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Jacqueline, Countess of Hainaut

Jacqueline (Dutch: Jacoba; French: Jacqueline; German: Jakobäa; 15 July 1401 – 8 October 1436), of the House of Wittelsbach, was a noblewoman who ruled the counties of Holland, Zeeland and Hainaut in the Low Countries from 1417 to 1433. She was also Dauphine of France for a short time between 1415 and 1417 and Duchess of Gloucester in the 1420s, if her marriage to Humphrey, Duke of Gloucester, is accepted as valid.

Jacqueline
Portrait of Jacqueline by Jan van Eyck
Countess of Hainaut, Holland and Zeeland
Reign30 May 1417 – 12 April 1433
PredecessorWilliam IV and VI
SuccessorPhilip the Good
Born15 July 1401
Le Quesnoy, Nord, France
Died8 October 1436(1436-10-08) (aged 35)
Voorhout, Teylingen, the Netherlands
Burial
Spouse
(m. 1415; died 1417)
(m. 1418; annulled 1422)
[1]
(m. 1423; annulled 1428)
[1]
(m. 1434)
HouseWittelsbach
FatherWilliam II, Duke of Bavaria
MotherMargaret of Burgundy
ReligionRoman Catholicism

Jacqueline was born in Le Quesnoy and from her birth she was referred to as "of Holland", indicating that she was the heiress of her father's estates.

Jacqueline was the last Wittelsbach ruler of Hainaut and Holland. Following her death, her estates passed into the inheritance of Philip the Good, Duke of Burgundy.

Life Edit

Early life and marriage to John, Duke of Touraine Edit

She was the only daughter of William II, Duke of Bavaria (also known as William VI, Count of Holland) from his marriage with Margaret, a daughter of Philip the Bold, Duke of Burgundy and Margaret III, Countess of Flanders.

At the age of 22 months (in Paris on 5 May 1403) and again at the age of four (in Compiègne on 29 June 1406), Jacqueline was betrothed to John, Duke of Touraine, fourth son of King Charles VI of France and Queen Isabeau of Bavaria. Both children were brought up in the Castle of Le Quesnoy in Hainaut. The boy had been given into tutelage of his future father-in-law, since he was expected to succeed as ruler in Hainaut and not in any way in France itself.[2] On 22 April 1411 the Pope gave his dispensation for the union and on 6 August 1415, when Jacqueline was fourteen, she and John married in The Hague.[3] With this marriage, Duke William II wanted to secure the succession of his daughter to his domains; although he had at least nine illegitimate children, Jacqueline was his only legitimate offspring and as a female, her rights would be contested by her paternal uncle Bishop John of Liège and her cousin Philip the Good,[4] Duke of Burgundy since 1419.

Four months after the wedding, on 15 December 1415, John's elder brother Louis, Dauphin of France, died; and thus John became the heir to the throne, with Jacqueline as the Dauphine and future Queen consort. Duke William II, who had raised John since childhood, as the father-in-law of the future King obtained a considerable influence at the French court; however, despite this he was less successful in his efforts with the German King Sigismund of Luxembourg to recognize Jacqueline as his rightful heir in the Counties of Holland, Zeeland and Hainaut.[4] In March 1416, Count William raised the matter with Sigismund while the latter was the guest of the English king, Henry V of England, but was rejected; he angrily returned home.

Dauphin John died (probably poisoned) on 4 April 1417, leaving Jacqueline as a widow aged 16. Two months later on 31 May, she unexpectedly lost her father. Duke William II was bitten by a dog, which caused a blood infection that quickly killed him. The politically inexperienced Jacqueline now had to fight for her inheritance.

Marriage to John IV, Duke of Brabant and war with John III Edit

In Hainaut, where female succession was long customary, Jacqueline was recognized as countess on 13 June, but in Holland and Zeeland her rights were controversial from the beginning. While the old aristocracy supported her, the municipal party supported her uncle John III, the youngest brother of her father and since 1389 the elected Bishop of Liège, although he was never fully ordained. Even before William II's death, he had expected to become his successor, and therefore he gave up his diocese. On the advice of her mother, Jacqueline initially gave her uncle the title of Guardian and Defender of the County of Hainaut (Hüters und Verteidigers des Landes Hennegau) in order to forestall his ambitions.[5] However, the German King Sigismund, who had already been against Jacqueline's rights since 1416, formally enfeoffed John III with the counties of his deceased brother and married him to his niece Elisabeth of Görlitz, Duchess of Luxembourg and widow of Anthony, Duke of Brabant, who died in the Battle of Agincourt in 1415.

