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Paternal Family Tree: Capet
On 28th May 1262 [his father] King Philip III of France (age 17) and [his mother] Isabella Barcelona Queen Consort France (age 14) were married. She the daughter of [his grandfather] James I King Aragon (age 54) and [his grandmother] Violant Árpád Queen Consort Aragon. He the son of [his grandfather] King Louis IX of France (age 48) and [his grandmother] Margaret Provence Queen Consort France (age 41). They were second cousin once removed. He a great x 2 grandson of King Henry "Curtmantle" II of England.
On 12th March 1270 Charles Valois I Count Valois was born to King Philip III of France (age 24) and Isabella Barcelona Queen Consort France (age 22). He a great x 3 grandson of King Henry "Curtmantle" II of England.
On 28th January 1271 [his mother] Isabella Barcelona Queen Consort France (age 23) died.
On 21st August 1274 [his father] King Philip III of France (age 29) and [his step-mother] Maria of Brabant Queen Consort France (age 18) were married. She by marriage Queen Consort of France. She the daughter of Henry Reginar III Duke Brabant and Adelaide Burgundy Duchess Brabant. He the son of [his grandfather] King Louis IX of France and [his grandmother] Margaret Provence Queen Consort France (age 53). They were fourth cousins. He a great x 2 grandson of King Henry "Curtmantle" II of England. She a great x 3 granddaughter of King Stephen I England.
In 1284 Charles Valois I Count Valois (age 13) was created I Count Valois.
On 5th October 1285 [his father] King Philip III of France (age 40) died. On 5th October 1285 His son [his brother] Philip (age 17) succeeded IV King France: Capet. Joan Blois I Queen Navarre (age 12) by marriage Queen Consort of France.
On 16th August 1290 Charles Valois I Count Valois (age 20) and Margaret Capet Countess Valois (age 17) were married. She by marriage Countess Valois. She the daughter of Charles II King Naples (age 36) and Mary of Hungary Queen Consort Naples (age 33). He the son of King Philip III of France and Isabella Barcelona Queen Consort France. They were second cousins. He a great x 3 grandson of King Henry "Curtmantle" II of England. She a great x 3 granddaughter of King Henry "Curtmantle" II of England.
In 1292 [his daughter] Isabelle Valois Duchess Brittany was born to Charles Valois I Count Valois (age 21) and [his wife] Margaret Capet Countess Valois (age 19). Coefficient of inbreeding 3.85%.
On 17th November 1293 [his son] King Philip "Fortunate" VI of France was born to Charles Valois I Count Valois (age 23) and [his wife] Margaret Capet Countess Valois (age 20). Coefficient of inbreeding 3.85%.
Around 1294 [his daughter] Joan Valois Countess Zeeland Holland Avesnes and Hainault was born to Charles Valois I Count Valois (age 23) and [his wife] Margaret Capet Countess Valois (age 21). Coefficient of inbreeding 3.85%.
In 1295 [his daughter] Margaret Valois was born to Charles Valois I Count Valois (age 24) and [his wife] Margaret Capet Countess Valois (age 22). Coefficient of inbreeding 3.85%.
On 12th August 1295 [his brother-in-law] Charles Martel King Hungary (age 23) died at Naples [Map]. He was buried at Naples Cathedral [Map].
In 1297 [his son] Charles Valois Count Alençon was born to Charles Valois I Count Valois (age 26) and [his wife] Margaret Capet Countess Valois (age 24). Coefficient of inbreeding 3.85%.
In 1297 [his son-in-law] John Capet III Duke Brittany (age 10) and [his daughter] Isabelle Valois Duchess Brittany (age 5) were married. She by marriage Duchess Brittany 1221 Dreux. She the daughter of Charles Valois I Count Valois (age 26) and [his wife] Margaret Capet Countess Valois (age 24). They were third cousins. He a great grandson of King Henry III of England. She a great x 4 granddaughter of King Henry "Curtmantle" II of England.
