Count of Blois
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The County of Blois was centred on Blois, south of Paris, France. One of the chief cities, along with Blois itself, was Chartres. Blois was associated with Champagne, Châtillon (the lords of which tended to reside in Blois), and later with the French royal family, to whom the county passed in 1391. Blois was later important during the Hundred Years' War; Joan of Arc based herself there.
The extent of the county varied over time. The northern portion, bordering on Normandy, was sometimes alienated as the County of Chartres, but the Counts of Blois who possessed it did not use a separate title for it. These lands were finally sold to the crown by Joanne of Châtillon in 1291. In 1439, the area around Chateaudun was separated as the County of Dunois for Jean Dunois.
[edit] Counts of Blois
- William (?–834)
- Odo (834–865)
- Robert (865–866)
- ? 866–878
- Warnegald (878–906)
- Gello (906–928)
- Theobald I (928–975)
- Odo I (975–995) (also count of Champagne)
- Theobald II (995–1004) (also count of Champagne)
- Odo II (1004–1037) (also count of Champagne)
- Theobald III (1037–1089) (also count of Champagne, 1063–1089)
- Stephen Henry (1089–1102)
- Theobald IV "the Great" (1102–1152) (also count of Champagne)
- Theobald V "the Good" (1152–1191)
- Louis I (1191–1205)
- Theobald VI (1205–1218)
- Margaret of Blois (1218–1230)
- Marie of Avesnes (1230–1241)
- John I (1241–1279)
- Joanne (1279–1292)
- Hugh II (1292–1307)
- Guy I (1307–1342)
- Louis II (1342–1346)
- Louis III (1346–1372)
- John II (1372–1381)
- Guy II (1381–1397)
- sold the county to
- Louis IV (1397–1407) (also duke of Orléans; Blois becomes a royal domain of France)
- Charles (1407–1465) (also duke of Orléans)
- Louis V (1465–1498) (also duke of Orléans)
- royal domain
- Gaston (1626–1660) (also duke of Orléans)
- royal domain