Jacqueline also remarried, but her selection of husband was unfortunate. John IV, Duke of Brabant, stepson of Elisabeth of Görlitz, who succeeded his father Anthony as Duke of Brabant, was chosen to be her second husband; modern historians believed that this decision was widely influenced by Jacqueline's mother and uncle John the Fearless, Duke of Burgundy.[6] On 31 July 1417, two months after William II's death, the betrothal between Jacqueline and John IV took place, and the wedding was celebrated in The Hague on 10 March 1418. However, the union proved to be a failure. The close relationship between the spouses required a papal dispensation, which, although granted in December 1417, was revoked in January 1418 in the Council of Constance due to the intrigues of Jacqueline's opponents, including King Sigismund of Luxembourg.[7] In addition to this, the considerable financial problems of the young Duke John IV and his weak political leadership increased the conflicts inside the marriage.

 
Jacqueline of Bavaria and Margaret of Burgundy before the walls of Gorinchem, 1417

John III, with the support of King Sigismund and the Cods, took up arms against Jacqueline, who was supported by the Hooks; this civil war was known as the Hook and Cod wars. The troops of uncle and niece met in the Battle of Gorkum in 1417; Jacqueline was victorious, but was forced to leave the major trading city of Dordrecht. In addition, her marital status was again questioned thanks to her uncle, who claimed that without papal dispensation the union was annulled;[8] this caused even more misgivings for Jacqueline about how to maintain her marriage. Even worse, on 29 May 1418 and against the express wishes of King Sigismund, John IV pledged the district of Mons; because of this Jacqueline in 1419 signed the Compensation of Workum (Ausgleich von Workum) with her cousin Philip the Good, future Duke of Burgundy, under which for a monetary compensation she ceded to him the districts of Dordrecht, Gorkum and Rotterdam.[9]

John III agreed to recognize the legitimacy of the marriage between Jacqueline and John IV of Brabant if only to receive a high financial compensation from the government for the next five years of the regions dominated by the spouses. However, the intervention of Pope Martin V finally ended the controversy with granting the papal dispensation on May 1419.[10] John IV, always heavily indebted and against the will of his wife signed with John III the Treaty of St. Martinsdyk, under which he gave to Jacqueline's uncle full custody over Holland and Zeeland for the next 12 years.[11][12] In exchange, John III gave a monetary compensation to the couple and left them the County of Hainaut; however, this was a little consolation for Jacqueline, whose subjects of Holland, Zeeland and Friesland were released from their oath of allegiance under the terms of the treaty. Finally, John IV also pledged Hainaut to improve his financial situation; for Jacqueline, this was enough: she and her allies began to want the formal separation from John IV.

Marriage to Humphrey, Duke of Gloucester and aftermath Edit

In the meanwhile, the political situation had changed radically. The Duke of Burgundy, John the Fearless, was assassinated in September 1419, and the French Dauphin Charles, brother of Jacqueline's first husband, was considered an accomplice and was therefore disinherited in 1420 under the Treaty of Troyes. King Henry V of England then claimed to be the King of France. In February 1421 Jacqueline issued a statement where she stated that, because of the destructive behaviour of John IV of Brabant, she wanted the annulment of her marriage. The fight against John III, continued until the capture of the city of Leiden, the last city loyal to Jacqueline; after this, she had to admit defeat.

On 6 March 1421 Jacqueline fled to England asking the help of Henry V, who gave her a glamorous reception.[13] She was an honoured guest at the court of England, and when the future Henry VI was born, Jacqueline was made one of his godparents.[14] It was only after the unexpected death of Henry V in 1422 that Jacqueline obtained a dubious divorce from John IV of Brabant valid only in England that allowed her third marriage with Humphrey, Duke of Gloucester, Henry V's brother and principal counsellor of the Kingdom on behalf of his infant nephew Henry VI.[15] However, as not all rules were observed, the marriage was arranged in haste and in secret in the town of Hadleigh, Essex, sometime between February and 7 March 1423.

