See also

Family of Philip III + and Isabel + of ARAGON

Husband: Philip III + (1245-1285)
Wife: Isabel + of ARAGON (1247-1271)
Children: Louis (1265- )
Philip IV + (1268-1314)
Robert (1269-1271)
Charles I + (1270-1325)
Blanche of FRANCE (1278- )
Marriage 28 May 1262 Clermont-Ferrance, Puy-de-Dome, France

Husband: Philip III +

Name: Philip III +
Sex: Male
Nickname: The Bold
Father: Louis IX + (1215-1270)
Mother: Marguerite + of PROVENCE (1221-1295)
Birth 1 May 1245 Poissy, Ile de France, France
Occupation King of France
Title frm 25 Aug 1270 to 5 Oct 1285 (age 25-40) King of France
Title to 25 Aug 1270 (age 25) Count of Orleans
Death 5 Oct 1285 (age 40) Perpignan, Toulouse, France
Burial Saint Denis Basilica, Paris, France

Wife: Isabel + of ARAGON

Name: Isabel + of ARAGON
Sex: Female
Father: James I + (1207-1276)
Mother: Yolanda + of HUNGARY (1216-1253)
Birth 1247 Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain
Occupation Queen Consort of France
Death 28 Jan 1271 (age 23-24) Cosenza, Italy

Child 1: Louis

Name: Louis
Sex: Male
Birth 1265
Death "5/1276"
Cause: poisoned

Child 2: Philip IV +

picture

Spouse: Joan I + of NAVARRE

Name: Philip IV +
Sex: Male
Nickname: The Fair
Spouse: Joan I + of NAVARRE (1273-1305)
Birth 1268 Fontainbleau, Ile de France, France
Occupation King of France
Title frm 5 Oct 1285 to 29 Nov 1314 (age 16-46) King of France
Death 29 Nov 1314 (age 45-46) Fontainbleau, Ile de France, France

Child 3: Robert

Name: Robert
Sex: Male
Birth 1269
Death 1271 (age 1-2)

Child 4: Charles I +

picture

Charles I +

picture

Spouse: Catherine of COURTENAY

Name: Charles I +
Sex: Male
Spouse 1: Marguerite + (1273-1299)
Spouse 2: Mahaut of CHATILLON (1292-1358)
Spouse 3: Catherine of COURTENAY (1274-1307)
Birth 12 Mar 1270 Vincennes, Ile-de-France, France
Occupation Count of Valois
Title frm 1284 to 1325 (age 13-55) Count of Valois
Death 16 Dec 1325 (age 55) Nogent-le-Roi, Centre, France

Child 5: Blanche of FRANCE

Name: Blanche of FRANCE
Sex: Female
Birth 1278

Note on Husband: Philip III +

Philip III (30 April 1245 – 5 October 1285), called the Bold (French: le Hardi), was the King of France, succeeding his father, Louis IX, and reigning from 1270 to 1285. He was a member of the House of Capet.

 

Born in Poissy, to Louis IX (the later Saint Louis) and Margaret of Provence, Philip was prior to his accession Count of Orleans. He accompanied his father on the Eighth Crusade to Tunisia in 1270. His father died at Tunis and there Philip was declared king at the age of 25. Philip was indecisive, soft in nature, timid, and apparently crushed by the strong personalities of his parents and dominated by his father's policies. He was called "the Bold" on the basis of his abilities in combat and on horseback and not his character. He was pious, but not cultivated. He followed the dictates of others, first of Pierre de la Broce and then of his uncle Charles I of Sicily.

 

 

Coronation of Philip III.After his succession, he quickly set his uncle on negotiations with the emir to conclude the crusade, while he himself returned to France. A ten-year truce was concluded and Philip was crowned in France on 12 August 1271. On 21 August, his uncle, Alfonso, Count of Poitou, Toulouse, and Auvergne, died returning from the crusade in Italy. Philip inherited his counties and united them to the royal demesne. The portion of the Auvergne which he inherited became the "Terre royale d'Auvergne", later the Duchy of Auvergne. In accordance with Alfonso's wishes, the Comtat Venaissin was granted to the Pope Gregory X in 1274. Several years of negotiations yielded the Treaty of Amiens with Edward I of England in 1279. Thereby Philip restored to the English the Agenais which had fallen to him with the death of Alfonso. In 1284, Philip also inherited the counties of Perche and Alençon from his brother Pierre.

