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- Q449076 subject Q13298671.
- Q449076 subject Q7835284.
- Q449076 subject Q8088691.
- Q449076 subject Q8567311.
- Q449076 subject Q8871595.
- Q449076 abstract "The Treaty of Le Goulet was signed by the kings John of England and Philip II of France in May 1200 and aimed to ultimately settle the claims the Angevin kings of England had on French lands. Hence, it aimed to bring an end to the war over the Duchy of Normandy and finalise the new borders of what was left of the duchy, as well as the future relationship of the king of France and the dukes of Normandy. The treaty was a victory for Philip as it asserted his legal claims to overlordship over John's French lands.The terms of the treaty signed at le Goulet, on the Gueuleton island in the middle of the Seine river near Vernon in Normandy, included clarifications of the feudal relationships binding the monarchs. Philip recognised John as King of England, heir of his brother Richard I, and thus formally abandoned his prior support for Arthur I, Duke of Brittany, the son of John's late brother, Geoffrey II of Brittany. John, meanwhile, formally recognised the new status of the lost Norman territories by acknowledging the Counts of Boulogne and Flanders as vassals of the kings of France, not those of England, and recognised Philip as the suzerain of the continental lands in the Angevin Empire. John also bound himself not to support any rebellions on the part of the counts of Boulogne and Flanders.Philip had previously recognised John as suzerain of Anjou and the Duchy of Brittany, but with the treaty of le Goulet he extorted 20,000 marks sterling in payment for recognition of John's sovereignty of Brittany.The Duchy of Aquitaine was not included in the treaty. It was still held by John as heir to his still-living mother, Eleanor. The treaty was sealed with a marriage alliance between the Angevin and Capetian dynasties. John's niece Blanche, daughter of his sister Leonora and Alfonso VIII of Castile, married Philip's eldest son, Louis VIII of France (to be eventually known as Louis the Lion). The marriage alliance only assured a strong regent for the minority of Louis IX of France. Philip declared John deposed from his fiefs for failure to obey a summons in 1202 and war broke out again. Philip moved quickly to seize John's lands in Normandy, strengthening the French throne in the process.".
- Q449076 wikiPageWikiLink Q107426.
- Q449076 wikiPageWikiLink Q129308.
- Q449076 wikiPageWikiLink Q13298671.
- Q449076 wikiPageWikiLink Q165284.
- Q449076 wikiPageWikiLink Q178525.
- Q449076 wikiPageWikiLink Q179544.
- Q449076 wikiPageWikiLink Q19894615.
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- Q449076 wikiPageWikiLink Q236736.
- Q449076 wikiPageWikiLink Q25224.
- Q449076 wikiPageWikiLink Q295268.
- Q449076 wikiPageWikiLink Q314550.
- Q449076 wikiPageWikiLink Q3290531.
- Q449076 wikiPageWikiLink Q34428.
- Q449076 wikiPageWikiLink Q346.
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- Q449076 wikiPageWikiLink Q363800.
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- Q449076 wikiPageWikiLink Q4281830.
- Q449076 wikiPageWikiLink Q538677.
- Q449076 wikiPageWikiLink Q71747.
- Q449076 wikiPageWikiLink Q756727.
- Q449076 wikiPageWikiLink Q7703611.
- Q449076 wikiPageWikiLink Q7835284.
- Q449076 wikiPageWikiLink Q8088691.
- Q449076 wikiPageWikiLink Q82850.
- Q449076 wikiPageWikiLink Q836484.
- Q449076 wikiPageWikiLink Q842091.
- Q449076 wikiPageWikiLink Q8567311.
- Q449076 wikiPageWikiLink Q8871595.
- Q449076 comment "The Treaty of Le Goulet was signed by the kings John of England and Philip II of France in May 1200 and aimed to ultimately settle the claims the Angevin kings of England had on French lands. Hence, it aimed to bring an end to the war over the Duchy of Normandy and finalise the new borders of what was left of the duchy, as well as the future relationship of the king of France and the dukes of Normandy.".
- Q449076 label "Treaty of Le Goulet".