The news of this marriage shocked everyone. On 15 October 1423 it was announced that not only was Jacqueline married to one of the most powerful princes of Europe, but that she was also rumoured to be pregnant with his child. On 20 October, she was granted a letter of denization, which would allow her and her descendants to be treated as English under law, and it recorded her status as duchess of Gloucester. [16][17].To secure her position, Jacqueline had to obtain the formal annulment of her marriage with John IV of Brabant. She asked Pope Martin V in Rome and Antipope Benedict XIII in Avignon to resolve her irregular marital status, but her uncle John III intervened against it. Unexpectedly, her cousin Philip the Good, who wanted to prevent an English invasion, supported the annulment.

In the autumn of 1424 Jacqueline joined Humphrey in the Duchy of Gloucester, where she had a miscarriage; this was her only recorded pregnancy.[18]

Jacqueline and Humphrey landed in Calais and by the end of November they entered Mons, where on 5 December the Duke of Gloucester was recognized as the sovereign Count of Hainaut. Already on 3 January 1425 he signed with

"Humphrey, by the grace of God, son, brother and uncle of kings, Duke of Gloucester, Count of Hainaut, Holland, Zealand and Pembroke, Lord of Friesland and Grand Chamberlain of England".[19]

War in Holland Edit

Her situation changed when her uncle John III of Bavaria died on 6 January 1425, the victim of poisoning. John IV, Duke of Brabant, still claimed rights over Holland, Zeeland and Hainault and made Philip, Duke of Burgundy, regent of Holland and Zeeland, like he had done before with John III. Jacqueline escaped her imprisonment in Ghent disguised in men's clothing and fled to Schoonhoven and then Gouda, where she stayed with the leaders of the Hook faction. Now it was her former husband, John of Brabant, who tried to dispute her inheritance. In this matter, Humphrey did intervene, albeit with limited force; his efforts, however, had disastrous consequences for the English-Burgundian alliance that aided the English cause in France during the Hundred Years' War. Pope Martin V decreed that Jacqueline was still the wife of John IV, Duke of Brabant, and therefore her marriage to Humphrey of Gloucester was illegitimate.[20] However, John IV had died a year earlier.

Peace and loss of lands Edit

On 3 July 1428 Jacqueline had to agree to a peace treaty, Reconciliation of Delft (de Zoen van Delft), with the duke of Burgundy. By this treaty, Jacqueline kept her titles of Countess of Holland, Zeeland and Hainaut, but the administration of her territories was placed in the hands of Philip, who was also appointed as her heir in case she died without children. She was not allowed to marry without the permission of her mother, Philip and the three counties. (Her marriage to Humphrey was annulled in this same year.) However, her financial situation was dire. She barely had enough income to support her household. Furthermore, the duke of Burgundy did not stop after the peace treaty in 1428. He bought the loyalty of her allies or estranged them from her in another way.[21] At Easter 1433, Jacqueline "voluntarily" signed a treaty with Philip which gave Philip all her lands and titles. In return she was allowed the income of several estates, mostly situated in Zeeland.[22]

Marriage with Frank van Borssele and death Edit

 
Jacqueline, Countess of Holland and Zeeland, ca. 1435.

With the renunciation of her titles, Jacqueline retired to her land in Zeeland. There, she and Francis, Lord of Borssele ("Frank van Borssele"), a local and powerful nobleman, became close. In the spring of 1434 they married and Philip granted Frank the title of Count of Oostervant.[23] This marriage, contrary to the other three, was one out of love, at least for Jacqueline.[24] It did not last long. In 1436 she became ill and after a few months of illness she died of tuberculosis[25] in Teylingen Castle on 8 October 1436. Since she had no children, Philip of Burgundy inherited Hainaut and Holland. Her husband Frank survived her for thirty-four years.

