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House of Valois

The Capetian house of Valois[a] (UK: /ˈvælwɑː/ VAL-wah, also US: /vælˈwɑː, vɑːlˈwɑː/ va(h)l-WAH,[1] French: [valwa]) was a cadet branch of the Capetian dynasty. They succeeded the House of Capet (or "Direct Capetians") to the French throne, and were the royal house of France from 1328 to 1589. Junior members of the family founded cadet branches in Orléans, Anjou, Burgundy, and Alençon.

House of Valois

Arms of the King of France since 1376
Parent houseCapetian dynasty
Country
Founded1284
FounderCharles, Count of Valois
Final rulerHenry III of France in France
Marie de Nemours in Neuchâtel
Dissolution1589 (royal line) and 1707 (Neuchâtel line)
Cadet branches

The Valois descended from Charles, Count of Valois (1270–1325), the second surviving son of King Philip III of France (reigned 1270–1285). Their title to the throne was based on a precedent in 1316 (later retroactively attributed to the Merovingian Salic law) which excluded females (Joan II of Navarre), as well as male descendants through the distaff side (Edward III of England), from the succession to the French throne.

After holding the throne for several centuries the Valois male line became extinct and the House of Bourbon succeeded the Valois to the throne as the senior-surviving branch of the Capetian dynasty.

Unexpected inheritance edit

The Capetian dynasty seemed secure in the rule of the Kingdom of France both during and after the reign of King Philip IV (Philip the Fair, r. 1285–1313). Philip left three surviving sons (Louis, Philip and Charles) and a daughter (Isabella). Each son became king in turn, but each died young without surviving male heirs, leaving only daughters who could not inherit the throne. When Charles IV died in 1328 the French succession became more problematic.

In 1328 three candidates had a plausible claim to the French throne:

  1. Philip, Count of Valois, son of Charles of Valois, who was the closest heir in male line and a grandson of Philip III (r. 1270–1285). Because his father was the brother of the late Philip IV, the Count of Valois was therefore a nephew of Philip IV and the cousin of Louis X, Philip V and Charles IV. Further, Charles IV had chosen him as the regent before his death.
  2. Joan of Navarre, daughter of Louis X. Although Philip V had used his position relative to his niece to take the throne in 1316, Joan nevertheless had a strong claim as the heir-general of Philip IV, and her maternal family had initially supported her claim after the death of Louis X. She ultimately received the Kingdom of Navarre, which could be passed to female heirs.
  3. Edward III of England, son of Isabella of France, the daughter and only surviving child of Philip IV. Edward claimed the French throne as a grandson of Philip IV.

In England, Isabella of France claimed the throne on behalf of her 15-year-old son. In contrast to France it was unclear whether a woman could inherit the English crown[2] but English precedent allowed succession through the female line (as exemplified by Henry II of England, son of Matilda). The French rejected Isabella's claim, arguing that since she herself, as a woman, could not succeed, then she could not transmit any such right to her son. Thus the French magnates chose as their new monarch Philip of Valois, who became King Philip VI of France. The throne of Navarre went its separate way, to Joan of France, daughter of Louis X, who became Joan II of Navarre.

Because diplomacy and negotiation had failed, Edward III would have to back his claims with force to obtain the French throne. For a few years, England and France maintained an uneasy peace. Eventually, an escalation of conflict between the two kings led to King Philip VI confiscating the Duchy of Aquitaine (1337). Instead of paying homage for Aquitaine to the French king, as his ancestors had done, Edward claimed that he himself was the rightful King of France. These events helped launch the Hundred Years' War (1337–1453) between England and France. Though England ultimately failed to win that prolonged conflict, English and British monarchs until 1801 continued to maintain, at least formally, a claim to the French throne.[3]

Hundred Years' War edit

The Hundred Years' War could be considered a lengthy war of succession between the houses of Valois and Plantagenet. The early reign of Philip VI was a promising one for France. The new king fought the Flemings on behalf of his vassal, the count of Flanders, and restored that count to power. Edward III's aggression against Scotland, a French ally, prompted Philip VI to confiscate Guyenne. In the past the English kings would have to submit to the King of France. But Edward, having descended from the French kings, claimed the throne for himself. France was then at the height of its power. No one believed that the English king could make good his claim to France.

Edward's initial strategy was to ally with Flanders and the princes of the Empire. The alliances were costly and not very productive. While on a truce the French and English kings intervened in the War of the Breton Succession. In 1346, Edward invaded France and pillaged the countryside rather than attempt to hold territory. French forces led by Philip VI confronted Edward III at the Battle of Crécy, which resulted in a devastating and humiliating defeat for the French. Despite this, the most that Edward could make out of his victory was the capture of Calais.

John II succeeded his father Philip VI in 1350. He was menaced by Charles II of Navarre, of the Évreux branch of the Capetian family, who aspired to the French throne by the right of his mother, the senior descendant of Philip IV of France. Charles' character eventually alienated both the French and English monarchs, because he readily switched sides whenever it suited his interest. In 1356, Edward, the Black Prince, eldest son and heir of Edward III, led an army to a chevauchée in France. John pursued the Black Prince, who tried to avoid battling the French king's superior force. Negotiations broke down. In the Battle of Poitiers, the French suffered another humiliating defeat, and their king was captured. Edward hoped to capitalize on the victory by invading France and having himself crowned at Reims. But the new leader, the Dauphin Charles, avoided another pitched battle, and the city of Reims withstood siege. In the Treaty of Brétigny, the English king gained an enlarged Aquitaine in full sovereignty, gave up the duchy of Touraine, the counties of Anjou and Maine, the suzerainty of Brittany and of Flanders, and his claim to the French throne.

Charles V became king in 1364. He supported Henry of Trastámara in the Castilian Civil War, while the Black Prince supported the reigning king, Peter of Castile. The Black Prince won, but Peter refused to pay for his expenses. The Black Prince tried to recover his losses by raising taxes in Aquitaine, which prompted them to appeal to the King of France. War was renewed. The French recovered their territories place after place. When Charles died in 1380, only Calais, Bordeaux and Bayonne were left to the English.

