Isabella of Valois, Duchess of Bourbon

Isabella of Valois (1313 – 26 July 1383), Duchess of Bourbon, was a relative of the French royal family. She a daughter of Charles of Valois by his third wife Mahaut of Châtillon.[1] She was the wife of Peter I, Duke of Bourbon.[2]

Isabella of Valois
Duchess consort of Bourbon
Tenure1336-1356
Born1313
Died26 July 1383 (aged 70)
SpousePeter I, Duke of Bourbon
IssueLouis II, Duke of Bourbon
Joanna, Queen of France
Blanche, Queen of Castile
Bonne, Duchess of Savoy
Margaret of Bourbon
HouseValois
FatherCharles of Valois
MotherMahaut of Châtillon

Marriage and issue

On 25 January 1336 Isabella married Peter I, Duke of Bourbon,[1] son of Louis I, Duke of Bourbon and Mary of Avesnes. Peter and Isabella had only one son, Louis and seven daughters. Her husband died at the Battle of Poitiers in 1356,[3] and Isabella never remarried. After her husband's death Isabella's son Louis became the Duke of Bourbon. In the same year 1356, Isabella arranged for her daughter Joanna to marry Charles V of France; as he was at the time the Dauphin of France, Joanna duly became Dauphine.

  1. Louis II, Duke of Bourbon, 1337-1410,[4] became Duke of Bourbon in 1356 married Anne of Auvergne had issue.
  2. Joanna of Bourbon, 1338-1378, married King Charles V of France, had issue.[1]
  3. Blanche of Bourbon, 1339-1361, married King Peter of Castile,[5] she was murdered by him in 1361 and had no issue.
  4. Bonne of Bourbon, 1341-1402, married Amadeus VI of Savoy, by whom she had issue.[1]
  5. Catherine of Bourbon, 1342-1427, married John VI of Harcourt[1]
  6. Margaret of Bourbon, 1344-1416, married Arnaud Amanieu, Lord of Albret, by whom she had issue.
  7. Isabelle of Bourbon, 1345-1345, died young
  8. Marie of Bourbon, 1347-1401, prioress of Poissy[1]
Isabella in her later years

She had as her butler Jean Saulnier, knight, lord of Thoury-on-Abron, councilor and chamberlain of the king, bailli of Saint-Pierre-le-Moûtier.[6].

When she became a widow, she took the veil. She died on 26 July 1383 at the age of seventy. She was buried in Eglise des Frères Mineurs in Paris.

Ancestors

gollark: Legal reminder to potatOS users: For users who are citizens of the European Union, we will now be requesting permission before initiating organ harvesting.
gollark: It's in the weird position of "sort of public but hard to access".
gollark: POST https://osmarks.tk/wsthing/report, it accepts JSON; you can send a `report` string, an array of strings `flags`, a string code sample `code`, and an object of arbitrary metadata stuff `host`.
gollark: How do you plan to break the trilaterating sniffer thing anyway?
gollark: Er, sure, I'll pull up the incident report system docs.

References

  1. Joni M. Hand, Women, Manuscripts and Identity in Northern Europe, 1350-1550, (Ashgate Publishing, 2013), 217.
  2. Jean de Venette, The Chronicle of Jean de Venette, translator Jean Birdsall, editor Richard A. Newhall, (Columbia University Press, 1953), 312.
  3. David Nicolle, Poitiers 1356: The Capture of a King, (Osprey, 2004), 24.
  4. Jean de Venette, The Chronicle of Jean de Venette, translator Jean Birdsall, editor Richard A. Newhall, (Columbia University Press, 1953), 312.
  5. Jean de Venette, The Chronicle of Jean de Venette, translator Jean Birdsall, editor Richard A. Newhall, (Columbia University Press, 1953), 312.
  6. Abbé Jacques-François Baudiau, Le Morvand, Nevers, 1865, 3e éd. Guénégaud, Paris, 1965, 3 vol., t.II, p. 152.


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