Catherine of Valois
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Catherine of Valois (27 October 1401 – 3 January 1437) was the Queen consort of England from 1420 until 1422. Catherine of Valois was the daughter of King Charles VI of France and Isabella of Bavaria-Ingolstadt. She was born on October 27, 1401, in Paris.
On June 2, 1420, she was given in marriage to King Henry V of England, but only after Henry's demand for return of Normandy and Aquitaine as part of the marriage pact which was triggered by the Battle of Agincourt and the subsequent Treaty of Troyes. As part of the treaty, Henry won control of Normandy and Aquitaine, became regent of France during Charles' lifetime, and won the right to succeed on Charles' death.
If this had come to pass, France and England would have been united under one monarch. However, Charles outlived Henry V by two months and Catherine of Valois thus never became Queen of France.
Catherine of Valois was crowned Queen of England at Westminster Abbey in February, 1421. The only issue of Catherine and Henry, the future Henry VI of England, was born on 6 December 1421. Then Henry V died on 31 August 1422. Catherine was given Wallingford Castle, where she retired, distant from the Court and from her infant son.
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At Wallingford Castle, she turned for comfort to Owen Tudor, a Welsh clerk, who would become the founding father of the Tudor dynasty. In 1428, Parliament reacted to the rumors about this relationship by forbidding queens dowager from marrying without the king's permission. No documentation survives of their marriage, which is believed to have taken place in around 1428. There was an otherwise general lack of interest in her on the part of the authorities.
She gave birth to at least six of Owen Tudor's children:
- Owen Tudor (1429-1501). He was a monk at Westminster.
- Edmund Tudor, 1st Earl of Richmond (1430 - November 1, 1456), married Lady Margaret Beaufort. Father of King Henry VII.
- Jasper Tudor, 1st Duke of Bedford (1431 - December 21/26, 1495), married Katherine Woodville, daughter to Richard Woodville, 1st Earl Rivers and Jacquetta of Luxembourg. No issue. He did have two illegitimate children.
- Tacina Tudor (1433 - 1469).
- Daughter Mary Tudor born (1432). She married Thomas Gray (1430-1501); they had a daughter Jane Gray (1475-1509)--Note: This was an earlier "Mary Tudor" than Henry VIII's sister; and an earlier Jane Gray with different spelling of last name, than the Jane Grey who was executed. Jane Gray b. 1475, had a daughter Jane Mercer, and granddaughter Jane Wilkinson. Ref. below: OneWorld Tree of ancestry.com
- Daughter Tudor. (born c. 1435) She became a nun.
- Margaret (Catherine) Tudor (born January 1437). Died young.
Catherine died on January 3, 1437, shortly after childbirth, in London, and was buried in Westminster Abbey. Her second husband, Owen Tudor, lived on until 1461, when he was executed by the Yorkists following the Battle of Mortimer's Cross. Their sons were given earldoms by King Henry VI after Catherine's death. Edmund would become the father of the future King Henry VII of England.
The wooden funeral effigy which was carried at her funeral still survives at Westminster Abbey and is on display at the Undercroft Museum. Her tomb originally boasted an alabaster memorial, which was deliberately destroyed during extensions to the abbey in the reign of her grandson, Henry VII. It has been suggested that Henry ordered her memorial to be removed to distance himself from his common ancestry. At this time, her coffin lid was accidentally raised, revealing her corpse, which for generations became a tourist attraction. In 1669 the diarist Samuel Pepys kissed the long-deceased queen on his birthday:
On Shrove Tuesday 1669, I to the Abbey went, and by favour did see the body of Queen Katherine of Valois, and had the upper part of the body in my hands, and I did kiss her mouth, reflecting upon it I did kiss a Queen: and this my birthday and I thirty-six years old and I did kiss a Queen.
– Samuel Pepys
Catherine's remains were not properly re-interred until the reign of Queen Victoria.
- Mary Tudor b. 1432: With sourced Ancestry of Owen Tudor, as daughter of Owen Tudor and Catherine De Valois; and Mary Tudor's daughter Jane Gray lived 1475-1509, earlier Jane than Jane Grey who was daughter of the later Mary Tudor, sister of Henry VIII) at http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/person.aspx?tid=3071280&pid=-1716367594
- Heidi Murphy Catherine of Valois (1401-1437)
- Catherine of Valois is the subject of Rosemary Hawley Jarman's novel "Crown in Candlelight" (1978)
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Catherine of Valois
Cadet branch of the Capetian dynasty
Born: 27 October 1401 Died: 3 January 1437 |
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| English royalty | ||
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| Preceded by Joanna of Navarre |
Queen Consort of England 2 June 1420 - 31 August 1422 |
Succeeded by Margaret of Anjou |
| Preceded by Isabella of France |
Queen Mothers 1422 - 1437 |
Succeeded by Elizabeth Woodville |
Categories: Articles lacking sources from September 2007 | All articles lacking sources | English royal consorts | French princesses | House of Valois | House of Lancaster | House of Tudor | Ladies of the Garter | Women of medieval England | People of the Hundred Years' War | Women of medieval France | 1401 births | 1437 deaths | Burials at Westminster Abbey