The ancient, great families of the feudal nobility had largely been replaced by an equally powerful class – the princes of the royal blood. With the confiscation of Guyenne, the only remaining non-Capetian peer was the Count of Flanders. The Montfort dukes of Brittany, the houses of Évreux and Bourbon, and the princes of the House of Valois, constituted the great nobility of the kingdom.

Succeeding to the throne at the age of 11, the reign of Charles VI of France was the first minority since that of Saint Louis' in 1226. Power devolved into the hands of his uncles, the dukes of Anjou, Berry and Burgundy. The dukes squandered the resources of the monarchy to pursue their own ends. Anjou pursued his claim in the Kingdom of Naples; Berry governed his large estates in Languedoc; and Burgundy, having married the heiress of Flanders, found it more convenient to rule his vast dominions from Paris. Charles terminated his uncles' regency at the age of 21, even though he would have been entitled to it as early as the age of 14. His early reign was promising, but the onset of madness, which he may have inherited from the Bourbon dukes through his mother, would prove to be disastrous for France. Burgundy, the most powerful of the princes and peers, naturally took power in his hands. But his nephew, Louis I, Duke of Orléans, the king's brother, contested his authority. Rivalry between the two princes and their descendants led to the Armagnac–Burgundian Civil War.

In 1415 Henry V of England, great-grandson of Edward III, invaded France. In the Battle of Agincourt, the Armagnac faction fought the English and were decimated. The dukes of Orléans and Bourbon were captured, and the Burgundian party gained ascendancy in Paris. Henry proceeded to conquer Normandy. The Armagnacs assassinated John the Fearless, duke of Burgundy, a belated revenge for the assassination of Louis I, Duke of Orléans. The new duke, Philip the Good, allied himself with the English. In the Treaty of Troyes, Henry V of England became regent of France and heir to that throne; he also married Catherine of Valois, the French king's daughter. The Dauphin Charles was effectively disinherited. To assume a greater appearance of legality, it was ratified by the Estates General later that year.

To accept the Treaty of Troyes would be a denial of the legitimacy of the Valois. While England was accustomed to change her kings, the French largely adhered to theirs. The treaty was recognized only in English-controlled territories in northern France, and by the allied dukes of Burgundy and Brittany. Henry V died before his sickly father-in-law, Charles VI, leaving the future of the Lancastrian Kingdom of France in the hands of his infant son Henry VI of England, and his brother, John, Duke of Bedford.

The able leadership of Bedford prevented Charles VII from retaking control of northern France. In 1429, Joan of Arc successfully raised the siege of Orléans and had the king crowned at Reims, an important French propaganda victory. Power struggles between Bedford, his brother Humphrey, Duke of Gloucester, and their uncle Cardinal Beaufort hampered the English war effort. The Duke of Burgundy, alienated by the blunders of Gloucester, reconciled with the King of France in the Treaty of Arras, 1435. Bedford had died that same year.

The warring parties arranged long truces, during which the French king prepared for the renewal of war, while the English relaxed and took a break from fresh taxes. By 1450, the French had reconquered Normandy, and Guyenne the next year. A final English attempt to recover their losses ended in decisive defeat at the Battle of Castillon, 1453. With this victory, the English had been expelled in all of France except Calais. The Valois succession was upheld and confirmed.

Centralization of power edit

With the expulsion of the English, Charles VII had reestablished his kingdom as the foremost power of Western Europe. He created France's first standing army since Roman times, and limited papal power in the Gallican Church by the Pragmatic Sanction of Bourges. But his later years were marred by quarrels with his eldest son and heir, the Dauphin Louis, who refused to obey him. The dauphin was banished from court for his intrigues, and did not return to France until his father's death.

Louis XI succeeded his father in 1461. At the beginning of his reign Louis reversed his father's policies, abolishing the Pragmatic Sanction to please the pope and the standing armies, which he distrusted, in favor of Swiss mercenaries. As a prince he had leagued with the nobility against his father, but as a king he found that his power could only be maintained by subduing them. He was the lifelong enemy of Charles the Bold, Count of Charolais, and later Duke of Burgundy. In 1465, the League of the Public Weal, an alliance of the feudal princes, which consisted of Charles, Duke of Berry, the king's brother, the Count of Charolais, the Dukes of Brittany, Bourbon, Lorraine (then a member of the House of Anjou), and several others, attempted to restore their feudal prerogatives. Louis feared a further escalation of the conflict against this formidable coalition. To obtain peace he conceded all their demands, including the Duchy of Normandy to his brother, which carried with it one-third of the offices of state.

Louis seldom relied on the fortunes of war, but rather on intrigue and diplomacy. He maintained his power by paying pensions to well-placed people in the courts of his vassals and in neighboring states. He retook Normandy from his brother at the first opportunity. He bought off Edward IV of England to desist from attacking France. He fomented rebellions in the Burgundian dominions. At the death of Charles the Bold in 1477, he seized the duchy of Burgundy, which he claimed as a reverted fief, even though the original grant did not specify the exclusion of female heirs. But the marriage of Mary of Burgundy, heiress of Charles the Bold, to Maximilian of Austria would prove problematic for later generations. In 1481, the last male of the House of Anjou died, willing all the Angevin possessions to the king. At the end of his reign royal power had become absolute in France.

Italian Wars edit

Charles VIII succeeded his father in 1483, at the age of 13. During his minority the nobles again attempted to seize power, but they were defeated by Charles' sister Anne of France. Charles' marriage to Anne of Brittany prevented a future total Habsburg encirclement of France.

As the heir of the House of Anjou, Charles VIII decided to press his claim to the Kingdom of Naples. It was the beginning of the Italian Wars. In September 1494 Charles invaded Italy with 25,000 men, and attained his object by 22 February 1495, virtually unopposed. But the speed and power of the French advance frightened the powers of Italy. The League of Venice, which consisted of the Republics of Venice and Florence, the Duchies of Milan and Mantua, the Kings of Spain and Naples, the Emperor and the Pope, united against the French. Charles, who did not wish to be trapped in Naples, had to fight against them in the Battle of Fornovo. Charles succeeded in returning to France, but all his conquests and booty were lost. The debts he incurred for the campaign prevented him from resuming the war, and he died in an accident in 1498. With his death the senior line of the House of Valois became extinct. He was succeeded by his cousin, the Duke of Orleans, who became Louis XII of France.