 

Philip all the while supported his uncle's policy in Italy. When, after the Sicilian Vespers of 1282, Peter III of Aragon invaded and took the island of Sicily, pope Martin IV excommunicated the conqueror and declared his kingdom (put under the suzerainty of the pope by Peter II in 1205) forfeit. He granted Aragon to Charles, Count of Valois, Philip's son. Philip intervened in the Navarrese succession after the death of Henry I of Navarre and married his son, Philip the Fair, to the heiress of Navarre, Joan I.

 

In 1284, Philip and his sons entered Roussillon at the head of a large army. This war, called the Aragonese Crusade from its papal sanction, has been labelled "perhaps the most unjust, unnecessary and calamitous enterprise ever undertaken by the Capetian monarchy."[1] On 26 June 1285, Philip the Bold entrenched himself before Girona in an attempt to besiege it. The resistance was strong, but the city was taken on 7 September. Philip soon experienced a reversal, however, as the French camp was hit hard by an epidemic of dysentery. Philip himself was afflicted. The French retreated and were handily defeated at the Battle of the Col de Panissars. The king of France himself died at Perpignan, the capital of his ally James II of Majorca, and was buried in Narbonne. He currently lies buried with his wife Isabella of Aragon in Saint Denis Basilica in Paris.

 

French Monarchy

Direct Capetians

 

Philip III

Philip IV

Charles III, Count of Valois

Louis d'Evreux

Margaret, Queen of England

Blanche, Duchess of Austria

 

In the Divine Comedy, Dante sees Philip's spirit outside the gates of Purgatory with a number of other contemporary European rulers. Dante does not name Philip directly, but refers to him as "the small-nosed" and "the father of the Pest of France."

 

[edit] Marriage and children

Philip with MarieOn 28 May 1262, Philip married Isabella of Aragon, daughter of James I of Aragon and his second wife Yolande of Hungary, daughter of Andrew II of Hungary, and had the following children:

 

1.Louis (1265 – May 1276). He was poisoned, possibly by orders of his stepmother.

2.Philip IV (1268 – 29 November 1314), successor as king.

3.Robert (1269–1271).

4.Charles (12 March 1270 – 16 December 1325), Count of Valois.

5.Stillborn son (1271).

After Isabella's death, he married on 21 August 1274, Maria of Brabant, daughter of Henry III of Brabant and Adelaide of Burgundy. Their children were:

 

1.Louis (May 1276 – 19 May 1319), Count of Évreux.

2.Blanche (1278 – 19 March 1305, Vienna), married Rudolf III of Austria on 25 May 1300.

3.Margaret (1282 – 14 February 1318), married Edward I of England

Note on Wife: Isabel + of ARAGON

Isabella of Aragon (1247 – 28 January 1271), infanta of Aragon, was, by marriage, Queen consort of France in the Middle Ages from 1270 to 1271.

 

[edit] LifeShe was the daughter of King James I of Aragon and his second wife Violant of Hungary, daughter of Andrew II of Hungary.

 

In Clermont on 28 May 1262, she married the future Philip III of France, son of king Louis IX and Marguerite of Provence. They had four sons:

 

1.Louis (1265–1276).

2.Philip IV "the Fair" (1268–1314), King of France.

3.Robert (1269–1271).

4.Charles of Valois (1270–1325).

She accompanied her husband on the Eighth Crusade against Tunis. On their way home, they stopped in Cosenza, Calabria. Six months pregnant with her fifth child, on 11 January 1271 she suffered a fall from her horse after they had resumed the trip back to France. Isabella gave birth to a premature stillborn son.[1] She never recovered from her injuries and the childbirth, and died seventeen days later, on 28 January. Her husband took her body and their stillborn son and, when he finally returned to France, buried her in Saint Denis Basilica. Her tomb, like many others, was desecrated during the French Revolution in 1793.