JEANNE II (Joan) OF NAVARRE


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Jeanne de France was to be the only surviving child of her parents, Louis of France and Margaret of Burgundy.
In 1314 a scandal rocked the French monarchy to its very core, leaving a question mark over Jeanne’s legitimacy, that is still there today.

The two knights in question of commiting adultery with the queen, the D’Aunay brothers, were tortured and castrated before being brutally exEcuted by being ‘broken on the wheel’ and d~capitated.

In November 1314, Jeanne’s grandfather Philip IV died, and her father succeeded to the French throne as King Louis X.
Louis was now desperate to produce a male heir.
Louis then married Clementia of Hungary and the couple were crowned jointly at Reims in August 1315.

However, doubts over Jeanne’s legitimacy must still have been at the forefront of people’s minds as Louis X, on his deathbed in June 1316, made a point of stating that Jeanne was his legitimate daughter.

Philip was the grandson of Philip III of France.
She was then given into the care of Philip’s grandmother, the dowager queen Marie of Brabant, to continue her education.

A succession crisis began, when Charles also died on 1st February 1328, leaving Jeanne as the senior claimant to the French and Navarrese thrones.
However, with Salic Law in place, the French crown was offered to Philip of Valois, a descendant of Philip III, who acceded to the throne as Philip VI.

After years in the shadows and aged just 17, Jeanne and her husband were crowned jointly, as King Philip III and Queen Jeanne II of Navarre, at Pamplona on 5th March 1329.

Jeanne and Philip shared their time between all their lands, with French governors installed to rule Navarre during their absences.
As rulers of Navarre, Jeanne and Philip had active legislation and building programmes, and tried to maintain peaceful relations with neighbouring states.

He was mortally wounded by an arrow during the Siege of Algeciras, and died shortly after.
His body was returned to Pamplona for burial, while his heart was taken to Paris and interred at the Couvent des Jacobins.

She was just months short of her 38th birthday, having ruled Navarre for 21 of her 38 years.
Jeanne was buried in the royal Basilica of St Denis but her heart was laid to rest beside her husband’s in the Couvent des Jacobins, proof of the taint of bastardy that plaged Jeanne throughout her life, was no longer an issue.
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