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  1. Louis II of Châtillon (died 26 August 1346), son of Guy I, Count of Blois and Margaret of Valois, was count of Blois and lord of Avesnes from 1342 to 1346. The battle of Crécy, from an illuminated manuscript of Jean Froissart's Chronicles.

  2. The very last hereditary count of Blois was his grandson, Duke Louis II, who annexed the county to the Crown lands of France when he was crowned King of France in 1498 under the name of Louis XII.

    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. Louis I of Blois (1172 – 14 April 1205) was Count of Blois from 1191 to 1205. He is best known for his participation in the Fourth Crusade and later prominent role in the Battle of Adrianople.

  4. Louis I of Châtillon (died 26 August 1346, battle of Crécy), son of Guy I of Blois-Châtillon and Margaret of Valois, was count of Blois and lord of Avesnes 1342–1346. In 1340 in Soissons, he married Jeanne of Avesnes, Countess of Soissons (d. 1350), daughter of John of Avesnes, Lord of Beaumont...

  5. Charles de Blois, son of Guy I, Count of Blois, married Joan of Penthievre, the heiress of John III, Duke of Brittany; together, they became principal protagonists in the War of the Breton Succession. Upon the death of his only son, Guy II, Count of Blois sold the county to Louis I, Duke of Orléans and the county passed to the French royal family.

  6. 4 de dez. de 2012 · Louis I, Count of Blois, was a fine example of the incestuous, bewildering royal connections that dominate the West. He was born in the spring of AD 1172, the son of Theobald V (called the Good) of Blois, making Louis the first cousin of the late Count Theobald III of Champagne.

  7. Louis II of Châtillon (died 26 August 1346), son of Guy I, Count of Blois and Margaret of Valois, was count of Blois and lord of Avesnes from 1342 to 1346. [1] The battle of Crécy, from an illuminated manuscript of Jean Froissart's Chronicles.