Louis X of France

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Louis X the Headstrong
King of France and Navarre, Count of Champagne (more…)
Louis X, Bibliothèque Nationale de France
Reign 29 November 13145 June 1316
Coronation 24 August 1315, Reims
Titles King of Navarre (130516)
Count of Champagne (130516)
Born October 1289
Paris, France
Died 5 June 1316
Vincennes, Val-de-Marne, France
Buried Saint Denis Basilica
Predecessor Philip IV
Successor John I
Consort Margaret of Burgundy (12901315)
Clémence d'Anjou (12931328)
Issue Joan II of Navarre (131249)
John I (1316)
Royal House House of Capet
Father Philip IV (12681314)
Mother Joan I of Navarre (12711305)
French Monarchy
Direct Capetians

Louis X
   Joan II of Navarre
   John I

Louis X (October 12895 June 1316), called the Quarreller, the Headstrong, or the Stubborn (French: le Hutin; Spanish: el Obstinado), 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, 1312October 6, 1349). In 1313 Louis accused his wife of adultery and imprisoned her in Chateau Gaillard. Her alleged lover was tortured and executed. Marguerite herself died in suspicious circumstances, possibly murdered, on 14 August 1315 at Chateau Gaillard; Louis remarried a scant five days later, on August 19, 1315, to Clémence d'Anjou (12931328), daughter of Charles Martel of Naples 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.

Contents

[edit] Ancestors

Louis X's ancestors in three generations
Louis X of France Father:
Philip IV of France
Paternal Grandfather:
Philip III of France
Paternal Great-grandfather:
Louis IX of France
Paternal Great-grandmother:
Marguerite of Provence
Paternal Grandmother:
Isabella of Aragon
Paternal Great-grandfather:
James I of Aragon
Paternal Great-grandmother:
Violant of Hungary
Mother:
Joan I of Navarre
Maternal Grandfather:
Henry I of Navarre
Maternal Great-grandfather:
Theobald I of Navarre
Maternal Great-grandmother:
Margaret of Bourbon
Maternal Grandmother:
Blanche of Artois
Maternal Great-grandfather:
Robert I of Artois
Maternal Great-grandmother:
Matilda of Brabant

[edit] References

[edit] 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)

[edit] Fiction

[edit] External links

Louis X of France
Born: October 1289 Died: 5 June 1316
Preceded by
Philip IV
King of France
29 November 13145 June 1316
Succeeded by
John I
Preceded by
Joan I
King of Navarre
(as 'Louis I')

4 April 13055 June 1316
Count of Champagne
(as 'Louis I')

4 April 13055 June 1316
Chronology of French monarchs from 987 to 1870
Medieval France
House of Capet

Hugues (987-996) • Robert II (996-1031) • Henri I (1031-1060) • Philippe I (1060-1108) • Louis VI (1108-1137) • Louis VII (1137-1180) • Philippe II (1180-1223) • Louis VIII (1223-1226) • Louis IX (1226-1270) • Philippe III (1270-1285) • Philippe IV (1285-1314) • Louis X (1314-1316) • Jean I (1316) • Philippe V (1316-1322) • Charles IV (1322-1328)

Medieval France
House of Valois

Philippe VI (1328-1350) • Jean II (1350-1364) • Charles V (1364-1380) • Charles VI (1380-1422) • Charles VII (1422-1461) • Louis XI (1461-1483) • Charles VIII (1483-1498)

Early Modern France
House of Valois

Louis XII (1498-1515) • François I (1515-1547) • Henri II (1547-1559) • François II (1559-1560) • Charles IX (1560-1574) • Henri III (1574-1589)

Early Modern France
House of Bourbon

Henri IV (1589-1610) • Louis XIII (1610-1643) • Louis XIV (1643-1715) • Louis XV (1715-1774) • Louis XVI (1774-1792)

First Republic
First Empire
House of Bonaparte

Napoléon I (1804-1814)

Bourbon Restoration I
House of Bourbon

Louis XVIII (1814-1815)

Hundred Days
House of Bonaparte

Napoléon I (1815) • Napoléon II (1815)

Bourbon Restoration II
House of Bourbon

Louis XVIII (1815-1824) • Charles X (1824-1830) • Louis XIX (1830) • Henri V (1830)

July Monarchy
House of Orléans

Louis-Philippe (1830-1848)

Second Republic
Second Empire
House of Bonaparte

Napoléon III (1852-1870)

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