All About History Books
The Chronicle of Geoffrey le Baker of Swinbroke. Baker was a secular clerk from Swinbroke, now Swinbrook, an Oxfordshire village two miles east of Burford. His Chronicle describes the events of the period 1303-1356: Gaveston, Bannockburn, Boroughbridge, the murder of King Edward II, the Scottish Wars, Sluys, Crécy, the Black Death, Winchelsea and Poitiers. To quote Herbert Bruce 'it possesses a vigorous and characteristic style, and its value for particular events between 1303 and 1356 has been recognised by its editor and by subsequent writers'. The book provides remarkable detail about the events it describes. Baker's text has been augmented with hundreds of notes, including extracts from other contemporary chronicles, such as the Annales Londonienses, Annales Paulini, Murimuth, Lanercost, Avesbury, Guisborough and Froissart to enrich the reader's understanding. The translation takes as its source the 'Chronicon Galfridi le Baker de Swynebroke' published in 1889, edited by Edward Maunde Thompson. Available at Amazon in eBook and Paperback.
On 19th August 1298 [his brother-in-law] Saint Louis Capet Bishop Toulose (age 24) died.
In 1299 [his daughter] Catherine Valois was born to Charles Valois I Count Valois (age 28) and [his wife] Margaret Capet Countess Valois (age 26). Coefficient of inbreeding 3.85%.
In 1299 [his daughter] Catherine Valois died.
On 31st December 1299 [his wife] Margaret Capet Countess Valois (age 26) died.
In 1302 Charles Valois I Count Valois (age 31) and Catherine Courtenay Countess Valois (age 27) were married. She by marriage Countess Valois. He the son of King Philip III of France and Isabella Barcelona Queen Consort France. They were third cousin once removed. He a great x 3 grandson of King Henry "Curtmantle" II of England.
In 1302 [his son] John Valois was born to Charles Valois I Count Valois (age 31) and [his wife] Catherine Courtenay Countess Valois (age 27).
Chronicle of Walter of Guisborough. When the king's brother [Charles Valois I Count Valois (age 31)], who had received the count on his honour, saw this, and could not manage to set him free, he went away from his brother in anger, hastening to the papal court to obtain the benefit of absolution from the broken oath. There, Pope Boniface anointed him king of Sicily, so that he might pursue the cause and interests of the Roman Church against the king of Aragon. He spent much in the venture afterwards, but achieved little, and at last returned to his brother without a kingdom. Meanwhile, with the count still held in custody, his sons rose up on his behalf, and their cause prospered in their hands, as has been stated above. A few years later, when Pope Boniface arranged, for the sake of peace, the marriage of the king of England to the sister of the king of France, and of the pope's own said son to the king's daughter, whom he did not love, the aforesaid daughter of the count died in the king of France's household, and, as it was said, was killed by poison, so that she would not afterwards be married to the son of the king of England, who had loved her.
Quod videns frater regis, qui eum in fide susceperat, nec liberare eum valens, perrexit iratus a fratre suo ad curiam properans, ut absolutionis beneficium de juramento fracto" consequi mereretur, ubi a papa Bonifacio unctus est in regem Siciliæ, ut contra regem Aragonum causam et statum Romanæ ecclesiæ prosequeretur. Qui multa expendit in posterum; sed parum profecit, et demum reversus est ad fratrem sine regno. Retento itaque comite, filii ejus insurrexerunt pro eo, et prosperatum est negotium in manibus eorum, sicut supra patet. Et post annos paucos, cum ordinasset papa Bonifacius pro bono pacis maritagium regis Angliæ cum sorore regis Franciæ, et filii sui prædicti cum filia regis quam non dilexit, mortua est prædicta filia comitis in domo regis Franciæ, et, ut dicebatur, veneno extincta, neduceretur in posterum a filio regis Angliæ qui dilexit eam.
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Before 15th April 1303 [his daughter] Catherine Valois was born to Charles Valois I Count Valois (age 33) and [his wife] Catherine Courtenay Countess Valois (age 28).
In 1304 [his daughter] Joan Valois was born to Charles Valois I Count Valois (age 33) and [his wife] Catherine Courtenay Countess Valois (age 29).