Louis XII married his predecessor's widow, Anne of Brittany, in order to retain that province for France. The new king also continued his predecessor's policy in Italy. The Dukes of Orleans were descended from Valentina Visconti, and through her claimed the Duchy of Milan. From 1499 to 1512, excepting a brief period in 1500, Louis XII was Duke of Milan. French military activity continued in Italy, with various leagues formed to counter the dominant power. Louis died without a son, and was succeeded by his cousin and son-in-law, Francis of Angoulême, who became Francis I of France in 1515.

Francis I belonged to a cadet branch of the House of Orleans. In the Battle of Marignano, Francis defeated the Swiss, who had ousted his predecessor from Milan, and took control of the duchy. In the Imperial Election of 1519, the Kings of Spain, France, and England fought for the imperial title. The King of Spain was a grandson of the deceased emperor, but the electors thought him to be a foreigner as much as the French king. The kings resorted to bribes, and the Spanish king became Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor.

The election of the Spanish king to the imperial throne made him the first monarch in Europe, both in title and in reality. Annoyed, the French king demanded that the emperor pay homage for Flanders and Artois; the emperor responded by reasserting his claim to the duchy of Burgundy. The rivalry of the French royal house with the Habsburgs dominated the rest of the sixteenth century. The emperor took Milan from the French in 1521. The King of England and the pope supported the emperor. France was surrounded by enemies on all sides. Domestic troubles led to the defection of Charles III, Duke of Bourbon and Constable of France, to the emperor. In 1525, at the Battle of Pavia, the French were defeated and the king himself was captured. Francis obtained his release through the Treaty of Madrid, in which he renounced claims in Naples and Milan, surrendered Burgundy to Spain, abandoned sovereignty over Flanders and Artois, and gave up two of his sons as hostages. Francis repudiated the treaty. Having often found himself alone in his struggle against the emperor, Francis formed the Franco-Ottoman alliance with the sultan, to the scandal of Christian Europe. Francis supported the conversion of the German princes to Protestantism, as it increased his potential allies against the emperor. In his own dominions, the Protestants were suppressed.

Henry II succeeded to the throne in 1547. He continued his father's policies, as did his successors. He persecuted Protestants in his kingdom, while Protestants abroad were his allies. Henry captured the three bishoprics of Metz, Toul, and Verdun. French offensives failed in Italy. In 1556, Charles V abdicated, splitting the Habsburg dominions between his son, Philip II of Spain, who gained Spain and the Low Countries, and his brother Ferdinand I, who became emperor. The French retook Calais after England allied with Spain. The Peace of Cateau-Cambrésis (1559) ended the Italian Wars. The French lost all their Italian territories except Saluzzo, and were confirmed in the possession of Calais and the three bishoprics. It was a diplomatic victory for Philip II, who gave up nothing which belonged to himself. The Spanish king retained Franche-Comté and was confirmed in his possession of Milan, Naples, Sicily, Sardinia, and the State of Presidi, making him the most powerful ruler in Italy.

French Wars of Religion edit

The last phase of Valois rule in France was marked by the French Wars of Religion. Henry II died in a jousting accident in 1559. His eldest son and heir, Francis II, succeeded him. The new king was already King of Scotland by right of his wife, Mary, Queen of Scots. The queen's maternal relatives, the House of Guise, gained an ascendancy over the young king.

The House of Guise was a cadet branch of the ducal House of Lorraine. They claimed descent from Charlemagne and had designs on the French throne. They considered the House of Bourbon, princes of the blood, as their natural enemies. The leading Bourbons, the brothers Antoine, King of Navarre, and Louis, Prince of Condé, were Protestants. The House of Guise identified themselves as champions of the Catholic cause. They were on the point of executing Condé when the young king died.

With the succession of her minor son Charles IX in 1560, Catherine de' Medici maneuvered for a balance of power. She released Condé, hoping to use the Bourbons as a counterweight against the Guises. Antoine of Navarre converted to Catholicism and became Lieutenant-General of the Kingdom. The Massacre of Vassy sparked the "first" religious war between the Catholics and the Huguenots. Navarre and Guise died in this war. Anne de Montmorency, Constable of France, was the notable casualty of the second war. Condé died in the third war. The Huguenots were unable to win a substantive victory, but were able to keep an army in the field.

Henry, King of Navarre, married Margaret of France, sister of Charles IX, in 1572. The marriage, which had been expected to reconcile the Protestants and Catholics, proved to be a disappointment. The St. Bartholomew's Day massacre ensued; the Huguenots who flocked in Paris for the wedding were massacred en masse. Navarre and Condé were spared, forced to convert, and detained. The guilt of having permitted the massacre would haunt Charles for the rest of his life. In 1573, the king's brother, Henry, Duke of Anjou, was elected King of Poland.

In 1574, only three months after Henry's coronation as King of Poland, he succeeded to the French throne as Henry III. The next year the king's only remaining brother, the Duke of Alençon, fled the court and joined with Condé and Navarre. This combined threat forced the new king to grant the demands of the rebels. Alençon was made Duke of Anjou. The concessions to the Huguenots disquieted the Catholics, who formed the Catholic League. The League was led by the princes of the House of Lorraine – the dukes of Guise, Mayenne, Aumale, Elboeuf, Mercœur and Lorraine, supported by Spain. The Huguenots held the southwest and were allied to England and the princes of Germany. The death of the king's brother, in 1584, meant that the Huguenot King of Navarre had become heir presumptive to the throne of France. Pressured by the Catholic League, the king issued the Treaty of Nemours, which outlawed Protestantism and made Protestants incapable of holding royal office.

In the resulting War of the Three Henrys, the royalists led by the king, the Huguenots led by Henry of Navarre, and the Catholic League led by Henry of Guise, fought a three-way contest for the control of France. After the humiliation of the Day of the Barricades, Henry III fled from Paris. Guise had entered Paris against his express prohibition; he resolved to assassinate the audacious duke. The assassination of Guise drew the odium of the Catholic League. Henry III sought the alliance of Navarre. The two kings were on the point of taking Paris with their great army, when the French king fell by the hands of an assassin. With his death the male line of the House of Valois had been completely extinguished, after reigning for 261 years in France.

