Beatrice of Savoy, Dame of Faucigny

Beatrice
suo jure Dame of Faucigny
Dauphine of Viennois
Viscountess of Béarn
Spouse(s) Guigues VII of Viennois
Gaston VII of Béarn

Issue

John I, Dauphin of Viennois
Anne, Dauphine of Viennois
Noble family House of Savoy
Father Peter II, Count of Savoy
Mother Agnes of Faucigny
Born c.1237
Died 21 April 1310
Faucingy
Buried Faucigny
Religion Roman Catholicism

Beatrice of Savoy (c.1237-21 April 1310) was suo jure Dame of Faucigny through the inheritance from her mother Agnes of Faucigny.[1] Her father was Peter II, Count of Savoy, she was his only legitimate child, but due to Salic law that existed in Savoy, she was excluded from the succession upon his death in 1268. In addition to being Dame, Beatrice held the titles of Dauphine of Viennois and Viscountess of Béarn by her two marriages.

Background

Despite being the only legitimate child of her father, she did have one illegitimate half-sister through him named Isabelle who would marry Pierre of Salinento, a family relation to both.

Beatrice's paternal grandparents were Thomas I of Savoy and Margaret of Geneva, one of their daughters was Beatrice of Savoy. This family link made the younger Beatrice a cousin to Margaret of Provence, wife of Louis IX of France and Eleanor of Provence, wife of Henry III of England.

First marriage

In 1253 Beatrice was married to Guigues VII of Viennois, they had been betrothed to each other since 1241, the marriage being the work of Beatrice's maternal grandfather Aymon II, Seigneur de Faucigny.

The subject of Beatrice's inheritance was soon raised. Her mother Agnes, had originally intended to give a third of the inheritance to her daughter and two thirds to her husband Peter.[2] However, she changed her will and named Beatrice as the sole heir of her lands in Faucigny along with Beatrice's husband Guigues.[3] Beatrice's parents died months apart, they both died in 1268 with Peter dying on May 15 and Agnes on August 11. Beatrice and her husband however, only inherited some of the lands that had belonged to her mother. Beatrice was forced to give up Thoire-Villars to her aunt, also named Beatrice. The claim of Beatrice for all of her mother's inheritance was strong considering the power of Guigues. However, due to Salic law over Savoy, which barred the rights of females to inherit, the succession as Count of Savoy passed over Beatrice to her uncle who succeeded as Philip I, Count of Savoy. Philip did however show support to Beatrice's aunt over the inheritance in Faucigny, this led to war breaking out, Beatrice was captured and imprisoned. She was only allowed to be released if she agreed to allow her aunt to maintain her portion of the inheritance and paid homage to Savoy. Beatrice agreed and she paid homage throughout the 1290s.[4]

The marriage produced four children:

In 1269, Guigues died and due to the minority of their son John, Beatrice was appointed his regent.[6] Her son was married to Bonne, daughter of Amadeus V, Count of Savoy who was a cousin of Beatrice. However, her son died after a fall from a horse aged around eighteen. He was eventually succeeded by Beatrice's older daughter Anne and her husband Humbert, with future dauphins descending from their marriage. Following the death of her son, Beatrice left for Taninges with his remains, laying them to rest there and praying for his soul in the monastery she founded, Mélan.

Second marriage and widowhood

Beatrice was married for a second time on April 2, 1273 to Gaston VII, Viscount of Béarn. Her second marriage is confirmed by the agreement dated 15 December 1284 under which Gaston makes an agreement with Anne and Humbert over his claim on the County of Vienne.[7] Beatrice arranged a marriage for stepdaughter Constance of Béarn to Aymon II of Geneva, a relative through her grandmother.[8] Gaston had dealt with domestic problems amongst his daughters from his first marriage and which would succeed him upon death, his son-in-laws Roger-Bernard III, Count of Foix and Gerald VI, Count of Armagnac had battled for power. The marriage between Beatrice and Gaston did not produce any children. After seventeen years of marriage, Gaston died and was succeeded by his son-in-law, Roger-Bernard.

Beatrice did not remarry after the death of her second husband but did have more political involvement with her family back in Savoy. In 1294, she transferred her lands between Seyssel and Freiburg to her cousin Count Amadeus V. In 1296, she gave up her title as Dame of Faucigny to her son-in-law Humbert, for the benefit of one of his sons, reserving the usufruct for herself.[9] Beatrice continued to be a powerful force in Savoy, causing torment for her cousin Amadeus especially, when she attempted to claim Savoy for her grandson Hugh.[10] However, the claim proved unsuccessful and Amadeus remained Count for the rest of his lifetime.

Beatrice died on 21 April 1310 and was buried at her monastery in Melun beside her son. Her various alliances with relatives and clerics in Geneva and the sharing out of her inheritance during and after her life, led to conflicts amongst her descendants for generations.[11] The disputes between the House of Savoy and Dauphin de Viennois over the territory which the House of Savoy won back from the French in the Treaty of Paris (1355).

References

  1. State Archives, volume 104, page 22, fascicules 15, and Wurstenberger (1858), Vol. IV, 764, p. 443.
  2. State Archives, volume 104, page 11, fascicule 10, and Wurstenberger (1858), Vol. IV, 586, p. 299.
  3. State Archives, volume 104, page 15, fascicules 12.1 and 2, and Wurstenberger (1858), Vol. IV, 657, p. 336.
  4. Nicolas Carrier, Life Faucigny mountain in the late Middle Ages , Editions L'Harmattan , 2001, 620 p. ( ISBN 978-2-7475-1592-4 ) , p. 36.
  5. Wurstenberger (1858), Vol. IV, 732, p. 407.
  6. SAVOY, Medieval Lands
  7. State Archives, volume 102, page 15, fascicule 1.
  8. Eugene L. Cox, The Eagles of Savoy: The House of Savoy in Thirteenth-Century Europe (Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press, 1974), 435–36.
  9. Kerrebrouck (2000), pp. 624-5.
  10. Medieval Lands
  11. Marie José (1956), p. 46.
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