Yolanda, Latin Empress: Difference between revisions
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| succession = [[Latin Emperor|Latin Empress of Constantinople]] |
| succession = [[Latin Emperor|Latin Empress of Constantinople]] |
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| reign = 1217 – August 1219 |
| reign = 1217 – August 1219 |
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| moretext = (''[[regent]]'') |
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| reign-type = Regency |
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| predecessor = [[Peter, Latin Emperor|Peter]] |
| predecessor = [[Peter, Latin Emperor|Peter]] |
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| successor = [[Robert, Latin Emperor|Robert]] |
| successor = [[Robert, Latin Emperor|Robert]] |
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In 1212, Yolanda became [[Marquis of Namur|Marchioness of Namur]] after her brother, Marquis Philip I. |
In 1212, Yolanda became [[Marquis of Namur|Marchioness of Namur]] after her brother, Marquis Philip I. |
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After the death of her brother emperor Henry in 1216 there was a brief period without an emperor, before Peter was elected to succeed her brother. |
After the death of her brother emperor Henry in 1216 there was a brief period without an emperor, before Peter was elected to succeed her brother. |
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Because of [[Salic Law]], Yolande could not succeed to the throne, and her husband became emperor instead.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Hazlitt |first=William Carew |url=https://books.google.co.kr/books?id=s903AAAAcAAJ&pg=PA132 |title=History of the Venetian Republic: Her Rise, Her Greatness, and Her Civilization |date=1860 |publisher=Smith |language=en|volume=2|pages=132|quote=The provisions of the Salic Law precluding Yolande from the succession in her own person, she was forced to content herself with ascending the throne in the right of her husband, Peter Courtenay, Count of Namur, whom the Barons of Romania consented to invest with the imperial title.}}</ref> |
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On their way there, Peter sent Yolanda ahead to Constantinople, while he fought the [[Despotate of Epirus]], during which he was captured. Because his fate was unknown (although he was probably killed), Yolanda governed Constantinople as a sole ruler for two years. |
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She allied with the [[Bulgaria]]ns against the various Byzantine successor states, and was able to make peace with [[Theodore I Lascaris]] of the [[Empire of Nicaea]], who married her daughter, Marie. She died soon after in 1219. |
She allied with the [[Bulgaria]]ns against the various Byzantine successor states, and was able to make peace with [[Theodore I Lascaris]] of the [[Empire of Nicaea]], who married her daughter, Marie. She died soon after in 1219. |
Revision as of 02:22, 10 May 2023
This article needs additional citations for verification. (September 2014) |
Yolanda | |
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Latin Empress of Constantinople | |
Regency | 1217 – August 1219 |
Predecessor | Peter |
Successor | Robert |
Latin Empress consort | |
Tenure | 1216 – 1217 |
Born | 1175 |
Died | 1219 (aged 43–44) |
Spouse | Peter, Latin Emperor |
Issue Detail | |
House | Flanders |
Father | Baldwin V, Count of Hainault |
Mother | Margaret I, Countess of Flanders |
Yolanda (Template:Lang-fr; 1175 – August 1219), often called Yolanda of Flanders, was Empress of the Latin Empire in Constantinople, first as the wife of Emperor Peter from 1216 to 1217 and thereafter as regent until her death in 1219. Peter was captured and imprisoned before he could reach Constantinople, so Yolanda assumed the duties of governing the Empire. She was ruling Marchioness of Namur from 1212 until 1217.
Biography
Yolanda was the daughter of Baldwin V, Count of Hainault,[1] and Countess Margaret I of Flanders. Two of her brothers, Baldwin I and then Henry, were emperors in Constantinople.[1]
In 1212, Yolanda became Marchioness of Namur after her brother, Marquis Philip I.
After the death of her brother emperor Henry in 1216 there was a brief period without an emperor, before Peter was elected to succeed her brother.
Because of Salic Law, Yolande could not succeed to the throne, and her husband became emperor instead.[2]
On their way there, Peter sent Yolanda ahead to Constantinople, while he fought the Despotate of Epirus, during which he was captured. Because his fate was unknown (although he was probably killed), Yolanda governed Constantinople as a sole ruler for two years.
She allied with the Bulgarians against the various Byzantine successor states, and was able to make peace with Theodore I Lascaris of the Empire of Nicaea, who married her daughter, Marie. She died soon after in 1219.
Legacy
Following Yolanda's death, her second son, Robert of Courtenay, became emperor because her oldest son, Philip, did not want the throne.[3] Robert was still in France at the time.
Yolanda was, in her own right, Marchioness of Namur, which she inherited from her brother, Marquis Philip I, in 1212 and left to her eldest son, Marquis Philip II, when she went to Constantinople in 1216.
Issue
By Peter of Courtenay she had 10 children:
- Philip (d. 1226),[3] Marquis of Namur, who declined the offer of the crown of the Latin Empire
- Robert of Courtenay (d. 1228), Latin Emperor[3]
- Henry (d. 1229), Marquis of Namur
- Baldwin II of Constantinople (d. 1273)
- Margaret, Marchioness of Namur, who married first Raoul d'Issoudun and then Henry count of Vianden
- Elizabeth, who married Walter (Gaucher) count of Bar and then Eudes sire of Montagu
- Yolanda, who married Andrew II of Hungary
- Eleanor, who married Philip of Montfort, Lord of Tyre
- Marie, who married Theodore I Lascaris of the Empire of Nicaea
- Agnes, who married Geoffrey II Villehardouin, Prince of Achaea
References
- ^ a b Rasmussen 1997, p. 9.
- ^ Hazlitt, William Carew (1860). History of the Venetian Republic: Her Rise, Her Greatness, and Her Civilization. Vol. 2. Smith. p. 132.
The provisions of the Salic Law precluding Yolande from the succession in her own person, she was forced to content herself with ascending the throne in the right of her husband, Peter Courtenay, Count of Namur, whom the Barons of Romania consented to invest with the imperial title.
- ^ a b c Nicol 2002, p. 12.
Sources
- Nicol, Donald M. (2002). The Last Centuries of Byzantium, 1261–1453. Cambridge University Press.
- Rasmussen, Ann Marie (1997). Mothers and Daughters in Medieval German Literature. Syracuse University Press.
- Van Tricht, Filip (2011). The Latin Renovatio of Byzantium. BRILL. ISBN 978-9004203235.
- 1175 births
- 1219 deaths
- 13th-century Latin Emperors of Constantinople
- House of Hainaut
- Capetian House of Courtenay
- Regents of the Latin Empire
- Latin Empresses of Constantinople
- Margraves of Namur
- Women of the Crusader states
- Countesses
- 13th-century Byzantine women
- 13th-century women rulers
- 13th-century rulers in Europe
- 12th-century women from the county of Flanders