Кой се ожени Мехтилд фон Гелдерн?
Godfried van Loon-Heinsberg женен Мехтилд фон Гелдерн на .
Бракът продължи 5 години, 11 месеца и 23 дни (2183 дни). Бракът приключи на г.
Йохан женен Мехтилд фон Гелдерн r.
John II, Count of Blois женен Мехтилд фон Гелдерн на .
Мехтилд фон Гелдерн
Мехтилд (Матилда) фон Гелдерн (на нидерландски: Mechteld van Gelre; на френски: Mathilde de Gueldre;на немски: Mechtild von Geldern; * ок. 1324; † 21 септември 1384, замък Хуисен, Гелдерланд) от фамилията Фламенсес, е чрез женитби графиня на Клеве (1347 – 1368) и от 1372 до 1381 г. графиня на Блоа. От 1371 до 1379 г. тя претендентка за Гелдерн и Цутфен.
Прочетете повече...
Godfried van Loon-Heinsberg
Готфрид (II/III) фон Лоон-Хайнсберг (на немски: Gottfried (II/III) von Loon-Heinsberg; * ок. 1322; † пр. 16 октомври 1342 или 1347) е рицар, от 1336 г. господар на Милен и Маасейк. Той е последният представител на фамилията на графовете на Лоон-Хайнсберг.
Той е единственият син на граф Дитрих III (II) фон Хайнсберг († 1361) и съпругата му графиня Кунигунда фон Марк († 1343/1357), дъщеря на граф Еберхард I фон Марк († 1308) и Мари фон Лоон.
Готфрид се жени през 1336 г. за Мехтилд фон Гелдерн (* ок. 1324; † 21 септември 1384), дъщеря на херцог Райналд II от Гелдерн, граф на Цутфен († 1343). Те нямат деца.
Той има един извънбрачен син:
- Годфрид ван Шини (* ok. 1340; † 1415).
Готфрид фон Лоон-Хайнсберг умира през 1342 г. по време на пътуване в Прусия и е погребан в манастир Minderbroedersklooster в Мехелен. Баща му Дитрих е наследен от племенника му Готфрид фон Лоон-Хайнсберг-Даленбройх († 1395), син на брат му Йохан I фон Хайнсберг-Даленбройх († 1334). Вдовицата му Мехтилд фон Гелдерн се омъжва втори път през 1348 г. за граф Йохан фон Клеве († 1368).
Прочетете повече...Мехтилд фон Гелдерн

Йохан
Johann (1293-1368), was the last Count of Cleves, from 1347 through 1368. Upon his death in 1368, the counties of Cleves and Count of Mark were united.
Johann was the youngest son of Dietrich VII, Count of Cleves and his second wife Margaret of Habsburg. He succeeded in 1347 his brother Dietrich VIII, Count of Cleves who had died without sons.
He married Mechteld of Guelders († 1384), daughter of Reginald II, Duke of Guelders, but the marriage remained childless. After his death, the County of Cleves went to Adolf III of the Marck and so to the Counts of Marck.
Прочетете повече...Мехтилд фон Гелдерн

John II, Count of Blois
John II (c. 1342 – 19 May 1381) was a Franco-Dutch nobleman who ruled lands in both France and the Holy Roman Empire. He was the count of Blois and Dunois from 1372 until 1381, the lord of Avesnes, Schoonhoven, Gouda, Beaumont, Chimay and Waarde from 1356 until 1381 and the stadtholder of Holland and Zeeland in 1359–1360 and 1362–1363 during the absences of Count Albert of Bavaria. He was also a claimant jure uxoris to the Duchy of Guelders from 1372 until 1379.
John was the second son of Count Louis II of Blois and Jeanne of Hainault, daughter of John of Beaumont. His father died at the battle of Crécy in 1346 and his mother administered his inheritance. In 1356, his maternal grandfather died, leaving him many lordships scattered throughout the Low Countries.
John made his chief residence at Schoonhoven, where he patronized French and Dutch poets. His court was the literary centre of Holland before the arrival of Albert of Bavaria. John was on good terms with Albert and represented him during his absence from Holland. In 1362 and 1363, when John went on crusade in Prussia, he took with him his professional storyteller, Augustijnken.
On 14 February 1372, John married Matilda, daughter of Duke Reginald II of Guelders. He was proclaimed duke of Guelders by the faction of Heeckerens, supported by the bishop of Utrecht, Arnold of Horne. That same year, he succeeded his elder brother, Louis III, in the counties of Blois and Dunois.
In 1371, Matilda's brothers, Dukes Reginald III and Edward, had died. John spent most of the rest of his life trying to seize Guelders from Matilda's nephew, William VII of Jülich, in the First War of the Guelderian Succession. William had the support of the Emperor Charles IV. In 1377, John was forced to abandon Arnhem, where he had set up his court. In 1379, he renounced his claim on Guelders in exchange for an annual pension from William.
John died at Valenciennes. He had no children with his wife. He had two sons by a mistress, Isabeau d'Isbergues: John, who became lord of Trélon, and Guy, lord of Heften in Zeeland.
Прочетете повече...