Father Charles I of Sicily Spouse Philip I, Latin Emperor Died 1275 | Name Beatrice Sicily, | |
Issue Catherine I of Courtenay House House of Anjou-SicilyHouse of Courtenay Children Catherine I, Latin Empress Parents Beatrice of Provence, Charles I of Naples Grandchildren Catherine II, Latin Empress Similar People Charles I of Naples, Beatrice of Savoy, Charles - Count of Valois, Blanche of Castile, Louis VIII of France |
Beatrice of Sicily (1252 – 17 November/12 December 1275) was titular Latin Empress as the wife of Philip of Courtenay. Her parents were Charles I of Sicily and Beatrice of Provence.
Under the Treaty of Viterbo (27 May 1267), Baldwin II of Courtenay transferred much of the rights to the Latin Empire to Charles I. Charles was to be confirmed in possession of Corfu and some cities in Albania. He was also given suzerainty over the Principality of Achaea and sovereignty of the Aegean Islands, excepting those held by Venice and Lesbos, Chios, Samos, and Amorgos. The same treaty arranged the marriage of Philip of Courtenay, heir apparent to the Latin Empire, and Beatrice, second daughter of Charles. If the marriage was childless, Philip's rights would be inherited by Charles I. Beatrice was approximately fifteen-years-old at the time of her betrothal.
On 15 October 1273, Beatrice and Philip were married in Foggia. The bride was twenty-one-years old and the groom thirty. Her father-in-law died days later. Philip was proclaimed emperor with Beatrice as empress. The marriage was harmonius and produced a daughter, Catherine I of Courtenay, born on 25 November 1274.
Beatrice died in late 1275 after a short illness.