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Ancestors of Robert Erwin William Juch

Twenty-Fifth Generation


19079360. Andrew de Neville was born about 1228. He married Alice. [Parents]

19079361. Alice.

They had the following children:

9539680 M i Jollan de Neville was born 1264.

19080192. Bartholomew St. Leger 1 was born about 1300. He married Anabilla (Anabella). [Parents]

19080193. Anabilla (Anabella) 1 was born 1310.

They had the following children:

9540096 M i Ralph St. Leger was born about 1326 and died before 1359.
M ii
Thomas St. Leger 1 was born about 1320. He died.

19080704. Robert de Neville Lord of Raby was born 1220 in Raby, Durham, England. He died 1290. Robert married Isabella Bertram.

Robert de Nevill, Lord of Raby, Governor of Norham, Werke and Bamborough Castles 1258; Warden of Forrests, north of Trent, 1261; Sheriff of Workshire, Governor of York Castle 1263, of Piekering Castle 1266 and Bamborough 1270; died 1282. He had livery in the 30th of Henry III (1246) upon doing his fealty of all the lands, which he inherited from his grandfather, Robert Fitz-Maldred. In 42 of same reign (1265) he had a military summons to march to the relief of the King of Scotland, and was then constituted Governor of Castles of Norham and Werke. In 1258 he was one of the Barons who undertook for the Ordinances of Oxford. (The Provisions of Oxford were articles constituting a preliminary scheme of Reform enacted by a Parliament which met at Oxford, England, June 11, 1258. King Henry III had promised on May 2, 1258, that the state of his realm should be rectified and reformed by 24 counsellors who were to meet at Oxford for this purpose 12 weeks later. Twelve of the Counsellors were chosen by the King and 12 by the Earls and Barons.)

19080705. Isabella Bertram was born 1221 in Mitford, Northumberland, England. She died 1282.

They had the following children:

9540352 M i Robert de Neville was born 1241 and died 6 Jun 1271.

19080706. Ralph FitzRandolph Lord Middleham was born 1206 in Middleham, Yorkshire, England. He married Anastacia de Percy.

19080707. Anastacia de Percy was born 1218. [Parents]

They had the following children:

9540353 F i Mary FitzRandolph was born 1240 and died 1320.

19080708. Roger FitzRoger Lord of Warkworth and Clavering was born 1220. He married Isabel.

19080709. Isabel was born 1225.

They had the following children:

9540354 M i Robert FitzRoger Lord of Warkworth and Clavering was born 1247 and died 1310.

19080710. Alan la Zouche Baron Zouche was born 1210 in Ashby, Leicester, England. He died 12 Aug 1270. Alan married Elena de Quincy.

Alan had a military summons in 1242 to attend the King into France, and in ten years had the whole of County of Cheshire and all North Wales placed under his government. In 45th of Henry III, 1261, he obtained a charter for a weekly market at Ashby La Zouche in Leicestershire, and for two fairs in the year at Swavesley. About this time he was made Justice itinerant for Counties Southampton, Buckinghamshire and Northampton and Warden of all the King's forests south of the Trent and Sheriff of Northampton. Upon the arbitration made by Louis, King of France, between Henry III and the barons, he was made one of the sureties on behalf of the King. In three years he was constituted Constable of the Tower of London and Governor of the Castle of Northampton. Sir Alan la Zouche was violently assaulted in Westminster Hall in 1268 by John, Earl of Warren and Surrey, upon a dispute between them regarding some landed property, and with his son Roger, who happened to be with him, was severely wounded. He married Elena, daughter and heir of Roger de Quincey, Earl of Winchester, and his wife Helena, daughter of Alan MacDonald and his wife, Margaret of Scotland, daughter of Prince David of Scotland, son of Prince Henry of Scotland and Ada de Warren, son of King David of Scotland and Maud, Countess of Huntington and Northumberland, son of Malcolm Conmore, King of Scotland, and Margaret, heiress of the Saxon Line. Roger de Quincey was son of Saire de Quincey, Surety for the Magna Charta, and his wife, Margaret de Bellomont, daughter of  Robert de Bellomont and Isabel de Vermandois, daughter of Hugh the Great Crusader, son of Henry I, King of France.

19080711. Elena de Quincy was born 1228.

They had the following children:

M i
Eudes la Zouche was born 1245 in Harringworth, Northamptonshire, England.
M ii
Roger la Zouche Baron Zouche was born 1246 in Ashby, Leicester, England.
9540355 F iii Margery la Zouche was born 1252.

