- Clementia of Hungary
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Clementia of Hungary Statue of Clémence d'Anjou Queen consort of France and Navarre
Countess consort of ChampagneTenure 1315–1316 Coronation 24 August 1315 Spouse Louis X of France Issue John I of France House House of Anjou
House of CapetFather Charles Martel of Anjou Mother Clementia of Habsburg Born 1293 Died 12 October 1328 (aged 34–35) Clementia of Hungary (also known as Clémence d'Anjou; French: Clémence de Hongrie) (1293–12 October 1328), Queen consort of France and Navarre, was the second wife of King Louis X of France.
Biography
Clémence of Hungary was the daughter of Charles Martel of Anjou, titular King of Hungary, and Clementia of Habsburg, the daughter of Holy Roman Emperor Rudolf I. Both of Clémence's parents died during her early childhood, and Mary of Hungary, Clementia's grandmother, raised her. The family claimed Hungary through Mary of Hungary, and so although Clémence was born and grew up in Naples, she used the title Clémence of Hungary.
Clémence is best known for the remarkable, rare inventory that was made of her belongings. The ninety-nine-page document in French describes her works of art and material culture in great detail. We learn about her many crown jewels, her reliquaries, the textiles that decorated her domestic space and her chapel, the silver sculptures she owned, and even her clothing. The almost forty manuscripts she held allow us to see what the queen read. The inventory is also valuable because we learn where she acquired many of her objects and who received them after her death. We can see the movement of her works of art to members of all classes.[1][2]
When Philip IV of France died, his eldest son Louis I of Navarre, became King of France. Louis' wife, Margaret, had been locked up in Château Gaillard since 1314 after being found guilty of adultery by King Philip, on the testimony of, amongst others, his daughter Isabelle. Since there had been no formal annulment, Margaret technically became queen consort on Philip's death, though she was kept locked up. In 1315, the queen died - allegedly strangled or otherwise murdered to allow her husband to remarry. Louis chose Clémence, and they married on 19 August 1315; she was crowned queen at Reims on 24 August.
Louis died in June 1316, leaving Clémence several months pregnant. Her brother-in-law, Philip, became regent, denying the rights of Clémence's stepdaughter Joan, who was too young and whose paternity was doubtful; and of Clémence herself, who was considered unsuitable to be regent. She gave birth to a son named John in November 1316. King from the moment of his birth, he lived only four days, whereupon the throne was seized by his uncle, who became Philip V. Clémence and Philip fought and he refused to pay her the income Louis had promised her. She wrote repeatedly to Pope John XXII and her family for help.
Clémence then left the French court for Aix-en-Provence, where she stayed until 1321, when she returned to Paris. She actively participated in royal life in Paris, and owned thirteen estates around Paris and in Normandy. In 1326, she commissioned a tomb effigy for her great-grandfather, Charles I, who was the brother of Louis IX. She owned the Peterborough Psalter and she probably sent the Reliquary Shrine of Elizabeth of Hungary, now at The Cloisters, to her sister-in-law in Buda. Through her patronage and gift giving she sought to enhance the reputation of her Angevin family and her husband, Louis X in Paris.
Upon her death 12 October 1328, at age thirty-five, her objects were auctioned, a rarely documented medieval sale. She was buried on 15 October in the Jacobin convent.
Ancestors
Ancestors of Clementia of HungaryReferences
- ^ L. Douët-d’Arcq, ed. “Inventaire et vente après décès des biens de la reine Clémence de Hongrie, veuve de Louis le Hutin, 1328” in Nouveau recueil de comptes de l’argenterie des rois de France (Paris, Librairie Renouard, 1874): 37-112.
- ^ Mariah Proctor-Tiffany. "Portrait of a Medieval Patron: The Inventory and Gift Giving of Clémence of Hungary." Ph.D. Dissertation, Brown University, 2007.
Weir, Alison, Isabella
French royalty Preceded by
Margaret of BurgundyQueen consort of Navarre
Countess consort of Champagne
1315–1316Succeeded by
Joan II,
Countess of BurgundyQueen consort of France
1315–1316Queens and Empresses of France Adelaide of Aquitaine (987–996) · Rozala of Italy (996) · Bertha of Burgundy (996–1000) · Constance of Arles (1003–1031) · Matilda of Frisia (1034–1044) · Anne of Kiev (1051–1060) · Bertha of Holland (1071–1092) · Bertrade de Montfort (1092–1108) · Adelaide of Maurienne (1115–1137) · Eleanor of Aquitaine (1137–1152) · Constance of Castile (1154–1160) · Adèle of Champagne (1164–1180) · Isabelle of Hainaut (1180–1190) · Ingeborg of Denmark (1193–1193; 1200-1223) · Agnes of Merania (1196–1200) · Blanche of Castile (1223–1226) · Margaret of Provence (1234–1270) · Isabella of Aragon (1270–1271) · Maria of Brabant (1274–1285) · Joan I of Navarre (1285–1305) · Margaret of Burgundy (1314–1315) · Clementia of Hungary (1315–1316) · Joan II of Burgundy (1316–1322) · Blanche of Burgundy (1322) · Marie of Luxembourg (1322–1324) · Jeanne d'Évreux (1325–1328) · Joan the Lame (1328–1348) · Blanche of Navarre (1350) · Joan I of Auvergne (1350–1360) · Jeanne de Bourbon (1364–1378) · Isabeau of Bavaria (1385–1422) · Marie of Anjou (1422–1461) · Charlotte of Savoy (1461–1483) · Anne of Brittany (1491–1498; 1498–1514) · Joan of France (1498) · Mary of England (1514-1515) · Claude of France (1515–1524) · Eleanor of Austria (1530–1547) · Catherine de' Medici (1547–1559) · Mary, Queen of Scots (1559–1560) · Archduchess Elisabeth of Austria (1570–1574) · Louise of Lorraine (1575–1589) · Margaret of Valois (1589–1599) · Marie de' Medici (1600–1610) · Archduchess Anne of Austria (1615–1643) · Archduchess Maria Theresa of Austria (1660–1683) · Marie Leszczyńska (1725–1768) · Archduchess Maria Antonia of Austria (1774–1792) · Princess Marie Joséphine of Savoy* (1795–1810) · Joséphine de Beauharnais (1804–1810) · Archduchess Marie Louise of Austria (1810–1814) · Princess Marie Thérèse of France* (1830) · Princess Maria Amalia of Naples and Sicily (1830–1848) · Eugénie de Montijo (1853–1870)*disputedCategories:- 1293 births
- 1328 deaths
- French queens consort
- Navarrese royal consorts
- Countesses of Champagne
- Women of medieval France
- French book and manuscript collectors
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