'Louis X' (
4 October 1289 –
5 June 1316), called 'the Quarreller', 'the Headstrong', or 'the Stubborn' (; ), was the
King of Navarre (as 'Louis I') from
1305 and
King of France from
1314 until his death.
He was born in
Paris, France, son of
Philip IV of France and
Joan I of Navarre. He inherited the title king of
Navarre on the death of his mother, on
April 2,
1305. On the death of his father in 1314, he became king of France and was officially crowned at
Reims in August
1315.
The reign of Louis X was short and unremarkable, dominated by continued feuding with the noble factions within the kingdom.
On
September 21,
1305 he married
Marguerite de Bourgogne (
Burgundy) and they had a daughter,
Jeanne (
January 28,
1312 –
October 6,
1349). In 1313 Louis accused his wife of adultery and imprisoned her in
Chateau Gaillard, where she died (possibly murdered) two years later. Her alleged lover was tortured and executed. On
August 13,
1315 he married
Clémence d'Anjou (
1293–
1328), daughter of
Charles Martel and sister of
Charles I of Hungary.
Louis died (possibly from dehydration, though there was also suspicion of poisoning
[1]) in 1316 at
Vincennes,
Val-de-Marne, following a game of
Jeu de Paume. He and his second wife Clémence are interred in
Saint Denis Basilica.
At the time of Louis's death, his wife Clémence was pregnant, making it impossible to know Louis's successor until his child was born. A son would succeed Louis as king in France and Navarre. A daughter would leave the succession in doubt. The two main claimants were Louis's daughter,
Joan and his brother
Philip, Count of Poitiers; however, France had no history of inheritance by females, thus allowing Joan no favourable precedent. Navarre, by contrast, had a history of inheritance by or through women (for example, Louis' predecessor had been his mother, Joan I), which gave Joan II a strong claim; men were nonetheless preferred.
Philip was appointed regent for the five months remaining until the birth of his brother's child. The baby, who turned out to be male, lived only five days -- an extremely short reign for Louis's posthumous son,
John I (Jean I). Louis X's brother
Philip then became king.
Ancestors
References
Bibliography
★ Marie-Anne Polo de Beaulieu - ''La France au moyen âge : De l'An mil à la Peste noire, 1348'' (2002)
★ Roselyne Callaux - ''Robert III d'Artois'' (2002)
Fiction
★
Maurice Druon - ''Les rois maudits''
External links
★
French history timeline
★
Biography
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