Legends Edit

There are many legends surrounding the life of Jacqueline. The most prevalent one is her supposed secret marriage to Francis of Borssele in 1432, two years prior to their public and official wedding. This secret marriage was supposed to be the real reason why she had to give up her titles and give them to the duke of Burgundy as it would violate the regulations in the peace treaty of 1428. However, there is no evidence that such a secret marriage ever took place and contemporary sources only mention the rumours of an upcoming wedding between Jacqueline and Francis at the end of 1433, half a year after Jacqueline renounced her titles.[26]

Popular culture Edit

She is the central protagonist of the 1831 novel Jacqueline of Holland by the Irish writer Thomas Colley Grattan.

Ancestry Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ a b see text
  2. ^ Antheun Janse: Een pion voor een dame, pp. 54–56
  3. ^ A. Janse, pp. 81–84.
  4. ^ a b Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Holland, County and Province of" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 13 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 606–611.
  5. ^ Léopold Devillers: Cartulaire des Comtes de Hainaut de l’avènement de Guillaume II à la mort de Jacqueline de Bavière, vol. IV, Hayez, Brüssels 1889, Nº. 1157, p. 91.
  6. ^ A. Janse, p. 121.
  7. ^ Devillers, Nº. 1173, p. 109, Nº. 1174, p. 111.
  8. ^ Devillers, Nº. 1199, p. 158.
  9. ^ Devillers, Nº. 1228, p. 187.
  10. ^ Devillers, Nº. 1235, p. 199.
  11. ^ A. Janse, p. 179.
  12. ^ Devillers, Nº. 1251, p. 200; Frans van Mieris: Groot charterboek der graaven van Holland, van Zeeland en heeren van Vriesland. vol. IV, van der Eyk, Leyden 1756, p. 545.
  13. ^ A. Janse, pp. 192–195.
  14. ^ A. Janse, p. 200.
  15. ^ Alfred H.Burne, "The Hundred Years War," (1st ed., 1955; Folio soc., 2005), 371
  16. ^ England's Immigrants 1330-1550, Jacqueline of (...) (23345) [retrieved 22 July 2022]
  17. ^ England's Immigrants 1330-1550, Letters of Denization and Other Sources [retrieved 22 July 2022]
  18. ^ Alison Weir: Britain's Royal Families: The Complete Genealogy, p. 128. [retrieved 19 June 2015].
  19. ^ Devillers, Nº. 1427, p. 438.
  20. ^ A. Janse, pp. 279–280.
  21. ^ A. Janse, pp. 312–316.
  22. ^ For a complete list see: A. Janse, p. 316.
  23. ^ A. Janse, p. 326.
  24. ^ A. Janse, p. 326, Graven van Holland, p. 143.
  25. ^ A. Janse, pp. 329–331.
  26. ^ Graven van Holland, pp. 141–143; for a full argumentation against this legend see: A. Janse, pp. 288–326.

References Edit

  • Antheun JANSE, Een pion voor een dame. Jacoba van Beieren (1401–1436), Amsterdam, Uitgeverij Balans, 2009, 400 p. (ISBN 978-94-6003-185-4).
  • Edmundson, George (1911). "Jacoba" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 15 (11th ed.). p. 115.
  • D.E.H. de Boer, E.H.P. Cordfunke. "Jacoba van Beieren (1417–1428) en Jan 'Zonder Genade' van Beieren (1418–1425)", In: Graven van Holland, Middeleeuwse Vorsten in Woord en Beeld (880–1580), 2010, pp. 135–145
  • Ruth Putnam. A Mediaeval Princess: Being a True Record of the Changing Fortunes Which Brought Divers Titles to Jacqueline, Countess of Holland, Together with an Account of her Conflict with Philip, Duke of Burgundy (G. P. Putnam's, 1904)
Jacqueline, Countess of Hainaut
Born: 1401 Died: 1436
Regnal titles
Preceded by Countess of Holland and Zeeland
1417–1420
Succeeded by
Countess of Hainaut
1417–1432
Succeeded by
Preceded by Countess of Holland and Zeeland
1425-1432

