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  1. Elizabeth of Vermandois, Countess of Leicester. Elizabeth of Vermandois (c. 1085 – 1131) (or Isabel), was a French noblewoman, who by her two marriages was the mother of the 1st Earl of Worcester, the 2nd Earl of Leicester, the 3rd Earl of Surrey, and of Gundred de Warenne, mother of the 4th Earl of Warwick.

  2. Elisabeth (French: Élisabeth), also known as Isabelle Mabille (1143 – Arras, 28 March 1183), was ruling Countess of Vermandois from 1168 to 1183, and also Countess of Flanders by marriage to Philip I, Count of Flanders.

  3. 26 de abr. de 2022 · Half sister of Marguerite “the elder sister” de Clermont, dame de Luzarches. Occupation: Comtesse de Leicester, Countess of Leicester, Countess of Surrey, Элизабет, Countess of Leicestershire. Label: married 2nd; William de Warenne. Managed by: Pam Wilson (on hiatus) Last Updated: April 26, 2022.

  4. 22 de abr. de 2015 · Elisabeth became Countess of Vermandois in her own right, but she ruled it jointly with her husband. Her marriage would remain childless, and we do not know why. We do know that Elisabeth had a lover in 1175, and Philip used that opportunity to seize complete control.

  5. When Elizabeth de Vermandois was born on 13 February 1085, in Oise, Picardie, France, her father, Hugues Ier de Vermandois, was 28 and her mother, Adélaïde de Vermandois, was 21. She married Sir Robert de Beaumont 1st Earl of Leicester about 1096.

  6. Vermandois was a French county that appeared in the Merovingian period. In the tenth century, it was organised around two castellan domains: St Quentin (Aisne) and Péronne (Somme). Pepin I of Vermandois, the earliest of its hereditary counts, was descended in direct male line from the emperor Charlemagne.

  7. The Ohio State University. Abstract: This study of two inheriting countesses explores the impact of the institutionalization of government and law in the later twelfth and early thirteenth centuries on the ability of elite women to exercise lordship in their inherited lands and their husbands’ lands.