Stephanie of Lampron
Queen consort of Cyprus
Stephanie of Lampron | |
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Coat-of-arms of Hétoumides, rulers of Armenia. | |
Queen consort of Cyprus | |
Reign | 1237–1249 |
Born | ca. 1220/1225 |
Died | after 1 April 1249 |
Burial | Santa Sophia, Nicosia |
Spouse | Henry I of Cyprus |
House | Hethumids |
Father | Constantine of Baberon |
Mother | Stephanie of Barbaron |
Stephanie of Lampron (c. 1220/1225 – soon after April 1, 1249, buried at Santa Sophia, Nicosia), was a queen consort of Cyprus, wife of Henry I de Lusignan, king of Cyprus.[1]
She was the daughter of Constantine, lord of Lampron and Regent of Armenia, and Stephanie of Barbaron. She was the sister of Sempad the Constable. She married at Nicosia in 1237/1238, without issue.
References
- ^ Runciman, Steven (1989). A History of the Crusades, Volume III: The Kingdom of Acre and the Later Crusades (en inglés). Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-06163-6.
Royal titles | ||
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Preceded by Alix of Montferrat | Queen consort of Cyprus 1237–1249 | Succeeded by Plaisance of Antioch |
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Royal consorts of the Kingdom of Cyprus
- Eschiva of Ibelin
- Isabella I of Jerusalem
- Alice of Champagne
- Alice of Montferrat
- Stephanie of Lampron
- Plaisance of Antioch
- Isabella, Lady of Beirut
- Isabella of Ibelin
- Constance of Sicily
- Alice of Ibelin
- Eleanor of Aragon
- Valentina Visconti
- Helvis of Brunswick-Grubenhagen
- Anglesia Visconti
- Charlotte of Bourbon
- Amadea Palaiologina of Montferrat
- Helena Palaiologina
- Catherine Cornaro