jacqueline, countess, hainaut, jacqueline, dutch, jacoba, french, jacqueline, german, jakobäa, july, 1401, october, 1436, house, wittelsbach, noblewoman, ruled, counties, holland, zeeland, hainaut, countries, from, 1417, 1433, also, dauphine, france, short, ti. Jacqueline Dutch Jacoba French Jacqueline German Jakobaa 15 July 1401 8 October 1436 of the House of Wittelsbach was a noblewoman who ruled the counties of Holland Zeeland and Hainaut in the Low Countries from 1417 to 1433 She was also Dauphine of France for a short time between 1415 and 1417 and Duchess of Gloucester in the 1420s if her marriage to Humphrey Duke of Gloucester is accepted as valid JacquelinePortrait of Jacqueline by Jan van EyckCountess of Hainaut Holland and ZeelandReign30 May 1417 12 April 1433PredecessorWilliam IV and VISuccessorPhilip the GoodBorn15 July 1401Le Quesnoy Nord FranceDied8 October 1436 1436 10 08 aged 35 Voorhout Teylingen the NetherlandsBurialBinnenhof The HagueSpouseJohn Dauphin of France m 1415 died 1417 wbr John IV Duke of Brabant m 1418 annulled 1422 wbr 1 Humphrey Duke of Gloucester m 1423 annulled 1428 wbr 1 Frank van Borssele m 1434 wbr HouseWittelsbachFatherWilliam II Duke of BavariaMotherMargaret of BurgundyReligionRoman CatholicismJacqueline was born in Le Quesnoy and from her birth she was referred to as of Holland indicating that she was the heiress of her father s estates Jacqueline was the last Wittelsbach ruler of Hainaut and Holland Following her death her estates passed into the inheritance of Philip the Good Duke of Burgundy Contents 1 Life 1 1 Early life and marriage to John Duke of Touraine 1 2 Marriage to John IV Duke of Brabant and war with John III 1 3 Marriage to Humphrey Duke of Gloucester and aftermath 1 4 War in Holland 1 5 Peace and loss of lands 1 6 Marriage with Frank van Borssele and death 2 Legends 3 Popular culture 4 Ancestry 5 Notes 6 ReferencesLife EditEarly life and marriage to John Duke of Touraine Edit She was the only daughter of William II Duke of Bavaria also known as William VI Count of Holland from his marriage with Margaret a daughter of Philip the Bold Duke of Burgundy and Margaret III Countess of Flanders At the age of 22 months in Paris on 5 May 1403 and again at the age of four in Compiegne on 29 June 1406 Jacqueline was betrothed to John Duke of Touraine fourth son of King Charles VI of France and Queen Isabeau of Bavaria Both children were brought up in the Castle of Le Quesnoy in Hainaut The boy had been given into tutelage of his future father in law since he was expected to succeed as ruler in Hainaut and not in any way in France itself 2 On 22 April 1411 the Pope gave his dispensation for the union and on 6 August 1415 when Jacqueline was fourteen she and John married in The Hague 3 With this marriage Duke William II wanted to secure the succession of his daughter to his domains although he had at least nine illegitimate children Jacqueline was his only legitimate offspring and as a female her rights would be contested by her paternal uncle Bishop John of Liege and her cousin Philip the Good 4 Duke of Burgundy since 1419 Four months after the wedding on 15 December 1415 John s elder brother Louis Dauphin of France died and thus John became the heir to the throne with Jacqueline as the Dauphine and future Queen consort Duke William II who had raised John since childhood as the father in law of the future King obtained a considerable influence at the French court however despite this he was less successful in his efforts with the German King Sigismund of Luxembourg to recognize Jacqueline as his rightful heir in the Counties of Holland Zeeland and Hainaut 4 In March 1416 Count William raised the matter with Sigismund while the latter was the guest of the English king Henry V of England but was rejected he angrily returned home Dauphin John died probably poisoned on 4 April 1417 leaving Jacqueline as a widow aged 16 Two months later on 31 May she unexpectedly lost her father Duke William II was bitten by a dog which caused a blood infection that quickly killed him The politically inexperienced Jacqueline now had to fight for her inheritance Marriage to John IV Duke of Brabant and war with John III Edit In Hainaut where female succession was long customary Jacqueline was recognized as countess on 13 June but in Holland and Zeeland her rights were controversial from the beginning While the old aristocracy supported her the municipal