Joanna of Bourbon

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Template:Pp-move-indef Template:Short description Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox royalty Joanna of Bourbon (Jeanne de Bourbon; 3 February 1338 – 6 February 1378) was Queen of France by marriage to King Charles V. She acted as his political adviser and was appointed potential regent in case of a minor regency.

Life

Early life

Born in the Château de Vincennes, Joanna was a daughter of Peter I, Duke of Bourbon, and Isabella of Valois,Template:Sfn a half-sister of Philip VI of France.

From October 1340 through at least 1343, negotiations and treaties were made for Joanna to marry Amadeus VI, Count of Savoy.Template:Sfn The goal was to bring Savoy more closely under French influence.Template:Sfn Following this, her betrothal to Humbert, Dauphin of Viennois, also fell through.Template:Sfn

Queen

Arms of Joanna as queen consort of France

On 8 April 1350, Joanna married her cousin, the future Charles V of France, at Tain-l'Hermitage.Template:Sfn Since they were first cousins once removed, their marriage required a papal dispensation.Template:Sfn Born thirteen days apart, they both were 12 years old. When Charles ascended the throne in 1364, Joanna became queen of France. Charles sometimes confided in Joanna on political and cultural issues and relied on her advice.

Joanna was described as mentally fragile, and after the birth of her son Louis in 1373, she suffered a complete mental breakdown.Template:Sfn This deeply worried Charles V, who made a pilgrimage and offered many prayers for her recovery.Template:Sfn When she did recover and regained her normal state of mind in 1373, Charles V appointed her legal guardian of the heir to the throne should he die when his son and heir was still a minor.Template:Sfn

Death and burial

Joanna died at the royal residence Hôtel Saint-Pol in Paris, on 6 February 1378 three days after her 40th birthday, and two days after the birth of her youngest child, Catherine.Template:Sfn Froissart<ref>J. A. Buchon, Collection des Chroniques nationales françaises écrites en langue vulgaire du treizième au seizième siècle, Chroniques de Froissart, Tome VII, Verdière, Libraire, Paris, 1824, p. 61</ref> recorded that Joanna took a bath against her physicians' advice. Soon after, she went into labour and died two days after giving birth. The king was devastated. Her heart was buried in the Cordeliers Convent and her entrails in the Couvent des Célestins. The Couvent des Célestins in Paris was the most important royal necropolis after the Basilica of St Denis. The rest of her remains were then placed at Saint-Denis.

Issue

Joanna and Charles had eightTemplate:Sfn or nineTemplate:Sfn children. Two of them reached adulthood:

  1. Joanna (end September 1357Template:Efn – 21 October 1360, Saint Antoine-des-Champs Abbey, ParisTemplate:Efn), interred at Saint-Antoine-des-Champs Abbey.
  2. Bonne (1358 – 7 November 1360, Palais Royal, ParisTemplate:Efn), interred beside her older sister.Template:Efn
  3. Joanna (Château de Vincennes, 6 June 1366Template:Efn – 21 December 1366, Hôtel de Saint-Pol, ParisTemplate:Efn), interred at Saint Denis Basilica.
  4. Charles VI (3 December 1368 – 22 October 1422), King of France.Template:Sfn
  5. Marie (Paris, 27 February 1370 – June 1377, Paris).
  6. Louis (13 March 1372 – 23 November 1407), Duke of Orléans.Template:Sfn
  7. Isabella (Paris, 24 July 1373 – 23 February 1378, Paris).
  8. John (1374/76 – died young).Template:Efn
  9. Catherine (Paris, 4 February 1378 – November 1388, buried at Abbaye De Maubuisson, France), m. John of Berry, Count of Montpensier (son of John, Duke of Berry).Template:Sfn

Ancestry

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Notes

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References

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Sources

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