'Louis I of Bourbon', ''le Boiteux'', the Lame (
Clermont-en-Beauvaisis,
1279 –
January 29 1342) was Count of
Clermont-en-Beauvaisis and
La Marche, and the first
Duke of Bourbon.
Life
Louis was son of
Robert, Count of Clermont and thus grandson of King
Louis IX of France, who never saw him, the son of his youngest son. Louis' mother was
Beatrix of Burgundy, heiress of Bourbon and a granddaughter of
Hugh IV, Duke of Burgundy.
He fought on the losing side in both the
Battle of the Golden Spurs (
1302) and the
Battle of Mons-en-Pévèle (
1304), but escaped unharmed. In
1310, he was made
Grand Chambrier of France. In
1327,
Charles IV of France persuaded him to exchange the County of Clermont for that of La Marche, and elevated Bourbon to a
duchy-peerage. However, Clermont was restored to him by
Philip VI of France in
1331.
Duke Louis is reported to have been mentally somewhat instable, a trait of nervous breakdowns presumably hereditary that showed clearly for example in his granddaughter
Joanna of Bourbon, the queen, and in her son, king
Charles VI of France, as well as down in the line in Charles' grandson king
Henry VI of England.
Family and children
In
1310, Louis married Mary of Avesnes, daughter of
John II of Avesnes,
Count of Hainaut and
Holland. They had eight children:
#
Peter I, Duke of Bourbon (
1311–
1356), killed at the
Battle of Poitiers
# Jeanne (
1312–
1402), married in
1324 Guigues VII, Count of Forez
# Marguerite (
1313–
1362), married on
July 6,
1320 Jean II de Sully, married in
1346 Hutin de Vermeilles
# Marie (
1315–
1387,
Naples), married first in
Nicosia in January
1330 Guy of Lusignan (d.
1343), titular
Prince of Galilee, married second on
September 9,
1347 Robert of Taranto, the titular
Latin Emperor. Only her first marriage produced surviving children.
# Philip (
1316 – aft.
1327)
# James (
1318)
#
James I, Count of La Marche (
1319 –
1362), killed at the
Battle of Brignais, from whom the later
royal Bourbons descend.
# Beatrix (
1320 –
December 23,
1383,
Danvillers), married first at
Vincennes in
1334 John of Luxembourg, King of Bohemia as his second wife, married herself second c.
1347 Eudes II of Grancey (d.
1389)