| b 05 Mar 1133, , Le Mans, Sarthe, France |
| d 06 Jul 1189, , Chinon, Indre-Et-Loire, France |
| bur 08 Jul 1189, Abbey At, Fontevrault, Maine-Et-Loire, France |
Geoffroy II Count Gastinois |
> |
61 18 May 1933, |
Foulques IV, Count Anjou |
Ermengarde De Countess Anjou, [Countess] |
> |
|
Foulques V 'le_jeune' Anjou, [King] |
b 1033 |
Simon I Montfort, [Seigneur de] |
> |
|
| b 1092 |
Bertrade De Montfort, [Queen of France |
Agnes D' Evreux |
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| Geoffrey V (The_Handsome) Plantagenet, Count of Anjou |
d 10 Nov 1143 |
b 1059 |
John De La Fleche |
|
| |b 24 Aug 1113 |
| |
Elias (Helie), Count Maine |
Paula |
|
| |d 07 Sep 1151 |
Ermengarde (Ermentrude) Du Maine, [Countess] |
b 1060 |
Gervase Seigneur De Chateau_Du_Loire |
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| | |
b 1096 |
Matilde De Chateau_Du_Loire, [Countess] |
Erenburg, Mrs De Chateau_Du_Loire |
|
| Henry II King England, 'Plantagenet' |
d 1126 |
b 1055 |
Robert I Normandy |
> |
| |-1 + |
|
William I 'The_Conqueror' England, [Duke] |
Harlette De Falaise |
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|m 11 May 1152 |
Henry I 'Beauclerc' England, [King] |
b 14 Oct 1024 |
Baldwin V Count Flanders |
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| |, Bordeaux, Gironde, France |
|b 1070 |
Matilda Countess Of Flanders, [Queen] |
Adele (Alix) Princess France |
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| Matilda (Maud) Princess England, Empress |
d 01 Dec 1135 |
b 1031 |
Duncan I, King Scotland |
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| b 05 Aug 1102 |
| |
Malcolm III, King Scotland |
Sibyl Fitzsiward, [Queen] |
> |
| d 10 Sep 1169 |
Matilda 'Atheling' Princess Scotland |
b 1033 |
Edward 'Atheling', Prince England, [The Exile] |
> |
|
b ABT 1079 1080 |
Margaret 'Atheling', Princess England, [Queen] |
Agatha Of Hungary Augsburg |
> |
|
d 01 May 1118 |
b ABT 1043 1045 |
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Henry II carried on his grandfather's policy of limiting the power of the nobles. He also tried to make the Roman Catholic Church in England submit to his authority. This policy brought him into conflict with Thomas a Becket, Archbishop of Canterbury. Four of the king's knights murdered Becket while he was at vespers in his cathedral.
Henry made Anglo-Saxon common law, rather than the revised Roman law, the supreme law of the land. He introduced trial by jury and circuit courts. In his later years, Henry's sons often rebelled against him. Two of them, Richard the Lion-Hearted and John, became the next two kings of England.