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  1. Brunissende of Foix (died September 1324) was Countess of Périgord by marriage to Count Elias VII. According to several sources, Brunissende had influence in the politics of the newly formed Avignon Papacy due to her close relationship with Pope Clement V .

  2. John I, Count of Foix also known as Jean de Foix-Grailly (1382 – 4 May 1436) was Count of Foix from 1428 until his death in 1436. He succeeded his mother Isabella, Countess of Foix . His father was Archambaud de Grailly .

  3. Roger-Bernard's new Foix-Béarn coat of arms that showed the houses that were joined with Margaret's marriage to him. The bars represent the House of Foix, the cows are for the House of Béarn. The union was politically advantageous as it created a strong alliance between the House of Béarn and the House of Foix.

  4. Catherine de Foix (c. 1455 – died before 1494) was a French noblewoman. She was a daughter of Gaston IV, Count of Foix , and Eleanor of Navarre , [1] and was a granddaughter of John II of Aragon and Blanche I of Navarre .

  5. Gaston II of Foix-Béarn (1308 – September 1343), son of Gaston I of Foix-Béarn and Jeanne of Artois, was the 10th Count of Foix. [1] In 1315, after the death of his father Gaston I, he became Count of Foix, and Viscount of Béarn , Marsan, Gabardan, Nébouzan and Lautrec under the regency of his mother, Jeanne of Artois.

  6. Matthew (died 1398), he succeeded Gaston III, Count of Foix (his first cousin once removed) as count of Foix. Isabella 1361–1428, she succeeded her brother as countess of Foix. Married to Archambaud of Grailly viscount of Castillon & Gruson and they found the branch of Foix-Grailly. John I, Count of Foix. Gaston IV, Count of Foix; References

  7. He was son of Roger-Bernard V of Foix viscount of Castelbon and Géraude de Navailles. In 1391 he succeeded Gaston Phoebus , his first cousin once removed, as count. He asserted the sovereignty of Béarn and, as son-in-law of John I , contested the Crown of Aragon with John's brother Martin I from 1396.