Isabella, Countess of Foix

Isabella of Foix also known as Isabella of Foix-Castelbon (before 2 November 1361 – 1428) was sovereign Countess of Foix and Viscountess of Béarn from 1399 until 1428. She was Countess of Foix in her own right, but shared power with her husband and later with her son. She succeeded as countess along with her husband upon the death of her childless brother Matthew.

Isabella
Seal of Isabella
Co-Princess of Andorra
Reign1398–1412
PredecessorMatthew
SuccessorJohn I
Co-rulerGalcerand de Vilanova
Countess of Foix
Reign1398–1428
PredecessorMatthew
SuccessorJohn I
Co-rulersArchambaud (1398–1412)
John I (1412–1428)
Bornbefore 2 November 1361
Died1428
Burial
Abbey of Boulbonne
SpouseArchambaud de Grailly
IssueJohn I, Count of Foix
Gaston of Foix
Archambaud of Foix
Matthew of Foix
Peter, Archbishop of Arles
HouseFoix
FatherRoger-Bernard V of Foix, Viscount of Castelbon
MotherGerauda of Navailles

Life

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Isabella was the daughter of Roger-Bernard V of Foix, Viscount of Castelbon and his wife Gerauda of Navailles.[1] She was the eldest of three children, her two brothers were the aforementioned Matthew and Roger Bernard, who died young.

Isabella married in 1381 to Archambaud de Grailly.[1]

Countess of Foix

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After the death of her younger brother Matthew in 1398, who had tried to claim the Aragonese crown for his wife Joanna, Isabella was the last living member of the House of Foix and was heir of a large ownership which focused especially on the northern slopes of the Pyrenees. This heritage was to be denied to Isabella by the French Crown because of her marriage to Archambaud, whose family had been supporters of the English during the Hundred Years' War. Charles VI of France wanted to prevent Foix from falling under influence of England, so a royal army under the leadership of the Constable de Sancerre invaded Foix and occupied large portions. In this situation, Isabella and her husband were willing to submit to the French Crown. The Treaty of Tarbes on 10 May 1399 saw Isabella made countess as long as her husband stopped his alliance with the English and allow the two oldest sons of the couple to be taken to royal court.

The fate of the new Foix dynasty during the French feudal period was reflected in its name because Isabella's descendants renounced the leadership of the name and coat of arms of Grailly in favor of the House of Foix's. The loyalty of the new dynasty of Foix to France was awarded in 1412, when Archambaud was appointed lieutenant-general of the Languedoc. In 1402 Isabella and her husband arranged the marriage for their eldest son, John, to the eldest daughter of Charles III of Navarre, Joan, who was formally recognised as heir to the kingdom later that year. This marriage hoped to make a union between Foix and Navarre. However, in 1413, Joan died leaving no issue and John a widower, all hope of a union had now failed.

Foix was a neighbour of the Crown of Aragon. The conditions were relaxed after 1400 when King Martin of Aragon refunded Isabella the county of Castelbon which the king had withdrawn from her brother 1386, after he fought for the crown.

Archambaud died in 1413, Isabella died in 1428 and was buried in the Abbey of Boulbonne, the resting place of her ancestors.

Children

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Isabella and Archambaud had:

References

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  1. ^ a b Garrigues 2006, p. 209.
  2. ^ Vernier 2008, p. 4.
  3. ^ Sumption 2015, p. 713.
  4. ^ Lerga 2005, p. 333.
  5. ^ a b Garrigues 2006, p. 412.

Sources

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  • Garrigues, Véronique (2006). Adrien de Monluc (1571–1646) d'encre et de sang (in French). PULIM.
  • Lerga, Álvaro Adot (2005). Juan de Albret y Catalina de Foix o la defensa del estado navarro (1483–1517) (in Spanish). Pamiela.
  • Sumption, Jonathan (2015). The Hundred Years War. Vol. IV: Cursed Kings. Faber & Faber.
  • Vernier, Richard (2008). Lord of the Pyrenees, Gaston Fébus, Count of Foix (1331–1391). The Boydell Press.
Isabella, Countess of Foix
Cadet branch of the House of Foix
Born: bef. 2 November 1361 Died: circa 1428
French nobility
Preceded by Countess of Foix
Viscountess of Béarn

1398-1428
with Archambaud (1398–1412)
John I (1412–1428)
Succeeded by