Showing posts with label Navarre. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Navarre. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 11, 2017

Meandering Adventures of Cognatic Inheritance

There are numerous ways in which titles can be passed, but primogeniture, where the eldest child inherits all of the titles, is one of the most well-recognised inheritance systems in the West. But this system has a problem: which child is considered the oldest? Is it the first-born, male or female (absolute primogeniture)? Is it the eldest male (agnatic primogeniture)? Or is it the eldest male, or the eldest female if there is no male (cognatic primogeniture)? In different countries, there are different rules, and these are but three of them.

For the sake of this discussion, let us just focus on one: cognatic primogeniture. Cognatic succession can be anathema to a dynasty. If a dynasty is patrilineal, then cognatic succession can allow a title—or all the tiles—to separate from that patrilineal line. Thus, cognatic titles can appear over generations as wayward travellers, traversing several dynasties in only a few generations. Such problems rarely impact agnatic succession systems, or seniority, or elective monarchies because all of those systems favour men more absolutely. But cognatic succession systems, even if they favour elder male children over female children, inevitably will revert the succession to a female line (a cognate).

There are numerous polities throughout Western European history that have allowed women to succeed, and sometimes those titles pass through numerous female holders. Generally—although not always—a female title holder will share her titles with her husband so long as she is alive, at which point the titles pass to her eldest child or to her nearest relative. Thus, just because a system allows female transmission of titles does not mean she gains exclusive use of those titles. Some women certainly insist upon exclusive regnal prerogatives, but not all of them. In other words, men still often become counts or kings when their wives hold the rights. Legally, this practice is called suo uxoris (by right of wife) and suo uxoris titles rarely outlast the woman from whom the titles derive.

There are a number of important cases of monarchies which were ruled, and indeed dictated, by the precepts of cognatic succession. Some of the most famous—England, Denmark, Russia, and Spain—rarely actually operated off of cognatic succession or, when they did, they often skipped women in favour of eldest sons. But a few polities, specifically many in France, experienced multiple female rulers throughout their existences.

The Lost Kingdom of Spain
Perhaps the most notorious European kingdom to experience the potential upheavals of cognatic succession was the Pyrenean kingdom of Navarre. Established in the mid-ninth century as one of two crusader states that began the expulsion of the Moors from Spain, Navarre's dalliance with cognatic succession did not begin until the Jiménez line of kings went extinct in 1234. Because of its Basque origins, Navarre had accepted the tenets of cognatic succession even if it never used such laws. The crown passed to a French lord, Thibaut IV, count of Champagne, whose mother had been the sister of the last Jiménez king, Sancho VII. For the next 80 years, the Champagnois ruled Navarre.

The kings and queens of Navarre, 1150 – 1643
Jeanne I, queen of Navarre and countess
of Champagne and Brie
In 1274, the last Champengois ruler, Jeanne I, married the future Philippe IV of France, thereby unifying Navarre with the French crown for the next 54 years. Philippe adopted the title of king at the time of his marriage, and their son Louis became the next king of Navarre in 1305 when Jeanne died. His brothers, Philippe and Charles, and then his daughter, Jeanne II, all held the royal title during their lifetime. But with Jeanne, the title once again was held alongside her husband, Philippe III. When she died in 1349, her son, Charles II, and then grandson, Charles III, followed her on the throne.

Yet another upheaval came in 1425 when Charles III's daughter, Zuria I, succeeded him. Her husband, Juan II (future king of Aragón) seized the royal title more decisively than was usual and when she died in 1441, he kept the royal title against her will, depriving his son and eldest daughter their due rights. Their younger daughter, Leonor, succeeded briefly in 1479 only after he had died. Her grandson, François Phoebus, reigned for four years after her death, and then her daughter, Catherine, became the next queen, ruling alongside her husband, Jean III d'Albret. During their reign, most of the kingdom was conquered by Aragón, leaving only a small portion on the northern side of the Pyrenees for them to rule.

Jeanne III d'Albret, queen of Navarre and
countess of Foix
Catherine died in 1517 leaving the crown to her son, Henri II. He, in turn, left yet another daughter, Jeanne III, as his heir. Jeanne took the throne in 1555 alongside her husband, Antoine de Vendôme, who ruled briefly until 1562. When Jeanne died in 1572, their son, Henri III, succeeded and began the ultimate end of Navarrese independence. Shortly after succeeding, he became the heir to the French throne through their laws of strict agnatic primogeniture. He became king of France as Henri IV in 1589, unifying for a second time the French and Navarrese crowns. But this time, it became permanent. His son, Louis XIII of France, permanently ended Navarre's independence in 1620, permanently unifying the kingdom to France. Thus, when the titular Louis XVII died in a French revolutionary prison in 1795, the claim to Navarre did not pass to his sister, but rather to his uncle, Louis XVIII, and subsequent French kings. France and Navarre, united twice, became bound together permanently due to cognatic succession.

