Joan II of Navarre

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Joan II of Navarre bigraphy, stories - Queen regent of Navarre

Joan II of Navarre : biography

28 January 1312 – 6 October 1349

Joan II (28 January 1312 – 6 October 1349) was Queen of Navarre from 1328 until her death. She was the only daughter of Margaret of Burgundy, first wife of King Louis X of France (Louis I of Navarre). Because Margaret was believed to have been involved in an extramarital affair, Joan’s paternity is in doubt.Jim Bradbury, The Capetians: Kings of France, 987–1328, (Continuum Books, 2007), 280.

Issue

  • Maria of Navarre (c. 1329–1347), first wife of King Peter IV of Aragon (1319–1387).
  • Blanche of Navarre (1331–1398), second wife of King Philip VI of France (1293–1350).
  • Charles II of Navarre (1332–1387),Jonathan Sumption, The Hundred Years War, Volume 2: Trial by Fire, (University of Pennsylvania Press, 1999), 103. King of Navarre, known as Charles the Bad.
  • Agnes of Navarre (1334–1396), married Gaston III, Count of Foix (1331–1391).
  • Philip, Count of Longueville (1336–1363), married Yolande de Dampierre (1331–1395).
  • Joan of Navarre (1339–1403), married John I, Viscount of Rohan (d. 1395).
  • Louis, Count of Beaumont-le-Roger (1341–1372), married 1358 Maria de Lizarazu, married 1366 Joanna of Durazzo (1344–1387)

Ancestry

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Category:1312 births Category:1349 deaths Category:14th-century deaths from plague (disease) Category:French princesses Category:Navarrese infantas Category:14th-century female rulers Category:14th-century women Category:Queens regnant of Navarre Category:House of Capet Category:Women of medieval France Category:Counts of Angoulême Category:Countesses of Évreux

Inheritance

On the deaths of Louis X (1316) and his son, John I (also 1316), both of whom had been kings of France and Navarre, she was excluded from the succession in favor of Louis’ brother Philip V of France (Philip II of Navarre), the second surviving son of Philip IV of France. Philip V prevailed for a number of reasons, including her youth, doubts regarding her paternity, and the Estates-General’s determination that women should not be allowed to rule France. The last reason, however, was not applicable to Navarre because there was already precedent there for succession by a female. The only reason that she was not officially declared a bastard was that Philip needed the political support of her mother’s brother Odo IV, Duke of Burgundy, who did not want to perpetuate the scandal of his sister’s behavior. After Philip V’s brother and successor Charles IV of France (Charles I of Navarre) died in 1328, there was no male heir to either crown in the direct line from Philip IV. Instead, a more distant Philip, a descendant of Philip IV’s younger brother Charles of Valois, successfully claimed the throne as Philip VI of France in preference to Joan and a number of other females closer to the line of succession. Philip was not descended from Joan I of Navarre, and hence had no claim to the crown of Navarre.

Queen of Navarre

Joan became Queen of Navarre through a treaty with Philip VI, who was not a descendant of the later kings of Navarre, and who could not invoke a rule against female succession in Navarre. In the treaty, she had to renounce her claims not only to the crown of France but also to her grandmother’s estates in Brie and Champagne (which were merged in the French royal domain). In compensation, she received the counties of Angoulême and Mortain as well as a portion of Cotentin (Longueville). Later on she exchanged Angoulême for three estates in Vexin:- Pontoise, Beaumont-sur-Oise, and Asnière-sur-Oise.

She reigned as Queen of Navarre until her death in 1349, together with her husband, Philip III of Navarre as de jure uxoris king, 1329–1343. Philip was also Count of Évreux, the heir of Count Louis of Évreux (youngest son of Philip III of France), and thus of Capetian male blood. Because of his patrimonial lands, together with Joan’s gains in Normandy and her rights in Champagne, the couple had extensive possessions in Northern France.

Altogether, Joan and Philip had eight children. She was succeeded by their son Charles II of Navarre. Their daughter Blanche d’Évreux became the second wife of Philip VI of France.

Although Joan never ascended the French throne, her descendants and heirs, the kings of Navarre, were to eventually reach the throne of France when Henry IV of France inherited the crown two centuries later, in 1589. From then onwards, all kings of France were Joan’s heirs general. The kings of France had already been descended from her since the ascension of Henry II; these were not, however, senior descendants of Joan.