Marie, Countess of Harcourt
Marie, Countess of Harcourt | |
---|---|
Born | 9 September 1398 |
Died | 19 April 1476 | (aged 77)
Buried | Nancy |
Noble family | House of Harcourt |
Spouse(s) | Antoine of Lorraine |
Father | John VII of Harcourt |
Mother | Marie of Alençon |
Marie of Harcourt (9 September 1398 – 19 April 1476) was Countess of Aumale and Baroness of Elbeuf from 1452 to 1476.
Life[]
She was the eldest daughter of John VII of Harcourt, Count of Harcourt and Aumale and Baron of Elbeuf, and of Marie of Alençon.
On 12 August 1416 she married Antoine of Lorraine (1400–1458), Count of Vaudémont and sire of Joinville.
Upon the death of her father in 1452, she attempted to claim the entire Harcourt inheritance, to the exclusion of her younger sister . By 1454, Jeanne had established herself as Countess of Aumale, and Marie as Countess of Harcourt and Baroness of Elbeuf. These lands were to pass to her second son, John, but he predeceased her in 1473, so they went to her grandson Rene.[1]
Issue[]
- Frederic II of Vaudémont (1428–1470), count of Vaudémont and sire of Joinville, in 1445 married Yolande de Bar of Anjou. She was the elder sister of Margaret of Anjou, Queen consort of England. Together Frederic and Yolande had six children.
- Jean of Lorraine, Count of Harcourt (died 1473), comte of Harcourt and of Aumale and baron of Elbeuf
- Henri (died 1505), bishop of Thérouanne (1447–1484), then of Metz (1484–1505)
- Marie (died 23 April 1455), in 1450 married (died 1462), viscount of Rohan
- Marguerite of Lorraine, Dame d'Aerschot and de Bierbeke (died before 1474), in 1432 married Antoine I de Croy, Seigneur de Croy.
References[]
- ^ Carroll, Stuart (1998). Noble Power During the French Wars of Religion. Cambridge University Press. pp. 17–19. ISBN 0-521-62404-5. Retrieved 2008-09-29.
Categories:
- 1398 births
- 1476 deaths
- French countesses
- House of Harcourt
- French suo jure nobility
- 14th-century French women
- 14th-century French people
- 15th-century French women
- 15th-century French people
- 15th-century women rulers