John II, Duke of Brittany
Template:Short description Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox royalty John II (Template:Langx; Template:Langx; 1239Template:Snd18 November 1305) reigned as Duke of Brittany from 1286 until his death, and was also Earl of Richmond in the Peerage of England. He took part in two crusades prior to his accession to the ducal throne. As a duke, John was involved in the conflicts between the kings of France and England. He was crushed to death in an accident during the celebrations of a papal coronation.
Life
John was the eldest son of Duke John I of Brittany and Blanche of Navarre.Template:Sfn On 22 January 1260, he married Beatrice, a daughter of King Henry III of England.Template:Sfn John was very close to his brother-in-law, Edward I. In 1271, he accompanied Edward to the Ninth Crusade, meeting there with his father and King Louis IX of France. Louis succumbed to an illness in Tunis, and John's father returned to Brittany. John, however, followed Edward to Palestine. The crusade ended the following year, having achieved little. In 1285, John took part in the Aragonese Crusade at the side of King Philip III of France.Template:Sfn
Upon the death of his father on 8 October 1286, John succeeded him as duke of Brittany, inheriting also the Earldom of Richmond in the Peerage of England. His namesake son was governing Aquitaine in the name of his uncle [[Edward I of England|EdwardTemplate:NbspI]], when [[Philip IV of France|King PhilipTemplate:NbspIV]] declared Edward's rule forfeit in May 1294 after Edward's refusal to stand before the Parlement of Paris over fishing disputes the previous year that had escalated into naval warfare between the two countries. John assisted his brother-in-law in the ensuing Gascon War but suffered only defeats. When the English army sought to recover by plundering the Breton Abbaye Saint-Mathieu de Fine-Terre in 1296, however, John abandoned Edward's cause. In response, Edward deprived him of the earldom. John proceeded to ally himself with the French, arranging a marriage between his grandson John and King Philip's cousin Isabella of Valois. Philip then raised him into the Peerage of France in September 1297.Template:Sfn During the negotiations over the final Treaty of Paris ending the war, John was among Philip's chief negotiators with the English.Template:Sfnp
From 1294 until 1304, John assisted the King of France in his campaign against Count Guy of Flanders, taking part in the decisive Battle of Mons-en-Pévèle.Template:Sfn Following King Philip's victory, in 1305, John travelled to Lyon to attend the coronation of Pope Clement V. John was leading the Pope's horse through the crowd during the celebrations. So many spectators had piled atop the walls that one of them crumbled and collapsed on top of the Duke.Template:Sfn He died four days later, on 18 November.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn His body was placed in a lead coffin and sent down the Loire. He was buried on 16 December in the Carmelite convent he had founded in Ploërmel.Template:Sfn
Issue
John and Beatrice had six children, several of whom were raised at the English court of their uncle EdwardTemplate:NbspI.
- Arthur II, Duke of Brittany (1262–1312)Template:Sfn
- John, Earl of Richmond (c. 1266–1334)Template:Sfn
- Marie, wife of Guy III of Châtillon (1268–1339)Template:Sfn
- Peter, Viscount of Leon (1269–1312)Template:Sfn
- Blanche, wife of Philip of Artois (1271–1327)Template:Sfn
- Eleanor of Brittany, Abbess of Fontevrault (1275–1342)Template:Sfn
See also
References
Citations
Sources
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Template:S-hou Template:S-reg Template:S-bef Template:S-ttl Template:S-aft Template:S-reg Template:S-bef Template:S-ttl Template:S-vac Template:S-end Template:Breton monarchs
- 1239 births
- 1305 deaths
- 13th-century dukes of Brittany
- 14th-century dukes of Brittany
- 13th-century peers of France
- 14th-century peers of France
- 13th-century English nobility
- 14th-century English nobility
- Dukes of Brittany
- Earls of Richmond (1268 creation)
- House of Dreux
- Accidental deaths in France
- Christians of Lord Edward's crusade