Alice, Queen Consort of Cyprus, had a speech impediment, cured by a miracle due to a fragment of Christ’s Cross.
She is my 16 x great-grandmother.
Alice or Alix was born sometime between 1304 and 13061, most likely in Nicosia. She is the daughter of Guy Ibelin, the castellan of Nicosia, and Isabelle Ibelin1.
Titles
Cyprus crowned her Queen consort of Cyprus when her husband became King of Cyprus2. They held the coronation at the Saint Sophia Cathedral in Nicosia1 2 3 4.
On 13 May, in Famagusta, they crowned her Queen consort of Jerusalem when her husband became King2.
Family
In 1310 she was betrothed to Henri de Lusignan, son of Amaury of Cyprus. Amaury’s family was exiled to Armenia, so this betrothal was terminated1.
In 1318, she married Hugh de Lusignan, Amaury’s nephew1 5. Hugh later became King Hugh IV of Cyprus1. Pope John XXII issued the papal dispensation for this marriage on 18 June of that year, and they married on 17 September1.
Hugh and Alice were second-cousins and shared common great-grandparents
- Guy Ibelin and Philippa Berlais had two children:
- A daughter, Isabelle who married Hugh III of Cyprus. They had a son:
- Guy, who married Eschiva Ibelin. Their son is Hugh.
- A son, Bailon who married Alix of Lampron. They had a son:
- Guy who married Isabelle Ibelin. Their daughter is Alice.
- A daughter, Isabelle who married Hugh III of Cyprus. They had a son:
Hugh and Alice had 9 children1:
- Guy of Cyprus
- Eschiva of Lusignan, born in 1325, died in 1363 of the plague.
- Peter (Pierre) who became Pierre I, King of Cyprus. In Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales, Peter I is the “worthy Peter” in his catalogue of fallen heros.
- John (Jean) of Cyprus (born between 1329 and 1330), murdered in Nicosia in 1375. He inherited the title of Titular Prince of Antioch.
- James (Jacques) I of Lusignan (1334-1398).
- Thomas of Cyprus, who died on 15 November 1340.
- Isabelle, who died in June 1340.
- Marguerite of Lusignan who married in 1337 and in 1347.
She became a widow in 13591.
In 1359 she married Philipp von Braunschweig-Grubenhagen1, the son of Heinrich von Braunschweig, Duke of Saxony6. Pope Urban V issued the papal dispensation for this wedding on 29 May 13681 6. She was his second wife, and they did not have any children6.
Philipp was also her son’s father-in-law, which is why they needed a papal dispensation.
Notable events
Contemporary records show Alix had an “impeded tongue” cured by divine intervention of “la Santa Croce di Tochni”1. This is a reference to a chapel in the Tochni village of Cyprus that claimed to house a piece of the True Cross of Christ.
Death
She died after 6 August 1386 in Cyprus, and they buried her in the Dominican Church1 3 5. The cause of her death is unknown.
Lineage
This person is my 16 x great-grandmother.
Get in touch!
Do you have any other information about this person? Would you like to ask me something about my research? I’d love to hear from you!
References
- Cyprus; Medieval lands; Charles Cawley; (Retrieved 2024-05-20) [↩][↩][↩][↩][↩][↩][↩][↩][↩][↩][↩][↩][↩]
- A History of Cyprus; Sir George Francis Hill; Cambridge University Press; 2010-11[↩][↩][↩]
- List of Cypriot sovereigns; Royal Tombs; (Retrieved 2024-05-21) [↩][↩]
- The Reign of Hugues IV; Cyprus History; (Retrieved 2024-05-21) [↩]
- Hugh IV; Genealogy.eu; (Retrieved 2024-05-20) [↩][↩]
- Brunswick; Medieval lands; Charles Cawley; (Retrieved 2024-05-20) [↩][↩][↩]
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