Chronicle of Walter of Guisborough. In the same year Pope Benedict XI died, in the month of July [7th July 1304]. The papal see was vacant for some time because of dissension among the cardinals, for there were eighteen of them, and they divided their votes equally. At length, after a long period of confinement in the conclave, they elected as pope, in the following year [1305], the Archbishop of Bordeaux,1 who received the papal crown at Lyons that same year, on the Sunday next after the feast of Saint Martin, many of his cardinals being present there for that occasion. But on that very day, when he was being led on horseback to the church of Saint Martin after being crowned, a stone wall beside the road, upon which many had climbed to see him, collapsed, crushing many beneath it. Among the dead was the Count of Brittany (age 65)2; Charles3, the king of France's brother, was injured. The pope remained in Bordeaux for a long time and created there nearly eighteen new cardinals, because some of the older cardinals had returned to Rome; he continually excused himself, saying he could not come. When Roman nobles sent envoys to him and then sent them again, the pope always gave the same excuse for not coming; and because he refused to go to his own see, they judged him unworthy to enjoy the patrimony of Peter. Nevertheless, he lived off money extorted from bishops confirmed at the curia. For example, from William, Archbishop of York, confirmed there, besides the great expenses he had freely made, he took within the first year nine thousand five hundred marks of silver. And the archbishop, returning so impoverished, within that same first year received from his religious subjects and rectors, first under the name of a "gift for goodwill and favour," and second under the name of a "loan", an immense sum of money. The pope also sent his envoy, named Testa, into England with papal bulls reserving to himself the "primi fructus4" [first fruit] of all churches falling vacant at any time and in any manner within the kingdoms of England, Scotland, Wales, and Ireland, and likewise the first year's income of all abbeys and priories vacant in the same period. Because of this, the lord king, together with his magnates in his parliament at Carlisle, opposed him, saying that it was not reasonable that from monasteries founded by his own ancestors or by the magnates of the land in honour of God's service, and for the maintenance of certain alms and hospitality, the pope should thus exact the primi fructus, thereby letting the worship of God and the work of hospitality perish. And so the pope changed his plan as regarded abbeys; but having granted to the king from the English churches a two-year tithe, he still obtained the primi fructus of churches, as said above.
Eodem anno obiit papa Benedictus XI mense Julii, vacavitque sedes propter dissensionem cardinalium, erant enim octodecim, et æqualiter diviserunt vota sua; tandem vero post longam carceris inclusionem, elegerunt in papam in anno Clement V scquenti archiepiscopum Burdegalensem, qui diadema suscepit apud Lugdunum in eodem anno, scilicet MCCCV, die Dominica proxima post festum Sancti Martini, præsentibus multis cardinalibus Sunday, suis, qui ob eandem causam ibidem venerant. Eodem autem die, cum ad ecclesiam beati Martini Fatal accisic diadematus in equo duceretur, corruit quidam coronation. murus lapideus a latere viæ, super quem multi ascenderant ut viderent eum, et oppressit multos, inter quos mortuus est comes Britanniæ, et Carolus frater regis Franciæ læsus est. Mansitque papa Burdegalis longo tempore, et creavit ibi novos cardinales quasi XVIII, pro eo quod quidam ex antiquis cardinalibus reversi fuerant Romam, ipso se semper excusante quod venire non poterat. Missisque a Romanis principibus He removes nunciis et remissis, semper excusavit se papa de the pontifi non veniendo. Et quia ad propriam sedem venire Rome. contempsit, censuerunt eum indignum Petri patrimonio frui; vixitque sic de pecunia extorta a confirmatis episcopis in curia. Quoniam ab archiepiscopo Eborum Willelmo, ibidem confirmato, præter expensas quas ibi largissime fecerat, infra primum suum annum habuit novies mille marcas argenti et quingentas, et ipse sic pauper reversus, infra eundem annum primum habuit a subditis suis religiosis et rectoribus, primo nomine curialitatis et gratiæ, et secundo nomine mutui, immensam pecuniæ summam. Misitque papa nuncium suum in Angliam nomine Testa cum bullis suis, in quibus reservavit sibi primos fructus primi anni omnium ecclesiarum vacantium quocunque tempore vel modo infra regna Angliæ, Scotia, Walliæ et Hiberniæ, et fructus similiter omnium abbatiarum et prioratuum vacantium eodem tempore: propter quod opposuit se dominus rex cum magnatibus suis in parliamento suo apud Carliolum, dicens, non esse rationi consonum, quod a monasteriis, a prædecessoribus suis vel a magnatibus terræ fundatis in honore servitii Dei, certæ eleemosinæ et hospitalitatis sustinendæ, papa sic primos fructus exigeret, et cultus Dei et hospitalitas deperirent. Et sic mutavit papa propositum quantum ad abbatias; sed concessa domino regi ab ecclesiis Anglicanis decima biennali, obtinuit primos fructus ecclesiarum, ut prædictum est.
