Brief   lives of women who reigned or ruled in their own  right or by marriage.
ANNE D'ALENCON (d.1562) 
Proprietary Title:  Lady of La Guerche and Pouence, 1549-1562. 
ANNE D'AUVERGNE (1358-1417)
Proprietary Title:  Countess of Forez  
Partner/Progeny:  Married in 1371, Louis II of Bourbon (1337-1410). 
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| Anne of Brittany Queen of France @Wikipedia | 
ANNE DE BRETAGNE (1477-1514)
Proprietary Title:
Duchess of Brittany & Countess of Montfort, 1488-1514
Countess of Etampes, 1512-1514
Other Titles:
Queen of the Romans, 1491-1492, as wife of Emperor Maximilian I
Queen of France, 1491-1498 as wife of Charles VIII
Queen of France, 1499-1514 as wife of Louis XII
Queen of Naples, 1501-1503
Duchess of Milan, 1499-1500, 1501-1512
Notes:   "Daughter of Marguerite de Foix and   François II, duke of Brittany,  Anne was born in Nantes on Jan. 25, 1477.   Upon her father's death in  Sept. 1488, at a time when French forces   occupied much of her duchy,  the young Anne was crowned duchess of   Brittany in Rennes (Feb. 1489).  The strong-willed girl refused to wed   Alain d'Albret but agreed to a  marriage by procuration with Maximilian   I, king of the Romans, in Dec.  1489. Besieged in Rennes, she was forced,   however, to accept marriage  to the French king Charles VIII in Dec.   1491 as part of a peace  treaty, thereby losing control of Brittany and   invalidating her union  with Maximilian. At fifteen, Anne was crowned   queen of France at  Saint-Denis and made her entry into Paris in Feb.   1492.  . . . With the  king's unexpected death in 1498, Anne regained   sovereignty over  Brittany. By all accounts her marriage to King Louis   XII in Jan. 1499  resulted in a happier union, in part because Anne   retained control of  Brittany and its revenues and was treated with   greater deference. Her  influence in French political matters was   nonetheless restricted,  although she was occasionally active behind the   scenes in opposing  Louis' military campaigns in Italy, particularly   against the pope, and  in intermittent negotiations with the Spanish, to   whom she was  related through her mother. A second coronation at   Saint-Denis and  entry into Paris took place in 1504. . . As the only   French queen to be  twice crowned, Anne has long been praised for her   intelligence,  generosity and piety, although historians have criticized   her supposed  prudishness and, more significantly, her privileging of   Brittany's  interests over those of France. Recent assessments emphasize   the  cultural refinement she brought to the French court and suggest   that,  in the end, Anne's main objectives, namely Breton independence,   the  birth of a male heir, the marriage of Claude to Charles of Austria   and  peace, lay beyond her limited powers as queen." [Get citation]
Persona:     " . . . The sketch furnished by Z. Contarini of Anne of Brittany was not    very flattering, as far as her personal appearance was concerned, but  he   spoke highly of her mental qualities.  'The queen,' he said, 'is  also   small, thin, and very lame, dark, with a pretty face, and very  cunning   for her age....  She has a cultivated mind, loves the arts,  poetry, and   ancient literature;  she knows Latin, and a little  Greek. . . ."  (Bingham, Vol. I, p. 32)
ANNE DE BEAUCHAMP (1444-1449)
Proprietary Title:   15th Countess of Warwick, Newburgh and Aumale, Premier Countess of  England, Baroness of Elmley and Hanslape, and Lady of Glamorgan and  Morgannoc, 1445-1449.
Parents/Pedigree:  Daughter and sole heiress of Henry de Beauchamp (), 1st Duke of Warwick, and of Lady Cecily Neville.
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| Anne de Beauchamp Countess of Warwick | 
ANNE DE BEAUCHAMP (1426-1492)
Proprietary Title:  16th Countess of Warwick, 1449-1492
Succession:  Anne inherited Warwick from her brother's only child and daughter, Anne de Beauchamp, who died at the age of 7.
Parents/Pedigree:  Daughter of Richard de Beauchamp, 13th Earl of Warwick, and of his second wife, Isabel le Despenser.
