Violant of Bar
Violant of Bar | |
---|---|
Queen consort of Aragon, Valencia, Majorca, and Sardinia and Corsica; Countess consort of Barcelona | |
Tenure | 1380–1395 |
Born |
c.1365 Northern France |
Died |
3 July 1431 Barcelona |
Spouse | John I of Aragon |
Issue Detail | Yolande, Queen of Naples |
House | House of Montbéliard |
Father | Robert, Duke of Bar |
Mother | Marie of Valois |
Religion | Roman Catholicism |
Violant of Bar (c. 1365 – 3 July 1431) was queen consort of Aragon.
She was the daughter of Robert I, Duke of Bar and Marie of Valois. Violante was the eighth of eleven children. She was married in 1380 at the age of 15 to John, Duke of Girona, the heir apparent to the throne of Aragon, thus becoming Duchess of Girona and Countess of Cervera.
Her husband became King of Aragon in 1387. He was often ill, and Violante wielded considerable administrative power on his behalf. She transformed the Aragonese court into a center of French culture. She especially cultivated the talents of Provençal troubadours (poet-musicians).
John and Violant had six children, but only one daughter, Yolande lived to adulthood.
- James (1382–1388), Duke of Girona and Count of Cervera
- Yolande (Zaragoza 1384 - Saumur 14 November 1442), married on 2 December 1400 at Louis II of Naples. She played a role in the history of France.
- Ferdinand (1389 - Monzón October 1389), Duke of Girona and Count of Cervera
- Joanna (1392 - Barcelona 4 August 1396)
- Antonia (b and d 1392)
- Peter (1394-1394), Duke of Girona and Count of Cervera
After John's death in 1395, she dedicated herself to the education of her only surviving child, Yolande. Yolande and her sons claimed the Kingdom of Aragon after John's death.
Violant died in Barcelona on 13 August 1431 at the age of sixty-six.
Preceded by Sibila of Fortia |
Queen consort of Aragon 1387–1395 |
Succeeded by Maria de Luna |