Eleanor De Montfort

Eleanor de Montfort (1252–June 1282) was the only daughter of Simon de Montfort, 6th Earl of Leicester, and became the last princess of Wales before the English Conquest in 1283. Eleanor's father was killed when she was still a child, but he had already made an alliance with Llywelyn the Last, Prince of Gwynedd, and it had been informally agreed that Llywelyn and Eleanor would marry. However, after Simon's death, his family was forced to flee England, and Eleanor was taken by her mother into exile in France. In 1275, a marriage contract was made with Llywelyn, and Eleanor began the voyage to Wales, avoiding a land passage through England. Her ship was taken by "pirates" in the pay of her cousin, King Edward I of England, who held her in captivity, mostly at Windsor, until 1278, when he finally reached terms with Llywelyn for her release. Their marriage took place at Worcester Cathedral. Despite the age difference, their marriage is believed to have been a happy one. However, in 1282, Eleanor died after giving birth to their only child, Princess Gwenllian. Montfort, Eleanor de Montfort, Eleanor de

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
frederick chiluba
fulda river
new york city subway
state (computer science)
ashvamedha
sophia naturalization act
superheating
william adelin
prince francis, duke of teck
sanli urfa
supercooling
richard mulligan
derringer
phrae province
chess club
wang mang
zentralfriedhof
john money
milton diamond
masterpiece
william clito
sterling (car)
deheubarth
lorelei
feeling minnesota
government national mortgage association
purusha
charmeleon
ogata kenzan
house dust mite
italic
pieter brueghel
cuyahoga river
golden horn
prince leopold, duke of albany
princess helena of waldeck
tetracyclic antidepressant
parallel transport
dioscorus i of alexandria
foreign relations of nauru
alexander cambridge, 1st earl of athlone
edmund wilson
bank of scotland
anne genevieve of bourbon cond