Succession edit

The royal Bourbons originated in 1272, when the youngest son of King Louis IX married the heiress of the lordship of Bourbon.[4] The house continued for three centuries as a cadet branch, serving as nobles under the Direct Capetian and Valois kings.

In 1589, at the death of Henry III of France, the House of Valois became extinct in the male line. Under the Salic law, the Head of the House of Bourbon, as the senior representative of the senior-surviving branch of the Capetian dynasty, became King of France as Henry IV.[4]

List of Valois kings of France edit

Valois (direct) edit

Valois-Orléans edit

  • Louis XII, the Father of the People 1498–1515, great-grandson of Charles V of France

Valois-Angoulême edit

The application of the Salic Law meant that with the extinction of the Valois in the male line, the Bourbons succeeded to the throne as descendants of Louis IX.

Valois king of Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth edit

Other significant titles held by the House of Valois edit

Count of Valois edit

House of Valois

Latin Emperor of Constantinople edit

House of Valois

House of Valois–Courtenay

Counts and Dukes of Alençon edit

House of Valois

  • Charles I, count (1291–1325) (see Charles of Valois, above)

House of Valois-Alençon

Counts and Dukes of Anjou edit

House of Valois-Anjou

  • Louis I, duke (1360–1383) (also king of Jerusalem and Naples as Louis I), second son of John II of France
  • Louis II (1377–1417), son of (also king of Naples as Louis II)
  • Louis III (1403–1434), son of (also king of Naples as Louis III)
  • René I (1409–1480), brother of (also king of Jerusalem and Naples as René I)
  • Charles IV (1436–1481), nephew of (also king of Jerusalem and Naples as Charles IV)

Dukes of Burgundy edit

House of Valois-Burgundy

Dukes of Brabant edit

House of Valois-Burgundy-Brabant

Counts of Nevers edit

House of Valois-Burgundy-Nevers

Dukes of Orléans edit

House of Valois

House of Valois-Orléans

Duke of Brittany edit

House of Valois–Orléans

House of Valois-Orléans-Angoulême

Counts of Angoulême edit

House of Valois-Orléans-Angoulême

Illegitimate branches edit

Forms of address edit

Forms of address for Valois kings and princes included "Most Christian Majesty", "Dauphin", "your Grace", "Your Majesty", "Most regal Majesty".

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Valois meaning, literally, "of the valley" or "from the valley".

References edit

  1. ^ Wells, John C. (2008). Longman Pronunciation Dictionary (3rd ed.). Longman. ISBN 978-1-4058-8118-0.; Jones, Daniel (2011). Roach, Peter; Setter, Jane; Esling, John (eds.). Cambridge English Pronouncing Dictionary (18th ed.). Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-15255-6.
  2. ^ Empress Matilda had claimed the English throne in the early 12th century. However, Stephen of Blois contested her claim, occasioning a lengthy civil war, and Matilda was not usually regarded[by whom?] as a legitimate monarch of England.
  3. ^ Weir, Alison (1989). "The House of Hanover". Britain's Royal Families: The Complete Genealogy. Random House (published 2011). p. 286. ISBN 9781446449110. On 1 January 1801, [King George III] relinquished for ever the title 'King of France', held by English kings since Edward III laid claim to the French crown in 1340.
  4. ^ a b Anselme, Père. ‘'Histoire de la Maison Royale de France'’, tome 4. Editions du Palais-Royal, 1967, Paris. pp. 144–146, 151–153, 175, 178, 180, 185, 187–189, 191, 295–298, 318–319, 322–329. (French).
House of Valois
Cadet branch of the Capetian dynasty
Preceded by Ruling House of France
1328–1589
Succeeded by
Preceded by Ruling House of the Duchy of Burgundy
1363–1482
Succeeded by

