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  1. Alice di Courtenay ( 1160 – 11 febbraio 1218) è stata una nobildonna francese. Figlia di Pietro I di Courtenay e sorella di Pietro II di Courtenay, imperatore latino di Costantinopoli, Alice si sposò tre volte.

  2. Alice of Courtenay (French: Alix; 1160 – 12 February 1218) was a French noblewoman. Her father was Peter I of Courtenay and her brother was Peter II of Courtenay, Latin Emperor of Constantinople. Alice married twice; by her second husband, Count Aymer of Angoulême, she was the mother of the English queen Isabella of Angoulême. Family

  3. 26 apr 2022 · Alice de Courtenay, died Sep. 14, 1211. She married Aymer de Talliefer, Count of Angouleme, and they became the parents of Isabella of Angoulême, who married King John I "Lackland", King of England.

    • Courtenay, Centre
    • Centre
  4. 19 apr 2022 · Alix or Adèle (in English Alice) de Courtenay was the daughter of Pierre de France, Seigneur de Courtenay, and his wife, Elisabeth, dame de Courtenay, and was perhaps born about 1160, or circa 1160-1165.

    • Female
    • Origin
    • The Crusader House of Courtenay
    • The English House of Courtenay
    • The Capetian House of Courtenay
    • Bibliography
    • External Links

    The house was founded by Athon, the first lord of Courtenay in France. Athon took advantage of the succession crisis in the Duchy of Burgundy between Otto-William, Duke of Burgundy and King Robert II of France to capture a piece of land for himself, where he established his own seigneury(lordship), taking his surname from the town he founded and fo...

    Joscelin de Courtenay arrived in Outremer with the third wave of the First Crusade and proved himself capable, becoming in turn Lord of Turbessel, Prince of Galilee, and (in 1118) Count of Edessa, succeeding his cousin King Baldwin II of Jerusalem.He was succeeded in 1131 by his son, Joscelin II, but the county was lost in 1144, and Joscelin died i...

    Reginald de Courtenay's grandson, Robert de Courtenay (d.1242), feudal baron of Okehampton, Devon (in right of his mother Hawise de Curcy (d.1219),) married Mary de Redvers, daughter and heiress of William de Redvers, 5th Earl of Devon (d.1217), seated at Tiverton Castle and Plympton Castle in Devon. On the death of Isabel de Forz, suo jure 8th Cou...

    Reginald de Courtenay's daughter, Elizabeth, was given in marriage, together with his forfeited French lands, by the French Capetian King Louis VII with whom he had quarreled, to his youngest brother Peter of France (d.1183), henceforth known as Peter I of Courtenay. Peter and Elizabeth's descendants were members of the Capetian House of Courtenay,...

    Runciman, Steven (1951) A History of the Crusades: Vols. I-II. Cambridge University Press
    Sanders, I.J. (1960) English Baronies. Oxford

    Cleaveland, Ezra. A Genealogical History of the Noble and Illustrious Family of Courtenay, Exeter, 1735

  5. Alice of Courtenay, Countess of Angoulême (1160 – 12 February 1218) [1] was a French noblewoman of the House of Courtenay. Her father was Peter of Courtenay and her brother was Peter II of Courtenay, Latin Emperor of Constantinople.

  6. Died c. Sept 14, 1211; dau. of Peter I de Courtenay (c. 1126–1180) and Elizabeth of Courtenay (d. 1205); m. Aymer Taillefer, count of Angoulême; children: Isabella of Angoulême (2nd wife of King John I Lackland). Dictionary of Women Worldwide: 25,000 Women Through the Ages.