Yahoo France Recherche Web

Résultats de recherche

  1. Mother. Ida, Countess of Boulogne. Mahaut or Matilda II of Boulogne (also known as Mathilde, Maud de Dammartin; 1202 – January 1259) was Countess of Boulogne in her own right and Queen of Portugal by marriage to King Afonso III from 1248 until their divorce in 1253.

  2. The Counts of Dammartin were the rulers of the county of Dammartin, based in the current commune of Dammartin-en-Goële as early as the 10th century. Located at the central plain of France, the county controlled the roads of Paris to Soissons and Laon.

  3. Mathilde de Dammartin 1227–1260, also Countess of Clermont-en-Beauvaisis and Queen of Portugal by her two marriages, Countess of Mortain, Countess of Boulogne and Countess of Dammartin-en-Goële with

  4. Renaud de Dammartin ( Reginald of Boulogne) (c. 1165 – 1227) was Count of Boulogne from 1190, Count of Dammartin from 1200 to 1214 and Count of Aumale from 1204 to 1214. He was son of Alberic III of Dammartin [1] and Mathilde of Clermont. [2] Brought up at the French court, he was a childhood friend of Philip Augustus.

  5. Mathilde (given name) 1202 births. 1259 deaths. Queens of Portugal. 1260 deaths. Counts of Boulogne. House of Dammartin. People depicted in The Portuguese Genealogy (1530-1534) Matilda (given name) 13th-century women of Portugal. Non-topical/index: Uses of Wikidata Infobox with no family name. Women of the Kingdom of Portugal by name.

  6. Alberic II (died 1183) was the Count of Dammartin, possibly the son of Aubry de Mello, Count of Dammartin, and Adela, daughter of Hugh I, Count of Dammartin. [1] [2] What little is known for sure about Alberic II is confounded by the preponderance of noblemen of the same name in both France and England.