The dynasty of the counts of Anjou in France which began with Fulk I (the “Red”), under the Carolingian emperors of the 9th century. Their badge, a sprig of the broom plant Genista, gave rise later to the name of Plantagenet. Geoffrey of Anjou married Matilda, the daughter of Henry I of England, in 1128, and their son, as Henry II of England, was the first of an English royal dynasty. The power of the Angevins under Henry was formidable, overshadowing the Capetian kings of France. Anjou remained in English hands until 1203 when Philip Augustus wrested it from John. Louis gave the Angevin title to his brother Charles who, as King of Naples and the Two Sicilies, established the second Angevin dynasty. In 1328 Philip IV inherited it together with Maine from his mother and thus it passed directly to the French crown.