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Consulta em Wikipédia - Beatrice de Bourbon
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Beatrice of Bourbon (1320 – 23 December 1383) was by marriage Queen of Bohemia and Countess of Luxembourg. Initially betrothed to Philip, Despot of Romania, she later married King John of Bohemia. By 1337 she had given birth to a son, Wenceslaus, and then promptly left Prague, residing in Luxembourg. After being widowed in 1346, Beatrice married Eudes II, Lord of Grancey in 1347. She died 27 December 1383 and was buried at the Couvent des Jacobins.Queen consort of BohemiaTenure1334–1346Coronation18 May 1337Born1320Died23 December 1383 (aged 62–63)BurialÉglise des Jacobins, ParisSpouseJohn of BohemiaEudes II, Lord of GranceyIssueWenceslaus I of LuxembourgHouseBourbonFatherLouis I, Duke of BourbonMotherMary of AvesnesLifeeditBorn in 1320, Beatrice was the daughter of Louis I, Duke of Bourbon[1] and Mary of Avesnes. Beatrice was betrothed to Philip, Despot of Romania, the second son of Philip I, Prince of Taranto, in May 1321.[2] The engagement was broken in 1327 after Philip chose to marry Violante of Aragon, daughter of James II of Aragon.[3] At the age of fourteen, she was married to John of Bohemia. The marriage was arranged by Philip VI of France, who wanted closer ties with Bohemia.The marriage of Beatrice and John was celebrated in the Château de Vincennes in December 1334, at which time she was fourteen years old. But because the two were related in a prohibited degree, Pope Benedict XII had to give dispensation for the marriage, which was granted in Avignon on 9 January 1335.The marriage contract stipulated that if a son was born from the marriage, the County of Luxembourg (John‘s paternal heritage), as well as lands belonging to it, would go to him.[4]Queen of BohemiaeditBeatrice arrived in Prague in July 1335.[5] She brought with her an annual income of 4,000 livres from her father‘s County of Clermont. On 25 February 1337, Beatrice gave birth in Prague to her only child,[a] a son named Wenceslaus after the holy patron of the Premyslid dynasty;[8] probably calling her son with this name either the queen or her husband tried to gain the favor of the Bohemians. The relationship between Beatrice and her new subjects remained estranged: On 18 May 1337, Beatrice was crowned at Prague Castle by John, the bishop of Prague, using the crown of the Czech lands, although the ceremony lacked the usual grand pomp.[9] Shortly after her coronation, in June 1337, Beatrice left Bohemia leaving her son behind, and went to live in Luxembourg. After this, she rarely visited the Bohemian Kingdom.Later yearseditBeatrice ceased to be queen consort following the death of her husband John at the Battle of Crécy on 26 August 1346. Her stepson, now King Charles of Bohemia, confirmed the provisions of her marriage contract. Beatrice, now Dowager Queen of Bohemia, received in perpetuity the lands in the County of Hainaut, the rent of 4,000 livres and the towns of Arlon, Marville and Damvillers as her widow‘s estate. These revenues were used not only for their own needs, but also for the education of her son. King Charles also left her all the movable property and income from the mines in Kutná Hora. In addition, when her father Duke Louis I of Bourbon died in 1342, she received the sum of 1,000 livres, which was secured from the town of Creil.Around 1347, Beatrice married for a second time to Eudes II, Lord of Grancey, at her state of Damvillers. Despite her new marriage, she retained the title of Dowager Queen of Bohemia. The couple had no children. Soon after her second marriage, she arranged the betrothal of her son Wenceslaus with the widowed Joanna, Duchess of Brabant, daughter and heiress of John III, Duke of Brabant, who was fifteen years older than he was.[8] The marriage took place in Damvillers four years later, on 17 May 1351.Beatrice died on 27 December 1383,[5] having outlived her son and all her stepchildren. She was buried in the now-demolished church of the Couvent des Jacobins in Paris - her effigy is now in the Basilica of St Denis.




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