Note 1. Clement V. (Bertrand de Goth, Archbishop of Bordeaux) was elected Pope by the influence of Philip le Bel, at Pérouse, on Tuesday, June 15, 1305, and crowned at Lyons on Sunday, November the 14th following.
Note 2. Jean Capet, Duke of Brittany, 1239-1305.
Note 3. Charles, Duke of Valois, 1270-1325 (age 34).
Note 4. These first-fruits continued to form part of the papal revenue until the time of Henry VIII.
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In 1305 [his daughter] Isabelle Valois Abbess Fontevraud was born to Charles Valois I Count Valois (age 34) and [his wife] Catherine Courtenay Countess Valois (age 30).
All About History Books
The Chronicle of Geoffrey le Baker of Swinbroke. Baker was a secular clerk from Swinbroke, now Swinbrook, an Oxfordshire village two miles east of Burford. His Chronicle describes the events of the period 1303-1356: Gaveston, Bannockburn, Boroughbridge, the murder of King Edward II, the Scottish Wars, Sluys, Crécy, the Black Death, Winchelsea and Poitiers. To quote Herbert Bruce 'it possesses a vigorous and characteristic style, and its value for particular events between 1303 and 1356 has been recognised by its editor and by subsequent writers'. The book provides remarkable detail about the events it describes. Baker's text has been augmented with hundreds of notes, including extracts from other contemporary chronicles, such as the Annales Londonienses, Annales Paulini, Murimuth, Lanercost, Avesbury, Guisborough and Froissart to enrich the reader's understanding. The translation takes as its source the 'Chronicon Galfridi le Baker de Swynebroke' published in 1889, edited by Edward Maunde Thompson. Available at Amazon in eBook and Paperback.
On 19th May 1305 [his son-in-law] William Hainault I Count Hainault III Count Avesnes III Count Holland II Count Zeeland (age 19) and [his daughter] Joan Valois Countess Zeeland Holland Avesnes and Hainault (age 11) were married. She by marriage Countess Zeeland, Countess Holland, Countess Avesnes, Countess Hainault. She the daughter of Charles Valois I Count Valois (age 35) and [his former wife] Margaret Capet Countess Valois. He the son of John Hainault II Count Hainault II Count Holland and Philippa Luxemburg Countess Hainault and Holland (age 53). They were fourth cousin once removed. He a great x 4 grandson of King Stephen I England. She a great x 4 granddaughter of King Henry "Curtmantle" II of England.
On 11th October 1307 [his wife] Catherine Courtenay Countess Valois (age 32) died.
In 1308 Charles Valois I Count Valois (age 37) and Mahaut Chatillon Countess Valois (age 15) were married. She by marriage Countess Valois. The difference in their ages was 22 years. She the daughter of Guy Chatillon IV Count Saint Pol (age 54) and Marie Capet (age 40). He the son of King Philip III of France and Isabella Barcelona Queen Consort France. They were second cousin once removed. He a great x 3 grandson of King Henry "Curtmantle" II of England. She a great granddaughter of King Henry III of England.
In 1308 [his son] John Valois (age 6) died.
Thomas Walsingham [-1422]. In the year of grace 1308, which is the second year from the Conquest of the reign of King Edward, not yet crowned, the second, the king kept Christmas at Wye, a manor of the Abbot of Battle, with a very large household. A few days after Christmas had passed, he crossed over into France to take as his wife Isabella, daughter of the King of France, who was a little over twelve years old. He entrusted the custody of the kingdom to the aforesaid Piers [Gaveston]; for which cause excessive murmuring arose among the magnates of the realm. The marriage in France at Boulogne-sur-Mer [28th January 1308], at which four kings were present, namely, the [his brother] King of France (age 39), the son of the King of France (age 18), the King of Germany, and the King of Sicily, was solemnly celebrated. Then he returned to the kingdom of England with his wife. The magnates went out to meet their king and his new queen, and all strove to see who could show them greater honour. Among them came Piers himself, whom the king at once admitted into a most special embrace and regarded with the greatest familiarity. The magnates grew envious, but they put off their vengeance for another time.
