Under this flag, peasants and city dwellers had defeated the troops of the French count of Armagnac along the upper Rhine in 1439, 1443 and 1444.
He married Marguerite of Lorraine (17 November 1662 – 16 December 1730), daughter of Louis, Count of Armagnac.
The dispensation was granted by John XXIII, against quite recent precedent (the 1392 case of Bernard VII, Count of Armagnac who wished to marry the widow of his late brother John III, Count of Armagnac, and was refused by Pope Clement VII); and proceeded on the basis of an opinion of Peter of Ancarano (influenced by Andrea).
Count | Count Basie | count | Count Dracula | The Count of Monte Cristo | Imperial Count | Count of Flanders | Count of Barcelona | Count Basie Orchestra | Gaspar de Guzmán, Count-Duke of Olivares | Count of Soissons | You Can Count on Me | Jean-Frédéric Phélypeaux, Count of Maurepas | Count Palatine | Count palatine | Count of Paris | John II, Count of Rietberg | Count of Nevers | count of Blois | William I, Count of Nassau-Dillenburg | Simon VI, Count of Lippe | Ramon Berenguer II, Count of Barcelona | Ramon Berenguer I, Count of Barcelona | Prince Gaston, Count of Eu | Peter II, Count of Savoy | Juan Vicente de Güemes, 2nd Count of Revillagigedo | Gustav Horn, Count of Pori | Gilbert, Count of Gravina | Gebhard, Count of the Lahngau | count palatine |
His oldest brother, Louis, was Count of Armagnac and husband of Catherine de Neufville, the youngest daughter of Nicolas de Neufville de Villeroy, governor of a young Louis XIV.
Gerald V d'Armagnac (died 1219), Count of Armagnac and Fézensac from 1215 to 1219, was the son of Bernard d'Armagnac, Viscount of Fézensaguet and Geralda of Foix.