The Itinerant French County
The case of cognatic succession can get just as extreme, if not more so, when impacting a county. The tiny county of Boulogne on the French side of the English Channel is one such case. Originally granted to Baudouin II of Flanders as a fief, it passed through a series of men until the line came to an end with Mathilde I in 1125. Mathilde was married to none other than Stephen of Blois, the future king of England. Stephen never became count of Blois, but he did assert his wife's titles from 1125 until 1151, when Mathilde died. At this point, the title passed to two of his sons in succession before falling to his eldest surviving daughter, Marie I. Like Mathilde, Marie ruled alongside her husband Mathieu of Alsace, but their marriage was not amicable. In 1170, they divorced, but Mathieu continued to claim the comital title until his death in 1173 (she lived until 1182). While this practice was unusual, it was not unheard of and paralleled the usurpation of Juan II of Aragón, above.

The rulers of Boulogne and later rulers of Auvergne, 1087 – 1653
Mathieu and Marie had a daughter, Ida, who became one of the most highly desirable heiresses in northern France. She married four times and each of her four husbands took her titles as his own. Her final marriage to Renaud, count of Aumâle, was forced upon her by the king against her wishes. Her husband proved a recalcitrant vassal, too, and fought against Philippe II Auguste of France until he was ultimately imprisoned. Ida's daughter by Renaud, Mathilde II, succeeded her in 1216 and was almost immediately betrothed to Philippe Hurepel, Philippe's son of questionable legitimacy. Suddenly, the Capetian family had taken hold of Boulogne through cognatic marriage.

Jeanne II, duchess of Berry and countess of Boulogne
Philippe Hurepel, though, did not live more than a decade and in 1235, Mathilde married the future king of Portugal, Afonso [III]. But both marriages proved childless and the succession passed to her nearest senior heir, who happened to be another woman: Adelaide, wife of Guillaume III of Auvergne. For the next four generations, Boulogne and Auvergne would be linked together via a succession of male rulers. However, both titles were transmittable via cognatic primogeniture and eventually fell to Jeanne I, who married in 1338 Philippe, son of the duke of Burgundy. She later married, after his death, King Jean II of France, once again binding the fate of Boulogne to that of the Capetians. But the county escaped outright annexation through sheer dynastic bad luck when her son, Philippe, died young in 1461. Her titles then passed to her paternal uncle, Jean II. Jean's granddaughter, Jeanne II, almost dragged the dynasty into the Capetian fold for a third time since she was married to Jean, duke of Berry, an uncle of King Charles VI. Indeed, the county was elevated to a duchy at this time (although the duchy was, oddly, separate from the county). But their childlessness allowed the titles to be transmitted to yet another female relative, Marie II, whose husband had already died by the time she succeeded to Boulogne and Auvergne.

Catherine de' Medici, queen of France
and countess of Auvergne
For the first time in Boulogne's history, there was a female regnant countess not beholden to her husband's whims or the demand that she be married again after being widowed. Marie lived until 1437, at which point her male progeny succeeded her, members of the House of La Tour. The county of Boulogne was annexed to the royal domain in 1501 after the last male of the line died, but the county of Auvergne passed to his daughter, Anne, whose husband was so preoccupied with Scottish affairs that she, too, had virtually full control over her ancestral county. When she died in 1524, the Auvergne title passed to her niece, Catherine de' Medici, who became queen of France through her marriage with Henri II and served as regent for her three sons, who reigned in succession, the last of the Valois kings of France. Auvergne became an embattled title from this point forward. The title was claimed by her son-in-law, Charles III, duke of Lorraine, until 1608, when it was seized by Catherine's daughter Marguerite, who had been married to Henri IV of France until they divorced in 1599. When Louis XIII of France became king in 1610, his government seized the Auvergne title claiming next-of-kin, although there were others who had a better claim. Concurrently in 1589, the Auvergne lands (but not titles) went to Charles, the illegitimate son of King Charles IX, who claimed them invariably until his death in 1650, after which his son, Louis-Emanuel claimed them for a few more years. At his death, the lands were seized by Louis XIII. The long history of cognatic descent in Boulogne and Auvergne saw it pass through numerous major and minor noble houses before it ultimately was appended to the many claims of the House of Bourbon, just as Navarre had been annexed slightly earlier.

