Marie de Coucy

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Marie de Coucy (c. 12181285) was the daughter of Enguerrand III, Lord of Coucy and his third wife Marie de Montmirel (c. 1184-1267). She was Queen consort of the Kingdom of Scotland.

On May 15, 1239 she married King Alexander II of Scotland at Roxburgh, with whom she mothered the future King, Alexander III of Scotland. The marriage brought an alliance between the Scots and the Coucy lordship, and for the rest of the 13th century, they exchanged soldiers and money. Her husband died in 1249, and so two years later she returned to Picardy, although she would frequently revisit the Kingdom of Scotland.

Her second husband was Jean de Brienne, Grand Butler of France.

She died in 1285.

[edit] References

  • Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America Before 1700, by Frederick Lewis Weis, Line 120-30
  • Brown, Michael, The Wars of Scotland, 1214-1371, (Edinburgh, 2004)
Preceded by
Joan of England
Queen consort of Scotland
1239-1249
Succeeded by
Margaret of England
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