Who married Raymond VI, Count of Toulouse?
Beatrice of Béziers married Raymond VI, Count of Toulouse .
Damsel of Cyprus married Raymond VI, Count of Toulouse .
Ermessende of Pelet married Raymond VI, Count of Toulouse on . Raymond VI, Count of Toulouse was 15 years old on the wedding day (15 years, 10 months and 16 days).
The marriage lasted 4 years, 1 months and 13 days (1504 days ). The marriage ended on .
Joan of England married Raymond VI, Count of Toulouse on . Raymond VI, Count of Toulouse was 39 years old on the wedding day (39 years, 10 months and 28 days). Joan of England was 31 years old on the wedding day (31 years, 0 months and 0 days). The age gap was 8 years, 10 months and 28 days.
Leonor de Aragón y de Castilla married Raymond VI, Count of Toulouse in .
Raymond VI, Count of Toulouse
Raymond VI (Occitan: Ramon; 27 October 1156 – 2 August 1222) was Count of Toulouse and Marquis of Provence from 1194 to 1222. He was also Count of Melgueil (as Raymond IV) from 1173 to 1190. Raymond's conflicts with Pope Innocent III over his tolerance of the Cathars led into his excommunication and the beginning of the Albigensian Crusade.
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Beatrice of Béziers
Beatrice of Béziers was the second wife of Raymond VI of Toulouse. Together they had one daughter, Constance of Toulouse. Beatrice was repudiated in 1189 and she retired to a Cathar nunnery. It was said she became a Cathar parfaite (a woman Cathar pastor).
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Damsel of Cyprus
The Damsel of Cyprus (born c. 1177), possibly named Beatrice or Maria, was the daughter of Isaac Komnenos, emperor of Cyprus, and an Armenian princess. She was her father's sole heiress. Her given name is not known with certainty and she is known by convention as the "Damsel of Cyprus".
She was a hostage in the Principality of Antioch from 1182 until at least 1184. She was captured in 1191 during a brief war between her father and King Richard I of England. She remained an English prisoner, although treated well, until 1194. During her captivity she travelled throughout the Holy Land, Italy and France. After her release, she remained in France. In 1199 or 1200, she married Count Raymond VI of Toulouse, becoming his fifth wife. They divorced by late 1202 or early 1203, when she married Thierry of Flanders, who attempted to claim Cyprus on her behalf. After this failed venture, the couple went to Cilician Armenia. Her fate thereafter is unknown.
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Ermessende of Pelet
Ermessende of Pelet was the last heiress of the County of Melgueil, in southern France, and the last countess before it was joined with the County of Toulouse.
Ermessende was the daughter of Bernard V Pelet, who had married Beatrice, daughter of Bernard IV of Melgueil and widow of Berenguer Ramon, Count of Provence. As her consort Bernard V ruled the county from 1146 to 1170.
Ermessende first married Pierre Bermond, lord of Anduze, and they ruled Melgueil from 1170 to 1172 when he died. In 1173 she married Raymond VI of Toulouse. Ermessende died in 1176; her will, made shortly before, was heard before the cardinal deacon Raymond des Arènes, Aldebert d'Uzès, bishop of Nîmes, Bernard Ato V, viscount of Nîmes and Agde, and Gui Guerrejat, guardian of William VIII of Montpellier.
After 1176 Raymond VI continued to rule Melgueil until 1190. He did not die until 1222.
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Joan of England
Joan of England (October 1165 – 4 September 1199) was by marriage Queen of Sicily and Countess of Toulouse. She was the seventh child of King Henry II of England and Duchess Eleanor of Aquitaine. From her birth, she was destined to make a political and royal marriage. She married William II of Sicily and later Raymond VI, Count of Toulouse, two very important and powerful figures in the political landscape of medieval Europe.
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Leonor de Aragón y de Castilla
Eleanor of Aragon, Countess of Toulouse (1182–1226) was a daughter of King Alfonso II of Aragon and Sancha of Castile. She married Raymond VI, Count of Toulouse.
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