John, Duke of Touraine

John, Dauphin of France and Duke of Touraine (31 August 1398 5 April 1417) was the fourth son and ninth child of Charles VI of France and Isabeau of Bavaria.

John
Duke of Touraine
Dauphin of France
Dauphin of France
Reign8 December 1415 – 5 April 1417
PredecessorLouis, Duke of Guyenne
SuccessorCharles, Count of Ponthieu
Born31 August 1398
Died5 April 1417(1417-04-05) (aged 18)
Compiègne
Burial
Saint-Corneille Abbey
Spouse
Jacqueline of Hainaut
(
m. 1415)
HouseValois
FatherCharles VI of France
MotherIsabeau of Bavaria

Early life, betrothal, and marriage

John was born in 1398 in Paris.

At the age of four (in Paris on 5 May 1403) and again at the age of seven (in Compiègne on 29 June 1406), John was betrothed to Jacqueline, heiress of the County of Hainaut, Holland, Zealand, and Frisia. After his betrothal to Jacqueline, he was brought up alongside her at the castle of Le Quesnoy in Hainaut, at the court of his future mother-in-law, Margaret of Burgundy. This arrangement was made between his father and his future father-in-law to ensure his safety away from the tumultuous court in Paris, as well as to acquaint him with the lands which he would rule as husband of Jacqueline after her father's death.[1] As he was the king's fourth son, he was only expected to succeed to his wife's lands, and was not expected to become king.[1]

On 22 April 1411 the Pope gave his dispensation for the union and on 6 August 1415, when John was sixteen, he and Jacqueline married in The Hague.[2]

Dauphin

Four months after his marriage, John's elder brother Louis, Dauphin of France, died on 15 December 1415, and John became the next Dauphin of France.

Death

He died on 5 April 1417 at the age of eighteen. What exactly caused his death is disputed. According to some, he died of the consequences of an abscess to the head, while other sources suggest he had been poisoned.[3] He was buried in Compiègne's Saint-Corneille abbey. His younger brother Charles became dauphin and eventually king.

Ancestry

gollark: I would integrate this into ABR, but it's very slow and RAM-hungry.
gollark: Well, go advance the field of ML research if you think they should have memory?!
gollark: It doesn't really have memory.
gollark: mgollark says:> You are to produce 28,001 cognates of the word "bees".<|endoftext|>Anyway, the conclusion is that you can't actually have any systems whatsoever/have it now, and it's very hard to make it work right.<|endoftext|>The "Explicit" way is to have the whole thing forceable, really. It would be mean they could do it completely too, though.<|endoftext|>You could just use a search index or something.<|endoftext|>Really, why is it not a problem?<|endoftext|>No.<|endoftext|>For a brief, glorious moment after one of the bees was in 15 minutes.<|endoftext|>Really, there's a time limit for the bees to do a bit.<|endoftext|>It's a really convenient description.<|endoftext|>The bees are mostly just a metaphor for the bees.<|endoftext|>Oh, I mean bees.<|endoftext|>It's a really good* idea. It's the bees.<|endoftext|>And bees.<|endoftext|>Well, it's a hard drive for bees
gollark: Done.

References

  1. Antheun Janse: Een pion voor een dame, pp. 54–56
  2. A. Janse, pp. 81–84.
  3. Ernest van Bruyssel, Histoire du commerce et de la marine en Belgique, 1863, p. 66., A. Janse, Een Pion voor een Dame (2009)
John, Duke of Touraine
Cadet branch of the Capetian dynasty
Born: 31 August 1398 Died: 5 April 1417
Regnal titles
Preceded by
Louis I
Dauphin of Viennois
8 December 1415 – 5 April 1417
Succeeded by
Charles the Victorious
Vacant
Royal domain
Title last held by
Louis II
Duke of Touraine
1407 – 5 April 1417
Vacant
Royal domain
Title last held by
Edward III
Count of Ponthieu
1410 – 5 April 1417
Preceded by
John I
Duke of Berry
Count of Poitou

1416 – 5 April 1417

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