man Henry II Curmantle Plantagenet‏‎, son of Geoffrey V The Fair Plantagenet and Matilda Maud of England‏.
Born ‎ Mar 5, 1133 at Le Mans,Francia, died ‎ Jul 6, 1189 at Chinon,Francia‎, 56 years

Married ‎ May 18, 1153 at Bordeaux Cathedral,Bordeaux,France (36 years married) to:

woman Eleanor of Aquitaine‏‎, daughter of Guillaume X Duque De Aquitaine and Eleanor Chatelleraut de Rouchefoucald‏.
Born ‎ 1122 at Chateau de Belin,Grunne,France, died ‎ Apr 1, 1204 at Castillo De Mirabell,Francia‎, 81 or 82 years, buried ‎ at ,Fontevrault L'Ab,Maine-Et-Loire,France, ‎1st marriage to: Henry II Curmantle Plantagenet, 2nd marriage to: Louis VII "The Younger" King of France
Name Suffix: prncss 7*
REFN: 1260926157
Princess of Aquitaine

Children:

1.
man Aymer Longespee‏‎
2.
man William Longespee [EARL OF SALISBU , [EARL OF SALISBU‏
Born ‎± 1173 at ,,,England, died ‎ Mar 7, 1225/1226 at ,,,England‎, approximately 52 years, buried ‎ at ,Salisbury,Wiltshire,England
3.
man Henry Longespee‏‎
Born ‎ Feb 28, 1155‎
4.
man Geoffrey Longespee‏‎
Born ‎ Sep 23, 1158‎
5.
man Phillip Longespee Prince of England , Prince of England‏‎
Born ‎± 1160‎
6.
woman Joan Longespee‏‎
Born ‎ Oct 1165‎
7.
woman Eleanor Princess of England‏
Born ‎ Oct 13, 1162 at Domfront,Normandía, died ‎ Oct 25, 1214 at Las Huelgas,Burgos,España‎, 52 years, buried ‎ at Monasterio De Las Huelgas. España
8.
man John, "Lackland" Plantagenet King of England , King of England‏
Nickname: "Lackland", also known as: John /Lackland/, born ‎ Dec 24, 1166 at Kings Manorhouse,Oxford,Oxfordshire,England, died ‎ Oct 19, 1216 at Newark-On-Trent,Newark,Nottinghamshire,England‎, 49 years, buried ‎ at Worcester Cathed,Worcester,Worcestershire,England
From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996.

[Pullen010502.FTW]

Source: 'The World Book Encyclopedia', 1968, p J110. 'Royalty forommoners', Roderick W. Stuart, 1993, p 38.: Reigned 1199-1216. SignedMagna Carta in 1215 at Runnymede. His reign saw renewal of war withPhillip II Augustus of France to whom he lost several continentalpossesions including Normandy by 1205. He came into conflict with hisBarons and was forced to Sign the Magna Carta. His later repudiationof the charter led to the first barons war 1215-17 during which Johndied. Burke says he was born in 1160. John 'Lackland' King Of Englandwas known as one of England's worst kings; however, modern analysisnotes he was actually much better than his infamous reputation allows.His barons forced him to grant the famous charter of liberties, MagnaCarta, in 1215. He was often cruel, but he showed both administrativeand military ability. John succeeded his brother Richard theLion-Hearted as king of England and duke of Normandy in 1199. His rulebegan badly. By inept politics and the murder of his nephew Arthur, helost the allegiance of many of his French barons. King Philip Augustusof France then declared war. In 1205 John was beaten, and lost all theEnglish holdings in France except Aquitaine. John persued a policy inEngland that brought him into conflict with Pope Innocent III. In 1208the pope placed England under an interdict, which banned churchservices. The following year John was excommunicated. The king thenshowed his capacity for strong rule. He forced Scotland into asubordinate position, kept the Welsh princes in check, and held a firmgrip on Ireland. But his foreign favorites, professional troops, andautocratic financial policy stirred up discontent among the Englishbarons. When John failed to reconquer the lost French territories in1214, most of the barons and many of the clergy revolted. On June 15,1215, the king was forced to approve the Magna Carta at Runnymedemeadow beside the River Thames.
A few months later, John fought the barons. They were aided by PrinceLouis of France, heir to Philip Augustus, and appeared certain to win.But John penned his enemies in London and the adjacent counties. Hedied suddenly in 1216, but his throne was saved for his son, HenryIII. Buried in Worcester Cathedral Concubine at Kings Manor House,Oxford, Oxfordshire, England Divorced Isabel Fitzrobert 29 August1189.

REF: "Falls the Shadow" Sharon Kay Penman: William the Conquerorrequested a large number of Jews to move to England after hisconquest. They spoke Norman & did well under his reign. Theycontinued to thrive under William's grandson Henry II. When Richardwas coronated, he did so "in a bath of Jewish blood." John merelytaxed them very heavily, "bled them white".

REF: British Monarchy Official Website: Richard's success (atretrieving all of his French possessions taken by Philip Augustus) wasshort lived. In 1199 his brother, John, became king and Philipsuccessfully invaded Normandy. By 1203 John had retreated to England,losing his French lands of Normandy and Anjou by 1205. John (reigned1199-1216) was an able administrator interested in law and governmentbut he neither trusted others, nor was trusted by them.
Heavy taxation, disputes with the Church (John was excommunicated bythe Pope in 1209) and unsuccessful attempts to recover his Frenchpossessions made him unpopular. Many of his barons rebelled and inJune 1215 they forced the King to sign a peace treaty accepting theirreforms. This treaty, later known as Magna Carta, limited royalpowers, defined feudal obligations between the king and the barons,and guaranteed a number of rights. The most influential clausesconcerned the freedom of the Church; the redress of grievances ofowners and tenants of land; the need to consult the Great Council ofthe Realm so as to prevent unjust taxation; mercantile and tradingrelationships; regulation of the machinery of justice so that justicebe denied to no one; and the requirement to control the behaviour ofroyal officials. The most important clauses established the basis ofhabeas corpus ('you have the body'), i.e. that no one shallbeimprisoned except by due process of law, and that 'to no one will wesell, to no one will we refuse or delay right or justice'.
The Charter also established a council of barons who were to ensurethat the sovereign observed the Charter, with the right to wage war onhim if he did
not. Magna Carta was the first formal document insisting that thesovereign was as much under the rule of law as his people; and thatthe rights of individuals were to be upheld even against the wishes ofthe sovereign. As a source of fundamental constitutional principles,Magna Carta came to be seen as an important definition of aspects ofEnglish law, and in later centuries as the basis of the liberties ofthe English people. As a peace treaty Magna Carta was a failure andthe rebels invited Louis of France to become their king. When Johndied in 1216 England was in the grip of civil war.


Downloaded from Bradford_Taylor on rootsweb.com


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9.
man Richard Lionhearth King of England‏
Also known as: Richard the /Lion-Hearted/, born ‎ Sep 13, 1157 at Oxfordshire,England, died ‎ ABR 6, 1199 at France‎, 41 or 42 years
10.
woman Mathilde Plantagenet‏
Born ‎ 1156 at London,England, died ‎ Jun 28, 1189 at Germany‎, 32 or 33 years