19080716. Roger de Mortimer was born about 1158 in Wigmore, Hertfordshire, England. He died 24 Jun 1214 in Wigmore, Hertfordshire, England. Roger married Isabel de Ferrers. [Parents]

19080717. Isabel de Ferrers was born about 1036. [Parents]

They had the following children:

9540358 M i Ralph de Mortimer was born about 1190 and died 6 Aug 1246.

19080718. Llywelyn I "Fawr" ap Lorwerth was born about 1173 in Aberffraw Castle, Anglesey. He died 11 Apr 1240 in Aberconway, Caernarvonshire, Wales. Llywelyn married Tangwystl verch Lywarch. [Parents]

Llewelyn I ap Iorwerth (d. 1240), prince of north Wales, was born after the expulsion of his father, Iorwerth, from the principality. In 1194, Llewelyn recovered the paternal inheritance and by 1201 was the greatest prince in Wales. At first he was a friend of King John, whose illegitimate daughter, Joanna, he married in 1201; but the alliance soon fell through, and in 1211 John reduced Llewelyn to submission. In the next year Llewelyn recovered all his losses in north Wales. In 1215 he took Shrewsbury. His rising had been encouraged by the pope, by France and by the English barons. His rights were secured by special clauses in the Magna Carta. But he never desisted from his wars with the Marchers of south Wales, and in the early years of Henry III he was several times attacked by English armies. In 1234, however, a truce was concluded at Middle. In 1239 Llewelyn retired into a Cistercian monastery. [Encyclopaedia Britannica, 1961 ed., Vol. 14, p. 252, LLEWELYN]

19080719. Tangwystl verch Lywarch was born about 1164 in Wales.

They had the following children:

9540359 F i Gwladys "The Dark" verch Llewelyn Princess of Wales was born about 1194 and died 1251.

19080720. William de Percy Lord Topcliffe was born about 1193 in Alnwick, Northumberland, England. He died before 28 Jul 1245. William married Eleanor de Baillol about 1234 in Red Castle, Angushire, Scotland.

William de Percy was only 15 when his father died, and now became by right Baron de Percy, but his uncle, Richard de Percy, found no difficulty in usurping not only the administering of the entire estates of the family, but even the baronial title as well. He married Eleana, daughter of Inglegram de Baliol, and her relatives gradually induced William to assert himself. Richard defied every effort to dislodge him, and when the King himself was appealed to, a compromise was effected by which Richard was left in undisputed possession of the barony and estates until his death, after which William was to inherit both, to the exclusion of the usurper's sons, who died sine prole. When William, 7th Baron Percy, at length came into his own, he was in his 52nd year, and died in 1245.

19080721. Eleanor de Baillol was born 1200 in Red Castle, Augushire, Scotland. [Parents]

They had the following children:

M i
Ingelram de Percy Lord Topcliffe was born 1216.
M ii
Alan de Percy was born 1218.
M iii
Walter de Percy was born 1222.
M iv
William de Percy was born 1224.
M v
Josceline de Percy Lord Linton was born 1227.
M vi
Geoffrey de Percy Lord Semar was born 1231.
9540360 M vii Henry de Percy 8th Baron Percy was born about 1235 and died 29 Aug 1272.

19080722. John de Warenne 7th Earl of Surrey 1 was born after Jul 1231 in of Warren, Surrey, England. He died 1 after Sep 1304 in Kennington, Surrey, England. John married Alice de Lusignan on Aug 1247. [Parents]

John was the leader of the English forces which lost to William Wallace in the battle of Stirling Bridge in 1297 as depicted in the film "Braveheart".