Cognatic succession, therefore, can work in opposition to the generally clean successions provided by male-dominated modes. While from a gender standpoint it should make no difference whether a title passes to a son or a daughter, the geo-political situation in Western Europe until recently meant that most titles were held and descended through male lines to stop rogue cognatic titles such as Navarre and Boulogne-Auvergne from causing trouble. Their capacity to briefly attach themselves to others' titles meant that polities allowing cognatic succession such as these proved difficult to permanently attach to any one dynasty for more than a few generations.

Thursday, October 18, 2012

[October 18] Sancho III, king of Navarre

Surnamed: "The Great" (El Mayor)
Parents: García II, king of Navarre, and Jimena of Cea
Born: circa 992
House: Jiménez
Spouse(s): Muniadona Mayor, daughter of Sancho, count of Castile, and Urraca of Castile
Predecessor: García II
Reign: 1004 – 1035
Brief: Becoming king of Navarre as a minor, Sancho had great aspirations for his country and for Iberia in general. As early as 1015, he was working to expand his frontiers into Umayyad Spain. Opportunities arose to annex Sobrarbe and Ribagorza, and the county of Barcelona was forced to become a vassal to the Navarrese king. Next, he managed to annex Castile in 1027 following the untimely death of its count. The majority of Christian Spain was now under Sancho's control. Borders now secured, Sancho improved the major thoroughfare through the Pyrenees to Gascony where his ally, the duke of Gascony, could send pilgrims and knights to fight in the Reconquista. In 1034, after years of fighting, Sancho subdued and annexed León, the ancestral senior kingdom in Iberia, and had himself crowned Emperor of Spain. Unfortunately, a year later he was assassinated. His Iberian empire was divided between his many sons, never to be reunited again.
Date of Death: 18 October 1035
Successor: García III

Other Monarchs Who Died Today:
  • Jin Mingdi, emperor of China (325)
  • Leopold IV, duke of Bavaria (1141)
  • Gregory XII, pope of Rome (1417)
  • Pius III, pope of Rome (1503)
  • Fasilides, emperor of Ethiopia (1667)
  • Ludwig III, king of Bavaria (1921)

Saturday, September 8, 2012

[September 8] Alfonso I, king of Aragón & Navarre

Surnamed: "The Battler" (El Batallador)
Parents: Sancho V, king of Aragón and Navarre, and Felicia of Roucy
House: Jiménez
Born: circa 1073
Spouse(s): Urraca, queen of Léon, daughter of Alfonso VI, king of León, and Constance of Burgundy
Predecessor: Pedro I
Reign: 1104 – 1134
Date of Death: 8 September 1134
Successor: Ramiro II (in Aragón) and García IV (in Navarre)

Other Monarchs Who Died Today:

  • Sergius I, pope of Rome (701)
  • Leo IV, emperor of Constantinople (780)
  • Clement III, antipope of Rome (1100)
  • Charles III, king of Navarre (1425)
  • Faisal I, king of Iraq (1933)

Saturday, September 1, 2012

[September 1] Louis XIV, king of France & Navarre

Surnamed: "The Sun King" (le Roi-Soleil)
Date of Birth: 5 September 1938
Parents: Louis XIII, king of France, and Anne of Austria
House: Bourbon
Spouse(s): (1) Maria Theresa, daughter of Philip IV, king of Spain & Portugal, and Elisabeth of France, then (2) Françoise, daughter of Constant d'Aubigné and Jeanne de Cardillac
Predecessor: Louis XIII
Reign: 1643 – 1715
Summary: The longest-reigning monarch in European history, Louis XIV began his rule as a five-year-old child, leaving the management of the state to various regents. Anne of Austria, his mother, served as the chief regent, with Cardinal Mazarin as the prime minister. In 1648, the Thirty Years' War ended with Dutch independence from Spain formalized. As the war ended, the Fronde, a French civil war, erupted. It was led by dissatisfied aristocrats who feared a centralized French monarchy. Anne fled Paris with her sons and some courtiers until the French army returned and reestablished order in the kingdom. A second Fronde, this time led by many members of the royal family, broke out, but ended when Louis came of age. 