house, valois, capetian, house, valois, ɑː, also, ɑː, ɑː, ɑː, french, valwa, cadet, branch, capetian, dynasty, they, succeeded, house, capet, direct, capetians, french, throne, were, royal, house, france, from, 1328, 1589, junior, members, family, founded, cad. The Capetian house of Valois a UK ˈ v ae l w ɑː VAL wah also US v ae l ˈ w ɑː v ɑː l ˈ w ɑː va h l WAH 1 French valwa was a cadet branch of the Capetian dynasty They succeeded the House of Capet or Direct Capetians to the French throne and were the royal house of France from 1328 to 1589 Junior members of the family founded cadet branches in Orleans Anjou Burgundy and Alencon House of ValoisArms of the King of France since 1376Parent houseCapetian dynastyCountryKingdom of France 1328 1589 Duchy of Burgundy 1361 1482 Kingdom of Naples 1389 1399 1435 1442 1501 1504 Duchy of Milan 1499 1512 1515 1521 Duchy of Brittany 1514 1547 Principality of Neuchatel 1543 1707 through illegitimate branch Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth 1573 1575 Founded1284FounderCharles Count of ValoisFinal rulerHenry III of France in France Marie de Nemours in NeuchatelDissolution1589 royal line and 1707 Neuchatel line Cadet branchesValois Orleans Valois Angouleme Valois Saint Remy illegitimate Valois Dunois illegitimate Valois Anjou Valois Burgundy Valois AlenconThe Valois descended from Charles Count of Valois 1270 1325 the second surviving son of King Philip III of France reigned 1270 1285 Their title to the throne was based on a precedent in 1316 later retroactively attributed to the Merovingian Salic law which excluded females Joan II of Navarre as well as male descendants through the distaff side Edward III of England from the succession to the French throne After holding the throne for several centuries the Valois male line became extinct and the House of Bourbon succeeded the Valois to the throne as the senior surviving branch of the Capetian dynasty Contents 1 Unexpected inheritance 2 Hundred Years War 3 Centralization of power 4 Italian Wars 5 French Wars of Religion 6 Succession 7 List of Valois kings of France 7 1 Valois direct 7 2 Valois Orleans 7 3 Valois Angouleme 8 Valois king of Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth 9 Other significant titles held by the House of Valois 9 1 Count of Valois 9 2 Latin Emperor of Constantinople 9 3 Counts and Dukes of Alencon 9 4 Counts and Dukes of Anjou 9 5 Dukes of Burgundy 9 5 1 Dukes of Brabant 9 5 2 Counts of Nevers 9 6 Dukes of Orleans 9 7 Duke of Brittany 9 7 1 Counts of Angouleme 10 Illegitimate branches 11 Forms of address 12 See also 13 Notes 14 ReferencesUnexpected inheritance editThe Capetian dynasty seemed secure in the rule of the Kingdom of France both during and after the reign of King Philip IV Philip the Fair r 1285 1313 Philip left three surviving sons Louis Philip and Charles and a daughter Isabella Each son became king in turn but each died young without surviving male heirs leaving only daughters who could not inherit the throne When Charles IV died in 1328 the French succession became more problematic In 1328 three candidates had a plausible claim to the French throne Philip Count of Valois son of Charles of Valois who was the closest heir in male line and a grandson of Philip III r 1270 1285 Because his father was the brother of the late Philip IV the Count of Valois was therefore a nephew of Philip IV and the cousin of Louis X Philip V and Charles IV Further Charles IV had chosen him as the regent before his death Joan of Navarre daughter of Louis X Although Philip V had used his position relative to his niece to take the throne in 1316 Joan nevertheless had a strong claim as the heir general of Philip IV and her maternal family had initially supported her claim after the death of Louis X She ultimately received the Kingdom of Navarre which could be passed to female heirs Edward III of England son of Isabella of France the daughter and only surviving child of Philip IV Edward claimed the French throne as a grandson of Philip IV In England Isabella of France claimed the throne on behalf of her 15 year old son In contrast to France it was unclear whether a woman could inherit the English crown 2 but English precedent allowed succession through the female line as exemplified by Henry II of England son of Matilda The French rejected Isabella s claim arguing that since she herself as a woman could not succeed then she could not transmit any such right to her son Thus the French magnates chose as their new monarch Philip of Valois who became King Philip VI of France The throne of Navarre went its separate way to Joan of France daughter of Louis X who became Joan II of Navarre Because diplomacy and negotiation had failed Edward III would have to back his claims with force to obtain the French throne For a few years England and France maintained an uneasy peace Eventually an escalation of conflict between the two kings led to King Philip VI confiscating the Duchy of Aquitaine 1337 Instead of paying homage for Aquitaine to the French king as his ancestors had done Edward claimed that he himself was the rightful King of France These events helped launch the Hundred Years War 1337 1453 between England and France Though England ultimately failed to win that prolonged conflict English and British monarchs until 1801 continued to maintain at least formally a claim to the French throne 3 Hundred Years War editThe Hundred Years War could be considered a lengthy war of succession between the houses of Valois and Plantagenet The early reign of Philip VI was a promising one for France The new king fought the Flemings on behalf of his vassal the count of Flanders and restored that count to power Edward III s aggression against Scotland a French ally prompted Philip VI to confiscate Guyenne In the past the English kings would have to submit to the King of France But Edward having descended from the French kings claimed the throne for himself France was then at the height of its power No one believed that the English king could make good his claim to France Edward s initial strategy was to ally with Flanders and the princes of the Empire The alliances were costly and not very productive While on a truce the French and English kings intervened in the War of the Breton Succession In 1346 Edward invaded France and pillaged the countryside rather than attempt to hold territory French forces led by Philip VI confronted Edward III at the Battle of Crecy which resulted in a devastating and humiliating defeat for the French Despite this the most that Edward could make out of his victory was the capture of Calais John II succeeded his father Philip VI in 1350 He was menaced by Charles II of Navarre of the Evreux branch of the Capetian family who aspired to the French throne by the right of his mother the senior descendant of Philip IV of France Charles character eventually alienated both the French and English monarchs because he readily switched sides whenever it suited his interest In 1356 Edward the Black Prince eldest son and heir of Edward III led an army to a chevauchee in France John pursued the Black Prince who tried to avoid battling the French king s superior force Negotiations broke down In the Battle of Poitiers the French suffered another humiliating defeat and their king was captured Edward hoped to capitalize on the victory by invading France and having himself crowned at Reims But the new leader the Dauphin Charles avoided another pitched battle and the city of Reims withstood siege In the Treaty of Bretigny the English