Notes: "Anne countess of Warwick occupies an illustrious position amongst the  female nobility of England. She was the daughter, and ultimately the  heiress of Richard Beauchamp, earl of Warwick, and transferred this  earldom to her husband, Richard Neville earl of Montague and Salisbury,  who became in her right the Earl of Warwick, so well known in the  history of the wars of the roses as the Kingmaker. Her only children  were two daughters; who both became the wives of princes of the blood  royal of England. Isabel the elder married George duke of Clarence. . . The younger daughter . . . was Anne, the first wife of the Lancastrian  Prince of Wales, Edward son of Henry VI, and then of Richard duke of  Gloucester. She was ultimately raised to the perilous dignity of  queen-consort of England during the short and troubled reign of Richard  III." (Letters of Royal and Illustrious Ladies of Great Britain, Vol 1: 100)
Notes:   "Then death laid its cold hand prematurely   on the Beauchamps. Henry  de Beauchamp, the 'seemlie sort of person,'   died in 1446, at the age  of twenty-two. His little daughter died in   1449, at the age of seven.  The inheritance devolved upon Henry's aunt,   Anne, the wife of Richard  Neville, the future King-maker, who, in right   of his wife, became  'Earl of Warwick, Newburgh, and Aumale, Premier   Earl of England, Baron  of Elmley and Hanslape, and Lord of Glamorgan and   Morgannoc." (Warwick: 145) 
ANNE DE CROY (d.c1609) 
Proprietary Title:  Marquise of Renty 
Parents/Pedigree:  Only child of Guillaume of Croy, Marquis of Renty (1527-1565) and Anne of Renesse (d.1586)  
Partners/Progeny:  Married (1) Emmanuel of Lalaing, Lord of Montigny (d.1590), and (2) 1591, Philippe of Croy-Sempy (d.1612), Count of Solre. 
ANNE DE CROY (1564-1635) 
Proprietary Title:  Duchess of Arschot, 1612-1635, succeeding her brother Charles II, Duke of Arschot and Croy  
Parents/Pedigree:  Daughter of Philippe III of Croy, Duke of Aarschot and Prince of Porcean and Chimay, and Jeanne-Henriette of Hallwin Partner/Progeny:  Married in 1587 Charles, Prince of Arenberg (d.1616). 
ANNE DE DREUX (1476-1514) 
Proprietary Title:  Duchess of Brittany 
ANNE DE FRANCE 
Proprietary Title:  Viscountess of Thouars
Parents/Pedigree:  Daughter of Louis VI of France
Partner/Progeny:  Married Pierre II of Bourbon (1438-1503).  
ANNE DE FRANCE (1461-1522)
Anne de Beaujeau 
Proprietary Title:  Countess of Gien
Properties:   "At the end of   the fifteenth century, it belonged to Anne of France  (1461-1522),  sister  of Charles VIII (1470-1498), who restored the  Collegiate Church,  which  had fallen into disrepair." (Gien)
ANNE DE HUSSON (1475-1540)
Proprietary Title: Countess of Tonnerre, Lady of Husson, of Ancy-le Franc, of Laignes, of Cruzy, of Chassinelle and of Ravieres, 1537-1540.
Parents/Pedigree: Charles de Husson, Count of Tonnerre, and of Antoinette de La Tremoille.
Partner/Progeny: Bernardin de Clermont (1440-1522), Viscount of Tallart, Lord of Saint Andre de Royans, of Montrevel, of Bastie, of Paladru, of Virieu and of Selles sur Cher.
Notes: " . . . Anne de Husson, who had just inherited the title of countess of  Tonnerre, the holders of the title having died young. . . ."  
ANNE DE LAVAL (1385-1466)
Proprietary Titles:    15th Lady of Laval, Lady of Vitre, Countess of Rennes, Chatillon,    Gavre, Acquigny, Aubigne, Courbeveille, Lady of Tinteniac, Bechrel and    Romill3, 1414
Parents/Pedigree:  Daughter   of of Guy XII of Laval (d.1412) and Jeanne of Laval-Tinteniac  (inherited   from her two brothers, Guy and Francois, who successively  died   accidentally).
Progeny/Posterity:  Married   in 1404 Jean of Montfort (1385-1414), Lord of Montfort and  Kergolay and   Count of Laval as Guy XIII, with 3 sons and 2 daughters.
