Margaret of Flanders, Countess of Guelders explained

Margaret of Flanders, Countess of Guelders
Noble Family:House of Dampierre
Father:Guy, Count of Flanders
Mother:Isabelle of Luxembourg
Spouse:firstly: Alexander, Prince of Scotland secondly: Reinauld I, Count of Guelders

Margaret of Flanders (died 1331) was a consort of Alexander, Prince of Scotland and later wife of Reinauld I, Count of Guelders.

She was the daughter of Guy, Count of Flanders and his second wife Isabelle of Luxembourg. In 1281, King Alexander II of Scotland started negotiating with the Count of Flanders, about the marriage of the Count's daughter Margaret to the Prince Alexander. The couple were married on 14 November 1282 at Roxburgh, Scotland and the marriage was celebrated the following day. Prince Alexander died a week after his twentieth birthday, on 28 January 1284. Margaret returned to Flanders early in 1285.[1]

On 3 July 1286, Margaret was married to Reinauld I, Count of Guelders, in Namur, Wallonia. They had six children, Reginald II, Margaret, Guy, Philippe, Elisabeth and Philippa.

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Reid, Norman H. (2019). Alexander III, 1249 -1286: First Among Equals, John Donald, Edinburgh, p. 258,