Maubuisson Abbey
Maubuisson Abbey (French: Abbaye de Maubuisson) was a Cistercian nunnery at Saint-Ouen-l'Aumône, in the Val-d'Oise department of France. The site is now within the north-western suburbs of Paris. The surviving buildings are listed as a monument historique.
History
The abbey was founded in 1236 by Blanche of Castile, the queen consort of Louis VIII. She was maybe buried there in 1252.[1] The abbey thrived financially under royal patronage until the Hundred Years War.
In the fifteenth century the nuns twice supported rival abbesses.
After a century of decline the abbey was suppressed before the French Revolution in 1787 on order of the King Louis XVI.
Abbesses
- 1242-1275: Guillemette I
- 1275-1276: Agnès de Laval
- 1276-1309: Blanche de Brienne d'Eu
- 1309-1345: Isabelle de Montmorency
- 1345-1362: Marguerite I de Moncy
- 1362-1390: Philippa Paynel of Hambye
- 1390-1391: Catherine I of Flins
- 1391-1406: Jeanne d'Ivry
- 1406-1456: Catherine II of Estouteville
- 1456-1461: Madeleine I
- 1461-1473: Marguerite II Danes
- 1473-1482: Guillemette II Martine
- 1482-1523: Antoinette of Dinteville des Chenets
- 1523-1524: Henriette de Villers la Faye
- 1524-1543: Mary of Montmorency
- 1543-1546: Mary II of Annebault
- 1546-1574: Mary III of Pisseleu d'Heilly
- 1574-1594: Madeleine II Tiercelin of Brosses
- 1594-1597: Françoise Tiercelin de Brosses
- 1597-1618: Angélique d'Estrées
- 1618-1621: Interim of the Abbess of Port-Royal des Champs
- 1623-1626: Charlotte I of Bourbon-Soissons
- 1626-1648: Mary IV Suireau of Rocheren
- 1648-1652: Suzanne of Hénin-Liétard de Roches
- 1652-1653: Marguerite III of Béthune of Orval
- 1653-1664: Catherine III Angélique of Valois-Orléans-Longueville
- 1664-1709: Louise Hollandine of the Palatinate
- 1709-1719: Charlotte II Joubert of the Bastide of Chateaumorand
- 1719-1765: Charlotte III of Colbert-Croissy
- 1765-1766: Mary V Margaret of Jarente of Senas d'Orgeval
- 1766-1780: Venture-Gabrielle of Pontevès of Maubousquet
- 1780-1786: Gabrielle-Césarine of Beynac
Burials
The following women have tombs here.
- (Maybe) Blanche of Castile (d. 1252)[2]
- Catherine of Courtenay (d.1307)[2]
- Bonne of Bohemia (d.1349)[2]
Notes
- ↑ Klaniczay, page 236
- 1 2 3 {FR} Revue archéologique Juillet-Decembre 1907, Volume 4; Volume 9, ed. G. Perrot and S. Reinach, (Ernest Leroux, 1907), 448-449.
References
- Klaniczay, Gábor. (2002). Holy rulers and blessed princesses: dynastic cults in medieval central Europe. Cambridge University Press.
- Archaeological excavations made in 1979 by the Service Archéologique du Val d'Oise (SDAVO)
Coordinates: 49°02′46″N 2°07′00″E / 49.04611°N 2.11667°E
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