party supported her uncle John III the youngest brother of her father and since 1389 the elected Bishop of Liege although he was never fully ordained Even before William II s death he had expected to become his successor and therefore he gave up his diocese On the advice of her mother Jacqueline initially gave her uncle the title of Guardian and Defender of the County of Hainaut Huters und Verteidigers des Landes Hennegau in order to forestall his ambitions 5 However the German King Sigismund who had already been against Jacqueline s rights since 1416 formally enfeoffed John III with the counties of his deceased brother and married him to his niece Elisabeth of Gorlitz Duchess of Luxembourg and widow of Anthony Duke of Brabant who died in the Battle of Agincourt in 1415 Jacqueline also remarried but her selection of husband was unfortunate John IV Duke of Brabant stepson of Elisabeth of Gorlitz who succeeded his father Anthony as Duke of Brabant was chosen to be her second husband modern historians believed that this decision was widely influenced by Jacqueline s mother and uncle John the Fearless Duke of Burgundy 6 On 31 July 1417 two months after William II s death the betrothal between Jacqueline and John IV took place and the wedding was celebrated in The Hague on 10 March 1418 However the union proved to be a failure The close relationship between the spouses required a papal dispensation which although granted in December 1417 was revoked in January 1418 in the Council of Constance due to the intrigues of Jacqueline s opponents including King Sigismund of Luxembourg 7 In addition to this the considerable financial problems of the young Duke John IV and his weak political leadership increased the conflicts inside the marriage nbsp Jacqueline of Bavaria and Margaret of Burgundy before the walls of Gorinchem 1417John III with the support of King Sigismund and the Cods took up arms against Jacqueline who was supported by the Hooks this civil war was known as the Hook and Cod wars The troops of uncle and niece met in the Battle of Gorkum in 1417 Jacqueline was victorious but was forced to leave the major trading city of Dordrecht In addition her marital status was again questioned thanks to her uncle who claimed that without papal dispensation the union was annulled 8 this caused even more misgivings for Jacqueline about how to maintain her marriage Even worse on 29 May 1418 and against the express wishes of King Sigismund John IV pledged the district of Mons because of this Jacqueline in 1419 signed the Compensation of Workum Ausgleich von Workum with her cousin Philip the Good future Duke of Burgundy under which for a monetary compensation she ceded to him the districts of Dordrecht Gorkum and Rotterdam 9 John III agreed to recognize the legitimacy of the marriage between Jacqueline and John IV of Brabant if only to receive a high financial compensation from the government for the next five years of the regions dominated by the spouses However the intervention of Pope Martin V finally ended the controversy with granting the papal dispensation on May 1419 10 John IV always heavily indebted and against the will of his wife signed with John III the Treaty of St Martinsdyk under which he gave to Jacqueline s uncle full custody over Holland and Zeeland for the next 12 years 11 12 In exchange John III gave a monetary compensation to the couple and left them the County of Hainaut however this was a little consolation for Jacqueline whose subjects of Holland Zeeland and Friesland were released from their oath of allegiance under the terms of the treaty Finally John IV also pledged Hainaut to improve his financial situation for Jacqueline this was enough she and her allies began to want the formal separation from John IV Marriage to Humphrey Duke of Gloucester and aftermath Edit In the meanwhile the political situation had changed radically The Duke of Burgundy John the Fearless was assassinated in September 1419 and the French Dauphin Charles brother of Jacqueline s first husband was considered an accomplice and was therefore disinherited in 1420 under the Treaty of Troyes King Henry V of England then claimed to be the King of France In February 1421 Jacqueline issued a statement where she stated that because of the destructive behaviour of John IV of Brabant she wanted the annulment of her marriage The fight against John III continued until the capture of the city of