king gained an enlarged Aquitaine in full sovereignty gave up the duchy of Touraine the counties of Anjou and Maine the suzerainty of Brittany and of Flanders and his claim to the French throne Charles V became king in 1364 He supported Henry of Trastamara in the Castilian Civil War while the Black Prince supported the reigning king Peter of Castile The Black Prince won but Peter refused to pay for his expenses The Black Prince tried to recover his losses by raising taxes in Aquitaine which prompted them to appeal to the King of France War was renewed The French recovered their territories place after place When Charles died in 1380 only Calais Bordeaux and Bayonne were left to the English The ancient great families of the feudal nobility had largely been replaced by an equally powerful class the princes of the royal blood With the confiscation of Guyenne the only remaining non Capetian peer was the Count of Flanders The Montfort dukes of Brittany the houses of Evreux and Bourbon and the princes of the House of Valois constituted the great nobility of the kingdom Succeeding to the throne at the age of 11 the reign of Charles VI of France was the first minority since that of Saint Louis in 1226 Power devolved into the hands of his uncles the dukes of Anjou Berry and Burgundy The dukes squandered the resources of the monarchy to pursue their own ends Anjou pursued his claim in the Kingdom of Naples Berry governed his large estates in Languedoc and Burgundy having married the heiress of Flanders found it more convenient to rule his vast dominions from Paris Charles terminated his uncles regency at the age of 21 even though he would have been entitled to it as early as the age of 14 His early reign was promising but the onset of madness which he may have inherited from the Bourbon dukes through his mother would prove to be disastrous for France Burgundy the most powerful of the princes and peers naturally took power in his hands But his nephew Louis I Duke of Orleans the king s brother contested his authority Rivalry between the two princes and their descendants led to the Armagnac Burgundian Civil War In 1415 Henry V of England great grandson of Edward III invaded France In the Battle of Agincourt the Armagnac faction fought the English and were decimated The dukes of Orleans and Bourbon were captured and the Burgundian party gained ascendancy in Paris Henry proceeded to conquer Normandy The Armagnacs assassinated John the Fearless duke of Burgundy a belated revenge for the assassination of Louis I Duke of Orleans The new duke Philip the Good allied himself with the English In the Treaty of Troyes Henry V of England became regent of France and heir to that throne he also married Catherine of Valois the French king s daughter The Dauphin Charles was effectively disinherited To assume a greater appearance of legality it was ratified by the Estates General later that year To accept the Treaty of Troyes would be a denial of the legitimacy of the Valois While England was accustomed to change her kings the French largely adhered to theirs The treaty was recognized only in English controlled territories in northern France and by the allied dukes of Burgundy and Brittany Henry V died before his sickly father in law Charles VI leaving the future of the Lancastrian Kingdom of France in the hands of his infant son Henry VI of England and his brother John Duke of Bedford The able leadership of Bedford prevented Charles VII from retaking control of northern France In 1429 Joan of Arc successfully raised the siege of Orleans and had the king crowned at Reims an important French propaganda victory Power struggles between Bedford his brother Humphrey Duke of Gloucester and their uncle Cardinal Beaufort hampered the English war effort The Duke of Burgundy alienated by the blunders of Gloucester reconciled with the King of France in the Treaty of Arras 1435 Bedford had died that same year The warring parties arranged long truces during which the French king prepared for the renewal of war while the English relaxed and took a break from fresh taxes By 1450 the French had reconquered Normandy and Guyenne the next year A final English attempt to recover their losses ended in decisive defeat at the Battle of Castillon 1453 With this victory the English had been expelled in all of France except Calais The Valois succession was upheld and confirmed vteRoyal families involved in the Hundred Years War 1337 1453 Valois Capet Evreux Capet PlantagenetBloisCapetCharlesCount of ValoisLouisCount of EvreuxEdward I Longshanks King of Englandr 1272 1307Joan IQueen of Navarrer 1274 1305Philip IV the Fair King of Francer 1285 1314 Philip IKing of Navarrer 1284 1305Edward IIKing of Englandr 1307 1327Isabella She Wolf of France Louis XKing of Francer 1314 1316 Louis IKing of Navarrer 1305 1316Philip V the Tall King of FrancePhilip IIKing of Navarrer 1316 1322Charles IV the Fair King of FranceCharles I the Bald King of Navarrer 1322 1328Philip VI the Fortunate of Valois King of Francer 1328 1350Joan of ValoisPhilip III the Noble the Wise King of Navarre jure uxorisr 1328 1343Joan IIQueen of Navarrer 1328 1349John I the Posthumous King of FranceKing of Navarrer 1316Joan of BurgundyJohn II the Good King of Francer 1350 1364Philippa of HainaultEdward IIIKing of Englandr 1327 1377Joan of the TowerDavid IIKing of Scotlandr 1329 1371Charles II the Bad King of Navarrer 1349 1387Philip of BurgundyCount of AuvergneCharles V the Wise King of Francer 1364 1380Philip the BoldDuke of BurgundyEdward of Woodstock The Black Prince John of GauntEdmund of LangleyDuke of YorkLuxembourgCharles VI the Beloved the Mad King of Francer 1380 1422Louis IDuke of OrleansCharles IVHoly Roman Emperorr 1355 1378Henry IVKing of Englandr 1399 1413Charles VII the Victorious King of Francer 1422 1461Isabella of ValoisRichard IIKing of Englandr 1377 1399Anne of BohemiaCatherine of ValoisHenry VKing of Englandr 1413 1422Thomas of LancasterDuke of Clarence Battle of BaugeHenry VIKing of Englandr 1422 1461 r 1470 1471Centralization of power editWith the expulsion of the English Charles VII had reestablished his kingdom as the foremost power of Western Europe He created France s first standing army since Roman times and limited papal power in the Gallican Church by the Pragmatic Sanction of Bourges But his later years were marred by quarrels with his eldest son and heir the Dauphin Louis who refused to obey him The dauphin was banished from court for his intrigues and did not return to France until his father s death Louis XI succeeded his father in 1461 At the beginning of his reign Louis reversed his father s policies abolishing the Pragmatic Sanction to please the pope and the standing armies which he distrusted in favor of Swiss mercenaries As a prince he had leagued with the nobility against his father but as a king he found that his power could only be maintained by subduing them He was the lifelong enemy of Charles the Bold Count of Charolais and later Duke of Burgundy In 1465 the League of the Public Weal an alliance of the feudal princes which consisted of Charles Duke of Berry the king s brother the Count of Charolais the Dukes of Brittany Bourbon Lorraine then a member of the House of Anjou and several others attempted to restore their feudal prerogatives Louis feared a further escalation of the conflict against this formidable coalition To obtain peace he conceded all their demands including the Duchy of Normandy to his brother which carried with it one third of the offices of state Louis seldom relied on the