'Charles I of Bourbon' (
1401–
4 December,
1456,
Château de
Moulins) was
Count of Clermont-en-Beauvaisis from
1424, and
Duke of Bourbon and
Auvergne from
1434 to his death, although due to the imprisonment of his father after the
Battle of Agincourt, he acquired control of the duchy before this date. In
1425, Charles renewed his earlier betrothal by marrying
Agnes of Burgundy (
1407–
1476), daughter of
John the Fearless, and by her produced the following 11 children:
★
John II, Duke of Bourbon (
1426–
1488)
★ Mary of Bourbon (
1428–
1448), married in
1444 John II, Duke of Lorraine
★ Philip of Bourbon (
1430–
1440), Lord of
Beaujeu
★
Charles II, Duke of Bourbon (Château de Moulins
1434–
1488,
Lyon), Cardinal and
Archbishop of Lyon
★
Isabella of Bourbon (
1436–
1465), married
Charles, Duke of Burgundy
★
Peter II, Duke of Bourbon, (
1438–
1503, Château de Moulins)
★
Louis of Bourbon (1438 –
August 30,
1482, murdered),
Bishop of Liège
★ Margaret of Bourbon (
February 5,
1439 –
1483, Château du Pont-Ains), married in Moulins on
April 6,
1472 Philip II, Duke of Savoy
★ Catherine of Bourbon (
Liège,
1440 –
May 21,
1469,
Nijmegen), married on
December 28,
1463 in
Bruges Adolf II, Duke of Guelders
★ Joanna of Bourbon (
1442–
1493,
Brussels), married in Brussels in
1467 John II of Chalon,
Prince of Orange
★ Jacques of Bourbon (
1445–
1468, Bruges), Count of
Montpensier. Unmarried.
Charles served with distinction in the Royal army during the
Hundred Years' War, while nevertheless maintaining local truces with his brother-in-law and otherwise enemy,
Philip III, Duke of Burgundy. Despite this service, he took part in the "
Praguerie" (a revolt by the French nobles against Charles VII) in
1439–
1440. When the revolt collapsed, he was forced to beg for mercy from the King, and was stripped of some of his lands. He died on his estates in 1456.
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