John de Warren (Plantagenet), Earl of Warren and Surrey, was but five years of age at the time of his father's decease, and was placed inward with Peter de Savoy, the Queen's brother. When he attained majority, he attached himself zealously to Henry III in his conflicts with the barons and maintained the cause of the king with his sword at the battle of Lewes. His lordship was a person of violent and imperious temper and was often betrayed into acts of great intemperance, as in the instance of assaulting Sir Alan Zouch and his son, Roger, in Westminster Hall, when he almost killed the one and wounded the other. And again, when Edward I issued the first writs of Quo Warranto, his lordship being questioned as to the title of his possessions, exhibited to the justicesan old sword and unsheathing it said, "Behold my lords, here is my warranty; my ancestors coming into this land with William the Bastard, did obtain their lands by the sword, and I am resolved with the sword to defend them against whomsoever shall endeavor to dispossess me, but our progenitors were sharers and assistants therein." The earl was constituted, by King Edward, general of all his forces on the north of Trent for the better restraining the insolences of the Scots; whereupon he marched into Scotland and so terrified the inhabitants that they immediately sued for peace and gave hostages for their future good conduct. But the war soon after breaking out afresh, his lordship sustained a signal defeat at Strivelin where his troops fled first to Berwick, and thence into England. The earl m. 1st, 1247, Alice, dau. of Hugh le Brun, Count de la March, and half sister by the mother of King Henry III, and 2ndly, Joan, dau. of William, Lord Mowbray, and by the former only had issue, William, Alianore, and Isabel. His lordship d. in 1304, and was s. by his grandson, John de Warren (Plantagenet). [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 569, Warren, Earls of Surrey]

19080723. Alice de Lusignan was born about 1224 in Lusignan, Vienne, France. She died 9 Feb 1254/1255 in Warren, Sussex, England. [Parents]

They had the following children:

9540361 F i Eleanor (Alianore) de Warren was born about 1244 and died after 1282.
F ii
Isabel de Warren was born about 1253. She died 1254/1347.
M iii
William de Warren was born about 1256 in Warren, Sussex, England. He died 15 Dec 1286 in Croydon, Surrey, England.

19080728. Lord Roger II de Clifford Justice of Wales was born about 1215 in Clifford's Castle, Herefordshire, England. He died 1 6 Nov 1285 in Menai Strait, Anglesey, Wales. Roger married Hawise de Botterell Countess of Lorraine. [Parents]

19080729. Hawise de Botterell Countess of Lorraine was born 1225 in Tenbury, Worcestershire, England. She died 1301 in Tenbury, Worcestershire, England. [Parents]

They had the following children:

9540364 M i Lord Roger III de Clifford Justice of Forests was born 1243 and died 6 Nov 1282.
F ii
Agnes de Clifford was born about 1274 in Tetbury, Gloucestershire, England. She died before 1332.

19080730. Robert de Vipont Lord of Appleby Sheriff of Westmorland 1, 2 was born 1239 in Appleby, Westmorland, England. He died 1 7 Jun 1264. Robert married Isabel FitzJohn. [Parents]

19080731. Isabel FitzJohn 1, 2 was born about 1230 in Shere, Farnbridge, Surrey, England. [Parents]

They had the following children:

9540365 F i Isabel de Vipont was born 1254 and died 14 May 1292.
F ii
Iodinea de Vipont Lady of Brough was born 1258 in Appleby, Westmorland, England. She died 10 Nov 1333.

19080732. Richard de Clare Earl of Hertford and Gloucester 1, 2 was born 4 Aug 1222 in Gloucestershire, England. He died 3 15 Jul 1262 in John Griol's Manor, Ashenfield, Waltham, Kent, England and was buried 28 Jul 1262 in Tewksbury, Gloucestershire, England. Richard married 4 Maud de Lacy on 1223 in Lincoln, Lincolnshire, England. [Parents]

Richard de Clare, 6th Earl of Hertford and 2nd Earl of Gloucester, then in minority at the decease of his father in 1229. The wardship of this young nobleman was granted to the famous Hubert de Burgh, Earl of Kent, Justiciar of England, whose dau., Margaret, to the great displeasure of the king (Henry III), he afterwards (1243) clandestinely married but from whom he was probably divorced, for we find the king marrying him the next year to Maude, dau. of John de Lacy, Earl of Lincoln, in consideration whereof the said John paid to the crown 5,000 marks and remitted a debt of 2,000 more. His lordship, who appears to have been a very distinguished personage in the reign of Henry III, was one of the chief nobles present in Westminster Hall (40th Henry III) [1256], when Boniface, archbishop of Canterbury, with divers other prelates, pronounced that solemn curse, with candles lighted, against all those who should thenceforth violate Magna Carta. In two years afterwards, an attempt was made by Walter de Scotenay, his chief counselor, to poison the earl and his brother William, which proved effective as to the latter, while his lordship narrowly escaped with the loss of his hair and nails. In the next year the earl was commissioned, with others of the nobility by the appointment of the king and the whole baronage of England, to the parliament of France to convey King Henry III's resignation of Normandy and to adjust all differences between the two crowns; and upon the return of the mission, his lordship reported proceedings to the king, in parliament. About this period he had license to fortify the isle of Portland and to embattle it as a fortress. It is reported of this nobleman that, being at Tewkesbury in the 45th Henry III [1261], a Jew, who had fallen into a jakes upon the Saturday, refusing to be pulled out in reverence of the Jewish Sabbath, his lordship prohibited any help to be afforded him on the next day, the Christian Sabbath, and thus suffered the unfortunate Israelite to perish. He d. himself in the July of the next year (1262), having been poisoned at the table of Peter de Savoy, the queen's uncle, along with Baldwin, Earl of Devon, and other persons of note. His lordship left issue, Gilbert, his successor, Thomas, Rose, and Margaret. The earl was s. by his elder son, Gilbert de Clare.[Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, London, 1883, p.119, Clare, Lords of Clare, Earls of Hertford, Earls of Gloucester]

