Yolanda of Lusignan

Yolanda of Lusignan
suo jure Countess of La Marche
suo jure Dame of Lusignan, of Couhe, and de Peyrat
suo jure Heiress of Fougères
Dame de Pons
Dame de Mathe
Spouse(s) Elie Rudel, Seigneur de Pons
Robert, Seigneur de Mathe

Issue

Renaud IV de Pons
Yolande de Pons
Noble family Lusignan
Father Hugh XII of Lusignan, Count of La Marche, Count of Angoulême
Mother Jeanne de Fougères, Dame de Fougères
Born 24 March 1257
Angoulême, France
Died 30 September 1314

Yolanda of Lusignan or Yolande I & I de Lusignan, Countess of La Marche (24 March 1257[1][2] 30 September 1314) was a French noblewoman and peeress. In 1308, she succeeded her brother Guy I as suo jure Dame of Lusignan, of Couhe and of Peyrat, and suo jure Countess of La Marche, but not as Countess of Angoulême since after her brother's death the county was sold by her sisters, Joan and Isabelle, to King Philip IV and annexed to the French Crown.[3] Yolanda was also the heiress of Fougères, which she succeeded to upon her mother's death sometime after 1273.[4]

Lineage and family

Yolanda was born in Angoulême, France on 24 March 1257.[5][6] She was the eldest child of Hugh XII of Lusignan, Seigneur de Lusignan, Couhe, et de Peyrat, Count of La Marche, Count of Angoulême, (died in 1270 on Crusade) and Jeanne de Fougères, Dame de Fougères. She had two brothers and three sisters.

Yolanda succeeded as the heiress of Fougères upon her mother's death which occurred sometime after 1273. In 1308, Yolanda inherited her brother Guy's titles, becoming suo jure Countess of La Marche, Dame of Lusignan, of Couhe, and of Peyrat. His county of Angoulême did not pass to her as it had been sold by her sisters after Guy's death to King Philip IV, and annexed to the French crown.

Marriages and issue

In 1270, at the age of thirteen, Yolanda's father was killed while on Crusade with King Louis IX of France. On an unknown date before 1281, she married her first husband, Elie Rudel, Seigneur de Pons, Lord of Montignac and by him she had two children: [7]

Yolanda married secondly Robert, Seigneur de Mathe.

Death

Following her death on 30 September 1314, the county of La Marche was annexed by King Philip IV of France and given as an appanage to Philip's son Charles IV of France.

Ancestry

Sources

  1. Les Sires de Pons et leurs Alliances (dont la maison de Rabaine).
  2. Medieval Lands "Angoulême".

References

  1. Medieval Lands "Angoulême"
  2. Europaseische Stammtafeln "Lusignan"
  3. Europaseische Stammtafeln "Lusignan2
  4. Medieval Lands "Angoulême".
  5. Europaseische Stammtafeln "Lusignan".
  6. Medieval Lands"Angoulême".
  7. Jean Baptiste Pierre Jullien de Courcelles, Histoire généalogique et héraldique des pairs de France: des grands dignitaires de la couronne, des principales familles nobles du royaume et des maisons princières de l'Europe, précédée de la généalogie de la maison de France, Volume 5 (Google eBook), 1825
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Wednesday, March 30, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.