Eleanor of Navarre

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Iamthecheese44 (talk | contribs) at 02:01, 22 October 2016. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Eleanor
File:Eleanor of Navarre.jpg
Queen of Navarre
Reign28 January 1479 – 12 February 1479
Coronation28 January 1479
PredecessorJohn II
SuccessorFrancis
Born(1426-02-02)2 February 1426
Olite, Navarre
Died12 February 1479(1479-02-12) (aged 53)
Tudela, Navarre
SpouseGaston IV, Count of Foix
IssueGaston, Prince of Viana
Peter, Bishop of Arles
John, Viscount of Narbonne
Marie, Marchioness of Montferrat
Margaret, Duchess of Brittany
Joan, Countess of Armagnac
James, Count of Cortes
Catherine, Countess of Candale
HouseHouse of Trastamara
FatherJohn II of Aragon
MotherBlanche I of Navarre

Eleanor of Aragon (Basque: Leonor and Spanish: Leonor) (2 February 1426 – 12 February 1479),[1] Regent (1455–1479) and the queen regnant of Navarre in 1479. She was crowned on 28 January 1479 in Tudela.[2]

Life

Coat of arms of Queen Eleanor

She was born in Olite, Navarre (now Spain), the third and youngest child of King John II of Aragon and Queen Blanche I of Navarre and the younger sister of Blanche II of Navarre.[3] She was born 2 February 1426, and was acclaimed by the Cortes in Pamplona, 9 August 1427, as the legitimate heir of Charles IV, and Blanche II in succession to their mother. After their mother's death, however, their father occupied Navarre.

She married Gaston IV, Count of Foix, in 1441.[4] In 1442, Eleanor moved with her spouse to Bearn. In 1455, her father deposed her brother and her sister as heirs of Navarre and proclaimed Eleanor as the heir and the regent and general governor of Navarre, and she moved to Sangüesa. She continued as regent after the death of her brother in 1461. In 1462, she signed the treaty of Olite, where she recognized her father as the monarch of Navarre and accepted to have her sister Blanche imprisoned under her care.

In 1464, Blanche died in her care, suspected to have been poisoned. By the treaty, she was recognized by her father as the heir of Navarre and his regent (governor) in Navarre. In 1468, her father killed her advisor Nicolas de Etchabarri, and deposed her as governor. In 1471, however, her father recognized her as the governor of Navarre until his death. At her father's death in 1479, she gave her oath as the monarch of Navarre, and died two weeks later at Tudela, Navarre, aged 53.

Marriage and children

In 1441, she married Gaston IV, count of Foix, and had the following children with him:[5][6]

Ancestry

References

  1. ^ cf. Anthony (1931)
  2. ^ see Anthony (1931)
  3. ^ The Cambridge Modern History, ed. A.W. Ward, G.W. Prothero and Stanley Leathes, (Macmillan Company, 1911), 80.
  4. ^ The Cambridge Modern History, 84.
  5. ^ TOULOUSE NOBILITY in: Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG) [retrieved 7 June 2016].
  6. ^ Hijos de la reina Leonor I de Navarra Trastamara y Gastón de Foix-Grailly-Béarn in: lebrelblanco.com (in Spanish) [retrieved 7 June 2016].
  7. ^ 1494: Hieronymous Munzer, Compostela, and the Codex Calixtinus, Jeanne E. Krochalis, The Pilgrimage to Compostela in the Middle Ages, ed. Maryjane Dunn and Linda Kay Davidson, (Routledge, 1996), 96.
  8. ^ Isabel de Foix, infanta of Navarre in: geneall.net [retrieved 7 June 2016].

Bibliography

  • Anthony, Raoul: Identification et Etude des Ossements des Rois de Navarre inhumés dans la Cathédrale de Lescar (Identification and Study of the Bones of the Kings of Navarre buried at the Cathedral of Lescar), Paris, Masson, 1931

External links

Eleanor of Navarre
Born: 2 February 1426 Died: 12 February 1479
Regnal titles
Preceded by Queen of Navarre
1479
Succeeded by