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  1. Mary, Countess of Blois, also known as Marie of Avesnes, (1200–1241) was countess of Blois from 1230 to 1241. She was the daughter of Walter of Avesnes and Margaret of Blois. In 1226, Mary married Hugh I of Châtillon, a count from Châtillon-sur-Marne, son of Gaucher III of Châtillon and Elisabeth of Saint-Pol. They had five ...

  2. Counts of Blois. During the Middle Ages, the counts of Blois were among the most powerful vassals of the King of France . This title of nobility seems to have been created in 832 by Emperor Louis the Pious for Count William, the youngest son of Adrian, Count of Orléans. Over a few decades, the county was gathered to the royal lands ...

    Name
    Reign
    Other Titles
    Description
    Theobald I of Blois,aka Theobald the ...
    940–977
    Count of ToursCount of ChartresCount of ...
    Son of Theobald the Elder and Richilde.
    Odo I of Blois(c. 950 – died in 996)
    977–996
    Count of ToursCount of ChartresCount of ...
    Second son of Count Theobald I and ...
    Theobald II of Blois(c. 983 – 11 July ...
    996–1004
    Count of ToursCount of ChartresCount of ...
    Elder son of Count Odo I, her reign was ...
    Odo II of Blois(c. 985 – 15 Nov. 1037)
    1004–1037
    Count of ToursCount of ChartresCount of ...
    Younger brother of Count Theobald II, he ...
  3. Marie I or Mary (1136 – 25 July 1182 in St Austrebert, Montreuil, France) was the suo jure Countess of Boulogne from 1159 to 1170. She also held the post of Abbess of Romsey for five years until her abduction by Matthew of Alsace, who forced her to marry him.

  4. Margaret of Blois. Mary, Countess of Blois was countess of Blois (1230-1241). Mary was born into the family of Walter of Avesnes and Margaret of Blois. [1]

  5. 4 de nov. de 2020 · She was suddenly a great heiress, countess of Boulogne in her own right and too great a marriage prize to be allowed to remain secluded in the cloisters. She was abducted from Romsey Abbey by Matthew of Alsace, second son of the Count of Flanders, and forced to marry him.

  6. Mary of Blois was the youngest daughter of Stephen of Blois and his wife, Matilda of Boulogne, herself the granddaughter of St Margaret, queen of Scotland. Mary was born in Blois, France around 1136. She was destined for the cloister from an early age and, while still a young girl, was placed in a convent at St Sulpice in Rennes.

  7. Alix de France, Countess of Blois-Chartres. The story of the late twelfth- and thirteenth-century countesses of Blois and Chartres begins with the family matriarch, Alix de France, daughter of Louis VII. constructed their families between the eighth and twelfth centuries in the old Frankish realm.