Philip III of Navarre

Philip III

Bust in the Louvre
King of Navarre
Reign 1 February 1328 - 16 September 1343
Coronation 5 March 1329
Predecessor Charles I
Successor Joan II
Born (1306-03-27)27 March 1306
Died 16 September 1343(1343-09-16) (aged 37)
Burial Pamplona Cathedral
Spouse Joan II of Navarre
House Évreux
Father Louis of Évreux
Mother Margaret of Artois
Religion Roman Catholicism

Philip III (27 March 1306 – 16 September 1343), called the Noble (el Noble) or the Wise, Count of Évreux[1] (1319–1343) and King of Navarre (1328–1343), was the second son of Louis of Évreux and Margaret of Artois and therefore a grandson of King Philip III of France. Because of this descent, he was a possible heir to the throne of France.

Inheritance

In due course, he inherited the County of Évreux, in Normandy, from his father, and ten years later became Philip III, jure uxoris King of Navarre, on the death of his cousin, Charles IV of France. On 18 June 1318, he had married the heiress Joan II.[1] She held extensive fiefdoms in northern France, as well as Navarre. Because of their lands and their many royal relatives, Philip and his wife were influential in both France and Navarre and spent much of their lives going back and forth between them.

Military achievements

By the Treaty of Villeneuve-lès-Avignon of 14 March 1336 he received the counties of Angoulème and Mortain in the peerage of France, and the castles of Benon in Aunis and Fontenay-l'Abattu in Poitou. In 1339, he was at the side of the kings of France, Bohemia (John), and Scotland (David II), relieving the cities of Cambrai and Tournai, besieged by the English. This was the opening stages of the Hundred Years' War.

Aside from that war on French soil, Philip actively participated in the Reconquista in Iberia. He joined the crusade intitiated by Alfonso XI of Castile against the Kingdom of Granada was mortally wounded by an arrow at the Siege of Algeciras (1342-1344).[2] He fell ill and died at Jerez de la Frontera.[3] His body was brought back to Pamplona for burial,[4] though his heart was buried at the now-demolished church of the Couvent des Jacobins in Paris.

Armorial

The arms of Philippe III of Navarre changed throughout his lifetime:

Marriage and children

Ancestry

References

  1. 1 2 Robert Fawtier, The Capetian Kings of France: Monarchy and Nation 987-1328, transl. Lionel Butler and R.J. Adam, (Macmillan Education Ltd, 1989), 130.
  2. Housley, Norman, The Avignon papacy and the Crusades, 1305-1378, (Oxford University Press, 1986), 61.
  3. See Pilar Azcárate Aguilar-Amat, "Aportación y muerte de Felipe de Evreux en la cruzada de Algeciras (1343)", in Eduardo Ripoll Perelló and Manuel Fernando Ladero Quesada (eds.) Actas del II Congreso Internacional "El Estrecho de Gibraltar", Ceuta, 1990 (Madrid, 1995), 3:61–76.
  4. Fernando Arias Guillén (2012), "El linaje maldito de Alfonso X. Conflictos en torno a la legitimidad regia en Castilla (c. 1275–1390)", Vínculos de Historia, 1: 157.
  5. Fermin Miranda Garcia, Reyes de Navarra: Felipe III y Juana II de Evreux (Pamplona, 1994).
  6. Garcia.
  7. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Vol.10, 722.
Philip III of Navarre
Cadet branch of the Capetian dynasty
Born: 27 March 1306 Died: 16 September 1343
Preceded by
Louis
Count of Évreux
13191343
Succeeded by
Charles the Bad
Preceded by
Charles I
King of Navarre
(jure uxoris) with Joan II

13281343
Succeeded by
Joan II
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