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Alys, Countess of the Vexin

Alys, Countess of the Vexin (October 4, 1160-c.1200) was the daughter of King Louis VII of France and his second wife Constanza of Castile, daughter of Alfonso VII of Castile and Berenguela of Barcelona. Also known as Alaïs, Adélaïde, Adèle, or Alix (but not to be confused with her half-sister Alix Capet, the daughter of Louis by his first wife Eleanor of Aquitaine).

As a child she was betrothed to Prince Richard of England and sent to England, but once there Alys was seduced by his father King Henry II of England and became his mistress after Eleanor of Aquitaine (ex-wife of Louis VII, wife of Henry II, mother of Richard) had been imprisoned by Henry. There were unsubstantiated rumours at the time that she had a child by Henry. It was said of Alys that "except for her looks, the tales were none too good."

When King Henry died on July 6, 1189, her long-time fiance, Richard, succeeded to the throne but terminated their engagement in Messina in March 1190, on the grounds that she had borne a child by his father. She was sent back to France in 1195.

Her brother, King Philip II of France, offered her to Richard's younger brother Prince John in 1192, but Queen Mother Eleanor of Aquitaine put a stop to that. Instead Alys was married on August 20, 1195 to William III Talvas, Count of Ponthieu, and they had three daughters: Jean (born dead), Marie, Countess of Ponthieu , and Isabelle. Alys was still alive on July 28, 1218.

Mentioned in Fiction

Alaïs is the narrator of the historical novel Canterbury Papers by Judith Koll Healey (ISBN 0-06-052535-5).

Sources

01-04-2007 01:32:10
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