virtual control of the realm. A council of fift een men, comprised of both the king's supporters and detractors, effect ed a situation whereby Henry could nothing without the council's knowle dge and consent. The magnates handled every level of government with gr eat unity initially but gradually succumbed to petty bickering; the Pro visions of Oxford remained in force for only years. Henry reasserted hi s authority and denied the Provisions, resulting in the outbreak of civ il war in 1264. Edward, Henry's eldest son, led the king's forces with t he opposition commanded by Simon de Montfort, Henry's brother-in-law. A t the Battle of Lewes, in Sussex, de Montfort defeated Edward and captu red both king and son - and found himself in control of the government.
Simon de Montfort held absolute power after subduing Henry but was a c hampion of reform. The nobility supported him because of his royal ties a nd belief in the Provisions of Oxford. De Montfort, with two close asso ciates, selected a council of nine (whose function was similar to the e arlier council of fifteen) and ruled in the king's name. De Montfort re cognized the need to gain the backing of smaller landowners and prosper ous townsfolk: in 1264, he summoned knights from each shire in addition t o the normal high churchmen and nobility to an early pre-Parliament, an d in 1265 invited burgesses from selected towns. Although Parliament as a n institution was yet to be formalized, the latter session was a precur sor to both the elements of Parliament: the House of Lords and the Hous e of Commons.
Later in 1265, de Montfort lost the support of one of the most powe rful barons, the Earl of Gloucester, and Edward also managed to escape. T he two gathered an army and defeated de Montfort at the Battle of Evash am, Worcestershire. de Montfort was slain and Henry was released; Henry r esumed control of the throne but, for the remainder of his reign, Edwar d exercised the real power of the throne in his father's stead. The old k ing, after a long reign of fifty-six years, died in 1272. Although a fa ilure as a politician and soldier, his reign was significant for defini ng the English monarchical position until the end of the fifteenth cent ury: kingship limited by law.
Elbeonore (Lbeonor) Countess Of Provence 1 was born about 1217 in Of, A ix-En-Provence, Provence. She died on 24 Jun 1291 in , Amesbury, Wiltsh ire, England. She was buried on 11 Sep 1291 in Monastery, Amesbury, Wil tshire, England. She married Henry III King Of England on 14 Jan 1236 i n Cathedral, Canterbury, Kent, England.
They had the following children:
F i Margaret Queen Of Scotland 1 was born on 5 Oct 1240 in Wi ndsor Castle, Windsor, Berkshire, England. She died on 27 Feb 1274/1275 i n Cupar Castle, Cuper, Fifeshire, Scotland. She was buried in , Dunferm line, Fifeshire, Scotland.
F ii Beatrice Princess Of England 1 was born on 25 Jun 1242 i n , Bordeaux, Gascogne, France. She died on 24 Mar 1274/1275 in , , Bre tagne, France. She was buried in Grey Friars, London, Middlesex, Englan d.
M iii Richard Prince Of England 1 was born about 1247 in , We stminster, Middlesex, England. He died before 1256 in , Westminster, Mi ddlesex, England. He was buried in , Westminster, Middlesex, England.
M iv John Prince Of England 1 was born about 1250 in Of, West minster, Middlesex, England. He died before 1256 in , Westminster, Midd lesex, England. He was buried in , Westminster, Middlesex, England.
F v Catherine Princess Of England 1 was born on 25 Nov 1253 i n Westminster, London, Middlesex, England. She died on 3 May 1256/1258 i n , Westminster, Middlesex, England. She was buried in , Westminster, M iddlesex, England.
M vi William Prince Of England 1 was born about 1256 in Of, W estminster, Middlesex, England. He died about 1256 in Of, Westminster, M iddlesex, England. He was buried in New Temple, London, Middlesex, Engl and.
M vii Henry Prince Of England 1 was born about 1258 in Of, We stminster, Middlesex, England. He died in Died Young, Westminster, Midd lesex, England. He was buried in , Westminster, Middlesex, England.