Note 1. The four kings being King Philip IV of France, his son Louis, King of Navarre, Albert (age 52), King of Germany and Philip IV's brother Charles (age 37), King of Sicily.
Anno gratiæ millesimo trecentesimo octavo, qui est annus regni Regis Edwardi, nondum coronati, a Conquæstu Secundi, secundus, tenuit idem rex Natale apud Wy, manerium Abbatis de Bello, cum familia multa nimis. Paucis post Natale diebus transactis, transfretavit in Franciam, ut Regis Francorum filiam in uxorem duceret, nomine Isabellam, qua paulo plus annis duodecim habuit in ætate. Commisit autem regni custodiam Petro præfato; ob quam causam murmur immodicus inter proceres regni succrevit. Nuptiis in Francia apud Boloniam supra Mare, quibus quatuor Reges interfuerunt, videlicet Rex Franciæ, filius Regis Franciæ, Rex Alemanniæ, et Rex Siciliæ, celebratis solemniter, ad regnum Angliæ revertitur cum uxore. Igitur proceres occurrunt regi suo conjugique novæ; et a cunctis elaboratur, quis propensiorem honorem impendere possit illis. Occurrit inter cæteros ipse Petrus, quem mox Rex in amplexus specialius admittebat, et familiarins respiciebat. Invidebant ergo proceres, sed vindictam in tempus aliud differebant.
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In 1309 [his daughter] Marie Valois was born to Charles Valois I Count Valois (age 38) and [his wife] Mahaut Chatillon Countess Valois (age 16). She a great x 2 granddaughter of King Henry III of England.
In 1309 [his daughter] Isabelle Valois Duchess Brittany (age 17) died.
In 1310 [his son-in-law] Guy Chatillon I Count Blois and [his daughter] Margaret Valois (age 15) were married. She the daughter of Charles Valois I Count Valois (age 39) and [his former wife] Margaret Capet Countess Valois. He the son of Hugh Chatillon II Count Blois and Beatrix Dampierre Countess Blois. They were fourth cousin once removed. He a great x 4 grandson of King Stephen I England. She a great x 4 granddaughter of King Henry "Curtmantle" II of England.
In 1313 [his daughter] Isabella Valois Duchess Bourbon was born to Charles Valois I Count Valois (age 42) and [his wife] Mahaut Chatillon Countess Valois (age 20). She a great x 2 granddaughter of King Henry III of England.
In April 1314 [his son] Charles Valois Count Alençon (age 17) and [his daughter-in-law] Jeanne Joigny were married. She by marriage Countess Alençon. He the son of Charles Valois I Count Valois (age 44) and [his former wife] Margaret Capet Countess Valois.
In 1317 [his daughter] Blanche Valois Holy Roman Empress Luxemburg was born to Charles Valois I Count Valois (age 46) and [his wife] Mahaut Chatillon Countess Valois (age 24). She a great x 2 granddaughter of King Henry III of England.
On 6th April 1317 [his father-in-law] Guy Chatillon IV Count Saint Pol (age 63) died. His son [his brother-in-law] Jean (age 25) succeeded Count Saint Pol.
In 1318 [his son] Louis Valois was born to Charles Valois I Count Valois (age 47) and [his wife] Mahaut Chatillon Countess Valois (age 25). He a great x 2 grandson of King Henry III of England.
In 1320 [his son-in-law] Robert III Artois (age 33) and [his daughter] Joan Valois Countess Zeeland Holland Avesnes and Hainault (age 26) were married. She the daughter of Charles Valois I Count Valois (age 49) and [his former wife] Margaret Capet Countess Valois. They were third cousins. He a great grandson of King Henry III of England. She a great x 4 granddaughter of King Henry "Curtmantle" II of England.
In 1321 Aymer de Valence 2nd Earl Pembroke (age 46) and [his sister-in-law] Marie Chatillon Countess Pembroke (age 18) were married. She by marriage Countess Pembroke. The difference in their ages was 28 years. She the daughter of [his father-in-law] Guy Chatillon IV Count Saint Pol and [his mother-in-law] Marie Capet (age 53). He the son of William de Valence 1st Earl Pembroke and Joan Munchensi Countess Pembroke. They were half first cousin twice removed. She a great granddaughter of King Henry III of England.