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Richard de Clare, 7th Earl of Gloucester, 8TH EARL OF CLARE, 6TH EARLOFHERTFORD (b. Aug. 4, 1222--d. July 15, 1262, Eschemerfield, near Canterbury, Kent, Eng.), the most powerful English noble of his time. He held estates in more than 20 English counties, including the lordship of Tewkesbury, wealthy manors in Gloucester, and the great marcher lordship of Glamorgan. He himself acquired the Kilkenny estates in Ireland and the lordship of Usk and Caerleon in south Wales, making him the greatest lord in south Wales; in Glamorgan especially he was almost an independent prince.

Son of Gilbert de Clare (the 6th Earl), Richard succeeded to the earldoms in October 1230. He refused to help King Henry III on the French expedition of 1253 but was with him afterward at Paris. Thereafter he went on a diplomatic errand to Scotland and was sent to Germany to work among the princes for the election of his stepfather, Richard, Earl of Cornwall, as king of the Romans. About 1258 Gloucester became a leader of the barons in their resistance to the king, and he was prominent during the proceedings that followed the Mad Parliament at Oxford in 1258. In 1259, however, he quarreled with Simon de Montfort, Earl of Leicester; the dispute, begun in ENG, was renewed in France, and he was again in the confidence of the king. This attitude, too, was only temporary, and in 1261 Gloucester and Montfort were again working in concord. [Encyclopedia Britannica CD, 1996, GLOUCESTER, RICHARD DE CLARE, 7TH EARL OF]

19080733. Maud de Lacy 1, 2 was born about 1223 in Lincoln, Lincolnshire, England. She died 3 before 10 Mar 1288/1289. [Parents]

They had the following children:

F i
Isabel de Clare was born about 1240. She died about 1271.
M ii
Gilbert "The Red Earl" de Clare Earl of Hertford and Gloucester 1 was born 2 2 Sep 1243 in Christ Church, Hampshire, England. He died 3 7 Dec 1295 in Monmouth Castle, Monmouthshire, Wales and was buried 22 Dec 1295 in Tewksbury Abbey, Tewksbury, Gloucestershire, England.