M viii Edward I "Longshanks" King Of England
M ix Edmund "Crouchback" Prince Of England
source page:
http://www.geocities.com/kevingecowets/pafg72.htm#7812
added:
03/26/05
More About Henry III Plantagenet:
Date born 2: October 01, 1207, Winchester or Westminster, Hampshire, England.10374, 10375, 10376
Burial 1: Unknown, Westminster, England.10377, 10378
Burial 2: November 20, 1272, Westminster Abbey, London, England.10379, 10380, 10381
Christening 1: King of England 1217-1272;.10382, 10383
Christening 2: October 10, 1207, Winchester, Hampshire, England.10384, 10385
Died 2: November 16, 1272, Westminster, or Winchester, Middlesex, England.10386, 10387, 10388
Kinship: 22nd Great-grandfather (to C.A.A.).10388
Occupation 1: King England 1216-1272.10389, 10390
Occupation 2: England; Occupation: King.10391, 10392, 10393
Occupation 3: King of England.10394, 10395
Record Change: February 07, 200610395
More About Henry III Plantagenet and EleanorBerenger (Provence, of Provence):
Marriage 1: January 24, 1235/3610396, 10397
Marriage 2: January 14, 1236/37, Canterbury.10398, 10399
Marriage 3: January 14, 1236/37, Canterbury Cathedral, Kent, England.10400, 10401, 10402, 10403
Marriage Notes for Henry III Plantagenet and EleanorBerenger (Provence, of Provence):
[15feb06abernethy.ged]
HENRY III PLANTAGENET (King of England)
Born: 1 Oct 1206/7, Winchester, Hampshire, England
Acceded: 28 Oct 1216, Gloucester Cathedral
Died: 16 Nov 1272, Westminster, Middlesex, England
Buried: 20 Nov 1272, Westminster Abbey, Westminster, Middlesex, England
Notes: Reigned 1216-1272. A minor when he took the throne he did not ta ke the reigns of Government himself until 1234. Baronian discontent sim mered, boiling over in 1258 when Henry facing financial disaster attemp ted to raise large sums from his magnates. Reforms were agreed upon but t hen renouced by Henry. Simon De Montford lead a rebellion against the K ing (the Barons Wars) which was defeated after initial success, thereaf ter Henry ceeded much of his power to his son. Burke say he was born 10 O ct 1206 and married 14 Jan, crowned 1216.
Father: JOHN I "Lackland" PLANTAGENET (King of England)
Mother: Isabella of Angoulême
Married: Eleanor of Provence (b. 1217 - d. 24 Jan 1291) 14 Jan 1236, Ca nterbury Cathedral, Kent, England
Children:
1. EDWARD I "Longshanks" PLANTAGENET (King of England)
2. Margaret PLANTAGENET (Queen of Scotland)
3. Beatrice PLANTAGENET (D. Brittany)
4. Edmund "Crounchback" PLANTAGENET (1º E. Lancaster)
5. Richard PLANTAGENET (b. ABT 1247 - d. BEF 1256)
6. John PLANTAGENET (b. 1250 - d. BEF 1256)
7. Catherine PLANTAGENET
8. William PLANTAGENET (b. ABT 1256)
9. Henry PLANTAGENET (b. ABT 1258)
source:
http://www.tudorplace.com.ar/PLANTAGENET.htm#HENRY%20III%20PLANTAGENET% 20(King%20of%20England)
added:
16oct2005
==========
Crowell-Miles Family Tree
Entries: 6176 Updated: 2005-07-26 04:20:06 UTC (Tue) Contact: Chr istine Miles
Information is not guaranteed to be accurate
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# ID: I531
# Name: Henry III
# Given Name: Henry III
# NSFX: King of England
# Sex: M
# _UID: D23DFFE31F17D045905983089E9F68BA0F32
# Change Date: 22 Jun 2005
# Birth: 1 OCT 1207 in Winchester Castle
# Death: 16 NOV 1272 in Westminster Palace
# Burial: Westminster Cathedral
Father: John I PLANTAGENET b: 24 DEC 1167 in Beaumont Palace, Oxford
Mother: Isabella (D'Angouleme) TAILLEFER b: 1188 in Angouleme, Charente , Aquitaine
Marriage 1 Eleanor BERENGER b: 1217 in Aix-en-Provence
* Married: 14 JAN 1236 in Canterbury Cathedral
Children
1. Has Children Edward I PLANTAGENET b: 17 JUN 1237 in Westminster P alace
2. Has Children Edmund OF ENGLAND b: 16 JAN 1244 in London
source:
http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=christine51& id=I531
added:
06nov2005
# ID: I577685893
# Name: Henry III PLANTAGENET
# Given Name: Henry III
# Surname: PLANTAGENET
# Sex: M
# Birth: 1 Oct 1206/1207 in England
# Death: 16 Nov 1272 in England
# Change Date: 21 Jul 2004
# Note: King of England.
Father: John "Lackland" PLANTAGENET b: 24 Dec 1166 in England
Mother: Isabelle DE TAILLEFER b: Abt. 1188
Marriage 1 Eleonore (Leonore, Eleanor) BERENGER b: Abt. 1223 in England
* Note: _UID00F31A737A8F324AAD7713C1E96A2F9D1CA8
Children
1. Edward I PLANTAGENET b: 7 Oct 1239 in Westminster, London, Englan d
source page:
http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=:2951323&id= I577685893
added:
03/24/05
Children of Henry III Plantagenet and EleanorBerenger (Provence, of Provence) are:
- +Edward I (Longshanks) Plantagenet, b. June 17, 1239, Westminster, England10404, 10405, d. July 07, 1307, Burgh-on-the-Sands, Carlisle, Cumberland, England10406, 10407, 10408.
- +Edmund Plantagenet, b. January 16, 1244/45, London, Middlesex, England10409, 10410, d. June 05, 1295, Bayonne, Pyr.-Atlantiques, France10411, 10412.

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