Notes:   "...The Montmorency line died out with Gui   XII, whose daughter Anne  married a prominent Breton, Jean, lord of   Montfort, Gael, and Loheac.  He took the name Gui XIII but soon died,   leaving Anne to administer  the family lands for their young son, Gui XIV   (d.1486), during whose  long reign Charles VII ereced Lagal into a   county..."(Kibler, p. 531)
ANNE DE MONTAFIE (1577-1644)
Proprietary Titles: Comtesse de Clermont-en-Beauvaisis, Comtesse de Montafie, Dame de Luce and Bonnetable
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| Anne de Montafie Countess of Clermont @Wikipedia | 
Proprietary Titles: Comtesse de Clermont-en-Beauvaisis, Comtesse de Montafie, Dame de Luce and Bonnetable
Parents and Pedigree: She was the daughter and co-heiress of Louis de Montafie, Comte de Montafie, Sire de Piedmont, Principe di Carignano, and of Jeanne de Coesme, Dame de Luce and Bonnetable.
Patrimony and Properties
Persona and Personality
Powers Exercised
Patronages
Partner(s) and Progeny: She married, in 1601, Charles de Bourbon, Comte de Soissons.
Persona and Personality
Powers Exercised
Patronages
ANNE DE PONS 
Proprietary Title:  Viscountess of Ribérac
| Anne of Savoy Byzantine Empress | 
ANNE DE SAVOIE (1306-1359) 
Power Exercised:   Regent of the Byzantine Empire, 1341-1347 for her son John V  Palaiologos.  "...In 1351 Anna too settled in   Thessalonika and reigned  over it as her own portion of the empire until   her death in c. 1365,  even minting her own coinage...." (Garland, p. 226) 
ANNE DE VIENNOIS (1255-1298)
a.k.a. Anne de Bourgogne
Proprietary Titles: Dauphine of Viennois and Countess of Albon, 1282-1298, succeeding her brother Jean I de Viennois.
Parents/Pedigree: Daughter of Guigues VII de Viennois (c1225-1269), and of Beatrice de Savoie (1237-1310).
Partner/Progeny: Married in 1273, Humbert de la Tour du Pin (1240-1307), Dauphin de Viennois (as Humbert I), with whom she had 4 sons and 5 daughters.
Notes: "[She] was the daughter of Guigues, the seventh or eighth dauphin of Viennois, of the second race. The date of her birth is not known, that of her marriage to Humbert, baron of La Tour din Pin, is 1273. In the year 1281, on the death of her brother Jean, she succeeded to the Dauphinate of Vienne, and the county of Albon, in conjunction with her husband. This princess had several children, the eldest of whom, Jean, succeeded to the possessions, which were claimed by the duke of Burgundy, the date of her death is not recorded; she was buried in the Carthusian monastery of Salette, in the barony of La Tour, on the south bank of the Rhine, which monastery was founded by herself and her husband in the year 1299." (Adams, p. 52)
Notes: "Anne, Duchess of the Viennois, after the death of her brother, John I, defended her rights with great courage and success against the claims of Robert, duke of Burgundy. She died in 1296." (Hale, p. 75)
ANNE DE VIENNOIS (1255-1298)
a.k.a. Anne de Bourgogne
Proprietary Titles: Dauphine of Viennois and Countess of Albon, 1282-1298, succeeding her brother Jean I de Viennois.
Parents/Pedigree: Daughter of Guigues VII de Viennois (c1225-1269), and of Beatrice de Savoie (1237-1310).
Partner/Progeny: Married in 1273, Humbert de la Tour du Pin (1240-1307), Dauphin de Viennois (as Humbert I), with whom she had 4 sons and 5 daughters.
