Marie of Anjou

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Marie of Anjou, Queen of France
Marie of Anjou, Queen of France
The Court of Mary of Anjou
The Court of Mary of Anjou

Marie of Anjou (October 14, 14041463) was the daughter of Louis II of Anjou, King of Naples, titular King of Sicily, and Yolande of Aragon, Queen of Aragon, herself daughter of John I of Aragon.

She married King Charles VII in 1422 at Bourges, and became queen consort of France. Her husband's success in the Hundred Years War owed a great deal to the support he received from Marie's family, notably from her mother Yolande of Aragon. SAlthough Marie and Charles had twelve children, her husband's affection was primarily directed towards his mistress, Agnès Sorel.

In the drawing seen below, at Court her chaplain Robert Blondel presents her with the allegorical Treatise of the "Twelve Perils of Hell," which he composed for her (1455). Facsimile of a miniature from this work. Bibl. de l'Arsenal, Paris.

Marie of Anjou died in 1463 at the Abbaye de Chateliers-en-Poitou.


[edit] Children

Marie was the mother of twelve children

[edit] Ancestry


Preceded by
Isabeau of Bavaria
Queen of France
1422July 22, 1461
Succeeded by
Charlotte of Savoy