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Joan of Savoy

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Father
  
Edward, Count of Savoy

House
  
House of Savoy

Name
  
Joan Savoy

Religion
  
Roman Catholicism

Mother
  
Bianca of Burgundy


Joan of Savoy

Tenure
  
21 March 1330–30 April 1341

Burial
  
eglise des Cordeliers, Dijon

Died
  
June 29, 1344, Dijon, France

Spouse
  
John III, Duke of Brittany (m. 1329–1341)

Parents
  
Blanche of Burgundy, Countess of Savoy, Edward, Count of Savoy

Grandparents
  
Amadeus V, Count of Savoy, Agnes of France, Duchess of Burgundy, Robert II, Duke of Burgundy

Great-grandparents
  
Louis IX of France, Margaret of Provence

Joan of Savoy (1310 – 29 June 1344), was Duchess consort of Brittany, wife of John III, Duke of Brittany. Joan was also a claimant to the County of Savoy upon the death of her father. She was a member of the House of Savoy and married into the House of Dreux. Joan was born in 1310, she was the only child of Edward, Count of Savoy, and his wife, Blanche of Burgundy.

Joan of Savoy httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Joan married in 1329 aged nineteen to the forty-three-year-old, childless John III, Duke of Brittany; she was his third wife, John's second wife Isabella had died the previous year.

The same year as Joan's marriage, her father died. Being his only child she considered herself his successor. However, Savoy had never had a female ruler, leading to a dispute in the succession. Joan's uncle Aymon had the support of the nobles of Savoy for the Semi-Salic inheritance and succeeded as count.

John supported Joan's rights on Savoy. After the marriage, Joan renewed her claim on Savoy and allied herself with the Dauphin de Viennois against her uncle. By agreement settled by the French King on 22 November 1339, she renounced her rights of succession in return for an annual income of 6000 livres.

Joan and John were married for twelve years but produced no offspring, and John died on 30 April 1341, leaving Joan a childless widow. This led to a disputed succession in Brittany between John's half-brother of the same name and John's niece Joan.

In 1343, when her uncle Aymon died, Joan renewed her claim on the county of Savoy against her nine-year-old cousin, Amadeus VI. In her will, she left the county to Philip, Duke of Orléans to spite her cousins. In the end, he negotiated a similar settlement to the one of Joan, yielding the claim in exchange for 5000 livres annually.

Joan died on 29 June 1344.

References

Joan of Savoy Wikipedia


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