Notes: "[She] was the daughter of Guigues, the seventh or eighth dauphin of Viennois, of the second race. The date of her birth is not known, that of her marriage to Humbert, baron of La Tour din Pin, is 1273. In the year 1281, on the death of her brother Jean, she succeeded to the Dauphinate of Vienne, and the county of Albon, in conjunction with her husband. This princess had several children, the eldest of whom, Jean, succeeded to the possessions, which were claimed by the duke of Burgundy, the date of her death is not recorded; she was buried in the Carthusian monastery of Salette, in the barony of La Tour, on the south bank of the Rhine, which monastery was founded by herself and her husband in the year 1299." (Adams, p. 52)
Notes: "Anne, Duchess of the Viennois, after the death of her brother, John I, defended her rights with great courage and success against the claims of Robert, duke of Burgundy. She died in 1296." (Hale, p. 75)
Anne von Egmont (1533-1558) 
Proprietary Title:  Countess of Buren
Notes:   "Anne was the Countess of Buren and one of   the greatest heiresses in  the Netherlands. She married William of   Orange (1533-1584) when they  were both 18 years old. William, at the   height of his power, was the  first stadholder of Holland, Count of   Nassau, Prince of Orange. He  owned his principality in Orange, a quarter   of Brabant, portions of  Luxemburg, Flanders, and the Franche Comté,   baronies in Italy and 300  smaller estates. He died a virtual pauper   having spent his entire  fortune in the fight to free his country from   Spanish control. When  the Duke of Alba was appointed to the Low   Countries, William left the  Netherlands for Germany with his family, but   left behind his eldest  son who was attending University of Leuven (in   the Netherlands). As a  result, he was not killed with other Dutch   leaders such as the Counts  of Egmont and Hornes, but was free to   continue his struggle against  Spain. Anne died in 1558 when she was only   25 years old." 
Anne Clifford (1590-1676)
Proprietary Titles:  14th Baroness Clifford, 1605
Parents/Pedigree:  Daughter and only child of George Clifford, 3rd Earl of Cumberland, and Margaret Russell (1560-1616)
Progeny/Posterity:  Married (1) in 1609 Richard Sackville, 3rd Earl of Dorset, with whom she had 2 daughters;  married (2) Philip Herbert, 4th Earl of Pembroke and 1st Earl Montgomery
Properties:  Skipton Castle.
Notes:   "She came from a prominent family that possessed hundreds of acres of    land in the north of England, anchored by immense castles, that had   been  passed down for more than three centuries by the time she was   born.  These properties included Skipton Castle in North Yorkshire,   which had  been built around 1100 by Robert de Romillé, a figure of   historical  importance as part of the French Norman contingent that   invaded England  in 1066 under the leadership of William the Conqueror   (c. 1027–1087).  The Cliffords were given that castle and ownership of   its adjacent lands  in 1310 by decree of King Edward II (1284–1327). By   that point they  already held Brough Castle in Cumbria, which in its   original  construction dated back to the 1090s and is thought to be one   of the  first stone castles in England. There was also another castle  in   Cumbria, this one called Brougham, which had been built on the site  of   an old Roman fortification."  (notablebiographies.com)
Persona:   "...[S]he was the last Clifford to own   Skipton Castle. She fought  equally tenaciously for her rights and for   the King's cause in the  Civil War, when Skipton Castle withstood a three   years siege.  Lady  Anne was also remarkable for the extensive post   Civil War restoration  work on her Castles. In 1659 she planted the yew   tree in the central  courtyard to mark the Castle's repair from its Civil   War damage."  (Skipton Castle) 
ANNE HAMILTON (1630-1716)
the Good Duchess Anne
Proprietary Titles:    3rd Duchess of Hamilton, 3rd Countess of Arran and Cambridge, 2nd    Countess of Lanark, 2nd Lady Machansyre and Polmont, 3rd Lady Aven and    Innerdale, 3rd Duchess of Hamilton, 3rd Marchioness of Clydesdale,  1651. 