Leiden the last city loyal to Jacqueline after this she had to admit defeat On 6 March 1421 Jacqueline fled to England asking the help of Henry V who gave her a glamorous reception 13 She was an honoured guest at the court of England and when the future Henry VI was born Jacqueline was made one of his godparents 14 It was only after the unexpected death of Henry V in 1422 that Jacqueline obtained a dubious divorce from John IV of Brabant valid only in England that allowed her third marriage with Humphrey Duke of Gloucester Henry V s brother and principal counsellor of the Kingdom on behalf of his infant nephew Henry VI 15 However as not all rules were observed the marriage was arranged in haste and in secret in the town of Hadleigh Essex sometime between February and 7 March 1423 The news of this marriage shocked everyone On 15 October 1423 it was announced that not only was Jacqueline married to one of the most powerful princes of Europe but that she was also rumoured to be pregnant with his child On 20 October she was granted a letter of denization which would allow her and her descendants to be treated as English under law and it recorded her status as duchess of Gloucester 16 17 To secure her position Jacqueline had to obtain the formal annulment of her marriage with John IV of Brabant She asked Pope Martin V in Rome and Antipope Benedict XIII in Avignon to resolve her irregular marital status but her uncle John III intervened against it Unexpectedly her cousin Philip the Good who wanted to prevent an English invasion supported the annulment In the autumn of 1424 Jacqueline joined Humphrey in the Duchy of Gloucester where she had a miscarriage this was her only recorded pregnancy 18 Jacqueline and Humphrey landed in Calais and by the end of November they entered Mons where on 5 December the Duke of Gloucester was recognized as the sovereign Count of Hainaut Already on 3 January 1425 he signed with Humphrey by the grace of God son brother and uncle of kings Duke of Gloucester Count of Hainaut Holland Zealand and Pembroke Lord of Friesland and Grand Chamberlain of England 19 dd War in Holland Edit Her situation changed when her uncle John III of Bavaria died on 6 January 1425 the victim of poisoning John IV Duke of Brabant still claimed rights over Holland Zeeland and Hainault and made Philip Duke of Burgundy regent of Holland and Zeeland like he had done before with John III Jacqueline escaped her imprisonment in Ghent disguised in men s clothing and fled to Schoonhoven and then Gouda where she stayed with the leaders of the Hook faction Now it was her former husband John of Brabant who tried to dispute her inheritance In this matter Humphrey did intervene albeit with limited force his efforts however had disastrous consequences for the English Burgundian alliance that aided the English cause in France during the Hundred Years War Pope Martin V decreed that Jacqueline was still the wife of John IV Duke of Brabant and therefore her marriage to Humphrey of Gloucester was illegitimate 20 However John IV had died a year earlier Peace and loss of lands Edit On 3 July 1428 Jacqueline had to agree to a peace treaty Reconciliation of Delft de Zoen van Delft with the duke of Burgundy By this treaty Jacqueline kept her titles of Countess of Holland Zeeland and Hainaut but the administration of her territories was placed in the hands of Philip who was also appointed as her heir in case she died without children She was not allowed to marry without the permission of her mother Philip and the three counties Her marriage to Humphrey was annulled in this same year However her financial situation was dire She barely had enough income to support her household Furthermore the duke of Burgundy did not stop after the peace treaty in 1428 He bought the loyalty of her allies or estranged them from her in another way 21 At Easter 1433 Jacqueline voluntarily signed a treaty with Philip which gave Philip all her lands and titles In return she was allowed the income of several estates mostly situated in Zeeland 22 Marriage with Frank van Borssele and death Edit nbsp Jacqueline Countess of Holland and Zeeland ca 1435 With the renunciation of her titles Jacqueline retired to her land in Zeeland There she and Francis Lord of Borssele Frank van Borssele a local and powerful nobleman became close In the spring of 1434 they married and Philip granted Frank the title of Count of Oostervant 23 This