In 1325 [his daughter] Theresa Valois was born to Charles Valois I Count Valois (age 54).
On 16th December 1325 Charles Valois I Count Valois (age 55) died.
In 1358 [his former wife] Mahaut Chatillon Countess Valois (age 65) died.
Kings Wessex: Great x 8 Grand Son of King Edmund "Ironside" I of England
Kings England: Great x 3 Grand Son of King Henry "Curtmantle" II of England
Kings Scotland: Great x 7 Grand Son of King Duncan I of Scotland
Kings Franks: Great x 3 Grand Son of Louis VII King Franks
Kings France: Great x 7 Grand Son of Robert "Pious" II King France
Kings Duke Aquitaine: Great x 12 Grand Son of Ranulf I Duke Aquitaine
King Philip "Fortunate" VI of France
Margaret Hainault Holy Roman Empress
Philippa of Hainault Queen Consort England
Blanche Valois Holy Roman Empress Luxemburg
Joanna Bourbon Queen Consort France
Blanche Bourbon Queen Consort Castile
Margaret of Anjou Queen Consort England
Philip "Handsome Fair" King Castile
Marguerite Valois Orléans Queen Consort Navarre
Anne of Cleves Queen Consort England
Mary of Guise Queen Consort Scotland
Maximilian Habsburg Spain II Holy Roman Emperor
Louise Lorraine Queen Consort France
Maximilian "The Great" Wittelsbach I Duke Bavaria I Elector Bavaria
Maria Anna Wittelsbach Holy Roman Empress
Marie de Medici Queen Consort France
Electress Louise Juliana of the Palatine Rhine
Ferdinand of Spain II Holy Roman Emperor
Margaret of Austria Queen Consort Spain
Anna of Austria Holy Roman Empress
Eleonora Gonzaga Queen Consort Bohemia
Maria Leopoldine Habsburg Spain Queen Consort Bohemia
Marie Françoise Élisabeth of Savoy Queen Consort of Portugal
Maria Anna Neuburg Queen Consort Spain
Charles Habsburg Spain VI Holy Roman Emperor
Elisabeth Therese Lorraine Queen Consort Sardinia
King George III of Great Britain and Ireland
Charlotte Mecklenburg Strelitz Queen Consort England
Caroline Matilda Hanover Queen Consort Denmark and Norway
Caroline of Brunswick Queen Consort England
Frederica Mecklenburg Strelitz Queen Consort Hanover
King Christian I of Norway and VIII of Denmark
Frederick William IV King Prussia
Queen Louise Hesse-Kassel of Denmark
Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom
Queen Sophia of Sweden and Norway
Victoria Empress Germany Queen Consort Prussia
King Edward VII of the United Kingdom
Frederick Charles I King Finland
Alexandrine Mecklenburg-Schwerin Queen Consort Denmark
Victoria Eugénie Mountbatten Queen Consort Spain
Louise Mountbatten Queen Consort Sweden
Ingrid Bernadotte Queen Consort Denmark
Great x 4 Grandfather: King Louis VI of France
Great x 3 Grandfather: Louis VII King Franks
Great x 4 Grandmother: Adelaide Savoy Queen Consort France
Great x 2 Grandfather: King Philip II of France 2 x Great Grand Son of King William "Conqueror" I of England
Great x 4 Grandfather: Theobald Blois II Count Champagne IV Count Blois Grand Son of King William "Conqueror" I of England
Great x 3 Grandmother: Adèle Blois Great Grand Daughter of King William "Conqueror" I of England
Great x 4 Grandmother: Matilda Carinthia Countess Champagne and Blois
Great x 1 Grandfather: King Louis VIII of France 3 x Great Grand Son of King William "Conqueror" I of England
Great x 4 Grandfather: Baldwin Flanders IV Count Hainault
Great x 3 Grandfather: Baldwin Flanders V Count Hainault
Great x 4 Grandmother: Alice Namur Countess Hainault
Great x 2 Grandmother: Isabelle Flanders Queen Consort France
Great x 4 Grandfather: Thierry Count Flanders
Great x 3 Grandmother: Margaret Metz Countess Hainault and Flanders
Great x 4 Grandmother: Sibylla Anjou Countess Essex and Flanders