fortunes of war but rather on intrigue and diplomacy He maintained his power by paying pensions to well placed people in the courts of his vassals and in neighboring states He retook Normandy from his brother at the first opportunity He bought off Edward IV of England to desist from attacking France He fomented rebellions in the Burgundian dominions At the death of Charles the Bold in 1477 he seized the duchy of Burgundy which he claimed as a reverted fief even though the original grant did not specify the exclusion of female heirs But the marriage of Mary of Burgundy heiress of Charles the Bold to Maximilian of Austria would prove problematic for later generations In 1481 the last male of the House of Anjou died willing all the Angevin possessions to the king At the end of his reign royal power had become absolute in France Italian Wars editCharles VIII succeeded his father in 1483 at the age of 13 During his minority the nobles again attempted to seize power but they were defeated by Charles sister Anne of France Charles marriage to Anne of Brittany prevented a future total Habsburg encirclement of France As the heir of the House of Anjou Charles VIII decided to press his claim to the Kingdom of Naples It was the beginning of the Italian Wars In September 1494 Charles invaded Italy with 25 000 men and attained his object by 22 February 1495 virtually unopposed But the speed and power of the French advance frightened the powers of Italy The League of Venice which consisted of the Republics of Venice and Florence the Duchies of Milan and Mantua the Kings of Spain and Naples the Emperor and the Pope united against the French Charles who did not wish to be trapped in Naples had to fight against them in the Battle of Fornovo Charles succeeded in returning to France but all his conquests and booty were lost The debts he incurred for the campaign prevented him from resuming the war and he died in an accident in 1498 With his death the senior line of the House of Valois became extinct He was succeeded by his cousin the Duke of Orleans who became Louis XII of France Louis XII married his predecessor s widow Anne of Brittany in order to retain that province for France The new king also continued his predecessor s policy in Italy The Dukes of Orleans were descended from Valentina Visconti and through her claimed the Duchy of Milan From 1499 to 1512 excepting a brief period in 1500 Louis XII was Duke of Milan French military activity continued in Italy with various leagues formed to counter the dominant power Louis died without a son and was succeeded by his cousin and son in law Francis of Angouleme who became Francis I of France in 1515 Francis I belonged to a cadet branch of the House of Orleans In the Battle of Marignano Francis defeated the Swiss who had ousted his predecessor from Milan and took control of the duchy In the Imperial Election of 1519 the Kings of Spain France and England fought for the imperial title The King of Spain was a grandson of the deceased emperor but the electors thought him to be a foreigner as much as the French king The kings resorted to bribes and the Spanish king became Charles V Holy Roman Emperor The election of the Spanish king to the imperial throne made him the first monarch in Europe both in title and in reality Annoyed the French king demanded that the emperor pay homage for Flanders and Artois the emperor responded by reasserting his claim to the duchy of Burgundy The rivalry of the French royal house with the Habsburgs dominated the rest of the sixteenth century The emperor took Milan from the French in 1521 The King of England and the pope supported the emperor France was surrounded by enemies on all sides Domestic troubles led to the defection of Charles III Duke of Bourbon and Constable of France to the emperor In 1525 at the Battle of Pavia the French were defeated and the king himself was captured Francis obtained his release through the Treaty of Madrid in which he renounced claims in Naples and Milan surrendered Burgundy to Spain abandoned sovereignty over Flanders and Artois and gave up two of his sons as hostages Francis repudiated the treaty Having often found himself alone in his struggle against the emperor Francis formed the Franco Ottoman alliance with the sultan to the scandal of Christian Europe Francis supported the conversion of the German princes to Protestantism as it increased his potential allies against the emperor In his own dominions the Protestants were suppressed Henry II succeeded to the throne in 1547 He continued his father s policies as did his successors He persecuted Protestants in his kingdom while Protestants abroad were his allies Henry captured the three bishoprics of Metz Toul and Verdun French offensives failed in Italy In 1556 Charles V abdicated splitting the Habsburg dominions between his son Philip II of Spain who gained Spain and the Low Countries and his brother Ferdinand I who became emperor The French retook Calais after England allied with Spain The Peace of Cateau Cambresis 1559 ended the Italian Wars The French lost all their Italian territories except Saluzzo and were confirmed in the possession of Calais and the three bishoprics It was a diplomatic victory for Philip II who gave up nothing which belonged to himself The Spanish king retained Franche Comte and was confirmed in his possession of Milan Naples Sicily Sardinia and the State of Presidi making him the most powerful ruler in Italy French Wars of Religion editThe last phase of Valois rule in France was marked by the French Wars of Religion Henry II died in a jousting accident in 1559 His eldest son and heir Francis II succeeded him The new king was already King of Scotland by right of his wife Mary Queen of Scots The queen s maternal relatives the House of Guise gained an ascendancy over the young king The House of Guise was a cadet branch of the ducal House of Lorraine They claimed descent from Charlemagne and had designs on the French throne They considered the House of Bourbon princes of the blood as their natural enemies The leading Bourbons the brothers Antoine King of Navarre and Louis Prince of Conde were Protestants The House of Guise identified themselves as champions of the Catholic cause They were on the point of executing Conde when the young king died With the succession of her minor son Charles IX in 1560 Catherine de Medici maneuvered for a balance of power She released Conde hoping to use the Bourbons as a counterweight against the Guises Antoine of Navarre converted to Catholicism and became Lieutenant General of the Kingdom The Massacre of Vassy sparked the first religious war between the Catholics and the Huguenots Navarre and Guise died in this war Anne de Montmorency Constable of France was the notable casualty of the second war Conde died in the third war The Huguenots were unable to win a substantive victory but were able to keep an army in the field Henry King of Navarre married Margaret of France sister of Charles IX in 1572 The marriage which had been expected to reconcile the Protestants and Catholics proved to be a disappointment The St Bartholomew s Day massacre ensued the Huguenots who flocked in Paris for the wedding were massacred en masse Navarre and Conde were spared forced to convert and detained The guilt of having permitted the massacre would haunt Charles for the rest of his life In 1573 the king s brother Henry Duke of Anjou was elected King of Poland In 1574 only three months after Henry s coronation as King of Poland he succeeded to the French throne as Henry III