marriage contrary to the other three was one out of love at least for Jacqueline 24 It did not last long In 1436 she became ill and after a few months of illness she died of tuberculosis 25 in Teylingen Castle on 8 October 1436 Since she had no children Philip of Burgundy inherited Hainaut and Holland Her husband Frank survived her for thirty four years Legends EditThere are many legends surrounding the life of Jacqueline The most prevalent one is her supposed secret marriage to Francis of Borssele in 1432 two years prior to their public and official wedding This secret marriage was supposed to be the real reason why she had to give up her titles and give them to the duke of Burgundy as it would violate the regulations in the peace treaty of 1428 However there is no evidence that such a secret marriage ever took place and contemporary sources only mention the rumours of an upcoming wedding between Jacqueline and Francis at the end of 1433 half a year after Jacqueline renounced her titles 26 Popular culture EditShe is the central protagonist of the 1831 novel Jacqueline of Holland by the Irish writer Thomas Colley Grattan Ancestry EditAncestors of Jacqueline Countess of Hainaut16 Louis II Duke of Bavaria8 Louis IV Holy Roman Emperor17 Matilda of Habsburg4 Albert I Duke of Bavaria18 William I Count of Hainaut9 Margaret II Countess of Hainault19 Joan of Valois2 William II Duke of Bavaria20 Boleslaw III the Generous10 Ludwik I the Fair21 Margaret of Bohemia5 Margaret of Brieg22 Henry IV the Faithful11 Agnes of Glogow23 Matilda of Brandenburg1 Jacqueline Countess of Hainaut24 Philip VI of France12 John II of France25 Joan of Burgundy6 Philip the Bold26 John I of Bohemia13 Bonne of Bohemia27 Elisabeth of Bohemia3 Margaret of Burgundy28 Louis I of Flanders14 Louis II of Flanders29 Margaret I Countess of Burgundy7 Margaret III of Flanders30 John III Duke of Brabant15 Margaret of Brabant31 Marie d EvreuxNotes Edit a b see text Antheun Janse Een pion voor een dame pp 54 56 A Janse pp 81 84 a b Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Holland County and Province of Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 13 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 606 611 Leopold Devillers Cartulaire des Comtes de Hainaut de l avenement de Guillaume II a la mort de Jacqueline de Baviere vol IV Hayez Brussels 1889 Nº 1157 p 91 A Janse p 121 Devillers Nº 1173 p 109 Nº 1174 p 111 Devillers Nº 1199 p 158 Devillers Nº 1228 p 187 Devillers Nº 1235 p 199 A Janse p 179 Devillers Nº 1251 p 200 Frans van Mieris Groot charterboek der graaven van Holland van Zeeland en heeren van Vriesland vol IV van der Eyk Leyden 1756 p 545 A Janse pp 192 195 A Janse p 200 Alfred H Burne The Hundred Years War 1st ed 1955 Folio soc 2005 371 England s Immigrants 1330 1550 Jacqueline of 23345 retrieved 22 July 2022 England s Immigrants 1330 1550 Letters of Denization and Other Sources retrieved 22 July 2022 Alison Weir Britain s Royal Families The Complete Genealogy p 128 retrieved 19 June 2015 Devillers Nº 1427 p 438 A Janse pp 279 280 A Janse pp 312 316 For a complete list see A Janse p 316 A Janse p 326 A Janse p 326 Graven van Holland p 143 A Janse pp 329 331 Graven van Holland pp 141 143 for a full argumentation against this legend see A Janse pp 288 326 References EditAntheun JANSE Een pion voor een dame Jacoba van Beieren 1401 1436 Amsterdam Uitgeverij Balans 2009 400 p ISBN 978 94 6003 185 4 Edmundson George 1911 Jacoba Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 15 11th ed p 115 D E H de Boer E H P Cordfunke Jacoba van Beieren 1417 1428 en Jan Zonder Genade van Beieren 1418 1425 In Graven van Holland Middeleeuwse Vorsten in Woord en Beeld 880 1580 2010 pp 135 145 Ruth Putnam A Mediaeval Princess Being a True Record of the Changing Fortunes Which Brought Divers Titles to Jacqueline Countess of Holland Together with an Account of her Conflict with Philip Duke of Burgundy G P Putnam s 1904 Jacqueline Countess of HainautHouse of WittelsbachBorn 1401 Died 1436Regnal titlesPreceded byWilliam VI amp IV Countess of Holland and Zeeland1417 1420 Succeeded byJohn IIICountess of Hainaut1417 1432 Succeeded byPhilip IPreceded byJohn III Countess of Holland and Zeeland1425 1432 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jacqueline Countess of Hainaut amp oldid 1170607057, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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