Gilbert de Clare, surnamed the Red, 7th Earl of Hertford and 3rd Earl of Gloucester, who, by the king's procurement, m. in 1257, Alice, dau. of Guy, Earl of Angouleme, and niece of the king of France, which monarch bestowed upon the lady a marriage portion of 5,000 marks. This noble man, who, like his predecessors, was zealous in the cause of the barons, proceeded to London immediately after the defeat sustained by the insurrectionary lords at Northampton (48th Henry III) [1264], in order to rouse the citizens, which, having effected, he received the honor of knighthood from Montfort, Earl of Leicester, at the head of the army at Lewes; of which army, his lordship, with John Fitz-John and William de Montchensi, commanded the second brigade, and having mainly contributed to the victory in which the king and prince became prisoners, while the whole power of the realm fell into the hands of the victors, the earl procured a grant under the great seal of all the lands and possessions lying in England of John de Warren, Earl of Surrey, one of the most faithful adherents of the king, excepting the castles of Riegate and Lewes, to hold during the pleasure of the crown, and he soon after, with some of the principal barons, extorted from the captive monarch a commission authorizing Stephen, then bishop of Chichester, Simon Montford, Earl of Leicester, and himself, to nominate nine persons of "the most faithful, prudent, and most studious of the public weal," as well prelates as others, to manage all things according to the laws and customs of the realm until the consultations at Lewes should terminate. Being jealous, however, of the power of Leicester, the earl soon after abandoned the baronial cause and, having assisted in procuring the liberty of the king and prince, commanded the second brigade of the royal arm at the battle of Evesham, which restored the kingly power to its former luster. In reward of these eminent services he received a full pardon for himself and his brother Thomas of all prior treasons, and the custody of the castle of Bergavenny during the minority of Maud, wife of Humphrey de Bohun. His lordship veered again though in his allegiance and he does not appear to have been sincerely reconciled to the royal cause until 1270, in which year, demanding from Prince Edward repayment of the expenses he had incurred at the battle of Evesham, with livery of all the castles and lands which his ancestors had possessed and, those demands having been complied with, he thenceforward became a good and loyal subject of the crown. Upon the death of King Henry, the Earl of Hertford and Gloucester was one of the lords who met at the New Temple in London to proclaim Prince Edward, then in the Holy Land, successor to the crown, and so soon as the new monarch returned to England, his lordship was the first to entertain him and his whole retinue with great magnificence for several days at his castle of Tonebruge. In the 13th Edward I [1285], his lordship divorced his wife Alice, the French princess, and in consideration of her illustrious birth, granted for her support during her life, six extensive manors and parks, and he m. in 1289, Joan of Acre, dau. of King Edward I, upon which occasion he gave up the inheritance of his castles and manors, as well in England as in Wales , to his royal father-in-law, to dispose of as he might think proper; which manors, and c., were entailed by the king upon the earl's issue by the said Joane, and in default, upon her heirs and assigns, should she survive the lordship. By this lady he had issue, Gilbert, his successor, Alianore, Margaret, and Elizabeth. His lordship d. in 1295, and the Countess Joan surviving, m. a "plain esquire," called Ralph de Monthermer, clandestinely, without the king, her father's, knowledge, but to which alliance he was reconciled through the intercession of Anthony Beke, the celebrated bishop of Durham, and became eventually much attached to his now son-in-law. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, London, 1883, pp. 119-120, Clare, Lords of Clare, Earls of Hertford, Earls of Gloucester]

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Gilbert de Clare, Earl of Gloucester (1243-1295), 8th earl of Gloucester and 9th earl of Clare, was born at Christchurch, Hampshire, on Sept. 2, 1243. He married Alice of Angouleme, niece of king Henry III, succeeded his father in July 1262, and joined the baronial party led by Simon de Montfort. With Simon, Gloucester was at the battle of Lewes in May 1264, when the king himself surrendered to him, and after this victory he was one of the three persons selected to nominate a council. Soon, however, he quarreled with Simon. Leaving London for his lands on the Welsh border he met Prince Edward, afterward king Edward I, at Ludlow, just after his escape from captivity; and contributed largely to the prince's victory at Evesham in August 1265. But this alliance was as transitory as the one with Leicester, Gloucester championed the barons who had surrendered at Kenilworth in November and December 1266, and after putting his demands before the king, secured possession of London (April 1267). The earl quickly made his peace with Henry III and with Prince Edward. Under Edward I he spent several years in fighting in Wales, or on the Welsh border; in 1289 when the barons were asked for a subsidy he replied on their behalf that they would grant nothing until they saw the king in person (nihi prius personaliter viderent in Anglia faciem regis), and in 291 he was fined and imprisoned on account of levying private war on Humphrey de Bohun, earl of Hereford. Having divorced his wife Alice, he married in 1290 Edward's daughter Joan, or Johanna (d. 1307). The "Red Earl," as he is sometimes called, died at Monmouth on Dec. 7, 1295, leaving, in addition to three daughters, a son, Gilbert, earl of Gloucester, killed at Bannockburn. [Encyclopedia Britannica, 1961 ed., Vol. 10, p. 434, GLOUCESTER, GILBERT DE CLARE, EARL OF.]

Ninth Earl Clare
9540366 M iii Thomas de Clare Governor of London Lord of Thormond was born about 1248 and died 1287/1288.
F iv
Bogo de Clare was born 1248. She died 1294.
F v
Margaret of Gloucester de Clare was born 1249. She died Feb 1312/1313.
F vi
Rohese de Clare 1 was born 1252 in Tunbridge, Kent, England. She died 2 after 1299.
F vii
Eglentina de Clare was born 1257. She died 1257.

