Examples of 'angevins' in a sentence

Meaning of "angevins"

angevins (noun) - in history, it refers to the rulers of the Anjou region in France, particularly the Plantagenet kings of England who descended from the House of Anjou. In English, it is used to describe this historical dynasty and their reign
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  • plural of Angevin

How to use "angevins" in a sentence

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angevins
Works on a series of porcelain with motifs angevins.
The Angevins were faced with a powerful and divided local nobility.
This was a major setback for the Angevins.
Angers inhabitants are called Angevins and formerly as Andegaves.
Of a family which had come to Italy with the Angevins.
Many historians identify the Angevins as a distinct English royal house.
Amboise lay on the eastern frontier of the Angevins holdings.
Thousands of Angevins and other French residents of the island were massacred.
The tarì were also produced by the Hohenstaufens and the early Angevins.
The Angevins exited from the west side of Winchester on the Salisbury road.
Achaea of the Angevins.
Through this marriage the Angevins joined the highest ranks of western French nobility.
Angevins the Marchesato.
The Guelph cities in Tuscany accepted the direct rule of the Angevins.
The Angevins then decided to return to Provence.

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French Henry II was the first of the Angevins who were the first Plantagenet kings.
The Angevins were swiftly approaching Naples and Ferdinand prepared a counteroffensive.
He distinguished himself in the Battle of Acl and in defending Messina from the Angevins.
At the same time, the Angevins allowed the local rulers to keep their Orthodox faith.
The kingdom of Naples & Sicily passes to the Angevins.
Still, Robert of Naples was bitter that the Angevins had lost Sicily from his kingdom.
The Angevins remained in control until the collapse of their empire in northern France in 1204.
This had broken out in 1282 between the Angevins and Catalans over the possession of Sicily.
Angevins for men, and.
Ruvo was dominated also by Normans, Swabians, Angevins and Aragons.
Later, however, the Angevins intervened and restored royal power.
It was finished in 1324 and was the royal church of the Angevins.
Most of these conquests were lost to the Angevins in 1296, when a truce was signed.
It was in 1348, that the Avignon papacy bought the city of Avignon from the Angevins.
Eventually most of these were recovered by the Angevins and peace was restored in 1296.
In 1282 the Angevins lost control of Sicily but retained Naples.
Byzantine counteroffensive soon ensued, which drove the Angevins out of the interior by 1281.
The Swabian were replaced by Angevins till the advent of Alfonso of Aragon in 1442.
However, Robert remained bitter, and in 1320 war broke out between the Angevins and the Sicilians.
In 1368 Dyrrhachium was taken from the Angevins by Karlo Thopia, an Albanian lord.

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