The next year the king s only remaining brother the Duke of Alencon fled the court and joined with Conde and Navarre This combined threat forced the new king to grant the demands of the rebels Alencon was made Duke of Anjou The concessions to the Huguenots disquieted the Catholics who formed the Catholic League The League was led by the princes of the House of Lorraine the dukes of Guise Mayenne Aumale Elboeuf Mercœur and Lorraine supported by Spain The Huguenots held the southwest and were allied to England and the princes of Germany The death of the king s brother in 1584 meant that the Huguenot King of Navarre had become heir presumptive to the throne of France Pressured by the Catholic League the king issued the Treaty of Nemours which outlawed Protestantism and made Protestants incapable of holding royal office In the resulting War of the Three Henrys the royalists led by the king the Huguenots led by Henry of Navarre and the Catholic League led by Henry of Guise fought a three way contest for the control of France After the humiliation of the Day of the Barricades Henry III fled from Paris Guise had entered Paris against his express prohibition he resolved to assassinate the audacious duke The assassination of Guise drew the odium of the Catholic League Henry III sought the alliance of Navarre The two kings were on the point of taking Paris with their great army when the French king fell by the hands of an assassin With his death the male line of the House of Valois had been completely extinguished after reigning for 261 years in France Succession editThe royal Bourbons originated in 1272 when the youngest son of King Louis IX married the heiress of the lordship of Bourbon 4 The house continued for three centuries as a cadet branch serving as nobles under the Direct Capetian and Valois kings In 1589 at the death of Henry III of France the House of Valois became extinct in the male line Under the Salic law the Head of the House of Bourbon as the senior representative of the senior surviving branch of the Capetian dynasty became King of France as Henry IV 4 List of Valois kings of France editValois direct edit Philip VI the Fortunate 1328 1350 son of Charles of Valois John II the Good 1350 1364 Charles V the Wise 1364 1380 Charles VI the Well Beloved later known as the Mad 1380 1422 Charles VII the Victorious or the Well Served 1422 1461 Louis XI the Prudent 1461 1483 Charles VIII the Affable 1483 1498Valois Orleans edit Louis XII the Father of the People 1498 1515 great grandson of Charles V of FranceValois Angouleme edit Francis I 1515 1547 great great grandson of Charles V of France Henry II 1547 1559 Francis II 1559 1560 Charles IX 1560 1574 Henry III 1574 1589The application of the Salic Law meant that with the extinction of the Valois in the male line the Bourbons succeeded to the throne as descendants of Louis IX Valois king of Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth editHenry III of France 1573 1574Other significant titles held by the House of Valois editCount of Valois edit House of Valois Charles count 1284 1325 Latin Emperor of Constantinople edit House of Valois Charles titular emperor suo uxoris 1301 1307 see Charles of Valois above House of Valois Courtenay Catherine II Latin Empress titular empress 1307 1346 daughter of Charles of ValoisCounts and Dukes of Alencon edit House of Valois Charles I count 1291 1325 see Charles of Valois above House of Valois Alencon Charles II count 1325 1346 second son of Charles of Valois Charles III count 1346 1361 Peter II count 1361 1391 John I count 1391 1414 John I duke 1414 1415 John II duke 1415 1424 and 1449 1474 Rene I duke 1478 1492 Charles IV duke 1492 1525 Counts and Dukes of Anjou edit House of Valois Anjou Louis I duke 1360 1383 also king of Jerusalem and Naples as Louis I second son of John II of France Louis II 1377 1417 son of also king of Naples as Louis II Louis III 1403 1434 son of also king of Naples as Louis III Rene I 1409 1480 brother of also king of Jerusalem and Naples as Rene I Charles IV 1436 1481 nephew of also king of Jerusalem and Naples as Charles IV Dukes of Burgundy edit House of Valois Burgundy Philip II the Bold 1363 1404 fourth son of John II of France John I the Fearless 1404 1419 Philip III the Good 1419 1467 Charles I the Bold 1467 1477 Mary I the Rich 1477 1482 Dukes of Brabant edit House of Valois Burgundy Brabant Anthony I 1406 1415 second son of Philip the Bold of Burgundy John IV 1415 1427 Philip I 1427 1430 Counts of Nevers edit House of Valois Burgundy Nevers Philip II 1404 1415 third son of Philip the Bold of Burgundy Charles I 1415 1464 John II 1464 1491 Dukes of Orleans edit House of Valois Philip Duke of Orleans 1344 1375 House of Valois Orleans Louis I Duke of Orleans 1392 1407 younger son of Charles V of France Charles Duke of Orleans 1407 1465 Louis II Duke of Orleans 1465 1515 later also King of France as Louis XIIDuke of Brittany edit House of Valois Orleans Claude duchess 1514 1524 daughter of Louis XII of France and Anne of BrittanyHouse of Valois Orleans Angouleme Francis III Duke of Brittany duke 1524 1536 son of Claude of Brittany Henry duke 1536 1547 brother of Francis III later also King of France as Henry IICounts of Angouleme edit House of Valois Orleans Angouleme John Count of Angouleme 1399 1467 a younger son of Louis I Duke of Orleans Charles Count of Angouleme 1459 1496 Francis Count of Angouleme 1494 1547 later also King of France as Francis IIllegitimate branches editHouse of Valois Dunois counts of Longueville see Jean de Dunois descended from a son of Louis I Duke of Orleans House of Valois Saint Remy counts of Saint Remy see Jeanne of Valois Saint Remy descended from a son of Henry II of FranceForms of address editForms of address for Valois kings and princes included Most Christian Majesty Dauphin your Grace Your Majesty Most regal Majesty See also edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to House of Valois Ancien Regime France in the Middle Ages Early modern France French monarchs family tree Valois TapestriesNotes edit Valois meaning literally of the valley or from the valley References edit Wells John C 2008 Longman Pronunciation Dictionary 3rd ed Longman ISBN 978 1 4058 8118 0 Jones Daniel 2011 Roach Peter Setter Jane Esling John eds Cambridge English Pronouncing Dictionary 18th ed Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 15255 6 Empress Matilda had claimed the English throne in the early 12th century However Stephen of Blois contested her claim occasioning a lengthy civil war and Matilda was not usually regarded by whom as a legitimate monarch of England Weir Alison 1989 The House of Hanover Britain s Royal Families The Complete Genealogy Random House published 2011 p 286 ISBN 9781446449110 On 1 January 1801 King George III relinquished for ever the title King of France held by English kings since Edward III laid claim to the French crown in 1340 a b Anselme Pere Histoire de la Maison Royale de France tome 4 Editions du Palais Royal 1967 Paris pp 144 146 151 153 175 178 180 185 187 189 191 295 298 318 319 322 329 French Royal House House of ValoisCadet branch of the Capetian dynastyPreceded byHouse of Capet Ruling House of France1328 1589 Succeeded byHouse of BourbonPreceded byCapetian House of Burgundy Ruling House of the Duchy of Burgundy1363 1482 Succeeded byHouse of Habsburg Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title House of Valois amp oldid 1196873293, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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