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Alphonse, Count of Toulouse and of Poitiers (November 11, 1220 - August 21, 1271) was the son of Louis VIII, King of France, and the brother of St Louis (Louis IX).
He joined the county of Toulouse to his appanage of Poitou and Auvergne, on the death, in September 1249, of Raymond VII, whose daughter Jeanne he had married in 1237. He took the cross with his brother, St Louis, in 1248 (the Seventh Crusade) and in 1270 (the Eighth Crusade). In 1252, on the death of his mother, Blanche of Castile, he was joint regent with Charles of Anjou until the return of Louis IX, and took a great part in the negotiations which led to the treaties of Abbeville and of Paris (1258-1259).
His main work was on his own estates. There he repaired the evils of the Albigensian war and made a first attempt at administrative centralization, thus preparing the way for union with the crown. The charter known as "Alphonsine," granted to the town of Riom, became the code of public law for Auvergne. Honest and moderate, protecting the middle classes against exactions of the nobles, he exercised a happy influence upon the south, in spite of his naturally despotic character and his continual and pressing need of money.
He died without heirs on his return from the Eighth Crusade, in Italy, probably at Savona, on August 21, 1271.
| Preceded by: Raymond VII | Count of Toulouse with public domain 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica. |