19080734. Maurice FitzMaurice Lord of Offaly Justiciar of Ireland 1, 2 was born about 1242 in Offaly, Kildare, Ireland. He died 2 before 10 Nov 1286 in Ross, Wexford, Ireland. Maurice married Emmeline Longespee about 1266. [Parents]

19080735. Emmeline Longespee 1 was born 2 1250 in Ulster, Ireland. She died 2 1291. [Parents]

They had the following children:

9540367 F i Juliana FitzMaurice was born about 1266 and died after 1309.

19080736. Henry III Plantagenet King of England was born 1 Oct 1207 in Winchester Castle, Hampshire, England. He died 16 Nov 1272 in Westminster Palace, London, Middlesex, England and was buried in Westminster Abbey, London, Middlesex, England. Henry married Eleanor Berenger on 14 Jan 1235/1236 in Canterbury Cathedral, Canterbury, Kent, England. [Parents]

Reigned 1216-1272. A minor when he took the throne he did not take the reigns of Government himself until 1234. Baronial discontent simmered, boiling over in 1258 when Henry facing financial disaster attempted to raise large sums from his magnates. Reforms were agreed upon but then renounced by Henry. Simon de Montford lead a rebellion against the King (the Barons Wars) which was defeated after initial success, thereafter Henry ceded much of his power to his son. Burke say he was born 10 Oct 1206 and married 14 Jan, crowned 1216.

19080737. Eleanor Berenger was born 1222 in Aix-en-Provence, France. She died 24 Jun 1291 in Ambresbury Abbey, Wiltshire, England. [Parents]

After King Henry died she took the veil at Amesbury.

Henry and Eleanor had the following children:

9540368 M i Edward "Longshanks" Plantagenet King of England was born 17 Jun 1239 and died 7 Jul 1307.
F ii
Margaret Plantagenet was born 29 Sep 1240 in Windsor Castle, Berkshire, England. She died 26 Feb 1274/1275 in Cupar Castle, Fife.
F iii
Beatrice Plantagenet was born 25 Jun 1242 in Bordeaux, France. She died 24 Mar 1274/1275 in London, Middlesex, England and was buried in Greyfriars Church, Newgate, London, Middlesex, England.
M iv
Edmund Plantagenet Earl of Lancaster was born 16 Jan 1244/1245 in London, Middlesex, England. He died 5 Jun 1296.
M v
Richard Plantagenet was born about 1247. He died before 1256.
M vi
John Plantagenet was born about 1250. He died before 1256.
M vii
William Plantagenet was born about 1252. He died about 1256.
F viii
Katherine Plantagenet was born 25 Nov 1253 in Westminster, England. She died 3 May 1257 in Windsor Castle, Berkshire, England.
M ix
Henry Plantagenet was born after 1256. He died about 1257.

19080738. St. Ferdinand III King of Castile and Leon was born 1199. He died 30 May 1252 in Seville, Spain. Ferdinand married Johanna Countess of Ponthieu on 1237 in Burgos, Castile, Spain. [Parents]

19080739. Johanna Countess of Ponthieu was born 1197/1223. She died 15 Mar 1278/1279 in Abbeville, France. [Parents]

They had the following children:

M i
Simon of Castile was born 1220/1247. He died 1226/1326.
M ii
Juan of Castile was born 1220/1247. He died 1226/1326.
M iii
Fernando of Castile, Conde d'Aumale was born after 1239. He died before 1269.
M iv
Luis of Castile, Sn de Marchenza was born before 1243. He died after 1269.
9540369 F v Eleanor of Castile, Countess de Ponthieu was born about 1244 and died 24 Nov 1290.

19080740. Philip III "The Bold" Capet King of France was born 1 May 1245 in Poissy, Yvelnies, France. He died 5 Oct 1285 in Perpignan, Pyrenees-Orientales, France. Philip married Isabelle of Aragon on 28 May 1262 in Clermont-Ferrand, Puy-et-Dome, France. [Parents]

19080741. Isabelle of Aragon was born 1247 in Montpelier, Herault, France. She died 29 Jan 1271 in Cozenza, Calabria, ITA. [Parents]

They had the following children:

9540370 M i Philip IV "The Fair" Capet King of France was born 1268 and died 29 Nov 1314.
M ii
Charles III de Valois Duke of Anjou was born 12 Mar 1270 in Fontainebleau, France. He died 15 Dec 1325.

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