John of Charolais
John (French: Jean; 1283 — 1322) was a mediaeval French nobleman, Lord (seigneur) of Charolais and Saint-Just, who fought in Flanders. He is also known as John of Clermont (Jean de Clermont).

The seal of the daughter of John, Lady Joanna
Life
Lord John was born in 1283 as a son of Robert, Count of Clermont and his wife, Beatrice of Burgundy, Lady of Bourbon.[1] In 1309c., John married Joanna of Dargies and Catheux (daughter of Renaud II of Dargies and Catheux and his spouse, Agnes).
John and his wife had;
- Beatrice of Charolais, who succeeded her father
- Joanna, wife to John I, Count of Auvergne
Burial
John was buried in Lyon, but his bones were later transferred to Paris.
gollark: And if it's not bidirectional you can just require messages to be cryptographically signed and drop a lot of complex bits.
gollark: In this situation you can even avoid the bootstrapping-y issues of P2P networks as you can probably just connect back to whoever infected you.
gollark: But making your own probably wildly insecure P2P network to propagate commands is cooler!
gollark: I suppose you *could* do that.
gollark: Ideally several cheap VPSes and fallback to IPFS or something.
References
- Laiou 1972, p. 251.
Sources
- Laiou, Angeliki E. (1972). Constantinople and the Latins: the foreign policy of Andronicus II, 1282-1328. Harvard University Press.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.