John "Lackland" (?) King of England
M, b. 24 December 1167, d. 19 October 1216
John "Lackland" (?) King of England|b. 24 Dec 1167\nd. 19 Oct 1216|p1105.htm|Henry II "Curt Mantel" (?) King of England|b. 5 Mar 1133\nd. 6 Jul 1189|p1103.htm|Eleanor of Aquitaine (?)|b. 1122\nd. 1 Apr 1204|p1104.htm|Geoffrey V. P. (?) Duke of Normandy, Count of Anjou|b. 24 Aug 1113|p1101.htm|Matilda (?) Queen of England and Empress of Germany|b. 7 Feb 1102\nd. 10 Sep 1167|p1102.htm|William X. (?) Duke of Aquitaine|b. 1099\nd. 9 Apr 1137|p1181.htm|Aenor Aimery||p1182.htm|
- Charts
- Rob's Ancestors
King John was styled as, "Joannes Rex Angliae et Dominus Hiberniae, Dux Normaniae et Aquitaniae et Comes Andigaviae."
Crowned by Hubert Walter, Archbishop of Canterbury.
John's first marriage was anulled on the grounds of consanguinity.
John was not particularly religious, even before being excommunicated. Once while John was hunting, a large stag was killed. "What a fine life that animal has had, and yet it has never heard holy Mass."
John had a drooping left eye, as did his son Henry III, and grandson Edward I.
Died of dysentery.
King John was, of course, the title character in Shakespeare's play King John, which is better theatre than history but much better history than his Richard III. King Philip of France says to John, during a parley: "But thou from loving England art so far That thou hast under-wrought his lawful king, Cut off the sequence of posterity, Outfaced infant state, and done a rape Upon the maiden virtue of the crown." King John Act 2, scene 1
Portrayed by Claude Rains in the 1938 film, "The Adventures of Robin Hood."
Portrayed by Guy Rolfe in the 1952 film, "Ivanhoe."
Portrayed, as Prince John, by Hubert Gregg in the 1952 film, "The Story of Robin Hood and His Merrie Men."
Portrayed by Hubert Gregg, Brian Haines, and Donald Pleasance in the 1955-58 television series, "The Adventures of Robin Hood."
Portrayed by Nigel Terry in the 1968 film, "Lion in Winter".
Portrayed by John Duttine in the 1978 BBC-2 series, "The Devil's Crown."
John "Lackland" (?) King of England was born on 24 December 1167 at Beaumont Palace, Oxford, Oxfordshire, England.1 He was the son of Henry II "Curt Mantel" (?) King of England and Eleanor of Aquitaine (?). John "Lackland" (?) King of England married Isabella of Gloucester (?) on 29 August 1189.1 John "Lackland" (?) King of England married Isabel of Angouleme (?) on 24 August 1200 at Bordeaux, Gironde, France.1 John "Lackland" (?) King of England died on 19 October 1216 at Newark Castle, Nottinghamshire, England, at age 48.1 He was buried at Worcester Cathedral, Worcester, England.1
Crowned by Hubert Walter, Archbishop of Canterbury.
John's first marriage was anulled on the grounds of consanguinity.
John was not particularly religious, even before being excommunicated. Once while John was hunting, a large stag was killed. "What a fine life that animal has had, and yet it has never heard holy Mass."
John had a drooping left eye, as did his son Henry III, and grandson Edward I.
Died of dysentery.
King John was, of course, the title character in Shakespeare's play King John, which is better theatre than history but much better history than his Richard III. King Philip of France says to John, during a parley: "But thou from loving England art so far That thou hast under-wrought his lawful king, Cut off the sequence of posterity, Outfaced infant state, and done a rape Upon the maiden virtue of the crown." King John Act 2, scene 1
Portrayed by Claude Rains in the 1938 film, "The Adventures of Robin Hood."
Portrayed by Guy Rolfe in the 1952 film, "Ivanhoe."
Portrayed, as Prince John, by Hubert Gregg in the 1952 film, "The Story of Robin Hood and His Merrie Men."
Portrayed by Hubert Gregg, Brian Haines, and Donald Pleasance in the 1955-58 television series, "The Adventures of Robin Hood."
Portrayed by Nigel Terry in the 1968 film, "Lion in Winter".
Portrayed by John Duttine in the 1978 BBC-2 series, "The Devil's Crown."
John "Lackland" (?) King of England was born on 24 December 1167 at Beaumont Palace, Oxford, Oxfordshire, England.1 He was the son of Henry II "Curt Mantel" (?) King of England and Eleanor of Aquitaine (?). John "Lackland" (?) King of England married Isabella of Gloucester (?) on 29 August 1189.1 John "Lackland" (?) King of England married Isabel of Angouleme (?) on 24 August 1200 at Bordeaux, Gironde, France.1 John "Lackland" (?) King of England died on 19 October 1216 at Newark Castle, Nottinghamshire, England, at age 48.1 He was buried at Worcester Cathedral, Worcester, England.1
Child of John "Lackland" (?) King of England and Isabel of Angouleme (?)
- Henry III (?) King of England+ b. 1 Oct 1207, d. 16 Nov 1272
Citations
- [S64] Roderick W. Stuart, Royalty for Commoners, 2-26.
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