ANNE OF GLOUCESTER (1383-1438)
Notes:   "The  third Earl, Thomas, was in fact  old enough at the time of his  father's  death to take an active interest  in the administration of his   inheritance.  He came of age in 1389 and  married Anne, the daughter  of  Thomas of Woodstock, Duke of Gloucester,  shortly afterwards.  They  had  no children, so that on his early death in  1392 the earldom passed  to  Thomas's second brother, William.   Gloucester took charge of the  boy,  who died only three years later aged  seventeen; he was, however,   allowed to keep the wardship and marriage of  Thomas's third brother,   Edmund, the fifth Earl of Stafford; and he  immediately strengthened   their relationship by marrying him to his  widowed sister-in-law   Anne...  In addition to his own estates, the EArl  acquired further   property through his wife, but he did not live long  enough to enjoy his   increased income, being killed at the Battle of  Shrewsbury in 1403.    Now twice widowed, with the customary third of her  two husbands'   estates, the Countess Anne controlled over half the  Stafford   inheritance and was also a great landowner in her own right...   From   her father she had acquired a claim to the earldom of Buckingham  and a   title to property worth about (pounds) 1,000 a year; soon after  the   death of her mother, Eleanor de Bohun, in 1399, she was recognised  as   sole heiress to half the de Bohun estates...."  (Rawcliffe, p. 12) 
"...This lady...was Anne Lascaris, countess of Tende.  At the period of her marriage with the count de Villars, Anne Lascaris was one of the most wealthy heiresses in France.  The favour and patronage of madame raised the count de Villars to the highest offices in the state; and on his first arrival in France, as a foundation for the support of the dignities which she destined for her brother, Louisa commence by marrying him to the king's youthful ward.  Marguerite appears to have been attached to the countess de Villars; and on hearing of her decease, she wrote in great distress of mind to Briconnet.  From the commendations lavished upon her by the duchess in her letter, and by the bishop of Meaux in his reply, the countess must have been a lady of great piety and worth.  Little is known of her, nevertheless, beyong the fact of her marriage with the bastard of Savoy, and the names of her children.  Her three daughters married into the most illustrious families of France; the youngest, Madeleine, becoming the consort of Anne de Montmorency, after the return of the king Francis from his captivity in Spain...."  (Freer, 1854, p. 227) 
"...Guillaume de Montmorency married in 1484, Anne Pot, heiress of More, la Prune-au-Pot, and Savoisy.  This lady brought him two sons, Anne de Montmorency, and Francois Seigneur de Rochepot.  The Baron de Montmorency was gentleman of the chamber to the duchess of Angouleme, and high-bailiff of Orleans.  He died in 1531."  (Freer, 1854, p. 81) 
ANNE MARIE LOUISE D'ORLEANS (1627-1693)
La Grande Mademoiselle
Proprietary Titles:    Dauphine of Auvergne, Sovereign Princess of Dombes, Princess of Luc,    Princess of La Roche-sur-Yon, Princess of Joinville, Duchess of    Beaupréau, Duchesse of Montpensier, Duchess of Saint-Fargeau, Duchess of    Châtellerault, Marquise of Mézières, Countess of Eu, Countess of    Mortain, Countess of Bar-sur-Seine, Viscountess of Auge, Viscountess of    Brosse, Baroness of Beaujolais, Lady of Champigny-sur-Veude, Lay of    Beaujeu, Lady of Argenton, Lady of Saint-Sever, Lady of Cluys, Lady of    Agurande, Lady of Châtelet, Lady of Ecolle, Lady of Combrailles and  Lady   of Choisy-sur-Seine
Patrimony/Properties:    "Mademoiselle's most important inherited properties were found in the    ancient Bourbon domains, with vast estates in the Bourbonnais,   Auvergne,  the Beaujolais, and Dombes, and secondary concentrations   along the  'historic' Loire (Champigny, Mezieres-en-Brenne,   Chatellerault) and in  Lower Normandy (Mortain, Domfront, Auge).   Additional holdings were found  in La Puisaye/Burgundy (Saint-Fergau),   the Vendee (La Roche-sur-Yon),  and Champagne...." (Pitts: 2000, p. 264)
ANTOINETTE DE CHABANNES
Proprietary Title:  Lady of Saint-Fargeau
"Dammartin, Antoinette de Chabannes, Comtesse de – (1498 – 1527), French heiress
Antoinette de Chabannes was the daughter of Jean IV de Chabannes, Comte de Dammartin, and his wife Suzanne de Bourbon-Rousillon. She became the wife (1515) of Rene d’Anjou, Baron de Mezieres (1483 – 1521), seneschal of Maine in Normandy. With the death of her elder sister Anne, the wife of Jacques de Coligny, Antoinette inherited the county of Dammartin in the Ile-de-France, which later passed to her eldest daughter Francoise d’Anjou-Mezieres, the wife of Philippe, seigneur de Boilainvilliers and de Verneuil, and their children, who eventually sold the county to the Montmorency family. Antoinette also held the fiefs of Saint-Fargeau and de Piusaye, and left four children, including Nicolas d’Anjou, Marquis de Mezieres and Comte de Saint-Fargeau (1518 – after 1568), who was appointed governor of Aquitaine by Charles IX (1560 – 1574). Her youngest daughter Antoinette d’Anjou-Mezieres (1521 – 1542) became the first wife of Jean I de Bourbon, third Vicomte de Lavedan (c1478 – 1549), by whom she left issue."
