- Fulk (Latin: Fulco, French:
Foulque or
Foulques; c. 1089/1092 – 13
November 1143), also
known as Fulk the Younger, was King of
Jerusalem with his wife...
- 1268), born Gui
Foucois (Latin:
Guido Falcodius; French: Guy de
Foulques or Guy
Foulques) and also
known as Guy le Gros (French for "Guy the Fat"; Italian:...
- Fulk I of
Anjou (c. 870 – 942),
known by the
nickname Foulques le Roux ("Fulk the Red", i.e. "Red Falcon"), was a
Frankish nobleman who held
several titles...
-
Folquet de M****lha (alternatively
Folquet de M****ille,
Foulques de Toulouse, Fulk of Toulouse; c. 1150 – 25
December 1231) came from a
Genoese merchant...
-
Germanic folk ("people" or "chieftain"). It is
cognate with the
French Foulques, the
German Volk, the
Italian Fulco and the
Swedish Folke,
along with other...
-
Foulques de
Chanac (died 25 July 1349) was
Bishop of
Paris from 28
November 1342
until his death. The
previous bishop was
Guillaume de Chanac,
uncle of...
-
Foulques de
Villaret (Occitan:
Folco del Vilaret, Catalan: Folc del Vilaret; died 1
September 1327), was the 25th
Grand Master of the
Knights Hospitaller...
- Fulk III, the
Black (c. 970–1040; Old French:
Foulque Nerra) was an
early Count of
Anjou celebrated as one of the
first great builders of
medieval castles...
-
appears as
Fulco or
Fulcho and
Bertrannus in
contemporary do****ents. It is
Foulques in
modern French. His
ordinal is a
reference to a
second Bertrand, his...
- Fulk of
Neuilly (also
appearing in the
forms "Fulke," "
Foulque," "
Foulques," "Fulco," "Folco," etc., and as "de Neuilly") (died 1201) was a
French preacher...