Isabelle de Craon

Isabelle de Craon
Dame de Fougères
Spouse(s) Raoul III, Sire de Fougères
Issue
Jean de Fougères
Jeanne de Fougères, suo jure Dame de Fougères
Noble family Craon
Father Amaury I, Sire de Craon
Mother Jeanne des Roches
Born 1212
France

Isabelle de Craon, Dame de Fougères (born 1212), was a French noblewoman, being the daughter of Amaury I, Sire de Craon, a wealthy baron who was the possessor of many lordships in Anjou and Maine. She was the wife of Raoul III, Sire de Fougères, by whom she had one daughter, Jeanne de Fougères, who became the heiress to her father's seigneury.

Family

Isabelle was born in 1212, the youngest daughter of Amaury I, Sire de Craon and Jeanne des Roches (c.1195- 28 September 1238).[1] She had a younger brother, Maurice IV, Sire de Craon (1213–1250), who married Isabelle de Lusignan, a half-sister of King Henry III of England by whom he had three children. She had an elder sister, Jeanne who was bethrothed to the three-year old Arthur of Brittany in 1223. Arthur died that same year, and nothing further is known about Jeanne.

Isabelle's paternal grandparents were Maurice II de Craon and Isabelle de Meulan. Her maternal grandparents were Guillaume des Roches, Seneschal of Anjou and Marguerite de Sablé. Being the husband of Jeanne, eldest daughter of Guillaume des Roches, the hereditary seneschalship of Anjou and the vast Sablé barony passed to Isabelle's father upon the death of her maternal grandfather on 15 July 1222. Amaury died in 1226, when Isabelle was fourteen years old.

Marriage and issue

On an unknown date sometime before 1230, Isabelle married Raoul III, Sire de Fougères, the son of Geoffrey, Seigneur de Fougères and Mathilde de Porhoet. The marriage was documented in a charter dated February 1233.[2] The chateau of Fougères in Brittany became their principal residence.

Together Raoul and Isabelle had two children:[3]

Isabelle died on an unknown date. Her husband Raoul died on 24 February 1256, and his seigneury of Fougères was inherited by their only surviving child, Jeanne who thereafter held the title of suo jure Dame de Fougères.

References

  1. ^ Charles Cawley, Medieval Lands, Anjou
  2. ^ Cawley, Medieval Lands, Anjou
  3. ^ Cawley, Medieval Lands, Anjou