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Philip VI of France

French Monarchy
Capetian Dynasty
(Valois branch)

Philip VI
Children
   John II
John II
Children
   Charles V
   Louis I of Anjou
   John, Duke of Berry
   Philip the Bold, Duke of
   Burgundy
Charles V
Children
   Charles VI
   Louis, Duke of Orléans
Charles VI
Children
   Isabella of Valois, Queen
   consort of England
   Catherine of Valois,
   Queen consort of Engl.
   Charles VII
Charles VII
Children
   Louis XI
Louis XI
Children
   Charles VIII
Charles VIII

Philip VI of Valois (French: Philippe VI de Valois; 1293August 22, 1350) was the King of France from 1328 to his death. He was the son of Charles of Valois and founded the Valois Dynasty.

Table of contents

Ascension to the Throne

In 1328, King Charles IV of France died without a direct male descendant, however leaving his wife pregnant. Philippe was one of the two chief claimants to the throne along with King Edward III of England whose mother, Isabella of France, was the late King Charles' sister. Philippe ascended to the crown based on Salic law which forbade females and those descended in the female line to succeed to the throne. After the previous queen gave birth to a girl, Philip was crowned on May 27, 1328 at the Cathedral in Reims.

Philip VI was not a heir nor a descendant of Joan I of Navarre, whose inheritance (Kingdom of Navarre, as well as counties of Champagne, Troyes, Meaux and Brie) had been in personal union with the crown of France almost fifty years at that time, and already long administered by the same royal machinery (established by Philip IV, the father of French bureaucracy), which resource was inherited by Philip VI. Particularly the said counties were at that time already closely entrenched to the economic and administrative entirety of the Royal Domain of France, being located adjacent to Ile-de-France. Philip was however not at all entitled to inherit that inheritance – the most rightful heiress was Louis X's surviving daughter, the future Joan II of Navarre, the eldest granddaughter of Joan I of Navarre. Philip ceded Navarre to Joan II, but regarding the counties in Champagne, they struck a deal: Joan II received vast lands in Normandy (adjacent to her husbands fief in Evreux) in compensation, and Philip got to keep Champagne as part of the Royal Domain.

Life

In July, 1313, Philippe had married Jeanne of Burgundy (Joan the Lame), daughter of duke Robert II and princess Agnes of France, the youngest daughter of King Saint Louis of France. In an ironic twist to his "male" ascendancy to the throne, the intelligent, strong-willed Joan was said to be the brains behind the throne and the real ruler of France.

Their children were:

After Joan died in 1348, Philippe VI married Blanche d'Evreux, princess of Navarre, daughter of the queen regnant Joan II of Navarre on January 11, 1350. They had one daughter: Jeanne (1351 – 1371).

King Philippe VI died at Nogent-le-Roi, Eure-et-Loir on August 22, 1350 and is interred with his wife, Blanche de Navarre (1330 – 1398) in Saint Denis Basilica. He was succeeded by the son of Jeanne of Burgundy, Jean II.

Reign

The reign of Philippe VI was punctuated with crises, many of which were the result of defeats on the battlefield, in particular at the Battle of l'Ecluse in 1340 and again at Crécy in 1346. In 1348 the bubonic plague struck, killing one-third of the entire population. The labor shortage caused inflation to soar and the king attempted to fix prices, further de-stabilizing the country. On his death, France was still very much a divided country filled with social unrest.

See also


Preceded by:
Charles III
Count of Anjou
1325–1332
Succeeded by:
John II
Preceded by:
Charles IV
King of France
February 1, 1328August 22, 1350









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