Mazarin's death in 1661 began Louis' formal rule in France. Although he had been of age for three years already, he chose to allow his prime minister to rule. In 1665, Louis chose Jean-Baptiste Colbert as his controller of finances in a role that he would one day regret. Over the next few years, Louis attempted to gather all the varied legal codes from throughout France into one tome that was later known as the Code Louis. As a patron, Louis expanded many of his palaces and supported all forms of art. At Versailles, he built a new chateau to rival all of those of Europe. He remodeled Paris as well, demolishing city walls and expanding boulevards. Most of Louis' reign was frought with war, many that he started or maintained. The War of Devolution in the Spanish Netherlands began in 1665 and acted as a prelude to the War of the Spanish Succession in 1700. The Franco-Dutch War in 1672 helped bring William of Orange to power in the Netherlands and also brought enmity between the two monarchs. Outside of Europe, France expanded its holdings to nearly every habitable continent, especially America and India. Louis famously began requiring all his nobles attend him at court in Versailles on a regular basis, a means to control the aristocracy. He included military nobles in this game to ensure the loyalty of the army and navy. Religion, though, was something he had little control over. In 1685, he revoked the Edict of Nantes and began to actively persecute non-Catholics living in France. Up to 200,000 Huguenots fled France in the ensuing years. The War of the League of Augsburg began in 1688 and was a direct response to French aggression in Germany. Piggybacking off this war, the Glorious Revolution in France deposed the French-friendly Stuarts with the Dutchman William of Orange, who had been hurt by France before. Louis funded Irish revolt and backed the deposed English king James II, but to no avail. The Augsburg War ended in 1697 with France having the upper hand. Another war, this time over the Spanish Succession, consumed the remainder of Louis' reign. His grandson, Philip of Anjou, was the declared heir of the dying King Charles II of Spain. When the king died, Louis went to war over Philip's claim. Attempts to avoid war failed and world war followed, with theaters in Europe, Asia, and the Americas (Queen Anne's War). The Treaty of Utrecht in 1713 ended the war, with the Treaty of Rastatt ending the conflict between France and Austria. Philip retained his new throne as Philip V of Spain, while Austria gained the Austrian Netherlands and parts of Italy. Louis died of gangrene at Versailles in 1715, only days before his 77th birthday. His son, the Grand Dauphin, his grandson, the Petit Dauphin, and his great-grandson, the Duke of Brittany, had all predeceased him. A brother of the duke of Brittany, Louis, Duke of Anjou, therefore, became his successor as Louis XV.
Date of Death: 1 September 1715
Successor: Louis XV

Other Monarchs Who Died Today:
  • Baldwin V, count of Flanders (1067)
  • Adrian IV, pope of Rome (1159)
  • Kujo Yoritsune, shogun of Japan (1256)
  • Guru Ram Das, Sikh Guru (1581)

Friday, May 25, 2012

[May 25] Henry II, king of Navarre

Parents: Jean, lord of Albret, and Catherine, queen of Navarre
Date of Birth: 18 April 1503
House: Albret
Spouse: Marguerite, daughter of Charles, count of Angoulême, and Louise of Savoy
Predecessor: Catherine
Reign: 1517 – 1555
Summary: A tragedy occurred to the small Pyrenees kingdom of Navarre in 1512, just five years prior of Henry's coronation. Ferdinand II, king of Aragon, on false pretenses annexed half of Navarre. Ferdinand based his claim on the claim of his second wife, Germaine, who was a cousin to Queen Catherine, Henry's mother. When Ferdinand took the land, he stole the title as well, adding it as a sub-title to his own. Lower Navarre, the portion north of modern-day Spain, held out as a separate country still named Navarre. Yet its days of independence were numbered. Henry d'Albert was the second in his line to claim the title. His father, Jean, was a minor lord in southern France. When Catherine began negotiations to marry Henry, she chose a French princess for her son. This is the trigger that prompted Ferdinand's invasion, because the Aragonese king did not want France in his back yard. Henry did not marry a French princess and Catherine died in 1517, leaving the remaining portion of Navarre to her son.

Henry owed his country's survival to the good graces of King François I of France. Meanwhile, Charles (the future Holy Roman Emperor Charles V) continued his grandfather's claim to Navarre from Spain. Henry II, though, wanted all of his country back. It was the oldest surviving state in Hispania and it was his by right. In 1516 and 1518, conferences were held to try and convince the Pamplona estates to recognize Henry II as their king. In 1521, French and Navarrese forces invaded Upper Navarre but were defeated at the Battle of Noain. In 1525, Henry was taken prisoner at the Battle of Pavia but he escaped in 1526. Soon after, he married the sister of King François. She became the mother of the penultimate independent ruler of Navarre, Jeanne III. In his final years, Henry arranged the marriage of his daughter to Antoine de Bourbon, a potential heir to the French throne, thereby ensuring continued support from France. Henry had gained the sympathy of the Huguenots in southern France and died in their care at Hagetmau in 1555, never regaining any of his southern lands.
Date of Death: 25 May 1555
Successor: Jeanne III

