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  1. Louis of Anjou (16 October 1427 – d. 1443 [1] c.1444 [2]) was marquis of Pont-à-Mousson from 1441 to 1443. He was preceded and succeeded in the title by his father. He was the third son of René of Anjou and his first wife Isabella, Duchess of Lorraine. He and his brother Jean were given as hostages to the Burgundians in April ...

  2. Louis d'Anjou, marquis of Pont-à-Mousson. Birthdate: October 16, 1427. Death: between May 22, 1444 and October 16, 1444 (16-17) prison, Dijon, Côte-d'Or, Bourgogne-Franche-Comté, France (pneumonia - hostage) Immediate Family: Son of René I d'Anjou, titular King of Naples and Isabelle, duchesse de Lorraine.

  3. Louis (16 October 1427 – between 22 May and 16 October 1444), Marquis of Pont-à-Mousson and Lieutenant General of Lorraine. At the age of five, in 1432, he was sent as a hostage to Dijon with his brother John in exchange for their captive father. John was released, but Louis was not and died of pneumonia in prison.

    • 2 February 1435 – 2 June 1442
    • Alfonso I
  4. Louis of Anjou (16 October 1427 – d. 1443 c.1444) was marquis of Pont-à-Mousson from 1441 to 1443. He was preceded and succeeded in the title by his father. He was the third son of René of Anjou and his first wife Isabella, Duchess of Lorraine.

  5. Pont-à-Mousson was the birthplace of: Guarinus of Sitten (1065–1150), saint and bishop of Sion; Margaret of Anjou (1430–1482) married to Henry VI of England; John Barclay (1582—1621), Scottish satirist and Latin poet; Geraud Duroc (1772–1813), French general; Louis Camille Maillard (1878–1936), French physician and chemist

  6. 22 mar 2024 · Hundred Years’ War. Louis I (born July 23, 1339, Vincennes, Fr.—died Sept. 20, 1384, Bisceglie, Apulia, Kingdom of Sicily) was the duke of Anjou, count of Maine, count of Provence, and claimant to the crown of Sicily and Jerusalem.

  7. Louis d'Anjou (1427 † 1444) 1438 1444 second fils de René Ier d'Anjou, lieutenant général du duché de Lorraine [2] Jean II d'Anjou, duc de Lorraine et de Calabre (1424 † 1470) 1445 1470 fils aîné de René Ier d'Anjou, créé marquis de Pont-à-Mousson le 21 novembre 1445 [2] Nicolas d'Anjou, duc de Lorraine (1448 † 1473 ...