Antoinette de Chabannes was the daughter of Jean IV de Chabannes, Comte de Dammartin, and his wife Suzanne de Bourbon-Rousillon. She became the wife (1515) of Rene d’Anjou, Baron de Mezieres (1483 – 1521), seneschal of Maine in Normandy. With the death of her elder sister Anne, the wife of Jacques de Coligny, Antoinette inherited the county of Dammartin in the Ile-de-France, which later passed to her eldest daughter Francoise d’Anjou-Mezieres, the wife of Philippe, seigneur de Boilainvilliers and de Verneuil, and their children, who eventually sold the county to the Montmorency family. Antoinette also held the fiefs of Saint-Fargeau and de Piusaye, and left four children, including Nicolas d’Anjou, Marquis de Mezieres and Comte de Saint-Fargeau (1518 – after 1568), who was appointed governor of Aquitaine by Charles IX (1560 – 1574). Her youngest daughter Antoinette d’Anjou-Mezieres (1521 – 1542) became the first wife of Jean I de Bourbon, third Vicomte de Lavedan (c1478 – 1549), by whom she left issue."
AREMBURGE DE SULLY (d.c1265)
Proprietary Title:  Lady of Erry
ARNAUA DE CABOET
Notes:  "...In  the course of  Arnau's long  episcopate (1167-95) the situation  progressively  worsened, particularly  when in 1185, the new viscount of  Castellbo,  Ramon's son Arnau, married  with Arnaua de Caboet, heiress of  the rich  valleys of Cabo, Sant Joan  and Andorra.  With the blessing of  Bishop  Arnau, Arnaua had previously  been married to Bertran de Tarasco  and  had produced a son, also Bertran,  before her husband died.  The  new  marriage, supported by Ermengol VIII,  passed over the rights of  young  Bertran and gave Arnau not only rights  in Caboet but ultimately  the  lordship of Andorra...."  (Smith, p. 94) 
Ava of Barcelona (d.926) 
Power Exercised:  Countess-Regent of Cerdanya and Besalu
Progeny/Posterity:   "...wife   of Miró II of Cerdanya, mother of Sunifred II of  Cerdanya-Besalú,   Guifré II of Besalú, Oliba I of Cerdanya-Besalú and  Miró III of Besalú,   bishop of Girona, and grandmother of Oliba, abbot  of Ripoll and bishop   of Vic. On her husband's death (927) she governed  the counties as   guardian of her sons, still minors. By 941 mother and  sons were already   ruling together, and the following year Sunifred  ruled alone. Her acts   took the form of many donations made to several  religious centres:  Cuixà  (941, 953, 962), Ripoll, Elna (962) and  Camprodon (944)." (Enciclopedia Catalana)
AVELINE DE FORTIBUS (1259-1274)
Aveline de Forz
Proprietary Title:  Countess of Holderness & Countess of Aumale, 1269-1274.
Notes:   "1269 - Prince Edmund of England, known as 'Crouchback,' earl of    Leicester and Lancaster, second son of King Henry III and Queen Eleanor    of Provence, is married to Lady Aveline de Fortibus in the newly    re-built Westminster Abbey. Lady Aveline is the daughter of the earl of    Aumale and the grand-daughter of the earl of Devon. Shortly before her    marriage, she inherits the title of countess of Aumale in her own    right." (Theodore's Royalty & Monarchy Site)
Notes:  "...In 1278 the king (Edward I) acquired the estates of Aveline de Forz, a major heiress who died childless...." (Prestwich, p. 139)
REFERENCES 
Freeman, Edward (1869).  The History of the Norman Conquest of England, Its Causes and Its Results (Vol. III).


 
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