Other Monarch Deaths:
Boniface IV, pope of Rome (615)
Murakami, emperor of Japan (967)
Mieszko I, duke of Poland (992)
Gregory VII, pope of Rome (1085)
Alexander IV, pope of Rome (1261)
Idris I, king of Libya (1983)

Wednesday, April 4, 2012

[April 4] Jeanne I, queen of Navarre

Parents: Henri I, king of Navarre, and Blanche of Artois
Date of Birth: 14 January 1273
House: Champagne
Spouse: Philippe IV, king of France
Predecessor: Henri I
Reign: 1285 – 1305
Summary: At the age of one, she became the countess regnant of the large County of Champagne and also the queen regnant of the small Kingdom of Navarre straddling the Pyrenees Mountains between France and Spain. Since she was young and unmarried, many local powers attempted to take advantage of her and claim her throne for themselves through marriage. Jeanne and her mother, Blanche, sought refuge in one of those powers: France. At 10 years of age, Jeanne was married to Philippe, the future king of France. All three of her sons—Louis, Philippe, and Charles—would rule France and Navarre in turn while her granddaughter, Jeanne II, would inherit the Kingdom of Navarre a century later when the French line split to the Valois branch of the House of Capet. Her daughter, Isabella, became queen consort of England and her descendants later prompted the Hundred Years' War. Isabella was a bold monarch, but bowed to her husband in the administration of her realms. Still, she was said to have led an army against the Count of Bar when the small county attacked Champagne. She died of a stillbirth in 1305.
Date of Death: 4 April 1305
Successor: Louis I (also Louis X, king of France)

Other Monarchs Who Died Today:
  • Formosus, pope of Rome (896)
  • Alfonso X, king of Castile (1284)
  • Nicholas IV, pope of Rome (1292)
  • Frederick I, margrave of Brandenburg-Ansbach (1536)
  • Frederick II, king of Denmark (1588)
  • Carol II, king of Romania (1953)

Friday, January 20, 2012

[January 20] Juan II, king of Aragón

Parents: Ferdinand I, king of Aragón, and Eleanor of Alburquerque
Date of Birth: 29 June 1398
Royal House: Trastámara
Spouse: Blanche I, queen of Navarre, then Juana Enríquez
Reign: 1458 – 1479
Predecessor: Alfonso V
Summary: John II began ruling Aragón at an early age. During his youth, he ruled in the name of his brother, Alfonso, who was generally in Italy ruling over Sicily. In 1425, he also came into possession through marriage of the small kingdom of Navarre in the Pyrenees. Throughout his life, he would reign over this small kingdom despite the superior claims of his children over his own claim. From 1441 until his own death in 1479, John deprived the right to rule Navarre first of his son, the titular Charles IV, and then Blanche II, until Queen Eleanor finally outlived her father. This conflict between father and children was not helped by John's second wife, Juana, who sowed seeds of conflict between John and the children of his first marriage. It is thought that Juana herself may have been responsible for the death of Charles IV.

As king of Aragón, John also ruled the Catalan counties of northern Spain, the kingdoms of Sicily, Valencia, Majorca, and Sardinia, and the county of Roussillon in France. Conflicts over Roussillon, technically a French county, caused John to finally cede it to Louis XI in 1472. This did not pacify him, however, and he fought a long war with France over the Catalan counties until his death in 1479. Prior to his death, John had arranged the marriage between his only surviving son, Ferdinand II, and the heiress of Castile, Isabella. Isabella became queen in 1474 and Ferdinand succeeded his father in 1479, thereby uniting for the first time in history the kingdoms of Aragón and Castile (and their many appendages), setting the groundwork for the creation of the kingdom of Spain. John's daughter Eleanor ruled Navarre for all of two weeks before dying. The Navarrese crown then passed to John's great-grandson Francis Phoebus, count of Foix.
Date of Death: 20 January 1479
Successor: Ferdinand II

Other Monarchs Who Died Today:
  • Fabian, pope of Rome (250)
  • Frederick VI, duke of Swabia (1191)
  • Rudolf II, Holy Roman Emperor (1612)
  • Charles IV, king of Spain (1819)
  • Minh Mang, emperor of Vietnam (1841)
  • Christian VIII, king of Denmark (1848)
  • Kalakaua, king of Hawai'i (1891)
  • George V, king of the United Kingdom (1936)

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