Eleonora Breizh (1185-1241) : diforc'h etre ar stummoù

Endalc’h diverket Danvez ouzhpennet
Linenn 7:
Merc'h henañ [[Jafrez II (dug Breizh)]] (1158-1186) hag e bried [[Konstanza]] (war-dro 1161-1201) e oa. He zad a oa mab da [[Herri II (Bro-Saoz)|Henri II]], [[roue Bro-Saoz]], ha da [[Eleanora Akitania]], ha breur da [[Richarzh Kalon-Leon]] ha da [[Yann Dizouar]]. He mamm a oa merc'h da [[Konan IV]], [[dug Breizh]], ha d'e bried [[Margaret of Huntingdon (Dukez Breizh)|Marc'harid Bro-Skos]], merc'h da [[roue Bro-Skos]]. N'he doa nemet ur breur, [[Arzhur Iañ (dug Breizh)|Arzhur]], ganet daou viz goude marv o zad.
 
Pennhêrez e oa, ha dezhi, hervez he gwir, Bro-Saoz, Anjev, Akitania, abaoe 1203. Gant-se e oa un dañjer da gurunenn Yann
Bac'het e voe e-pad 39 bloaz, adalek he 17 vloaz e 1202 betek he marv e 1241, gant hec'h eontr [[Yann Dizouar]] da gentañ, ha gant he c'henderv [[Herri III (Bro-Saoz)|Henri III]] goude, difennet outi dimeziñ evit ma ne vije hêr ebet.
 
Linenn 13 ⟶ 14:
'''Eleanor the 5th Countess of Richmond''' (c. 1184 – 10 August 1241), was the eldest daughter
 
As the rightful heiress to vast lands including England, Anjou, and Aquitaine since 1203 and thus a potential threat to the throne of her uncle [[John of England]] and cousin [[Henry III of England]], she was imprisoned from 1202 and thus became the longest imprisoned member of an English royal family,<ref>[http://msngroup.aimoo.com/ALLMYTUDORShistorychat/rbor.msnw-action=get_message&mview=0&ID_Message=7904&LastModified=4675705518095491844.htm ALL MY TUDORS...history chat]</ref> which also led to her succession failure to [[Duchy of Brittany]]. Like [[Empress Matilda]] and later [[Elizabeth of York]], her claim to the English throne gained little (if any) support from barons, due to the incompletion of English succession law when female rights were somehow ignored. Some commented that her imprisonment was "the most unjustifiable act of King John".<ref>''The History of Bristol, Civil and Ecclesiastical: Including Biographical Notices of Eminent and Distinguished Natives'' by [[John Corry]] and [[John Evans]], p.219</ref><ref>''Chilcott's new guide to Bristol, Clifton and the Hotwells'', p.15</ref> Her long imprisonment was mysterious. Though apparently innocent and never tried, sentenced<ref>Sir Frederick Pollock, ''The History of English Law before the Time of Edward I'', vol. 2 [1898]</ref> or locked in a cell,<ref name=mcpe/> and lived a relatively comfortable life according to some reports, she was viewed as a "state prisoner", forbidden to marry and guarded closely even after her child-bearing years,<ref name=fvp/> and was kept in prison till her death.
-->
 
 
==Bugaleaj==