Guillaume II of Narbonne
Guillaume II (killed in Verneuil, on August 14th, 1424), Viscount of Narbonne (1397-1424), is a French captain of the party Armagnac and an adviser of the dolphin, the future Charles VII, during the war of the Armagnacs and Burgundian the.
Political activity and military
At the time of the Civil war between Armagnacs and Burgundian, it adheres to the party Armagnacs as of the constitution of the Ligue of Gien, on April 15th, 1410.
September 10th, 1419, it takes part, in the continuation of the future Charles VII, with the interview of Montereau which ends in the Assassinat of Jean without Peur.
It is killed with the Bataille of Verneuil, on August 14th, 1424.
Family
Wire of Guillaume Ier, Viscount of Narbonne, it succeeds to him the head of the Viscount of Narbonne in 1397. His/her mother, Guérine, girl of Marquis de Beaufort, lord of Canillac and Catherine of Auvergne, remarie quickly with Guillaume de Tinières.
November 30th, 1415, he marries Marguerite of Armagnac, the niece of the constable Bernard VII of Armagnac, chief of the faction of the Armagnacs. It is the girl of Jean III, count d' Armagnac († 1391) and of Marguerite (1363-1443), countess of Comminges.
Last Viscount of Narbonne of the house of Lara, it dies without posterity and bequeaths his Viscount to his uterine half-brother Pierre de Linières, who takes the name of Guillaume III.