GrandFather: King Louis IX of France Great Grand Son of King Henry "Curtmantle" II of England
Great x 4 Grandfather: Alfonso VII King Castile VII King Leon
Great x 3 Grandfather: Sancho III King Castile
Great x 4 Grandmother: Berenguela Barcelona Queen Consort Castile and Leon
Great x 2 Grandfather: Alfonso VIII King Castile
Great x 4 Grandfather: García "Restorer" IV King Navarre
Great x 3 Grandmother: Blanche Ramirez Queen Consort Castile
Great x 4 Grandmother: Marguerite Aigle Queen Consort Navarre
Great x 1 Grandmother: Blanche Ivrea Queen Consort France Grand Daughter of King Henry "Curtmantle" II of England
Great x 4 Grandfather: Geoffrey Plantagenet Duke Normandy
Great x 3 Grandfather: King Henry "Curtmantle" II of England Grand Son of King Henry I "Beauclerc" England
Great x 4 Grandmother: Empress Matilda Daughter of King Henry I "Beauclerc" England
Great x 2 Grandmother: Eleanor Plantagenet Queen Consort Castile Daughter of King Henry "Curtmantle" II of England
Great x 4 Grandfather: William "Saint" Poitiers X Duke Aquitaine
Great x 3 Grandmother: Eleanor of Aquitaine Queen Consort Franks and England
Great x 4 Grandmother: Aenor Chatellerault Duchess Aquitaine
Father: King Philip III of France 2 x Great Grand Son of King Henry "Curtmantle" II of England
Great x 4 Grandfather: Raymond Berenguer Barcelona V Count Barcelona
Great x 3 Grandfather: Alfonso II King Aragon
Great x 4 Grandmother: Petronilla Jiménez Queen Aragon
Great x 2 Grandfather: Alfonso Barcelona II Count Provence
Great x 4 Grandfather: Alfonso VII King Castile VII King Leon
Great x 3 Grandmother: Sancha Ivrea Queen Consort Aragon
Great x 4 Grandmother: Richeza Unknown Queen Consort Castile Queen Consort Leon
Great x 1 Grandfather: Raymond Berenguer Provence IV Count Provence
Great x 3 Grandfather: Rainou of Sabran
Great x 2 Grandmother: Gersenda II Sabran Countess Provence
GrandMother: Margaret Provence Queen Consort France
Great x 4 Grandfather: Amadeus Savoy III Count Savoy
Great x 3 Grandfather: Humbert Savoy III Count Savoy
Great x 4 Grandmother: Mahaut Albon Countess Savoy
Great x 2 Grandfather: Thomas Savoy I Count Savoy
Great x 3 Grandmother: Beatrice Macon Countess Savoy
Great x 1 Grandmother: Beatrice Savoy Countess Provence
Great x 3 Grandfather: William I-Count Geneva
Great x 2 Grandmother: Margaret Geneva Countess Savoy
Charles Valois I Count Valois 3 x Great Grand Son of King Henry "Curtmantle" II of England
Great x 4 Grandfather: Raymond Berenguer Barcelona III Count Barcelona
Great x 3 Grandfather: Raymond Berenguer Barcelona V Count Barcelona
Great x 4 Grandmother: Douce Gevaudan Countess Barcelona
Great x 2 Grandfather: Alfonso II King Aragon
Great x 4 Grandfather: Ramiro "Monk" II King Aragon
Great x 3 Grandmother: Petronilla Jiménez Queen Aragon
Great x 4 Grandmother: Agnes Poitiers Queen Consort Aragon
Great x 1 Grandfather: Peter II King Aragon
Great x 4 Grandfather: Raymond Ivrea
Great x 3 Grandfather: Alfonso VII King Castile VII King Leon
Great x 4 Grandmother: Urracca "Reckless" Jiménez Queen Consort Aragon and Pamplona
Great x 2 Grandmother: Sancha Ivrea Queen Consort Aragon
Great x 3 Grandmother: Richeza Unknown Queen Consort Castile Queen Consort Leon
GrandFather: James I King Aragon
Great x 1 Grandmother: Marie Montpellier Queen Consort Aragon
Mother: Isabella Barcelona Queen Consort France
Great x 3 Grandfather: King Géza II of Hungary
Great x 2 Grandfather: King Béla III of Hungary
Great x 1 Grandfather: King Andrew II of Hungary
GrandMother: Violant Árpád Queen Consort Aragon