Geoffrey Plantagenet | |
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Count of Anjou | |
Reign | 1129 – 7 September 1151 |
Predecessor | Fulk the Younger |
Successor | Henry II of England |
Duke of Normandy | |
Reign | 1144–1150 |
Predecessor | Stephen |
Successor | Henry II |
Consort of the English monarch | |
Tenure | 8 April 1141 – 1148 |
Born | 24 August 1113 |
Died | 7 September 1151 Château-du-Loir, France | (aged 38)
Burial | |
Spouse | |
Issue Detail | |
House | Ingelger (by birth) Plantagenet (founder) |
Father | Fulk, King of Jerusalem |
Mother | Eremburga, Countess of Maine |
Geoffrey V (24 August 1113 – 7 September 1151), called the Fair (French: le Bel) or Plantagenet, was the Count of Anjou, Touraine and Maine by inheritance from 1129, and also Duke of Normandy by his marriage claim, and conquest, from 1144.
Geoffrey's marriage to Empress Matilda, daughter of King Henry I of England and Duke of Normandy, led, through their son Henry II, to the 300-year long reign of the Plantagenet dynasty in England. Although it was never his family name or last name, "Plantagenet" was taken for the dynasty from Geoffrey's epithet, long after his death. Geoffrey was 'of Anjou', his ancestral domain of Anjou in north central France gives rise to the name Angevin, and what modern historians name as the Angevin Empire in the 12th century.