King John "Lackland" (of
England) was born on 24 December 1166
at Kings Manor House, Oxford, Oxfordshire, England.
2 He was the son of
King Henry II "Curt Mantle" Plantagenet of England and
Queen Eleanor (of Aquitaine).
1 King John "Lackland" (of England) is also recorded born on 24 December 1167
at Beaumont Palace, Oxfordshire, England.
1 He and
Agatha De Ferrers had a relationship.
2 King John "Lackland" (of England) and
(____?____) de Warrene had a relationship.
2 King John "Lackland" (of England) and
Miss Plantagenet had a relationship
at Kings Manor House, Oxford, Oxfordshire, England.
2 King John "Lackland" (of England) and
Hawisa Fitzwarin had a relationship.
2 King John "Lackland" (of England) married
Clementia (____?____).
2 King John "Lackland" (of England) married first
Isabella (of Gloucester) on 29 August 1189.
1 King John "Lackland" (of England) and
(____?____) ((____?____)) had a relationship.
2 King John "Lackland" (of England) and
(____?____) ((____?____)) had a relationship.
2 King John "Lackland" (of England) and
(____?____) de Warrene had a relationship.
2 King John "Lackland" (of England) and
(____?____) ((____?____)) had a relationship.
2 King John "Lackland" (of England) and
Isabella (of Gloucester) were divorced.
1 King John "Lackland" (of England) married second
Isabella (of Angoulême), daughter of
Aymer "Taillefer" de Valence and
Alice de Courtenay, on 24 August 1200
in Bordeaux, , France.
3,1,2 King John "Lackland" (of England) and
Matilda Gifford had a relationship.
2 King John "Lackland" (of England) died on 19 October 1216
in Newark, Nottinghamshire, England, at age 49.
1 He was buried
at Worcester Cathedral, Worcester, Worcestershire, England.
2,1 King John "Lackland" (of England) has ID 2-26 in
Royalty for Commoners.
1 Signed Magna Carta in 1215 The statement in the legitimization of Joan, daughter of king John and wife of prince Llywelyn, that each of her parents were unmarried at the time of her birth, does not imply she was born prior to John's first marriage, to Isabelle de Clare in 1189. This marriage had been annulled by the time of Joan's legitimization, and would have been considered by the clerics not to have occurred. It might be that the legitimization does imply that, by the time of John's second marriage, to Isabelle of Angouleme, that Joan's mother was either dead or had become a nun, otherwise the legitimacy of king Henry III might have been called into question. It might also be that the reference in Joan's obituary to her mother as 'queen Clementia' implies that Clemence, mother of Joan, did not die or become a nun until after John's accession. I suspect that in the minds of the monks and clerics who recorded things, these annulments and legitimizations created a virtual world in which annulled real world marriages did not exist, and appropriate legitimizing marriages did exist, with all appropriate side effect implications, including Clemence having been queen.. - Paul K. Davis - paulkdavis@earthlink.net.
2 King John "Lackland" (of England) became
King of England in 1199 replacing
King Richard I 'Coeur De Lion' (of England).
4 King John "Lackland" (of England) was replaced as
King of England by
King Henry III (of England) in 1216.
1,4