Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. Philip of Cognac (early 1180s – after 1211 [1]) was an illegitimate son of King Richard I of England, [2] by an unidentified mother. Philip had reached adulthood by the end of the 1190s. His father married him to his ward, Amelia, the heiress of Cognac, France, in Charente.

  2. 21 de set. de 2022 · Philip of Cognac (early 1180s – after 1201) was an illegitimate son of Richard I of England by an unidentified mother. Philip had reached adulthood by the end of the 1190s. His father married him to his ward, Amelia, the heiress of Cognac in Charente.

  3. The sparsely-documented historical Philip of Cognac has been developed in literature. William Shakespeare depicted him as Philip the Bastard in his play, The Life and Death of King John. In this, he is the son of Lady Faulconbridge, widow of Sir Robert Faulconbridge, and learns of his true paternity in the first scene: Madam, I would not wish a ...

  4. Philip of Cognac was born in 1185, in England, United Kingdom as the son of Richard I King of England. He died in 1211, at the age of 26.

    • Male
    • Amelia of Cognac
    • England, United Kingdom
  5. Philip of Cognac (early 1180s – after 1211) was an illegitimate son of King Richard I of England, by an unidentified mother. Quick Facts Known for, Born ...

  6. 6 de abr. de 2021 · Added: Apr 6, 2021. Find a Grave Memorial ID: 225381151. Source citation. Philip of Cognac was an illegitimate son of Richard the Lionheart, King of England, by an unidentified mother. Philip had reached adulthood by the end of the 1190s.

  7. Richard did have at least one illegitimate son, known as Phillip of Cognac, who steps into the pages of history in Shakespeare's King John. In the spring of 1199, a horde of Roman treasure was discovered by a peasant ploughing a field by Chalus, near Limoges, which was delivered to his lord, Archard of Chalus.